Georgian Poetry 1916–1917
Қосымшада ыңғайлырақҚосымшаны жүктеуге арналған QRRuStore · Samsung Galaxy Store
Huawei AppGallery · Xiaomi GetApps

автордың кітабын онлайн тегін оқу  Georgian Poetry 1916–1917

Georgian Poetry

1916-17



edited by

Sir Edward Howard Marsh


1917
Fourth Thousand The Poetry Bookshop 35 Devonshire St. Theobalds Rd. London W.C.1 MCMXVIII To Edmund Gosse







Table of Contents

  • Prefatory Note
  • W J Turner
Romance Ecstasy Magic The Hunter The Sky-sent Death The Caves of Auvergne

from

The Hunter

from

The Hunter

from

The Hunter

from

The Hunter

from

The Hunter
  • James Stephens
The Fifteen Acres Check Westland Row The Turn of the Road A Visit from Abroad

(from

The Adventures of Seumas Beg

)

(from

The Adventures of Seumas Beg

)

(from

The Adventures of Seumas Beg

)

(from

The Adventures of Seumas Beg

)

(from

The Adventures of Seumas Beg

)

  • J. C. Squire
A House To a Bull-dog The Lily of Malud

(from

The Lily of Malud

)

(from

The Lily of Malud

)

(from

The Lily of Malud

)

  • Siegfried Sassoon
A Letter Home The Kiss The Dragon and the Undying To Victory 'They' 'In the Pink' Haunted The Death-Bed

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

(from

The Old Huntsman

)

  • I. Rosenberg
'Ah, Koelue ...'
  • Robert Nichols
To —— The Assault Fulfilment The Philosopher's Oration The Naiads' Music The Prophetic Bard's Oration The Tower

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

(from

Ardours and Endurances

)

  • Harold Monro
Two Poems Every Thing Solitude Week-End The Bird at Dawn

(from

Strange Meetings

)

(from

Strange Meetings

)

(from

Strange Meetings

)

(from

Strange Meetings

)

(from

Strange Meetings

)

  • John Masefield
Seven Poems

(from

Lollingdon Downs

)

  • Ralph Hodgson
The Gipsy Girl The Bells of Heaven Babylon

(from

Poems

)

(from

Poems

)

(from

Poems

)

  • Robert Graves
It's a Queer Time David and Goliath A Pinch of Salt Star Talk In the Wilderness The Boy in Church The Lady Visitor Not Dead

(from

Love Poems and Others

)

  • Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
Rupert Brooke Tenants For G. Sea-Change Battle
  1. The Return
  2. The Dancers
  3. Hit
Lament

(from

Friends

)

(from

Friends

)

(from

Friends

)

(from

Friends

)

(from

Battle

)

(from

Whin

)

  • John Freeman
Music Comes November Skies Discovery 'It was the Lovely Moon' Stone Trees The Pigeons Happy is England Now

(from

Stone Trees

)

(from

Stone Trees

)

(from

Stone Trees

)

(from

Stone Trees

)

(from

Stone Trees

)

(published in

To-Day

)

(from

Stone Trees

)

  • John Drinkwater
May Garden The Midlands The Cotswold Farmers In Woods and Meadows Reciprocity Birthright Olton Pools

(from

Tides

)

(from

Tides

)

(from

Tides

)

(from

Tides

)

(from

Olton Pools

)

(from

Olton Pools

)

  • Walter de la Mare
The Scribe The Remonstrance The Ghost The Fool rings his Bells

from

Child Lovers
  • William H. Davies
The White Cascade Easter Raptures Cowslips and Larks
  • Gordon Bottomley
Atlantis New Year's Eve, 1913 In Memoriam, A. M. W.
  • Maurice Baring
In Memoriam, A. H.
  • Herbert Asquith
The Volunteer
  • Bibliography





Prefatory Note


This third book of Georgian Poetry carries to the end of a seventh year the presentation of chosen examples from the work of contemporary poets belonging to the younger generation. Of the eighteen writers included, nine appear in the series for the first time. The representation of the older inhabitants has in most cases been restricted in order to allow full space for the new-comers; and the alphabetical order of the names has been reversed, so as to bring more of these into prominence than would otherwise have been done.

My thanks for permission to print the poems are due to Messrs. Chatto & Windus, Constable, Fifield, Heinemann, Macmillan, Elkin Mathews, Martin Secker, and Sidgwick & Jackson, and to the Editors of the Nation, the New Statesman, and To-Day.

E. M.

September 1917.

Contents



W. J. Turner


Romance

When I was but thirteen or so

I went into a golden land,

Chimborazo, Cotopaxi

Took me by the hand.

My father died, my brother too,

They passed like fleeting dreams,

I stood where Popocatapetl

In the sunlight gleams.

I dimly heard the master's voice

And boys far-off at play,

Chimborazo, Cotopaxi

Had stolen me away.

I walked in a great golden dream

To and fro from school —

Shining Popocatapetl

The dusty streets did rule.

I walked home with a gold dark boy

And never a word I'd say,

Chimborazo, Cotopaxi

Had taken my speech away:

I gazed entranced upon his face

Fairer than any flower —

O shining Popocatapetl

It was thy magic hour:

The houses, people, traffic seemed

Thin fading dreams by day,

Chimborazo, Cotopaxi

They had stolen my soul away!


Contents



Ecstasy


I saw a frieze on whitest marble drawn

Of boys who sought for shells along the shore,

Their white feet shedding pallor in the sea,

The shallow sea, the spring-time sea of green

That faintly creamed against the cold, smooth pebbles.

The air was thin, their limbs were delicate,

The wind had graven their small eager hands

To feel the forests and the dark nights of Asia

Behind the purple bloom of the horizon,

Where sails would float and slowly melt away.

Their naked, pure, and grave, unbroken silence

Filled the soft air as gleaming, limpid water

Fills a spring sky those days when rain is lying

In shattered bright pools on the wind-dried roads,

And their sweet bodies were wind-purified.

One held a shell unto his shell-like ear

And there was music carven in his face,

His eyes half-closed, his lips just breaking open

To catch the lulling, mazy, coralline roar

Of numberless caverns filled with singing seas.

And all of them were hearkening as to singing

Of far-off voices thin and delicate,

Voices too fine for any mortal wind

To blow into the whorls of mortal ears —

And yet those sounds flowed from their grave, sweet faces.

And as I looked I heard that delicate music,

And I became as grave, as calm, as still

As those carved boys. I stood upon that shore,

I felt the cool sea dream around my feet,

My eyes were staring at the far horizon:

And the wind came and purified my limbs,

And the stars came and set within my eyes,

And snowy clouds rested upon my shoulders,

And the blue sky shimmered deep within me,

And I sang like a carven pipe of music.


Contents



Magic


I love a still conservatory

That's full of giant, breathless palms,

Azaleas, clematis and vines,

Whose quietness great Trees becalms

Filling the air with foliage,

A curved and dreamy statuary.

I like to hear a cold, pure rill

Of water trickling low, afar

With sudden little jerks and purls

Into a tank or stoneware jar,

The song of a tiny sleeping bird

Held like a shadow in its trill.

I love the mossy quietness

That grows upon the great stone flags,

The dark tree-ferns, the staghorn ferns,

The prehistoric, antlered stags

That carven stand and stare among

The silent, ferny wilderness.

And are they birds or souls that flit

Among the trees so silently,

And are they fish or ghosts that haunt

The still pools of the rockery! —

For I am but a sculptured rock

As in that magic place I sit.

Still as a great jewel is the air

With boughs and leaves smooth-carved in it,

And rocks and trees and giant ferns,

And blooms with inner radiance lit,

And naked water like a nymph

That dances tireless slim and bare.

I watch a white Nyanza float

Upon a green, untroubled pool,

A fairyland Ophelia, she

Has cast herself in water cool,

And lies while fairy cymbals ring

Drowned in her fairy castle moat.

The goldfish sing a winding song

Below her pale and waxen face,

The water-nymph is dancing by

Lifting smooth arms with mournful grace,

A stainless white dream she floats on

While fairies beat a fairy gong.

Silent the Cattleyas blaze

And thin red orchid shapes of Death

Peer savagely with twisted lips

Sucking an eerie, phantom breath

With that bright, spotted, fever'd lust

That watches lonely travellers craze.

Gigantic, mauve and hairy leaves

Hang like obliterated faces

Full of dim unattained expression

Such as haunts virgin forest places

When Silence leaps among the trees

And the echoing heart deceives.


Contents



The Hunter


"But there was one land he dared not enter."

Beyond the blue, the purple seas,

Beyond the thin horizon's line,

Beyond Antilla, Hebrides,

Jamaica, Cuba, Caribbees,

There lies the land of Yucatan.

The land, the land of Yucatan,

The low coast breaking into foam,

The dim hills where my thoughts shall roam

The forests of my boyhood's home,

The splendid dream of Yucatan!

I met thee first long, long ago

Turning a printed page, and I

Stared at a world I did not know

And felt my blood like fire flow

At that strange name of Yucatan.

O those sweet, far-off Austral days

When life had a diviner glow,

When hot Suns whipped my blood to know

Things all unseen, then I could go

Into thy heart O Yucatan!

I have forgotten what I saw,

I have forgotten what I knew,

And many lands I've set sail for

To find that marvellous spell of yore,

Never to set foot on thy shore

O haunting land of Yucatan!

But sailing I have passed thee by,

And leaning on the white ship's rail

Watched thy dim hills till mystery

Wrapped thy far stillness close to me

And I have breathed ''tis Yucatan!

''Tis Yucatan, 'tis Yucatan!'

The ship is sailing far away,

The coast recedes, the dim hills fade,

A bubble-winding track we've made,

And thou'rt a Dream O Yucatan!


Contents



The Sky-sent Death


"A German aeroplane flew over Greek territory dropping a bomb which killed a shepherd."

Sitting on a stone a Shepherd,
Stone and Shepherd sleeping,
Under the high blue Attic sky;
Along the green monotony
Grey sheep creeping, creeping
.

Deep down on the hill and valley,

At the bottom of the sunshine,

Like great Ships in clearest water,

Water holding anchored Shadows,

Water without wave or ripple,

Sunshine deep and clear and heavy,

Sunshine like a booming bell

Made of purest golden metal,

White Ships heavy in the sky

Sleep with anchored shadow.

Pipe a song in that still air

And the song would be of crystal

Snapped in silence, or a bronze vase

Smooth and graceful, curved and shining.

Tell an old tale or a history;

It would seem a slow Procession

Full of gestures; limbs and torso

White and rounded in the sunlight.

Sitting on a stone a Shepherd,
Stone and Shepherd sleeping,
Like a fragment of old marble
Dug up from the hillside shadow
.

In the sunshine deep and soundless

Came a faint metallic humming;

In the sunshine clear and heavy

Came a speck, a speck of shadow —

Shepherd lift your head and listen,

Listen to that humming Shadow!

Sitting on a stone the Shepherd,
Stone and Shepherd sleeping
In a sleep dreamless as water,
Water in a white glass beaker,
Clear, pellucid, without shadow;
Underneath a sky-blue crystal
Sees his grey sheep creeping
.

In the sunshine clear and heavy

Shadow-fled a dark hand downward:

In the sunshine deep and soundless

Burst a star-dropt thing of thunder —

Smoked the burnt blue air's torn veiling

Drooping softly round the hillside.

Boomed the silence in returning

To the crater in the hillside,

To the red earth fresh and bleeding,

To the mangled heap remaining:

Far away that humming Shadow

Vanished in the azure distance.

Sitting on a stone no Shepherd,
Stone and Shepherd sleeping,
But across the hill and valley
Grey sheep creeping, creeping,
Standing carven on the sky-line,
Scattering in the open distance,
Free, in no man's keeping
.


Contents



The Caves of Auvergne


He carved the red deer and the bull

Upon the smooth cave rock,

Returned from war with belly full,

And scarred with many a knock,

He carved the red deer and the bull

Upon the smooth cave rock.

The stars flew by the cave's wide door,

The clouds wild trumpets blew,

Trees rose in wild dreams from the floor,

Flowers with dream faces grew

Up to the sky, and softly hung

Golden and white and blue.

The woman ground her heap of corn,

Her heart a guarded fire;

The wind played in his trembling soul

Like a hand upon a lyre,

The wind drew faintly on the stone

Symbols of his desire:

The red deer of the forest dark,

Whose antlers cut the sky,

That vanishes into the mirk

And like a dream flits by,

And by an arrow slain at last

Is but the wind's dark body.

The bull that stands in marshy lakes

As motionless and still

As a dark rock jutting from a plain

Without a tree or hill,

The bull that is the sign of life,

Its sombre, phallic will.

And from the dead, white eyes of them

The wind springs up anew,

It blows upon the trembling heart,

And bull and deer renew

Their flitting life in the dim past

When that dead Hunter drew.

I sit beside him in the night,

And, fingering his red stone,

I chase through endless forests dark

Seeking that thing unknown,

That which is not red deer or bull,

But which by them was shown:

By those stiff shapes in which he drew

His soul's exalted cry,

When flying down the forest dark

He slew and knew not why,

When he was filled with song, and strength

Flowed to him from the sky.

The wind blows from red deer and bull,

The clouds wild trumpets blare,

Trees rise in wild dreams from the earth,

Flowers with dream faces stare,

O Hunter, your own shadow stands
Within your forest lair!


Contents



James Stephens


The Fifteen Acres

I cling and swing

On a branch, or sing

Through the cool, clear hush of

Morning, O:

Or fling my wing

On the air, and bring

To sleepier birds a warning, O:

That the night's in flight,

And the sun's in sight,

And the dew is the grass adorning, O:

And the green leaves swing

As I sing, sing, sing,

Up by the river,

Down the dell,

To the little wee nest,

Where the big tree fell,

So early in the morning, O.

I flit and twit

In the sun for a bit

When his light so bright is shining, O:

Or sit and fit

My plumes, or knit

Straw plaits for the nest's nice lining, O:

And she with glee

Shows unto me

Underneath her wings reclining, O:

And I sing that Peg

Has an egg, egg, egg,

Up by the oat-field,

Round the mill,

Past the meadow,

Down the hill,

So early in the morning, O.

I stoop and swoop

On the air, or loop

Through the trees, and then go soaring, O:

To group with a troop

On the gusty poop

While the wind behind is roaring, O:

I skim and swim

By a cloud's red rim

And up to the azure flooring, O:

And my wide wings drip

As I slip, slip, slip

Down through the rain-drops,

Back where Peg

Broods in the nest

On the little white egg,

So early in the morning, O.


Contents


Check

The night was creeping on the ground;

She crept and did not make a sound

Until she reached the tree, and then

She covered it, and stole again

Along the grass beside the wall.

I heard the rustle of her shawl

As she threw blackness everywhere

Upon the sky and ground and air,

And in the room where I was hid:

But no matter what she did

To everything that was without,

She could not put my candle out.

So I stared at the night, and she

Stared back solemnly at me.



Contents




Westland Row


Every Sunday there's a throng

Of pretty girls, who trot along

In a pious, breathless state

(They are nearly always late)

To the Chapel, where they pray

For the sins of Saturday.

They have frocks of white and blue,

Yellow sashes they have too,

And red ribbons show each head

Tenderly is ringleted;

And the bell rings loud, and the

Railway whistles urgently.

After Chapel they will go,

Walking delicately slow,

Telling still how Father John

Is so good to look upon,

And such other grave affairs

As they thought of during prayers.


Contents




The Turn of the Road


I was playing with my hoop along the road

Just where the bushes are, when, suddenly,

There came a shout, — I ran away and stowed

Myself beneath a bush, and watched to see

What made the noise, and then, around the bend,

I saw a woman running. She was old

And wrinkle-faced, and had big teeth. — The end

Of her red shawl caught on a bush and rolled

Right off her, and her hair fell down. — Her face

Was awful white, and both her eyes looked sick,

And she was talking queer. 'O God of Grace!'

Said she, 'where is the child?' and flew back quick

The way she came, and screamed, and shook her hands;

... Maybe she was a witch from foreign lands.


Contents




A Visit from Abroad


A speck went blowing up against the sky

As little as a leaf: then it drew near

And broadened. — 'It's a bird,' said I,

And fetched my bow and arrows. It was queer!

It grew from up a speck into a blot,

And squattered past a cloud; then it flew down

All crumply, and waggled such a lot

I thought the thing would fall. — It was a brown

Old carpet where a man was sitting snug

Who, when he reached the ground, began to sew

A big hole in the middle of the rug,

And kept on peeping everywhere to know

Who might be coming — then he gave a twist

And flew away.... I fired at him but missed.


Contents




J. C. Squire


A House

Now very quietly, and rather mournfully,

In clouds of hyacinth the sun retires,

And all the stubble-fields that were so warm to him

Keep but in memory their borrowed fires.

And I, the traveller, break, still unsatisfied,

From that faint exquisite celestial strand,

And turn and see again the only dwelling-place

In this wide wilderness of darkening land.

The house, that house, O now what change has come to it.

Its crude red-brick facade, its roof of slate;

What imperceptible swift hand has given it

A new, a wonderful, a queenly state?

No hand has altered it, that parallelogram,

So inharmonious, so ill-arranged;

That hard blue roof in shape and colour's what it was;

No, it is not that any line has changed.

Only that loneliness is now accentuate

And, as the dusk unveils the heaven's deep cave,

This small world's feebleness fills me with awe again,

And all man's energies seem very brave.

And this mean edifice, which some dull architect

Built for an ignorant earth-turning hind,

Takes on the quality of that magnificent

Unshakable dauntlessness of human kind.

Darkness and stars will come, and long the night will be,

Yet imperturbable that house will rest,

Avoiding gallantly the stars' chill scrutiny,

Ignoring secrets in the midnight's breast.

Thunders may shudder it, and winds demoniac

May howl their menaces, and hail descend;

Yet it will bear with them, serenely, steadfastly,

Not even scornfully, and wait the end.

And all a universe of nameless messengers

From unknown distances may whisper fear,

And it will imitate immortal permanence,

And stare and stare ahead and scarcely hear.

It stood there yesterday; it will to-morrow, too,

When there is none to watch, no alien eyes

To watch its ugliness assume a majesty

From this great solitude of evening skies.

So lone, so very small, with worlds and worlds around,

While life remains to it prepared to outface

Whatever awful unconjectured mysteries

May hide and wait for it in time and space.


Contents


To a Bull-Dog


(W. H. S., Capt. [Acting Major] R. F. A.; killed, April 12, 1917)

We shan't see Willy any more, Mamie,

He won't be coming any more:

He came back once and again and again,

But he won't get leave any more.

We looked from the window and there was his cab,

And we ran downstairs like a streak,

And he said, 'Hullo, you bad dog,' and you crouched to the floor,

Paralysed to hear him speak,

And then let fly at his face and his chest

Till I had to hold you down,

While he took off his cap and his gloves and his coat,

And his bag and his thonged Sam Browne.

We went upstairs to the studio,

The three of us, just as of old,

And you lay down and I sat and talked to him

As round the room he strolled.

Here in the room where, years ago

Before the old life stopped,

He worked all day with his slippers and his pipe,

He would pick up the threads he'd dropped,

Fondling all the drawings he had left behind,

Glad to find them all still the same,

And opening the cupboards to look at his belongings

... Every time he came.

But now I know what a dog doesn't know,

Though you'll thrust your head on my knee,

And try to draw me from the absent-mindedness

That you find so dull in me.

And all your life you will never know

What I wouldn't tell you even if I could,

That the last time we waved him away

Willy went for good.

But sometimes as you lie on the hearthrug

Sleeping in the warmth of the stove,

Even through your muddled old canine brain

Shapes from the past may rove.

You'll scarcely remember, even in a dream,

How we brought home a silly little pup,

With a big square head and little crooked legs

That could scarcely bear him up,

But your tail will tap at the memory

Of a man whose friend you were,

Who was always kind though he called you a naughty dog

When he found you on his chair;

Who'd make you face a reproving finger

And solemnly lecture you

Till your head hung downwards and you looked very sheepish:

And you'll dream of your triumphs too,

Of summer evening chases in the garden

When you dodged us all about with a bone:

We were three boys, and you were the cleverest,

But now we're two alone.

When summer comes again,

And the long sunsets fade,

We shall have to go on playing the feeble game for two

That since the war we've played.

And though you run expectant as you always do

To the uniforms we meet,

You'll never find Willy among all the soldiers

In even the longest street,

Nor in any crowd; yet, strange and bitter thought,

Even now were the old words said,

If I tried the old trick and said 'Where's Willy?'

You would quiver and lift your head,

And your brown eyes would look to ask if I was serious,

And wait for the word to spring.

Sleep undisturbed: I shan't say that again,

You innocent old thing.

I must sit, not speaking, on the sofa,

While you lie asleep on the floor;

For he's suffered a thing that dogs couldn't dream of,

And he won't be coming here any more.


Contents


The Lily of Malud

The lily of Malud is born in secret mud.

It is breathed like a word in a little dark ravine

Where no bird was ever heard and no beast was ever seen,

And the leaves are never stirred by the panther's velvet sheen.

It blooms once a year in summer moonlight,

In a valley of dark fear full of pale moonlight:

It blooms once a year, and dies in a night,

And its petals disappear with the dawn's first light;

And when that night has come, black small-breasted maids,

With ecstatic terror dumb, steal fawn-like through the shades

To watch, hour by hour, the unfolding of the flower.

When the world is full of night, and the moon reigns alone

And drowns in silver light the known and the unknown,

When each hut is a mound, half blue-silver and half black,

And casts upon the ground the hard shadow of its back,

When the winds are out of hearing and the tree-tops never shake,

When the grass in the clearing is silent but awake

'Neath a moon-paven sky: all the village is asleep

And the babes that nightly cry dream deep:

From the doors the maidens creep,

Tiptoe over dreaming curs, soft, so soft, that not one stirs,

And stand curved and a-quiver, like bathers by a river,

Looking at the forest wall, groups of slender naked girls,

Whose black bodies shine like pearls where the moonbeams fall.

They have waked, they knew not why, at a summons from the night,

They have stolen fearfully from the dark to the light,

Stepping over sleeping men, who have moved and slept again:

And they know not why they go to the forest, but they know,

As their moth-feet pass to the shore of the grass

And the forest's dreadful brink, that their tender spirits shrink:

They would flee, but cannot turn, for their eyelids burn

With still frenzy, and each maid, ere she leaves the moonlit space,

If she sees another's face is thrilled and afraid.

Now like little phantom fawns they thread the outer lawns

Where the boles of giant trees stand about in twos and threes,

Till the forest grows more dense and the darkness more intense,

And they only sometimes see in a lone moon-ray

A dead and spongy trunk in the earth half-sunk,

Or the roots of a tree with fungus grey,

Or a drift of muddy leaves, or a banded snake that heaves.

And the towering unseen roof grows more intricate, and soon

It is featureless and proof to the lost forgotten moon.

But they could not look above as with blind-drawn feet they move

Onwards on the scarce-felt path, with quick and desperate breath,

For their circling fingers dread to caress some slimy head,

Or to touch the icy shape of a hunched and hairy ape,

And at every step they fear in their very midst to hear

A lion's rending roar or a tiger's snore....

And when things swish or fall, they shiver but dare not call.

O what is it leads the way that they do not stray?

What unimagined arm keeps their bodies from harm?

What presence concealed lifts their little feet that yield

Over dry ground and wet till their straining eyes are met

With a thinning of the darkness?

And the foremost faintly cries in awed surprise:

And they one by one emerge from the gloom to the verge

Of a small sunken vale full of moonlight pale.

And they hang along the bank, clinging to the branches dank,

A shadowy festoon out of sight of the moon;

And they see in front of them, rising from the mud,

A single straight stem and a single pallid bud

In that little lake of light from the moon's calm height.

A stem, a ghostly bud, on the moon-swept mud

That shimmers like a pond; and over there beyond

The guardian forest high, menacing and strange,

Invades the empty sky with its wild black range.

And they watch hour by hour that small lonely flower

In that deep forest place that hunter never found.

It shines without sound, as a star in space.

And the silence all around that solitary place

Is like silence in a dream; till a sudden flashing gleam

Down their dark faces flies; and their lips fall apart

And their glimmering great eyes with excitement dart

And their fingers, clutching the branches they were touching,

Shake and arouse hissing leaves on the boughs.

And they whisper aswoon: Did it move in the moon?

O it moved as it grew!

It is moving, opening, with calm and gradual will

And their bodies where they cling are shadowed and still,

And with marvel they mark that the mud now is dark,

For the unfolding flower, like a goddess in her power,

Challenges the moon with a light of her own,

That lovelily grows as the petals unclose,

Wider, more wide with an awful inward pride

Till the heart of it breaks, and stilled is their breath,

For the radiance it makes is as wonderful as death.

The morning's crimson stain tinges their ashen brows

As they part the last boughs and slowly step again

On to the village grass, and chill and languid pass

Into the huts to sleep.

             Brief slumber, yet so deep

That, when they wake to day, darkness and splendour seem

Broken and far-away, a faint miraculous dream;

And when those maidens rise they are as they ever were

Save only for a rare shade of trouble in their eyes.

And the surly thick-lipped men, as they sit about their huts

Making drums out of guts, grunting gruffly now and then,

Carving sticks of ivory, stretching shields of wrinkled skin,

Smoothing sinister and thin squatting gods of ebony,

Chip and grunt and do not see.

             But each mother, silently,

Longer than her wont stays shut in the dimness of her hut,

For she feels a brooding cloud of memory in the air,

A lingering thing there that makes her sit bowed

With hollow shining eyes, as the night-fire dies,

And stare softly at the ember, and try to remember,

Something sorrowful and far, something sweet and vaguely seen

Like an early evening star when the sky is pale green:

A quiet silver tower that climbed in an hour,

Or a ghost like a flower, or a flower like a queen:

Something holy in the past that came and did not last....

But she knows not what it was.


Contents



Siegfried Sassoon


A Letter Home


(To Robert Graves)


I

Here I'm sitting in the gloom

Of my quiet attic room.

France goes rolling all around,

Fledged with forest May has crowned.

And I puff my pipe, calm-hearted,

Thinking how the fighting started,

Wondering when we'll ever end it,

Back to Hell with Kaiser send it,

Gag the noise, pack up and go,

Clockwork soldiers in a row.

I've got better things to do

Than to waste my time on you.

II

Robert, when I drowse to-night,

Skirting lawns of sleep to chase

Shifting dreams in mazy light,

Somewhere then I'll see your face

Turning back to bid me follow

Where I wag my arms and hollo,

Over hedges hasting after

Crooked smile and baffling laughter,

Running tireless, floating, leaping,

Down your web-hung woods and valleys,

Garden glooms and hornbeam alleys,

Where the glowworm stars are peeping,

Till I find you, quiet as stone

On a hill-top all alone,

Staring outward, gravely pondering

Jumbled leagues of hillock-wandering.

III

You and I have walked together

In the starving winter weather.

We've been glad because we knew

Time's too short and friends are few.

We've been sad because we missed

One whose yellow head was kissed

By the gods, who thought about him

Till they couldn't do without him.

Now he's here again; I've seen

Soldier David dressed in green,

Standing in a wood that swings

To the madrigal he sings.

He's come back, all mirth and glory,

Like the prince in a fairy story.

Winter called him far away;

Blossoms bring him home with May.

IV

Well, I know you'll swear it's true

That you found him decked in blue

Striding up through morning-land

With a cloud on either hand.

Out in Wales, you'll say, he marches

Arm-in-arm with oaks and larches;

Hides all night in hilly nooks,

Laughs at dawn in tumbling brooks.

Yet, it's certain, here he teaches

Outpost-schemes to groups of beeches.

And I'm sure, as here I stand,

That he shines through every land,

That he sings in every place

Where we're thinking of his face.

V

Robert, there's a war in France;

Everywhere men bang and blunder,

Sweat and swear and worship Chance,

Creep and blink through cannon thunder.

Rifles crack and bullets flick,

Sing and hum like hornet-swarms.

Bones are smashed and buried quick.

Yet, through stunning battle storms,

All the while I watch the spark

Lit to guide me; for I know

Dreams will triumph, though the dark

Scowls above me where I go.

You

can hear me;

you

can mingle

Radiant folly with my jingle.

War's a joke for me and you

While we know such dreams are true!


Contents



The Kiss


To these I turn, in these I trust;

Brother Lead and Sister Steel.

To his blind power I make appeal;

I guard her beauty clean from rust.

He spins and burns and loves the air,

And splits a skull to win my praise;

But up the nobly marching days

She glitters naked, cold and fair.

Sweet Sister, grant your soldier this;

That in good fury he may feel

The body where he sets his heel

Quail from your downward darting kiss.


Contents



The Dragon and the Undying


All night the flares go up; the Dragon sings

And beats upon the dark with furious wings;

And, stung to rage by his own darting fires,

Reaches with grappling coils from town to town;

He lusts to break the loveliness of spires,

And hurls their martyred music toppling down.

Yet, though the slain are homeless as the breeze,

Vocal are they, like storm-bewilder'd seas.

Their faces are the fair, unshrouded night,

And planets are their eyes, their ageless dreams.

Tenderly stooping earthward from their height,

They wander in the dusk with chanting streams;

And they are dawn-lit trees, with arms up-flung,

To hail the burning heavens they left unsung.


Contents



To Victory


Return to greet me, colours that were my joy,

Not in the woeful crimson of men slain,

But shining as a garden; come with the streaming

Banners of dawn and sundown after rain.

I want to fill my gaze with blue and silver,

Radiance through living roses, spires of green

Rising in young-limbed copse and lovely wood,

Where the hueless wind passes and cries unseen.

I am not sad; only I long for lustre, —

Tired of the greys and browns and the leafless ash.

I would have hours that move like a glitter of dancers

Far from the angry guns that boom and flash.

Return, musical, gay with blossom and fleetness,

Days when my sight shall be clear and my heart rejoice;

Come from the sea with breadth of approaching brightness,

When the blithe wind laughs on the hills with up-lifted voice.


Contents



'They'


The Bishop tells us: 'When the boys come back

They will not be the same; for they'll have fought

In a just cause: they lead the last attack

On Anti-Christ; their comrades' blood has bought

New right to breed an honourable race.

They have challenged Death and dared him face to face.'

'We're none of us the same!' the boys reply.

For George lost both his legs; and Bill's stone blind;

Poor Jim's shot through the lungs and like to die;

And Bert's gone syphilitic; you'll not find

A chap who's served that hasn't found some change.'

And the Bishop said: 'The ways of God are strange!'


Contents



'In the Pink'


So Davies wrote: 'This leaves me in the pink.'

Then scrawled his name: 'Your loving sweet-heart, Willie'

With crosses for a hug. He'd had a drink

Of rum and tea; and, though the barn was chilly,

For once his blood ran warm; he had pay to spend.

Winter was passing; soon the year would mend.

He couldn't sleep that night. Stiff in the dark

He groaned and thought of Sundays at the farm,

When he'd go out as cheerful as a lark

In his best suit to wander arm-in-arm

With brown-eyed Gwen, and whisper in her ear

The simple, silly things she liked to hear.

And then he thought: to-morrow night we trudge

Up to the trenches, and my boots are rotten.

Five miles of stodgy clay and freezing sludge,

And everything but wretchedness forgotten.

To-night he's in the pink; but soon he'll die.

And still the war goes on; he don't know why.


Contents



Haunted


Evening was in the wood, louring with storm.

A time of drought had sucked the weedy pool

And baked the channels; birds had done with song.

Thirst was a dream of fountains in the moon,

Or willow-music blown across the water

Leisurely sliding on by weir and mill.

Uneasy was the man who wandered, brooding,

His face a little whiter than the dusk.

A drone of sultry wings flicker'd in his head.

The end of sunset burning thro' the boughs

Died in a smear of red; exhausted hours

Cumber'd, and ugly sorrows hemmed him in.

He thought: 'Somewhere there's thunder,' as he strove

To shake off dread; he dared not look behind him,

But stood, the sweat of horror on his face.

He blundered down a path, trampling on thistles,

In sudden race to leave the ghostly trees.

And: 'Soon I'll be in open fields,' he thought,

And half remembered starlight on the meadows,

Scent of mown grass and voices of tired men,

Fading along the field-paths; home and sleep

And cool-swept upland spaces, whispering leaves,

And far off the long churring night-jar's note.

But something in the wood, trying to daunt him,

Led him confused in circles through the brake.

He was forgetting his old wretched folly,

And freedom was his need; his throat was choking;

Barbed brambles gripped and clawed him round his legs,

And he floundered over snags and hidden stumps.

Mumbling: 'I will get out! I must get out!'

Butting and thrusting up the baffling gloom,

Pausing to listen in a space 'twixt thorns,

He peers around with boding, frantic eyes.

An evil creature in the twilight looping

Flapped blindly in his face. Beating it off,

He screeched in terror, and straightway something clambered

Heavily from an oak, and dropped, bent double,

To shamble at him zigzag, squat and bestial.

Headlong he charges down the wood, and falls

With roaring brain — agony — the snapt spark —

And blots of green and purple in his eyes.

Then the slow fingers groping on his neck,

And at his heart the strangling clasp of death.


Contents



The Death-Bed


He drowsed and was aware of silence heaped

Round him, unshaken as the steadfast walls;

Aqueous like floating rays of amber light,

Soaring and quivering in the wings of sleep, —

Silence and safety; and his mortal shore

Lipped by the inward, moonless waves of death.

Some one was holding water to his mouth.

He swallowed, unresisting; moaned and dropped

Through crimson gloom to darkness; and forgot

The opiate throb and ache that was his wound.

Water — calm, sliding green above the weir;

Water — a sky-lit alley for his boat,

Bird-voiced, and bordered with reflected flowers

And shaken hues of summer: drifting down,

He dipped contented oars, and sighed, and slept.

Night, with a gust of wind, was in the ward,

Blowing the curtain to a glimmering curve.

Night. He was blind; he could not see the stars

Glinting among the wraiths of wandering cloud;

Queer blots of colour, purple, scarlet, green,

Flickered and faded in his drowning eyes.

Rain; he could hear it rustling through the dark;

Fragrance and passionless music woven as one;

Warm rain on drooping roses; pattering showers

That soak the woods; not the harsh rain that sweeps

Behind the thunder, but a trickling peace

Gently and slowly washing life away.

* * * * *

He stirred, shifting his body; then the pain

Leaped like a prowling beast, and gripped and tore

His groping dreams with grinding claws and fangs.

But some one was beside him; soon he lay

Shuddering because that evil thing had passed.

And Death, who'd stepped toward him, paused and stared.

Light many lamps and gather round his bed.

Lend him your eyes, warm blood, and will to live.

Speak to him; rouse him; you may save him yet.

He's young; he hated war; how should he die

When cruel old campaigners win safe through?

But Death replied: 'I choose him.' So he went,

And there was silence in the summer night;

Silence and safety; and the veils of sleep.

Then, far away, the thudding of the guns.


Contents



I. Rosenberg


'Ah, Koelue ...'

Ah, Koelue!

Had you embalmed your beauty, so

It could not backward go,

Or change in any way,

What were the use, if on my eyes

The embalming spices were not laid

To keep us fixed,

Two amorous sculptures passioned endlessly?

What were the use, if my sight grew,

And its far branches were cloud-hung,

You small at the roots, like grass,

While the new lips my spirit would kiss

Were not red lips of flesh,

But the huge kiss of power?

Where yesterday soft hair through my fingers fell,

A shaggy mane would entwine,

And no slim form work fire to my thighs,

But human Life's inarticulate mass

Throb the pulse of a thing

Whose mountain flanks awry

Beg my mastery — mine!

Ah! I will ride the dizzy beast of the world

My road — my way!


Contents



Robert Nichols


To ——

Asleep within the deadest hour of night

And turning with the earth, I was aware

How suddenly the eastern curve was bright,

As when the sun arises from his lair.

But not the sun arose: it was thy hair

Shaken up heaven in tossing leagues of light.

Since then I know that neither night nor day

May I escape thee, O my heavenly hell!

Awake, in dreams, thou springest to waylay;

And should I dare to die, I know full well

Whose voice would mock me in the mourning bell,

Whose face would greet me in hell's fiery way.


Contents / Contents, p. 2


The Assault



The beating of the guns grows louder.

'Not long, boys, now.'

My heart burns whiter, fearfuller, prouder.

Hurricanes grow

As guns redouble their fire.

Through the shaken periscope peeping,

I glimpse their wire:

Black earth, fountains of earth rise, leaping,

Spouting like shocks of meeting waves,

Death's fountains are playing,

Shells like shrieking birds rush over;

Crash and din rises higher.

A stream of lead raves

Over us from the left ... (we safe under cover!)

Crash! Reverberation! Crash!

Acrid smoke billowing. Flash upon flash.

Black smoke drifting. The German line

Vanishes in confusion, smoke. Cries, and cry

Of our men, 'Gah, yer swine!
Ye're for it
,' die

In a hurricane of shell.

One cry:

'We're comin' soon! look out!'

There is opened hell

Over there; fragments fly,

Rifles and bits of men whirled at the sky:

Dust, smoke, thunder! A sudden bout

Of machine guns chattering ...

And redoubled battering,

As if in fury at their daring!...

No good staring.

Time soon now ... home ... house on a sunny hill ...

Gone like a flickered page:

Time soon now ... zero ... will engage....

A sudden thrill —

'Fix bayonets!'

Gods! we have our fill

Of fear, hysteria, exultation, rage,

Rage to kill.

My heart burns hot, whiter and whiter,

Contracts tighter and tighter,

Until I stifle with the will

Long forged, now used

(Though utterly strained) —

O pounding heart,

Baffled, confused,

Heart panged, head singing, dizzily pained —

To do my part.

Blindness a moment. Sick.

There the men are!

Bayonets ready: click!

Time goes quick;

A stumbled prayer ... somehow a blazing star

In a blue night ... where?

Again prayer.

The tongue trips. Start:

How's time? Soon now. Two minutes or less.

The gun's fury mounting higher ...

Their utmost. I lift a silent hand. Unseen I bless

Those hearts will follow me.

And beautifully,

Now beautifully my will grips,

Soul calm and round and filmed and white!

A shout: 'Men, no such order as retire!'

I nod.

      The whistle's 'twixt my lips ...

I catch

A wan, worn smile at me.

Dear men!

The pale wrist-watch ...

The quiet hand ticks on amid the din.

The guns again

Rise to a last fury, to a rage, a lust:

Kill! Pound! Kill! Pound! Pound!

Now comes the thrust!

My part ... dizziness ... will ... but trust

These men. The great guns rise;

Their fury seems to burst the earth and skies!

They lift.

Gather, heart, all thoughts that drift;

Be steel, soul,

Compress thyself

Into a round, bright whole.

I cannot speak.

Time. Time!

I hear my whistle shriek,

Between teeth set;

I fling an arm up,

Scramble up the grime

Over the parapet!

I'm up. Go on.

Something meets us.

Head down into the storm that greets us.

A wail.

Lights. Blurr.

Gone.

On, on. Lead. Lead. Hail.

Spatter. Whirr! Whirr!

'Toward that patch of brown;
Direction left
.' Bullets a stream.

Devouring thought crying in a dream.

Men, crumpled, going down....

Go on. Go.

Deafness. Numbness. The loudening tornado.

Bullets. Mud. Stumbling and skating.

My voice's strangled shout:

'Steady pace, boys!'

The still light: gladness.

'Look, sir. Look out!'

Ha! ha! Bunched figures waiting.

Revolver levelled quick!

Flick! Flick!

Red as blood.

Germans. Germans.

Good! O good!

Cool madness.


Contents / Contents, p. 2


Fulfilment


Was there love once? I have forgotten her.

Was there grief once? grief yet is mine.

Other loves I have, men rough, but men who stir

More grief, more joy, than love of thee and thine.

Faces cheerful, full of whimsical mirth,

Lined by the wind, burned by the sun;

Bodies enraptured by the abounding earth,

As whose children we are brethren: one.

And any moment may descend hot death

To shatter limbs! pulp, tear, blast

Beloved soldiers who love rough life and breath

Not less for dying faithful to the last.

O the fading eyes, the grimed face turned bony,

Oped mouth gushing, fallen head,

Lessening pressure of a hand shrunk, clammed, and stony!

O sudden spasm, release of the dead!

Was there love once? I have forgotten her.

Was there grief once? grief yet is mine.

O loved, living, dying, heroic soldier,

All, all, my joy, my grief, my love, are thine!


Contents / Contents, p. 2


The Philosopher's Oration



(From 'A Faun's Holiday')

Meanwhile, though nations in distress

Cower at a comet's loveliness

Shaken across the midnight sky;

Though the wind roars, and Victory,

A virgin fierce, on vans of gold

Stoops through the cloud's white smother rolled

Over the armies' shock and flow

Across the broad green hills below,

Yet hovers and will not circle down

To cast t'ward one the leafy crown;

Though men drive galleys' golden beaks

To isles beyond the sunset peaks,

And cities on the sea behold

Whose walls are glass, whose gates are gold,

Whose turrets, risen in an hour,

Dazzle between the sun and shower,

Whose sole inhabitants are kings

Six cubits high with gryphon's wings

And beard and mien more glorious

Than Midas or Assaracus;

Though priests in many a hill-top fane

Lift anguished hands — and lift in vain —

Toward the sun's shaft dancing through

The bright roof's square of wind-swept blue;

Though 'cross the stars nightly arise

The silver fumes of sacrifice;

Though a new Helen bring new scars,

Pyres piled upon wrecked golden cars,

Stacked spears, rolled smoke, and spirits sped

Like a streaked flame toward the dead:

Though all these be, yet grows not old

Delight of sunned and windy wold,

Of soaking downs aglare, asteam,

Of still tarns where the yellow gleam

Of a far sunrise slowly breaks,

Or sunset strews with golden flakes

The deeps which soon the stars will throng.

For earth yet keeps her undersong

Of comfort and of ultimate peace,

That whoso seeks shall never cease

To hear at dawn or noon or night.

Joys hath she, too, joys thin and bright,

Too thin, too bright, for those to hear

Who listen with an eager ear,

Or course about and seek to spy,

Within an hour, eternity.

First must the spirit cast aside

This world's and next his own poor pride

And learn the universe to scan

More as a flower, less as a man.

Then shall he hear the lonely dead

Sing and the stars sing overhead,

And every spray upon the heath,

And larks above and ants beneath;

The stream shall take him in her arms;

Blue skies shall rest him in their calms;

The wind shall be a lovely friend,

And every leaf and bough shall bend

Over him with a lover's grace.

The hills shall bare a perfect face

Full of a high solemnity;

The heavenly clouds shall weep, and be

Content as overhead they swim

To be high brothers unto him.

No more shall he feel pitched and hurled

Uncomprehended into this world;

For every place shall be his place,

And he shall recognize its face.

At dawn he shall upon his path;

No sword shall touch him, nor the wrath

Of the ranked crowd of clamorous men.

At even he shall home again,

And lay him down to sleep at ease,

One with the Night and the Night's peace.

Ev'n Sorrow, to be escaped of none,

But a more deep communion

Shall be to him, and Death at last

No more dreaded than the Past,

Whose shadow in the brain of earth

Informs him now and gave him birth.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Naiads' Music


(From 'A Faun's Holiday')

Come, ye sorrowful, and steep

Your tired brows in a nectarous sleep:

For our kisses lightlier run

Than the traceries of the sun

By the lolling water cast

Up grey precipices vast,

Lifting smooth and warm and steep

Out of the palely shimmering deep.

Come, ye sorrowful, and take

Kisses that are but half awake:

For here are eyes O softer far

Than the blossom of the star

Upon the mothy twilit waters,

And here are mouths whose gentle laughters

Are but the echoes of the deep

Laughing and murmuring in its sleep.

Come, ye sorrowful, and see

The raindrops flaming goldenly

On the stream's eddies overhead

And dragonflies with drops of red

In the crisp surface of each wing

Threading slant rains that flash and sing,

Or under the water-lily's cup,

From darkling depths, roll slowly up

The bronze flanks of an ancient bream

Into the hot sun's shattered beam,

Or over a sunk tree's bubbled hole

The perch stream in a golden shoal:

Come, ye sorrowful; our deep

Holds dreams lovelier than sleep.

But if ye sons of Sorrow come

Only wishing to be numb:

Our eyes are sad as bluebell posies,

Our breasts are soft as silken roses,

And our hands are tenderer

Than the breaths that scarce can stir

The sunlit eglantine that is

Murmurous with hidden bees.

Come, ye sorrowful, and steep

Your tired brows in a nectarous sleep.

Come, ye sorrowful, for here

No voices sound but fond and clear

Of mouths as lorn as is the rose

That under water doth disclose,

Amid her crimson petals torn,

A heart as golden as the morn;

And here are tresses languorous

As the weeds wander over us,

And brows as holy and as bland

As the honey-coloured sand

Lying sun-entranced below

The lazy water's limpid flow:

Come, ye sorrowful, and steep

Your tired brows in a nectarous sleep.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Prophetic Bard's Oration


(From 'A Faun's Holiday')

'Be warned! I feel the world grow old,

And off Olympus fades the gold

Of the simple passionate sun;

And the Gods wither one by one:

Proud-eyed Apollo's bow is broken,

And throned Zeus nods nor may be woken

But by the song of spirits seven

Quiring in the midnight heaven

Of a new world no more forlorn,

Sith unto it a Babe is born,

That in a propped, thatched stable lies,

While with darkling, reverent eyes

Dusky Emperors, coifed in gold,

Kneel mid the rushy mire, and hold

Caskets of rubies, urns of myrrh,

Whose fumes enwrap the thurifer

And coil toward the high dim rafters

Where, with lutes and warbling laughters,

Clustered cherubs of rainbow feather,

Fanning the fragrant air together,

Flit in jubilant holy glee,

And make heavenly minstrelsy

To the Child their Sun, whose glow

Bathes them His cloudlets from below....

Long shall this chimed accord be heard,

Yet all earth hushed at His first word:

Then shall be seen Apollo's car

Blaze headlong like a banished star;

And the Queen of heavenly Loves

Dragged downward by her dying doves;

Vulcan, spun on a wheel, shall track

The circle of the zodiac;

Silver Artemis be lost,

To the polar blizzards tossed;

Heaven shall curdle as with blood;

The sun be swallowed in the flood;

The universe be silent save

For the low drone of winds that lave

The shadowed great world's ashen sides

As through the rustling void she glides.

Then shall there be a whisper heard

Of the Grave's Secret and its Word,

Where in black silence none shall cry

Save those who, dead-affrighted, spy

How from the murmurous graveyards creep

The figures of eternal sleep.

Last: when 'tis light men shall behold,

Beyond the crags, a flower of gold

Blossoming in a golden haze,

And, while they guess Zeus' halls now blaze,

Shall in the blossom's heart descry

The saints of a new hierarchy!'

He ceased ... and in the morning sky

Zeus' anger threatened murmurously.

I sped away. The lightning's sword

Stabbed on the forest. But the word

Abides with me. I feel its power

Most darkly in the twilit hour,

When Night's eternal shadow, cast

Over earth hushed and pale and vast,

Darkly foretells the soundless Night

In which this orb, so green, so bright,

Now spins, and which shall compass her

When on her rondure nought shall stir

But snow-whorls which the wind shall roll

From the Equator to the Pole ...

For everlastingly there is

Something Beyond, Behind: I wis

All Gods are haunted, and there clings,

As hound behind fled sheep, the things

Beyond the Universe's ken:

Gods haunt the Half-Gods, Half-Gods men,

And Man the brute. Gods, born of Night,

Feel a blacker appetite

Gape to devour them; Half-Gods dread

But jealous Gods; and mere men tread

Warily lest a Half-God rise

And loose on them from empty skies

Amazement, thunder, stark affright,

Famine and sudden War's thick night,

In which loud Furies hunt the Pities

Through smoke above wrecked, flaming cities.

For Pan, the Unknown God, rules all.

He shall outlive the funeral,

Change, and decay, of many Gods,

Until he, too, lets fall his rods

Of viewless power upon that minute

When Universe cowers at Infinite!


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Tower


It was deep night, and over Jerusalem's low roofs

The moon floated, drifting through high vaporous woofs.

The moonlight crept and glistened silent, solemn, sweet,

Over dome and column, up empty, endless street;

In the closed, scented gardens the rose loosed from the stem

Her white showery petals; none regarded them;

The starry thicket breathed odours to the sentinel palm;

Silence possessed the city like a soul possessed by calm.

Not a spark in the warren under the giant night,

Save where in a turret's lantern beamed a grave, still light:

There in the topmost chamber a gold-eyed lamp was lit —

Marvellous lamp in darkness, informing, redeeming it!

For, set in that tiny chamber, Jesus, the blessed and doomed,

Spoke to the lone apostles as light to men en-tombed;

And spreading his hands in blessing, as one soon to be dead,

He put soft enchantment into spare wine and bread.

The hearts of the disciples were broken and full of tears,

Because their lord, the spearless, was hedgéd about with spears;

And in his face the sickness of departure had spread a gloom,

At leaving his young friends friendless.

             They could not forget the tomb.

He smiled subduedly, telling, in tones soft as voice of the dove,

The endlessness of sorrow, the eternal solace of love;

And lifting the earthly tokens, wine and sorrowful bread,

He bade them sup and remember one who lived and was dead.

And they could not restrain their weeping.

             But one rose up to depart,

Having weakness and hate of weakness raging within his heart,

And bowed to the robed assembly whose eyes gleamed wet in the light.

Judas arose and departed: night went out to the night.

Then Jesus lifted his voice like a fountain in an ocean of tears,

And comforted his disciples and calmed and allayed their fears.

But Judas wound down the turret, creeping from floor to floor,

And would fly; but one leaning, weeping, barred him beside the door.

And he knew her by her ruddy garment and two yet-watching men:

Mary of Seven Evils, Mary Magdalen.

And he was frighted at her. She sighed: 'I dreamed him dead.

We sell the body for silver ...'

Then Judas cried out and fled

Forth into the night!... The moon had begun to set:

A drear, deft wind went sifting, setting the dust afret;

Into the heart of the city Judas ran on and prayed

To stern Jehovah lest his deed make him afraid.

But in the tiny lantern, hanging as if on air,

The disciples sat unspeaking. Amaze and peace were there.

For his voice, more lovely than song of all earthly birds,

In accents humble and happy spoke slow, consoling words.

Thus Jesus discoursed, and was silent, sitting up-right, and soon

Past the casement behind him slanted the sinking moon;

And, rising for Olivet, all stared, between love and dread,

Seeing the torrid moon a ruddy halo behind his head.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Harold Monro


Two Poems


(Numbers I and X in 'Strange Meetings')


I

If suddenly a clod of earth should rise,

And walk about, and breathe, and speak, and love,

How one would tremble, and in what surprise

Gasp: 'Can

you

move?'

I see men walking, and I always feel:

'Earth! How have you done this? What can you be?'

I can't learn how to know men, or conceal

How strange they are to me.





II

A flower is looking through the ground,

Blinking at the April weather;

Now a child has seen the flower:

Now they go and play together.

Now it seems the flower will speak,

And will call the child its brother —

But, oh strange forgetfulness! —

They don't recognize each other.



Contents / Contents, p. 2



Every Thing


Since man has been articulate,

Mechanical, improvidently wise,

(Servant of Fate),

He has not understood the little cries

And foreign conversations of the small

Delightful creatures that have followed him

Not far behind;

Has failed to hear the sympathetic call

Of Crockery and Cutlery, those kind

Reposeful Teraphim

Of his domestic happiness; the Stool

He sat on, or the Door he entered through:

He has not thanked them, overbearing fool!

What is he coming to?

But you should listen to the talk of these.

Honest they are, and patient they have kept,

Served him without his Thank you or his Please.

I often heard

The gentle Bed, a sigh between each word,

Murmuring, before I slept.

The Candle, as I blew it, cried aloud,

Then bowed,

And in a smoky argument

Into the darkness went.

The Kettle puffed a tentacle of breath: —

'Pooh! I have boiled his water, I don't know

Why; and he always says I boil too slow.

He never calls me "Sukie, dear," and oh,

I wonder why I squander my desire

Sitting submissive on his kitchen fire.'

Now the old Copper Basin suddenly

Rattled and tumbled from the shelf,

Bumping and crying: 'I can fall by myself;

Without a woman's hand

To patronize and coax and flatter me,

I understand

The lean and poise of gravitable land.'

It gave a raucous and tumultuous shout,

Twisted itself convulsively about,

Rested upon the floor, and, while I stare,

It stares and grins at me.

The old impetuous Gas above my head

Begins irascibly to flare and fret,

Wheezing into its epileptic jet,

Reminding me I ought to go to bed.

The Rafters creak; an Empty-Cupboard door

Swings open; now a wild Plank of the floor

Breaks from its joist, and leaps behind my foot.

Down from the chimney half a pound of Soot

Tumbles, and lies, and shakes itself again.

The Putty cracks against the window-pane.

A piece of Paper in the basket shoves

Another piece, and toward the bottom moves.

My independent Pencil, while I write,

Breaks at the point: the ruminating Clock

Stirs all its body and begins to rock,

Warning the waiting presence of the Night,

Strikes the dead hour, and tumbles to the plain

Ticking of ordinary work again.

You do well to remind me, and I praise

Your strangely individual foreign ways.

You call me from myself to recognize

Companionship in your unselfish eyes.

I want your dear acquaintances, although

I pass you arrogantly over, throw

Your lovely sounds, and squander them along

My busy days. I'll do you no more wrong.

Purr for me, Sukie, like a faithful cat.

You, my well trampled Boots, and you, my Hat,

Remain my friends: I feel, though I don't speak,

Your touch grow kindlier from week to week.

It well becomes our mutual happiness

To go toward the same end more or less.

There is not much dissimilarity,

Not much to choose, I know it well, in fine,

Between the purposes of you and me,

And your eventual Rubbish Heap, and mine.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Solitude


When you have tidied all things for the night,

And while your thoughts are fading to their sleep,

You'll pause a moment in the late firelight,

Too sorrowful to weep.

The large and gentle furniture has stood

In sympathetic silence all the day

With that old kindness of domestic wood;

Nevertheless the haunted room will say:

'Some one must be away.'

The little dog rolls over half awake,

Stretches his paws, yawns, looking up at you,

Wags his tail very slightly for your sake,

That you may feel he is unhappy too.

A distant engine whistles, or the floor

Creaks, or the wandering night-wind bangs a door.

Silence is scattered like a broken glass.

The minutes prick their ears and run about,

Then one by one subside again and pass

Sedately in, monotonously out.

You bend your head and wipe away a tear.

Solitude walks one heavy step more near.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Week-End


I

The train! The twelve o'clock for paradise.

Hurry, or it will try to creep away.

Out in the country every one is wise:

We can be only wise on Saturday.

There you are waiting, little friendly house:

Those are your chimney-stacks with you between,

Surrounded by old trees and strolling cows,

Staring through all your windows at the green.

Your homely floor is creaking for our tread;

The smiling tea-pot with contented spout

Thinks of the boiling water, and the bread

Longs for the butter. All their hands are out

To greet us, and the gentle blankets seem

Purring and crooning: 'Lie in us, and dream.'

II

The key will stammer, and the door reply,

The hall wake, yawn, and smile; the torpid stair

Will grumble at our feet, the table cry:

'Fetch my belongings for me; I am bare.'

A clatter! Something in the attic falls.

A ghost has lifted up his robes and fled.

The loitering shadows move along the walls;

Then silence very slowly lifts his head.

The starling with impatient screech has flown

The chimney, and is watching from the tree.

They thought us gone for ever: mouse alone

Stops in the middle of the floor to see.

Now all you idle things, resume your toil.

Hearth, put your flames on. Sulky kettle, boil.

III

Contented evening; comfortable joys;

The snoozing fire, and all the fields are still:

Tranquil delight, no purpose, and no noise —

Unless the slow wind flowing round the hill.

'Murry' (the kettle) dozes; little mouse

Is rambling prudently about the floor.

There's lovely conversation in this house:

Words become princes that were slaves before.

What a sweet atmosphere for you and me

The people that have been here left behind....

Oh, but I fear it may turn out to be

Built of a dream, erected in the mind:

So if we speak too loud, we may awaken

To find it vanished, and ourselves mistaken.

IV

Lift up the curtain carefully. All the trees

Stand in the dark like drowsy sentinels.

The oak is talkative to-night; he tells

The little bushes crowding at his knees

That formidable, hard, voluminous

History of growth from acorn into age.

They titter like school-children; they arouse

Their comrades, who exclaim: 'He is very sage.'

Look how the moon is staring through that cloud,

Laying and lifting idle streaks of light.

O hark! was that the monstrous wind, so loud

And sudden, prowling always through the night?

Let down the shaking curtain. They are queer,

Those foreigners. They and we live so near.

V

Come, come to bed. The shadows move about,

And some one seems to overhear our talk.

The fire is low; the candles flicker out;

The ghosts of former tenants want to walk.

Already they are shuffling through the gloom.

I felt an old man touch my shoulder-blade;

Once he was married here; they love this room,

He and his woman and the child they made.

Dead, dead, they are, yet some familiar sound,

Creeping along the brink of happy life,

Revives their memory from under ground —

The farmer and his troublesome old wife.

Let us be going: as we climb the stairs,

They'll sit down in our warm half-empty chairs.

VI

Morning! Wake up! Awaken! All the boughs

Are rippling on the air across the green.

The youngest birds are singing to the house.

Blood of the world! — and is the country clean?

Disturb the precinct. Cool it with a shout.

Sing as you trundle down to light the fire.

Turn the encumbering shadows tumbling out.

And fill the chambers with a new desire.

Life is no good, unless the morning brings

White happiness and quick delight of day.

These half-inanimate domestic things

Must all be useful, or must go away.

Coffee, be fragrant. Porridge in my plate,

Increase the vigour to fulfil my fate.

VII

The fresh air moves like water round a boat.

The white clouds wander. Let us wander too.

The whining, wavering plover flap and float.

That crow is flying after that cuckoo.

Look! Look!... They're gone. What are the great trees calling?

Just come a little farther, by that edge

Of green, to where the stormy ploughland, falling

Wave upon wave, is lapping to the hedge.

Oh, what a lovely bank! Give me your hand.

Lie down and press your heart against the ground.

Let us both listen till we understand,

Each through the other, every natural sound....

I can't hear anything to-day, can you,

But, far and near: 'Cuckoo! Cuckoo! Cuckoo!'?

VIII

The everlasting grass — how bright, how cool!

The day has gone too suddenly, too soon.

There's something white and shiny in that pool —

Throw in a stone, and you will hit the moon.

Listen, the church-bell ringing! Do not say

We must go back to-morrow to our work.

We'll tell them we are dead: we died to-day.

We're lazy. We're too happy. We will shirk.

We're cows. We're kettles. We'll be anything

Except the manikins of time and fear.

We'll start away to-morrow wandering,

And nobody will notice in a year....

Now the great sun is slipping under ground.

Grip firmly! — How the earth is whirling round!

IX

Be staid; be careful; and be not too free.

Temptation to enjoy your liberty

May rise against you, break into a crime,

And smash the habit of employing Time.

It serves no purpose that the careful clock

Mark the appointment, the officious train

Hurry to keep it, if the minutes mock

Loud in your ear: 'Late. Late. Late. Late again.'

Week-end is very well on Saturday:

On Monday it's a different affair —

A little episode, a trivial stay

In some oblivious spot somehow, somewhere.

On Sunday night we hardly laugh or speak:

Week-end begins to merge itself in Week.

X

Pack up the house, and close the creaking door.

The fields are dull this morning in the rain.

It's difficult to leave that homely floor.

Wave a light hand; we will return again.

(What was that bird?) Good-bye, ecstatic tree,

Floating, bursting, and breathing on the air.

The lonely farm is wondering that we

Can leave. How every window seems to stare!

That bag is heavy. Share it for a bit.

You like that gentle swashing of the ground

As we tread?...

           It is over. Now we sit

Reading the morning paper in the sound

Of the debilitating heavy train.

London again, again. London again.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Bird at Dawn


What I saw was just one eye

In the dawn as I was going:

A bird can carry all the sky

In that little button glowing.

Never in my life I went

So deep into the firmament.

He was standing on a tree,

All in blossom overflowing;

And he purposely looked hard at me,

At first, as if to question merrily:

'Where are you going?'

But next some far more serious thing to say:

I could not answer, could not look away.

Oh, that hard, round, and so distracting eye:

Little mirror of all sky! —

And then the after-song another tree

Held, and sent radiating back on me.

If no man had invented human word,

And a bird-song had been

The only way to utter what we mean,

What would we men have heard,

What understood, what seen,

Between the trills and pauses, in between

The singing and the silence of a bird?


Contents / Contents, p. 2



John Masefield


Seven Poems



I

Here in the self is all that man can know

Of Beauty, all the wonder, all the power,

All the unearthly colour, all the glow,

Here in the self which withers like a flower;

Here in the self which fades as hours pass,

And droops and dies and rots and is forgotten

Sooner, by ages, than the mirroring glass

In which it sees its glory still unrotten.

Here in the flesh, within the flesh, behind,

Swift in the blood and throbbing on the bone,

Beauty herself, the universal mind,

Eternal April wandering alone;

The God, the holy Ghost, the atoning Lord,

Here in the flesh, the never yet explored.





II

What am I, Life? A thing of watery salt

Held in cohesion by unresting cells

Which work they know not why, which never halt,

Myself unwitting where their master dwells.

I do not bid them, yet they toil, they spin;

A world which uses me as I use them,

Nor do I know which end or which begin,

Nor which to praise, which pamper, which condemn.

So, like a marvel in a marvel set,

I answer to the vast, as wave by wave

The sea of air goes over, dry or wet,

Or the full moon comes swimming from her cave,

Or the great sun comes north, this myriad I

Tingles, not knowing how, yet wondering why.





III

If I could get within this changing I,

This ever altering thing which yet persists,

Keeping the features it is reckoned by,

While each component atom breaks or twists;

If, wandering past strange groups of shifting forms,

Cells at their hidden marvels hard at work,

Pale from much toil, or red from sudden storms,

I might attain to where the Rulers lurk;

If, pressing past the guards in those grey gates,

The brain's most folded, intertwisted shell,

I might attain to that which alters fates,

The King, the supreme self, the Master Cell;

Then, on Man's earthly peak, I might behold

The unearthly self beyond, unguessed, untold.





IV

Ah, we are neither heaven nor earth, but men;

Something that uses and despises both,

That takes its earth's contentment in the pen,

Then sees the world's injustice and is wroth,

And flinging off youth's happy promise, flies

Up to some breach, despising earthly things,

And, in contempt of hell and heaven, dies

Rather than bear some yoke of priests or kings.

Our joys are not of heaven nor earth, but man's,

A woman's beauty, or a child's delight,

The trembling blood when the discoverer scans

The sought-for world, the guessed-at satellite;

The ringing scene, the stone at point to blush

For unborn men to look at and say 'Hush.'





V

Roses are beauty, but I never see

Those blood drops from the burning heart of June

Glowing like thought upon the living tree

Without a pity that they die so soon,

Die into petals, like those roses old,

Those women, who were summer in men's hearts

Before the smile upon the Sphinx was cold

Or sand had hid the Syrian and his arts.

O myriad dust of beauty that lies thick

Under our feet that not a single grain

But stirred and moved in beauty and was quick

For one brief moon and died nor lived again;

But when the moon rose lay upon the grass

Pasture to living beauty, life that was.





VI

I went into the fields, but you were there

Waiting for me, so all the summer flowers

Were only glimpses of your starry powers;

Beautiful and inspired dust they were.

I went down by the waters, and a bird

Sang with your voice in all the unknown tones

Of all that self of you I have not heard,

So that my being felt you to the bones.

I went into the house, and shut the door

To be alone, but you were there with me;

All beauty in a little room may be,

Though the roof lean and muddy be the floor.

Then in my bed I bound my tired eyes

To make a darkness for my weary brain;

But like a presence you were there again,

Being and real, beautiful and wise,

So that I could not sleep, and cried aloud,

'You strange grave thing, what is it you would say?'

The redness of your dear lips dimmed to grey,

The waters ebbed, the moon hid in a cloud.





VII

Death lies in wait for you, you wild thing in the wood,

Shy-footed beauty dear, half-seen, half-understood,

Glimpsed in the beech-wood dim and in the dropping fir,

Shy like a fawn and sweet and beauty's minister.

Glimpsed as in flying clouds by night the little moon,

A wonder, a delight, a paleness passing soon.

Only a moment held, only an hour seen,

Only an instant known in all that life has been,

One instant in the sand to drink that gush of grace,

The beauty of your way, the marvel of your face.

Death lies in wait for you, but few short hours he gives;

I perish even as you by whom all spirit lives.

Come to me, spirit, come, and fill my hour of breath

With hours of life in life that pay no toll to death.




Contents / Contents, p. 2



Ralph Hodgson


The Gipsy Girl

'Come, try your skill, kind gentlemen,

A penny for three tries!'

Some threw and lost, some threw and won

A ten-a-penny prize.

She was a tawny gipsy girl,

A girl of twenty years,

I liked her for the lumps of gold

That jingled from her ears;

I liked the flaring yellow scarf

Bound loose about her throat,

I liked her showy purple gown

And flashy velvet coat.

A man came up, too loose of tongue,

And said no good to her;

She did not blush as Saxons do,

Or turn upon the cur;

She fawned and whined 'Sweet gentleman,

A penny for three tries!'

— But oh, the den of wild things in

The darkness of her eyes!


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Bells of Heaven

'Twould ring the bells of Heaven

The wildest peal for years,

If Parson lost his senses

And people came to theirs,

And he and they together

Knelt down with angry prayers

For tamed and shabby tigers

And dancing dogs and bears,

And wretched, blind pit ponies,

And little hunted hares.



Contents / Contents, p. 2


Babylon

If you could bring her glories back!

You gentle sirs who sift the dust

And burrow in the mould and must

Of Babylon for bric-a-brac;

Who catalogue and pigeon-hole

The faded splendours of her soul

And put her greatness under glass —

If you could bring her past to pass!

If you could bring her dead to life!

The soldier lad; the market wife;

Madam buying fowls from her;

Tip, the butcher's bandy cur;

Workmen carting bricks and clay;

Babel passing to and fro

On the business of a day

Gone three thousand years ago —

That you cannot; then be done,

Put the goblet down again,

Let the broken arch remain,

Leave the dead men's dust alone —

Is it nothing how she lies,

This old mother of you all,

You great cities proud and tall

Towering to a hundred skies

Round a world she never knew,

Is it nothing, this, to you?

Must the ghoulish work go on

Till her very floors are gone?

While there's still a brick to save

Drive these people from her grave.

The Jewish seer when he cried

Woe to Babel's lust and pride

Saw the foxes at her gates;

Once again the wild thing waits.

Then leave her in her last decay

A house of owls, a foxes' den;

The desert that till yesterday

Hid her from the eyes of men

In its proper time and way

Will take her to itself again.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Robert Graves


It's a Queer Time

It's hard to know if you're alive or dead

When steel and fire go roaring through your head.

One moment you'll be crouching at your gun

Traversing, mowing heaps down half in fun:

The next, you choke and clutch at your right breast —

No time to think — leave all — and off you go ...

To Treasure Island where the Spice winds blow,

To lovely groves of mango, quince and lime —

Breathe no good-bye, but ho, for the Red West!

It's a queer time.

You're charging madly at them yelling 'Fag!'

When somehow something gives and your feet drag.

You fall and strike your head; yet feel no pain

And find ... you're digging tunnels through the hay

In the Big Barn, 'cause it's a rainy day.

Oh springy hay, and lovely beams to climb!

You're back in the old sailor suit again.

It's a queer time.

Or you'll be dozing safe in your dug-out —

Great roar — the trench shakes and falls about —

You're struggling, gasping, struggling, then ... hullo!

Elsie comes tripping gaily down the trench,

Hanky to nose — that lyddite makes a stench —

Getting her pinafore all over grime.

Funny! because she died ten years ago!

It's a queer time.

The trouble is, things happen much too quick;

Up jump the Bosches, rifles thump and click,

You stagger, and the whole scene fades away:

Even good Christians don't like passing straight

From Tipperary or their Hymn of Hate

To Alleluiah-chanting, and the chime

Of golden harps ... and ... I'm not well today ...

It's a queer time.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



David and Goliath


(For D. C. T., killed at Fricourt, March 1916)

Once an earlier David took

Smooth pebbles from the brook:

Out between the lines he went

To that one-sided tournament,

A shepherd boy who stood out fine

And young to fight a Philistine

Clad all in brazen mail. He swears

That he's killed lions, he's killed bears,

And those that scorn the God of Zion

Shall perish so like bear or lion.

But ... the historian of that fight

Had not the heart to tell it right.

Striding within javelin range

Goliath marvels at this strange

Goodly-faced boy so proud of strength.

David's clear eye measures the length;

With hand thrust back, he cramps one knee,

Poises a moment thoughtfully,

And hurls with a long vengeful swing.

The pebble, humming from the sling

Like a wild bee, flies a sure line;

For the forehead of the Philistine;

Then ... but there comes a brazen clink

And quicker than a man can think

Goliath's shield parries each cast.

Clang! clang! and clang! was David's last

Scorn blazes in the Giant's eye,

Towering unhurt six cubits high.

Says foolish David, 'Damn your shield!

And damn my sling! but I'll not yield.'

He takes his staff of Mamre oak,

A knotted shepherd-staff that's broke

The skull of many a wolf and fox

Come filching lambs from Jesse's flocks.

Loud laughs Goliath, and that laugh

Can scatter chariots like blown chaff

To rout: but David, calm and brave,

Holds his ground, for God will save.

Steel crosses wood, a flash, and oh!

Shame for Beauty's overthrow!

(God's eyes are dim, His ears are shut.)

One cruel backhand sabre cut —

'I'm hit! I'm killed!' young David cries,

Throws blindly forward, chokes ... and dies.

And look, spike-helmeted, grey, grim,

Goliath straddles over him.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



A Pinch of Salt


When a dream is born in you

With a sudden clamorous pain,

When you know the dream is true

And lovely, with no flaw nor stain,

O then, be careful, or with sudden clutch

You'll hurt the delicate thing you prize so much.

Dreams are like a bird that mocks,

Flirting the feathers of his tail.

When you seize at the salt-box

Over the hedge you'll see him sail.

Old birds are neither caught with salt nor chaff:

They watch you from the apple bough and laugh.

Poet, never chase the dream.

Laugh yourself and turn away.

Mask your hunger, let it seem

Small matter if he come or stay;

But when he nestles in your hand at last,

Close up your fingers tight and hold him fast.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Star Talk


'Are you awake, Gemelli,

This frosty night?'

'We'll be awake till reveillé,

Which is Sunrise,' say the Gemelli,

'It's no good trying to go to sleep:

If there's wine to be got we'll drink it deep,

But rest is hopeless tonight,

But rest is hopeless tonight.'

'Are you cold too, poor Pleiads,

This frosty night?'

'Yes, and so are the Hyads:

See us cuddle and hug,' say the Pleiads,

'All six in a ring: it keeps us warm:

We huddle together like birds in a storm:

It's bitter weather tonight,

It's bitter weather tonight.'

'What do you hunt, Orion,

This starry night?'

'The Ram, the Bull and the Lion,

And the Great Bear,' says Orion,

'With my starry quiver and beautiful belt

I am trying to find a good thick pelt

To warm my shoulders tonight,

To warm my shoulders tonight.'

'Did you hear that, Great She-bear,

This frosty night?'

'Yes, he's talking of stripping me bare

Of my own big fur,' says the She-bear,

I'm afraid of the man and his terrible arrow:

The thought of it chills my bones to the marrow,

And the frost so cruel tonight!

And the frost so cruel tonight!

'How is your trade, Aquarius,

This frosty night?'

'Complaints is many and various

And my feet are cold,' says Aquarius,

'There's Venus objects to Dolphin-scales,

And Mars to Crab-spawn found in my pails,

And the pump has frozen tonight,

And the pump has frozen tonight.'


Contents / Contents, p. 2



In the Wilderness


Christ of his gentleness

Thirsting and hungering,

Walked in the wilderness;

Soft words of grace he spoke

Unto lost desert-folk

That listened wondering.

He heard the bitterns call

From ruined palace-wall,

Answered them brotherly.

He held communion

With the she-pelican

Of lonely piety.

Basilisk, cockatrice,

Flocked to his homilies,

With mail of dread device,

With monstrous barbed stings,

With eager dragon-eyes;

Great rats on leather wings

And poor blind broken things,

Foul in their miseries.

And ever with him went,

Of all his wanderings

Comrade, with ragged coat,

Gaunt ribs — poor innocent —

Bleeding foot, burning throat,

The guileless old scape-goat;

For forty nights and days

Followed in Jesus' ways,

Sure guard behind him kept,

Tears like a lover wept.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Boy in Church


'Gabble-gabble ... brethren ... gabble-gabble!'

My window glimpses larch and heather.

I hardly hear the tuneful babble,

Not knowing nor much caring whether

The text is praise or exhortation,

Prayer or thanksgiving or damnation.

Outside it blows wetter and wetter,

The tossing trees never stay still;

I shift my elbows to catch better

The full round sweep of heathered hill.

The tortured copse bends to and fro

In silence like a shadow-show.

The parson's voice runs like a river

Over smooth rocks. I like this church.

The pews are staid, they never shiver,

They never bend or sway or lurch.

'Prayer,' says the kind voice, 'is a chain

That draws down Grace from Heaven again.'

I add the hymns up over and over

Until there's not the least mistake.

Seven-seventy-one. (Look! there's a plover!

It's gone!) Who's that Saint by the Lake?

The red light from his mantle passes

Across the broad memorial brasses.

It's pleasant here for dreams and thinking,

Lolling and letting reason nod,

With ugly, serious people linking

Prayer-chains for a forgiving God.

But a dumb blast sets the trees swaying

With furious zeal like madmen praying.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



The Lady Visitor


Why do you break upon this old, cool peace,

This painted peace of ours,

With harsh dress hissing like a flock of geese,

With garish flowers?

Why do you churn smooth waters rough again,

Selfish old Skin-and-bone?

Leave us to quiet dreaming and slow pain,

Leave us alone.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Not Dead


Walking through trees to cool my heat and pain,

I know that David's with me here again.

All that is simple, happy, strong, he is.

Caressingly I stroke

Rough bark of the friendly oak.

A brook goes bubbling by: the voice is his.

Turf burns with pleasant smoke:

I laugh at chaffinch and at primroses.

All that is simple, happy, strong, he is.

Over the whole wood in a little while

Breaks his slow smile.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Wilfrid Wilson Gibson


Rupert Brooke


Your face was lifted to the golden sky

Ablaze beyond the black roofs of the square,

As flame on flame leapt, flourishing in air

Its tumult of red stars exultantly,

To the cold constellations dim and high;

And as we neared, the roaring ruddy flare

Kindled to gold your throat and brow and hair

Until you burned, a flame of ecstasy.

The golden head goes down into the night

Quenched in cold gloom — and yet again you stand

Beside me now with lifted face alight,

As, flame to flame, and fire to fire you burn ...

Then, recollecting, laughingly you turn,

And look into my eyes and take my hand.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Tenants


Suddenly, out of dark and leafy ways,

We came upon the little house asleep

In cold blind stillness, shadowless and deep,

In the white magic of the full moon-blaze.

Strangers without the gate, we stood agaze,

Fearful to break that quiet, and to creep

Into the home that had been ours to keep

Through a long year of happy nights and days.

So unfamiliar in the white moon-gleam,

So old and ghostly like a house of dream

It seemed, that over us there stole the dread

That even as we watched it, side by side,

The ghosts of lovers, who had lived and died

Within its walls, were sleeping in our bed.


Contents / Contents, p. 2



For G.


All night under the moon

Plovers are flying

Over the dreaming meadows of silvery light,

Over the meadows of June,

Flying and crying —

Wandering voices of love in the hush of the night.

All night under the moon,

Love, though we're lying

Quietly under the thatch, in silvery light

Over the meadows of June

Together we're flying —

Rapturous voices of love in the hush of the night?


Contents / Contents, p. 2



Sea Change


Wind-flicked and ruddy her young body glowed

In sunny shallows, splashing them to spray;

But when on rippled, silver sand she lay,

And over her the little green waves flowed,

Coldly translucent and moon-coloured showed

Her frail young beauty, as if rapt away

From all the light and laughter of the day

To some twilit, forlorn sea-god's abode.

Again into the sun with happy cry

She leapt alive and sparkling from the sea,

Sprinkling white spray against the hot blue sky,

A laughing girl ... and yet, I see her lie

Under a deeper tide eternally

In cold moon-coloured immortality.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Battle

I The Return

He went, and he was gay to go:

And I smiled on him as he went.

My boy! 'Twas well he couldn't know

My darkest dread, or what it meant —

Just what it meant to smile and smile

And let my son go cheerily —

My son ... and wondering all the while

What stranger would come back to me.

II The Dancers

All day beneath the hurtling shells

Before my burning eyes

Hover the dainty demoiselles —

The peacock dragon-flies.

Unceasingly they dart and glance

Above the stagnant stream —

And I am fighting here in France

As in a senseless dream.

A dream of shattering black shells

That hurtle overhead,

And dainty dancing demoiselles

Above the dreamless dead.

III Hit

Out of the sparkling sea

I drew my tingling body clear, and lay

On a low ledge the livelong summer day,

Basking, and watching lazily

White sails in Falmouth Bay.

My body seemed to burn

Salt in the sun that drenched it through and through

Till every particle glowed clean and new

And slowly seemed to turn

To lucent amber in a world of blue....

I felt a sudden wrench —

A trickle of warm blood —

And found that I was sprawling in the mud

Among the dead men in the trench.



Contents / Contents, p. 3



Lament


We who are left, how shall we look again

Happily on the sun or feel the rain

Without remembering how they who went

Ungrudgingly and spent

Their lives for us loved, too, the sun and rain?

A bird among the rain-wet lilac sings —

But we, how shall we turn to little things

And listen to the birds and winds and streams

Made holy by their dreams,

Nor feel the heart-break in the heart of things?


Contents / Contents, p. 3



John Freeman


Music Comes

Music comes

Sweetly from the trembling string

When wizard fingers sweep

Dreamily, half asleep;

When through remembering reeds

Ancient airs and murmurs creep,

Oboe oboe following,

Flute answering clear high flute,

Voices, voices — falling mute,

And the jarring drums.

At night I heard

First a waking bird

Out of the quiet darkness sing ...

Music comes

Strangely to the brain asleep!

And I heard

Soft, wizard fingers sweep

Music from the trembling string,

And through remembering reeds

Ancient airs and murmurs creep;

Oboe oboe following,

Flute calling clear high flute,

Voices faint, falling mute,

And low jarring drums;

Then all those airs

Sweetly jangled — newly strange,

Rich with change ...

Was it the wind in the reeds?

Did the wind range

Over the trembling string;

Into flute and oboe pouring

Solemn music; sinking, soaring

Low to high,

Up and down the sky?

Was it the wind jarring

Drowsy far-off drums?

Strangely to the brain asleep

Music comes.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



November Skies


Than these November skies

Is no sky lovelier. The clouds are deep;

Into their grey the subtle spies

Of colour creep,

Changing that high austerity to delight,

Till ev'n the leaden interfolds are bright.

And, where the cloud breaks, faint far azure peers

Ere a thin flushing cloud again

Shuts up that loveliness, or shares.

The huge great clouds move slowly, gently, as

Reluctant the quick sun should shine in vain,

Holding in bright caprice their rain.

And when of colours none,

Not rose, nor amber, nor the scarce late green,

Is truly seen, —

In all the myriad grey,

In silver height and dusky deep, remain

The loveliest,

Faint purple flushes of the unvanquished sun.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Discovery


Beauty walked over the hills and made them bright.

She in the long fresh grass scattered her rains

Sparkling and glittering like a host of stars,

But not like stars cold, severe, terrible.

Hers was the laughter of the wind that leaped

Arm-full of shadows, flinging them far and wide.

Hers the bright light within the quick green

Of every new leaf on the oldest tree.

It was her swimming made the river run

Shining as the sun;

Her voice, escaped from winter's chill and dark,

Singing in the incessant lark....

All this was hers — yet all this had not been

Except 'twas seen.

It was my eyes, Beauty, that made thee bright;

My ears that heard, the blood leaping in my veins,

The vehemence of transfiguring thought —

Not lights and shadows, birds, grasses and rains —

That made thy wonders wonderful.

For it has been, Beauty, that I have seen thee,

Tedious as a painted cloth at a bad play,

Empty of meaning and so of all delight.

Now thou hast blessed me with a great pure bliss,

Shaking thy rainy light all over the earth,

And I have paid thee with my thankfulness.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



'It was the Lovely Moon'


It was the lovely moon — she lifted

Slowly her white brow among

Bronze cloud-waves that ebbed and drifted

Faintly, faintlier afar.

Calm she looked, yet pale with wonder,

Sweet in unwonted thoughtfulness,

Watching the earth that dwindled under

Faintly, faintlier afar.

It was the lovely moon that lovelike

Hovered over the wandering, tired

Earth, her bosom grey and dovelike,

Hovering beautiful as a dove....

The lovely moon: — her soft light falling

Lightly on roof and poplar and pine —

Tree to tree whispering and calling,

Wonderful in the silvery shine

Of the round, lovely, thoughtful moon.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Stone Trees


Last night a sword-light in the sky

Flashed a swift terror on the dark.

In that sharp light the fields did lie

Naked and stone-like; each tree stood

Like a tranced woman, bound and stark.

Far off the wood

With darkness ridged the riven dark.

And cows astonied stared with fear,

And sheep crept to the knees of cows,

And conies to their burrows slid,

And rooks were still in rigid boughs,

And all things else were still or hid.

From all the wood

Came but the owl's hoot, ghostly, clear.

In that cold trance the earth was held

It seemed an age, or time was nought.

Sure never from that stone-like field

Sprang golden corn, nor from those chill

Grey granite trees was music wrought.

In all the wood

Even the tall poplar hung stone still.

It seemed an age, or time was none ...

Slowly the earth heaved out of sleep

And shivered, and the trees of stone

Bent and sighed in the gusty wind,

And rain swept as birds flocking sweep.

Far off the wood

Rolled the slow thunders on the wind.

From all the wood came no brave bird,

No song broke through the close-fall'n night,

Nor any sound from cowering herd:

Only a dog's long lonely howl

When from the window poured pale light.

And from the wood

The hoot came ghostly of the owl.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Pigeons


The pigeons, following the faint warm light,

Stayed at last on the roof till warmth was gone,

Then in the mist that's hastier than night

Disappeared all behind the carved dark stone,

Huddling from the black cruelty of the frost.

With the new sparkling sun they swooped and came

Like a cloud between the sun and street, and then

Like a cloud blown from the blue north were lost,

Vanishing and returning ever again,

Small cloud following cloud across the flame

That clear and meagre burned and burned away

And left the ice unmelting day by day.

... Nor could the sun through the roof's purple slate

(Though his gold magic played with shadow there

And drew the pigeons from the streaming air)

With any fiery magic penetrate.

Under the roof the air and water froze,

And no smoke from the gaping chimney rose.

The silver frost upon the window pane

Flowered and branched each starving night anew,

And stranger, lovelier and crueller grew;

Pouring her silver that cold silver through,

The moon made all the dim flower bright again.

... Pouring her silver through that barren flower

Of silver frost, until it filled and whitened

A room where two small children waited, frightened

At the pale ghost of light that hour by hour

Stared at them till though fear slept not they slept.

And when that white ghost from the window crept,

And day came and they woke and saw all plain

Though still the frost-flower blinded the window pane,

And touched their mother and touched her hand in vain,

And wondered why she woke not when they woke;

And wondered what it was their sleep that broke

When hand in hand they stared and stared, so frightened;

They feared and waited, and waited all day long,

While all the shadows went and the day brightened,

All the ill shadows but one shadow strong.

Outside were busy feet and human speech

And daily cries and horns. Maybe they heard,

Painfully wondering still, and each to each

Leaning, and listening if their mother stirred —

Cold, cold,

Hungering as the long slow hours grew old,

Though food within the cupboard idle lay

Beyond their thought, or but beyond their reach.

The soft blue pigeons all the afternoon

Sunned themselves on the roof or rose at play,

Then with the shrinking light fluttered away;

And once more came the icy-hearted moon,

Staring down at the frightened children there

That could but shiver and stare.

How many hours, how many days, who knows?

Neighbours there were who thought they had gone away

To return some luckier or luckless day.

No sound came from the room: the cold air froze

The very echo of the children's sighs.

And what they saw within each other's eyes,

Or heard each other's heart say as they peered

At the dead mother lying there, and feared

That she might wake, and then might never wake,

Who knows, who knows?

None heard a living sound their silence break.

In those cold days and nights how many birds,

Flittering above the fields and streams all frozen,

Watched hungrily the tended flocks and herds —

Earth's chosen nourished by earth's wise self-chosen!

How many birds suddenly stiffened and died

With no plaint cried,

The starved heart ceasing when the pale sun ceased!

And when the new day stepped from the same cold East

The dead birds lay in the light on the snow-flecked field,

Their song and beautiful free winging stilled.

I walked under snow-sprinkled hills at night,

And starry sprinkled skies deep blue and bright.

The keen wind thrust with his knife against the thin

Breast of the wood as I went tingling by,

And heard a weak cheep-cheep, — no more — the cry

Of a bird that crouched the smitten wood within ...

But no one heeded that sharp spiritual cry

Of the two children in their misery,

When in the cold and famished night death's shade

More terrible the moon's cold shadows made.

How was it none could hear

That bodiless crying, birdlike, sharp and clear?

I cannot think what they, unanswered, thought

When the night came again and shadows moved

As the moon through the ice-flower stared and roved,

And that unyielding Shadow came again.

That Shadow came again unseen and caught

The children as they sat listening in vain,

Their starved hearts failing ere the Shadow removed.

And when the new morn stepped from the same cold East

They lay unawakening in the barren light,

Their song and their imaginations bright,

Their pains and fears and all bewilderment ceased....

While the brief sun gave

New beauty to the death-flower of the frost,

And pigeons in the frore air swooped and tossed,

And glad eyes were more glad, and grave less grave.

There is not pity enough in heaven or earth,

There is not love enough, if children die

Like famished birds — oh, less mercifully.

A great wrong's done when such as these go forth

Into the starless dark, broken and bruised,

With mind and sweet affection all confused,

And horror closing round them as they go.

There is not pity enough!

And I have made, children, these verses for you,

Lasting a little longer than your breath,

Because I have been haunted with your death:

So men are driven to things they hate to do.

Jesus, forgive us all our happiness,

As Thou dost blot out all our miseries.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Happy is England Now


There is not anything more wonderful

Than a great people moving towards the deep

Of an unguessed and unfeared future; nor

Is aught so dear of all held dear before

As the new passion stirring in their veins

When the destroying Dragon wakes from sleep.

Happy is England now, as never yet!

And though the sorrows of the slow days fret

Her faithfullest children, grief itself is proud.

Ev'n the warm beauty of this spring and summer

That turns to bitterness turns then to gladness

Since for this England the beloved ones died.

Happy is England in the brave that die

For wrongs not hers and wrongs so sternly hers;

Happy in those that give, give, and endure

The pain that never the new years may cure;

Happy in all her dark woods, green fields, towns,

Her hills and rivers and her chafing sea.

What'er was dear before is dearer now.

There's not a bird singing upon his bough

But sings the sweeter in our English ears:

There's not a nobleness of heart, hand, brain

But shines the purer; happiest is England now

In those that fight, and watch with pride and tears.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



John Drinkwater


May Garden

A shower of green gems on my apple tree

This first morning of May

Has fallen out of the night, to be

Herald of holiday —

Bright gems of green that, fallen there,

Seem fixed and glowing on the air.

Until a flutter of blackbird wings

Shakes and makes the boughs alive,

And the gems are now no frozen things,

But apple-green buds to thrive

On sap of my May garden, how well

The green September globes will tell.

Also my pear tree has its buds,

But they are silver-yellow,

Like autumn meadows when the floods

Are silver under willow,

And here shall long and shapely pears

Be gathered while the autumn wears.

And there are sixty daffodils

Beneath my wall....

And jealousy it is that kills

This world when all

The spring's behaviour here is spent

To make the world magnificent.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Midlands

Black in the summer night my Cotswold hill

Aslant my window sleeps, beneath a sky

Deep as the bedded violets that fill

March woods with dusky passion. As I lie

Abed between cool walls I watch the host

Of the slow stars lit over Gloucester plain,

And drowsily the habit of these most

Beloved of English lands moves in my brain,

While silence holds dominion of the dark,

Save when the foxes from the spinneys bark.

I see the valleys in their morning mist

Wreathed under limpid hills in moving light,

Happy with many a yeoman melodist:

I see the little roads of twinkling white

Busy with fieldward teams and market gear

Of rosy men, cloth-gaitered, who can tell

The many-minded changes of the year,

Who know why crops and kine fare ill or well;

I see the sun persuade the mist away,

Till town and stead are shining to the day.

I see the wagons move along the rows

Of ripe and summer-breathing clover-flower,

I see the lissom husbandman who knows

Deep in his heart the beauty of his power,

As, lithely pitched, the full-heaped fork bids on

The harvest home. I hear the rickyard fill

With gossip as in generations gone,

While wagon follows wagon from the hill.

I think how, when our seasons all are sealed,

Shall come the unchanging harvest from the field.

I see the barns and comely manors planned

By men who somehow moved in comely thought,

Who, with a simple shippon to their hand,

As men upon some godlike business wrought;

I see the little cottages that keep

Their beauty still where since Plantagenet

Have come the shepherds happily to sleep,

Finding the loaves and cups of cider set;

I see the twisted shepherds, brown and old,

Driving at dusk their glimmering sheep to fold.

And now the valleys that upon the sun

Broke from their opal veils, are veiled again,

And the last light upon the wolds is done,

And silence falls on flock and fields and men;

And black upon the night I watch my hill,

And the stars shine, and there an owly wing

Brushes the night, and all again is still,

And, from this land of worship that I sing,

I turn to sleep, content that from my sires

I draw the blood of England's midmost shires.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Cotswold Farmers


Sometimes the ghosts forgotten go

Along the hill-top way,

And with long scythes of silver mow

Meadows of moonlit hay,

Until the cocks of Cotswold crow

The coming of the day.

There's Tony Turkletob who died

When he could drink no more,

And Uncle Heritage, the pride

Of eighteen-twenty-four,

And Ebenezer Barleytide,

And others half a score.

They fold in phantom pens, and plough

Furrows without a share,

And one will milk a faery cow,

And one will stare and stare,

And whistle ghostly tunes that now

Are not sung anywhere.

The moon goes down on Oakridge lea,

The other world's astir,

The Cotswold Farmers silently

Go back to sepulchre,

The sleeping watchdogs wake, and see

No ghostly harvester.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



In Woods and Meadows


Play to the tender stops, though cheerily:

Gently, my soul, my song: let no one hear:

Sing to thyself alone; thine ecstasy

Rising in silence to the inward ear

That is attuned to silence: do not tell

A friend, a bird, a star, lest they should say —

He danced in woods and meadows all the day,
Waving his arms, and cried as evening fell,
'O, do not come,' and cried, 'O, come, thou queen,
And walk with me unwatched upon the green
Under the sky.'


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Reciprocity


I do not think that skies and meadows are

Moral, or that the fixture of a star

Comes of a quiet spirit, or that trees

Have wisdom in their windless silences.

Yet these are things invested in my mood

With constancy, and peace, and fortitude,

That in my troubled season I can cry

Upon the wide composure of the sky,

And envy fields, and wish that I might be

As little daunted as a star or tree.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Birthright


Lord Rameses of Egypt sighed

Because a summer evening passed;

And little Ariadne cried

That summer fancy fell at last

To dust; and young Verona died

When beauty's hour was overcast.

Theirs was the bitterness we know

Because the clouds of hawthorn keep

So short a state, and kisses go

To tombs unfathomably deep,

While Rameses and Romeo

And little Ariadne sleep.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Olton Pools


Now June walks on the waters,

And the cuckoo's last enchantment

Passes from Olton pools.

Now dawn comes to my window

Breathing midsummer roses,

And scythes are wet with dew.

Is it not strange for ever

That, bowered in this wonder,

Man keeps a jealous heart?...

That June and the June waters,

And birds and dawn-lit roses,

Are gospels in the wind,

Fading upon the deserts,

Poor pilgrim revelations?...

Hist ... over Olton pools!


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Walter de la Mare


The Scribe


What lovely things

Thy hand hath made,

The smooth-plumed bird

In its emerald shade,

The seed of the grass,

The speck of stone

Which the wayfaring ant

Stirs, and hastes on!

Though I should sit

By some tarn in Thy hills,

Using its ink

As the spirit wills

To write of Earth's wonders,

Its live willed things,

Flit would the ages

On soundless wings

Ere unto Z

My pen drew nigh,

Leviathan told,

And the honey-fly:

And still would remain

My wit to try —

My worn reeds broken,

The dark tarn dry,

All words forgotten —

Thou, Lord, and I.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Remonstrance


I was at peace until you came

And set a careless mind aflame;

I lived in quiet; cold, content;

All longing in safe banishment,

Until your ghostly lips and eyes

Made wisdom unwise.

Naught was in me to tempt your feet

To seek a lodging. Quite forgot

Lay the sweet solitude we two

In childhood used to wander through;

Time's cold had closed my heart about,

And shut you out.

Well, and what then?... O vision grave,

Take all the little all I have!

Strip me of what in voiceless thought

Life's kept of life, unhoped, unsought! —

Reverie and dream that memory must

Hide deep in dust!

This only I say: Though cold and bare

The haunted house you have chosen to share,

Still 'neath its walls the moonbeam goes

And trembles on the untended rose;

Still o'er its broken roof-tree rise

The starry arches of the skies;

And 'neath your lightest word shall be

The thunder of an ebbing sea.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Ghost


'Who knocks?' 'I, who was beautiful

Beyond all dreams to restore,

I from the roots of the dark thorn am hither,

And knock on the door.'

'Who speaks?' 'I — once was my speech

Sweet as the bird's on the air,

When echo lurks by the waters to heed;

'Tis I speak thee fair.'

'Dark is the hour!' 'Aye, and cold.'

'Lone is my house.' 'Ah, but mine?'

'Sight, touch, lips, eyes gleamed in vain.'

'Long dead these to thine.'

Silence. Still faint on the porch

Brake the flames of the stars.

In gloom groped a hope-wearied hand

Over keys, bolts, and bars.

A face peered. All the grey night

In chaos of vacancy shone;

Nought but vast sorrow was there —

The sweet cheat gone.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



The Fool Rings His Bells


Come, Death, I'd have a word with thee;

And thou, poor Innocency;

And Love — a lad with broken wing;

And Pity, too:

The Fool shall sing to you,

As Fools will sing.

Aye, music hath small sense.

And a time's soon told,

And Earth is old,

And my poor wits are dense;

Yet I have secrets, — dark, my dear,

To breathe you all: Come near.

And lest some hideous listener tells,

I'll ring the bells.

They're all at war!

Yes, yes, their bodies go

'Neath burning sun and icy star

To chaunted songs of woe,

Dragging cold cannon through a mire

Of rain and blood and spouting fire,

The new moon glinting hard on eyes

Wide with insanities!

Hush!... I use words

I hardly know the meaning of;

And the mute birds

Are glancing at Love

From out their shade of leaf and flower,

Trembling at treacheries

Which even in noonday cower.

Heed, heed not what I said

Of frenzied hosts of men,

More fools than I,

On envy, hatred fed,

Who kill, and die —

Spake I not plainly, then?

Yet Pity whispered, 'Why?'

Thou silly thing, off to thy daisies go.

Mine was not news for child to know,

And Death — no ears hath. He hath supped where creep

Eyeless worms in hush of sleep;

Yet, when he smiles, the hand he draws

Athwart his grinning jaws —

Faintly the thin bones rattle and ... there, there,

Hearken how my bells in the air

Drive away care!...

Nay, but a dream I had

Of a world all mad.

Not simple happy mad like me,

Who am mad like an empty scene

Of water and willow tree,

Where the wind hath been;

But that foul Satan-mad,

Who rots in his own head,

And counts the dead,

Not honest one — and two —

But for the ghosts they were,

Brave, faithful, true,

When, head in air,

In Earth's clear green and blue

Heaven they did share

With Beauty who bade them there....

There, now! — Death goes —

Mayhap I have wearied him.

Aye, and the light doth dim,

And asleep's the rose,

And tired Innocence

In dreams is hence....

Come, Love, my lad,

Nodding that drowsy head,

'Tis time thy prayers were said.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



William H. Davies


The White Cascade


What happy mortal sees that mountain now,

The white cascade that's shining on its brow;

The white cascade that's both a bird and star,

That has a ten-mile voice and shines as far?

Though I may never leave this land again,

Yet every spring my mind must cross the main

To hear and see that water-bird and star

That on the mountain sings, and shines so far.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Easter


What exultations in my mind,

From the love-bite of this Easter wind!

My head thrown back, my face doth shine

Like yonder Sun's, but warmer mine.

A butterfly — from who knows where —

Comes with a stagger through the air,

And, lying down, doth ope and close

His wings, as babies work their toes:

Perhaps he thinks of pressing tight

Into his wings a little light!

And many a bird hops in between

The leaves he dreams of, long and green,

And sings for nipple-buds that show

Where the full-breasted leaves must grow.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Raptures


Sing for the sun your lyric, lark,

Of twice ten thousand notes;

Sing for the moon, you nightingales,

Whose light shall kiss your throats;

Sing, sparrows, for the soft warm rain,

To wet your feathers through;

And when a rainbow's in the sky,

Sing you, cuckoo — Cuckoo!

Sing for your five blue eggs, fond thrush,

By many a leaf concealed;

You starlings, wrens, and blackbirds, sing

In every wood and field:

While I, who fail to give my love

Long raptures twice as fine,

Will for her beauty breathe this one —

A sigh, that's more divine.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Cowslips and Larks


I hear it said yon land is poor,

In spite of those rich cowslips there —

And all the singing larks it shoots

To heaven from the cowslips' roots.

But I, with eyes that beauty find,

And music ever in my mind,

Feed my thoughts well upon that grass

Which starves the horse, the ox, and ass.

So here I stand, two miles to come

To Shapwick and my ten-days-home,

Taking my summer's joy, although

The distant clouds are dark and low,

And comes a storm that, fierce and strong,

Has brought the Mendip hills along:

Those hills that when the light is there

Are many a sunny mile from here.


Contents / Contents, p. 3



Gordon Bottomley


Atlantis


What poets sang in Atlantis? Who can tell

The epics of Atlantis or their names?

The sea hath its own murmurs, and sounds not

The secrets of its silences beneath,

And knows not any cadences enfolded

When the last bubbles of Atlantis broke

Among the quieting of its heaving floor.

O, years and tides and leagues and all their billows

Can alter not man's knowledge of men's hearts —

While trees and rocks and clouds include our being

We know the epics of Atlantis still:

A hero gave himself to lesser men,

Who first misunderstood and murdered him,

And then misunderstood and worshipped him;

A woman was lovely and men fought for her,

Towns burnt for her, and men put men in bondage,

But she put lengthier bondage on them all;

A wanderer toiled among all the isles

That fleck this turning star of shifting sea,

Or lonely purgatories of the mind,

In longing for his home or his lost love.

Poetry is founded on the hearts of men:

Though in Nirvana or the Heavenly courts

The principle of beauty shall persist,

Its body of poetry, as the body of man,

Is but a terrene form, a terrene use,

That swifter being will not loiter with;

And, when mankind is dead and the world cold,

Poetry's immortality will pass.


Contents / Contents, p. 4



New Year's Eve, 1913


O, Cartmel bells ring soft to-night,

And Cartmel bells ring clear,

But I lie far away to-night,

Listening with my dear;

Listening in a frosty land

Where all the bells are still

And the small-windowed bell-towers stand

Dark under heath and hill.

I thought that, with each dying year,

As long as life should last

The bells of Cartmel I should hear

Ring out an aged past:

The plunging, mingling sounds increase

Darkness's depth and height,

The hollow valley gains more peace

And ancientness to-night:

The loveliness, the fruitfulness,

The power of life lived there

Return, revive, more closely press

Upon that midnight air.

But many deaths have place in men

Before they come to die;

Joys must be used and spent, and then

Abandoned and passed by.

Earth is not ours; no cherished space

Can hold us from life's flow,

That bears us thither and thence by ways

We knew not we should go.

O, Cartmel bells ring loud, ring clear,

Through midnight deep and hoar,

A year new-born, and I shall hear

The Cartmel bells no more.


Contents / Contents, p. 4



In Memoriam, A. M. W.


SEPTEMBER 1910

(For a Solemn Music)

Out of a silence

The voice of music speaks.

When words have no more power,

When tears can tell no more,

The heart of all regret

Is uttered by a falling wave

Of melody.

No more, no more

The voice that gathered us

Shall hush us with deep joy;

But in this hush,

Out of its silence,

In the awaking of music,

It shall return.

For music can renew

Its gladness and communion,

Until we also sink,

Where sinks the voice of music,

Into a silence.


Contents / Contents, p. 4



Maurice Baring


In Memoriam, A. H.


(Auberon Herbert, Captain Lord Lucas, R. F. C. killed November 3, 1916)



The wind had blown away the rain

That all day long had soaked the level plain.

Against the horizon's fiery wrack,

The sheds loomed black.

And higher, in their tumultuous concourse met,

The streaming clouds, shot-riddled banners, wet

With the flickering storm,

Drifted and smouldered, warm

With flashes sent

From the lower firmament.

And they concealed —

They only here and there through rifts revealed

A hidden sanctuary of fire and light,

A city of chrysolite.

We looked and laughed and wondered, and I said:

That orange sea, those oriflammes outspread

Were like the fanciful imaginings

That the young painter flings

Upon the canvas bold,

Such as the sage and the old

Make mock at, saying it could never be;

And you assented also, laughingly.

I wondered what they meant,

That flaming firmament,

Those clouds so grey so gold, so wet so warm,

So much of glory and so much of storm,

The end of the world, or the end

Of the war — remoter still to me and you, my friend.

Alas! it meant not this, it meant not that:

It meant that now the last time you and I

Should look at the golden sky,

And the dark fields large and flat,

And smell the evening weather,

And laugh and talk and wonder both together.

The last, last time. We nevermore should meet

In France or London street,

Or fields of home. The desolated space

Of life shall nevermore

Be what it was before.

No one shall take your place.

No other face

Can fill that empty frame.

There is no answer when we call your name.

We cannot hear your step upon the stair.

We turn to speak and find a vacant chair.

Something is broken which we cannot mend.

God has done more than take away a friend

In taking you; for all that we have left

Is bruised and irremediably bereft.

There is none like you. Yet not that alone

Do we bemoan;

But this; that you were greater than the rest,

And better than the best.

O liberal heart fast-rooted to the soil,

O lover of ancient freedom and proud toil,

Friend of the gipsies and all wandering song,

The forest's nursling and the favoured child

Of woodlands wild —

O brother to the birds and all things free,

Captain of liberty!

Deep in your heart the restless seed was sown;

The vagrant spirit fretted in your feet;

We wondered could you tarry long,

And brook for long the cramping street,

Or would you one day sail for shores unknown,

And shake from you the dust of towns, and spurn

The crowded market-place — and not return?

You found a sterner guide;

You heard the guns. Then, to their distant fire,

Your dreams were laid aside;

And on that day, you cast your heart's desire

Upon a burning pyre;

You gave your service to the exalted need,

Until at last from bondage freed,

At liberty to serve as you loved best,

You chose the noblest way. God did the rest.

So when the spring of the world shall shrive our stain,

After the winter of war,

When the poor world awakes to peace once more,

After such night of ravage and of rain,

You shall not come again.

You shall not come to taste the old spring weather,

To gallop through the soft untrampled heather,

To bathe and bake your body on the grass.

We shall be there, alas!

But not with you. When Spring shall wake the earth,

And quicken the scarred fields to the new birth,

Our grief shall grow. For what can Spring renew

More fiercely for us than the need of you?

That night I dreamt they sent for me and said

That you were missing, 'missing, missing — dead':

I cried when in the morning I awoke,

And all the world seemed shrouded in a cloak;

But when I saw the sun,

And knew another day had just begun,

I brushed the dream away, and quite forgot

The nightmare's ugly blot.

So was the dream forgot. The dream came true.

Before the night I knew

That you had flown away into the air

For ever. Then I cheated my despair.

I said

That you were safe — or wounded — but not dead.

Alas! I knew

Which was the false and true.

And after days of watching, days of lead,

There came the certain news that you were dead.

You had died fighting, fighting against odds,

Such as in war the gods

Æthereal dared when all the world was young;

Such fighting as blind Homer never sung,

Nor Hector nor Achilles never knew,

High in the empty blue.

High, high, above the clouds, against the setting sun,

The fight was fought, and your great task was done.

Of all your brave adventures this the last

The bravest was and best;

Meet ending to a long embattled past,

This swift, triumphant, fatal quest,

Crowned with the wreath that never perisheth,

And diadem of honourable death;

Swift Death aflame with offering supreme

And mighty sacrifice,

More than all mortal dream;

A soaring death, and near to Heaven's gate;

Beneath the very walls of Paradise.

Surely with soul elate,

You heard the destined bullet as you flew,

And surely your prophetic spirit knew

That you had well deserved that shining fate.

Here is no waste,

No burning Might-have-been,

No bitter after-taste,

None to censure, none to screen,

Nothing awry, nor anything misspent;

Only content, content beyond content,

Which hath not any room for betterment.

God, Who had made you valiant, strong and swift,

And maimed you with a bullet long ago,

And cleft your riotous ardour with a rift,

And checked your youth's tumultuous overflow,

Gave back your youth to you,

And packed in moments rare and few

Achievements manifold

And happiness untold,

And bade you spring to Death as to a bride,

In manhood's ripeness, power and pride,

And on your sandals the strong wings of youth.

He let you leave a name

To shine on the entablatures of truth,

For ever:

To sound for ever in answering halls of fame.

For you soared onwards to that world which rags

Of clouds, like tattered flags,

Concealed; you reached the walls of chrysolite,

The mansions white;

And losing all, you gained the civic crown

Of that eternal town,

Wherein you passed a rightful citizen

Of the bright commonwealth ablaze beyond our ken.

Surely you found companions meet for you

In that high place;

You met there face to face

Those you had never known, but whom you knew:

Knights of the Table Round,

And all the very brave, the very true,

With chivalry crowned;

The captains rare,

Courteous and brave beyond our human air;

Those who had loved and suffered overmuch,

Now free from the world's touch.

And with them were the friends of yesterday,

Who went before and pointed you the way;

And in that place of freshness, light and rest,

Where Lancelot and Tristram vigil keep

Over their King's long sleep,

Surely they made a place for you.

Their long-expected guest,

Among the chosen few,

And welcomed you, their brother and their friend,

To that companionship which hath no end.

And in the portals of the sacred hall

You hear the trumpet's call,

At dawn upon the silvery battlement,

Re-echo through the deep

And bid the sons of God to rise from sleep,

And with a shout to hail

The sunrise on the city of the Grail:

The music that proud Lucifer in Hell

Missed more than all the joys that he forwent.

You hear the solemn bell

At vespers, when the oriflammes are furled;

And then you know that somewhere in the world,

That shines far-off beneath you like a gem,

They think of you, and when you think of them

You know that they will wipe away their tears,

And cast aside their fears;

That they will have it so,

And in no otherwise;

That it is well with them because they know,

With faithful eyes,

Fixed forward and turned upwards to the skies,

That it is well with you,

Among the chosen few,

Among the very brave, the very true.


Contents / Contents, p. 4



Herbert Asquith


The Volunteer


Here lies the clerk who half his life had spent

Toiling at ledgers in a city grey,

Thinking that so his days would drift away

With no lance broken in life's tournament:

Yet ever 'twixt the books and his bright eyes

The gleaming eagles of the legions came,

And horsemen, charging under phantom skies,

Went thundering past beneath the oriflamme.

And now those waiting dreams are satisfied;

From twilight to the halls of dawn he went;

His lance is broken; but he lies content

With that high hour, in which he lived and died.

And falling thus, he wants no recompense,

Who found his battle in the last resort;

Nor needs he any hearse to bear him hence,

Who goes to join the men of Agincourt.


Contents / Contents, p. 4



Bibliography


The Bibliography for this volume will be available soon, in an updated version of this file which will replace the current file on Project Gutenberg.

end of text