Class ^^^^J"^/ Book .fS fFS GopyrightN" I2M^ COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. The First Wardens 'T^-^yi^' The First Wardens Poem0 William J. Neidig ' j4itd on the key Of the great ar(h were figures tnilitant, IVho battled long their standard there to plant" THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD. 1905 ■^^ jill rights reserved I WO -v-op.'ei deCLjiveu iVI.AR IS 1905 ■^ .iiiLi— J Copyright, 1905 The Macmillan Company Set up and electrotyped Printed March, 1905 ^-^ ^ tS:o t|)e 6l9emorp of Contents CONTENTS Page The King's Fool .......... i A Woman's Ring 3 i. The Cry 3 ii. Why So Cold? ........ 4 iii. O, Not Indifference ! 5 iv. Reassurance . 6 V. The Doubt 7 vi. Gropings . , 8 vii. Pride of Women 9 viii« The Whole Truth ......= 10 ix. Heart-Hunger ...... 11 X. Indictment ..... ... 12 xi. The Wife 13 xii. Absolution 14 Alvah and Azubah 15 The First Wardens 20 The Adoration of the Magi 27 Wine of Laurel 31 Victory Z'i The White Guest 40 Lex Mundi . . 48 vii Contents Page The Buoy-Bell 50 Sea Burial 51 The Soldier's Locket 52 Christmas Night 53 The Temple of Art 54 Morro Castle 55 Cuba ! 57 Not at This Chancel 58 Saul the King 59 Ash-of-the-Altar , 60 Hermon 61 Scot and Lot 63 Promise of Hawthorn * . . . 64 In the Spirit of Romance 66 The Prince of Paupers 69 Mission Carmel 78 The Rose of Death 91 The King's Fool THE KING'S FOOL A Fool it was, and took his Soul Within his hollowed hands; He took his Soul and smoothed it calm, And loosed its strained bands. "O Soul," he cried, ''you bear the stain Of chain-gyves interwove ! Who did this thing?" The Soul replied 'Tt was the friend I love." ''O Soul, you have a flaming brand Burned on your nakedness ! Who did this thing?" The Soul replied "That was a pure caress." "O Soul, a fissure shows your heart Like wound of bloody sword ! Who did this thing?" The Soul replied : "That was a friendly word." The King's Fool 2 "O Soul, you shrink within my hand, I scarce see where you be ! Who did this thing?" The Soul replied : "A woman pitied me." The Fool laid down his Soul and wept, And knelt him down beside; He soothed and questioned all the night, — No Soul of him replied. A Woman s Ring A WOMAN'S RING I THE CRY If I smooth out, in secret dim recess Of this cool closed page, my wrinkled thought ; If seeming I do guard the deep impress Of joggled types too closely, or in aught Withhold myself from you, my husband dear ; If in my pride, I say, I thrust my face Into this cold, sweet pillow lying here, And whisper out my soul in that lone place, That you would clasp me to your lips and breast. Not as a child delighting in a toy, But so to set my woman's doubts at rest, — Forgive me, love ! it is because great joy Hangs trembling o'er my hand, and I, your wife, Have no more strength to add it to my life. A Woman's Ring II WHY SO COLD? Has my poor beauty lost its light so soon, Or am I cheapened, loving you too much ? Last night a primrose, kissing with the moon To-day in withered rags, with fifty such ? Ah, no ! my glass is better guide than that ! I am not less than fair, no more than you. No, no ! Here in my cheek where beauty sat. Still is the seat where girlhood burns anew ; xA.nd this white marble, where you praised my brow It hath not weathered to less spotless rime ! Then why so cold, my husband, to me now, Whose cheeks were glowing too a little time ? Sure, when I flush and tremble at your side, Wonder could nowhere but in me abide. A Woman's Ring III O, NOT INDIFFERENCE! O, not indifference ! Ring the passing bell For the white company of all our days ! Stamp into ruins the too fragile shell We drank from, you and I ! the morning haze, The splendor of the crowning sun at noon. The long swift shadows slipping down the slope. The stain of sunset rainbows, fled so soon, Blot it all out, the memory with the hope ! Yes, break the windows in our house of life, With every sacred witness of our bliss, And say to me, *'You are no more my wife, I love you not!" Say this to me, say this: So shall you, O my husband, swiftly slay, Not kill me slow by holding me away ! A Woman's Ring IV REASSURANCE You love me ! my dear husband, now I know ! If I have in my fooHsh woman's pain, When Hfe hung heavy on my eyes, breathed low, To myself only, but a word in vain ; If I have been less than a wife to you Ev'n in this secret place, with moan and sigh Doubting my sweetheart lord if he be true : Forgive me, it was Folly spoke, not I. You love me ! Yes, you kissed me tenderly. And held me fast against your loyal breast : Kissed me and told me, told poor wicked me, 'Until I did not know which ear was guest ! Since love is in the world, speak kindly still, So I may love and listen all I will ! A Woman's Ring V THE DOUBT Was I once fair, not ugly in your sight ? Admired, possessed, — though but as a rich stone, To be put on or off as you had hght, Or hke a coat, by weathers ? Was I won, Borne from my home for fair? My husband dear, I could forgive you that you loved my eyes, Or loved the lips that tremble, others near : — The bee loves thus the bell where sugar lies ; I could forgive you that you deemed me fair, Loved my lithe movements, or some piquant toss Of my poor head beneath its weight of hair ; I could forgive all this, but not its loss. If I was wed for beauty, let me die : My cheeks are swollen and my eyes are dry. A Woman's Ring VT GROPINGS Yes, I can read it plain : you are in love, And not with me ! The words are firm and black ; I do not falter at the inky grove Of oak-gall letters in my path, alack. No more with me ! A stranger hath your heart ! I trace with my dry pen the knotted line. O, I am calm : I neither weep nor start, Neither my voice to grief nor rage resign, But like some princely rajah, weigh the cost, Add off my rubies to the reddest grain, And smile my hurt to sleep as nothing lost. So were I verily your wife again ! If I but knew who stole you from me, dear, Mercy were swift to deal with me as her ! A Woman's Ring VII PRIDE OF WOMEN But no ; I would not own both power and right ; It were poor vengeance to unfold by day The petals blackened by foul worms at night ; Let me still seem to love you, all I may, Make bold pretence, lest those who rail should deem ,We two were less than children of the sun, Bathed in the light that lingers, flesh and gleam Of that old glow in Eden's aisles begun ! But touch not on her name ! no, not by chance, Not as you name the casual things of life. For I should feel your too-indifferent glance, And feeling, seem no more, but be, your wife! I am but woman, dearest, — bitter quick To blow a coal or snuff a smoking wick ! A Woman's Ring 10 VITI THE WHOLE TRUTH As when assassin sighs by desert springs, No murder in them, fearing poison there ; As when in dreams we flee from monster things That leave no footprints to our waking care ; As when, in an ill-hghted, crowded hall, Men are stampeded by some vague alarm, The taste of smoke, or glow upon the wall Of lightning flash, to do their bodies harm : So have I perished hourly, and no cause. Deeming my fountains poisoned, or my throat Torn into whip-cords by some tiger's claws ! So have I stumbled at the vital note ! No cause, I said ? You loved none other she. Yet had at heart your wisdom more than me? A Woman s Ring II IX HEART-HUNGER Only for you to lead me by the hand ; To leave the day of large things in its tomb ; To bend in spirit o'er me with the strand That holds the household shuttle to the loom ; To be my quick right arm in present strife, Not waiting for far battles never fought. But showing how^ so much I am your wife In little things I occupy your thought ! Ah, could you love me with such minor fire And walk with service ere her time be past, Life would be infinite beyond desire, And love a benediction to the last! So should we tarry in the blessed zone Of utter worship, the years all our own ! A IV Oman's Ring X INDICTMENT So blind with miser selfness ? Ah, you are ! O, when the sun leaps downward in his course Unswerved a gnat's-breadth by the nearest star ; When this forked river at its mountain source Lies broad and tanned as where it tastes the sea, And loquats ripen without leaf or flower, And every root alone sustains the tree, And each half measured singly is the hour ; When rainbows with green-crimsons are not stained, And music strips her chords to the key-note, — Say then, then also, not in manner feigned. But with the ice of winter in your throat, "My life was all self-centered : see how I Prove single good, married felicity !" A Woman's Ring 13 XI THE WIFE Yes, you have bent your arrow to the bow And shot it straight : you would not be denied. Wealth and great name are yours : I know, I know, — The world has laid such unguents to your pride. My husband, yes : you strung your honors here, The fruit of all the days of all your life. And I, not knowing them so costly dear. Wore them a trustful moment as your wife. Yes, and must wear them still, their splendor gone, While precious love lies sleeping in your eyes With smiles and tears, like dew-drops far withdrawn To heart of the wild-rose where honey lies. O, deem me not ungrateful, that my heart Hungers for sweets not of your gain a part ! A Woman's Ring XII ABSOLUTION You could not help it, dearest ; no, I say, You shall not be reproached with baseness too, Ev'n in this journal hidden safe away ; On me the blame, not you, no, never you ! For oh, you showed me each ambitious peak From that first day, showed me, with misty breath, And told me how these summits you would seek Up the white trail with single mind till death ; Therefore if I love not the gleaming trail So well as I love you, and linger so. Sighing for summer warmth without avail, No blame on you, my husband of the snow ! No, no ! nor shall you ever guess the pain With which my broken feet press on again ! Alvah and Azxihah 15 ALVAH AND AZUBAH Arose the woman then and faced the black Gun-muzzles, where they eyed her ; for the man, Not she, is pardoned ; Alvah gains his life. Not she, not frail Azubah. Then she spake. Her voice a vibrant peal behind closed doors. Half loud, half wasted, as though all the bells Of faith and fear were ringing in her soul. But Alvah gave no sign : lest his sealed pardon Should fade like bubble breathed on, his locked lips Refused farewell, and he unheeding turned From her who loved him, to the life he loved. Which seeing, she grew pale as woman dead. "How whitely lies this snow on my cold friend ! How soon, O Alvah! hath this bloom of frost Brightened thy virtue ! Oh, I deemed thy love The very Maytime anchored in the year As oak in the forest ; deemed thy spoken music Alvah and Amihah i6 No protestation of dead boughs in the wind, But very heart of the harp, soul of the soul ! And now thou standest frosted, alien, dead. Ice on thy boughs and winter in thy veins ! "One moment since, how we together kneeled Hand in warm hand before the spattered wall. Counting the bullet lead-marks on the stone: Waiting the word to close out all our light. Life's last, death's first parole, the border- word ! And then, instead of that dread word, how still Muttered the mulling priest, and clattering hoofs Made dilatory progress down the road An age or two ; and wx looked life in the eye, We twain together ! Then one turned to me, Saying, if I had word to leave on earth More, I must speak it now, — no word but one, — For Alvah hath reprieve from the good Queen. The woman's sentence stands. He then explained That sin in woman is like pitch in snow ; That she who is the measure and the light. Alvah and Azubah 17 The promise and fulfillment, depth and breadth, Of daily life, — true compass to the North, Plummet to test walls by, the level sea. One of God's host star-flung across the sky, And other beautiful vagueness men have held, — That she may not defile her beauty lightly. That if she only were less shamefully Scornful of law and name, less stubborn in Her wrenched allegiance, deeming it a virtue Not to renounce until she is renounced. Repentance were not so late ; but praised be God The fear of sinful death redeems the man ! The knot of the matter being, Alvah there By timely penitence retrieves his life. Builds dykes and saves his towers; whilst I, a woman, Eager to die in glory, as I dreamed, Wake in this crowded empty field to die. "Poor life : 'twas dear to him ! Alvah, farewell ! Alvah ! he will not even toll goodbye Alvah and Asubah i8 From his black belfry : will not say Godspeed ! Not twist the shuttered windows for one last Last look on me that thought I loved him well : That loved him well, alas ! and love him still ! "He will not turn for me? He will not see? Kind globe the Earth, in all your vales, in all Your fragrant forests, all your mountainside. Plains, deserts, glacier-peaks, wherever love Treads or shall tread, in stillness of what night Or glare of noon, if there be any dell So inaccessible to dust of him Living or dead, no atom of himself May lodge in it, by wind, rain, snow or ice, Earthquake or cataclysm, man or beaSt, O let me there be laid to lie at rest ! Alvah ! I well have loved what you are not, Repenting me more than you ever can What was indeed a sin : God pity me ! "Stand straight? and face the front? I thank you, sir. Alvah and Asuhah 19 Well, then ! I pin this knot above my heart So, and you aim, no wavering, at the pit, And the ripe fruit is seeded. That is done. Now, when you are ready . . . Ah !" Far down the road A foaming horse throws out his shaggy knees. Bearing his master to cathedral-close For shrift of easance. Alvah hath reprieve. The First Wardens ao THE FIRST WARDENS I They sealed the sepulchre with what pure lid The angel lifted, that first Easter morn ; No silver laced, nor gold the marble hid, Nor wealthy woods their cavern might adorn, Nor sweep of lanthorned dome, nor pyramid Of stains and glazings ; nor, in bronzes borne. Incense past price made fragrant their rude room ; They waived all that, the monks that kept the tomb. ' n Down the still lanes of peace they walked alway. Where saintly lineaments grow softly clear In sunset legend : breathing but to pray ; Drinking deep draughts of easement all the year ; Not beauty's strenuous wine, but every day The nectar from calm fountains, and the cheer Of faith secure that blesses w^ith its peace Soul, sense and mind : faith hath such sure surcease. The First Wardens 21 III No tarnish their white master might condemn ; No stress, no conflict, nothing of defeat; Not any eager plucking at the stem That droops with fragrant fruit in gardens sweet ; No : they must win their deathless diadem Unstained by sully of the field or street ; They bound on cavern altars all their thought, Which leapt up smoke-like for the peace they sought. IV They kept no day with lilies of delight ; They were not first with robes for Easter-time ; They were not first to sing the stone of night Rolled from the buried ; were not first to climb One eastern peak where splendor bursteth bright ; They did not run with chisel or with rime In beauty's salutation on the earth, The great first souls in enterprise of worth. The First Wardens 22 Ah, no; they waived the beautiful and fair; There was no easelessness in their confine ; He that must mould the marble was not there, For peace was there, and not unrest divine ; — The master's burin fails for all his care ; The maker traces still his dim design ; The seer rues his vision ; naught is right In sight of poet or in prophet's sight. VI No ; they held off from beauty, lest their peace Should fade like vapor breathed upon bright steel ; They could not rise from their redeemed knees ; They could not hear it that sweet matin-peal Called them to glorious task, but by degrees Crept from this life in thought as they did kneel. So saith dim-lettered legend, and it saith Their names are no more known, nor when then* death. The First Wardens 23 VII They passed ; and Constantine set his hard brand Upon the stone, and builded wondrously Over above where his scarred shields did stand ; His captains added gold from oversea ; And tesselated pavements by their hand Were laid in splendid naves ; and on the key Of the great arch were figures militant Who battled long their standard there to plant. VIII Aye, battled long, in such fierce whirlwind war — Kings, poets, builders, Davids from the field, Wide-visioned Solomon with plummet-star Proving his towers — all, all upon that shield Made desperate cause for place in glory's car ; Among the zenith planets, half-revealed To tense white worshipers from far-of¥ lands, They battled long, with smoke-stained knotted hands. The First Wardens 24 IX They battle still : for beauty hath no bell To toll her legions into beds of ease ; Her loom knows no repose ; she sees not well How monks may weave their narrow convent-frieze ; Her cloth, as cobweb filmy, doth excel Time in its width ; and all her knights may seize Of gold and steel she twists into its weft While gold endures, and precious steel is left. X They battle still ! the sepulchre is still The symbol of our winning : its high dome. Dashed with the spray of conflict, crowns the hill Of this world's war, unshaken by its foam ; Still do we bear our bounty to the mill Of hard endeavor; and we gather home High splendors, virtues, burdens, golden deeds, In measure of our hopes and of our needs. The First Wardens 25 XI Oh, still the flail must purge the temple mart ! He that would light this world unto his dream Still seize the brand of battle, and depart Upon the crowded highway with his beam! Yes, whether poet of the burning heart, Or prophet with the truth of God in him. He must w^ork beauty on the world in strife, Or pass, and yield no solace of his life ! xn Ah, beauty was not dead, not dead, that day When Pilate forced the shining chancel door, The slender chancel door that barred his way. Whose workmanship no Pilate could restore ! And think you 'twas not raised from where it lay To stir men's souls by all it cost the more? By all it cost, whose wonder will not die, The love, the care, the travail pure and high? The First Wardens 26 XIII Dear Christ ! so long ago, so long ago ! The years of labor and ripe discontent, How they are fair ! How long the symbol bow Of armed centuries in stone hath bent O'er the great sepulchre to hold it so ! Never, O never may that bolt be spent ! We need its strength and beauty : we would part Not with one whit of all its costly art ! The story is that the true cavern of the sepulchre of Christ was occu- pied, during the second or third century, by a company of religionists ; and that when Constantine usurped the tomb he raised his basilica over the rock they had guarded. The Adoration of the Magi 27 THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI They came and kneeled. The kings of all the world Stole down the star-lit lane, their banners furled, Ev'n to the manger, and at dim midnight Laid this world's goods before the Child of light. I saw a magus hoar with frost of trade ; He kneeled beside a plate of costly jade, — A stone rejected, now become the head And glory of the hall, with symbols spread. He brought a grail, of gules, from Pharaoh's seat. Twined all with tendrils for remembrance meet ; Balsams he brought, for wounds, and jars of myrrh Sealed with the seals of Herod's magister ; He brought sheet-lightnings caught up in a gem, And inky seas, and foaming pearls with them, And curious beaten network of red-thorn On frosted bronze, Christ's temples to adorn. The Adoration of the Magi 28 And then with flaming hands he heaped rich gold Upon the mighty jade, all it would hold. I saw a magus ridged with thews of steel ; He was bowed down beneath a shining wheel, The symbol of his hope and of his toil. He laid it king-like on the sacred soil. Then, as upon an altar, he strewed there Palm-sprays bedewed with jewels of his care. A sceptre fashioned from a shepherd's crook, Down its light shaft old letters from a book : A searnless cloak wove on a virgin loom : These all he added to his altar's bloom. And lest these fade, gold from the mines he poured In brightness as the chariot of the Lord. The third sage that I saw, with dreamy eyes Brought visions Mary's child may not despise : — An etched plate, deep and dark — Gethsemane, Or some Christ-passion and no stars to see; He brought a lidded casket lined with lead, The Adoration of the Magi 29 That held the lettered tablets of the dead ; The city of the Lord, in tender thought Of laced and fretted ivory, he brought ; He brought a scroll of wonders — poesies. And tales prophetic stained with evening skies ; And last, his dearest gift, the blazing keys That open every door : of stamped gold these. Ah me ! they brought their gold to heaven's hall, But when they peered behind the gilded stall, It was not Christ dawned golden on their sight ! They saw the Mammon Child that Christmas night ! Yes, each brought costliest tribute he could save ; Each took away the costliest thought he gave : For then and now the Christ is as the gift ; We find our faith behind each veil we lift ; And then as now when men have gold to do. It hardens to a god for worship too ! Do we most value what our labor brings, Bow down to gilded art and showy things ? The Adoration of the Magi 30 Is there no virtue in the moulded wheel To snatch men's souls to glory where they kneel ? Is so the blare more than the workmanship ? Is now no joy upon the trembling lip To sing the gleam of beauty or of worth That is foretaste of heaven upon earth, Save it bring plunder home, and shining praise? Are we so fallen upon merchant days? Then are we still in worship as of old Running to Christ with merit of our gold, — And still as then we see the changeling nod, The end of all men's labor each man's god ! Wine of Laurel 31 WINE OF LAUREL Now, who are thou in bright moonhght Dost rise from bloody bed ? Thou Shape, am I a scourge of souls. To seek quarrels with the dead ? Now, who art thou with hungry hands Dost ride down dead man's lane? Thou Shape, I slew thee, bones and all ! Dost thou seek death again ? I slew thy set and gleaming eyes : I slew thy dripping heart : I slew the hatred on thy breath, Dead man as thou art ! Yea, horseman of the shining eyes, I slew thee, root and stem ! I have no quarrel with dead men's skulls To ring my steel on them ! Wine of Laurel 32 Then swerve thou not, thou grisly gleam, With death-dew on thy brow, — Though thou shouldst ride through stone and steel Thou canst not fright me now : For thou art but a dead man's bones. Tossed out wnth mouldy things, And I am master of the field, The friend and fear of kings ! Victory S3 VICTORY I O strength that strideth over broken ground Into the dusk ! O vigor unrenowned ! Toil-tempered Demos ! Yes, the victor still, Fighting for foothold on his harrowed hill ! II To strive, and fall at last, and conquer so ! This shaft in the world-forest, thus to grow. To raise its head, and die, — and with its blood Seed the inert to-morrows unto good! Ill Where was the dawn of battle down the race ? In what far sunset shall the umpire's mace Beat back the hills of war, fill the last gulf 'Twixt fang and fang, cheetah and shaggy wolf ? Victory 34 IV The panther in the glade still pays his feud ; And he that slays, his breast is ruddy-hued ; Aye, both have left strong sons to feed the fire ; Aye, harder wood than this shall top the pyre ! V Since that first angry ant-hill rose in wrath. Poured out his hosts to scourge the forest-path Of its young menace, Christ hath dreamed and bled- And still the grasses redden with blood shed ! VI Aye, my brown brother-plowman ! when the stone That crowns to-morrow's dead lies with your own Crumbled in ash a hundred thousand years, A plowman still shall sow his field with tears ! Victory 35 VII With blood, and tears, and seedings as to-day ! Aye, seedsman ! thou shalt wear thy Hfe away Upon the soil rekictant, wheat and tare, Until thy toiling children shroud thee there ! VIII Aye, till thy manhood's evening shalt thou be, Brown seedsman, brawny-armed and bold of knee As he thy Tubal sire, to hold in trust Forge, share and sword from capture and from rust ! IX Aye, the last acorn on the tree of life, Flower of those hundred thousand years of strife. Still must it suck its fibre from the storm, And fight for sunshine still to keep it warm ! Victory 36 X And he that grafts his bitter stock long time With this and that of sweetness at its prime, Shall he, engrossed in the loaden bough, Still scorn such hardy ichor, all as now ? XI Oh, shall he cherish still the jeweled sword Of golden Caesar, win the golden word, And fall asleep, long seated at the feast. To dream of golden cities in the East ? XII Master of fairest-fortuned flower that blows. To dream of some far-favored fairer rose ? All those slim bridges from the soul to earth. His senses, sealed to snow-bells of no worth ? Victory 37 XIII Ah, my brown giant : life's last victory Is brimming cup enough for you and me ! Deep cup enough — to fight, and fight, and fall, Until your blood is reddest blood of all ! XIV Long hath that goldsmith Day the jeweled skies Set forth for Night to sell where no one buys ; And he will take them in and set them out And polish them still longer, do not doubt. XV Aeons and cycles round the white abyss Their burning took them, fiery-hued ere this ; Cycles and aeons must they burnish still Down harshest night, their lustre to fulfill. Victory 38 XVI Until each myriad moon is ground to dust : Each smouldering sun, against the wheel a-thrust, Lies all dispersed in stain of Milky Way ; Until the kindlier, softer, final day ! XVII Aye, till the Ultimate Law life's little laws Transcends in larger cycles, end and cause. Strife shall not lose her sceptre, — nor the brawn Earned of the soil be held from earth in pawn ! XVIII Then stand thou fast above this battle-mould : For thou shalt plant it thick, and not with gold, — Yea, reap, O seedsman ! as thy hand hath sped. Ere good-night belfry tolls thy brawn to bed ! Victory 39 XIX Oh, stand thou steadfast where thy frame was won ! Be sure thy steel shall quicken, ere the sun, Drooping anew from stalk in earth's dull pot, Strews Bloom-o'-Stars o'er the King's garden-plot! XX Sweet are the violet fields where we must fight ; White blows the lily where w^e weep to-night ; Red blooms the blood of saints, where we should pray ; So life makes victors of us, all she may! The White Guest 40 THE WHITE GUEST "Bind her brow austere with laurel; Place in her hand th' oblivious lyre ; Hide from her eyes all strife and quarrel; Deck her this once in silk attire ! "Plait her dark hair with snowiest grasses : No red-eyed daughters of the earth ; No palsied posies from the morasses; Hers the glad ichor : wine and mirth ! "Stir her with no funeral measure: She shall indulge the wine's caprice; Aye, she shall be well wed to pleasure ! This is no day for song to cease. "She shall be blind to Cain's black brow ; She shall be deaf to Esau's grief ; She shall not waste her features now In tears, and furrowed unbelief. The White Guest 41 *'She shall be merry — aye, she shall ! She shall be glad — aye, laugh for glee ! Aye, glad at this our festival ! Aye, choked with song and laughter, she!" Now is the stain of the grape on the fingers : Now is the breath and glare and tumult Fierce of the feast : now is the zenith : The utter gleam of shimmering purple, Of crystal gold-purfled : the shiver of argent And ardor of rubies : the snow and the fire And bloom of the banquet : now is the summit ! Calm midst the clamor of throats, and the flourish And bravery of pledges, with face unsearchable, Seated on dais majestic, the guest. Her awful features shrouded in marble, Broodeth in silence; with eyes unclouded She of the mountains watcheth the wassail : Watcheth decanter, tankard and flagon, Jorum and cruise, kiss lips in her honor : Watcheth the pounding of stein and beaker, The White Guest 42 Posnet and pipkin and horn : what chalice Or stoup will hold wine, or stand in the pledges ; Equalty each with each in bumpers Challenging- her, the mighty presence, Alas, wnth toast unsteadily fashioned ! She, the one-minded daughter of worship, Sitteth as marble: broodeth in silence: Riseth, 'mid dripping of pledges, in silence : Fareth away, with face unsearchable, Far from the glittering temples, the service And priesthood of clamor : the praise and the pledges Spread for her whose smile is not flattered. II "Oh, who hath heard her high decree, And where is she, that she may heal And save us, make us free? Have ye not seen her lightly steal, Skirting the city's tumult, bound The White Guest 43 For countryside, where health is found? Oh, where is she, that we may touch Her garment's hem, for virtue such As lies therein, that we may hear Eloquent wisdom from her lips. And bow our heads, and worship there, And bless her healing finger-tips ? "Evil is grown up with the good ? Justice hath no sure abode? Men ask with stained lips. And where Is this unsullied presence fair? They have not seen her : if she be Filling her arms upon the lea With native poppies, or have climbed Over the mountain, how shall they, Imagination all begrimed, Celebrate her praise to-day ? Let her come forth and stand here now, That men again may crown her brow !'' The White Guest 44 Far from the praise : far, far from the fruitless Praise inconsequent, far hath she wandered From this, from this! Deep in her forests, Long hath she strayed, where health is, and vigor, Shaping her verdict, burning her statute. On tree and rock ; on tablets of granite She of the giants writeth for giants During the ages message unforgeable : Not here, not in democracy's fiat, Not in the clamorous purple of wassail, But one with the laws and forces of God : "Freedom hath never smiled on men Save they were strong : how often, then !" Ill Lo in the East Soft on the heights The light of a glory. The glow of a presence. Staining the edge The White Guest 45 Of night, and melting The shadows of omen ! Long hath she wandered : Long hath the darkness Compassed her people : Now is it morning ! Now is the fervor Of day, and the heat And light of the sun! She Cometh, she cometh, she cometh, She cometh to welcome her sons : Her chariot emblazoned with fire : Her trumpets the bellowing guns ! She openeth her gates through the mountains : She placeth her seal on the plains : She marketh the sites of her cities : Hope beateth high in her veins ! Where are the myrmidons now Up from the valleys of sloth ? The flush of a day new-born TJw White Guest 46 Lies on her radiant brow : The pestilent children of scorn, Are they fled to their pestilent slough ? Does it not stir you, citizens, Who pride in her white residence. To see these banners bold? This resolute San Francisco, this Free city, this cosmopolis. This civilization's eager strife, This multitudinous busy life — Does it not stir you, citizens ? Why, under Saturn there is not A state more richly veined with gold, A soil more prodigal, a spot More adequately blessed of God ! If mountain-minded, as of old, She would leave those peaks untrod. E'en those Sierras hoar, her hours To spend midst California's flowers! Does it not stir you, citizens, The White Guest 47 That by this matchless crowded bay Freedom is come for residence, To stay here, if she may? So men to her and each be true. Bringing bright God-deeds as her due. Freedom will here abide : and thou, O vessel of the westward prow. And thou, O seaman, know long time Her, and her starry brow sublime! Lex Mundi 48 LEX MUNDI I rule : my word is on the sea And continents of eld ; each knee, Since and till chaos, bends to me. I am the East and West : my veins Are hot with conflict ; on my plains, Smoking of war, I heap my grains. I am the North and South : my ice Lies carved in no sun-wrought device ; My flowers, with travail I paid their price. I am the Old and New : I sought. Fought, conquered, and grew strong ; and naught Of let has softened the steel I wrought. I stand till the last victorious toast : Pledge of a people toil-engrossed : Freedom, who loveth the victor most ! Mine is the brawn of earth's old war; Who bred these bones, strong ancestor. His flint be still accounted for ! The Buoy-Bell 49 THE BUOY-BELL Bell! Bell! Bell that rideth the breakers' crest, Bell of the shallows, tell, O tell : The swell and fall of foam on the sand, Storm in the face from sea to land, Roar of gray tempest : these, O bell, What say these of the West? Tell !0 tell! Bell! Bell! Crowding the night with cries, O tell : What of the moorings in the silt ? What of the blooms that drift and wilt? What of the sea-chest wrenched wide? Is it safe harbor by thy side ? Bell that rideth the breakers' crest. What say these of the West ? Tell !0 tell! The Buoy-Bell 50 Bell! Bell! It is a dirge the bell is tolling, A dirge for the silent dead, — With the cold sea rolling, rolling, rolling, RolHng each restless head. Bell that rideth the breakers' crest, O, when will they lie all quietty, Untossed by the slow sea-swell : Nor breakers brave on the gray sea-beach. Nor ceaseless crash of the cresting sea, Nor booming headland's sullen knell. Nor bell, for elegy ? When is the last tide out of the West, And the last restless dream for each ? Tell ! O tell ! Toll ! toll ! toll ! Toll for the ebbing tide : Toll for the lives that outward ride : Toll for the deep-delved cold sea-seat : Night in the West at every beat ! Toll ! toll I Sea Burial 51 SEA BURIAL A winding sheet, a broadside for the brave, A light on the blue sea one instant known, A work unfinished — Where his dust was strewn Is no more battle. Sea-moss shades his grave ; Coolness of coral spans his pearl-strewn cave : Nor Pharaoh's vaults more deaf to the sands blown, Nor silk cocoons more soft, in Maytime grown, Before the summer frees the textile slave ! O give me, Star, my rest beneath the sea ! There let me lie, and let the deaf swells roll, Or craggy cliffs, like belfries wild and free, In palpitating peals my requiem toll! But grant me first my work may finished be : No sap-wood, when the axe strikes through the boll ! The Soldier's Locket 52 THE SOLDIER'S LOCKET Bend thy clear eyes upon this knotted ground; Smooth out the clods where these old fortunes lie : — O locket Lura, earth how old and dry That once thou blessedest ! Do thou still this mound Plant with thy rose of faith, and it be crowned ! O, do thou still kneel by my grave when I, Trenched in this alien clay, no longer sigh, And with sweet holy flowers my dust surround ! Thou lingerest far, alas, from murdered me, Where the white roses grow in gardens blest ! Then in God's gardens rest my merit now : O, there my soul's safe sanctuary be, — And, though I see thee not, thy locket brow Lie blushing long upon my crimsoned breast! Christmas Night 53 CHRISTMAS NIGHT They crowd from the black belfries ; misty forms, Padres with swinging censers, neophytes, In slow white funeral choir — clandestine rites As of the dead — sweep shrineward. "Midnight warms/' Sighs a near shape, which stands, with tossing arms ; *'Alas!" and echoes from the vaulted heights, "Alas ! alas !" They surge : and now he smites ; Hot steams the incense-breath, and all in swarms Pale vaporous things press round a bloody bier, And sigh and sigh : "O dreadful angry soul, Strike quickly, lest thy bride forever here Shrink from thy knife, and ever grow more fair !" Ah me! that Barbara's bells should softly toll This Christmas night, and she and he be there ! The Temple of Art 54 THE TEMPLE OF ART Poets, make room ! one other at the shrine Of pale resolve and bitter compassment Kneels with his candle for the flame slow-sent ! Lo, on the altar writ with names that shine He, too, would weigh out myrrh and fragrant pine ! Bright dreams! white deeds, who knows? much splendor lent To the wide halls of Truth ! new rainbows bent ! The candid temple with new light divine Vaulted, till thought is silent, beauteous place! O Heart of Fire, bleed on this candle small ! Let it be named with them that kindle grace Along blear isle and arch and beetling wall ! So may the world it with the rest embrace. Saying, this lamp hath light to give the hall. Morro Castle 55 MORRO CASTLE I It is Havana's rock of sighs, And from her weary walls doth rise What whisper of the clank of chain : Riseth what wasteful dull disdain? Where battlemented Morro breaks The still blue sky, where ocean shakes Upon the tunneled flint his locks, To dry them on Cabana's rocks, Cometh a woman day by day With tears to wear the stone away : With tears to melt Esteban free. Ah, girl ! thou art not calm as he ! "Morro! O Morro!" II "What if her tears are but begun, And he shall see her eyes ?" quoth one. Morro Castle 56 They guide her down the mazy deep ; The salt ooze drippeth in a dream ; What recketh she of dungeon-keep ? She treadeth where fair jewels gleam. They bring her to the tamer's cage : Well may he roar, w^ell may he rage, Her best-beloved, to see her there. To see her sweated brow and hair ! Ah, rock of sorrows, thou hast wrung What from Esteban's halting tongue? "Morro !0 Morro!" Cuba S7 CUBA ! Cuba, when I regard how thou art torn, And by whose judgment fall the flails of war ; When I peruse each forfeit welt and scar, And think how sword and ermine, still forsworn, Record their shame ; how hardly to be borne Is furious Tacon's fury still; how far Felicity doth lie from temple bar Where is no justice; when I see thee shorn, O thou dark-futured pleader ! of thy grace. Whose chiefest crime, thou wast too fair of face. Mine is no tongue to trust ! the captain's hand Doth hang too ruthless-heavy on thy door. And he the snow-white judge so much the more Than bloody tyrant reddens all the land ! Not at This Chancel 58 NOT AT THIS CHANCEL Not at this chancel kneel; not at the foot Of Christ's still crucifix bow down, O Spain ! For bloody offense, fire, steel, and rout, and stain Of taken slaves ; not on this altar put Such murderous Cuban candle ! nay, w^ith soot Smirched in the face from stake and martyrs slain, O seek not here thy wasted strength again ! Find thou some pagan altar thou mayst loot : Perchance Cholula's blood-bespattered stones Will smile on faithless Cortez ; or the proud Temple of Cuzco bless the Spanish bones That slew her priests ; or from his clotted shroud The Moor of Aragon beam for the nones Upon thy cause : if thou but cry aloud ! Saul the King 59 SAUL THE KING Arson doth laugh ; grim battle laughs his fill ; The earth, the red earth, holds her quaking sides ; That gaunt guest famine knows where mirth abides ; Fever doth flash her teeth, her swollen heel Murdering the cheeks of children ; the wet steel Doth laugh, and it have food ; each crew that rides With Death makes merry of the crimson tides : — Shall old Madrid not laugh with right good will ? Aye, laugh, aye, laugh, old ruler ! as that gray Quibble of Endor, at his witch-moored broom ; Laugh at lean Samuel, from the grave estray, Tolling his madness (mirth rest on his tomb) ; Aye, laugh ! laugh ! laugh ! It is a merry play When Saul the King flings shaking from the room ! Ash-of -the- Altar 60 ASH-OF-THE-ALTAR The censer's cold ; the candle's spent ; The Priest has closed the sacred tent ; Breathed on the coal till it is dead ; Strewed ash-of-the-altar there, instead. The eastern fire was on his brow ; His forehead lies in shadow now. He lived his winter's day, and kept Faith with the winter stars, and slept. He knew the summits in the mist ; He blazed a path with patient wrist; His gentle fame is chiseled there : All that he was of high and rare. Oh, to the mountain, for the dawn! And lock the temple : he is gone. With roses and all wreathed bloom Drape the door of the empty room. Wilbur W. Thoburn : 1899. Hermon 6i HERMON He sat within his garden-place, ('Twas tree-bloom all around), Pining to tread the peaks of light And summits winter-crowned. "O for the open-minded hills, With outlook for the soul ! Above the trees and fields !" he cried, ''Where Hermon's waters roll!" He led me down by palm and pine ; He plucked me roses three : His sun, his shade, his tangled glade, He sealed them all to me. I yielded him my open hills ; He gave me bower and mere, Which was fair purchase-price, I ween, For my cold heights austere. Hermon 62 But oh ! my lichens drooped and died In their warm beds below ! And oh ! his roses would not bloom Upon my fields of snow ! The happy hills refused him joy : Mists crowded to his eyes ! And I : the tangled shade grew red Beneath the sultry skies! God made me for the morning peaks, To dwell with them alone ; God made each yearning thing that breathes For heaven of its own ! And so I sent him back his flowers, And hugged my crags of ice; God give him peace a thousand years In his rose-Paradise! Scot and Lot 63 SCOT AND LOT My fingers use no shepherd's craft To pipe Pan's dancers to thy knee : No honey-hearted oaten shaft To shape the Orphic strain in me. Ah, no! I bring thee more, my friend! I blow the note where silence falls! The loudest tone hath soonest end : The empty are the noisy halls ! Promise of Hawthorn 64 PROMISE OF HAWTHORN A bough of hawthorn buds for me? To-morrow they will be in bloom, The life and fragrance of the tree ! Aye, they already change the room ! But why for me, who have not earned Blessing of hawthorn from your hand? Whose lighted forge-fires have not burned ? Whose fields still fail of harvest-stand ? Who scarce have added color-dole To meagerest canvas, good or bad ? No ; nor achievement freed my soul Of any vision that I had? You say, it is the hawthorn's need To bear May-blossoms? You esteem As precious as the ripened deed The scent and beauty of the dream ? Promise of Hawthorn 65 Sure, dawn hath touched them on the brow ! White daylight trembles on their eyes ! And oh, I bless your hawthorn bough! To-morrow shall be fragrant skies! In the Spirit of Romance OS IN THE SPIRIT OF ROMANCE Dark mystery of shadowy waters, Stars through the branches, comets aflame On mountain-side and mere, — fair lake, Fair evening lake, all curve-begirt With vanishing paths and grassy slopes. Dark coves and shaded landings, where The mandolin and soft guitar. With breathed song, and blended oar, In old romance reply : where youth Reviews the various failing word In trembling ditty — timid chord Compelling shy responses : where Clear chimes from far-off elfin tower Ring sweetly to low songs of love, And glance meets glance upon the glass, And face sees face among the stars : Where laughing maid shy cavalier Regards from her safe vantage-seat In the Spirit of Romance (>7 Behind soft-clinging Persian silk That ripples from her hand : where all Is shadowy, and dim, and curtained Mistily off from substance things — O lake! (not lake but elfin pool While beauty drapes thee well : while veil From mountain spring and April rain And costliest dainty dew, in beauty Sweeps from thy headlands !) how thy banks Embrace in mystic ring to-night The happy singers where they glide : Shape evening's soft horizon-line Of airiest clouds and lovely deeps To prosper marvels ! Would they might, Those lovers, riding among the stars. Ride on forever as now they ride : Know what they know, have what they have, My lady's pleasure in her eyes That she is lovely and desired : Her true-heart' s-love as he is woven Into her dreams upon the sky ! In the Spirit of Romance 68 So might they Hve in beauty's bloom, Since beauty is half mystery, And loveliness revealed in all. With nothing left to be revealed, Is heart of loveliness no more — She what she is, and all beside. And he forever strong and good : Nothing but this until the end ! The Prince of Paupers 69 THE PRINCE OF PAUPERS The Prince of Paupers leaned along his throne In smoky mood. His laughing court drew nigh ; Them seemed some one great enterprise had flown Like wild-fowl to the jungle, that his eye Grew sombre, and the careless waves did die From the clear sunny rivers of his soul. But no avail : it was his day of dole. Ah, they were poor and merry, every one ! And their pale prince was merriest of all ! Rubies and ruddy garnets had they none ; No gold-worked arras hung upon their wall ; No incense from Mukalla or Bengal Burned in their censers ; naught of price they had, No meanest taint of wealth to make them sad. No beryl bracelets ; no jade-wrought brocades ; No carcanets of gold and burnished pearl; The Prince of Paupers 70 No inlaid belts nor priceless sabre-blades With silver-work along the hilted whorl; No wine-stained crystal, seeming to unfurl In fragile poppy-petals to the dew ; No : they were poor — this merry-hearted crew. But now mirth stood with cypress on her head ; The happy feet were stayed; the swirl of dance, Frozen like foam in winter, whirled and sped Without a movement, waiting utterance Of the pale prince. At last he dipped his lance. "O chiefs," he cried, "a riddle ! This expound, Why all my camels lie along the ground !" When none would try the lock, he made demand Upon the sages of his ragged court. The wise men of the East, in triple strand Who bound up wisdom ; they had gained report Out to the desert cell and lone resort Of farthest learning, for their wizard spells: Aye, even southward to El Fasher's wells. The Prince of Paupers 71 He named his ragged sages ; straight they kneeled. The first was girded round the loins with skins ; The second, his brown bosom half-revealed, Wore goats'-hair tunic ; on the third begins And ends what may be penance for his sins, So harsh it is — this is his order's sign, The fitting vesture at impoverished shrine. The tanned bell-sage spake soothly to his prince. Entreating him forget his lover's grief ; She is not worth the shifting of their tents ; Her loss is but the loss of a dead leaf, One grass-blade fallen from the harvest-sheaf. It is a rival hath her heart away, Is reason why she will not keep her day. 'That is no reason !" quoth the monarch grim. He asked the second sage how he should read : If bosom brown can solve this writing dim, Why every light he follows doth recede. And no well more hath water for his need ; The Prince of Paupers 72 Why he is sad, whose pleasure is not gold ; Why all his thoughts are darker than of old. The sage with tender wisdom looked him through ; He stood long time before the troubled throne, Then sad and fearless told him all he knew, What sand-storm kills true love : neglect alone ! Neglect, against love's snowy blossoms blown, Blackeneth them like fire ; neglect, no less. Is reason for the prince's mourning dress. ''That is no reason : there was no neglect !" To sage of harshest garb the prince now turned, Requiring him to speak his heart direct ; And if this wizard's word from book was learned Where truth looms large, it straight shall be dis- cerned. If not, let Folly have him for her own : There is no virtue in a cell alone! The last and oldest sage delays his speech, Lest his plain-spoken word offend the ear ; The Prince of Paupers 73 He cannot choose but trace the riddle's reach. The prince imperatively bids him near, And stint not of his breath that all may hear. "Ah, then ! your pauper's court is reason true ! Your poverty hath lost your love to you ! *' Woman was cast in frail luxurious mould ! Not like the man, compact of godlike thought, She cannot live care-free in mansions old The while she ponders how the stars were wrought, Or solves dim battles that her fathers fought : She cannot spring in blossom from the plain. Glad as a tree, at cost of winter rain !" The Prince of Paupers beat his faded breast ; Him seemed the shaft of truth had reached his heart. O, it was sorrow for the ragged guest, And sorrow for them all, to see him start And wrestle to pluck out the barbed dart ! "By all the fiends ! I shall seek nothing now But bloody gold, no question where nor how !" The Prince of Paupers 74 Stepped out a maid with sunshine in her hair, The hght of sixteen summers : she, dismayed No whit by reason of the sages there, Stepped forward with flushed face and eyes where played The dawn of womanhood ; calm, unafraid, She waited for her prince to bid her speak. Then said her woman's creed in accents meek. "O Prince, your sages are of wisest men, But they have never looked in maiden's eyes ! They know all language that is w^it with pen. But they have never read what wisdom lies In woman's smile, for all that they are wise ! O, I believe them w^ise in bookish art, But they have never learned from woman's heart ! "They say a rival, say neglect, to you ! Those are tw^o letters they have learned, of all The woman's alphabet ! These will not do. So they cry poverty, with faces tall ; The Prince of Paupers 75 Ah, they know Httle who for reasons fall On such a reason, why a woman's love Should sink so low from glory's heights above ! 'They know full little ! O far-cherished Prince, Your heart can tell you more than wisest sage Of this life's mystery — the mellow tints : The silver on the peaks : the smoothed-out rage Of all this world, when morning strikes the page. And love, that will not let him be forgot. Adds happy turn to every tragic plot ! "Aye, far more than can hermit in his cell ! Then, O good Prince, ask not this thing of him : Ask your own heart, and see you mind it well ! So shall you quaff of wonders from the brim. And know what truth abides in vistas dim. Even in the realms of love, that now are near, And now most distant-cold, with nothing clear. "They tell you love must have her tinsel-fee ? No ! Your betrothed is dreaming now of you. The Prince of Paupers 1^ Your colors in her face, where all can see ! Your drums and bugles pierce her through and through, And when they beat retreat she whitens too ! O, if I were a man, I think that I Should soon find where the honey-gardens lie !" The maiden ceased, and fear ran up her face ; With timorous outward glance she shrank aside. Ran hotly through the crowded, silent place, And found the shaded gardens, where her pride Took refuge with the roses, breath denied. There she made tarry till the care died down Her snowy hand had brushed from prince's crown. ''Now, by my beard, she is the sage of all ! Bugler, blow steed and stirrup, and no let !" The Prince threw off his melancholy pall ; His dismal tones returned to cabinet With curious vases and old carvings jet ; He drew his happy hand across his eyes And left them cloudless as the desert skies. The Prince of Paupers 77 No more he spake, but sprang to saddle-trough ; Straight the dust hid him that his riding raised ; Far down the highway came his merry laugh, Till distance took him wholly; not amazed. His chiefs and merry men that laughter praised Resumed their mirth and waited him again. Who could not ride with care, or would not deign. So ends the story : laughter, day and night ! The fairest bride in all the world, I ween ! The happiest prince that ever worshiped light! These blissful lovers kept their bridal green In chambers of the sun where love had been A ragged guest a thousand years before ! Allah them keep from care a thousand more ! And she that led them had her worship too ! The modest maid that saw the riddle right. She was not last in service that she knew ; She rides among the stars, forever bright ! Oh, when her children crowd the paths of light, Allah them keep in knowledge of the heart A thousand years, to prize the pauper's part ! Mission Carmel 78 MISSION CARMEL O magic of old courts and twilight halls ! Print from a block out-fashioned, as they tell, Gray Carmel by the sea ! thy ruined walls. Dim bones of walls, all in a ruined dell. Still do they bear the Ave Mary bell. Still flash with cross and censer ; though the blast Inhospitable grind, and stormy knell Break on their clay, still guard they to the last The peace and restful beauty of their gentle past ! II The misty morning's frosty finger-tips Lay lightly on her brow uncrimsoned ; But oh, what crimson fluttered on her lips! And oh, what echoes echoed soft, and fled Back to their bosom, hiding all their red Mission Caniicl 79 Behind the snowy veil where crimson stays ! Estelle the grave, with summer-bended head ! Such was my guide by hall and ruined ways, While all the walls grew sweet with bloom of other days. Ill Alas! for old romance and idyls sung: For Jason's fleece, that nibbled precious root On the hale hills of Or when song was young ! How can she sing wide eyes and golden suit, Who hath not tasted yet such honeyed fruit ? What should bud know^ of roses ? Yet this lay, This master-music, a sweet-tongued recruit, Whose songs of love and life were learned to-day, Sings on the king-note clear as braided minstrel may. IV Sings on the king-note ; a heart's master-need, And how the hope that f adeth blooms anew. ! Mission Carmcl 80 How Eleanora, who each rosary bead Tells off to the sad Virgin as her due, Stands in her sunset casement! Through and through The glory stains her marble wondrously ; Trembling she stands, till she is western too ; She knows not, save her shrine, what else can be So dear as gold and pearl when sun sets in the sea. V So ran the legend : long ago it fell ! O still she stands a-brooding, all her dreams, Like sparks in paper, weaving vagrant spell, — Stands in her casement, thinking how it seems To scriven magic name in starry beams ; And still Benito creepeth down the night, All her heart's love, with eyes where worship gleams. Even from their caverns black, with lovely light ; — And still the vision fades that burned so tender bright ! Mission C arm el 8i VI She sighs, and fingers her heart-easing beads, And burns white prayers at shrine of maiden blest ; Yes, night by night she Hstens for the steeds Of her winged lover riding in the West; The fierceness of her hope destroys her Vest ; Sometimes she dreams he beckons, crowned with Hght; Sometimes when she awakes she hears her guest And runs to meet him with half-veiled sight ; And sometimes, ah ! she fears, and shuns the vision bright ! VII At last he came. Oh, then her gardens rang ! "Love Eleanor, love Ellen, come with me ! Oh, hasten, hasten, hasten !" soft he sang, "To the steep mountain paths and canyons free! There, there," he said, "from every balmy tree And shrub of healing we will glean our weal ! Mission Carmel 82 Through all the years," he whispered, "there will we Each day to memory new treasure seal ! There, there, at shrine of love together let us kneel !" VIII '* 'Tis weary work," she sighed, *'to win a maid And fight her battles down the dusky lane !" "My sword has ancient need of war," he said. "Yes : but my shadows are impinged in vain !" "If not your ghosts," he said, "then mine amain !" Their venture called. "Then let us flee the feud," She said, "while skies are starless to our gain !" Their gain! That chemist night such ink had brewed. No more was faintest light in all the world accrued. IX "O moon !" she cried, "that sweetly hides her flame In sour eclipse and smoky swart constraint ! Mission Carmel 83 O stars!" she cried, "for Aphrodite's fame That veil their too-bright beams at lovers' plaint ! O tender vital earth ! whose sooty taint Is not now cloud," she cried, "but bridal robe !" What speech she uttered sounded far and faint ; Then died to silence, lest her breathing probe This bubble joy she nursed, and shatter such frail globe. X Her wings were eager for adventures new, And one she loved would guide her, for the rest ; With pinions stretched-out wide to bear her through. Softly this fledgling fluttered from her nest ; And black night took them, faith and faith abreast ; Thousand-year gorges hid them down the world ; And ever one sure pathway paid their quest ; And always brighter one dim scroll unfurled. Which was that dream their life, where their dark future curled. Mission Carmel 84 XI It was the dawn. A stain crept up the sky ; The night had not yet brushed her eyes of dew ; Round the cool earth the cloak was gathered high Of sleep, and not a dream - thought showing through ; With drowsy gems and star-heart tears of rue The yucca's nodding spires were mounted bright ; And cactus regiments stood where they grew, Confederate and armed, to guard all night The beautiful silent desert till the morning light. XII The stain grows older round the serrate edge Of Orient heaven ; now th' enkindling swell Leaps up behind the sharp horizon-ridge ; And now the East has bloomed in beauty-bell Of blossoms from the sea — petalled in shell And streaming with pearls and coral, and the stray Fire of blood-amber; now the sentinel Mission Carmel Crag-tips flash flame ; and now lord infant day Flutters a million windows with his court's array. XIII Oh, steel against steel, and how they fight for life! Pursuit has tracked them through the desert- dust, — Jose the hunchback, and his men of strife! Oh, useless there Benito's frame robust ! Bootless that Ellen screams when scream she must ! Soon he is seized and bound, and she is bound ; They hear their doom where they are thrown to rust; Faintly they hear faint hoof-beats 'gainst the ground. Then but their breathing hear, the only desert sound. XIV Stout binding-webs those spider ruffians spun ; With leathern thongs wedded the bridal pair ; Mission Carmel Left them beneath Mojave's cloudless sun. — Holy Maria ! hear a suppliant's prayer : Two webbed and corded skeletons lay there ! They saw them from the future, where they lay : For desert bones are white, and to despair The centuries all swiftly slide away ! — There meshed and bound Jose the hunchback left his prey. XV Holy Maria, hear a suppliant's prayer ! All day they lay beneath the desert sun. And evening came, and dawn, and stifling air Blew o'er them till the stifling day was done And evening came again ; speech had they none. But lay half in a swoon beneath the stroke. And dreamed of canyons, where cool waters run, — Then dreamed of spiders and harsh desert-folk : Dreamed all of fiends and spiders ; and at dawn they woke. Mission Carmel XVI Holy Maria, hear a suppliant's prayer! Spiders about them, spiders all around : Spiders, that loosed the fettered ankles there, And swollen wrists, and raised them from their swound, And bathed their burns with lenitives renowned ! It was a caravan of holy friends. Brown mission priests, across the desert bound, Who came with no fierce fire to push amends, But glowed with saintly love, that all in service spends. XVII They gave the lovers their own saddle-beasts And rode on swiftly to a shaded well. Far in the desert, known to mission priests ; Then on, until the Ave Mary bell From Carmel's towers usurped the desert spell, And they were home. They led the strangers in ; Mission Carmel They heard the honey-gall they had to tell ; They gave them cloistral refuge, ivy-green. Ah, then! the cool arcades how eloquent-serene! XVIII With praise how eloquent and joy how full ! Through shaded court they wandered hand in hand; By splashing fountains filled with waters cool Seated, they told their love ; or on the sand By the sweet sea they breathed the breezes bland ; The final peace, the last repose, was there ; Where there was need, they were the first to stand ; In every willing service they did share ; But when glad task was done love knew no more of care. XIX And there the hills — O miracle complete ! The hills were all awash with poppied gold : Mission Carmel 89 The native poppies, flashing forth in sheet Of instant fire the Hfe hid in the mould About their roots ; the fertile soil could hold No more ; and when the breezes took their tops, Lifting the golden petals fold from fold, They paled to silver-and-amber, dashed with drops Of green, and crimson bells, and waxen buttercups. XX Who then but Eleanora loved the flowers ? Who but Benito loved the fragrant breeze, The sea's salt breath, in pyramidical showers Spilling the heavy blossoms from the trees ? Who but these two were eager all to please The pastor priests, that soothed their desert- plight? The sweet-breathed kine, the organ-winged bees, The birds, the chimes, the songs, the moon at night,— Where but at Mission Carmel was there such delight ? Mission Carmel go XXI There they were happy, long ago : and still Their music lingers ; still the silvern lute Trembles to touch of passion, by the skill Of song and story threading that old suit; And still are Carmel's gardens sweet with fruit ; Still strewn her desert courts with summer snow ; Still her towers vocal that for aye are mute ; And her brown priests, the singer bids me know, Still do they smile on lovers as in long ago ! XXII When that Estelle reclothed these happy walls She turned to rob them of their softest grace ; She would have shunned the legendary halls ; And when I spoke she turned away her face ; And then the woman in her ebbed apace And the white lilies mounted to her brow ; Then blood-red roses blossomed in their place ; And then she fled, — or stayed ! no matter how, For there the story ended, as it endeth now. The Rose of Death 91 THE ROSE OF DEATH It was a brown old convent-hall ; Far from the world it reared its wall In gardens of the sun ; And there were monks to pray within ; Pale monks, who scourged their souls of sin With ashes of penance, peace to win When their harsh day was done. II Oh, our good Christ in heaven above Healed them and clothed them with his love ; So well Christ by his power Loved them, he held back sudden death, But sent, to shape their passing breath, A white rose from no earthly wreath, To tell their dying hour. The Rose of Death 92 III Ever and aye, for gentle sign How Christ smiled on their lonely line, That rose of grace came down ; And always the dead saint for shrift Withdrew in cloister, where to sift His life's last pearls from the shore-drift To deck his burial-gown. IV "Mine eyes, would they might see the sign,' Quoth Carlos, "and that rose were mine, To blaze upon my couch ! Oh, long and long I wait the day, Thou alabaster Christ! to lay This sinful corse in earth away. And seal the rood's avouch !" The Rose of Death 93 Felix, how can he love his life : Carlos, why should he tire of strife: The frail frame and the strong? For Felix, health dwelt in the moon : His world held no such precious boon : Ah, sure, he should not care how soon Christ haled him to His throng! VI Yet so it was. At vesper bell Lame Felix dragged him from his cell, And dragged him back unblest ; And then he sank into his place, And lifted soon his weary face : In his brown couch the flower of grace, Christ's stainless rose, was pressed. The Rose of Death 94 VII "The Sign! and I," he said, "have died! The bridegroom taken from the bride : My hfe from me so soon ! While Carlos kneels for that cold kiss Until his winter's evening, this My youth fares ill, and may not miss Cruel eclipse at noon !" VIII There Felix gazed it in the eye, The Sign that came to help him die. Alas ! he could not pray ! Alas! alas! with ragged feet He creeps out to the argent-seat. And then, alas ! from the brown sheet He steals the rose away. The Rose of Death 95 IX Steals it away beneath his gown, And soon, alas ! the flower lays down Where no one sees him go ; He strews it where Saint Carlos sleeps ; Lays it on his smooth couch, and creeps Back to the vigil that he keeps, And breathings fast and slow. Betimes turned Carlos to his cell : And raised his eyes ; and straight must tell In gold all he did see ! New wisdom smoothed his visioned brow : Song kissed his lips : for him the bough Bloomed and bore fruit, and none knew how, Of earth's old poesy. The Rose of Death 96 XI *'0 coal from odorous incense-jar: O rose ! how sweet to me you are ! I burn you into my breast And live," he cried, "at last, at last ! Scar on my breast, I hold you fast ! Home pennant, I break you from the mast So sail we into the West!" XII Good Carlos counts his dying beads (The token lights him all he needs), His sins for to atone ; Before the knotted cross he kneels : Down on the blistered flags he seals His aching knees, till morning steals O'er him, and the white Son ; The Rose of Death 97 XIII He bends his beads again and again Till glory breaks in the East. Amen. All night, till night is dead And burning on her funeral pyre : All day, in light of that bright fire Till it dies out, the prostrate friar Humbles his wintry head : XIV Kneels in the fragrant twilight air : Kneels, till they find him murdered there, All crimson where he trod ; He had no white rose in his hand : There was no snow where he did stand : The token-flower burned like a brand : Turned red with his heart's blood ! The Rose of Death XV They stood and marveled, every one; They kneeled and said htish'd benison Where his white frame was shed; And they laid Carlos in the ground. Drew clods on him, and pressed him round, And laid the red rose on the mound Forever to mark his bed. XVI Felix they buried by his side ; And oh, they marveled how he died Whom Christ called not away ! And oh, they marveled at the bloom That sprung from Carlos' crimsoned tomb, And why nor bud nor blade May's loom Wove from his neighbor's clay ! The Rose of Death 99 XVII But most in this they marveled, how Nothing of white but failed, since now Saint Carlos died amain ; How murder lost all love had earned ; How the bright flower of omen burned No more ; Christ's grace no more returned, Nor aught of Sign again! Lo?G. THE SIN OF DAVID By STEPHEN PHILLIPS Author of " Ulysses," etc. Cloth 16 mo. $1.25 net "Ulysses" was accepted as proving Mr. Phillips's right to the title of "the greatest living poet of English speech." Constructive power and creative genius are rarely found in such perfect combination as in his brilliant dramas. The new play is not, however, biblical, as has been assumed since it was first announced under the title of " David and Bathsheba." The theme is clearly indicated by the title, but the play opens in the Army of Cromwell, and runs its course during the Eng- lish Civil War. ULYSSES A drama in a prologue and three acts By STEPHEN PHILLIPS Cloth 16 mo. $1.25 net " That a young man should in so short a time have sent us all back to read our Dante, our Josephus, and our Homer, is no small achievement, and that after reading them we have pronounced the young man's work not unworthy of mention in the same breath with the masters, is high enough praise." —Boston Budget. WHEN THE BIRDS GO NORTH AGAIN By MRS. ELLA HIGGINSON Author (jf "The Voice of April-land and other poems." Cloth 16 mo. $1.25 net "They have melody to an unusual degree, and, like her stories, show an ardent love of natural beauty. In emotion, they range from the merry to the gravest moods." — Providence Journal. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Avenue • New York THE DYNASTS A drama of the Napoleonic wars In three parts, nineteen acts, and one hundred and thirty scenes Cloth 12 mo. $1.50 net "The ripe, disinterested labor of a man who has always had a genius for getting at the human soul, and who in dealing with this great subject of the Napoleonic wars in a psychological manner, undertakes a large em- prise." — Chicaso Tribune. THE DIVINE VISION By A. E. Cloth 16 mo. $1.25 net " The volume, although small, is of very exquisite rarity and tran- scendent charm. Not only is its spirit one of ethereal beauty, but in form, too, it holds a level of fine unwontedness and abounds in single lines of haunting perfection and large melody."— The Boston Transcript. POEMS By GEORGE E. WOODBERRY Cloth 12 mo. $1.50 net "The Outlook has already commented very fully on the rare intellec- tual and poetic quality of Prof. Woodberry's work in verse. . . . Those who have been attracted to it in the past have found in it a quality of thought, of interest, and of art which gives it a permanent place in their affections."— 77/^ Outlook. SONGS OF MOTHERHOOD Selected by E. J. H. Cloth 16 mo. $1.25 ne This is a volume of poems for young mothers, and celebrates the beauty and miracle of motherhood. Strange as it may seem, there is in the market no book of this special kind and field. Every selection is cheerful ; thoughtfulness, hopefulness and inspiration are the keynotes. Some very unusual poems have been included, like those from Alma Tadema. William Canton, Henry Timrod, Richard Realf, T. B. Aldrich, Richard LeGallienne and Richard Watson Gilder. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Avenue • New York ^ MAR IS 1905t