^^93 ^S^^ THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES >-i POEMS J r....p POEMS BY JAMES RHOADES H n ii n MACMILLAN AND CO. 1870. [All rights reserved.) HERTFORD PRINTED BY STEPHEN AUSTIN. CONTENTS. PAGE. Dedication i Ode to Harmony 5 To THE Spirit of Unrest 14 Ode to Winter 17 Song 19 A Son's Complaint 20 A Sad Thought 23 The Tunnel 24 To the Spirit of Beauty 26 To Hesperus 30 Song of a Leaf 31 To Nature 33 A Sketch 35 816668 VI CONTENTS. PAGE. By the Rotha 36 Vanitas Vanitatum 38 The Nightingale 39 The Thrush 42 Rest 43 The Poet's Call 44 A Lucid Interval 45 An Old Orchard 46 The Ballad of Sir Guy 50 The Hush S3 Song-Birds in February f... 54 Love and Rest 56 Frozen at the Heart 58 Song 59 Hope 60 Despair 61 Spring 62 A Farewell 64 The Flowers Surprised 65 Cloud-Life 66 The Atmosphere of Poetry 67 CONTENTS. VU PAGE, Winter-Music 68 Two Characters 69 A Portrait 71 The Poet and the People 73 The Two Paths 76 Failure 79 Pygmalion's Statue 81 On the Death of Artemus Ward 83 A Fact 85 Nature's Task in Modern Times 89 A Farewell Ode 93 Memory 96 The True Greatness 100 The Ballad of Little Maisie 102 Translation 106 To the Daisy 108 Night 112 Sonnets , 113 A Dialogue 141 L'Envoi 171 DEDICATION, What is there worth the giving, That I might give to thee ? Or nieet for thy receiving, That thou should'st take of me ? Earth's crowns fade fast in weaving. Then how should these things be ? Shall dead men praise the living, Or slaves the spirit-free ? DEDICATION. It may be now thou sleepest, It may be that, to hear This struggling song, thou weepcst For pity tear on tear : The world an hour will render Of fault-encumber'd fame : Wilt thou be still too tender, Too mother-like to blame ? O love of child and mother ! New loves may wax and wane ; But shall we find another, Nor time nor tears can stain ? From life's august beginning Through all her dark extremes Sole love that needs no winning. Nor wastes in passionate dreams ! DEDICATION. Love born of thoughts whose lightning Scarce lingers in the skies ! Child-memories slowly bright'ning Through mists of slumb'ring eyes ! What hand so close can hold us, What lips breathe holier breath, Till thy dark arms enfold us, Our second mother. Death ? I give with tears the verses In joy kept back from thee : E'en now my heart rehearses That hour of promis'd glee ; But though, the more to endear them, I write them thine to day, Ah me ! thou wilt not hear them : Too far — too far away ! ' DEDICATION. Till this one change have found us, The hours their glass forget, The old arms linger round us, The child-heart holds us yet ; But, once this tie dissever'd. We gird our loins to go. Though lips with love be fever'd And feet from sorrow slow. My bark has slipt her moorings ; One bend obscures the bay; New banks with new allurings Invite who can to stay : High crags and grassy hollows — Past both alike we flee : Come deep waves or come shallows, It must come soon — the sea. 1867. ODE TO HARMONY I. Spirit of Harmony divine, Whom I so long have worshipp'd from afar, Not having call'd thee mine, Do thou at length draw near. And for a little season deign to be Lord of all my melody, And master of my soul ; Whence may the rythmic numbers roll In not unworthy lays Of thee, who art the universal Whole, Of thee, great Spirit, who wast before the days ODE TO HARMONY. Of human blame or human praise, When all the earth was silent, but for thee, Who spakest then in flower and tree. In cloud and sky, or running rill, In whatsoever was and knew not ill, In all things that obeyed the high Creator's will. II. Alas ! of thee how little do we know. Or have new strength to learn ! — Who cannot well discern Even in our best endeavour Those simpler strains of thine, that round us flow For ever and for ever ; Even in our purest thought We cannot well be taught To see and hear thee, Spirit, who dost dwell In every hill, in every dell, ODE TO HARMONY. Where grasses grow and waters sleep, Or where these lightly spring, And through the meadows winding bring Comfort to flowers that weep — Then forward flash and leap. And blending on their way With all glad things and gay In preludes fair and mazy symphonies Do such sweet concert keep, That at the last they join without surprise In the everlasting chorus of the deep. 111. The seasons rise and fall. And, each succeeding each with more delight, Build up the mighty fugue; and, wov'n though all, The theme of this their music, "Day and Night," Doth never, never cease ; 8 ODE TO HARMONY. With thee for king and guide, In mystic change they glide, And still with sweet return do lessen and increase. IV. We only have fall'n from such a height so low, We at the first o'er all created things Created kings : For look ! with all things else it is not so ; The tender flowers thy government obey, And, each in order due Returning, fill the happy earth alway With looks of love and eyes of natural hue. The nightingale forgetteth not her song. Which God hath taught her with shrill throat to tune Deep in the drowsy woodlands, all night long, Under the silent moon : Out of her sinless heart o'erflows ODE TO HARMONY. The joyful thought that bids her sing : She hath no care, no fear she knows For what to-morrow's dawn may bring, And nothing can her touch "With sense of sadness for the former years — Alas ! our deepest, sweetest thoughts are such As fill the eyes with tears. V. Hence we may no longer hope Without a touch of pain To watch the red sun slowly slope Behind the mountains to the main, As in the days of old ; And our heart must blindly grope To the light that shineth ever Through darkness blank and cold ; And if at even we behold lO ODE TO HARMONY. Over some majestic river Summer's green or autumn's gold By the fitful breezes tost, In every shadow we foresee A darker that is yet to be, And in all tender lights on flower and tree The light of Eden lost. VI. Yet, Spirit, grant me this, Sometimes to lift me with thy wings Far, far above each jarring sound that rings On earth's discordant sphere To thine abodes of bliss ; That I may see and hear What only true and perfect concord is, And what the glorious ending Toward which the souls are tending Of those whom thou dost perfect and hold dear ODE TO HARMONY. I I VII. For oh ! thou hast not left us all alone, In utter solitude Upon our ills to brood, Or faint in searching for a bliss unknown ; It cannot be that all our love is flown So far from thee, the source of all our good ; He knows it, whosoe'er hath stood But for a moment betwixt heaven and hell, Doubtful to plunge or climb, And, in his agony hardly choosing this. Hath spurned the black abyss, And up towards heaven achieved his way sublime — He knows and he remembers well The rapture of that time ; When first from his freed spirit fell A veil more thick than that of cloud Which hides the mountain from God's face, 12 ODE TO HARMONY. When the molten glacier roars aloud, And the sunbeams find no peering-place, And snowy hurricanes sweep the frosted pine- Then is given him to divine Faultless beauty, and from far Music's golden rule to see — That which was and is to be — A perfect love that blends with perfect law : Till he has quite forgot his old desire, And nothing now seems fair, but only this, To soar and sing with that celestial choir, Or else on earth to make their service his ; And lo ! his own will is no more his own, Lost in thy bright and perfect majesty. To whom is given the universal rule Of earth, and air, and sea ; For he beholds thee, Spirit, beautiful, And that there is none other like to thee ; ODE TO HARMONY. 13 AH meaner passions from his breast are flown, And in thy light he lives, one glorious hour, alone. VIII. Wherefore the birds may sing, The flowers bloom on, the happy waters flow, And every loud-lipp'd cave of ocean ring : Let all glad things be glad, And let the stately seasons come and go. Our heart shall not be sad : But when thy star-tun'd voices round us roll, Or, steep'd in silence of poetic thought, We search for God and thee through deeps of soul, Albeit for some far-distant end we yearn, Thanks for the present trust such hours have taught, That thou wilt yet return — Wilt yet make earth and heaven and all things thine, Spirit, long-lost, divine ! TO THE SPIRIT OF UNREST. Thy hands are at my throat, thy knee Knit firm upon my breast ; I am spent, I have no more strength to see : And thou — what would' st thou more with me, O Spirit of Unrest ? Time was, thou knowest, I found in thee A master to my mind, Chafed under thy light tyranny No worse than some chid wave at sea, That bridles to the wind : TO THE SPIRIT OF UNREST. 1 5 O days ! when it was joy and pride, Waking, to hear thee sing ' Up ! up ! ' or ever at thy side To sigh or to be weary-eyed Was an imagin'd thing. Nay, thy own waves seemed laggard too, Thy lightnings slow to run. So swift the new-born wonder grew, — Till sudden fell the wings that flew, And life's desire was done. Then mad with loss, though lorn of hope, Thou ledd'st me forth no less, Too weak to strive — with eyes wide ope Cast amid life's charr'd ruins to grope For childhood's palaces. 1 6 TO THE SPIRIT OF UNREST. I saw thee still in cloud and grass, Short sunshine, shifting snow ; I heard thy voice bid summer pass, And in my heart thy prayer — ' alas ! Would God that all might go ! ' Yet thus, while at thy feet I lie. My soul one secret knows ; And ' better,' my faint lips would cry, ' To toss in tempest-agony. Than stagnate in repose.' Even I, who am grown so weary of thee. Shall not be all unblest : — Who lacks not, lives not : it may be Thou wert the good Spirit to me, O Spirit of Unrest ! ODE TO WINTER. Cold winter, art thou come, With all thy savage blasts and shorten'd hours, With nothing in thine eyes but starved gloam. And sad forgetfulness of summer flowers, With little on thy lips but moaning drear ? Come, saddest that thou art, least lov'd of all the year. I know that through and through Thy bitter, piercing winds will search and leave No green upon the boughs, but quite undo The web that summer had such toil to weave, Then freeze her songs to silence, till no bird. Nor any passing stream along the woods be heard. l8 ODE TO WINTER. But now thy breath and face, Pale wasted features and devouring tongue, Seem fairer than young Spring in all her grace, Or Summer wantoning the fields among, Sweeter than king-cups crushed with foot of kine, Or balmy winds that breathe through forests of the pine. For what can Summer bring That should not make the heart more sad than gay ? Or what avails the awak'ning voice of Spring To boughs long cumber'd with the old year's decay r Or what know we of death, that we should borrow Comfort of earth's new joy, re-risen from Winter's sorrow: But think, if only we Might lay our hearts, even as the branches, bare. Cast our old burdens off like them, and be All night abandon'd to thy scourging air, How would our lighten'd spirits not droop, as now, To watch the year's young fire in every bursting bough 1 SONG. Bright snows, like fire on the mountains, When the sunbeam shall bid you die. It will be but to burst into fountains. And over the warm earth fly. Swift stream, though the sheer rock flout thee, From the death of yon cavern deep Thou wilt gather thy waves about thee. And on, like an eagle, sweep. We, too, with a blind devotion Press onward in trembling trust ; But is it to swift, sweet motion ? Or to darkness and silent dust ? A SON'S COMPLAINT. Sweet Nature, thou hast done me wrong, Own mother, I have lov'd thee true. Since when, thy flowers and fields among, A wondering child I grew. Till now, when, as thy voices roll, I feel the gathering passions throng, With thoughts that eddy round the soul, And fly for rest to song. A SONS COMPLAINT. 2 1 Sometimes thou thrill'st me with delight ; Thy beauty makes it bliss to be, At dead of noon, or when by night The stars look gloriously. And sometimes when the quiet breath Of evening on the mountain blows, I seem to read thy riddle ' death,' So sweet the sadness grows ; The eyes, that are within the soul. Do read a tale that cannot lie : For thou hast penn'd it on the scroll Of that fair even-sky. All these thou givest — a kingly dower — Yet would I of thy love complain. Who dost not soothe in troubled hour The poet's heart of pain. 2 2 A SON S COMPLAINT. To the tir'd earth night bringeth peace ; And, when they list, the winds are still ; The great heart of the grieved seas Beats quiet, when they will : This shore, that tossing sky of thine, Sleeps safe within the water's breast — But canst thou calm this heart of mine, Or teach it so to rest ? — ^r^ST^-^I^S^fc* A SAD THOUGHT. As we pass'd into the valley, Out of heaven a sunbeam sprang ; Stream to stream, like silver harp-strings Quivering on the mountains, rang. Sudden smiled each frowning forehead Of the sun-forsaken hills ; Sped the full voluptuous river Proudly to his foaming ghylls. Only yon dark silent yew-tree To the earth no gladness lent, Rising like a thought of sorrow, In the midst of merriment. THE TUNNEL. Out of the tunnel at last, I think ! — Not unlike that of my life, which has run Thro' the ribs of this mountain, I might have climb'd, But chose the black heart of it hid from the sun. So all this time I have had no peep Of the pure bright sea and the flocks abroad, Nor sunlight, nor starlight, save some few gleams Through shafts in the darkness let down by God; THE TUNNEL. 25 Nor sweet air's murmur, nor any rain, But a cliill wind dank with the dews of death, And, as water-floods break on a drowning brain, The sound of swift footing and furious breath. Then to think, as the barren black darkness you reap, That the hill-tops above with God's morning are red, Or the pale moon is gathering her stars, like sheep. Into fair, safe folds of the heaven overhead ! Came a whisper — ' still shines thy guiding star ; ' Came a shriek — 'this, too, shall avail thee not' — Like a hull on the sea, whose help is far, Man-forsaken and God-forgot. But a moment — a change ! for the black grew to gray ; The gray slowly quicken'd, till light dawn'd plain — Earth has seem'd purer, though far less gay, To the spirit that pass'd through that region of pain. TO THE SPIRIT OF BEAUTY. Oh for wings to follow thee ! Wings to waft, or feet to flee ! Though this film of flesh divide thee From our eyes, though tempests hide thee. Though thy form, for ever flying, Lure us but to leave us dying, Eyes that strain, and lips that greet, Hands that cannot clasp, are sweet ; How much sweeter then must be Wings or feet to follow thee ! TO THE SPIRIT OF BEAUTY. ^^ Sometimes, as thou mov'st along, We behold thee, and are strong — In a young child's happy breath, In the after-calm of death, In the love that turns to sweetness All our spirit's incompleteness, In remembrance doubly dear From the unseen sepulchre Of to-morrow's doubt and fear : When the crimson cloud-veil riven Bares the holiest place of heaven, Where her golden censers shine In deep vaults of night divine, When the Spring's o'erflowing blood Spreads like fire from bough to bud. E'er our eyes have learn'd the loss Of her first and virgin gloss, When the warm wet breezes rust 2 8 TO THE SPIRIT OF BEAUTY. The rich Autumn's golden dust, While the shepherd-south-wind grieves O'er his flocks of fallen leaves Fed with happier tears, and tended. And from withering frosts defended — Then thou beckonest * follow me ! ' And we have no feet to flee. Whither should we follow thee, Spirit of the earth and sea ? Thou art near us, thou art far, As a flower, or as a star ; For thy tears the morning fill. And thy foot-prints fire the hill. And thy voice is on the wind, But thyself we cannot find. Like the netted dove that sees Heaven o'erhead and shadowy trees. TO THE SPIRIT OF BEAUTY. 29 Like to thirst-slain souls that hear Hidden fountains murmuring near, Like the flower that silent turns Sunward, where the morning burns, Following him, though far above. With an endless, hopeless love, — Chain'd to dust we pant for thee, Yearning to be spirit-free. — i^>^%^SS-£>?>0-ra LOVE AND REST. Flower that followest all day long Tearless-eyed thy lover bright, Sun-flower, thou whose love is strong. And whose sleep is light, Flowers I know that softer shine, And with eve as calmly close. But what passion like to thine That turns to like repose ? I know love, the loves of men, Slow to waste, though sore to keep ; I have heard their sighs, and then I have seen them sleep ; LOVE AND REST. 57 But oh ! sunflower, ask not me If there dwell in human breast Such a grace of Constancy With such a gift of Rest. -7<(±;«iF^ FROZEN AT THE HEART. Yes, the forest-brakes are bursting, And the river runs its swiftest, And the sunbeams quench their thirsting In bright dew ; the lark thou liftest Shouting to the skies in madness, Happy wind, that, like a spirit Inarticulate for gladness, Pausest on thy cloud to hear it. Blessed ye ! who now inherit Your full powers, though transitory, Darken'd by no foul demerit, Sadden'd by no human story — As for me, behold me bringing Silence on my lips for singing, Clouds within my heart for glory. SONG. The mists are drawn to the blue sky ; The white streams gather to the sea ; And I, too, could not choose but fly, My own dear love, to thee : Soft winds breathed of thee, as in dream ; The still stars nightly looked of thee ; The sweet field's scent was thine, the stream Ran laughing that such joy should be. By all these things I knew that thou Wast somewhere waiting, sweet, for me : And lo ! I needs must follow now, And live and die with thee. HOPE. Cloudy heart, why whisperest thou To the leaden wave beneath thee ? Dost thou pine from anguish now In its sullen depths to sheathe thee ? Stream, my heart and thou are like — All too dull in cheerless weather : Clouds will vanish ; suns will strike ; And ye both shall shine together. DESPAIR. Now, Joy and Hope, good night ! Good night, a weary pair ! And, as a raven lustrous-black and rare Doth slowly at some cavern's mouth alight, Rent by the thunder-blare. So now my heart, Despair, Bids thee float in upon thy wings of night. Float calmly, darkly in, and fear no light. Nor other tenant there. SPRING. See ! the anguish of Earth with Winter closes — The wet cold tears and the crowns of thorn ; And Spring lights the flames of the pale primroses, Dim like to torch-fires at flush of morn : For Spring walks forth with a brand fresh-lighted, Touching each spot where the flowers are few ; And those that by Winter were quench'd or blighted Kindle and burst into flame anew. And all gentle sounds, to the hour belonging, From her feet and her forehead are softly shed, And wafts of sweet odours, the mild air thronging, Mix till the sense is bewildered. SPRING. 63 She has call'd to the streams, and they answer faintly, Not quite unafraid of the frost's fierce lip ; Yet they laugh to themselves as they follow her gently. For gladness of her sweet fellowship. Then the old Earth wakes from her sleep of horror, And her heart, like the youngest, beats fresh and new ; For she knows that the long sweet Summer is before her, Summer, and- the gold-hair'd Autumn too. Yes, the wail and the anguish of Earth now closes : Who doubts, let him hear what the black-bird saith : For Spring gets more joy than Winter loses, When God wakes the flowers from their dream of death. A FAREWELL. A long farewell ! great heart and true, Too great to care for human spite ; They could not love so fine a light, A brightness which they never knew : Yet, though thy clay returns to clay, Unvoiced within the silent tomb. The man we loved will pierce the gloom, And speak with us for many a day ; Will leave a light more glorious yet. But softer, as the day is done ; That they, who could not see thy sun, May love thy beams when thou art set. THE FLOWERS SURPRISED. How still they seem to blossom there — The flowers our woodland-bank o'er-brimming ! Yet once I caught them unaware, Ere they could hush their hymning : Drunk with the sun, though mix'd with dew. To look, to listen, they forgot ; I saw — alas ! how brief a view ! — The ground enchanted where they grew, And heard — ah me ! but what ? A song that was so heavenly-gay, It fled from human ears away, A speech so spirit-pure and good, I could not tell it if I would. CLOUD-LIFE. From the world's noise, last night, And from its shows, that lie, I was uplifted by a light, And a splendour in the sky — Red waves of fire for storm, And a rosy isle for rest. And many a golden, gracious form- But one that I loved best — So small, you scarce could find it. But so sweet, till it was gone ; For a light of Life enshrined it. As it meekly travelled on. THE ATMOSPHERE OF POETRY, Like cloudy shapes, that float or lie Beneath still depths of azure sky — Dull dream-like forms, that have their birth And semblance from the insensate earth, Till, mix'd with heaven, they learn to share The pulses of the purple air, So round the poet's feet are roll'd Dim fancies, colourless and cold. Skirting the lustral deeps, that lie Within his soul's transparent sky. And are not fleet, themselves, or fair, Till mix'd with that refulgent air. WINTER-MUSIC. My heart is ev'n a desert-grove, Where not a wild bird sings of June, Nor ever nightingale her love Thrills darkling to the throned moon : 'O When suns are warm, and soft winds sleep, When Glory walks from glade to glade, Then most of all dread silence deep Doth that mysterious heart pervade : But should soft skies be changed to rude, Rough Eurus for the zephyr blow, Should all chill powers in malice-mood Forbid the frozen sap to flow. These boughs, that silent slept so long, Awake, and shudder into song. TWO CHARACTERS. See there ! for this man, too, life's toil is over; His words are all said out ; his deeds are done ; For this man, too, there comes a rest, however Unquiet passed his time beneath the sun. You said what seemed you best ; your life's poor fountain Just bubbled, whilst his soared or shuddered down ; You chid him as a tir'd boy chides a mountain ; You frowned on him, and thought God, too, must frown. His worst thought was so great, your best so little, Your best and worst not yours, his all his own ; You ran the world's safe way ; he dared to thwart it ; You stood with thousands by you, he alone. 70 TWO CHARACTERS. Wherefore, when God shall judge the world, I take it, He will not mete this man by rule and line, Who felt no common thirst, nor feared to slake it From that which flowed within him — the Divine : Or think you God loves our tame levell'd acres More than the proud head of some heaven-kiss'd hill ? Man's straight-dug ditch more than His own free river, That wanders. He regarding, where it will ? Enough — high words abate no jot or tittle Of what, while man still lasts, shall still be true — Heaven's great ones must be slander'd by Earth's little, And God makes no ado. A PORTRAIT. There he goes, as you say, like a madman ! — His clothes all awry, And a fine lofty scorn for things human In forehead and eye. Poor man that scarce owns an acquaintance ! If he had but a friend Just to tell him straight out in one sentence How matters will end ! When body and mind have gone mouldy, 'T were something to say " There now, you would have it ; I told ye ; You would not obey : 72 A PORTRAIT. What fniit ever came of such dreaming. But despondence and fear ? " — Hark now ! better hush this blaspheming, Lest an angel should hear. Poor man ? — Aye indeed, for his mortal Is quench'd in divine : Meanly clad ? — but may be at Death's portal His raiment vi^ill shine. Scornful-eyed ? — Why that eye pierces thorough Both your slanders and you : Sad ? — Yes, for he knows of the sorrow God gives unto few. There he goes, as you say, but no fool he, With One for his friend ; And I fancy He knows somewhat truly * How matters will end.' THE POET AND THE PEOPLE. You care not for the splendour and the passion, The march of music and the glow of speech — Would rest, not strive, content with this world's fashion, To heights beyond your reach. "Some must do earth's real work — we fain would do it- Be dull and humble some, not soar and shine : What part have we with painter or with poet, Things earthly with divine ?" 74 THE POET AND THE PEOPLE. So 't is to-day, so yesterday ; to-morrow The same fool's fable will be sung again ; You dream not that the Artist's school is sorrow, The Poet's teacher Pain. 'T is you that gape at heaven, scorn earth below it — Your human nature narrow'd to a span : Heaven cannot teach you, if earth fail to show it, The majesty of man. The soaring bird stoops lowest ; base things and noble, The seer sees each and all with human eyes, Cuts deeper through life's rock, intent to double The striving and the prize. You call his life 'calm,' spent in Truth's high quarrel. His songs 'sweet,' that in blood and pain were born ; You think not of the brows beneath your laurel Red-bleeding from the thorn : THE POET AND THE PEOPLE. 75 You choke life's meaning out — love, tears, and laughter — With vague, mad visions of some cold Ideal ; He, looking, trusts or doubts the dread Hereafter, But knows that Now is real. You give him praise for some strange star, some comet Across your skies of alien birth and breath ; God gives him life, to plunge into and plumb it Even to the dregs of death. Aye, gives him, over all, his bliss, to know it, And, under all, his gulfs of pain to span — Not more ' divine,' but most supremely Poet, When most intensely Man. THE TWO PATHS. Thus far then side by side The self-same path we've plied — Our hope, our prospect and horizon one : Now this new path I choose ; Yet blame not, nor accuse, But, parting, bid me in God's name go on. For still by day or night, Through travail and delight. With men, or talking with the earth and sea, I find no written rule. No form of creed or school. But something that beats here is more to me. THE TWO PATHS. 77 'T is bitter so to part ; But falsehood to the heart Shoots bitterer arrows barb'd with self-disdain : The beaten ways are sweet, Worn by a thousand feet — Not with old foot-prints be my path made plain ! Think not the Eternal Good Is measur'd by man's rood, His thoughts scann'd, as the stars are, one by one; No prophet, saint, or sage Shall sum up Truth, or gauge God's purpose ripening while the ages run. In crocus and in rose Though the same sunshine glows, One flower waves crimson, and one trembles gold : Dost thou alone claim sight ? Is Love less free than Light ? Love's rays in human hearts less manifold ? 78 THE TWO PATHS. Nay, yet through scorn and hate We hail but one thing great, One power, the universal heart approves : With Love's free sandals shod Man's feet may find out God, Far from the world's great ways and echoing grooves. FAILURE. Victor, from the fight disrobing ! Lover, now that heaven's attain'd ! Ere the shouts be lost in sobbing, The clear heaven with storm-cloud stain' d, Mind ye 'mid your golden sunset, Or triumphant trumpet's sound, Hearts as brave, yet brok'n in onset, Lovers, but with love uncrowned ? Heed not ; pay no vain recital. Tithes of pity, praise, or tears — Glorious in their unrequital. Richer for the world's arrears ! 8o FAILURE. Though your fame wax old before ye, Though Love's leaf with frost be curl'd, Justice bares for these her glory, Veil'd but from the vulgar world ; Where they strawed, who reap but stubble, Silent and unseen She stands. With a look that makes more noble Than the kiss of sceptred hands ; And a crown She weaves for ever — Bloodless thorn and sweeten'd rue— For each noble lost endeavour Of the souls that died to do. PYGiMALION'S STATUE. O that stoty of the statue ! Statue shaped with art so rare That your sculptor, gazing at you, Loved, in spite of the despair, Till sweet Art took Nature's breath, Lent you life, and gave you death ! While he sighed "Ah ! fond beginner, If indeed your hands wrought v\-ell, Beauty should catch life within her — Bird-like break its ivory shell " — One more touch — her breast behold ! Tremulous in the garment's fold. 82 Pygmalion's statue. But while fear and rapture mingled, And the swift surprise of seeing, How those shuddering pulses tingled With the first faint flush of being. Out he bursts with sudden cry — "She will change, grow old, and die." So to gain her was to lose her. So to quicken was to kill : Heart-enshrin'd, Love sleeps ; but, use her, She will wake to perish still — Yet would I — who would not ? — choose So to gain and so to lose. ON THE DEATH OF ARTEMUS WARD. Is he gone to a land of no laughter — This man that made mirth for us all ? Proves Death but a silence hereafter, Where the echoes of Earth cannot fall ? Once closed, have the lips no more duty ? No more pleasure the exquisite ears ? Has the heart done o'erflowing Avith beauty. As the eyes have with tears ? 84 ON THE DEATH OF ARTEMUS WARD. Nay, if aught be sure, what can be surer, Than that earth's good decays not with earth ? And of all the heart's springs none are purer Than the springs of the fountains of mirth ? He that sounds them has pierced the heart's hollows, The places where tears are and sleep ; For the foam flakes, that dance in life's shallows, Are wrung from life's deep. He came with a heart full of gladness From the glad-hearted world of the West, Won our laughter, but not with mere madness. Spake and joked with us, not in mere jest : For the Man in our heart lingered after, When the merriment died from our ears, And those who were loudest in laughter Are silent in tears. A FACT Scarce seven days since God saw go forth A child in girlhood's beauty. To do, whate'er its little worth, Her simple task of duty : She has left the cottage gay and glad, — No fear, no thought of horror, But child-like thinking how she had The whole bright Spring before her. God saw her go — sees all, we trust — No deed to Him mis-stated. Yet knew, oh ! think, how blood and lust His little one awaited. 86 A FACT. You say ' mere blasphemy to think ;' I say, though lip scarce brave it, He saw His child tread hell's red brink. And stretched no hand to save it. And mark ! small need of marvels here — How simple the solution ! Some brute-scent of discovery near, Brute-fear of retribution, One child-like impulse on her way By that dark house to have hasted — Hell's trump had chok'd one triumph-bray. One life less sered and blasted. Will ye sink back then ? — take your ease ?— Sigh ' needs must come offences ? ' — Trust to your pious ' if God please,' And special Providences ? A FACT. 87 Or is He wrath — for lack of prayer His little ones forsaking ? Why, cry aloud then, cry, nor spare, He sleeps and needs awaking. Shout ! leap ! what fierj' signal shone ? What voice from heaven rewarded ? ' No voice,' at even shall ye moan, ' Nor any that regarded.' ' Yet He is Love ' — I know it, and fain Would trust Love's dark revealing — His law burnt through us, that human pain Through human help find healing. Out on false faith ! Come teach who can ! Nay, Preacher, spare your trouble, Show first what beauty lives in man. And what in life is noble ; 88 A FACT. Throw wide their heart to the warm sun, Make place for light and pleasure, Teach them life's gain on earth begun, Then talk of heavenly treasure — Thy law burnt through us ! Oh ! strong and good, How hard Love's task to engrave it ! Thou that must see Thy lamb's shed blood, And stretch no hand to save it ! <^>r^jjj§Xr>'^=3--vj NATURE'S TASK IN MODERN TIMES. Ah ! do we sometimes sigh to be Like those of old, who dwelt and sang Where holier streams and haunted sea To Nereid and to Naiad rang ? And all earth's riper gains forego— Faith, knowledge, light, and liberty, So were it ours, like them, to know That life is lovely, ere we die ? Our years in reckless haste are spent. Our springs of life too quickly dried- Borne onward by each hour's event, Or victims to the advancing tide : go nature's task in modern times. New laws are ours ; new arts we know. New stars in heaven, they saw not shine : But where is fled the warmth, the glow, That made the very grass divine ? Enough, it can be so no more ; The days of golden calm are dead ; Gone are the sea-nymphs from the shore. The Oreads from the mountain-head : Say, hath she ceased to minister Rest to man's toil, and balm for pain ? Loves Nature those who love but her As some mere mistress, light and vain ? Nay, like the Spartan mother, she The recreant from her breast would spurn, Bidding him strive to death, if he The guerdon of her love would earn. NATURES TASK IN MODERN TIMES. 9 1 And as a child, who starts in fright From drifting agonies of dream, Sees slowly with returning sight His mother in the morning beam. So from life's feverish whirl awaked I glad my wondering eyes with thee. Till thought is calmed and spirit slaked With murmurs of the eternal sea. Yes, for through suffering we may win Peace, that to them thou couldst not give : Fresh from the mad world's dust and din. Our lips are fain to drink and live ; Our eyes old custom cannot blind To beauty ; but when toil has end, And we are satiate of mankind, To walk with Nature as a friend — 92 nature's task in modern times. Bathe in her light, and breathe her life- Such profit of our pain have we, Whose ears are vex'd with inland strife. Whose ways are seldom by the sea. t^^£^ A FAREWELL ODE. Comrades, I bid you weep ; Save this, there is no solace left to show : In all fair harvests that our hands shall mow, Henceforth the master-reaper will not reap. Idle it is 'gainst adverse fates to strive. And with vain effort still keep grief alive : There is a time for tears too, as for sleep — Let your tears flow. 94 A FAREAVELL ODE. Brothers, I bid you sing, Because Truth fails not, though the great go by, Arid those frail souls, that win to her on high, Abide unvex'd by vain imagining. Low at her feet the white waves howl for hate ; She is so calm and they so passionate. Let us be glad together for this thing — Truth cannot die. Children, I bid you pray ; So, though we look not on his like again. Maybe his memory will our hearts sustain, And some pure portion of his spirit stay. This, too, he taught us ; and 'tis no light gift To souls sore-blinded by the tempest-drift — That who on heaven's high succour wait alway. Wait not in vain. A FAREWELL ODE. 9$ Once more, I bid you peace. How should weak song put sorrow out of sight ? There are who clamour at love, and curse the light ; Silence alone is holy till they cease. Yea, oh ! our Master, for ourselves and thee Sweet is the silence, since joy may not be — God of thy day's work give thee fair increase, And a good night. oo:3&tP^ MEMORY I am born of the early sweet shadows, 'Mid the bubbling of birds and of streams ; As morn breaks the mists from the meadows, I move through the dark of your dreams. Fair am I, as the feet of Aurora, Yet pale, like the garments of eve ; I am Ceres, and I am Pandora, To heal with my gifts or to grieve. MEMORY. 97 In the depth of primeval abysses, Where the soul is not shapen to dwell, I quicken the dark with vague blisses, Strange visions of heaven or of hell : As the cloud-veils slow-bright'ning surrender Dawn's secret at last to the sea, So pale out of night, and so tender The faint far arising of me. As the moon, when the sun is departed, Makes glorious the regions of gloam, I am life to the desolate-hearted, To the wanderers hope and a home ; I can cheer when all lovers forsake you, I can poison your mirth with despair : If ye mount up to heaven, I o'ertake you. Or plunge down to hell, I am there. gS MEMORY. As ye watch where, to sink and to sunder, Time's billows break fast on the strand, I reveal the bright floor-way thereunder, Mesh'd curves of the sensitive sand : Old foot-prints are plain — ye may trace them- Strewn spilth of life's bountiful urn ; Ye may rue, but can never erase them. And mourn, but ye shall not return. All the lore of past infinite ages — Man's wisdom for ages to be — I have writ on Earth's adamant pages. My dark sayings in deeps of the sea. Night and silence weave veils to enfold me. But I pass to your spirit through these ; In the setting of suns ye behold me. And hear in the sighing of trees. MEMORY. 99 Not of earth is the succour I send you, Oh ! ye creatures of transient breath ! As an angel of light I attend you To the gloom of the gateway of Death : But I pass from his shadowy portal, To finish what first I began — Making radiant with footsteps immortal The path of ephemeral man. THE TRUE GREATNESS. Not bewilder'd, though fate have bereft us Of the strength we had counted our own, Not dismay'd, though the sunlight have left us At noontide alone. No, nor stunn'd with the stroke of our sorrow, Though, 'mid perils and pestilent air. We may seek where the heart loved to borrow. And help is not there. " Scanty praise ! " do you cry, shallow reader ? "Weak worship, scarce better than scorn 1 Will ye praise him for lord and lost leader, Whose loss can be borne ? THE TRUE GREATNESS. 10 1 Is the hero not great by the token That without him no work can be well, As the arm of the Spartan fell broken, When Brasidas fell ? " Oh ! but is it not, comrades, his glory, That we dare look alone on the foe ? That ye cried, as he went out before ye, God help us ! but go ? Man worships the splendours that blind him, Then vanish ; but show me, who can. One that leaves his own greatness behind him — This, this is the man. THE BALLAD OF LITTLE MAISIE. " Mother, mother, I'm weary o' bed ; ( White apple-blooms hloivn on the oixhard-floor ! ) The sun shines sweet through the curtain-head : (And oh / hereafter and herebefore I J " Do on my clothes, my own mother dear, f White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor ! J My bonnet fine with the gay feather : (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore ! ) " My velvet shoon bring hither to me : ( White apple-blooms blown on the orchaj-d-floor ! ) And eke my gown of the cramoisie : (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore ! ) THE BALLAD OF LITTLE MAISIE. 103 " Come, Sister Janet, to the hawthorn-bush : fWhiie apple-blooms blown on the orchatd-floor !J We will listen and look for the dappled thrush. (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore I J *' We will gather the cowslip and blue-bell, (White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor !J The cuckoo-pint and the periwinkle. fAnd oh ! hereafter and herebefore !) " With the flowers we'll make a wreath for my head ; ( White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor !J And Willie and I for play will wed." (And oh I hereafter and herebefore !J " But Maisie, my darling, Maisie, my dear, f White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor !j Through the open window the thrush sings clear. fAnd oh ! hereafter and herebefore !) 104 THE BALLAD OF LITTLE MAISIE. " Maisie, my child, my maiden sweet, (White apple -blooms bloivn on the orchard-floor ! ) The grass is o'erlong for your tender feet." (And oh ! hereafter and herehefore ! ) " But last year, my mother, you said not so : ( White apple-blooms blown on the orchard floor 1) But last year you were fain to let me go. (And oh I hereafter and herebefore I) " 'T is sweet to be out in the summer hours : (White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor I j I should like to lie all day in the flowers." (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore I J ■K- ■Sf is- ic -ic " All day, all night in the flowers, my child, ( White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor I ) Through summer sweet, through winter wild ! (And oh 1 hereafter and herebefore I ) THE BALLAD OF LITTLE MAISIE. 10; " Ye may draw the curtain close, Willie, ( White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor ! ) Little IMaisie will no more wed with thee. (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore !J " Ye may make the chamber dark, Janet ; (White apple-blooms blown on the orchard-floor ! J And would God for me it were darker yet ! " (And oh ! hereafter and herebefore ! ) S'3>^gs^<@0^— TRANSLATION FROM MDME. EMILE DE GIRARDIN. Angel all-discerning, Thou, whose fiery eyes Pierce the heart's hid yearning. Tell me all his sighs : Say, while braving danger On the wrathful sea, From his home a ranger, Where in thought is he ? TRANSLATION FROM MDME. EMILE DE GIRARDIX. 107 When his white sails shimmer, Fluttering to the gale, When the gold star-glimmer Lights the waters pale, When he gazes lonely O'er the stormless sea, If his heart sigh only, Of whom then dreams he ? When the storm-cloud mutters On the breast of Night, And the deep wave utters Voices of affright. If in fear and wonder Peril strange he see, ']Mid the threatening thunder, For whom trembles he ? TO THE DAISY. I choose thee from a thousand flowers, Fair trampled star of English meads ; Thou, simplest-born of Summer hours, Hast help for deepest human needs : Not that thy light illumes the blind, Or makes the sensual heart to glow, But for the wisest fail to find The power that bids thee sun-ward blow. We peer through all thy tiny frame, From dark green stem to golden disk ; And Science slays thee for a name, With deadlier eye than basilisk ; TO THE DAISY. 109 All, all thy members in her book Are written, see, with endless pains : We think to learn thee at a look. But still the mystery remains. Ah ! simple flower, unknown to grief, That, when thy summer-days are done, Through dauntless hope and long belief Art first to greet the April sun ; Great Science, though she count thee blind, A truer insight learns from thee — E'en where she faulters most to find A more sublime philosophy. Whenas with half-uncover' d cup, Yet fearful of the wintry chill, To that dear Sun thy heart goes up. Who knows to fill it, and who will ; no TO THE DAISY. How, like a cage-escaped bird New-wak'd 'mid forest leaves to sing, Thy gentle sense is tun'd and stirr'd To all the harmonies of Spring ! The balmier air, the softer sod, The whisper as of wings that heal — Thy measure of the gifts of God — What need to prove it ? thou canst feel No fruit of knowledge deadly-fair, With foretaste sweet and after-dole, E'er touched thy lips and turned to air, And left the hunger on thy soul. Ah ! yet, to love the light were much. To wait on heaven through alter'd skies- Such is a daisy's faith, and such The wisdom of the truly wise ; TO THE DAISY. I I I More certain truth ye may not find- Let this be ours till life be done, A patient heart, a lowly mind, An eye fix'd ever on the sun. ^^^^MS^^S^^"- — NIGHT. Night followed passionless and still ; God laid the frolic breezes by, With rose and gold upon the hill, And rose upon the sky ; And tir'd trees stretched their arms and slept, And flowers contented closed their eyen : Then forth from their long hiding crept The new-wak'd stars to shine : Only the birds would not forget Their singing and the gladsome day, And as for me — mine eyes are wet For sweet hours fled away. SONNETS. SONNETS. 115 I. Shall I forget thee when the Spring comes back, And the green mists begin about the trees, And cling, and brighten ; when no heart has lack Of living, and no ear of melodies, And no eyes weary of the rainless air ? The world grows sweeter than a heart can bear, 'Live with white violets, whose breath has made Earth like a pillow where young heads are laid, Fragrant and frail and hid in their warm hair; When all sweet flower-scents rise, like happy rhymes From golden memories of olden times, And out of death springs life, and joy from pain, And laughter to young lips, and love to men — Shall I forget thee then, forget thee then ? Il6 SONNETS. II. Nature, when I deplore the fates that bind My spirit to a life unlov'd by thee, My limbs to pace this narrow room, my mind To hour on hour of dull monotony. When I recall how glorious and how free, Lost on thy mountains amid wave and wind, To learn the blessedness of hearts that find, Of ears that hear thee, and of eyes that see — Then dream that I am fall'n beneath thy frown, Doom'd to be no more with thee, no more wise — What joy to think, thine too these common skies. This field — thy finger wove its floral crown ; Oh ! mother, thine this silence that comes down, And bears the nightingale's great song, and dies ! SONNETS. 117 III. Schumann, who dares to mount with thee, must dare Of pain and peril all a man may know, Battle and the cry to them that will not spare Their charioting — glory and blood and woe ; And inarticulate passion moaning low, Mix'd with mute calms and holy quietings. That one might say, " fire and the flight of wings Through heaven beside his feet are slack and slow ;" — Hope, with an utter sadness creeping through, Joy, that for ever coming comes not quite. And seething of black clouds more black than night. And heights of blessedness more pure than snow. Where one plunge downward bringeth to the brink Of passionless despair — but who would shrink ? Il8 SONNETS. IV. I saw a lark mount up from earth to heaven, When thunder and fierce lightnings were abroad : With one bright crash the neighbouring oak was riven, And bent knees trembled in the House of God. The white-rob'd choir a solemn chant they sang — " Lord, let me know the number of my days :" But fiercer overhead the lightning sprang. And blacker darkness swallowed up the blaze. Then rose the bird — through all that storm she flew — So large her love, and such a heart to sing ! And poured the sweetest of all songs she knew, And shamed the frown of heaven with fearless wing : When she returned, I looked — the skies were clear — And listened — but no thunder could I hear. SONNETS. 119 V. Whenas my heart would fain break out in song, Ev'n as the full buds burst in merry May, Then comes a frost with breath so cruel-strong, It dares not ope or blossom to the day. All furious winds do seem to rage in air ; From North and South are passions without rest, And keen Regret from the wild East is there, And Zephyr-Hope blows faintly from the West : Where flowers have been, deep lies the drifted snow, Nor I can sing, nor any bird to-day : Half-froz'n itself the stream of Love runs slow — Is Summer dead ? or hath she lost her way ? — When this is so, when Winter will not flee. What should I do but fly, my Spring, to thee } 120 SONNETS. VI. Lift high the torch of Science ; let it wave ! Search out the coming and the going wind ; Read ye the secrets of the eternal Mind, And go forget the eternal Heart that gave ! Ev'n now men sow and reap, and thank not God ; " Earth and her cloud obey but natural laws — What need of thanks ?— Effect but follows cause, And suns must shine upon the moisten'd sod." Ah ! not for these the song of the wild lark, And worship, and the worth of all that is ! But, God, thou knowest in Love is our best bliss. In Knowledge not, albeit a heavenly spark. Give Light and Love— else, if they will not this. Put out their candle, God, and leave them dark. SONNETS. 1 2 1 VII. I saw in dream where met proud rivers twain From the East and West — one without storm or stain, Clear-eyed and paved with crj-stal, as to glass The merest speck that in the air might pass Above it ; the other, from remoter springs, Soil'd with long travel and passionate outgoings, Full-vein'd and swoll'n with ore from the iron rock, Impetuous sped to meet it : at the shock Earth reeled, and heaven grew dark with sudden gloam Above the impenetrable spray. What wonder, If men's eyes, baffled by the blinding foam. Saw not beyond, where 'scaped the smoke and thunder. Through prosperous fields, bright-blazon'd fold on fold. One clear strong stream their glorious course they hold ? 122 SONNETS. VIII. Sorrow, I have one word to sing to thee, So beautiful thou seemest : I would say That, ev'n as the dim twilight passeth day, So art thou fairer than all joys that be. A long time hast thou sojourn'd here with me, Dwelling in this deep soul, when no man thought ; And it is twilight there, and I can see The pure stars and the splendour noon hath not. Men do not love thee nor thy tearful face, Perceiving not the grace That from those downcast eyes doth meekly shine : They love their foolish pleasures — mirth and noise — But I love thee, and would no more rejoice, For thou art of the Silence — Be thou mine ! SONNETS. 123 IX. sing, sing, sing, O nightingale, sing on ! None knowing why is it thou dost cry to God, Thus voiceful 'mid the voiceless all alone At midnight, with no gentle thing abroad. Singest at this still hour, that He may hear Far up thy frequent voice and none but thine ? Or is it sorrow moves thee ? dost thou pine For that earth is not purer, being so fair ? Or lovest thou for itself this quiet air ? Or hath the moon bewitched thee, 'scaped her cloud. With sad complaint and soon with laughter loud To mourn by turns and mock thine own despair ? — Whatever bids thee, sing till night is gone : 1 only am awake— sweet bird, sing on ! 124 SONNETS. X. This is the charmed hour and noon of night : A rich earth-fragrance rides upon the gale, Mingled with heaven's own dews, and moonbeams pale Float down, and flood the lawn with faery light. How loud the stillest day would seem, how bright The softest, to this hour of spirit-rest ! See ! where above the black fir's slendering crest, In sky-abysses calm and infinite, Ever one star with pure and perfect ray Shines as through tears ! Far off the night-bird cries ; And low winds whisper of the glad surprise Of death, and regions very far away — While thou, poor Spirit, from this prison-clay May'st look and long, but hast no wings to rise. SONNETS. 125 XL Soft lights on sleeping meadows, the first cry Of birds that break the hallow'd hush of dawn, Or leaping of white waves, or windy sky, With many a bold cloud-gesture over-drawn, Bright forest-glades, where springs the fearful fawn, And quiet noises all day long surprise, Laughter of sudden brook, or silent eyes Cluster'd in heaven, or wandering moon forlorn — If each of these with rare and several grace Do sometimes win my very heart away. Oh ! how to tell of her, in whose sweet face I count their sum of sweetness every day, And know each smile, each look of love, I see. Is true as heaven, and all for only me ? 126 SONNETS. XII. Death, and the pour'd-out fury of driven seas, Or a blind multitude madden'd by despair. Or winds that drag down forests by the hair, Until they howl for agony — before these Frail perishable flesh must quake and cower : Thus far with trembling knees We bow before great Nature's energies, Worshipping the resistlessness of Power. Thus far indeed, wild mob and seas and wind, Avails ungovernable Fury blind — Yet deem not this the highest ! as if man's soul Would stoop to tremble for her storm and shaking !- Man, that has learnt, all meaner force forsaking. The sublime strength that can itself control. SONNETS. 127 XIII. O thou that comest on earth to spoil and sting, More joyless from remember'd joys of Spring, Paler and sicklier for red Summer's health, And ten-fold fruitless after Autumn's wealth, Winter ! once more thou'rt with us on that fierce foot That stamps the swift stream to a marble slab. And from thy quiver the frozen lightnings stab Down through earth's armour to the deep tree-root. There is in all the world no flower or tune Where thou abidest, but barren hoar-frost white, And snow-blooms blown from heaven, till the aching light Has darken'd from swift noon to after-noon — Then lo ! the subtle-broider'd tent of Night, Full of gold buds and one white flower, the Moon ! 128 SONNETS. XIV. Melhinks my heart is cold and earthl) grown, So little doth the sight of any tree, Or voice of winds that rave all night alone. Or glories of the mountain, profit me. The world becomes too wise : yet wiser far Was He that fixed in heaven yon burnish'd star, And thought to glad us with His morning-skies : But nothing now hath any new surprise ; Daylight is common, and the darkness naught ; We cannot read God's silence, as we ought. And Nature's voice falls oftenest on deaf ears — Yet can I sometimes lift enraptur'd eyes, And sometimes, too, divine immortal thought. Alone, upon a starry night, with tears. SONNETS. 129 XV. O brave sweet bird ! how dost thou lift my heart ! Which singest on thy green bough above the snow — Thy one green bough, no frost can from thee part — To the dear Summer-months that lag so slow. " Be quick, be quick," thou sayest, and yet I know Summer will come not for thy cry, but first Sad nights a-many, and sharp winds to and fro Devouring, in dark caves of Northland nurs'd ; And hail, not flowers; and ice, not murmuring wave; Low-flapping clouds for the high-tented heaven — All these for many a day, ere Spring be given ! Yet Spring must come, thou sayest, sweet bird and brave ! Think, Poet, to sing like this — how great it were ! High-based on living thought, when all things else are bare. 9 130 SONNETS. XVI. Ye that inhabit there above the sea ! In all our storms holy and silent still, My soul's soul from a place of boundless ill Springs to you, sorely travailing to be free. All night ye swim through heaven's immensity, Beholding that which is : nothing can kill, Or darkly blind you that ye should not see, On Goodness, Truth, and Love unspeakable Gazing enrapt — But I call from this Deep, Where nothing real abideth — a dark place Where Death is, and we cannot see God's face — Where Silence comes not, nor the rest of sleep. Yet, when mine eyes behold you, they can bless, They bless and strive to that high saintliness. SONNETS. 131 XVII. How pleasant through the long, dark winter-hour, When every pane is hoar with ferny rime, To dream dear Summer back, before her time. And fancy-paint the field with herb and flower ! On this bare thorn the budding roses blow : And violet-eyes peep dark from yonder bank, Breathing their sweetness ; and still waters flow By never-ending cowslips, rank on rank : The drowsy woodland scarce can sleep for song. Despite the hovering bee's low lullaby — Oh ! happy he, whose fancy can descry Whatever sweets to any hour belong ! For who the chain of stubborn Time can sever, He kings it upon earth, though crowned never. 132 SONNETS. XVIII. Sweet Pity, sister's self to Charity, Come down and with us dwell : they would not miss Thy face in heaven, for heaven is full of bliss, As our poor Earth o'erflows with misery. Sweet Pity, come : we have such need of thee ! Not each for self, but all for one-another : Thy name amongst us should be sister, mother, Or loving wife — the tenderest names that be. Thou, more than all thy peers, should'st cleave to Earth, Without whose weariness thou hadst not been, In whose quench'd brightness was thy brightness seen — For this fall'n star, a new star's glorious birth ! Come then, for thine own sake, come quickly down ! Thou that art least, yet most of all our own. SONNETS. 133 XIX. Man stands apart from Nature ; he is lord Of all that herein is, or seems to be : No beauty that he lacks can earth afford, No secret knows the immeasurable sea. Our first experience from her lips we learn : Yet will she her own weakness not disguise, But lifts us in her arms, till we discern The unimagin'd, that beyond her lies. Such is her task, and else she had not been : To this end the winds breathe and waters roll — Should our own fondness raise a barrier-screen, Or seek to bound the illimitable Soul, Up Reason ! break the chain, fool-Fancy wrought, And strike into the very Vast of Thought. 134 SONNETS. XX. Dark Spirit, oh listen ! thou that fiercely flowest, So fierce, and so impatient to be gone ! Is it fear, or some wild vengeance that thou owest ? Or doth the fiend of madness drive thee on ? Nay — for that stormy heart has been my own — Thou art full of glorious passion from the hills, And in thy strength goest forth to conquer ills, Not thinking how thou must be overthrown. Yet chafe not, noble river, nor seek to mend God's purpose in thee and thine own far end, Lest those proud waves o'erflow in sluggish mire : His be the grief, who would not brook control. Within whose heart has ceased the great desire. And stagnant are the waters of his soul. SONNETS. 135 XXI. How is it that so oft it sweeter seems To mourn lost bliss than win what yet may be, To sink absorb'd in melancholy dreams Far sweeter than to feast on mirth and glee, And solitude than all gay company, And winter, with her wind, than summer's beams, And dead cold ice than the dear living streams. And fallen leaves than green leaves on the tree ? — Is Sorrow in herself a thing divine, That we should take her for our utmost goal ? Or like a star's soft reflex on the soul Is it her semblance, not herself, doth shine ? Or does she lie far past our human sight. Strange as man's doom, and deep as day or night ? 136 SONNETS. XXII. From morn till noon here on this mountain-side In lonely meditation have I spent, Beholding three fair valleys winding wide, Beholding all, yet with no one content. And shall I ask my heart what here is meant ? — What fault or change, that it should beat so slow, Which used to bound in thought of such a show, Thrill'd through with wonder and with ravishment ? Or shall I bend my steps by yon sweet way Dark-opening on a land — perchance how fair ? — So, having found it, turn in grief away. Or satisfy my soul with beauties there ? Nay, let it rest unseen ! since dearer far Is the sweet doubt of what those beauties arc. SONNETS. 137 XXIII. stars, my silent teachers ! and thou, moon, That dost triumphant walk the wide heavens through, 1 have lov'd your glorious travels late and soon, Your still deep drownings in the waters blue : How is it that ye forsook me ? ye, that knew I could not join for ever all your joy ! " O come, while life is beautiful and new. Light-hearted child," ye said, " and merry boy : " So evermore I shunned the world's annoy, And ever toward your silent blisses grew ; But ah ! though silent, plain ye speak, and well, Your unimpassion'd utterance of pure light ; Whilst I am dumb for ever — I may not tell What God has whisper'd in mine ear to-night. 138 SONNETS. XXIV. Love-time and flower-time for this year are dead — Bright wealth of Summer, and fervent pulse of Spring — But thou art bleaker than sharp winds that shed The last frail feather from the warm year's wing. Ah ! well, 't is left to dream of and to sing ; We two shall gather no more flowers again, Nor watch the river leap like a living thing To catch the cold bright kisses of the rain, Then madden'd with insatiable desire Flash out among the rocks in foam like fire — But when we hear the unfed wind complain In barren hollows where are no more flowers. Each will remember that old love of ours Grown with the dead leaves a departed pain. SONNETS. 1 39 XXV. O calm great brows ! clear forehead unconfin'd ! Fever' d by no day's heat nor dreams of night ! Whose myriad perfect eyes absorbing light — The light indwelling of the eternal Mind — Sleep not, nor faint, with their high watch oppress' d- All truth, all beauty, like a land outspread Before them, and, beneath and overhead, That moving Order which is more than rest ! — We are full of broken beauties ; with strong pain Here 'mid this finite throbs the infinite. Like pent-up fire that bursts the mountain's brain : Yet patient still, still waiting to attain Full stature for the flame's expanding might, We feed it, and we keep it burning bright. HO SONNETS. XXVI. There is a peak that soars in silent air Silent, above the mountains, crown'd with cloud. Disrobed of sunrise, and of sunset bare — Upon whose neck the heav'ns are darkly bow'd : Far under chafe the waves of memory loud, Driving Man's feet to his last refuge there — Memory, whose stream, for ever flowing and fed. Fills the long desert and the drouth of Time With murmurs of the eternal watershed — Then, slowly swoll'n to a pursuing flood, Deepens from solitude to solitude : But not the clamour of all her waves can climb To that calm refuge whither all men press — The silent forehead of Forgetfulness. A DIALOGUE. PERSONS — LADY JANE GREY. FECKENHAM, a Catholic Priest. TIME — February, 1554. SCENE :— Lady Jane Grey's Apartment in the Tower. Enter Feckenham.] Feckenham. Madam, I bear no comfort on my tongue, But such as to some foundering bark a wave Brings, that puts hope out quite, yet ends not all, Charg'd but to sweep clean, salivate the prey For the sea's throat, before the last wave quench Hope, life, and all together. 144 a dialogue, Lady Jane Grey. A plain tale, sir, Best savours plainly spoken — ^you are come To say that I must die. Feckenham. Indeed, 'tis so : Against the young Lord Guildford and your Grace The warrants are gone forth ; to-morrow's sun Illumines the sad missal of your life In its last page — How, Lady ! do you smile ? Is it so sweet and at your age, and thus Clean from the pale of Grace, past human hope, Body and soul belike, unshriven, to die ? Know you what death is ? Lady Jane Grey. Nay, sir, not to-night : Did you not say to-morrow I should know ? A DIALOGUE. 145 To-night we are match'd in knowledge — mortals both: To-morrow 'twill be different. Hath eye seen, Or ear heard, either heart of man conceived The things God hath prepared for them that love Him.? Feckenham. Ay so ; but for the outcasts of the fold, Those on His left, the foolish strayaways. Know you another Scripture that must serve } Lady Jane Grey. Sir, for your tidings and good will I thank you, Yes, from my heart; you wish, I think, to snatch me Another brand from the burning : but pray see How vain to counsel me in this ! my faith You cannot shake : what comfort if you could 1 10 146 A DIALOGUE. Old faiths unlearn'd and new faiths learn'd in a night ? Beseech you, leave me — I would be with Christ. Feckenham. 'Tis thither I would bring you, even to Christ. Leave you I dare not, lest Christ lose a soul 'Twas mine to have rescued. Lady, let me speak : It is mine office to console and shrive. Think you I have grown to fifty years God's priest, Shrunk from no conflict, sicken'd at no toil, Wrestling with Satan — Christ's ambassador, With powers to bind or loose, remit, retain, Learn'd therefore in His lore — a seer of souls^ Yet master'd no more of life's mysteries Than your child-wisdom.? Be not over-bold: There stands the Door ! The Porter waits your knock: A DIALOGUE. 14,7 " Whoso climbs up some other way," saith He, " The same is thief and robber." Lady Jane Grey. If to know much Were to possess God's secret, that were yours ; Or if ripe age were wisdom, you were wise. But, sir, may it not be that all this while You, 'mid the clamour and clash of hostile creeds. Bred to do battle, flush'd with controversy. In the blind turmoil and pell-mell of fight Striking at who comes first — so press the plumes — Have, though the sword of the Spirit were in your hands, Dinted and dimm'd it 'gainst the shield of Faith Borne past you by some seeming adversary, And 'mid the Babel-discord of debate Sought, but not always haply found the Lord ? 148 A DIALOGUE. Whiles I, a woman, a mere child, if you will. Shy, simple student, shut from the world's noise, Learning of God from His own Word, without Much gloss of man's or added commentary, And from His works around me in the flowers, Looking on Nature, as a child is taught First by fair pictures, may have come more near That kingdom each must enter as a child ? Also your plea of age I part put by. That you have liv'd more — must know more of life ; Well, if life mean prolong'd apprenticeship To hate, strife, all that makes it sad to live — Stumblings in stony ways where no light is, Tracking vain circles with laborious feet, Seeing through a glass but darkly, knowing in part, — If this be life, you are elder far than I : But if the crown and glory of old age be The approach of death, proximity to God, A DIALOGUE. 149 Mine is the vantage there — the unearthly cahn Of souls sequester'd by death's shadowing wings, An ear shut to the world's thrum, sharpen'd more To sounds from heaven, the finer film of flesh Pierced almost now by the glory that is to be — All these are mine, not yours. As for that Door You spake of, I have knock'd, am enter'd in. Feckenham. What words are these — the topmost froth of madness ! Mere bubbles blown and broken with a breath 1 Pestilent fumes from a distemper'd fancy ! Physic you thus the death-wounds of a soul ? Child ! will it profit to have read God's word By the light of fancy — a rainbow of rosy foam Flung o'er the fountain of youth's heart? — Mistake Such phantom for the sun's effectual ray ? Will you plead at God's bar, " Thy law seemed hard, J50 A DIALOGUE. But for the tenderer faith that's taught of flowers ?" Go, sing it to thy lute ; seek some lone stream, And mix its warnings with the murmuring waves ; Turn from its terrors to soft skies, and sigh " So will heaven seem :" but know for all these things God brings thee unto judgment. Hast thou faith ? Lady Jane Grey. In God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Creator, Saviour, Sanctifier of all, So may His hand support, His blood wash clean. His Spirit comfort me, as I believe. Feckenham. Well then do you think mankind may come to God Through bye-ways, His appointed path denied ? — Honour the King, yet spurn his messengers ? — Trusting the main source, doubt the stream divine ? a dialogue. 151 Lady Jane Grey. Yes, for to meet it from men's haunts there haste A thousand throats, whose poisonous runnels pour From many an obscene source, till at the last They mix, and, gathering refuse as they go, Needs must discharge into the virgin bed, Augment and crown the perfect river of God. Sir, there's a hill, the smoke-blind city loves, Soars to the very flush of the setting sun ; Green all his slopes with pasture, his bare head A shrine of solitude, where souls may live And worship with no temple-walls between. Thither, though sharp the ascent, narrow the track, Who trembles not may climb and cast all care 'Mid wild goats bleating and grey great rocks, but all Sound of man's enterprise is banish'd far. Then come officious folk, call'd lords o' the land. Claim all the hill their own, bid loiterers pack. 152 A DIALOGUE. Clear copse, blast rock, make the rough places plain, And at the last cry out in triumph, " Behold ! No climbing more at peril of life and limb ! See the brave road we have made, with terraced steps Where the stream rushed ! Hold by the rope, or, if you will, Speak, and, pence paid, we hoist you by the tram" — What must the lovers of the mountain say ? Feckenham. So then you recognize no bond but this — Belief in God, His being, His attributes ; This is the sum and substance of your creed. All else — all powers, though by Himself conferr'd (As proved beyond doubt by miraculous signs) On those appointed to no end but this — Tradition of Christ's mysteries to men — The Church His bride, 'gainst whom the gates of hell A DIALOGUE. '53 Prevail not, with the rock whereon 't was built, All laws, all ordinances, gifts of grace Through fifteen centuries surviving still, As null, void, inessential, you would waive — All the great golden chain cast loose, whereby God draws to heaven each separate link, a soul. Is faith alone sufficient ? Lady Jane Grey. Faith alone, But for the hardness of men's hearts, exists not. To know God and believe, and there stop short, No fruit in act resulting, were a thing More monstrous false, more past impossible Than that the peerless sun should rise, shine, set. Flame his full circuit to the ends of heaven. Earth lying dark the while, her puny stars Twinkling and unaware ! why it were harder 154 ^ DIALOGUE. For the fork'd fire-bolt to tear heaven in twain Nor the air applaud in thunder ! — 'tis mere words ; Faith without charity avails not, why ? Why 'tis a mere phantasma — a goodly tree, But without stem, sap, branches, leaves, or fruit ! Sir, I remember — 'twas seven years ago — I, ten years old, one summer eve lay down Tired of my games, and for the first time saw The sunset — That's a human word, but else How should I tell it ? — The sun that day had died A violent death, and in the sweat of flight Flung down, it seemed, his battle-robe lay there, Fleck'd and distain'd with blood, not trampled yet By the fierce hoofs of Night. I felt afraid Till I drew back my gaze eastward, and lo ! No blood here, nor no colours, but the ghosts Of all dead colours, the spirits of slain shapes Fading and forming ! In a moment I perceived A DIALOGUE. 155 This was God's beauty had dawned upon my soul Through the earthly senses first : all I had heard. Learnt, read, but scarce had hoped to understand. How God is strong, just, merciful, and mild, Sender of sorrows, and yet source of love — Flash'd and was truth within me — the dry bones lived ! And as I pondered I became aware How wonderful a thing was mine own soul ! No child more ! — such an infinite bright birth Within me, as must henceforth having seen Love and be miserable away from God — One crystal drop as perfect though so small, As pure in its proportion and degree As the main ocean ! — Doubtless God forgave That thought, so born of such an ecstacy. Well well, mere madness ! but what I mean is this — When from a spirit's vision, howsoe'er Lighten'd, the mist fades, and the scales drop off, 15^ A DIALOGUE. And the bush burns before him ; when his feet Tremble because they stand on holy ground, And the new air is terrible and sweet About him, as the Lord is passing by, Then though the World, the Devil, and the Flesh- Though these three leagued together with all their hosts Swept from the four winds to abolish him. He should go up against them and prevail : Nor this alone ; not against evil only Stands he an instant and an eager foe ; But as the clear eye of some limpid pool Sweeps from its serene surface every mote And impure speck that taints it from the hills, Because 'tis meet the " clarity of heaven" Be shown there, or brave shape of passing cloud, Or gold star diving, or silver-splinter'd moon — So such a spirit henceforth — what things soe'er Are pure and lovely and of good report, A DIALOGUE. 157 If there be any virtue, any praise — Thinks on these things. O sir ! to be like God, We must reflect his nature, which is love : You cannot make the turbid stream paint heaven Through tunnels of bored stone or earthen duct, It must lie bare for that. What think you, Pope ? When did your second-hand salvation, say, Penance or pardons help one heart to love ? You cannot win a child's love by command ; We must see first before we can desire : Let God himself teach that, who draws us all By human cords and with the bands of love. Why should you stand between men's souls and God ? Surely one's own flesh makes it dim enough — His presence. Fear that we may see too much ? Why, sir, to see is to grow like Him ; that, That is the next world's glory : they are like Him Who see Him as He is. 15^ a dialogue. Feckenham. Yes, but remember, Of all true loves Obedience is the badge : Love else makes no more music than the loose Breath of some vagabond and lawless wind, Mere hollow blustering and blind desire, Which, prison'd in sweet pipes and timely stopped Had issued no mere rabble of wandering sounds, But school'd and temper'd to grave harmonies Meet for the Master's ear. Lady Jane Grey. Again I say, Your tongue shoots wide o' the mark. Love once inspir'd. Its range is infinite — all law we need So simple — to God first and then to man. This is the eternal rule of harmony ; A DIALOGUE. 159 Not meant to straiten, but wide enough wherein Each separate soul may pour itself in praise To God for ever. Your multiplied restraints Impede the player, not modulate the tone, Assign false limits, contract the scale, and bring The whole world's great exuberance of song To one dull murmur of mechanic sound. Feckenham. Once claim such freedom, and all bounds disappear. Prove the Church human and her foundation sand. Show flaw in the fabric — there's no force in earth Shall reconstruct the sunder'd elements Into a power which may convert the world. Why else at all design'd, but that Christ knew The bias of man's own heart his natural bane. His sovereign need enthron'd Authority, A supreme arbiter,, whence no appeal ? l6o A DIALOGUE. Men's aims are variable, God's purpose one : Except his fiat be cogent to compel Unquestioning obedience, there's an end. Man's will steps into rivalry with God's ; And the new freedmen, cautiously at first, But by degrees grown masterful, throw off The yoke of their old burdens, in whose place They will set up as God, and worship it, This demon of Free-thought, which pricked them first To such high daring ; and for a creed they'll spin Some subtle network of the curious brain. Some metaphysic film too weak to bear The rude fall of a single bolt of fate. From that day forth I seem in spirit to see All Israel scatter'd on the hills as sheep Having no shepherd : the hosts of the profane, Unshamefast and triumphant and malign, A DIALOGUE. l6l Ride down the people and possess the spoil ! Hail Antichrist ! Apostate thousands swell Thy cohorts ; I see Redemption made a scoff, The Cross a scorn, and Faith's clear certainty Starv'd to the waning comfort of a dream ! O Lord ! is this the intolerable end ? Better the world still bowed and clave to Baal, Chemosh and Moloch and the Lord of flies ! But ye, so careful to add naught hereto, Look ye diminish not from Christ's commands. Say all you can, this yet remains to say — "We build upon Christ's ver^- words, the same You disregard or garble." Take one plain word — Something or nothing — and interpret which : "This is my body which is given for you." How must we read that saying ? Lady Jane Grev. The sequel knits The sense up, and shows all : " do this," he adds, ir I 62 A DIALOGUE. " In memory of me." — No juggler's sleight, Seeing that His body was whole before them there ! Men do not eat the last dear lock that keeps The memory of dead friends, much less their flesh, Were it possible. To eat Christ's flesh were to pluck Away one's own redemption, and make vile And of cheap worth what cost so deadly dear. Fool — Pharisees ! blind leaders of the blind ! Doth not Himself say that which entereth in Defiles not, though unclean, the heart of a man ? How should the clean then purify ? Man's soul Exists on God, not by material food : God is a Spirit, and they that worship Him Must worship Him in spirit and in truth. See how ye wrest the Scriptures to your will ! — Ravel five threads out from the quaint-wrought web Which in the pictur'd arras present a sword, Christ holds in act to sheathe; and, severing so A DIALOGUE. 1 63 The dry dead body of the thing from its idea, Cry, " who asks warrant, behold the naked blade His hand grasped ! Do ye fear to flesh it now ? So perish all His enemies !" — meanwhile Forgetful of the curse upon the scroll — "All they that take shall perish by the sword." How would Christ meet your Grand Inquisitor ? Methinks upon that sea of martyr'd blood Sailing, and in a boat of human bones. Wafted by wailings of the souls he slew Red Torquemada comes to claim his crown : There stands the Christ ! but Oh ! what heavy cheer ! What worlds of sadness in the eyes' regard ! " Have I not battled all my life for Thee, Till the hands wearied and the blade waxed dull Slaughtering Thy foes ?" — " Mine ! whom I died to save ! My little ones that loved me !" — Then He knows. 164 A DIALOGUE. O sir ! you came to turn me : be you turn'd Instead ; cleave not to such a Church as that ! Infallible, no doubt : but what of those Poor sheep she cuts the throat of ? 'Tis your way To save — I know it : well, Christ's way was to die, Feckenham. Herein frail human judgment, that bruis'd reed, You leant on, breaks and fails you : Faith alone, Where men see naught but darkness, lends her ray. Yet, look you, to live at ease on the earth awhile, Exempt from fleshly pain — get wealth and spend it — Be what the world calls fortunate, and live Careless the thing that men call life, belike Dying the while, — all this is no such matter A man should fear the loss of, who thereby Cuts short the awful after-reckoning. Who shall reprove Him ? Who contend with Him } A DIALOGUE. 1 65 Not alway of old, His right arm stretch'd to save, With gift of manna and gush of waters sweet Led He His people through the wilderness ; Nay, but with outpour'd fury, with fiery flight Of serpents, nay, with the earthquake's living doom, With pestilence, plague, flames, He chastened them, Till Moses wondered ! Was it for Israel even So deep, so deadly a sin to disobey ? God's ways are not as our ways, nor His eye Straiten'd within the scope of mortal ken. For us to arraign Him. Yet durst thou impute To Love's veil'd face the murderous hues of hate, To Justice the foul crimes of erring men, To stern Necessity, that sword of God, Lust's hot excess and bloody banquetings. But now no more : I have cherish'd a fool's hope, Spent but waste breath and offer'd fruitless prayer, Seeking to save you ; not the less my heart I 66 A DIALOGUE. Trembles for, sorrows o'er you, lost so young. Whether the eternal God may temper so His judgment with forbearance that this sharp Quick shutting of the door on life and hope, This sudden short'ning of your April-prime With ruin of all possible fair buds To be, which haply coming showers had woo'd, Killing the canker, into blooms mature — Whether, I say, your strange fate plead for you, Arrest the scale of vengeance, that it pause In its declining, and your soul escape His uttermost damnation, fire and worm — I know not, nor have warranty to hope. Lady Jane Grey. Waste neither hopes at all nor fears on me. Stern priest, for they are vain : your whole life long You have starved your soul on barren husks of truth A DIALOGUE. I 67 Fit but for swine ; and when it would arise, Go to its father, you have chain'd it down With ceremonious forms : for your heart's springs You have dug channels deep, and straiten'd them In ways that are not God's — Now must you needs As from God's throne look down with pity on me ! You, blindfold, with both eyes persistently Shut fast, take pity ! presume in fatuous pride To cheer with prospect of night's vanishing One that with upturn'd gaze already drinks, And only lacks eyes large enough to drain. The glut of the noon's glory ! There's enough Trouble on earth, God knows, and care enough. Sick hearts and trembling, and moving of wild arms Blindly 'mid darkness such as may be felt : There let your rush-light glimmer, and there let flow All your heart's pity ; for I will none of it. Were it whole rivers, which now is but a drop — 1 68 A DIALOGUE. That pity of yours — still is not Christ's the sea ? Have you not spent one hour with threats to scare Whom His whole life He gave with love to win ? When did the world not woo His enemies ? And shall He tend not whom the world forsakes ? — Look ye, the world and thou a speck upon it Dwindle, diminish, darken, whiles I speak ; I am drawn — drawn nearer ! I rush into the sun ! Haste, have you more to say ? your form grows dim, Your words the wailing of an empty wind ! Feckenham. Madam, my say is said : I have cast my pearls Before one that has trod them underfoot. Mine be the folly, on your own head the guilt ; The hour of grace is past — I am well assured We two shall meet no more. \_Exit. a dialogue. i 69 Lady Jane Grey. . . . . " After the wind An earthquake ; but the Lord was not in the earth- quake ; And after the earthquake a fire ; but the Lord was not In the fire ; and after the fire a still small voice." 12 VENVOI. Go, little bark ! be buoyant, brave ; Fve launched thee on a stormier main Than ever closed o'er seaman's grave. Or deeply drank the hoarded gaiii. It may be to thy fair renown Some favourable breeze will blow. Or else " the gulfs may wash thee doivn " — Well, there are nobler freights below. It may be — nay, but thou art frail. And scarce canst stem the boisterous wave, And many a broader prow might fail The sinking castaway to save. 172 L ENVOI. // may he that, when eve is nigh. Some watcher on a lonely isle May lift his eyes be/ore he die. And think of home again, and smile . If he forget a moment' s pain. To track thy flight across the sun. Be glad thou wert not all in vain. Then vatiish,for thy day is done. STEPHEN AUSTIN, PRINTER, HERTFORD. ^--™lmx>«.. :^>: > i >-^ ;* -> ■I tt-v 1 This book IS DUE on the last date stamped below. lOM-'. 1-50:2555 470 REMINGTON RANO INC. 23 REGIONAL LIBRARY A u AA 000 3684198 PR 5221 R33SA17 1S70