BY THE SAME AUTHOR
————
FLEURS DE LYS, and OTHER POEMS
1887, E. M. Renouf, Montreal
————
THE ROMANCE OF SIR RICHARD, SONNETS, and OTHER POEMS
1890, W. Drysdale & Co., Montreal
THE SNOWFLAKE
AND
O T H E R P O E M S
BY
ARTHUR WEIR
MONTREAL:
JOHN LOVELL & SON
1897
Copyrighted, 1896, by Arthur Weir, Montreal.
CONTENTS.
TO
HUGH GRAHAM, Esq.,
TO WHOSE
ENCOURAGEMENT, TASTE AND ENTERPRISE
THE AUTHOR
IS LARGELY INDEBTED
FOR
WHATEVER OF PUBLIC FAVOR HE ENJOYS,
THIS VOLUME
IS
Gratefully Dedicated.
T H E S N O W F L A K E
AND OTHER POEMS.
THE SNOWFLAKE.
In grottoes cool dwelt I,
And, laughing, hid in the seashell’s lid,
As fishes arrowed by.
My feet were free to the undersea;
I played amidst its gloom,
And in the deep where the mermaids weep
Above the hero’s tomb,
Where the sea snake strips dainty maiden lips
Of kisses once so warm,
And the lifeless child, by the eddies wild,
Is torn from the mother’s arm.
The foam-browed billow my head would pillow
Upon its bosom fair,
While the restless sweep of the moon-led deep
Would drift us here and there.
I oft would float in the dainty boat
The Nautilus oared for me,
Out, far, far out, where a noisy rout
Of breakers leapt in glee;
Or further urge to the world’s dim verge,
Where heaven meets the wave,
And the seagull’s wing was the only thing
To follow us was brave.{2}
Then called by the blast, as it glided past,
I would turn and clap my hands,
As the waves were tossed on the tropic coast,
And furrowed the silver sands.
Bend over the foaming sea,
I oft resorted, and, as I sported,
The sunbeams played with me.
We would dance all day in the prismed spray,
Or in the blossoms hide,
That, trembling, clung to the crags and hung
Above the boiling tide.
Oftimes the cool, green depths of a pool
Would lure me down to rest,
Till the sunbeams came in a path of flame
And found me in my nest.
With colors gaily they decked me daily,
And tempted me to fly
Afar from the foam of my ocean home
Aloft in the cloudless sky.
But I said them nay, for the leaping spray,
And cool, green depths of sea,
Than the flight of birds and the sunbeams’ words
Were dearer far to me.
“I had seen,” I said, “to the sky o’erhead
My sisters, laughing, soar
For a merry flight through the azure bright,
And never saw them more.
I love my home in the ocean foam,
I love the moonlit sands,{3}
And I would sigh in the depths of sky
And die in distant lands.”
Unyielding and unkind?
At love’s low call we hasten all,
Like leaves at the voice of wind.
And ere the moon at the night’s high noon
Had twelve times orbed grown,
My heart was stirred at a whispered word,
My soul was not mine own.
My lover was fair as the balmy air
That follows after storm,
When the careless sea, with a song of glee,
Trips over the shallows warm.
He was the first through the gloom that burst
To bring the dawn to me,
And he was the last from my sight that passed
When darkness walked the sea.
One shimmering day, as asleep I lay
Upon the tide-worn sand,
He stole apart, with an eager heart,
From all the sunny band.
He came to me, as I lay thought free,
And bent my couch above,
And while I slumbered, with words unnumbered,
He pleaded for my love;
Then as I woke at the words he spoke,
And rising turned to flee,
I was closely pressed to his ardent breast,
And kisses were rained on me.{4}
Thou to take flight with me?
Is there aught more fair than the realms of air
In yonder sullen sea?
Is the sea-gull’s scream or the under gleam
Of billows rushing by
More sweet to thee than the melody
Of larks in the azure sky?
Oh, be thou my bride, and side by side
We’ll float upon the breeze
O’er river and town, o’er forest and down,
Wherever we twain shall please.
We’ll swim in the wine of the luscious vine
Which brims the crystal high,
And when of her lover the fond words move her,
We’ll dance in the maiden’s eye.
We’ll scale vast mountains and o’er gay fountains
Hover in noon’s warm glare,
And when night lowers, shall sleep in flowers
That sway in the dewy air.
And shouldst thou tire, nor more desire
The airy plains to roam,
But pine again for the leaping main
And the drench of flying foam,
We need but glide on the leaf-sown tide
Of some swift coursing stream
To our home at last, and the happy past
Shall be but a varied dream.”
And clasping hand in hand,{5}
With a parting glance at the sea’s expanse,
Dun rocks and silver strand,
We mounted high in the glowing sky,
And, leaving home behind,
Fared swiftly forth to the distant north
Upon the balmy wind.
O’er tangled brakes where the twilight makes
For evermore its home,
And the tiger sleeps and the cobra creeps,
And prowling jackals roam,
We floated fast, till the hills, at last,
To bar our path appeared,
And many a peak its forehead bleak
And tawny flanks upreared.
O’er many a cleft in the rocks bereft
Of life and the sunlight’s sheen,
Wild torrents were hurled to the under world,
And wheeled the eagles keen.
In faltering lines, the famished pines
Pressed up the mountain sides,
And sang to the blast, as it hurried past,
The song of the ocean tides,
Till I yearned once more for the tropic shore
Beside the emerald waves,
And my sisters gay and the dashing spray
And ocean’s weedy caves.
The hills an azure hue,
And the earth beneath was a naked heath
Where winds in anger blew.{6}
We saw the smoke like a wave that broke
Above the homes of men,
And in the bowers of the meadow flowers
Took rest for flight again.
A myriad sights were a thousand delights
As on through space we sped,
But the happy day soon faded away
And the sun in the west lay dead.
Then the shadows of death with their icy breath
Drew ever more surely nigh,
And in frightened crowds the murky clouds
Swept under the ebon sky.
Afar in the north a fire flamed forth
And flickered with ghastly light,
Like a lamp that burns when a soul returns
To God in the dead of night.
Gloom blotted the hills and the tinkling rills
Were bound in frosty chains,
And the flowers once gay all lifeless lay
Upon the dreary plains.
There was no sound in the air around,
No voice upon earth below,
Save the angry beat of the wild winds’ feet,
That wandered to and fro.
I clung to my darling’s breast,
For the wintry night with its baleful light
My timorous soul distressed.
“Beloved,” he cried, “sweet sea-nurtured bride,
My love brings sorrow to thee,{7}
For I feel at my heart the pitiless dart
That Death has made keen for me.”
I cried, “There are caves in the amethyst waves
Wherein love may make life sweet,
Oh! haste and return, ere the elements stern
Have beaten us under their feet.”
There was no reply to my passionate cry,
No answering kiss to mine,
And I felt in the storm from my trembling form
My lover’s arms untwine.
All heavy he grew, like a wounded sea mew
That dies in the midmost air,
And fell without sound to the frosty ground,
And lay like a dead bird there.
The tresses of gold on his forehead cold
I parted, and kissed his brow,
But his lips nor smiled at my fondling wild,
His eyes nor knew me now.
And the icy blast, as it thundered past
The hollow wherein he lay,
Tore him apart from my anguished heart,
And carried him away.
As the storm king struck them low,
And the river flood grew still as he stood
And bade it cease to flow.
There was no flower in that sad hour
Had strength to lift its head,
And I was alone in a land unknown
And mourned my love for dead.{8}
Then in countless hosts, like white-robed ghosts,
My sisters lost drew near,
And hemmed me round, but they made no sound
My breaking heart to cheer.
Each wore a star that glittered afar,
Amid her flowing hair,
And they went and came like the lightless flame
That pierced the northern air.
They floated high to the pitiless sky
And gathered on the heath,
Till their myriad feet did mingle and meet,
And hide the earth beneath.
And was it a dream that I should seem
A snowy robe to don,
And tread without pleasure their swift, weird measure,
As the wintry wind piped on.
Methought we flowed through that drear abode
In sheets of spray and foam,
As erst with hope and mirth on the slope
Of waves in our ocean home.
Upon the dreary plain,
Till, at last, I heard the pipe of a bird,
And my heart grew warm again.
At the bird’s sweet call through night’s thick pall
The faint sun peered and shone,
As of yore at home through the flying foam
He looked from the gates of dawn.
He looked and smiled, and the air, beguiled,
Grew warm and bright again,{9}
And my sisters all each to each did call,
As erst in the joyous main.
Like the leaping rills from the sunny hills
That tinkle to the sea,
They sang as they glanced in the sun and danced
On the rivers rushing free.
The flowers awoke from their sleep, and broke
With many an emerald spear
And banner bright to the warm sunlight
Through the leaves of the bygone year.
And one with a crown of gold bent down
And took me to its heart,
“Poor waif of the storm,” it said, “grow warm
And share of my joy a part.
In the sky above there are many will love
A heart as pure as thine;
Leave grief with the past, like the shadow we cast
As we hasten where sunbeams shine.”
For many a quiet day,
Till, on soft winds blown, the seeds were sown;
And then I wandered away.
For sake of my love, the sun above
Upraised me to the sky,
And east and west I went on my quest,
But my dear one found not I.
Oft I heard from brooks in shadowy nooks
My sisters call to me
To join their throng as they drifted along,
Seeking the distant sea.{10}
And hearing their lays in the woodland ways
Through autumn’s golden air,
A yearning came that I could not name,
Stronger than my despair.
“If I must live on when my love is gone,”
I murmured to my soul,
“Oh, let it be by the throbbing sea
My sisters make their goal.
There let me rest like a child on the breast,
Close to its great warm heart,
Till my sorrows cease and I am at peace,
O lover, where thou art.”
So I sought the brook, and the sky forsook,
And reached the sea at last,
In whose briny waves and weedy caves
I brood upon the past.
THE MASQUE OF THE YEAR.
(Time is discovered seated in the midst of a bevy of maidens, each of whom represents a month.)
TIME.
Twin brother of Death. Like him all hearts I tame.
As babes with baubles play, so I with fame.
I weigh all deeds, judge every poet’s rhyme,
Sift heroes, smile at life’s quaint pantomime,
Put down the present great, and oft reclaim
From sad oblivion some forgotten name,
Uplifting it to heights that are sublime.
I sit, amid the months, upon my throne,
Waiting to greet the New Year drawing nigh,
And though it brings a destiny unknown,
Naught need ye fear, since God is in the sky.
Fate is God’s choice; be therefore of good cheer.
Let mirth and song welcome each new crowned year.
JANUARY.
The land of the future, dread realm unknown,
Out of silence, alone.
I have trodden the ice-fields of drear Baccalaos,
Heard the grinding of bergs in the seas of the north
As the gale urged them forth,{12}
And at midday have looked on the sun’s feeble glory
With a smile of disdain, for the warmth that he felt
Ne’er my bosom could melt.
Death and stillness are mine, and, save wolves on a foray,
All is still, all is shrouded, all Nature’s asleep,
Under snow hidden deep.
I am the ruler of uncreate chaos,
Queen of absolute void, which life comes not anear—
First month of the year.
FEBRUARY.
In my bosom the seed of all changes to come.
As yet I am dumb,
But Hope has been born in the breast of Despair.
The pine boughs stir under their burden of snow,
As though promise they know,
Yet the sun shines no stronger, there’s naught that foretells
The coming of summer. No song of a bird
In the woodland is heard,
Not a sound, save the stroke of the axe, as it fells
Some wood king, whose form sinks beneath the keen blade,
With a crash, through the glade;
Yet the spirit of Nature’s awake, and the air
Thrills with love. I soothe grief with my wonderful balm,
Second month that I am.
MARCH.
Of wild and untamable hatred and love.
I glide through the grove,
Calling on Summer, so slow in returning.
I seek for the fruit, bud, leaf, blossom and all.
When they heed not my call,
The winds I unleash, which, like hounds on the scent,
Give voice round the farmsteads, and course o’er the moors,
With a hundred detours,
Till they leap on the forests, whose branches are rent.
I heap up the snowdrifts, bind firmer the streams,
And defy the sun’s beams.
My heart throbs with hate, and all tenderness spurning,
With winter again I span heaven’s blue arch.
I am passionate March.
APRIL.
Heaves with sweet, delicate hope, that beguiles
Dreamy Earth into smiles.
Through woodlands deserted I go on my quest,
And summon the blood-root and shad-bush to flower
Though they fade in an hour.
I drop gentle rain on the faded, brown grasses,
And loosen the soil for all tender, green shoots,
To push up from their roots.{14}
I summon the birds, and where’er my foot passes,
Sleeping Nature arouses itself at my call.
I am helpful to all.
While no ecstacy’s mine, I am never distressed,
But tranquilly wander, to fate reconciled.
I am April, the mild.
MAY.
When earth with its verdure smiles up at the sky,
And the mayflowers shy,
And sun-loving blossoms, their way to light winning
Through strewn leaves of autumn, mute emblems of death,
Perfume with their breath,
The zephyrs released from their fetters of frost.
The streams murmur cheerily under their banks
Their melodious thanks
For sweet freedom regained, as they flow and are lost
In the broad, sunny river, that rushes along
To the sea, with a song.
Chill Winter’s forgot, with its woe and its sinning.
Youth leaps in my veins—I am young, I am gay—
I am love-kindling May.
JUNE.
When Earth, as the sun its first passion discloses,
Blushes with roses,
When all things are new, and nothing can cloy.
The birds, in a cloudland of leafage concealed,
By their songs are revealed.{15}
All is young, all is love. In the shadowy vales,
In woodland and meadow, all Nature’s awake.
At the wind’s kiss, the lake
Breaks forth into smiles; but as yet passion fails
To weary itself. Soul is searching for soul,
And has not reached its goal.
Life leaping to life doth each moment employ,
And love doth all Nature’s grand chorus attune.
I am virginal June.
JULY.
When Earth silent lies, with shy longings opprest,
While soft sighs stir her breast.
All unclasped is her zone, and the Sun’s warm lips prove
Her lips ruby treasures, and make her soul his
With many a kiss.
I wander abroad in the murmurous hours,
While the silvery moonbeams sift down on the scene,
Rustling leafage between.
I whisper of joy to the slumbering flowers,
As, with petals close folded, like child hands in prayer,
They rest on the air,
And I drop cooling dews from the clear sky above
On the moist brow of Earth, as still she doth sigh.
I am July.
AUGUST.
In the shadowy depths of the woods I recline,
While afar stand the kine,
Thoughtful, knee-deep, where cool waters are streaming
Over the sands, and at hand, loud and clear,
The cicada I hear.
Afar, by the plunging green waves of the sea,
I wander at times, when the shimmer of heat
Disturbs my retreat;
Or amid rugged crags, where the wind wanders free,
I sit in the shelter of hills, by the brook
That leaps forth from its nook
Adown the swart cliff, with its silver spray gleaming,
And I muse on the past with a rapturous sigh.
Dreamy August am I.
SEPTEMBER.
The flush to the apple, the gold to the leaf,
And the grain to the sheaf.
I am the month that prepares for the dreary,
Long days of midwinter, when Earth lies asleep
Under snow hidden deep.
After the yearning of Spring and the passion
Of hot days of Summer, I cool the warm brow,
And the seeds that the plough
Gave to earth I give back, shaped in daintier fashion.
At the touch of my hand every toiler forgets
All life’s weeds and its frets,{17}
And the heart that was grieving becomes again cheery.
When I rule, men no longer their sorrows remember.
I am September.
OCTOBER.
I am the eventide, lulling to rest,
Upon Earth’s kindly breast,
Her offspring, the flowers, till they nestle up warm,
Folding their leaves and their blossomy eyes
Closing, child-wise.
I warn the still woodland, that doffs its gay dress
And upsprings, like a warrior armed for the fray,
To meet the dread day
When the Tempest’s huge shoulders against it shall press.
I breathe to the streams the fell tidings, until
Every bickering rill,
With a tremor of fear, seaward hurls its lithe form
In mad flight, ere with fetters the Ice King draws nigh.
October am I.
NOVEMBER.
The winds in my train. I am vestured in snow,
And wherever I go
The ice maidens deck me with jewels, and fling
Crystal arches o’er streams that flow sombrely by
Beneath the grey sky.{18}
Earth under my feet a soft carpeting spreads,
And from valley and hill, as I pass on my rounds,
There re-echo no sounds.
The lean, famished forests bow down their high heads
As among them I wander. The stars hold their breath
As, dread omen of death,
Flits the mystic aurora with rustling wing
High above, and some meteor falls like an ember.
I am November.
DECEMBER.
Under the eiderdown snow, that clings close
To her form in repose,
As her gossamer drape to the virgin, whose breast
Rises and falls as she dreams of her love.
Through the keen air above
The stars glow like watch-fires of summer. Anon
Come the jingle of sleigh-bells, a laugh and a shout,
As gay youth, in mad rout,
Sweeps merrily down the white road, and is gone.
Then silence returns, till the winds howl in glee,
Or some frost-riven tree
Shrieks aloud in its pain. Yet Earth sleeps, undistressed.
All ended her task, she has naught now to fear,
December is here.
| (The clock strikes) | |||
| January | “One.” | July | “Seven.” |
| February | “Two.” | August | “Eight.” |
| March | “Three.” | September | “Nine.” |
| April | “Four.” | October | “Ten.” |
| May | “Five.” | November | “Eleven.” |
| June | “Six.” | December | “Twelve.” |
| (The New Year Enters.) | |||
THE NEW YEAR.
I am flushed with hope’s wine; I have treasures for all.
The old year is sped, let it serve as a warning
That the moments I bring shall bear fruit ere they fall.
The past none can alter; its grief and its sinning
Are writ for all time in the volume of life,
But behold me, the New Year, new records beginning;
Let love be their burden, not envy and strife.
CHORUS OF MONTHS.
Welcome to thy kingdom, O monarch pure and true!
In gladness we will serve thee. Ah! rule this great earth well;
Efface the sorrows of the past, and all past joys renew.
We, the children of the sun,
Who watch the precious moments run,{20}
Will wreathe thy brow with stars of snow and flowers sweet and fair.
But while we sow the fruits of earth,
That man shall garner in with mirth,
To Time alone belongs the power
Of harvesting each ripened hour.
Welcome, welcome, with chime of merry bell!
Another year is given to man to sow and reap his life.
When next the mystic book is sealed, what story will it tell?
Will it speak of love triumphant, will it tell of sin and strife?
O mortal man, remember
Every year has its December,
And when the year has ended naught can change the record there.
THE MUSE AND THE PEN.
But seldom seen these humdrum times,
Came down to earth, in all her glory,
To put new life in modern rhymes.
“Forsooth,” she said, “I’m tired of hearing
Mechanic singers, every one,
With forced conceits and thin veneering,
Serving the lamp, and not the sun.”
Who loved the woodlands, meads and streams,
With odorous buds her gown was laden,
Her hair was bright with rippling gleams;
And murmuring an Arcadian ditty,
She wandered, with uncertain feet,
In wonder, through the crowded city,
Bewildered by each clattering street.
Each busy with his own affairs.
She spumed some lauded poets’ portals,—
“Let monthlies print such stuff as theirs.”
A milkman nodded her a cheery
“Bon jour, ma’mselle,” in ready French,
And as she passed a cabman beery,
He hiccoughed, “there’s a likely wench.”{22}
A dapper Strephon, full of airs;
The one in vesture cheap and showy,
The other versed in brutal stares;
And shocked and weary, hot and muddy,
Into the nearest house she turned,
And found herself within the study
Of one whose pen his living earned.
(Being of a curious turn of mind),
To learn if he did also flout her
And still in life some pleasure find.
Shortly she marked his desk, half hidden
Beneath a mass of copious notes,
And turned to it and read, unchidden,
Of chartered banks and chartered boats.
But that the country needed rain;
And then another item met her
On “Watered stocks, the country’s bane.”
She read of “interest rates as under,
With money still in poor demand,”
And let the item fall, to wonder
Were poets wealthy in the land.
Long raise the wind, for all their craft,”
“Bulls up a tree, a market caper,”
“A house in trouble with a draft.”{23}
She read of butter growing stronger
And cheese more lively every day,
That baker’s flour will rise no longer,
And of “a serious cut in hay.”
Reading an item now and then,
She did beneath the pile discover
And pounce upon the writer’s pen;
And by the charm the Muse possesses
She made it speak like flesh and blood,—
Oh! happy Pen, to have her tresses
Fall round thee in that solitude!
Is this I find thy skill employed?
Thy master’s style seems bright and nervous,
Yet is of sense a little void.”
The Pen replied: “O gracious lady,
Trade questions are considered here,
And thou wilt find transactions shady
By master’s hand made easily clear.”
Shrugged as she listened to the Pen.
“Thy master must than ice be colder
If thus content to write for men.
Go, bid him frame a graceful sonnet,
A simple poem from his heart,
And I will gently breathe upon it
And to its body life impart.”{24}
My master lacks nor heart nor skill
To turn a stanza, but of recent
Days he hath hungry mouths to fill.
He loves thee, but he may not show it,
And Pegasus must drag the plough,
For men would starve him as a poet
Who earns at least a pittance now.”
All else thy master make forget?”
The Pen replied: “The path of duty
My master hath not swerved from yet.
Thy beauty haunts his every vision,
Sweet on his ear thine accents fall;
Yet could he tread the fields Elysian,
Think’st thou, while suffering loved ones call?”
“Immortal shame!” replied the Pen.
“When he should pass Death’s sombre portal
And stand before his God, what then?
He hath a God-like, awful function,
To shield his own from want and wrong;
Wouldst have him, then, without compunction,
Barter his birthright for a song?
I help him win his daily bread.
Though heart may ache, or thought be lagging,
Still must the ink be ever shed.{25}
Yet oft he lays me down, and, sighing,
Looks through the casement at the stars;
And then I know his soul is trying
Vainly to pass beyond its bars.
He battles on, from day to day,
Swinging the gold-compelling sabre,
Nor finding time to pluck a spray.
Nay, more! he must, through glorious bowers,
Press harshly on, with heavy tread,
Crushing to earth the beauteous flowers
With which he fain had wreathed thy head.”
She said: “Now pity him I can.
Strong, purposeful and self-denying,
Here I have what I seek, a Man.
Would that this noble self-surrender,
These high resolves, this purpose stern,
Might yet the grander verse engender,
And brighter make his genius burn!
As still Fate balks him, day by day!”
“Nay!” cried the Pen, “thou may’st wonder,
But know, my master’s heart is gay.
Perchance at times, a pang concealing,
His face grows sad; but not for long,
For sweet, loved arms, around him stealing,
Fill all his soul with unvoiced song.”{26}
THE BEAVER MEADOW.
In the heart of an emerald wood,
And a crystal stream doth loiter and dart
Through the sun-smitten solitude.
The orioles glance like flashes of fire
From foliaged limb to limb,
And the harsh frogs pipe in a ceaseless choir
From the marsh, when day grows dim.
O’er meadow and wood and stream,
Looks forth from her tower of amethyst,
She sees the wild duck gleam
In the slender reeds that have waded out,
Far out, in the sinuous brook,
And she hears the loon, like a wary scout,
Shrill keen from his secret nook.
Fearless and full of hope,
With love of venture and wealth athirst,
O’er river and mountain slope,
To this woodland came, a lakelet lay
As bright as a burnished shield,
Where now the rivulet waters play,
And the loud frogs pipe, concealed.{28}
And wondrous people stood,
Where the deep mouthed frogs have now their homes,
And the wild ducks lurk and brood.
Grand were the fronts and the pictured walls
Of the Inca’s ancient sway,
But the town that stood where the streamlet calls,
More wondrous was than they.
Was there in all that town,
But strong defences the people planned,
And hewed the great trees down.
The rippling stream, with consummate art,
In barriers huge they pent,
And made their home in the new lake’s heart,
And dwelt therein content.
Earth giveth no deathless joy,
And where man’s merciless glances fall
The simple they fain destroy.
The brutal and covetous Spanish horde
That raided the Aztec land,
Put its people and chieftains to the sword,
Its cities to the brand.
This wonderful beaver town,
That baffled the elemental stress
Before our sires went down.{29}
Its stately domes and its barriers vast,
Its sinuous streets, its lake,
The hunter destroyed and overcast,
For a little riches’ sake.
And loosened the fettered stream.
And now the reeds, like a thousand strings,
With music as of a dream,
In the night wind mourn the departed lake
And the stately beaver town,
While the rippling waves in the rushes break,
As the stream goes eddying down.
Of the beaver colony,
My soul is carried in fancy’s flight
To the site of Ville Marie,
Where the Hochelagans, or beaver race
Of Indians, dwelt of old,
Their name renowned from their mountain’s base
To where the ocean rolled.
And where the beaver dwelt
Long since, the white man pitched his tent,
And before heaven knelt.
He felled the trees and he stayed the tide
Of tribesmen rushing down,
And, like the beaver, he builded wide
And strong a mighty town.{30}
And the beaver’s love of toil,
Became as well his heritage
As the broad and fruitful soil.
Then honor be to the beaver’s name,
And praise to the beaver’s skill,
And in the labor that makes for fame
May we all prove beavers still.
VOYAGEUR SONG.
Our rest her bosom broad;
And sure, in plenty and in dearth,
Of our six feet of sod,
We welcome Fate with careless mirth
And dangerous paths have trod,
Holding our lives of little worth
And fearing none but God.
Above the fretted sand,
Our frail canoes, like shadows, glide
Swift through the silent land;
Nor should, broad-shouldered, in some tide
Rocks rise on every hand,
Our path will we confess denied,
Nor cowardly seek the strand.
That hears the tempest scream,
The waves may fold their whitened shroud
Where ghastly ledges gleam;{32}
With muscles strained and backs well bowed
And poles that breaking seem,
We shoot the sault, whose torrent proud
Itself our lord did deem.
And treacherous smiles it hath,
And with its sickle of death doth reap,
With woe for aftermath;
But though the wind-vext waves may leap,
Like cougars, in our path,
Still forward on our way we keep,
Nor heed their futile wrath.
Beneath the northern light,
On netted shoes we noiseless go,
Nor heed though keen winds bite.
The shaggy bears our prowess know,
The white fox fears our might,
And wolves, when warm our camp fires glow,
With angry snarls take flight.
Ne’er trod by man before,
Where cries of loon and wild duck blend
With some dark torrent’s roar,
And timid deer, unawed, descend
Along the lake’s still shore,
We blaze the trees and onward wend
To ravish nature’s store.{33}
These calls the echoes wake.
We rise and forward fare, nor grieve
Though long portage we make,
Until the sky the sun gleams leave
And shadows cowl the lake;
And then we rest and fancies weave
For wife or sweetheart’s sake.
DEDICATORY ODE.
(Read at the unveiling of the Monument erected in the Parliament Grounds at Ottawa to the Memory of the Rt. Hon. Sir John A. Macdonald.)
Wherein his voice long held the land in sway;
Here, where the cadence of the distant falls
Seems a lament for grandeur passed away,
We, who have reaped where he had sown, now bring
To him this thanksgiving,
This tribute to the unforgotten great,
That, for all time, men may revere his name,
And children learn the secret of true fame,
True greatness emulate.
When, at his post, the veteran statesman died;
But now that grief has been assuaged by years,
We mourn not, but rejoice, with sober pride,
That one of earth’s immortals, wise and strong,
Dwelt in our midst so long,
Teaching large thoughts and love of liberty,
And, Atlas-like, upon his shoulders bore
Our world of care, until, life’s turmoil o’er,
He passed from us away.{35}
The Sea-Queen’s daughters, in primeval woods,
By lonely streams, lamenting, and them forth
He led from desert lands and solitudes.
The Pleiades of nations, they have shone
Upon Britannia’s throne;
With every passing year, their golden light
Waxing in lustre, until every land
In wonder looks upon the glorious band
That breaks the Northern night.
What were to others barriers, were to him
But gates, through which his high success was won.
He held strange spirit commune with the dim
Shapes of the future. His far-reaching mind
Some harmony did find
In elements discordant; and man’s strength
And weakness served with him the noble end
To build a nation and all factions blend
In brotherhood, at length.
Who had commune so long with his great mind,
Forsake his teachings, and, like Israel, melt
Our gold to rear false gods! Shall we grow blind
To those large thoughts, that tolerance which long
Made this Dominion strong?
Nay, never so! He left an heritage
Worthy himself and us; be ours the pride
To bind this new Dominion, rich and wide
Closer from age to age.
ENTERING PORT.
(In Memoriam The Rt. Hon. Sir John S. D. Thompson.)
What ship is this, that, dark as night or death,
Is entering port upon the sullen swell,
While an expectant nation holds its breath?
Above her deck the flag of Britain flies;
Like some sad dream she comes, her sombre shape
Crushing the waves that in her pathway rise.
Grim guardian of her honor, yet that prow
Ne’er upon nobler errand cleft the sea,
Nor guarded Britain’s honor more than now.
Night after night it sank beneath the wave,
Pointing the vessel on that carried one
The Empire honored to his western grave.
Onward through strife to honor without stain,
So is he brought through ocean’s solitude,
With but the billows for his funeral train.{37}
His was the higher task to make them one,
And Canada, awaiting now her dead,
With tears attests the task was nobly done.
The patriot lies. He is no longer here,
But onward, upward still, he journeys far
Beyond our ken to some still nobler sphere.
Fresh from new honors from his Sovereign’s hand,
To him the summons came. Earth’s voyage done,
He set his bark towards the eternal strand.
And this cold clay that waits the silent tomb;
Yet passing years shall never dim his fame,
Nor love forget him in their gathering gloom.
With mournful boom of cannon, lay him down
Within the sepulchre, to which shall come
Faintly the murmur of his native town.
Causing unnumbered hearts to throb as one.
Here by his tomb may Canada forget
The bigotry that he had fain undone.
Lulled by the murmur of the restless wave,
Life’s voyage done, he takes his well-earned rest,
In port, at last, with God beyond the grave.
WILD FLOWERS.
Who wandered through the woods and meadows,
Oft turned his head and oft was fain
To start or smile at shifting shadows.
Sometimes, within a verdant brake,
He saw a wood-nymph’s graceful form
Gleam white, and felt her beauty make
His heart beat fast, his cheek grow warm.
Whose ripples dreamy music made,
He spied in some sequestered nook
A naiad, on the marge who played,
Or when the breeze the leafage stirred
On drowsy summer afternoons,
Sometimes afar he thought he heard
The satyrs pipe their merry tunes.
Antiope, nor Venus’ lips
Tremble as she Adonis sues,
And he from her embracement slips.
No longer nymph nor naiad now,
Nor faun nor satyr haunts the wood,
Gone is Diana with her bow,—
The woodland is a solitude.{39}
And is there now no Arcady?
A fairy choir in wood and mead
In gentle accents answer, “Nay.”
And those who leave the world awhile
With nature’s spirit to commune,
May still see nymphs in woodland aisle
And naiads bathe at sunny noon.
Beneath the tangled foliage-meshes
Some sleeping naiad we may find,
With charms the inmost soul deems precious.
And deep within the tawny shade
Of pathless forests we may meet
Some true wood-nymph, who, unafraid,
Receives us in her cool retreat.
Beneath our feet the wild flowers spring,
Nymphs of that sylvan solitude
That us to love their beauty bring;
And still we follow, as of old
The swain pursued the fleeting shape,
For once their graces we behold
None can their mystic lure escape.
Some nodding blossom beckons still.
We see its slender figure gleam
Chastely beside the crystal rill.{40}
Perchance it droops its dainty head,
Or looks us fearless in the face,—
Ah, no, the naiads are not fled,
The stream is still their dwelling-place.
Its dust has but obscured our sight.
The pipes of Pan whoever hears
Will see as well the woodland sprite.
The revels of the leaves and wind,
The sudden glimpse of blossoming flowers,
These are his prize who leaves behind
The world, and strays through Nature’s bowers.
I would have watched for every gleam
Of shoulder, as some naiad svelt
Clove the clear crystal of the stream;
I would have followed in pursuit
Of artful nymph through tangled brakes,
And heard with joy the satyr’s flute,
Whose melody soft echo wakes.
When the first wild flower lifts its head,
Till autumn, when the breezes fling
Broadcast the dying leaves and dead,
Through sensuous summer’s golden hours
I roam the vast, Canadian woods,
Seeking the wild Canadian flowers,
True nymphs of sylvan solitudes.
DEDICATORY BALLAD.
(Written for the unveiling of the Monument erected by the Citizens of Montreal to Paul Chomedy de Maisonneuve.)
Over the woodland was flowing, o’erwhelming valley and lea.
The great river, bright in the sunshine, set the isle in a circlet of gold
As it swept to its tryst with the ocean, through realms of riches untold.
As the wanderers drew near their haven, afar from the sea and its gales;
From the land of their fathers afar, and anear the keen Iroquois knives.
But the pilgrims, to fear ever strangers, to the Cross had entrusted their lives.
Not for honor nor glory. Far nobler the object our sires had in view.
To carry the cross to the savage, braving danger and hardship they came.
They came for the love of the Virgin, a city to found in her name.{42}
Their barks gently touched on the shingle, and Maisonneuve, leaping to land,
Bent his knee, and the others knelt with him, uplifting their voices in prayer
To the Ruler of all, while, prophetic, the priest in his vestments stood there.
The wild duck lurked in the shallows, and anear screamed the kingfisher harsh,
High above swept the night-hawk in circles, in the meadow the fireflies gleamed bright
And were caught, to adorn the rude altar with garlands of pulsating light.
The rivulet gurgled and eddied, and answered the murmuring trees,
The mountain loomed dark in the distance, and the wolf looking down from the height,
In wonder and awe, saw the camp fire that burned on a city’s birth night.
If you ask at what sacrifice nourished or watered with what noble blood?{43}
Lo! the pages of history answer. There ’tis written in letters of gold
How each was a Christian and soldier, who founded Ville Marie of old.
On the ill-fated colony, they were the first whose arm parried the stroke.
They were Dollards in heart, and went even to torture and death with a smile,
While the women, like angels of mercy, stanched their wounds and their woes did beguile.
Maisonneuve, this, the new world’s defender, who for God held his whole life in fee.
He led them in worship, consoled them when thickly their troubles did fall,
Maisonneuve the undaunted, the founder, Æneas of old Montreal.
Where now beats the pulse of a city, the heart of a new nationhood,
Long years may his monument stand that our children may ask and be told
Of the leader who founded Ville Marie, and honor the heroes of old.
TIMOR MORTIS CONTURBAT ME.
(The Fear of Death Affrights Me.)
The tuneful singer beyond the sea,
When life’s flame sank and his blood waxed cold,
Timor mortis conturbat me.
And life so sweet, though there sorrows be,
Why welcome the summons to be gone?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
Babes that prattle about my knee;
Has heaven itself a dearer boon?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
With the lisp of rain in the willow tree,
Will the after death give all I crave?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
And truths, like nymphs my pursuit to flee,
Or will the ancient faith prove hollow?
Timor mortis conturbat me.{45}
Are there grey, still dawns on a dewy lea,
Are there twilights there, with a crescent moon?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
Are there wondrous lands for the eye to see,
Is melody there and dulcet speech?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
Greet and converse with sober glee,
Or is all new in the courts above?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
As in dreams we image it, hopefully,
Or does the Spirit forget the Man?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
Soul from the flesh set only free,
Or in new mould shall I be recast?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
I shall not be I, if I happy be.
If I be not I, what is heaven worth?
Timor mortis conturbat me.
ON NEW YEAR’S EVE.
Through the window, silvery-clear,
And I sat in my study, dreaming
Sweet dreams of the coming year.
Of flames on the gusty hearth,
As hour followed fleet hour after
To welcome the Year with mirth.
I heard in the gloomy hall
The scamper of mice run riot,
And I heard them in the wall.
To hear the cravens go,
While paler the moonbeams glistened
And the fire on the hearth burned low.
That, close by the door, I heard
The voice of a woman weeping
The sigh of a farewell word?{47}
That tapped and opened the door,
Or was it a woman knocking
And a light step on the floor?
With tears in her gentle eyes,
And her shapely arms were laden
With gems from time’s argosies.
On her breast was a lily fair;
But of rue was a sad wreath twining
Among her golden hair.
I greeted her with a kiss,
For I thought her the New Year, bringing
New uncut jewels of bliss.
And joy in her sweet face shone,
As sunlight a shadow chases
While a summer cloud floats on.
New Year, to behold thy face.”
Pale grew the maid, and, turning,
She shrank from my close embrace,{48}
The depth of my love to prove,
Yet ere from my bosom parted
To sigh for an untried love.
Time’s treasury could bestow;
I sated thy days with pleasures,
And guarded thy heart from woe.
I granted thee love and peace;
Yet thou scornest me now, or ever
My labor for thee doth cease.
Thy life’s pathway upon,
And now that thou hast been dowered
With all, canst thou wish me gone?
Be satisfied with thy lot,
Or must thou be pining ever
For joys that as yet are not?
An utter unknown to greet,
As a child a butterfly chases
Treading flowers beneath his feet?”{49}
Through night to a tropic dawn,
My heart, to the Old Year clinging,
Yearned for the joys nigh gone.
Passed over my grieving soul,
As I thought of the new to-morrow
That led to some unknown goal!
“Heed not the flight of time,
Oh stay,”—But I was forsaken,
And heard the New Year chime.
IN THE CLOSING HOURS.
When the latest guest has gone,
By the hearth fire’s flickering light
Sweet it is to dream alone.
Strife that ends in victory;
Sweeter still the peace complete
Following on the eager day.
Revelling in romantic rest,
Buoyed on dreams, whose mystic flood
Draws the soul on happy quest.
When the friends of youth are gone,
Ended lust of gain and strife,
Peace approaches with the dawn.
When the hair is turning white,
While the past, with broadening flood,
Murmurs through the closing night.
WHERE HEAVEN IS.
Cool shades among, in its lacework grot, the child reclining doth dreamful sway.
Hope’s hand, entwining life’s harp new strung with joyous garlands, its sound doth stay,
And he thinks earth heaven, to him God-given, nor cares though the passing hours delay.
Youth yearns for the strife, as a child for play, and his dreamings are of a well-won height.
As at dawn of day when the Morning Star unbinds the zone of the virgin Light,
We watch, all breathless, for beauty deathless, so heaven’s beyond us, yet seems in sight.
When trust in men we must fain deny, the miserere replaces song.{52}
Like slaves that ply in the galley’s den the laboring oar, through sin and wrong,
The soul plods on, and heaven is gone; we can but suffer and yet be strong.
The memory sage dreams dreams of the past and all that has made it have joys below.
When the friends long laid in the grave, at last, stand beckoning us in the twilight glow,
And wrongs endured prove that which cured, the heaven behind us too late we know.
To-day’s brief span arches little dear; the stream of bliss seems wider afar.
From this to this the path is drear; there’s always something each joy to mar,
Till the past that is real becomes ideal under the gold of life’s twilight star.
NEW YEAR’S EVE.
Air—Belle Mahone.
How it sinks and how it swells!
O’er the sleeping town it knells,
“Fare thee well, Old Year.”
Far across the snowy plain
Rolls the many-tongued refrain,
And the echoes cry again,
“Fare thee well, Old Year.”
Thou hast spared us many a tear,
Thou hast vanquished many a fear,
Fare thee well, Old Year.
Lightly touched by summer showers,
Budding hopes have grown to flowers,
Happy days have flown like hours,
Fare thee well, Old Year.
Precious favors thou hast brought,
Pleasant changes thou hast wrought,
Fare thee well, Old Year.{54}
Thy last records have been penned,
We must part at last, true friend.
Fare thee well, Old Year.
With whate’er it may relate,
Sin and goodness, love and hate,
Fare thee well, Old Year.
One more volume is complete,
Take it to the Mercy Seat,
Lay it at the Master’s feet,
Fare thee well, Old Year.
REFRAIN.
Fare thee well, Old Year,
Thou hast been a faithful friend,
Fare thee well, Old Year.
PEGASUS.
Scornful of your control,
Who canters well enough, indeed,
But will not caracole,
So much the better, poet mine,
’Tis bottom wins the race.
Let poetasters prance, in fine;
Keep you the steady pace.
Chase metres, out of breath;
Great thoughts are not thus run to ground,
Nor fame in at the death.
So, let your Pegasus be free
To hunt some thought sublime,
While you sit still, with clinging knee,
And gallop simple rhyme.
There’s nothing like the hunt,
The good horse straining at the girth,
The clear-tongued hounds in front.{56}
You well before the rout,
Don’t curb and make him beat the air;
Loose rein, and let him out.
With ornate language wrought,
Its cadences, though sweet indeed,
But hide the lack of thought.
Be yours the poem that can stand
From trappings wholly free,
Each thought a Phryne, to be scanned
In fearless nudity.
IT WOULD BE EASY TO BE GOOD.
Or follows ways of evil,
Who knows the joys that angels bless
Or sin’s insensate revel,
At last, too well has understood
Sin is not worth a feather.—
It would be easy to be good,
If all were good together.
And weighing but the pleasure,
Though we all sinful joys might blend,
They make a sorry treasure.
The loftiest joys must be subdued,
The soul we fain must tether.—
It would be easy to be good
If all were good together.
To every gentle feeling!
The soul would realize its hope
Its noblest side revealing.{58}
In calm and stormy weather.—
It would be easy to be good
If all were good together.
No need for wrong were given;
If each his neighbor helped along,
This earth would be a heaven;
If men once met in rectitude,
Farewell, the regions nether.—
It would be easy to be good,
If all were good together.
THE LITTLE TROOPER.
Throughout life’s long campaign.
They make a jest of all man’s pride,
And oh, the havoc! As they ride,
They cannot count their slain.
And laughing swings his blade.
The zephyrs toss his golden hair,
His eyes are blue; he is so fair
He seems a masking maid.
Dark as a midnight storm.
There is no man can cope with him.
We shrink and tremble in each limb
Before his awful form.
More than the gold-tressed youth,
The boy with every careless blow
More than the trooper grim lays low,
And causes earth more ruth.{60}
Than flame or winter’s breath.
Men bear his wounds to the realm above,
For the little trooper’s name is Love,
His comrade’s only Death.
CUPID’S DISGUISES.
We never see his form,
Till suddenly he surprises
And takes the heart by storm.
That tinge a cheek so fair,
Or oft in the moonlit hushes
In a sweet voice on the air.
Of mirth in azure eyes,
Sometimes in the curve entrancing
Of lips that part in sighs.
Of arm, rich lace beneath;
Sometimes in the tresses’ shimmer,
Sometimes in the peep of teeth.
He swifter is than thought.
The keenest mind is but stupid
When he begins to plot.
MUSIC.
And yet so few it satisfies
That man fain dreams life is complete
Only beyond the skies.
That guided Israel’s way by night,
Every unsatisfied desire
Leads man towards the right.
Youth’s pure ideals, shattered, lie;
Hope, virtue, charity and trust
Amid life’s deserts die.
Of goodness, honor and renown.
Man floats on a polluted stream,
Which fain would drag him down.
That sweetly sings in woodland brakes,
When hope and trust and virtue fail,
Man’s nobler nature wakes.{64}
An echo of the dreams of youth,
When he saw gods among mankind,
In woman only truth.
BABY’S STOCKING.
Hangs beside his wicker cot,
Darling mother’s wishes mocking
And the treasures she has brought.
Gift can find a place inside.
Was there doting mother ever
So distressed at Christmas tide?
Of the gentle mother face;
Baby’s hands are clasped and seeming
Interlocked in fond embrace.
And the Rubicon of youth
He has passed, for lo! beguiling
Mother’s kisses, peeps a tooth.
Santa Claus has many a gem,
But, God’s love and mother’s sharing,
Baby has no need of them.
MY DIVINITY.
(Smile, if you will, at the claim)
Mote though I am in the ambient sky,
Housed, I confess, in putrescible frame,
Still, a divinity.
My altars as well,—who knows?
You would prick my pride with your wit’s keen lance,
You know my radius. Well, suppose
You pipe, I dance.
That’s my affair, not my creatures’.
Did I create nature’s adamant laws,
Or am I but one of her manifold features?
Fellow gods can pick flaws!
I create by millions each hour,
Do you fancy the witless ephemeral brood,
As each lives its life, can my limits and power
Declare understood?{67}
I sit and my universe rule.
What can they know of their god, though they fain
Question, perhaps, each contemptible fool,
What joy is, why pain?
Worsting some hostile bacillus,
Fight over their God, sect term other sect lost,
Read my ways or complain, “Why torment us and kill us?”
What fate has each ghost?
Move the earth that I dwell on,
A million my creatures, remorseless, I slay.
Am I annoyed if they call me a felon!
It is I, or they.
My very nature disjoint?
Is there aught but destruction for all in such peace?
Must I miracle work for a microscope point,—
Corpuscles to please?
Yet are we one and not two.
They are the universe, I am the brain,
In and about them, knit through and through,—
Chords in one strain.{68}
Creator and creature, that we
Must rise to the height of our powers, or miss
Life’s best for ourselves, and each other decree
Frustrate of bliss.
. . . . . . . . . .
Is, now, this godhead of mine,
My limits, this difference vast
Between creature and maker, a symbol? In fine
Is mankind but a host of blood corpuscles, massed
Through the Divine?
THE SLEEPING SOUL.
Awake and come smiling to greet my own?
Will ever the love-light break
From thine eyes upon me, like the sun
On the billows that shoreward run,
Into foam by the winds of the ocean blown?
Thou hast in thy heart a bird,
But its head is under its wing.
I watch it and think with weeping
How sweet a song it might sing;
Yet by love it is never stirred.
I dream that I hear that low bird voice
Lilting so merrily,
Singing so cheerily,
Bidding my heart to its depths rejoice;
But alas, takes flight
My dream before the dawn’s lance of light.{70}
To kiss thy soul, as the prince in story
Kissed the Sleeping Beauty’s lips,
And to a life-love waken thee.
Round thee there is a maiden glory
Fairer than circles the sun that dips
Into the sea while chill night comes creeping
Slowly, silently through the sky;
But as well might I
Reach out my hand to the sun and try
To make his glory my very own
As think to touch with my finger tips
Thy glorious beauty that shrinks from me.
THE MOTHER.
She passed, like a sungleam at dawn, through mistlands of sorrows and fears,
Seeking the soul of the babe at her bosom now nursing and clinging,
And stood in the valley of death, gloomed with the shadow of tears.
Who dared to the valley of pain go down for the winning of life.
Hour after hour trembled by, as we crouched in our woe at the portal,
Made strangers to her whom we loved by strangers who looked on her strife.
Demons snarled at her heels, she was haunted by visions abhorred;{72}
But Love was a lamp to her feet as she passed through the woe-blossomed meadow,
Seeking the soul of her child. She was brave, for her trust was the Lord.
Treading the pavements of pearl and haloed with shimmering gleams,
On, till the veil hung between immortal and mortal was riven,
And she brought from the garden of God the blue-eyed flower of her dreams.
PLUCK FLOWERS IN YOUTH.
Pluck flowers in youth, in age it is too late;
Pluck flowers when it is morn with flowers and you.
So soon they wither, do not hesitate,
Lest you should gather roses not, but rue.
Pluck flowers ere life grows cold and desolate,
And love turns hate.
To age not even the rose itself is sweet,
Pluck flowers, pluck flowers in youth, while faith is great,
Ere life and joy grow cankered with deceit.
Pluck flowers in youth; no sadder thought brings Fate
Than memory of scorned joys crushed by our feet
In flight too fleet.
O FOOLISH HEART.
With hope and fear;
O treacherous blush, to come and go
When he is near;
Why do ye to the world reveal
The passion I would fain conceal?
O downcast eyes,
Whose lashes droop upon each cheek,
Nor dare to rise;
Do ye not know she sees and hears
Fond looks and words that cost me tears?
Give scorn for scorn;
Be deaf, mine ears, be blind, mine eyes,—
Yet soul, why mourn?
Though she may claim him for her own,
My love, my love is mine alone.
MY HEART’S A MERRY ROVER.
Though innocent of wrong;
Forever beauty’s lover,
Yet never constant long.
Their smiling to disguise,
He kneels and loves, not doubting
They are his richest prize.
He spies a bosom fair,
At once the rogue is scheming
To gain admittance there;
That frame a pretty head,
His love and his caresses
He spends on them instead.
With many a saucy stare,
The lips, the curls, the bosom
Must mourn their worshipper.{76}
Is nothing if not true,
He’s but one maiden’s lover,
And, dearest, she is you.
THE CIGARETTE SMOKER.
Blue eyes bright, match alight,
Shielding with her hands
The growing flame,
Holding to her lips, where the bee, love, sips,
The fragrant pleasure of man’s leisure,
Cigarette by name.
If she smoke, must she choke
When blue whirls come off?
Now she denies
The cigarette the bliss of her lips’ sweet kiss,
Holds it burning, to ash turning,
Till at last it dies.
By the fell magic spell
Of love’s witching art,
And just as I
Burned with passion’s fire, shrank from my desire,
Let my yearning and heart-burning
Into ashes die.
TAKE ME AS YOU FIND ME.
Take me so,
Else from love unbind me,
Let me go.
Body and soul;
These shall lose or save me,
As years roll.
I must wend
Onward, thus, nor falter
To the end.
Sweetheart, so
You’ll not look above me,
Nor below.
AT THE TRYST.
Amid the gloom of air,
Like gold and jewels twining
Among thy golden hair.
And count the moments fleet,—
O maiden, we are mortal,
Why hasten not thy feet?
Are wooing by the stream,
And far across the meadows
Thy windows brightly gleam.
Beneath the trysting tree,
The evening hours are fleeting,
Why com’st thou not to me?
SONNETS IN CALIFORNIA.
ON A FLASK OF WATER.
Taken from the Pacific at Santa Monica, Cal.
The grinding ice floes cast a spectral glare,
I come to shores where, through the golden air,
Palms wave and bees dip in the orange sprays.
From shores Siberian, where the keen knout preys
On women, wan with torture and despair,
I come, a voiceless, palpitating prayer,
Where Freedom dwells, yet succor still delays.
A giant sunk in poppied, dreamful rest,
I come where earth’s great last-born nation stands,
Flower of the centuries, the titanic West.
I come where East and West stand face to face,
The childhood and the manhood of the race.
SPRING IN THE SOUTH.
Without an icy blast or chilling air,
When the broad mesas arid lie and bare,
The Ishmael cactus and the sage brush grow.{81}
The sunflowers throng the by-ways everywhere,
Palms wave, birds sing. The earth lies free of care,
Basking in skies one golden, cloudless glow.
Streams to the canyons, and to ranch and glen
Wild flowers and orange blossoms, wherein rides
The bee on golden zephyrs. Swiftly then,
Like wind-blown fire, up the Sierra sides
A blaze of poppies runs, and it is Spring.
A WINTER DAY.
In the Sierras.
Was risen to flood each sombre peak with light,
Ere came a cloud host through the gusty night,
Storming the crags. Sheer canyon walls between
They swept, and hid bare ledge and living green.
Hoarse thunder pealed from unseen height to height,
As though the vast hills boasted of their might,
Though Chaos’ self upon them seemed to lean.
Across the hills. The clouds retired, and lo!
On every wind-swept crag, as Day looked forth,
Bright in the southern sunshine gleamed the snow,
A vision of the unforgotten North
’Twixt golden skies and poppy fields aflame.
In the Valley.
Poppies aflame and orange blooms, whose scent
With the faint odor of the snow is blent.
Snow on the peaks, but in the canyons, showers,
And torrents drinking strength from stormy hours.
The geese wheel seaward through the clouds half spent,
Fleeing the snow and screaming discontent,
But in the vale birds trill in blossomy bowers.
The bandit Winter lurks to seize his prey.
Still springs the grain, vines grow and fruit delights
Sun and soft winds through many a golden day
In many an Eden valley, nestling warm
Below the stern Sierras, wrapped in storm.
THE POOL OF SANT’ OLINE.
Sierra Madre, Cal.
For this new world set sail,
Ere yet the padres came anear
San Gabriel’s sunny vale,
Ere yet the thirst for gold drew men
Across the western hills,
I rippled down this rocky glen,
The happiest of rills.
Oft lay upon my breast;
Oft through the brown madronas broke
The bear upon his quest.
Past starry yuccas, to my brink,
At many a crimson dawn,
The mountain lion came to drink,
And oft a timid fawn.
Of many a sunny year,
And still I rippled on, content
And solitary here.{84}
At times a weary miner came
And quaffed my cooling stream,
At times I saw the camp-fire flame
Of hardy hunters gleam.
Trill in the leaves above,
A maid I never saw nor heard,
Nor knew the name of love.
Oh, there was never rivulet
So merry in a glen;
But now I never can forget,
Nor merry be again.
The dizzy trail along.
Upon my ferny marge she stood
And listened to my song.
I saw her, and I leapt for glee
In many a lucent wave,
And when she stooped to drink from me,
My very heart I gave.
Among the granite hills;
Instead, my ceaseless murmuring
The sombre canyon fills.
Oh! ye to whom that maid divine
Hath also heartless been,
Come join your mournful plaint with mine,
The pool of Sant’ Oline.
WINTER IN THE SOUTH.
Beside the frost-bound rills;
At home the snow is drifting deep
Upon the windy hills;
At home the ice king mocks the sun,
The woods are drear and bare,
And of the birds there is not one
Left singing anywhere.
The mesas bright with flowers.
The birds repeat each dulcet strain
They learned in Eden’s bowers.
’Midst ripening fruit, the orange trees
Have mingled odorous blooms,
And here and there the eager bees
Hum through the golden glooms.
Stand knee deep in the green,
Like patriarchs smiling as they go
Blithe groups of youth between.{86}
Behind them is the burning sand
Of the Mojave[A] waste;
Before, the warm Pacific strand,
By golden seas embraced.
Through a many a perfect day,
My heart would fain forget life’s quest,
And live in dreams alway;
But when upon the snow-clad hills
Mine eyes again look forth,
I wake. Thy spell my bosom thrills,
Stern homeland in the north!
The bursting of the leaf,
The northern summer brief but dear,
And autumn’s golden sheaf.
Give me the wintry moon’s pale gleam,
With snow and storm at strife.
The south is a bewitching dream,
But in the north is life.
THE KINDERGARTEN.
Now ripened for the gathering in,
Speak of old days, ere life’s pursuits
Touched the new soul with taint of sin,
We, weary of the toil and strife,
Must envy you your scorn of fame,
Your eager, loving trust in life.
His blocks unsteadily in air,
May yet a minster build, whose aisles
Shall echo to a nation’s prayer.
The letters on his cubes of wood,
May yet with a poetic spell
Charm and uplift the multitude.
To pluck the blossoms of each hour.
Ambition frets them not, they give
No thought to pomp or place or power.{88}
Our trivial aims; we rage and sigh
Because our blocks are built askew,
And our best hopes in ruins lie.
A teacher watches, true and kind,
Striving to guide our fantasies,
And patient with the groping mind.
He leads us, as these babes are led,
Till chimes, at last, the closing hour,
The prizes won, the lessons said.
Of life, that fits the soul for death,
Has learned to serve as well as rule,
And speak for truth with every breath.
THE POET.
Attains perfection through the sun-swept day,
And poets, to life’s highest mission born,
By slow unfolding reach the perfect lay.
That in the open casement sighs or sings,
The poet soul is void of melodies
Till unseen spirit fingers sweep the strings.
Death, the dark helmsman over seas unknown,
Nature, all-mother, and the teaching hours
Through him their grand, mysterious chants intone.
In discord breaks, ere he can hymn again
The anthems of the wondrous spirit throng,
And voice strange thoughts beyond our mortal ken.
His soul, which still the pitying spirits calm;
And in the warfare between soul and flesh
His heart oft rises to the noblest psalm.{90}
Or thrall himself a slave to evil’s power,
Too proud the Muse to bless a craven life,
Too pure, a sinful heart with song to dower.
To fate, fights upwards far beyond life’s mist,
And with the broadened vision of the sage
Beholds all earth by hope’s warm sungleams kissed.
Mix with the battling world, nor shirk their part,
But take such trials as are given by Fate
And set them to sweet music by their art.
In sorrow, happiness, in darkness, light,
Love everywhere, and lead his fellow kind
By flowery paths towards life’s sunny height.
GOLD TRESSES.
About her shoulders fall no more
Her locks, in beauty all their own.
Their days of liberty are o’er.
The zephyr’s unseen hand uplift
Each net-like, golden-threaded tress
To catch the sunlight’s moted drift.
Whereby my memory holds it dear,
From that which is her forehead’s frame
To that which hides her shelly ear.
On which my heart first suffered wreck,
That sometimes fell aside too much
And showed the ivory of her neck.
And all its beauty hid from me,
Still other charms I see instead,
And still am in captivity.{92}
Unveiled, that erst beneath the tress
But peeped, as pearly sea shells peer
Through ocean’s weedy wilderness.
My love, and wantoned in the wind,
I know your grief, for I was chained
Her slave ere ye were thus confined.
And laughs to find us strain our gyves.
Come, let us slaves unite and prove
That power to break her bond survives.
And soon, when she and I are wed,
My hands shall set ye free again
To wanton sweetly round her head.
EN ROUTE.
Past glimpses of empurpled hills,
O’er many a broad, sun-smitten flood
And many a myriad tinkling rills,
The train swings on and brings us twain
Each minute nearer by a mile,
While I to chafe at time am fain,
Which holds me sundered from thy smile.
Embowered, the village church spires gleam;
I see white homestead front the breeze,
And of our own sweet home I dream;
While still the fleet train brings us twain
Each minute nearer by a mile,
And fewer moments yet remain
To hold me sundered from thy smile.
Sleek cattle in the meadows browse,
Nor lift their heads, as past we run,
The lithe-limbed steeds and patient cows.{94}
And still the fleet train brings us twain
Each minute nearer by a mile,
Till scarce a moment doth remain
To hold me sundered from thy smile.
Leaves not pursuing night behind;
Stars sparkle in the sky’s broad mead,
And homeward plods the weary hind;
And still the fleet train brings us twain
Each minute nearer by a mile,
Until my heart is home again
And I am basking in thy smile.
AT DAWN.
Pierces the sable breast of night,
Which, dropping many a sable plume,
Flits far into the nether gloom,
All silently.
Dispels the mist that hides the stream,
And scatters from the hill and wood
The clouds that there did sit and brood,
Formless and grey.
And clouds and mist have fled from heaven,
The waking birds take eager flight
Up through the golden rain of light,
With happy song.
A maiden winged a kindly ray,
And, flying wearily and slow,
Far fled the sombre bird of woe
I harbored long.{96}
The mists that hid hope’s stream took flight,
Life’s hills a sunnier aspect took,
And I found many a pleasant nook
Within life’s grove.
Singing, towards the golden skies,
Afar from earthly doubt and strife,
Through the pure radiance of her life,
On wings of love.
MY STAR.
My other home it is,
Whereto, when sorrow threatens me, I fly,
And in my flight towards the vaulted sky
The hated sorrows roll
Down from my fleet-winged soul,
As from the sea gull’s circling form the spray
Drops to the storm-vext bay
Its pinions erst did kiss.
A weariness of the flesh;
And oft my brain, worn with its overthought,
Watches the night steal past, while sleep comes not.
Then doth my star arise
Slowly before my eyes,
Steady, serene and cold, yet heavenly bright,
And, while my grief takes flight,
Binds all my thoughts in leash.
To make my future drear,
For I arise and from that star of mine
Look down and see our small earth dimly shine;{98}
And all life’s joy and pain
Their proper worth obtain,
And I to smile at all past fears begin,
For earth’s discordant din
Is stilled, and God I hear.
TO A PICTURE.
Of tresses flowing free,
O dark-eyed, queenly, thoughtful face,
Awake and comfort me.
The meanest of us all,
It may thy glorious form reveal,
Thy tender soul recall.
And nestle by my side,
And I will be thy faithful page,
If thou wilt be my bride.
O sweet one, heed my cry;
Speak sad, sweet mouth, I wait for thee
To bid me live or die.
To thy fair face gave birth,
But that his vision I may find
Alive upon this earth.{100}
In palace and in cot,
And love shall once more conquer pride,
And she shall share my lot.
THE POET AND HIS RHYMES.
To find the poet there,
Might equally essay to climb
To castles in the air.
Or rather, lives too much.
He makes a forest of a tree,
A palace of a hutch.
His life’s eternal sorrow,
But he is laughing through his tears
And full of joy to-morrow.
The flower is fancy’s own.
’Tis the world’s heart he shows, in sooth,
And his is still unknown.
Without excuse or cause,
He pens the mournfullest of lays,
To win the world’s applause.{102}
The merriest stanzas flow.
Friend, think not by the poet’s rhymes
The poet’s heart to know.
TO AN INFANT.
I would I were like thee;
Then were this whole world’s scorn
And praise alike to me.
As do thine azure eyes,
And know how vain its strife,
How paltry what we prize.
Dominion over thee,
Nor fear the pinions maim
Of thy young soul and free.
Thy mind runs in no groove.
Thou dost both false and true
Question alike, and prove.
But the incarnate “I”,
And thou wilt reach thy goal,
Or failing, thou wouldst die.{104}
That makes us all obey,—
If I were childlike still,
I were more man to-day.
TO SCOTLAND.
’Twixt Scotland roll and me.
Its hills and dales I have not seen,
And scarce expect to see.
The homestead of my fathers
The keen ploughshare has torn,
And where the hearth once welcomed all
Waves now the golden corn.
My love for thee is deep,
Yet I fain would see the old church-yard
Where my forefathers sleep.
And fondly, ever fondly,
My heart in secret yearns,
That its songs may find a welcome
In the bonnie land of Burns.
I opened not my eyes,
I cannot speak the sweet Scotch tongue,
Remote my pathway lies;
Yet Scotland, mother Scotland,
Though fate us twain may part,
I claim my heritage of thee,
For I have the Scottish heart.
ROSINA VOKES.
And many a song be sung
Across the footlight’s golden glow
By many a silvery tongue,
But though new divas charm the ear,
Still memory shall recall
One song we nevermore shall hear:
“His ’art was true to Poll.”
Will care to sing that song
To those whom She, with witching art,
Had held in thrall so long?
Let other songs our pulses stir,
Delight us with them all,
But leave unsung for sake of her
“His ’art was true to Poll.”
Each lip was wreathed in smiles
To hear her sing that melody
With all her witching wiles;
But now, ’twould be no song of mirth,
’Twould bid the sad tears fall,
For though She dwells no more on earth,
Our ’arts are true to Poll.
A LITTLE MAID.
For virtue sweet and beauty rare.
Her eyes are turquoise and her hair
Is sunlight netted.
The quiet student, wise and tall,
The child that hugs its battered doll,—
By them she’s petted.
In smiles and kindly words, each day,
She scatters round her on life’s way
Love beyond measure.
Bloom sweeter for her being nigh;
The bird that mounts into the sky
Sings for her pleasure.
Her joys she shares on every side;
She is her doting mother’s pride,
Her father’s jewel.{108}
But strove, like her, to make it glad,
Life then would seem by far less sad,
Nor half so cruel.
SAMSON AND DELILAH.
Thy traitorous arts upon a soul like mine,
And lure me to eternal slavery
With glances warm like wine.
Thy tender body, like a fragile flower.
How darest thou prey of my heart to make,
And plot against my power?
Wrathful, and tear thy shapely limbs apart,
And dull the jewelled lustre of thine eyes,
And still thy faithless heart?
And see myself embowered in thine eyes,
And every curve of thy lithe figure trace
Beneath thy robe’s disguise.
And menace all my life with one great woe?
Thou hast me in the hollow of thy hand—
Take me or let me go!
MY LADY’S BONNET.
Bedecked with ribands, gay and bright,
And with a song bird perched upon it,
With tiny wings outspread for flight.
As though in its most joyous trill
The harmless thing had suddenly died.
One waits to hear it carol still.
She feeds the poor, instructs the young,
At tale of woe her tears will start,
And words of kindness throng her tongue.
But cloud and with just anger flash
If in her walk she chance to see
Some poor beast cringe beneath the lash.
Bedecked with ribands gay and bright,
But with a slaughtered bird upon it.—
My gentle lady, is this right?
FLOWERS AND FEARS.
Through golden summer hours,
And brought with her, at close of day,
A cluster of wild flowers.
The little one at rest,
Our own sweet flower, and there, ah, me!
The flowers lay on her breast.
Her merry eyes were closed,
She smiled, as though some heavenly sprite
Whispered as she reposed.
Below the ominous flowers,
She seemed a blossom plucked from care
To bloom in heavenly bowers.
The sudden sense of dearth!
We kissed her o’er and o’er again,
And brought her back to earth.
THE ROSEBUD.
So fast, ’twill be blossoming soon.
Around it the zephyrs are balmily blowing,
The sweet scented zephyrs of June,
Of June,
The odorous zephyrs of June.
While shyly its petals unfold.
The bees shall not rob nor the canker affect it,
Nor night make it tremble with cold,
With cold,
Nor night make it shudder with cold.
To her whom I worship alone.
On her beauteous bosom she’ll lay it and wear it
And rival its charms by her own,
Her own,
And shame all its grace by her own.
NIL DESPERANDUM.
Neither sorrow nor delight,
Neither nobleness nor sin,
Known to one
But falls upon
All men with its grace or blight.
He who from his task recoils,
Makes his fellow-laborers bear
On life’s road
A heavier load.
Some one for each sluggard toils.
’Tis the portal to success.
Often Fortune wears a mask.
Face the strife
And live your life;
Be no coward in distress!
FLESH AND SPIRIT.
If love would have its fill,
Though it may feed long on the one dear face,
It never is content, save in embrace.
Though passion have its fill,
It never is content, nor has delight,
If love come not to sanctify the rite.
These only shall inherit
The joys of earth, and in the dread To Be
Not death itself shall break that unity.
Would strive these twain to part;
Look down the ages, through the world’s mad din,
This is the one unpardonable sin.
IN CHURCH.
As when I kneel in worship at thy side,
And hear thy humble prayer to be forgiven
For sake of Him who for our saving died.
Plea of my own, but, silent, bow my head,
So close our souls are knit, I seem to share
The bounteous blessings God on thee doth shed.
But not their voices soften my flint heart;
Thine only in my inmost soul is ringing,
Bidding peace enter, grief and sin depart.
The rampart of my pride a ruin falls,
Even as of old the Jewish trumpets’ pealing
Shook down of haughty Jericho the walls.
SUCCOR THE CHILDREN.
Ears stranger to the wild bird’s song,
To rule, where shall they find the power?
How wage life’s battle, right the wrong?
How shall they meet the mighty toil,
Whose blood is tainted by the slums,
Whose ears know but the street’s turmoil?
And teach them in the fields to play,
Nor let them in the stifling heat
Of crowded cities fade away;
And, dreamless, sleep beneath the sod,
They may be ready for the strife
That brings this planet nearer God.
THE SUNSET LESSON.
Sink slowly in the west,
And the quiet sea and fleecy clouds
In rosy robes were dressed.
Yet still the sea and sky,
As faint the star-zoned twilight grew,
Were full of majesty.
I turned to sky and sea,
Methought that nature spake and bade
My spirit guileless be,
Close round me, like the night,
The memory of my past might still
Life’s evening gild with light.
AS FROM THE NECTAR-LADEN LILY.
Lily the wild bee sips,
A British queen, sweet maiden,
Drained with her loving lips
The poison that was filling
Her husband’s veins with death,
Her love with new life thrilling
His heart with each drawn breath.
Nor less thy bravery,
For when I came, o’erladen
With poisoned hopes, to thee,
With smiles and shy caresses
The venom thou didst drain,
And, healing my distresses,
Didst give new life again.
MUMMY THOUGHTS.
Stumbled by chance on an Etrurian tomb,
And saw a monarch sitting in the gloom,
Sceptred and crowned. Their eager hearts beat fast,
And on the masonry themselves they cast,
To seize the wonder. As, throughout the room,
The axe stroke rang, it knelled the monarch’s doom.
He fell to dust, and left them all aghast.
I have discovered many a kingly thought,
In solitary grandeur throned and crowned,
And striven to bear it forth, only to find
That, when the first stroke of my pen did sound,
It fell to dust, and lo! I had it not.
TO CERTAIN NATURE POETS.
To hail ye brethren in the tuneful art,
Since I but falter, though of earnest heart,—
Friends, I have thought, reading your measures sweet,
Your verses, though with many a charm replete,
Were bettered did they some high thought impart,
Or in man’s conscience plant a sudden dart.
Why proffer roses when the world craves wheat?
If he show not the soul in that he paints.
Why give to mere description all your lays
While what the eye beholds is but a mask
To some grand truth the poet’s hand should raise,
Revealing that for which man’s spirit faints.
THE PATRIARCH’S DEATH.
And build their nests in some umbrageous grove,
Through early summer guard the young they love,
And fill the air with tuneful melodies.
Then, as the fledgelings wake from dreamful ease,
Eager throughout the unknown world to rove,
The parents teach them their new strength to prove,
And beat with fearless wings the summer breeze.
The parents, weary, although sweet the task,
Take flight to other haunts, to rest from care.
The fledgelings in the glowing sunbeams bask,
Living their life. So is it everywhere,—
The patriarch dies; he is but resting now.
OH, WERE IT NOT.
One angel voice, one loving smile,
The world would be a dreary place,
And life to me not worth the while.
How wondrous fair the maiden is;
Methinks the warm winds only blow
That they may kiss her draperies.
May live an hour upon her breast;
I know that I would willingly
Share their brief life to share their nest.
FAREWELL.
And if I cannot say farewell,
’Tis that a thousand yearnings thrill
My heart, and hold my lips in spell.
My lips would speak. Yet why repine?
I knew thee, and, at least, can bless
Thy life, though sundered far from mine.
THE TIDE.
Throughout our city streets,
A limitless, deep sea of human souls,
Each wave, a heart that beats.
Upon that living sea;
What guile and innocence, what joy, what care,
What utter misery!
Into the sea of life,
Where its dark billows meet and foam and roar
In never-ending strife.
Backward upon its way,
Where wives and children bring sweet rest from toil,
Till dawns another day.
Life’s duties to fulfill;
Obedient to the silvery moon of love,
That rules them at its will.
MY COMRADE.
And both be young through life,
Methinks I might forgo the joy
Of calling you my wife.
And all our converse staid,
Still dearer to our hearts doth prove
Some wayward escapade.
You dare me to the fray,
From sober spousehood I recoil;
It is “en garde” straightway.
Upon some sparkling tide,
More prone am I to think of you
As comrade than as bride.
Who could, unawed, recline
By huge camp fire, beneath some tree,
Upon a couch of pine;{126}
And thrive on hunter’s food,
What sweet excursions we might make
To nature’s solitude!
Might lure you from my side,
So I shall wish you still, comrade,
My dainty, fair-haired bride.
MY GIFT.
So common ’tis to human kind;
And yet it is so rare, a king
His crown for it had well resigned.
And one which never can be sold;
A gift no mortal can deny,
And one that fades not, nor grows old.
Such is my heart’s perversity,
Unless I know my gift returned,
Life hath no joy in store for me.
HAMLIN’S MILL.
Upon the charming scene was shining,
And warm the thrifty village lay,
Amid its silent fields reclining.
The river, like a silver thread,
Wound round the hazy, shimmering hill,
Till, plunging o’er the dam, it fled
In eddies down to Hamlin’s Mill.
Beneath the shady trees, we hurried.
The birds were twittering above,
While in and out the squirrels scurried.
We took the narrow road which wound
Through clearings that were smoking still;
And soon our merry chat was drowned
Amidst the noise at Hamlin’s Mill.
And watched the busy bobbins turning;
Then gathered round a jangling loom,
The flying shuttle’s secret learning.
Across the mossy flume we crept,
Whose leaky sides their burden spill,
And stood beside the pond, where slept
The giant power of Hamlin’s Mill.{129}
We stand and watch what it is weaving.
The warp is spun of love and hate,
The woof of merriment and grieving.
But far beyond earth’s noise and dust,
There rules the one stupendous Will,
The power in which His creatures trust,
As in the mill-pond Hamlin’s Mill.
A BALLADE OF JOY.
The heart of my heart and my wife to be;
Who cam’st, with the gifts of the gods arrayed,
To lighten the labors of life for me;
Ere yet I had looked on the face of thee,
My soul dreamed dreams and awoke and said:
“None other is worthier love than she,
And earth shall be heaven when we are wed.”
And the soul finds its vision not readily.
Between us came many a mocking shade,
That smiled with the smile of my fantasy,
And I thought, can it be I have met with thee?
Then the arrows of truth through the false were sped,
And I heard thy soul murmuring cheeringly,
“The earth shall be heaven when we are wed.”
Though sundered by league upon league they be,
That, slipping through tangles of sun and shade,
Meet, mingle and flow to the shoreless sea,
At last my soul met with the soul of thee,
And woes fell from me as leaves fall dead
When winds have wakened the sleeping tree,
And earth became heaven when we were wed.
ENVOI.
And death draw nigh us with noiseless tread,
I reek not how soon may the summons be,
For earth became heaven when we were wed.
REMEMBRANCE.
(From the German of Fredrich Matthison.)
When through the brake
The nightingales sweet music make.
When dost thou think of me?
By the shady well,
Under the twilight’s glimmering spell.
Where dost thou think of me?
With pleasant pain,
With yearning, while the hot tears rain.
How dost thou think of me?
Till in some star
We meet again. However far,
I think of none but thee.
THE GLOVE.
Bestrewn with rocks and gloomed with trees,
Grey, rolling clouds, chased by the breeze,
A stream, which through the valley glides.
The eager squirrels scold the crows,
And sharply sound the sudden blows
Of some woodpecker’s greedy bill.
From its protecting broad leaf peers;
The horse tails shake aloft their spears,
Like foemen, at us as we pass.
Our speech with sparrow-chatter drowned,
He in the little valley found
An early violet, I a glove.
And shyly peered above the sod,
While, distant from it not a rod,
The dainty glove lay all alone.{134}
To dabble in the sunny spring,
And then, the thoughtless little thing,
Had left it lying on the rand.
Of budding life and blossoming spring,
Arose and from my heart took wing
To heaven a brief and heartfelt prayer:
And in whatever station set,
Be modest, like the violet,
And act in life an earnest part,
Is gently lifted to the skies,
Thy soul may unto heaven arise
Whene’er its earthly course is run.
THE MAGIC BOW.
(From the French of Charles Cros.)
Tress with tress did mingle and meet,
Yellow as ripening August wheat.
Like that of an angel or a fay.
Beneath dusk lashes her eyes shone gray.
As valleys through, or mountains o’er,
The maid upon his steed he bore.
That she in her pride would look upon
To the day she met him, and was undone.
That when her lover smiled disdain,
She to sicken and die was fain.
She said, “Bind thy bow with my locks, to charm
The maid to whom thy heart grows warm.”{136}
The shimmering aureole round her head
He bound to his bow, as she had said.
Sweeps his Cremona, so did he,
And went forth, seeking charity.
For the dead lived within the lay,
And with her songs all hearts did sway.
The dark-eyed queen, to honor dead,
With him by moonlight swiftly fled.
To play, no more the bow obeyed,
But mournfully did him upbraid.
In mid-flight by remorse were slain,
And the dead had her pledge again.
Rippling low, did mingle and meet,
Yellow as ripening August wheat.
AT THE SEASIDE.
Thou hast made my darling flush!
But the swarthier tints enhance
The charms of her modest blush.
Thou hast lent thy warmth and light
To the gleam of her melting eyes,
Till a glance in their depths so bright
Seems a peep into Paradise.
Thou hast stolen my love from me!
Thou hast clasped to thy breast her charms;
She has rested her head on thee.
Thou hast tangled her silken hair,
And kissed her face and her lips—
Ah! Love, he is false! Beware
Of that spoiler of men and ships!
THE ORPHANS.
Shall walls protect and man refuse to aid?
At Christmas, when our children are arrayed
In furs, shall orphans crouch behind a stone
To hide them from the storm? Is there not one
Will see the outstretched hand of that frail maid,
To whom the baby brother clings, afraid?
Will no ear heed when hunger makes its moan?
To shield them from distress, no mother’s love
Draws them within the shelter of her breast.
Those tender souls must front the world alone;
But, if Christ came not vainly from above,
Some noble heart will aid them, thus distressed.
ALADDIN’S LAMP.
Which claimed my simple faith in youth,
Its loss no longer I bewail,
But hold it mine in very truth.
To raise me, and, as swift as thought,
Bear me abroad, from land to land,
Wherever I would fain be brought.
Or where Egyptian deserts burn,
Wherever man has been, he goes,
And tells me all I wish to learn.
And how their wondrous cycles run,
Or places me beyond the earth,
Unharmed, upon the giant sun.
How this vast universe began;
How life, from mean beginnings, rose
High as God’s noblest creature, man.{140}
About the swinging earth I tread,
That it is one vast burying ground,
The living living through the dead,
Now stand the homes of countless souls;
That where once mountains rose in pride,
Billow on foaming billow rolls.
And bears me almost to its source;
Then as we float, bids scenes sublime
And sad and happy shore our course.
With busy builders everywhere,
Up, ever up, towards the skies,
Spearing the azure depths of air.
And see the workmen making signs,—
How humble God can make the proud!
How easily mar man’s best designs!
In cruel waves on fated Rome,
And in an emperor’s audience hall
I see the jackals make their home.{141}
And knights in burnished armor housed.
I hear the chime of marriage bells
For maids whom death hath long espoused.
That wins him immortality,
And weep with such as found with pain
Their idol but ignoble clay.
The words that stirred the world I see;
I hear the tramp of arméd men,
And know that thought, at last, is free.
Defeats and conquests of the race,
Through all the swift, eventful years,
The geni at my wish will trace.
For me, nor gives me queen for bride,
While I am free to all the past,
I ask from him no boon beside.
SONG.
And her soul as pure as snow;
When her eyes, with sunny splendor,
Set her countenance aglow;
When her every move discovers
Newer graces without end,
She can win a hundred lovers,—
Yet may hunger for a friend.
Ruby lips, in smiles that part,
These will lure a man’s caresses,
Easily enslave his heart;
Yet, when all is said and over,
Even though souls in passion blend,
She has only one more lover,
And may hunger for a friend.
Beauty hath its charm for me.
Yet would I, beyond life’s shallows,
Push towards the depthless sea.
Friendship’s true, and Love’s a rover,
Love is selfish in the end.
Choose thee, Sweet, whatever lover,
Let me still remain thy friend.
QUATRAINS.
I.
The sand that chafes it long;
My woes, can I not banish them,
I round into a song.
II.
The villain may be read,
But heaven itself can set no rule
To judge an addled head.
III.
All that it has to teach,
And lo, a glorious gem shall burn
Upon the brow of each.
IV.
In death he liveth still,
And, godlike, with a word of his
Makes deathless whom he will.
V.
To those who think self strong,
How they would cry, continually,
“Beware the first small wrong!”
VI.
To Felix Morris.
And yours, perhaps, the greater is;
You bring the world before men’s sight,
I can but proffer fantasies.
VII.
Ere raised in blossoms, first shall fall to dust.
Take comfort, then, O brother, when life mocks
Thine aspirations, as perforce life must.
VIII.
Her he but garlands with hopes and dreams,
And worships, not her in those wreaths arrayed,
But the vision of fancy that then she seems.
FOOTNOTE:
[A] Pronounced Mohavy.