In Memorium
A list of books
published by
Edward Moxon, 44, Dover Street.
IN MEMORIAM.
IN MEMORIAM.
LONDON:
EDWARD MOXON, DOVER STREET.
1850.
{iv}
LONDON:
BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
{v}
Whom we, that have not seen thy face,
By faith, and faith alone, embrace,
Believing where we cannot prove;
Thou madest Life in man and brute;
Thou madest Death; and lo, thy foot
Is on the skull which thou hast made.
Thou madest man, he knows not why;
He thinks he was not made to die;
{vi}And thou hast made him: thou art just.
The highest, holiest manhood, thou:
Our wills are ours, we know not how;
Our wills are ours, to make them thine.
They have their day and cease to be:
They are but broken lights of thee,
And thou, O Lord, art more than they.
For knowledge is of things we see;
And yet we trust it comes from thee,
A beam in darkness: let it grow.
But more of reverence in us dwell;
That mind and soul, according well,
May make one music as before,
We mock thee when we do not fear:
But help thy foolish ones to bear;
{vii}Help thy vain worlds to bear thy light.
What seem’d my worth since I began;
For merit lives from man to man,
And not from man, O Lord, to thee.
Thy creature, whom I found so fair.
I trust he lives in thee, and there
I find him worthier to be loved.
Confusions of a wasted youth;
Forgive them where they fail in truth,
And in thy wisdom make me wise.
1849.
IN MEMORIAM
A. H. H.
OBIIT MDCCCXXXIII.
I
To one clear harp in divers tones,
That men may rise on stepping-stones
Of their dead selves to higher things.
And find in loss a gain to match?
Or reach a hand thro’ time to catch
The far-off interest of tears?
Let darkness keep her raven gloss;
Ah! sweeter to be drunk with loss,
To dance with death, to beat the ground;
The long result of love, and boast:
‘Behold the man that loved and lost,
But all he was is overworn.’
{2}
II
That name the under-lying dead,
Thy fibres net the dreamless head;
Thy roots are wrapt about the bones.
And bring the firstling to the flock;
And in the dusk of thee, the clock
Beats out the little lives of men.
Who changest not in any gale!
Nor branding summer suns avail
To touch thy thousand years of gloom.
Sick for thy stubborn hardihood,
I seem to fail from out my blood,
And grow incorporate into thee.
{3}
III
O Priestess in the vaults of Death!
O sweet and bitter in a breath,
What whispers from thy lying lip?
A web is wov’n across the sky;
From out waste places comes a cry,
And murmurs from the dying sun:
With all her music in her tone,
A hollow echo of my own,—
A hollow form with empty hands.’
Embrace her as my natural good;
Or crush her, like a vice of blood,
Upon the threshold of the mind?
{4}
IV
My will is bondsman to the dark;
I sit within a helmless bark,
And with my heart I muse and say:
That thou should’st fail from thy desire,
Who scarcely darest to inquire
What is it makes me beat so low?’
Some pleasure from thine early years.
Break, thou deep vase of chilling tears,
That grief hath shaken into frost!
All night below the darken’d eyes;
With morning wakes the will, and cries,
‘Thou shalt not be the fool of loss.’
{5}
V
To put in words the grief I feel;
For words, like nature, half reveal
And half conceal the Soul within.
A use in measur’d language lies;
The sad mechanic exercise
Like dull narcotics, numbing pain.
Like coarsest clothes against the cold;
But that large grief which these enfold
Is given in outline and no more.
{6}
VI
That ‘Loss is common to the race’—
And common is the commonplace,
And vacant chaff well meant for grain.
My own less bitter, rather more:
Too common! Never morning wore
To evening, but some heart did break.
That pledgest now thy gallant son;
A shot, ere half thy draught be done
Hath still’d the life that beat from thee.
Thy sailor,—while thy head is bow’d,
His heavy-shotted hammock-shroud
Drops in his vast and wandering grave.{7}
At that last hour to please him well;
Who mused on all I had to tell,
And something written, something thought;
And ever met him on his way
With wishes, thinking, here to-day,
Or here to-morrow will he come.
That sittest ranging golden hair;
And glad to find thyself so fair,
Poor child, that waitest for thy love!
In expectation of a guest;
And thinking ‘this will please him best,’
She takes a riband or a rose;
And with the thought her colour burns;
And, having left the glass, she turns
Once more to set a ringlet right;{8}
Had fallen, and her future Lord
Was drown’d in passing thro’ the ford,
Or kill’d in falling from his horse.
And what to me remains of good?
To her, perpetual maidenhood,
And unto me, no second friend.
{9}
VII
Here in the long unlovely street,
Doors, where my heart was used to beat
So quickly, waiting for a hand,
Behold me, for I cannot sleep,
And like a guilty thing I creep
At earliest morning to the door.
The noise of life begins again,
And ghastly thro’ the drizzling rain
On the bald street breaks the blank day.
{10}
VIII
To look on her that loves him well,
Who lights and rings the gateway bell
And learns her gone and far from home,
Dies off at once from bower and hall,
And all the place is dark, and all
The chambers emptied of delight;
In which we two were wont to meet,
The field, the chamber and the street,
For all is dark where thou art not.
In those deserted walks, may find
A flower beat with rain and wind,
Which once she foster’d up with care;{11}
O my forsaken heart, with thee
And this poor flower of poesy
Which little cared for fades not yet.
I go to plant it on his tomb,
That if it can it there may bloom,
Or dying there at least may die.
{12}
IX
Sailest the placid ocean-plains
With my lost Arthur’s loved remains,
Spread thy full wings, and waft him o’er.
In vain; a favourable speed
Ruffle thy mirror’d mast, and lead
Thro’ prosperous floods his holy urn.
Thy sliding keel, till Phosphor, bright
As our pure love, thro’ early light
Shall glimmer on the dewy decks.
Sleep, gentle heavens, before the prow;
Sleep, gentle winds, as he sleeps now,
My friend, the brother of my love.{13}
Till all my widow’d race be run;
Dear as the mother to the son,
More than my brothers are to me.
{14}
X
I hear the bell struck in the night;
I see the cabin-window bright;
I see the sailor at the wheel.
And travell’d men from foreign lands;
And letters unto trembling hands;
And, thy dark freight, a vanish’d life.
This look of quiet flatters thus
Our home-bred fancies: O to us,
The fools of habit, sweeter seems
That takes the sunshine and the rains,
Or where the kneeling hamlet drains
The chalice of the grapes of God;{15}
Should gulf him fathom deep in brine;
And hands so often clasp’d in mine,
Should toss with tangle and with shells.
{16}
XI
Calm as to suit a calmer grief,
And only thro’ the faded leaf
The chesnut pattering to the ground:
And on these dews that drench the furze,
And all the silvery gossamers
That twinkle into green and gold:
That sweeps with all its autumn bowers,
And crowded farms and lessening towers,
To mingle with the bounding main:
These leaves that redden to the fall;
And in my heart, if calm at all,
If any calm, a calm despair:{17}
And waves that sway themselves in rest,
And dead calm in that noble breast
Which heaves but with the heaving deep.
{18}
XII
To hear thro’ Heaven a tale of woe,
Some dolorous message knit below
The wild pulsation of her wings;
I leave this mortal ark behind,
A weight of nerves without a mind,
And leave the cliffs, and haste away
And reach the glow of southern skies,
And see the sails at distance rise,
And linger weeping on the marge,
Is this the end of all my care?’
And circle moaning in the air:
‘Is this the end? Is this the end?{19}’
About the prow, and back return
To where the body sits, and learn,
That I have been an hour away.
{20}
XIII
A late-lost form that sleep reveals,
And moves his doubtful arms, and feels
Her place is empty, fall like these;
A void where heart on heart reposed;
And, where warm hands have prest and closed,
Silence, till I be silent too.
An awful thought, a life removed,
The human-hearted man I loved,
A spirit, not a breathing voice.
I do not suffer in a dream;
For now so strange do these things seem,
Mine eyes have leisure for their tears;{21}
And glance about the approaching sails,
As tho’ they brought but merchants’ bales,
And not the burthen that they bring.
{22}
XIV
That thou hadst touch’d the land to-day,
And I went down unto the quay,
And found thee lying in the port,
Should see thy passengers in rank
Come stepping lightly down the plank,
And beckoning unto those they know,
The man I held as half-divine;
Should strike a sudden hand in mine,
And ask a thousand things of home;
And how my life had droop’d of late,
And he should sorrow o’er my state
And marvel what possess’d my brain;{23}
No hint of death in all his frame,
But found him all in all the same,
I should not feel it to be strange.
{24}
XV
And roar from yonder dropping day:
The last red leaf is whirl’d away,
The rooks are blown about the skies;
The cattle huddled on the lea;
And wildly dash’d on tower and tree
The sunbeam strikes along the world:
That all thy motions gently pass
Athwart a plane of molten glass,
I scarce could brook the strain and stir
And but for fear it is not so,
The wild unrest that lives in woe
Would dote and pore on yonder cloud{25}
And onward drags a labouring breast,
And topples round the dreary west,
A looming bastion fringed with fire.
{26}
XVI
Can calm despair and wild unrest
Be tenants of a single breast,
Or sorrow such a changeling be?
The touch of change in calm or storm;
But knows no more of transient form
In her deep self, than some dead lake
Hung in the shadow of a heaven?
Or has the shock, so harshly given,
Confus’d me like the unhappy bark
And staggers blindly ere she sink?
And stunn’d me from my power to think
And all my knowledge of myself;{27}
Whose fancy fuses old and new,
And flashes into false and true,
And mingles all without a plan?
{28}
XVII
Compell’d thy canvas, and my prayer
Was as the whisper of an air
To breathe thee over lonely seas.
Thro’ circles of the bounding sky;
Week after week: the days go by:
Come quick, thou bringest all I love.
My blessing, like a line of light,
Is on the waters day and night,
And like a beacon guards thee home.
Mid-ocean, spare thee, sacred bark;
And balmy drops in summer dark
Slide from the bosom of the stars.{29}
Such precious relics brought by thee;
The dust of him I shall not see
Till all my widow’d race be run.
{30}
XVIII
Where he in English earth is laid,
And from his ashes may be made
The violet of his native land.
As if the quiet bones were blest
Among familiar names to rest
And in the places of his youth.
That sleeps or wears the mask of sleep,
And come, whatever loves to weep,
And hear the ritual of the dead.
I, falling on his faithful heart,
Would breathing thro’ his lips impart
The life that almost dies in me:{31}
And slowly forms the firmer mind,
Treasuring the look it cannot find,
The words that are not heard again.
{32}
XIX
The darken’d heart that beat no more;
They laid him by the pleasant shore,
And in the hearing of the wave.
The salt sea-water passes by,
And hushes half the babbling Wye,
And makes a silence in the hills.
And hush’d my deepest grief of all,
When fill’d with tears that cannot fall,
I brim with sorrow drowning song.
Is vocal in its wooded walls:
My deeper anguish also falls,
And I can speak a little then.
{33}
XX
That breathe a thousand tender vows,
Are but as servants in a house
Where lies the master newly dead;
And weep the fulness from the mind:
‘It will be hard’ they say ‘to find
Another service such as this.’
That out of words a comfort win;
But there are other griefs within,
And tears that at their fountain freeze;
Cold in that atmosphere of Death,
And scarce endure to draw the breath,
Or like to noiseless phantoms flit:{34}
So much the vital spirits sink
To see the vacant chair, and think,
‘How good! how kind! and he is gone.’
{35}
XXI
And, since the grasses round me wave,
I take the grasses of the grave,
And make them pipes whereon to blow.
And sometimes harshly will he speak;
‘This fellow would make weakness weak,
And melt the waxen hearts of men.’
He loves to make parade of pain,
That with his piping he may gain
The praise that comes to constancy.’
For private sorrow’s barren song,
When more and more the people throng
The chairs and thrones of civil power?{36}
When science reaches forth her arms
To feel from world to world, and charms
Her secret from the latest moon?’
Ye never knew the sacred dust:
I do but sing because I must,
And pipe but as the linnets sing:
For now her little ones have ranged;
And unto one her note is changed,
Because her brood is stol’n away.
{37}
XXII
Which led by tracts that pleased us well,
Thro’ four sweet years arose and fell,
From flower to flower, from snow to snow:
And crown’d with all the season lent,
From April on to April went,
And glad at heart from May to May:
To slant the fifth autumnal slope,
As we descended following Hope,
There sat the Shadow fear’d of man;
And spread his mantle dark and cold;
And wrapped thee formless in the fold,
And dull’d the murmur on thy lip;{38}
Nor follow, tho’ I walk in haste;
And think that, somewhere in the waste,
The Shadow sits and waits for me.
{39}
XXIII
Or breaking into song by fits;
Alone, alone, to where he sits,
The Shadow cloak’d from head to foot
I wander, often falling lame,
And looking back to whence I came,
Or on to where the pathway leads;
Thro’ lands where not a leaf was dumb;
But all the lavish hills would hum
The murmur of a happy Pan:
And Fancy light from Fancy caught,
And Thought leapt out to wed with Thought,
Ere thought could wed itself with Speech:{40}
And all was good that Time could bring,
And all the secret of the Spring
Moved in the chambers of the blood:
On Argive heights divinely sang,
And round us all the thicket rang
To many a flute of Arcady.
{41}
XXIV
As pure and perfect as I say?
The very source and fount of Day
Is dash’d with wandering isles of night.
This earth had been the Paradise
It never look’d to human eyes
Since Adam left his garden yet.
Hath stretch’d my former joy so great?
The lowness of the present state,
That sets the past in this relief?
A glory from its being far;
And orb into the perfect star
We saw not, when we moved therein?
{42}
XXV
Whereon with equal feet we fared;
And then, as now, the day prepared
The daily burden for the back.
As light as carrier-birds in air;
I loved the weight I had to bear,
Because it needed help of Love:
When mighty Love would cleave in twain
The lading of a single pain,
And part it, giving half to him.
{43}
XXVI
I with it; for I long to prove
No lapse of moons can canker Love,
Whatever fickle tongues may say.
And goodness, and hath power to see
Within the green the moulder’d tree,
And towers fall’n as soon as built—
Or see (in Him is no before)
In more of life true life no more,
And Love the indifference to be,
Breaks hither over Indian seas,
That Shadow waiting with the keys,
To cloak me from my proper scorn.
{44}
XXVII
The captive void of noble rage,
The linnet born within the cage
That never knew the summer woods:
His license in the field of time,
Unfetter’d by the sense of crime,
To whom a conscience never wakes;
The heart that never plighted troth
But stagnates in the weeds of sloth,
Nor any want-begotten rest.
I feel it, when I sorrow most;
’Tis better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all.
{45}
XXVIII
The moon is hid; the night is still;
The Christmas bells from hill to hill
Answer each other in the mist.
From far and near, on mead and moor,
Swell out and fail, as if a door
Were shut between me and the sound:
That now dilate, and now decrease,
Peace and goodwill, goodwill and peace,
Peace and goodwill, to all mankind.
I almost wish’d no more to wake,
And that my hold on life would break
Before I heard those bells again:{46}
For they controll’d me when a boy;
They bring me sorrow touch’d with joy,
The merry merry bells of Yule.
{47}
XXIX
As daily vexes household peace,
And chains regret to his decease,
How dare we keep our Christmas-eve;
To enrich the threshold of the night
With shower’d largess of delight,
In dance and song and game and jest.
Entwine the cold baptismal font,
Make one wreath more for Use and Wont
That guard the portals of the house;
Gray nurses, loving nothing new;
Why should they miss their yearly due
Before their time? They too will die.
{48}
XXX
The holly round the Christmas hearth;
A rainy cloud possess’d the earth,
And sadly fell our Christmas-eve.
We gambol’d, making vain pretence
Of gladness, with an awful sense
Of one mute Shadow watching all.
We heard them sweep the winter land;
And in a circle hand-in-hand
Sat silent, looking each at each.
We sung, tho’ every eye was dim,
A merry song we sang with him
Last year: impetuously we sang:{49}
Upon us: surely rest is meet:
‘They rest,’ we said, ‘their sleep is sweet,’
And silence follow’d, and we wept.
Once more we sang: ‘They do not die
Nor lose their mortal sympathy,
Nor change to us, although they change;
With gather’d power, yet the same,
Pierces the keen seraphic flame
From orb to orb, from veil to veil.
Draw forth the cheerful day from night:
O Father! touch the east, and light
The light that shone when Hope was born.’
{50}
XXXI
And home to Mary’s house return’d,
Was this demanded—if he yearn’d
To hear her weeping by his grave?
There lives no record of reply,
Which telling what it is to die
Had surely added praise to praise.
The streets were fill’d with joyful sound,
A solemn gladness even crown’d
The purple brows of Olivet.
The rest remaineth unreveal’d;
He told it not; or something seal’d
The lips of that Evangelist.
{51}
XXXII
Nor other thought her mind admits
But, he was dead, and there he sits,
And he that brought him back is there.
All other, when her ardent gaze
Roves from the living brother’s face.
And rests upon the Life indeed.
Borne down by gladness so complete,
She bows, she bathes the Saviour’s feet
With costly spikenard and with tears.
Whose loves in higher love endure;
What souls possess themselves so pure,
Or is there blessedness like theirs?
{52}
XXXIII
Mayst seem to have reach’d a purer air,
Whose faith has centre everywhere,
Nor cares to fix itself to form,
Her early Heaven, her happy views;
Nor thou with shadow’d hint confuse
A life that leads melodious days.
Her hands are quicker unto good.
Oh, sacred be the flesh and blood
To which she links a truth divine!
In holding by the law within,
Thou fail not in a world of sin,
And ev’n for want of such a type.
{53}
XXXIV
That life shall live for evermore,
Else earth is darkness at the core,
And dust and ashes all that is;
Fantastic beauty; such as lurks
In some wild Poet, when he works
Without a conscience or an aim.
’Twere hardly worth my while to choose
Of things all mortal, or to use
A little patience ere I die;
Like birds the charming serpent draws,
To drop head-foremost in the jaws
Of vacant darkness and to cease.
{54}
XXXV
Should murmur from the narrow house:
The cheeks drop in; the body bows;
Man dies: nor is there hope in dust:
But for one hour, O Love, I strive
To keep so sweet a thing alive?
But I should turn mine ears and hear
The sound of streams that swift or slow
Draw down Æonian hills, and sow
The dust of continents to be;
‘The sound of that forgetful shore
Will change my sweetness more and more,
Half dead to know that I shall die.{55}’
An idle case? If Death were seen
At first as Death, Love had not been,
Or been in narrowest working shut,
Or in his coarsest Satyr-shape
Had bruised the herb and crush’d the grape,
And bask’d and batten’d in the woods.
{56}
XXXVI
Deep-seated in our mystic frame,
We yield all blessing to the name
Of Him that made them current coin;
Where Truth in closest words shall fail,
When Truth embodied in a tale
Shall enter in at lowly doors.
With human hands the creed of creeds
In loveliness of perfect deeds,
More strong than all poetic thought;
Or builds the house, or digs the grave,
And those wild eyes that watch the wave
In roarings round the coral reef.
{57}
XXXVII
‘Thou pratest here where thou art least;
This faith has many a purer priest,
And many an abler voice than thou:
On thy Parnassus set thy feet,
And hear thy laurel whisper sweet
About the ledges of the hill.’
A touch of shame upon her cheek:
‘I am not worthy but to speak
Of thy prevailing mysteries;
And owning but a little art
To lull with song an aching heart,
And render human love his dues;{58}
And all he said of things divine,
(And dear as sacramental wine
To dying lips is all he said),
Of comfort clasp’d in truth reveal’d;
And loiter’d in the master’s field,
And darken’d sanctities with song.’
{59}
XXXVIII
Tho’ always under alter’d skies
The purple from the distance dies,
My prospect and horizon gone.
The herald melodies of spring,
But in the songs I love to sing
A doubtful gleam of solace lives.
Survive in spirits render’d free,
Then are these songs I sing of thee
Not all ungrateful to thine ear.
{60}
XXXIX
And look on Spirits breathed away,
As on a maiden in the day
When first she wears her orange-flower!
To take her latest leave of home,
And hopes and light regrets that come
Make April of her tender eyes;
And tears are on the mother’s face,
As parting with a long embrace
She enters other realms of love;
Becoming as is meet and fit
A link among the days, to knit
The generations each with each;{61}
A life that bears immortal fruit
In such great offices as suit
The full-grown energies of heaven.
How often shall her old fireside
Be cheer’d with tidings of the bride,
How often she herself return,
And bring her babe, and make her boast,
Till even those that miss’d her most,
Shall count new things as dear as old:
Till growing winters lay me low;
My paths are in the fields I know,
And thine in undiscover’d lands.
{62}
XL
Did ever rise from high to higher;
As mounts the heavenward altar-fire,
As flies the lighter thro’ the gross.
And I have lost the links that bound
Thy changes; here upon the ground;
No more partaker of thy change.
That I could wing my will with might
To leap the grades of life and light,
And flash at once, my friend, to thee:
To that vague fear implied in death;
Nor shudders at the gulfs beneath,
The howlings from forgotten fields;{63}
An inner trouble I behold,
A spectral doubt which makes me cold,
That I shall be thy mate no more,
The wonders that have come to thee,
Thro’ all the secular to be,
But evermore a life behind.
{64}
XLI
He still outstript me in the race;
It was but unity of place
That made me dream I rank’d with him.
And he the much-beloved again,
A lord of large experience, train
To riper growth the mind and will:
That stir the spirit’s inner deeps,
When one that loves but knows not, reaps
A truth from one that loves and knows?
{65}
XLII
And every spirit’s folded bloom
Thro’ all its intervital gloom
In some long trance should slumber on;
Bare of the body, might it last,
And silent traces of the past
Be all the colour of the flower:
But that still garden of the souls
In many a figured leaf enrolls
The total world since life began:
As when he loved me here in Time,
And at the spiritual prime
Rewaken with the dawning soul.
{66}
XLIII
For here the man is more and more;
But he forgets the days before
God shut the doorways of his head.
And yet perhaps the hoarding sense
Gives out at times (he knows not whence)
A little flash, a mystic hint;
(If Death so taste Lethean springs)
May some dim touch of earthly things
Surprise thee ranging with thy peers.
O turn thee round, resolve the doubt,
My guardian angel will speak out
In that high place, and tell thee all.
{67}
XLIV
What time his tender palm is prest
Against the circle of the breast,
Has never thought that ‘this is I:’
And learns the use of ‘I,’ and ‘me,’
And finds ‘I am not what I see,
And other than the things I touch:’
From whence clear memory may begin,
As thro’ the frame that binds him in
His isolation grows defined.
Which else were fruitless of their due,
Had man to learn himself anew
Beyond the second birth of Death.
{68}
XLV
The path we came by, thorn and flower,
Is shadow’d by the growing hour,
Lest life should fail in looking back.
In that deep dawn behind the tomb,
But clear from marge to marge shall bloom
The eternal landscape of the past;
The fruitful hours of still increase;
Days order’d in a wealthy peace,
And those five years its richest field.
A bounded field, nor stretching far,
Look also, Love, a brooding star,
A rosy warmth from marge to marge.
{69}
XLVI
Should move his rounds, and fusing all
The skirts of self again, should fall
Remerging in the general Soul,
Eternal form shall still divide
The eternal soul from all beside;
And I shall know him when we meet:
Enjoying each the other’s good;
What vaster dream can hit the mood
Of Love on earth? He seeks at least
Before the spirits fade away,
Some landing-place, to clasp and say,
‘Farewell! We lose ourselves in light.’
{70}
XLVII
Were taken to be such as closed
Grave doubts and answers here proposed,
Then these were such as men might scorn:
She takes, when harsher moods remit,
What slender shade of doubt may flit,
And makes it vassal unto love:
But better serves a wholesome law,
And holds it sin and shame to draw
The deepest measure from the chords:
But rather loosens from the lip
Short swallow-flights of song, that dip
Their wings in tears, and skim away.
{71}
XLVIII
Let random influences glance,
Like light in many a shiver’d lance
That breaks about the dappled pools:
The fancy’s tenderest eddy wreathe,
The slightest air of song shall breathe
To make the sullen surface crisp.
But blame not thou the winds that make
The seeming-wanton ripple break,
The tender-pencil’d shadow play.
Ay me! the sorrow deepens down,
Whose muffled motions blindly drown
The bases of my life in tears.
{72}
XLIX
When the blood creeps, and the nerves prick
And tingle; and the heart is sick,
And all the wheels of Being slow.
Is rack’d with pangs that conquer trust,
And time, a maniac, scattering dust,
And life, a Fury, slinging flame.
And men the flies of latter spring,
That lay their eggs, and sting and sing,
And weave their petty cells and die.
To point the term of human strife,
And on the low dark verge of life
The twilight of eternal day.
{73}
L
Should still be near us at our side?
Is there no baseness we would hide?
No inner vileness that we dread?
I had such reverence for his blame,
See with clear eye some hidden shame
And I be lessen’d in his love?
Shall love be blamed for want of faith?
There must be wisdom with great Death;
The dead shall look me thro’ and thro’.
Ye watch, like God, the rolling hours
With larger other eyes than ours,
To make allowance for us all.
{74}
LI
For love reflects the thing beloved;
My words are only words, and moved
Upon the topmost froth of thought.
The Spirit of true love replied;
‘Thou canst not move me from thy side,
Nor human frailty do me wrong.
To that ideal which he bears?
What record? not the sinless years
That breathed beneath the Syrian blue;
That life is dash’d with flecks of sin.
Abide: thy wealth is gathered in,
When Time hath sunder’d shell from pearl.’
{75}
LII
A sober man, among his boys,
Whose youth was full of foolish noise,
Who wears his manhood hale and green;
That had the wild oat not been sown,
The soil, left barren, had not grown
The grain by which a man may live?
For life outliving heats of youth,
Yet who would preach it as a truth
To those that eddy round and round?
For fear divine philosophy
Should push beyond her mark, and be
Procuress to the Lords of Hell.
{76}
LIII
Will be the final goal of ill,
To pangs of nature, sins of will,
Defects of doubt, and taints of blood;
That not one life shall be destroy’d,
Or cast as rubbish to the void,
When God hath made the pile complete;
That not a moth with vain desire
Is shrivel’d in a fruitless fire,
Or but subserves another’s gain.
I can but trust that good shall fall
At last—far off—at last, to all,
And every winter change to spring.{77}
An infant crying in the night:
An infant crying for the light:
And with no language but a cry.
{78}
LIV
No life may fail beyond the grave;
Derives it not from what we have
The likest God within the soul?
That Nature lends such evil dreams?
So careful of the type she seems,
So careless of the single life;
Her secret meaning in her deeds,
And finding that of fifty seeds
She often brings but one to bear;
And falling with my weight of cares
Upon the great world’s altar-stairs
That slope thro’ darkness up to God;{79}
And gather dust and chaff, and call
To what I feel is Lord of all,
And faintly trust the larger hope.
{80}
LV
From scarped cliff and quarried stone
She cries ‘a thousand types are gone:
I care for nothing, all shall go.
I bring to life, I bring to death:
The spirit does but mean the breath:
I know no more.’ And he, shall he,
Such splendid purpose in his eyes,
Who roll’d the psalm to wintry skies,
Who built him fanes of fruitless prayer,
And love Creation’s final law—
Tho’ Nature, red in tooth and claw
With ravine, shriek’d against his creed{81}—
Who battled for the True, the Just,
Be blown about the desert dust,
Or seal’d within the iron hills?
A discord. Dragons of the prime,
That tare each other in their slime,
Were mellow music match’d with him.
O for thy voice to soothe and bless!
What hope of answer, or redress?
Behind the veil, behind the veil.
{82}
LVI
Is after all an earthly song:
Peace, come away; we do him wrong
To sing so wildly; let us go.
But half my life I leave behind;
Methinks my friend is richly shrined,
But I shall pass; my work will fail.
One set slow bell will seem to toll
The passing of the sweetest soul
That ever looked with human eyes.
Eternal greetings to the dead;
And ‘Ave, Ave, Ave,’ said,
‘Adieu, adieu’ for evermore!
{83}
LVII
Like echoes in sepulchral halls,
As drop by drop the water falls
In vaults and catacombs, they fell;
Of hearts that beat from day to day,
Half-conscious of their dying clay,
And those cold crypts where they shall cease.
Thy brethren with a fruitless tear?
Abide a little longer here,
And thou shalt take a nobler leave.’
{84}
LVII
My spirit loved and loves him yet,
Like some poor girl whose heart is set
On one whose rank exceeds her own.
She finds the baseness of her lot;
Half jealous of she knows not what,
And envying all that meet him there.
She sighs amid her narrow days,
Moving about the household ways,
In that dark house where she was born.
And tease her till the day draws by;
At night she weeps, ‘How vain am I!
How should he love a thing so low?’
{85}
LIX
Thy ransom’d reason change replies
With all the circle of the wise,
The perfect flower of human time;
How dimly character’d and slight,
How dwarf’d a growth of cold and night,
How blanch’d with darkness must I grow!
Where thy first form was made a man:
I loved thee, Spirit, and love, nor can
The soul of Shakspeare love thee more.
{86}
LX
Could make thee somewhat blench or fail,
So be my love an idle tale,
And fading legend of the past;
When he was little more than boy,
On some unworthy heart with joy,
But lives to wed an equal mind;
His other passion wholly dies,
Or in the light of deeper eyes
Is matter for a flying smile.
{87}
LXI
And love in which my hound has part,
Can hang no weight upon my heart
In its assumptions up to heaven;
As thou, perchance, art more than I,
And yet I spare them sympathy
And I would set their pains at ease.
As, unto vaster motions bound,
The circuits of thine orbit round
A higher height, a deeper deep.
{88}
LXII
As some divinely gifted man,
Whose life in low estate began
And on a simple village green;
And grasps the skirts of happy chance,
And breasts the blows of circumstance,
And grapples with his evil star;
And lives to clutch the golden keys,
To mould a mighty state’s decrees,
And shape the whisper of the throne;
Becomes on Fortune’s crowning slope
The pillar of a people’s hope,
The centre of a world’s desire;{89}
When all his active powers are still,
A distant dearness in the hill,
A secret sweetness in the stream,
While yet beside its vocal springs
He played at counsellors and kings,
With one that was his earliest mate;
And reaps the labour of his hands,
Or in the furrow musing stands;
‘Does my old friend remember me?’
{90}
LXIII
I lull a fancy trouble-tost
With ‘Love’s too precious to be lost,
A little grain shall not be spilt.’
Till out of painful phases wrought
There flutters up a happy thought,
Self-balanced on a lightsome wing:
And thine effect so lives in me,
A part of mine may live in thee,
And move thee on to noble ends.
{91}
LXIV
You wonder when my fancies play
To find me gay among the gay,
Like one with any trifle pleased.
Which makes a desert in the mind,
Has made me kindly with my kind,
And like to him whose sight is lost;
Whose jest among his friends is free,
Who takes the children on his knee,
And winds their curls about his hand:
For pastime, dreaming of the sky;
His inner day can never die,
His night of loss is always there.
{92}
LXV
I know that in thy place of rest
By that broad water of the west,
There comes a glory on the walls:
As slowly steals a silver flame
Along the letters of thy name,
And o’er the number of thy years.
From off my bed the moonlight dies;
And closing eaves of wearied eyes
I sleep till dusk is dipt in gray:
A lucid veil from coast to coast,
And in the chancel like a ghost
Thy tablet glimmers to the dawn.
{93}
LXVI
Sleep, Death’s twin-brother, times my breath;
Sleep, Death’s twin-brother, knows not Death,
Nor can I dream of thee as dead:
When all our path was fresh with dew,
And all the bugle breezes blew
Reveillée to the breaking morn.
I find a trouble in thine eye
Which makes me sad I know not why,
Nor can my dream resolve the doubt:
I wake, and I discern the truth;
It is the trouble of my youth
That foolish sleep transfers to thee.
{94}
LXVII
That Nature’s ancient power was lost:
The streets were black with smoke and frost,
They chatter’d trifles at the door.
I found a wood with thorny boughs:
I took the thorns to bind my brows,
I wore them like a civic crown.
From youth and babe and hoary hairs:
They call’d me in the public squares
The fool that wears a crown of thorns.
I found an angel of the night:
The voice was low, the look was bright,
He look’d upon my crown and smiled:{95}
That seem’d to touch it into leaf:
The voice was not the voice of grief;
The words were hard to understand.
{96}
LXVIII
When on the gloom I strive to paint
The face I know; the hues are faint
And mix with hollow masks of night:
A gulf that ever shuts and gapes,
A hand that points, and palled shapes
In shadowy thoroughfares of thought;
And shoals of pucker’d faces drive;
Dark bulks that tumble half alive,
And lazy lengths on boundless shores:
I hear a wizard music roll,
And thro’ a lattice on the soul
Looks thy fair face and makes it still.
{97}
LXIX
And madness, thou hast forged at last
A night-long Present of the Past
In which we went through summer France.
So bring an opiate treble-strong,
Drug down the blindfold sense of wrong
That thus my pleasure might be whole;
Of men and minds, the dust of change,
The days that grow to something strange,
In walking as of old we walk’d
The fortress, and the mountain ridge,
The cataract flashing from the bridge,
The breaker breaking on the beach.
{98}
LXX
And howlest, issuing out of night,
With blasts that blow the poplar white,
And lash with storm the streaming pane?
To pine in that reverse of doom,
Which sickened every living bloom,
And blurr’d the splendour of the sun;
With thy quick tears that make the rose
Pull sideways, and the daisy close
Her crimson fringes to the shower;
Up the deep East, or, whispering, play’d
A chequer-work of beam and shade
From hill to hill, yet look’d the same,{99}
Day, mark’d as with some hideous crime,
When the dark hand struck down thro’ time.
And cancell’d nature’s best: but thou,
Thro’ clouds that drench the morning star,
And whirl the ungarner’d sheaf afar,
And sow the sky with flying boughs,
Climb thy thick noon, disastrous day;
Touch thy dull goal of joyless gray,
And hide thy shame beneath the ground.
{100}
LXXI
So little done, such things to be,
How know I what had need of thee,
For thou wert strong as thou wert true?
The head hath miss’d an earthly wreath:
I curse not nature; no, nor death,
For nothing is that errs from law.
Is dim, or will be dim, with weeds:
What fame is left for human deeds
In endless age? It rests with God.
Fade wholly, while the soul exults,
And self-infolds the large results
Of force that would have forged a name.
{101}
LXXII
To those that watch it more and more,
A likeness hardly seen before
Comes out—to some one of his race:
I see thee what thou art, and know
Thy likeness to the wise below,
Thy kindred with the great of old.
And what I see I leave unsaid,
Nor speak it, knowing Death has made
His darkness beautiful with thee.
{102}
LXXIII
In verse that brings myself relief,
And by the measure of my grief
I leave thy greatness to be guess’d;
In fitting aptest words to things,
Or voice the richest-toned that sings,
Hath power to give thee as thou wert?
To raise a cry that lasts not long,
And round thee with the breeze of song
To stir a little dust of praise.
And, while we breathe beneath the sun,
The world which credits what is done
Is cold to all that might have been.{103}
But somewhere, out of human view,
Whate’er thy hands are set to do
Is wrought with tumult of acclaim.
{104}
LXXIV
And in a moment set thy face
Where all the starry heavens of space
Are sharpen’d to a needle’s end;
The secular abyss to come,
And lo! thy deepest lays are dumb
Before the mouldering of a yew;
The darkness of our planet, last,
Thine own shall wither in the vast,
Ere half the lifetime of an oak.
With fifty Mays, thy songs are vain;
And what are they when these remain
The ruin’d shells of hollow towers?
{105}
LXXV
To him, who turns a musing eye
On songs, and deeds, and lives, that lie
Foreshorten’d in the tract of time?
May bind a book, may line a box,
May serve to curl a maiden’s locks;
Or when a thousand moons shall wane
And, passing, turn the page that tells
A grief—then changed to something else,
Sung by a long forgotten mind.
Shall ring with music all the same;
To breathe my loss is more than fame,
To utter love more sweet than praise.
{106}
LXXVI
The holly round the Christmas hearth,
The silent snow possess’d the earth,
And calmly fell our Christmas-eve;
No wing of wind the region swept,
But over all things brooding slept
The quiet sense of something lost.
Again our ancient games had place,
The mimic pictures breathing grace,
And dance and song and hoodman-blind.
No single tear, no type of pain:
O sorrow, then can sorrow wane?
O grief, can grief be changed to less?{107}
No—mixt with all this mystic frame,
Her deep relations are the same,
But with long use her tears are dry.
{108}
LXXVII
Let this not vex thee, noble heart!
I know thee of what force thou art,
To hold the costliest love in fee.
As moulded like in nature’s mint;
And hill and wood and field did print
The same sweet forms in either mind.
Through all his eddying coves; the same
All winds that roam the twilight came
In whispers of the beauteous world.
One lesson from one book we learn’d,
Ere childhood’s flaxen ringlet turn’d
To black and brown on kindred brows.{109}
But he was rich where I was poor,
And he supplied my want the more
As his unlikeness fitted mine.
{110}
LXXVIII
That holy Death ere Arthur died
Had moved me kindly from his side,
And dropt the dust on tearless eyes;
The grief my loss in him had wrought,
A grief as deep as life or thought,
But stay’d in peace with God and man.
I hear the sentence that he speaks;
He bears the burthen of the weeks,
But turns his burthen into gain.
And, influence-rich to soothe and save,
Unused example from the grave,
Reach out dead hands to comfort me.
{111}
LXXIX
‘My love shall now no further range,
There cannot come a mellower change,
For now is love mature in ear.’
What end is here to my complaint?
This haunting whisper makes me faint,
‘More years had made me love thee more.’
‘My sudden frost was sudden gain,
And gave all ripeness to the grain,
It might have drawn from after-heat.’
{112}
LXXX
For changes wrought on form and face;
No lower life that earth’s embrace
May breed with him, can fright my faith.
From state to state the spirit walks;
And these are but the shatter’d stalks
Or ruined chrysalis of one.
The use of virtue out of earth;
I know transplanted human worth
Will bloom to profit, otherwhere.
The wrath that garners in my heart;
He put our lives so far apart
We cannot hear each other speak.
{113}
LXXXI
O sweet new-year delaying long;
Thou doest expectant nature wrong.
Delaying long, delay no more.
Thy sweetness from its proper place?
Can trouble live with April days,
Or sadness in the summer moons?
The little speedwell’s darling blue,
Deep tulips dasht with fiery dew,
Laburnums, dropping-wells of fire.
Delayest the sorrow in my blood,
That longs to burst a frozen bud,
And flood a fresher throat with song.
{114}
LXXXII
The life that had been thine below,
And fix my thoughts on all the glow
To which thy crescent would have grown;
A central warmth diffusing bliss
In glance and smile, and clasp and kiss,
On all the branches of thy blood;
For now the day was drawing on,
When thou should’st link thy life with one
Of mine own house, and boys of thine
But that remorseless iron hour
Made cypress of her orange flower,
Despair of Hope, and earth of thee.{115}
To clap their cheeks, to call them mine.
I see their unborn faces shine
Beside the never-lighted fire.
Thy partner in the flowery walk
Of letters, genial table-talk,
Or deep dispute, and graceful jest:
The lips of men with honest praise,
And sun by sun the happy days
Descend below the golden hills
And all the train of bounteous hours
Conduct by paths of growing powers,
To reverence and the silver hair;
Her lavish mission richly wrought,
Leaving great legacies of thought,
Thy spirit should fail from off the globe;{116}
As link’d with thine in love and fate,
And, hovering o’er the dolorous strait
To the other shore, involved in thee,
And he that died in Holy Land
Would reach us out the shining hand,
And take us as a single soul.
Ah, backward fancy, wherefore wake
The old bitterness again, and break
The low beginnings of content.
{117}
LXXXIII
I felt it, when I sorrow’d most,
’Tis better to have loved and lost,
Than never to have loved at all——
Demanding, so to bring relief
To this which is our common grief,
What kind of life is that I lead;
Be dimm’d of sorrow, or sustain’d;
And whether love for him have drain’d
My capabilities of love;
A faithful answer from the breast,
Thro’ light reproaches, half exprest,
And loyal unto kindly laws.{118}
Till on mine ear this message falls,
That in Vienna’s fatal walls
God’s finger touch’d him, and he slept.
That range above our mortal state,
In circle round the blessed gate,
Received and gave him welcome there;
And show’d him in the fountain fresh
All knowledge that the sons of flesh
Shall gather in the cycled times.
Whose life, whose thoughts were little worth,
To wander on a darken’d earth,
Where all things round me breathed of him.
O heart, with kindliest motion warm,
O sacred essence, other form,
O solemn ghost! O crowned soul!{119}
How much of act at human hands
The sense of human will demands,
By which we dare to live or die.
I felt and feel, though left alone,
His being working in mine own,
The footsteps of his life in mine;
With gifts of grace that might express
All-comprehensive tenderness,
All-subtilising intellect:
To works of weakness, but I find
An image comforting the mind,
And in my grief a strength reserved.
That loved to handle spiritual strife,
Diffused the shock through all my life,
But in the present broke the blow.{120}
For other friends that once I met;
Nor can it suit me to forget
The mighty hopes that make us men.
To mourn for any overmuch;
I, the divided half of such
A friendship as had master’d Time;
Eternal, separate from fears.
The all-assuming months and years
Can take no part away from this:
And Spring that swells the narrow brooks,
And Autumn, with a noise of rooks,
That gather in the waning woods,
Recalls, in change of light or gloom,
My old affection of the tomb,
And my prime passion in the grave:{121}
A part of stillness, yearns to speak;
‘Arise, and get thee forth and seek
A friendship for the years to come.
Thy spirit up to mine can reach;
But in dear words of human speech
We two communicate no more.’
The starry clearness of the free?
How is it? Canst thou feel for me
Some painless sympathy with pain?’
‘’Tis hard for thee to fathom this;
I triumph in conclusive bliss,
And that serene result of all.’
Or so methinks the dead would say;
Or so shall grief with symbols play,
And pining life be fancy-fed.{122}
That these things pass, and I shall prove
A meeting somewhere, love with love,
I crave your pardon, O my friend;
I, clasping brother-hands, aver
I could not, if I would, transfer
The whole I felt for him to you.
The promise of the golden hours?
First love, first friendship, equal powers
That marry with the virgin heart.
That beats within a lonely place,
That yet remembers his embrace,
But at his footstep leaps no more,
Quite in the love of what is gone,
But seeks to beat in time with one
That warms another living breast.{123}
Knowing the primrose yet is dear,
The primrose of the later year,
As not unlike to that of Spring.
{124}
LXXXIV
That rollest from the gorgeous gloom
Of evening over brake and bloom
And meadow, slowly breathing bare
Thro’ all the dewy-tassell’d wood,
And shadowing down the horned flood
In ripples, fan my brows and blow
The full new life that feeds thy breath
Throughout my frame, till Doubt and Death,
Ill brethren, let the fancy fly
On leagues of odour streaming far,
To where in yonder orient star
A hundred spirits whisper ‘Peace.’
{125}
LXXXV
In which of old I wore the gown;
I roved at random through the town,
And saw the tumult of the halls;
The storm their high-built organs make,
And thunder-music, rolling, shake
The prophets blazon’d on the panes;
The measured pulse of racing oars
Among the willows; paced the shores
And many a bridge, and all about
The same, but not the same; and last
Up that long walk of limes I past
To see the rooms in which he dwelt.{126}
I linger’d; all within was noise
Of songs, and clapping hands, and boys
That crash’d the glass and beat the floor;
Of youthful friends, on mind and art,
And labour, and the changing mart,
And all the framework of the land;
But send it slackly from the string;
And one would pierce an outer ring,
And one an inner, here and there;
Would cleave the mark. A willing ear
We lent him. Who, but hung to hear
The rapt oration flowing free
And music in the bounds of law,
To those conclusions when we saw
The God within him light his face,{127}
In azure orbits heavenly-wise;
And over those ethereal eyes
The bar of Michael Angelo.
{128}
LXXXVI
Rings Eden through the budded quicks,
O tell me where the senses mix,
O tell me where the passions meet,
Thy spirits in the dusking leaf,
And in the midmost heart of grief
Thy passion clasps a secret joy:
I cannot all command the strings;
The glory of the sum of things
Will flash along the chords and go.
{129}
LXXXVII
Of this flat lawn with dusk and bright:
And thou, with all thy breadth and height
Of foliage, towering sycamore;
My Arthur found your shadows fair,
And shook to all the liberal air
The dust and din and steam of town:
He mixt in all our simple sports;
They pleased him, fresh from brawling courts
And dusky purlieus of the law.
Immantled in ambrosial dark,
To drink the cooler air, and mark
The landscape winking through the heat:{130}
The sweep of scythe in morning dew,
The gust that round the garden flew,
And tumbled half the mellowing pears!
About him, heart and ear were fed
To hear him, as he lay and read
The Tuscan poets on the lawn:
A guest, or happy sister, sung,
Or here she brought the harp and flung
A ballad to the brightening moon:
Beyond the bounding hill to stray,
And break the livelong summer day
With banquet in the distant woods;
Discuss’d the books to love or hate,
Or touch’d the changes of the state,
Or threaded some Socratic dream;{131}
He loved to rail against it still,
For ‘ground in yonder social mill
We rub each other’s angles down,
The picturesque of man and man.’
We talk’d: the stream beneath us ran,
The wine-flask lying couch’d in moss,
And last, returning from afar,
Before the crimson-circled star
Had fall’n into her father’s grave,
We heard behind the woodbine veil
The milk that bubbled in the pail,
And buzzings of the honied hours.
{132}
LXXXVIII
Nor ever drank the inviolate spring
Where nighest heaven, who first could fling
This bitter seed among mankind;
Were closed with wail, resume their life.
They would but find in child and wife
An iron welcome when they rise:
To pledge them with a kindly tear:
To talk them o’er, to wish them here,
To count their memories half divine;
Behold their brides in other hands:
The hard heir strides about their lands,
And will not yield them for a day.{133}
Not less the yet-lov’d sire would make
Confusion worse than death, and shake
The pillars of domestic peace.
Whatever change the years have wrought,
I find not yet one lonely thought
That cries against my wish for thee.
{134}
LXXXIX
And rarely pipes the mounted thrush;
Or underneath the barren bush
Flits by the sea-blue bird of March;
Thy spirit in time among thy peers;
The hope of unaccomplish’d years
Be large and lucid round thy brow.
May breathe with many roses sweet
Upon the thousand waves of wheat,
That ripple round the lonely grange;
But where the sunbeam broodeth warm,
Come, beauteous in thine after form,
And like a finer light in light.
{135}
XC
Thy likeness, I might count it vain
As but the canker of the brain;
Yea, though it spake and made appeal
Together in the days behind,
I might but say, I hear a wind
Of memory murmuring the past.
A fact within the coming year;
And tho’ the months, revolving near,
Should prove the phantom-warning true,
But spiritual presentiments,
And such refraction of events
As often rises ere they rise.
{136}
XCI
No spirit ever brake the band
That stays him from the native land,
Where first he walk’d when claspt in clay?
But he, the Spirit himself, may come
Where all the nerve of sense is numb;
Spirit to Spirit, Ghost to Ghost.
With gods in unconjectured bliss,
O, from the distance of the abyss
Of tenfold-complicated change,
The wish too strong for words to name;
That in this blindness of the frame
My Ghost may feel that thine is near.
{137}
XCII
With what divine affections bold
Should be the man whose thought would hold
An hour’s communion with the dead.
The spirits from their golden day,
Except, like them, thou too canst say
My spirit is at peace with all.
Imaginations calm and fair,
The memory like a cloudless air,
The conscience as a sea at rest:
And doubt beside the portal waits,
They can but listen at the gates
And hear the household jar within.
{138}
XCIII
For underfoot the herb was dry;
And genial warmth; and o’er the sky
The silvery haze of summer drawn;
Unwavering: not a cricket chirr’d:
The brook alone far-off was heard
And on the board the fluttering urn:
And wheel’d or lit the filmy shapes
That haunt the dusk, with ermine capes
And woolly breasts and beaded eyes;
From knoll to knoll, where, couch’d at ease,
The white kine glimmer’d and the trees
Laid their dark arms about the field.{139}
Withdrew themselves from me and night,
And in the house light after light
Went out, and I was all alone,
Of that glad year which once had been,
In those fall’n leaves which kept their green,
The noble letters of the dead:
The silent-speaking words, and strange
Was love’s dumb cry defying change
To test his worth; and strangely spoke
On doubts that drive the coward back,
And keen thro’ wordy snares to track
Suggestion to her inmost cell.
The dead man touch’d me from the past,
And all at once it seem’d at last
His living soul was flash’d on mine,{140}
About empyreal heights of thought,
And came on that which is, and caught
The deep pulsations of the world,
The steps of Time—the shocks of Chance—
The blows of Death. At length my trance
Was cancell’d, stricken thro’ with doubt.
In matter-moulded forms of speech,
Or ev’n for intellect to reach
Thro’ memory that which I became:
The knolls once more where, couch’d at ease,
The white kine glimmer’d, and the trees
Laid their dark arms about the field:
A breeze began to tremble o’er
The large leaves of the sycamore,
And fluctuate all the still perfume;{141}
Rock’d the full-foliaged elms, and swung
The heavy-folded rose, and flung
The lilies to and fro, and said
And East and West, without a breath,
Mixt their dim lights, like life and death,
To broaden into boundless day.
{142}
XCIV
Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-blue eyes
Are tender over drowning flies,
You tell me, doubt is Devil-born.
In many a subtle question versed,
Who touched a jarring lyre at first,
But ever strove to make it true:
At last he beat his music out,
There lives more faith in honest doubt,
Believe me, than in half the creeds.
He would not make his judgment blind,
He faced the spectres of the mind
And laid them: thus he came at length{143}
And Power was with him in the night,
Which makes the darkness and the light,
And dwells not in the light alone,
As over Sinaï’s peaks of old,
While Israel made their gods of gold
Altho’ the trumpet blew so loud.
{144}
XCV
He finds on misty mountain-ground
His own vast shadow glory-crown’d,
He sees himself in all he sees.
I look’d on these and thought of thee
In vastness and in mystery,
And of my spirit as of a wife.
Their hearts of old have heat in tune,
Their meetings made December June,
Their every parting was to die.
The days she never can forget
Are earnest that he loves her yet,
Whate’er the faithless people say.{145}
He loves her yet, she will not weep,
Tho’ rapt in matters dark and deep
He seems to slight her simple heart.
He reads the secret of the star,
He seems so near and yet so far,
He looks so cold: she thinks him kind.
A wither’d violet is her bliss;
She knows not what his greatness is;
For that, for all, she loves him more.
Of early faith and plighted vows;
She knows but matters of the house,
And he, he knows a thousand things.
She darkly feels him great and wise,
She dwells on him with faithful eyes,
‘I cannot understand: I love.’
{146}
XCVI
And those fair hills I sail’d below,
When I was there with him; and go
By summer belts of wheat and vine
That City. All her splendour seems
No livelier than the wisp that gleams
On Lethe in the eyes of Death.
Enwind her isles, unmarked of me:
I have not seen, I will not see
Vienna; rather dream that there,
The birth, the bridal; friend from friend,
Is oftener parted, fathers bend
Above more graves, a thousand wants{147}
By each cold hearth, and sadness flings
Her shadow on the blaze of kings:
And yet myself have heard him say,
With statelier progress to and fro
The double tides of chariots flow
By park and suburb under brown
He told me, lives in any crowd,
When all is gay with lamps, and loud
With sport and song, in booth and tent,
And wheels the circled dance, and breaks
The rocket molten into flakes
Of crimson or in emerald rain.
{148}
XCVII
So loud with voices of the birds,
So thick with lowings of the herds,
Day, when I lost the flower of men;
On yon swol’n brook that bubbles fast
By meadows breathing of the past,
And woodlands holy to the dead;
A song that slights the coming care,
And Autumn laying here and there
A fiery finger on the leaves;
To myriads on the genial earth,
Memories of bridal, or of birth,
And unto myriads more, of death.{149}
Betwixt the slumber of the poles,
To-day they count as kindred souls;
They know me not, but mourn with me.
{150}
XCVIII
Of all the landscape underneath
I find no place that does not breathe
Some gracious memory of my friend:
Or low morass and whispering reed,
Or simple stile from mead to mead,
Or sheepwalk up the windy wold;
That hears the latest linnet trill,
Nor quarry trench’d along the hill,
And haunted by the wrangling daw;
Nor pastoral rivulet that swerves
To left and right thro’ meadowy curves,
That feed the mothers of the flock;{151}
And each reflects a kindlier day;
And, leaving these, to pass away,
I think once more he seems to die.
{152}
XCIX
The tender blossom flutter down,
Unloved that beech will gather brown,
This maple burn itself away;
Ray round with flames her disk of seed,
And many a rose-carnation feed
With summer spice the humming air;
The brook shall babble down the plain,
At noon or when the lesser wain
Is twisting round the polar star;
And flood the haunts of hern and crake;
Or into silver arrows break
The sailing moon in creek and cove;{153}
A fresh association blow,
And year by year the landscape grow
Familiar to the stranger’s child;
His wonted glebe, or lops the glades;
And year by year our memory fades
From all the circle of the hills.
{154}
C
Where first we gazed upon the sky;
The roofs, that heard our earliest cry,
Will shelter one of stranger race.
As down the garden-walks I move,
Two spirits of a diverse love
Contend for loving masterdom.
Long since its matin song, and heard
The low love-language of the bird
In native hazels tassel-hung.
Thy feet have stray’d in after hours
With thy lost friend among the bowers,
And this hath made them trebly dear.{155}’
And each prefers his separate claim,
Poor rivals in a losing game,
That will not yield each other way.
To leave the pleasant fields and farms;
They mix in one another’s arms
To one pure image of regret.
{156}
CI
From out the doors where I was bred,
I dream’d a vision of the dead,
Which left my after morn content.
And maidens with me: distant hills
From hidden summits fed with rills
A river sliding by the wall.
They sang of what is wise and good
And graceful. In the centre stood
A statue veil’d, to which they sang;
The shape of him I loved, and love
For ever: then flew in a dove
And brought a summons from the sea:{157}
They wept and wail’d, but led the way
To where a little shallop lay
At anchor in the flood below;
And shadowing bluff that made the banks,
We glided winding under ranks
Of iris, and the golden reed;
And roll’d the floods in grander space,
The maidens gather’d strength and grace
And presence, lordlier than before;
And watch’d them, waxt in every limb;
I felt the thews of Anakim,
The pulses of a Titan’s heart;
And one would chant the history
Of that great race, which is to be,
And one the shaping of a star;{158}
Began to foam, and we to draw
From deep to deep, to where we saw
A great ship lift her shining sides.
But thrice as large as man he bent
To greet us. Up the side I went,
And fell in silence on his neck:
Bewail’d their lot; I did them wrong:
‘We served thee here,’ they said, ‘so long,
And wilt thou leave us now behind?’
An answer from my lips, but he
Replying, ‘Enter likewise ye
And go with us:’ they enter’d in.
A music out of sheet and shroud,
We steer’d her toward a crimson cloud
That landlike slept along the deep.
{159}
CII
The moon is hid, the night is still;
A single church below the hill
Is pealing, folded in the mist.
That wakens at this hour of rest
A single murmur in the breast,
That these are not the bells I know.
In lands where not a memory strays,
Nor landmark breathes of other days,
But all is new unhallow’d ground.
{160}
CIII
To night, ungather’d, shall it stand:
We live within the stranger’s land,
And strangely falls our Christmas eve.
And silent under other snows:
There in due time the woodbine blows,
The violet comes, but we are gone.
The genial hour with mask and mime;
For change of place, like growth of time,
Has broke the bond of dying use.
By which our lives are chiefly proved,
A little spare the night I loved,
And hold it solemn to the past.{161}
Nor bowl of wassail mantle warm;
For who would keep an ancient form
Through which the spirit breathes no more?
Nor harp be touch’d, nor flute be blown;
No dance, no motion, save alone
What lightens in the lucid east
Long sleeps the summer in the seed;
Run out your measur’d arcs, and lead
The closing cycle rich in good.
{162}
CIV
The flying cloud, the frosty light:
The year is dying in the night;
Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.
Ring, happy bells, across the snow:
The year is going, let him go;
Ring out the false, ring in the true.
For those that here we see no more;
Ring out the feud of rich and poor,
Ring in redress to all mankind.
And ancient forms of party strife;
Ring in the nobler modes of life,
With sweeter manners, purer laws.{163}
The faithless coldness of the times;
Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes,
But ring the fuller minstrel in.
The civic slander and the spite;
Ring in the love of truth and right,
Ring in the common love of good.
Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
Ring out the thousand wars of old,
Ring in the thousand years of peace.
The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
Ring out the darkness of the land,
Ring in the Christ that is to be.
{164}
CV
A bitter day that early sank
Behind a purple-frosty bank
Of vapour, leaving night forlorn.
To deck the banquet. Fiercely flies
The blast of North and East, and ice
Makes daggers at the sharpen’d eaves,
To yon hard crescent, as she hangs
Above the wood which grides and clangs
Its leafless ribs and iron horns
To darken on the rolling brine
That breaks the coast. But fetch the wine,
Arrange the board and brim the glass;{165}
To make a solid core of heat;
Be cheerful-minded, talk and treat
Of all things ev’n as he were by:
With books and music, surely we
Will drink to him whate’er he be,
And sing the songs he loved to hear.
{166}
CVI
And, lest I stiffen into stone,
I will not eat my heart alone,
Nor feed with sighs a passing wind:
And vacant yearning, tho’ with might
To scale the heaven’s highest height,
Or dive below the wells of Death?
But mine own phantom chanting hymns?
And on the depths of death there swims
The reflex of a human face.
Of sorrow under human skies:
’Tis held that sorrow makes us wise,
Whatever wisdom sleep with thee.
{167}
CVII
From household fountains never dry;
The critic clearness of an eye,
That saw thro’ all the Muses’ walk;
To seize and throw the doubts of man;
Impassion’d logic, which outran
The hearer in its fiery course;
But touch’d with no ascetic gloom;
And passion pure in snowy bloom
Thro’ all the years of April blood;
Of freedom in her regal seat
Of England, not the schoolboy heat,
The blind hysterics of the Celt;{168}
In such a sort, the child would twine,
A trustful hand, unasked, in thine,
And find his comfort in thy face;
Have look’d on: if they look’d in vain
My shame is greater who remain,
Nor let thy wisdom make me wise.
{169}
CVIII
The men of rathe and riper years:
The feeble soul, a haunt of fears,
Forgot his weakness in thy sight.
The proud was half disarm’d of pride,
Nor cared the serpent at thy side
To flicker with his treble tongue.
The flippant put himself to school
And heard thee, and the brazen fool
Was soften’d, and he knew not why;
And felt thy triumph was as mine;
And loved them more, that they were thine,
The graceful tact, the Christian art;{170}
But mine the love that will not tire,
And, born of love, the vague desire
That spurs an imitative will.
{171}
CIX
Along the scale of ranks, thro’ all
To who may grasp a golden ball
By blood a king, at heart a clown;
His want in forms for fashion’s sake,
Will let his coltish nature break
At seasons thro’ the gilded pale:
To whom a thousand memories call,
Not being less but more than all
The gentleness he seem’d to be,
Each office of the social hour,
To noble manners, as the flower
And native growth of noble mind;{172}
Or villain fancy fleeting by,
Drew in the expression of an eye,
Where God and Nature met in light,
The grand old name of gentleman,
Defamed by every charlatan,
And soil’d with all ignoble use.
{173}
CX
That I, who gaze with temperate eyes
On glorious insufficiencies,
Set light by narrower perfectness.
Of all my love, art reason why
I seem to cast a careless eye
On souls, the lesser lords of doom.
Sprang up for ever at a touch,
And hope could never hope too much,
In watching thee from hour to hour,
And tracts of calm from tempest made,
And world-wide fluctuation sway’d
In vassal tides that followed thought.
{174}
CXI
Yet how much wisdom sleeps with thee
Which not alone had guided me,
But served the seasons that may rise;
In intellect, with force and skill
To strive, to fashion, to fulfil—
I doubt not what thou wouldst have been:
A soul on highest mission sent,
A potent voice of Parliament,
A pillar steadfast in the storm,
Becoming, when the time has birth,
A lever to uplift the earth
And roll it in another course,{175}
With agonies, with energies,
With overthrowings, and with cries,
And undulations to and fro.
{176}
CXII
Against her beauty? May she mix
With men and prosper! Who shall fix
Her pillars? Let her work prevail.
She sets her forward countenance
And leaps into the future chance,
Submitting all things to desire.
She cannot fight the fear of death.
What is she, cut from love and faith,
But some wild Pallas from the brain
All barriers in her onward race
For power. Let her know her place;
She is the second, not the first.{177}
If all be not in vain; and guide
Her footsteps, moving side by side
With wisdom, like the younger child:
But wisdom heavenly of the soul.
O, friend, who camest to thy goal
So early, leaving me behind,
Who grewest not alone in power
And knowledge, but from hour to hour
In reverence and in charity.
{178}
CXIII
Now burgeons every maze of quick
About the flowering squares, and thick
By ashen roots the violets blow.
The distance takes a lovelier hue,
And drown’d in yonder living blue
The lark becomes a sightless song.
The flocks are whiter down the vale,
And milkier every milky sail
On winding stream or distant sea;
In yonder greening gleam, and fly
The happy birds, that change their sky
To build and brood; that live their lives.{179}
Spring wakens too; and my regret
Becomes an April violet,
And buds and blossoms like the rest.
{180}
CXIV
That keenlier in sweet April wakes,
And meets the year, and gives and takes
The colours of the crescent prime?
The life re-orient out of dust,
Cry thro’ the sense to hearten trust
In that which made the world so fair.
Upon me, while I muse alone;
The dear, dear voice that I have known
Will speak to me of me and mine:
For days of happy commune dead;
Less yearning for the friendship fled,
Than some strong bond which is to be.
{181}
CXV
To hold me from my proper place,
A little while from his embrace,
For fuller gain of after bliss:
Desire of nearness doubly sweet;
And unto meeting, when we meet,
Delight a hundredfold accrue,
And every span of shade that steals,
And every kiss of toothed wheels,
And all the courses of the suns.
{182}
CXVI
The giant labouring in his youth;
Nor dream of human love and truth,
As dying Nature’s earth and lime;
Are breathers of an ampler day
For ever nobler ends. They say,
The solid earth whereon we tread
And grew to seeming-random forms,
The seeming prey of cyclic storms,
Till at the last arose the man;
The herald of a higher race,
And of himself in higher place,
If so he type this work of time{183}
And, crown’d with attributes of woe
Like glories, move his course, and show
That life is not as idle ore,
And heated hot with burning fears;
And dipp’d in baths of hissing tears,
And batter’d with the shocks of doom
The reeling Faun, the sensual feast;
Move upward, working out the beast,
And let the ape and tiger die.
{184}
CXVII
So quickly, not as one that weeps
I come once more; the city sleeps;
I smell the meadow in the street;
Betwixt the black fronts long-withdrawn
A light-blue lane of early dawn,
And think of early days and thee,
And bright the friendship of thine eye;
And in my thoughts with scarce a sigh
I take the pressure of thine hand.
{185}
CXVIII
I think we are not wholly brain,
Magnetic mockeries; not in vain,
Like Paul with beasts, I fought with Death;
Let Science prove we are, and then
What matters Science unto men,
At least to me? I would not stay.
Hereafter, up from childhood shape
His action like the greater ape,
But I was born to other things.
{186}
CXIX
And ready, thou, to die with him,
Thou watchest all things ever dim
And dimmer, and a glory done:
The boat is drawn upon the shore;
Thou listenest to the closing door,
And life is darken’d in the brain.
By thee the world’s great work is heard
Beginning, and the wakeful bird;
Behind thee comes the greater light:
And voices hail it from the brink;
Thou hear’st the village hammer clink,
And see’st the moving of the team.{187}
For what is one, the first, the last,
Thou, like my present and my past,
Thy place is changed; thou art the same.
{188}
CXX
While I rose up against my doom,
And strove to burst the folded gloom,
To bare the eternal Heavens again,
The strong imagination roll
A sphere of stars about my soul,
In all her motion one with law;
Divide us not, be with me now,
And enter in at breast and brow,
Till all my blood, a fuller wave,
And like an inconsiderate boy,
As in the former flash of joy,
I slip the thoughts of life and death;{189}
And every dew-drop paints a bow;
The wizard lightnings deeply glow,
And every thought breaks out a rose.
{190}
CXXI
O earth, what changes hast thou seen!
There where the long street roars, hath been
The stillness of the central sea.
From form to form, and nothing stands;
They melt like mist, the solid lands,
Like clouds they shape themselves and go.
And dream my dream, and hold it true;
For tho’ my lips may breathe adieu,
I cannot think the thing farewell.
{191}
CXXII
Our dearest faith, our ghastliest doubt;
He, They, One, All; within, without;
The Power in darkness whom we guess;
Or eagle’s wing, or insect’s eye;
Nor thro’ the questions men may try,
The petty cobwebs we have spun:
I heard a voice ‘believe no more’
And heard an ever-breaking shore
That tumbled in the Godless deep;
The freezing reason’s colder part,
And like a man in wrath the heart
Stood up and answer’d ‘I have felt.{192}’
But that blind clamour made me wise;
Then was I as a child that cries,
But, crying, knows his father near;
What is, and no man understands;
And out of darkness came the hands
That reach thro’ nature, moulding men.
{193}
CXXIII
Some bitter notes my harp would give,
Yea, tho’ there often seem’d to live
A contradiction on the tongue,
She did but look thro’ dimmer eyes;
Or Love but play’d with gracious lies,
Because he felt so fix’d in truth:
He breathed the spirit of the song;
And if the words were sweet and strong
He set his royal signet there;
To seek thee on the mystic deeps,
And this electric force, that keeps
A thousand pulses dancing, fail.
{194}
CXXIV
And in his presence I attend
To hear the tidings of my friend,
Which every hour his couriers bring.
And will be, tho’ as yet I keep
Within his court on earth, and sleep
Encompass’d by his faithful guard,
That moves about from place to place,
And whispers to the vast of space
Among the worlds, that all is well.
{195}
CXXV
Be sunder’d in the night of fear;
Well roars the storm to those that hear
A deeper voice across the storm,
And justice, ev’n tho’ thrice again
The red fool-fury of the Seine
Should pile her barricades with dead.
And him, the lazar, in his rags:
They tremble, the sustaining crags;
The spires of ice are toppled down,
The fortress crashes from on high,
The brute earth lightens to the sky,
And the vast Æon sinks in blood,{196}
While thou, dear spirit, happy star,
O’erlook’st the tumult from afar,
And smilest, knowing all is well.
{197}
CXXVI
Unpalsied when he met with Death,
Is comrade of the lesser faith
That sees the course of human things.
Of onward time shall yet be made,
And throned races may degrade;
Yet O ye ministers of good,
If all your office had to do
With old results that look like new,
If this were all your mission here,
To fool the crowd with glorious lies,
To cleave a creed in sects and cries,
To change the bearing of a word,{198}
To cramp the student at his desk,
To make old baseness picturesque
And tuft with grass a feudal tower;
On you and yours. I see in part
That all, as in some piece of art,
Is toil cöoperant to an end.
{199}
CXXVII
So far, so near in woe and weal;
O, loved the most when most I feel
There is a lower and a higher;
Sweet human hand and lips and eye,
Dear heavenly friend that canst not die,
Mine, mine, for ever, ever mine!
Loved deeplier, darklier understood;
Behold I dream a dream of good
And mingle all the world with thee.
{200}
CXXVIII
I hear thee where the waters run;
Thou standest in the rising sun,
And in the setting thou art fair.
But tho’ I seem in star and flower
To feel thee, some diffusive power,
I do not therefore love thee less:
My love is vaster passion now;
Tho’ mix’d with God and Nature thou,
I seem to love thee more and more.
I have thee still, and I rejoice;
I prosper, circled with thy voice;
I shall not lose thee tho’ I die.
{201}
CXXIX
When all that seems shall suffer shock,
Rise in the spiritual rock,
Flow thro’ our deeds and make them pure,
A voice as unto him that hears,
A cry above the conquer’d years
To one that with us works, and trust
The truths that never can be proved
Until we close with all we loved,
And all we flow from, soul in soul.{203}{202}
Demand not thou a marriage lay;
In that it is thy marriage day
Is music more than any song.
Since first he told me that he loved
A daughter of our house; nor proved
Since that dark day a day like this;
Some thrice three years: they went and came,
Remade the blood and changed the frame,
And yet is love not less, but more;
In dying songs a dead regret,
But like a statue solid-set,
And moulded in colossal calm.{204}
Than in the summers that are flown,
For I myself with these have grown
To something greater than before;
As echoes out of weaker times,
As half but idle brawling rhymes,
The sport of random sun and shade.
That must be made a wife ere noon?
She enters, glowing like the moon
Of Eden on its bridal bower:
And then on thee; they meet thy look
And brighten like the star that shook
Betwixt the palms of paradise.
He too foretold the perfect rose.
For thee she grew, for thee she grows
For ever, and as fair as good.{205}
As gentle; liberal-minded, great,
Consistent; wearing all that weight
Of learning lightly like a flower.
And I must give away the bride;
She fears not, or with thee beside
And me behind her, will not fear:
That watch’d her on her nurse’s arm,
That shielded all her life from harm
At last must part with her to thee;
Her feet, my darling, on the dead;
Their pensive tablets round her head,
And the most living words of life
The ‘wilt thou’ answer’d, and again
The ‘wilt thou’ ask’d, till out of twain
Her sweet ‘I will’ has made ye one.{206}
Mute symbols of a joyful morn
By village eyes as yet unborn;
The names are sign’d, and overhead
The joy to every wandering breeze;
The blind wall rocks, and on the trees
The dead leaf trembles to the bells.
Await them. Many a merry face
Salutes them—maidens of the place,
That pelt us in the porch with flowers.
With him to whom her hand I gave.
They leave the porch, they pass the grave
That has to-day its sunny side.
For them the light of life increas’d
Who stay to share the morning feast,
Who rest to-night beside the sea.{207}
To meet and greet a whiter sun;
My drooping memory will not shun
The foaming grape of eastern France.
And hearts are warm’d and faces bloom,
As drinking health to bride and groom
We wish them store of happy days.
Conjecture of a stiller guest,
Perchance, perchance, among the rest,
And, tho’ in silence, wishing joy.
And those white-favour’d horses wait;
They rise but linger, it is late;
Farewell, we kiss, and they are gone.
From little cloudlets on the grass,
But sweeps away as out we pass
To range the woods, to roam the park.{208}
And talk of others that are wed,
And how she look’d, and what he said,
And back we come at fall of dew.
The shade of passing thought, the wealth
Of words and wit, the double health,
The crowning cup, the three times three,
Dumb is that tower which spake so loud,
And high in heaven the streaming cloud,
And on the downs a rising fire:
Till over down and over dale
All night the shining vapour sail
And pass the silent-lighted town,
And catch at every mountain head,
And o’er the friths that branch and spread
Their sleeping silver thro’ the hills;{209}
With tender gloom the roof, the wall;
And breaking let the splendour fall
To spangle all the happy shores
And, star and system rolling past,
A soul shall draw from out the vast
And strike his being into bounds,
Result in man, be born and think,
And act and love, a closer link
Betwixt us and the crowning race
On knowledge; under whose command
Is Earth and Earth’s, and in their hand
Is Nature like an open book;
For all we thought and loved and did,
And hoped, and suffer’d, is but seed
Of what in them is flower and fruit;{210}
This planet, was a noble type
Appearing ere the times were ripe,
That friend of mine who lives in God,
One God, one law, one element,
And one far-off divine event,
To which the whole creation moves.
THE END.
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| —— TRAVELS IN SOUTH AMERICA | 3 | 6 |
| LAMB’S POETICAL WORKS | 1 | 6 |
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