Class r K. - By bequest of William Lukens vShoemaker '**'*«»» OWEN MEREDITH'S POEMS. FROM THE LONDON PRESS. "The gossip of tlie litprarv woi-lil long ago reroaled that the vo)>i (le plu))ie of ' Owen IMonHlith ' but lightly veiled tlie reality of 'Robert llulwer Lytton.' Something of Saxon strengtli lends nerve and muscle to his line, and the grand old Saxon music echoes in his strains."" — Literary. Gazette. " Some of the poems match in hoanty of language and grace of thought with such masteri>ieces of music as IIerrick"s, Oarew"s, Marvers, Tennyson"s, l\Ioorc"s, or Edgar Poe"s Every way this volume is remarkable."' — Atheticeum. " It is not often in tlie present dull and prosaic times that we meet with a volume of such elegant and original poetry The more Mr. Owen Meredith is read and understood, so much the more will he be pronounced to be one of tlie very lest poets — if not the best— of the present age."' — BtU's Messenger. " If passion, and fervour, and intellect, ever renewing the beau-" tiful even in the shadow of suffering, and language rippling nm- sically np to the marge of riiyme as waves break in murmurs on the beach, he iiulieatioiis of the true poet, we have them all here."— C/-(7/c. " To descri' e them honestly is to declare that they are the best things of their kind that have come before the i>ublic for many a day. Some of them an' ex([uisite in the extreme, displaying a fine sensibility and a thorough knowledge of human uature." — Morniiiii Chronicle. POEMS OWEN MEREDITH THE WANDERER AND C L Y T E M N E S T R A . BOSTON: TICKNOR AND FIKLDS M DCCC LIX. RIVERSIDE, CAMBRIDGE: PaiNTKD BY H. 0. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY. OiH. W. L. Shoemaker 7 S '06 CONTENTS. Page Dkdication. To J. F ix. Prologue. I'art 1 17 Part ir 25 Part III 28 BOOK I. IN ITALY. The Magic Land 35 Desire 36 Fatality 39 A Vision 40 Fros 42 Indian Love Song 43 Morning and Meeting 45 The Cloud 47 lloot and Leaf 47 Warnings 48 A Fancy 51 Once ; 53 Since 56 A Love Letter :." 58 Condemned Ones 64 The Storm 66 The Vampyre 69 Change 71 A Chain to Wear 75 Silence 75 News 78 Count Kinaldo Rinaldi 79 The Last Message 82 Venice 84 On the Sea 85 BOOK II. IN FRANCE. " Prcnsus in iEgteo " 89 A TFiitresol 91 Terra Incognita .• , 94 A Kemembrance 97 Madame la Marquise 98 VI CONTENTS. Pagre The Novel -. 1(»1 Aux Italicns , 103 rroi:;ress 107 The Tortrait 108 Astmte Ill At Home during tlie Ball 113 At Home after >he Ball 116 All Cal\^ * * * 119 The Chess-Board 130 Song 131 The Last Kemonstrance 132 Sorcery. To 135 Adieu,' iMignonne, ma Belle . 137 To ISIignonne 138 Compensation 141 Tran^latiiMis from Peter Konstuxl: " Voici le Bois que ma Sainctc Angelctte ". . 142 " Oaelie pour cette Nuict " " 143 " Page SUV ^loy " 143 " Les Espices sont ii Ceres " 144 " ]\Ia Douce Jouveucc " 144 [BOOK 111. IN ENGLAND The Aloe 146 " Medio de Fonte Leporum " 149 The Death of King llacon 150 " Carne Diem " 152 The Fount of Truth 153 ^lidges 157 The last Time that I met Lady Ruth 160 Matrimonial Counsels 161 Sea-Saw 163 Babylonia 165 BOOK IV. IN SAVITZERLAND. The Heart and Nature 172 A Quiet Moment 174 Nienia3 176 BOOK V. IN HOLLAND. ' Autumn 180 Leafless Hours 180 On my Twcnty-f()urth Year 181 .lacqucline . . . .' 183 CONTENTS. VII MacromicroH 188 MyHtcrv 100 The Cjitif.icic of Love 198 'l"hc I'cddlcr 200 A (ilioMt Story , 202 Small I'ooplo 20;3 MotempMyclioHis 204 To tlic (^uccn ^f Serpents 205 lilucboard 206 I'sitimji 207 (ioirif^ buck fifr'.iin 207 The CiiHtle of Kirif,' Miicbetli 208 I)o!itli-in-Lifc 209 Kirif,' lAmoH 209 The l-'ugitivc 211 'I he Shore 212 The North Sea 214 A Xi;^lit in tlie FiHherman'B lint: I'art I. — The FiHlKirrnan'H Danghter 217 Tart 11. — 'I'he I.ej^end of Lord KoHencrantz . . . 220 I'art flL— Daybreak 223 Piirt I v.— lireakfaHt 226 A Drenm 227 K irifj Solomon ! 228 (Jordelia 231 " Ye seek Jesu.s of Nazareth whieh was crueified: ". 233 'i"o Cordelia 237 A Letter to Cordeh'a 240 Failure 242 Misanthropes 243 1500 K VI J'AMNOENKHTS A I'rayer 248 J'iiithanasia 250 The Soul's Science 257 A I'salm of Confession 258 Kequiescat 205 KflLOTJUP^ fart 1 200 I'art II 270 Part III 275 / CLrrKMNESTIlA. Clytemnestra 2H7 Good-Night in the Porch 878 VIU CONTENTS. Page The Earl's Eeturn 389 A Soul's Loss 415 The Artist 420 The Wife's Tragedy 427 MINOR POEMS. The Parting of Launcelot and Guenevere 450 A Sunset Fancy 459 Associations 461 Meeting again 462 Aristocracy 463 The Mermaiden 463 At her Casement 464 A Farewell 465 An Evening in Tuscany 465 Song 469 Sea-Side Songs. 1 471 II 472 The Stimmer-Time that was 473 Elayne Le Blanc 474 To 482 Queen Guenevere 482 The neglected Heart ^ 483 Appearances 485 How the Song was made 486 Retrospections. . , .' 486 Thy Voice across my Spirit falls 487 The ruined Palace 488 A Vision of Virgins 488 Leoline 492 Spring and Winter 494 King Hermandiaz 496 Song 497 The Swallow 498 Contraband 498 Evening 499 Adon 500 The Prophet 501 Wealth 501 Want 501 A Bird at Sunset 502 In Travel 503 Changes 505 Judicium Paridis 506 Night 513 Song 513 Forbearance 514 THE WANDEREK. DEDICATION. I'O J. F. Ah, in tlio launil'H niurninroiiH loavfs ''I'vvas fabled, onoo, a Vlr;^iri dwelt; WiUiiri till; poct'H f»a;iO yet heaves 'I'lie [)oet'.s Heart, and loves or grieves Or triinnplis, as it ielt. A liiirnan s[)irit liere reeords '11m; annals of its human strife. A Innnan hand hath toueh'd these chords. These son<^s may all be idhi words : And yet — they once wer(; life. I f(av(; u\y harp to Memory, She sung of hope, when hope was young, Of youth, as youth no nion; may be ; And, sinc(; sIk; sung of youth, to thee, Friend of my youth, hIk; sung. For all youtli seeks, all mjtnhood needs, All youth and manhood rarely find : A strength more strong than codes or creeds, In lofty thoughts and lovely deeds Keveal'd to heart and mind ; A staff to stay, a star to guide ; A sp(;ll to so'jthe, a power to raise ; A faith by fortune firmly tri(;d ; A judgment resolute to preside O'er days at strife with days. 11 DEDICATION. O large in lore, in nature sound ! O man to me, of all men, dear ! All tliese in thine my life hath found, And force to tread the rugged ground Of daily toil, with cheer. Accept — not these, the broken cries Of days receding far from me — But all the love that in them lies. The man's heart in the melodies, The man's heart honouring thee ! Sighing I sung ; for some sublime Emotion made my music jar : The forehead of this restless time Pales in a fervid, passionate clime, Lit by a changeful star ; And o'er the Age's threshold, traced In characters of hectic fire, The name of that keen, fervent-faced And toiling seraph, hath been placed. Which men have call'd Desire. But thou art strong where, even of old, The old heroic strength was rare, In high emotions self-controll'd. And insight keen, but never cold, To lay all falsehood bare ; Despising all those glittering lies Which in these days can fool mankind ; But full of noble sympathies For what is genuinely wise. And beautiful, and kind. And thou wilt pardon all the much Of weakness which doth here abound, Till music, little prized as such. DEDICATION. With thee find worth from one true touch Of nature in its sound. Tho' mighty spirits are no more. Yet spirits of beauty still remain. - Gone is the Seer that, by the shore Of lakes as limpid as his lore, Lived to one ceaseless strain And strenuous melody of mind. But one there rests that hath the power To charm the midnight moon, and bind All spirits of the sweet south wind, And steal from every shower That sweeps green England cool and clear, The violet of tender song. Great Alfred ! long may England's ear His music fill, his name be dear To English bosoms long 1 And one ... in sacred silence sheathed That name I keep, my verse would shame. The name my lips in prayer first breathed Was his : and prayer hath yet bequeath'd Its silence to that name ; — Which yet an age remote shall hear, Borne on the fourfold wind sublime By Fame, where, with some faded year These songs shall sink, hke leaflets sere, In avenues of Time. Love on my harp his finger lays ; His hand is held against the chords. My heart upon the music weighs, And, beating, hushes foolish praise From desultory words : V DEDICATION. And Childhood steals, with wistful grace, 'Twixt him' and me ; an infant hand Chides gently back the thoughts that chase The forward hour, and turns my face To that remember d land Of legend, and the Summer sky, And all the wild Welsh waterfalls. And haunts where he, and thou, and I Once wander'd with th(^ wandering Wye, And scaled the airy walls Of Chepstow, from whose ancient height We watch'd the liberal sun go down ; Then onward, thro' the gradual night, Till, ere the moon was fully bright. We supp'd in Monmouth Town. And tho', dear friend, thy love retains The choicest sons of song in fee. To thee not less I pour these strains, Knowing that in thy heart remains A little place for me. Nor wilt thou all forget the time Tho' it be past, in which together. On many an eve, with many a rhyme Of old and modern bards sublime We soothed the summer weather : And, citing all he said or sung With praise reserved for bards like him, Spake of that friend who dwells among The Apennine, and there hath strung A harp of Anakim ; Than whom a mightier master never Touch'd the deep chords of hidden things; Nor error did from truth dissever DEDICATION. With keener glance ; nor made endeavour To rise on bolder wings In those high regions of the soul Where thought itself grows dim with awe. But now the star of eve hath stole Thro' the deep sunset, and the whole Of heaven begins to draw The darkness round me, and the dew. And my pale Muse doth fold her eyes. Adieu, my friend; my guide, adieu ! May never night, 'twixt me and you, With thoughts less fond arise ! The Author. Flokence, Se2)i, 24, 1857. THE WANDERER rilOLOGUP]. PART 1. 8wki<:t are the rosy ineniories of tlie lips, That first kiss'd ours, albeit they kiss no more : Sweet is the si<;ht of'sunsot-saihnb'iiRSK ofjiii filing >vorl(I, beloved Ni^lit ! Our (lays aro iVotl'iil cliildrcn, weak to bi'ar A little pain : tlu'y wrangle, wound, and (i' hand that I'.lls Sleep's o[)iate: thine the mother's patient bi-east : Thine, too, the mother'^ unite reproaehfid eyes. That }2,H'ntly look our an<>ry noise to shame When all is done : we dare not meet their blame : They aro so silent, and they arc so wise. Thou that from this lone easeuuMit, while I write, Seen in the shadowy upsprinji;, swift dost post "Without a sound (he polar star to linht, Not idly did tlu' Chaldee shepherds boast \\y thy stern lights nian's life ai'i^ht to read. All day he hides himself from his own lu>arr, Swajiuers and struts, and })lays his foolish part: Thou only seest him as he is indeed. For who eould telou tiilse woi'th, or iiivt' the nod Amono- his fellows, or this dust disown, AVith nought between him and those lights of (lod, Left awfully alone with the Alone V Who vaunt hliih words, whose least heart's beatlnjj; jars 'i'he hush of sentinel worlds that take mute note Of all beneath yon judgnient plains remote? — A universal coiriiizanee of stars! rUULOGUK. — I'AKT 111. 2'J And yet, O njoiitlest an rilK WA.NDKKKU. II()i)u< iVoiM tlu< I\«>;iI(mI Hall lliisht Hcaiily stands, Miisiii<4 l>i>si(U> luM" coslU r«turl> alono : Kill wliilo slu' loosiMis, taint, with jowi'lIM liauds, VUv (liaiuoiuls tVom luM'dark liair, diu^ by oiu', Thou whis|uM'(>st in hor iMupty lu>art tlio naino Ol' OIU' that diod luNirt-brokon lor \\vv salv«^ liOUii' siiu'i', and all at onco tho roil'd lioU-snako Turns stiniiing in liis i\mi, and pomp is slianio. Tliou roini'st to tlu> man ol' many ploasiiri's \\'itl»ont a joy. that, sonlhss, plays lor souls, \\"hoso lil'o's H sipiandiM'M hoap ol" plnndorM troas- nr»'S. \VhiK\ listless loitrrinii l>y, Uu' monnMil n)lls From nothiiii*- on to nothing. From tho sludt' l\M'i'hanri> ho takos a rynii* hook. Pojvhanc*' .\ doa.d llowor stains \Uc K'.ivos. 'I'ho old ro- n\am'o Kotnrns. Kw m«>rn, pirrhani'O, ho shools hiin- ThoM oomost, with a touch o\' si'orn, to mo. That o'or iho hrokou wiuo-oup ol' n\y youth Sit hroodiuij; hon>, aiui poiutt>st siloutly To Ihino um'haniiin<> stars. YosI yos I in irulh, 'I'hoN soiMU moro roav'hloss now than wlioii ot' yoro .Vbovo iho jutiniist laud I watoht thoin shiuo. Aiul all amonti' thoir oryptio sor[>ontiiu> Wi'Ut oliuihinn llopo, now plaiu'ts to o\[)K>ro. Not for tho tU'sh that t;ulos -alt ho' dooay I'his throuii'M motropolis ot' sonso o'orsproad : Not I'or tho joys ot' youth, that floot away Whon tlu> wiso swallows to tho south aro llod ; Not that, bouoath tho l.iw whioh tados tho llowor, An oarthly ln^po should witluM- in iho oolls Of (his poor oarthly houso ol' lifo, whoro dwoILs IJnsoon tho solitarv rhinkiu<'-l\>wor ; ii'.iil, lliJil, vvli«-.r<', fadcM (lie flf»\vcr tin; wi-i- achieve. The, iinpeiiMhalih; IVoiii the. lhiii;/H ihal. |»e.nHh, I'dv l>rf)ken vowh, and we.ake.n'd will, I j^ricvc. Kiiowiiie; t,liafc iii;.diL oC all in r!re,e,[)iii;.' on VVheicrMi can iifj man work, I Horr';w iriOrtf, I"'(»r what, in j/ain'd, and not lor what tn hnt : Nor- rnonrn alone what'rt undone, hut whal-'.-s done. VVhal li<.'ht, i'loui yonder- windlc-MH cloud jele^asM, In widening u[) the, pe.akH of yon \>\ncU hilln '.' It, iH the (ull moon in the myntic eawt., VVhoHe, coming half the unravi«hl- hrine deepH divirn?, 'Ihe orb(Ml H[»l(jndour Hi-t-iuH to Hlide, and nhine. Aslope, t,he rollin;.^ va[>ourH in the vale. Ahio.'id tlu! Htars maJeMiif; li;.'ht, \h (lun;/. And t.hey f'a,d«'. hrlj/hteuinnr ijp t he Mtep.s of Xi^ht. ('old inyMtericH of (he mi4pidery Saturn in hi.s wehn of fire; VVIiel,||(;i the, nnecjuHeiouH de^WH no more, than thin: th>tt you are, still, I Jul lie, i.s moverj : lie, ^'0(rs, hut you remain. T'oolM w;n the fiuman v;i,nity that wrote JStran;/e name.H in .astral lire on yonder |joI(;. U2 I'llK NVAN1>KKKU. Who ami wli.il wcrr tlii'v — in wli.it ;\)Xo i'immoIo-— 'I'liiii scffiwlM weak hoaslson von sidtM'ial scroll ? Orion shines. Now stu'k lor NiuuHxl. \VhiM'o ? Osiris is a. fabU', and no more: lint Sirius hnrns as liri^hlly as of yori'. 'lMu>r«' is no shade on Kcrenici^'s hair. \ i)U that onthisl thl^ Pyramids, as they OutlasI their lonn(K>rs, loll ns of our doom! You that. si'<> liOve di^pai'l, and lOrror sti*ay, And'(iiMiius toiling- ill ii s[)hMidid tond), l/dve those M^yptian slavi'S : and Hope deeeivM: And Strength still l'ailin}>' whiMi the jiioal is near: And Tassion pareht : and Kajiturtwlaspt to Fear: And Trust hetray'd : and MiMuory l)i>re.ivM ! N'ain (pu'stion ! Shall soini^ otluM" voiei> di^elai'e \Vhat my soul knows not ol" luu'selt'y Ah no! , J)und) patient Monsti'r, <2;riiivini>' every wlu're, Thou auswiM-est nothiui;' wITudj I did not know. Tlu^ broken tVamneuls of ourselvi's W(^ seek In alien forms, and h*avt^ our lives behind. In our own nieuioi'ies oui' ol* uiournino' shall be heard; lint one l>i'tween the sunsi't and moon rise : Nivir ni«i;hl, yet nei!ihbouriu»i- day : a twilit land, And peopled by a melaneholy band - The souls that loved aiul t'ail'd — with lu>peh>ss eyes; More like that Hades of the autitiue .ri'tMls ; A laud kA' vales foilorn. wlure I'liou^ht .-hall roam Iveiiretl'ul, vi>id ot" wholesoiuv> human dev'ds. .Vu endless, homvdess, piuin>; after liouu', ruoiociii". - r.XK'i" ii 33 To vvliicli all si;;lils and sdiiikIm sliaJI iiiinistcr III vain : —white rosc^s ^liiimicriiiiL!; all aloiw^ III an (W(iniii;uii, Want, wilhoiil, hone, and incniory saddcniiiL; all. All (•onL;r(';^a,l(Ml liiinirc and despair Shall wand(M- there, thro' some old in;i/e of wroiio' : — Olthelia, drowiiiii^i, in her own deal,h-son;jj, And l''irst-L()ve strant>le,d in his «!;old(Mi hair. Ah well, I'oi' tJi(»se thai oviMconie, no donhl, The crowns arc; ready; striMi^i^tJi is to t,h(5 stroii;jj. r.iit, we — Itiit: we: W(sak hearts that. s whose, lierit;i;i;e was l)(d'ore The spluM-es, and owes no homajfc^ t.o the sun. Ill my own l)roa,st a mightier world I hear Than a,ll those orbs on orbs about, nu^ roll'iil, whirls, and sl«',e.ps,and tnriisa,ll heaven one way. So, strong as At-hiH, Hhonid the spirit, stand, .'I 34 THE WANDERER. And turn the jireat globe round in lier right hand, For recreation of her sovereign sway. Ah yet ! — For all, I shall not use my power. Nor reign within the light of my own home, Till speculation fades, and that strange hour Of the dej^arting of the soul is come ; Till all this wrinkled hnsk of care falls by. And my immortal nature stands upright In her perpetual morning, and the light Of suns that set not on Eternity ! BOOK I. IN ITALY. THE MAGIC LAND. By woodland belt, by ocean bar, The full south breeze our foreheads fann'd, And, under many a yellow star, We di'op{)'d into the Magic Land. There, every sound and every sight Means more than sight or sound elsewhere ; Each twilight star a two-fold light; Each rose a double redness, there. By ocean bar, by woodland belt, Our silent course a syren led. Till dark in dawn began to melt, I'hrough the wild wizard-work o'erhead. A murmur from the violet vales ! A glory in the goblin dell! There, Beauty all her breast unveils, And Music pours out all her shell. We watch'd, toward the land of (breams, The fair moon draw the nmrmuring main ; A single thread of silver beams Was made the monster's rippling chain. .">(> TllK \VANI>KUKlt. Wo hoard far olV (ho syroii's sotio- ; Wo onnght. tho nlonm of soa-maid's hair. Tlio iiliiutnorinii islos and nicks ainonii-, A\'o mtncd through sj^arkhuii' ])urpli^ air. Thou I\h>rning vdso, ami suioto tVoui far, llor olliti harps oVr land and soa ; Aud woodland bolt, and i^'oan bar, . Vo ono swoot noic, si^h'd " ltal\ I" DKSIKR TilK o-oldon Planet ol" tho Ocoldont Warm tVon\ his bath conios \\\\ V tho ros\ air. And yon i\Kiy toll which way tho l>ay!i;^hl went, Only by his last footsteps shining there : For no>v ho dwells Sea-doop o' tho other shore ot" the woi-ld. And winds himself in the pink-mouthod shells ; ()r, with his ilnsky, sun-dyed Priest, AValks ii\ tho uarilens of tho ooi-iveons East ; Or hides in Indian hills; or saileth where Floats, curiously curl'd, Leagues out of sight and soont ot' spii-y trees, The cream-white nautilus on sapjdiriuo seas. l>ut hero tho Night from tho hill-top yonder Steals all alone, nor yet too soon ; 1 have sighed for, ami sought for, her ; sadder and fonder (.\ll thro' the lonely anil lingering noon) Than a maiden that sits by tho lattice to ponder On vows mailo in vain, long since, under tho moon, llor dusky hair she hath shaken free, And her tender eves are wiKl with love; DKHiiti;. 37 And lior balmy bosom lies baro to inc. She, hath li^^hted the seven sweet Pleiads above ; She is brc-athin;^ ov(;r the (Jreainin^ sea, She is rnurniurinj^ \()w in the eedar er, Sinkin;^, slowly, in th(; li(juid W(!Ht : For the night's heart knoweth best Love by silenee most exprest. I'he nif^htinj^ales keep mute Kach one his fairy flutC!, "Wh(!re the mute; stars look down, And th(! laurels close the green sea-side; Only one amorous lute Twangs in the distant town, From some lattice 0[)(;n'd wide : 'J"he climbing rose and vine are hen;, are there, On the terrace, around, above m(; : The lone Lediean * lights from yon enchanted air Look down upon my spii-it, like a spirit's eyes that love me. IIow beantiful, at night, to muse on the mountain height. Moated in f)urpl<; air, arnl all alone ! IIow beautiful, at night, to look into the light Oi" loving (;yes, when loving lips lean down unto our own ! Jiut tli(;re is no hand in mine, no hand in mine, Nor any tender cheek against me prest : Jfovv (jft. uriw(;ari«;d, liavo we Hpciit tlio iiightH, 1'ill fchc Lfdajari HtarH, ho faiiied for love, Woncler'd at U8 from above. ' — Cowley, SS rilK W \M)KUKI{. O slais that o\'v \\\o shiiu\ I plm\ I piiu', I pine, \\\i\\ ho|U'K'ss taiu'ios liidilcii in ;ui I'vor-lumm'i- inii' bri\ist ! () wlioro, O wheri> is slu< that slu^nKl he Iumc. Tho spirit my spirit (Ireanii'th ? AVitli tlu> passionate eves, so (loop, so dear, \Vl\ere a seeret sweetness hi'anieth ? O sleepeth she, with her soft <>ohl hair Streaniinii' ovtM* the fragrant pillow, And a riel) dream olowini; in her lipe ehetk. Far away, 1 know not whtMv, l>y Kuu^ly shores, wlu're thi^ tnmblinii" Inllow Sounds all niiiht in an enierahl ereek y Or doth shi^ lean o'er the easement sttMie When the day's dull noise is done with. And the seeptred spirit renuMints alone Into hei" Km>i-nsurpeil tlu'one, l>y the stairs the stars are won with'? Hearing the white owl I'all Where the river draws thro' the meadows below, By the beeehes brown, and the broken wall. His silverv, seaward waters, slow To the orean bonndinji' all : \Vith, here a star on his «»lowing breast, Antl, there a hunp do\vn-streanunii\ And a nuisieal motion towards the west Where the lonii" white elitVs are oleaming ; \N'liiK\ t'.ir in tlu' nu)onli>ihf, lies at rest A ureal ship, asleep and ilreaminu- ? ()r doth she linuer yet Amouii' l>^'i' sisters and brothers. In thi" cdianiber wlu>re happy t;ut>s are met, Distinet from all the others V As my star up ther<\ be it ue\t'r so biiiiht. No other star resembles. Poih she steal to the window, and strain her si>'ht KATAMTY. .{!) (Whilo tlio |M'.ul ill Imt warm hair troniblcs) Over lliii (lark lln; htway the records of all other vows Of idol-worshi]) faded silently Out of the foldino; leaves of memory, Forever and Ibrever ; and my heart became Pure white at once, to keep in its completeness, And i)erfect purity, llcr mystic name. INDIAN LOVE SONG. My body sleeps : my heart awakes. My lij)S to breathe thy name are mowd In slumber's ear: then sluml»er breaks; And I am drawn to thee, beloved. Thou (h'awest me, thou drawest me. Thro' slei^), thro' night. I hear the rilh- And hear the k'oj)ard in the hills, And down the dark I feel to thee. The vineyards and the villajjes Were silent in the vales, tlie rocks. I ibllowed past the myrrhy trees. And by the footsteps of the Hocks. AVild honey, dropt from stone to stone. Where bees have been, my i)ath suggcst< 44 THE WAN1)EK*EU. The winds are in the eagles' nests. The moon is hid. I walk alone. Thou drawest me, thou drawest me Across the glimmerinij; wildernesses, And drawest me, my love, to thee, With ilove's eyes hidden in thy tresses. The world is many : my love is one. 1 find no likeness for my love. The cinnamons grow in the grove : The Golden Tree grows all alone. who Lath seen lier wondrous hair? Or seen my dove's eyes in the woods'? Or found her voice upon the air ? Her steps along the solitudes ? Or where is beauty like to hers ? She draweth me, she draweth me. 1 sought her by the incense-tree, And in the aloes, and in the firs. Where art thou, O my heart's delight. With dove's eyes hidden in thy locks ? ]\ly hair is wet with dews of niglit. JMy feet are torn u[)on the rocks. The cedarn scents, the spices, fail About me. Strange and stranger seems The path. There comes a sound of streams Above the darkness on the vale. No trees drop gums ; but poison llowers From rifts and cletts all round me fall. The perfumes of thy midnight bowers, The fragrance of thy chambers, all Is drawing me, is drawing me. Thy baths prepare ; anoint thine hair : 0[)en the window : meet me there : 1 come to thee, to thee, to thee I MORNING AND MEETING. 45 Thy lattices are dark, my own. Thy doora are still. My love look out. Arise, my dove with tender tone. The camphor-clusters all about Are whitening. Dawn breaks silently. And all my spirit, with the dawn Expands; and, slowly slowly drawn. Thro' mist and darkness moves toward thee. MORNING AND MEETING. One yellow star, the largest and the last Of all the lovely night, was fading slow (As fades a happy moment in the past) Out of the changing east, when, yet aglow With dreams her looks made magical, from sleep I waked ; and oped the lattice. Like a rose All the red-opening morning 'gan dis(.'lose A ripen'd light upon the distant steep. A bell was chiming thro' the crystal air From the high convent-church upon the hill. The folk were loitering by to matin prayer. The church-bell call'd me out, and seem'd to fill The air with little hopes. I reach'd the door Before the chauntcd hynm began to rise. And float its li(piid latin melodies O'er pious groups about the marble floor. Breathless, I slid among the kneeling folk. A little bell went tinkling thro' the pause Of inward i)ra}er. Then forth the low chaunt broke Among the glooming aisles, that thro' a gauze Of sunlight glimmer'd. A{\ riiK w \M)1j:kk. 'n.icklv ihn.l.l.M .Mv blood. 1 saw, (li\rk-ti"('ssiMl in llu' I'osf-lil sliadc, Many a littlo dusk lialian maid, Kni'idinj:; willi I'l'ivciit l'ar(> clost" wlioro I stdod. 'V\h' M\o^nin^■, all a n»is(y splendour, shook OiHM) in the nn«2;hty winiUnv's llanu>-lit wobs. It touch 'd tlu> t'l-own'd A|u)stli> with his hook, And bri^hten'd wIumt the sea of' jasper ebbs About those Saints' white I'eet tliat stand serene Isaeh with his lej^cnd, ea(d» in his own hue Attii-'d : some beryl-j^'olden : sa|>phiit'-bbie Some : and some luby-red : sonii' iMuerald-ureen. \\'lieitdronj, in rainbow-wreatlu's, the lii h liuht rollM Atoui the sm>wy altar, sparklini>; tdoan. Thi^ orpin ii,i'oanM and piui'd, then, <;rowinws I'arthward, I'l^els tln> hills 1h>w tc>o, and falls - 1 tli'i>pt lu'side luM\ l<\>elinii scem'd to t'xpand And closi> : a mist ol' nuisic liU'd the air: And, when it i-eased in hcav»M\, I was aware That, thro' a ra|)turi», I had torn ht her hand. innyy am» i.iai IIK ('LOUD. \Vi III slmpti lo ,sli;i|)t', all tluy, And cliaii^ic^ (o changes by Ibiclaiid, liilli, and li.iy, 'riii^ cloud conn's down (Vom wandi'i iiii; willi ilm wind, 'i'lii'o' {j^looiu and i^Icani across llic j^rccii waslt^ seas ; And, U'av'm;;; llic whilo clilVand lone Iowim- liarr To ('iu|)ly ail-, SlipH down (lie wiiidlcss W('sl,aiid jj^^rows dc- (iiicd In splciidoiir Ity d('}i,i(M'H. And, hlowii by CiVCM'y wind ( )!" wonder tbro' all rofiioiiH oC llic! mind, l''i'oni liopci lo lear, Iroin doidtl. to swcd, dcNpilc, ( 'lian^iiifi; all nlia|K',s, and niin^lin;^ snow willi (ire, 'riic tlion;i,lit of licp (b'secnds, ,slr«^|)S o'er llui bonnds < )!' passion, j^rows, ami ronmis Its iano, soft in sound, To make music when speech wanders, Poets reverently bound, O'er whose i)ages rapture ponders. Canvas, brushes, hues, to catch Fleeting forms in vale or mountain : And an evening star to Avatch When all's still, save one sweet fountain. Ah ! I idle time away With imjjossible Ibnd fancies ! For a lover lives all day In a land of lone romances. But the hot light o'er the city I)ro])s — and see ! on fire departs. And the night comes down in pity To the longing of our hearts. Bind thy golden hair from falling, O my love, my one, my own ! 'Tis for thee the cuckoo's calling With a note of tenderer tone. Up the hill-side, near and nearer, 'IMirough the vine, the corn, the flowers. Till the very air grows dearer. Neighbouring our pleasant bowers. ONCE. 53 Now I pass llie last Podere : There, tlio city lies beliind me. See her ilntterinn; like a fairy O'er the hapi)y grass to find me ! ONCE. A FALLING star that shot across The intricate and twinkling dark Vanisht, yet k\i\ no sense of loss Throughout the wide ethereal arc Of those serene and solemn skies 'I'hat round the dusky j)rospect rose, And ever seem'd to rise, and rise, Through regions of unreach'd repose. Far, on the windless mountain-range, One (!rInison sparklet died : the blue Flush'd with a brilliance, faint and strange, The ghost of daylight, dying too. But half-reveal'd, each terrace urn (jlimmer'd, Avhere now, in filmy flight, We watch'd i-eturn, and still return, The blind bats searching air for sight. With sullen fits of fleeting sound, Borne half asleep on slumbrous air, The drowsy beetle humm'd around, And pass'd, and oft repass'd us, there ; Where, hand in hand, our looks alight With thoughts our pale lips left untold, We sat, in that delicious night. On that dim terrace, green and old. 54 THE WANDERER. Deep down, for off, the city lay, When forth from all its spires was swept A music o'er our souls ; and they To music's midmost meanings leapt ; And, crushing some delirious cry Against each other's lips, we clung Together silent, while the sky Throbbing with sound around us hung: For, borne from bells on music soft. That solemn hour went forth thro' heaven, To stir the starry airs aloft. And thrill the purple pulse of even. O happy hush of heart to heart ! O moment molten thro' with bliss ! O Love, delaying long to part That first, fast, individual kiss ! Whereon two lives on glowing lips Hung- claspt, each feeling fold in fold, Like daisies closed with crimson tips. That sleep about a heart of gold. Was it some drowsy rose that moved ? Some dreaming dove's pathetic moan ? Or was it my name from lips beloved ? And was it thy sweet breath, mine own. That made me feel the tides of sense O'er life's low levels rise with might, And pour my being down the immense Shore of some mystic Infinite ? " Oh, have I found thee, my soul's soul ? My chosen forth from time and space ! And did we then break earth's control ? And have I seen thee face to face ? ONCE. 65 " Close, closer to thy home, my breast, Closer thy darling arms enfold ! I need such wai-mth, for else the rest Of life will freeze me dead with cold. " Long was the search, the effort long, Ere I compell'd thee from thy sphere, I know not with what mystic song, I know not with what nightly tear : " Bnt thou art here, beneath whose eyes My passion falters, even as some Pale wizard's taper sinks, and dies, When to his spell a spirit is come. " My brow is pale with much of pain : Though I am young, my youth is gone : And, shouldst thou leave me lone again, I think I could not live alone. " As some idea, half divined. With tumult Avorks within the brain Of desolate genius, and the mind Is vassal to imperious pain, " For toil by day, for tears by night. Till, in the sphere of vision brought. Rises the beautiful and bright Predestined, but relentless Thought; " So, gathering up the dreams of years, Thy love doth to its destined seat Rise sovran, thro' the light of tears — Achieved, accomplisht, and complete ! " I fear not now lest any hour Should chill the lips my own have prest ; For I possess thee by the power Whereby I am myself possest. 50 THE WANDKUKR. " These eyes must lose their onidinn; Ijnrht : Those li]>s from thim*, I know, must sever Oh looks and lips may disunito, lUit over love is love Ibrovor!" SINCE. WoRT>s like to those were said, or droam'd (How long since!) on a nioht divine, By lips from which sucli rai)ture streamed I cannot doom those lij)s were mine. The (lay comes \\\) ahovo the roofs, All sallow from a nii>ht of rain ; The sound of foot, and wheels, and hoofs In the blurr'd street begins again : The same old toil — no end — no aim ! The same vile babble in my oars ; The same unmeaning smiles: the same Most miserable dearth of tears. The same dull sound : the same dull lack Of lustre in the level gi'ay : It seems like Yesterday come back AV'ith his old things, and not To-day. But now and then her name will fall From careless lii)s with little ])raisc, On this dry shell, and shatter all The smooth indill'erence of my days. They chatter of her — deem her light — The apes and liars ! tlu'v who know As well to sound the unlathom'd Night As her impejietrablc woe ! SINCE. 57 And here, wliere Slander's scorn is split, And Kin:u, My wildest Avisli was vassal to thy will : IMy hauiihtiost hopo, a ponsiouor on tliy smile, Wliioli (lid with liiiht my barren heino- (ill, As moonliiiht glorifies some desert isle. I never thonght to know what T have known, — The raptnre, dear, orbein;:!: loved by yon : I never thonght, within my lu>art, to own One wish so blest that yon shonld share it too : Nor ever did 1 deen\. eon(ein])latini>- The many sorrows in this place ot']>ain, 80 strange a sorrow to my lite eould eling. As, being thus loved, to be beloved in vain. l>nt now we know the best, the Avorst. AVo liavc Interr'd, and ]>rematnrely, and unknown, Our youth, our hearts, our hopes, in one small grave, "Whence we must wander, Avidow'd, to our own. And it' we comfort not eai-h other, what Shall comtbrt ns, in the dark days to come ? Not the light laughter of the Avorld, and not The taees and the lirelight of (bnd home. And so T write to you ; and write, and write, Vov tlie mere sake of writing to you, dear. AVhat can 1 tell yon, that yon know not ? Night Is deepening thro' the rosy atmosphere About the lonely easement of this room. Which you have left tamlliar with the grace That grows where you have been. And on the gloom 1 ahuost fancy I can see your face. Not pale with pain, and tears restraln'd for me, As when 1 last beheld it ; but as first. A LOVK LKTTKK. Gl A (Ircarn ofr;i[)tMrc and of f)f)0.sy, Ul)Oii Jiiy youth, like (Jawti on dark, it burst. rercliancc I sliall not ever sec ajijain 'J'liat lace. I know tliat 1 shall never see Its radiant bcjauty as f saw it then, Save by tins lonely lamp of memory, Willi childhood's starry graces lingering yet 'I the rosy orient of young womanhood ; And eyes like woodland vi(jlets newly wet ; And li[)S that left their meaning in my blood ! I will not say to you what I might say To one less worthily loved, less worthy love. I will not say ..." Forget the f)ast. Be gay. And let the all ill-judging world api)rove Light in your eyes, and laught(!r on your lij)." 1 will not say ..." Dissolve i;i thought forever Our sorrowful, but sacres by Adonis bled, Doubtless were not so red. I comb'd her hair into curls of gold, And I kiss'd her lips till her lips were warm ; And 1 bathed her body in moonlight cold, Till she grew to a living form : Till she stood up }>old to a magic of old, And walk'd to a mutter'd charm — Life-like, without alarm. And she walks by me, and she talks by me, Evermore, night and day ; For she loves me so, that, wlierever I go, She follows me all the way — 70 THE WANDERER. This corpse — you would almost say There pined a soul in the clay. Her eyes are so bright at the dead of night That they keep me awake with dread ; And my life-blood foils in my veins, and pales At the sight of her lips so red : For her foce is as white as the pillow by night Where she kisses me on my bed : All her gold hair outspread — Neither alive nor dead. I would that this woman's head Were less gohlen about the hair : I would her lips were less red, And her face less deadly fair. For this is the worst to bear — How came that redness there ? 'Tis my heart, be sure, she eats for her food ; And it makes one's whole llesh creep To think that she drinks and drains my blood Unawares, when I am asleep. How else could those red lips keep Their redness so damson-deep ? There's a thought like a serpent, slips Ever into my heari't and head, — There are plenty of women, alive and human, One migiit woo, if one wish'd, and wed — Women with hearts, and brains, — ay, and lips Not so very terribly red. But to house with a corpse — and she so fair ! AVith that dim, unearthly, golden hair. And those sad, serene, blue eyes. With their looks from who knows where, Which Death has made so wise, W^ith the grave's own secret there — It is more than a man can bear ! CHANGE. 71 It were better for me, ere I came nigh her, This corpse— ere I look'cl upon her, Had they burn'd my body in flame and fire With a sorcerer's dishonour. For when the Devil hath made his lair, And lurks in the eyes of a fair young woman, (To grieve a man's soul with her golden hair And break his heart, if his heart be human,) Would not a saint despair To be saved by fast or prayer From perdition made so fair ? CHANGE. She is unkind, unkind ! On the Avindy hill, to-day, I sat in the sound of the wind. I knew what the wind would say. It said ... or seemed to my mind . . . *' The flowers are falling away. The summer," ... it said, ..." will not stay, And Love will be left behind." The swallows were swinging themselves In the leaden-gray air aloft ; Flitting by tens and twelves, And returning oft and oft ; Like the thousand thoughts in me, That went, and came, and went. Not letting me even be Alone with my discontent. The hard-vext weary vane Rattled, and moan'd and was still. In the convent over the plain. By the side of the windy hill. 72 THE WANDEREK. It was sad to hoar it complain So tVotful, ami -sveak, aiul shrill, Ajrain, and auain, and in vain. While the Avinil ^Yas (.'haniiinu; his will. I thonght of our walks last summer By the eonvont-walls so oreen ; Of the first kiss stolen from her. With no one near to be seen. I thought (as we wamler'd on, Each of us waiting to speak) How the daylight'left us alone. And left his last light on her eheek. The plain was as cold and gray (With its villas like glimmering shells) As son\e north-oeean bay. All dumb in the ehureh were the bells. In the mist, half a league away, Lay the little white house where she dwelh I thought of her face so bright. By the firelight bending low O'er her work so neat and whte ; Of her singing so soft and slow ; Of her tender-toned '' (uKxl-night ; " But a very foAv nights ago. O'er the convent doors, I could see A pale and sorrowtul-eyed JNIadonna looking at me. As when Our Lord lirst died. There was not a lizard or spider To be seen on the broktMi walls. The ruts, with the rain, had grown wider, And' blacker since last night's falls. O'er the universal dulness There broke not a single beam. 1 thought how my love at its fulness Had changed like a change in a dream. CIIANGIO. 73 The olives Avere slieddiiiji; fast About nie to left and riuht, In the lap of the scornful blast Jilaek berries and leallets white. 1 thouiiht'of the many romances One wintry word can blijiht ; Of the tender and timorous fancies By a cohl look put to ili^ht. How many noble deeds Strangled })erchance at their birth! The smoke of the burnini],- weeds Came up with the steam of the earth, From the red, wet ledj:;es of soil, And tlie sere vines, row over row, — And the vineyard-men at their toil, Who sang in the vineyard below. Last SprinKUKU. 'I'lio ycnrs will sihmu (o be, AVIkmi the last ol' \\vv looks is .!j;<»iu', Ami my heart is siU'iit in me! One streak of seornCiil n'old, In tlui cloudy and billowy west, lUirn'd with a light as cold As love in a mweh-wrongM breast. 1 thonoht of her faee so lair; Of her perfect bosom and arm ; Of her deej) sweet eyes atul hair ; Of her breath so pure and warm ; Of her toot so fine and fairy Thro' the nu'adows where slie would pass ; Of the sweep of her skirts so airy And fragrant over the grass. 1 thought ..." Can I live without her \\'hati>ver she do, or say V " I tlu)ught ..." Can 1 dare to doubt her, Now when I liave given away My whole self, body ami spirit. To keep, or to cast aside, 'I'o dower or disinherit. — '1\) use as she may decide V " The ^V'est was beginning to close O'er the last light burning thei-o. 1 thought ..." And when that goes, The dark will bo everywhere ! " Oh ! well is it hidden from man Whatever the Future may bring! The bells in the church began On a sudden to sound and swing. The chimes on the gust were caught, And roli'd u}) the windy height. 1 rose, and return'il, and thought . . . " 1 SHALL NOT SKK IIKK TO-NIGIIT." SILENCE. 75 A CHAIN TO WEAK. Away ! away ! The dream was vain. We meet too soon, or meet too late : Still wear, as best you may, the chain Your own hands forced about your fate, Who could not wait ! What ! . . . you liad i:kki;. ^Vc^vils of love — heavt-brokiMi, iovu^ \\"\{\\ this strono- and siuUlon avoo. All n\y srorn, she oouUl m)t (hnibt, A\'as but love tuniM ineldo out. ISIUmioo, siUMU'O, still unstlrrM ; Loui;, uubrokon, uuoxplain'd : Not ouo wonl, one little Avonl, Kven to show her toueliM or paiuM Silenee, silence, all unbroken : Not a sound, a sign, a token. AVell, let silenee gathor round All this shatterM lite of mine. Shall 1 break it by a sound '? Let it grow, anil be ilivine — ])ivine as that Prometheus kept AVhen for his sake the sea-nymphs wept. ].et silence settle, still and deep ; As the mist, the thuniler-eloud, O'er the lonely blasteil steep, AVhieh the red bolt hath not bow'd, Settle, to drench out the star. And cancel the blue vales afar. In this silence I will sheathe The sharp edge and point of all ! Not a sigh my lips shall breathe ; Not a gioan, what'er betall. Anil let this swonled silence be A fence 'twixt prying tools and me. Let silenee be about her name. And o'er the things which once have been Let silence cover \ip my shame, And annul that lace, once seen In fatal lunn-s, and all the light Of those eyes extinguish quite. SILENCE. 77 In silence, I go forth alone O'er the solemn mystery Of the deeds which, to be done,. Yet undone in the future lie. I peer in Time's hioh nests, and there Espy the callow brood of Care, The tledgeless nurslings of Regret, With beaks forever stretch'd for food : But why should I forecount as yet The ravage of that vulture brood V O'er all these things let silence stay, And lie, like snow, along my way. Let silence in this outraged heart Abide, and seal these lips Ibrever; Let silence dwell with me apart Lesidc^ the ever-babbling river Of that loud life in towns, that runs lilind to the changes of the suns. Ah ! from what most mournful star, ^Vasting down on evening's edge. Or what barren isle afar Flung by on some bare ocean ledge, Came the wicked hag to us, That changed the fairy revel thus? There were sounds from sweet guitars Once, and lights from lamps of amber ; Both went uj) among the stars From many a perfumed palace-chamber. Suddenly the |)lai'e seem'd dead ; Light and nuisic both were lied. Darkness in each perfumed chamber ; Darkness, silence, in the stars; Darkness on the lamps of amber ; Silence in the sweet auitars : 78 THE WANDERER. Darkness, silence, evermore Guard empty chamber, moveless door. NEWS. News, news, news, my gossiping friends ! I have wonderful news to tell, A lady, by me, her compliments sends; And this is the news from Hell : The Devil is dead. lie died resign'd, Tho' somewhat opprest by cares ; But his wife, my friends, is a woman of mind, And looks after her lord's affairs. I have just come back from that wonderful place, And kist hands with the Queen down there ; But 1 cannot describe Her Majesty's face, It has fiU'd me so with despair. The place is not what you might suppose : It is worse in some respects. But all that I heard there, I must not disclose, * For the lady that told me objects. The laws of the land are not Salique, But the King never dies, of course ; The new Queen is young, and pretty, and chic; There are women, I think, that are worse. But however that be, one thing I know, And this I am free to tell ; The Devil, my friends, is a woman, just now ; 'Tis a woman that reigns in Hell. COUNT RINALDO RINALDI. 79 COUNT RINALDO RINALDI. 'Tis a dark-purple, moonlighted midnight : — There is music about on the air. And, where, thro' the water, fall flashing The oars of each gay gondolier, The lamp-lighted ripples are dashing, In the musical moonlighted air, To the music, in merriment ; washing, And splashing, the black marble stair That leads to the last garden-terrace. Where many a gay cavalier And many a lady yet loiter, Round the Palace in festival there. 'Tis a terrace all paven mosaic, — Black marble, and green malachite ; Round an ancient Venetian Palace, Where the windows with lampions are bright. 'Tis an evening of gala and festival, Music, and passion, and light. There is love in the nightingales' throats. That sing in the garden so well : There is love in the face of the moon : • There is love in the warm languid glances Of the dancers adown the dim dances : There is love in the low languid notes That rise into rapture, and swell, From viol, and flute, and bassoon. The tree that bends down o'er the water So black, is a black cypress tree. And the statue, there, under the terrace, Mnemosyne's statue must be. There comes a black gondola slowly To the Palace in festival there : so THK \VANl>Kl{i:U. Ami llio Count Uinaldo Rlnaldi • Has inounU>(l the blaok marble stair. There was nothiiiL!; hut. darkness, and midnight, And tempest, and storn\, in the breast, Of the Ccnint Uinaldo Uinaldi, As his loot o'er the blaek marble prest : — The gllmmerino- black marble stair ^^'here the weed in the green ooze is I'linging, That leads to the garden vso lair, Where the nightingales softly are singing, — Where the minstrels new musie are stringing. And the dancers for dancing prepare. There rusth>s a robe of white satin : There's a footstep falls light by the stair: There rustles a robe of white satin : There's a gleaming of soft golden hair : And the Lady Irene Ivicasoli Stands near the ey[)ress tree there, — Near Mneuiosyne's statue so fair, — Tlu' Laily Irene Kicasoli, With the light in her long golden hair. And the nightingales siW'tly are singing In the mellow and moonlighted air; And the minstrels their vit)ls are stringing; Ai\il the dancers for dancing preiKire. " Siora," the Count said unto lu'r, " The shafts of ill-fortune pursue mo ; The old grief grows newer and newer, The old pangs are never at rest ; Anil the foes that have sworn to undo me Have left me no peai'c in my breast. They have slaniler'il, and wrong'd, and malign'd mc ; Tho' they broke not my sword in my hand, They have broken my heait in my bosom And sorrow mv viuith has unniann'd. COUNT RIXALDO KINALDI. 81 Jiut r lovt; you, Irene, Irene, With such love as the wretched alone Can feel from the desert within them Which only the wnitched have known I And the heart of Kinaldo Kinahli J>rl.ln^K. Ami you'll promiso luo. luy inollior Shall \iov<'r miss lior t^Dii, It' auytliluo- should happen In'loro the nii;ht is ilono. VKNICE. TiiK sylphs and oudlnos. And tho soa-kluiis and tpuHMis. LoJiii" ano, louii' aut the sylphs and ondines, Ami the sea-kings and tpieens Are tied under the wa\es: And I glide, and 1 glide [> the glinnnering tide Thro' a city of graves. Here will I bury my heait, Wrapt in the dream it dream'd ; ^'w ON Tin-: RKA. «i Oru; ffravc, more If) llic many ! One, ;^rav(; fi.s silent as any ; Sculptured about with art, — For a j)alaee tliis tomb oriee Hccxud. Iji'^ht lips liave, laujfliM there, Jirij^lit «!y<;s liav(; hearn'd. Revel and dane«t ; [jady and lover ! J'leasure liatli (juafrM tliere : I{(;auly liatli jfleain'd, Lov<; woo'd Romance. Now all is over ! And \ j^lide, and I j.dide Up the {^limmerin;; tide, 'Mid forms silently passing;, as silent as any, Here, 'mid th(; waves, In this city of f^raves 'Jo bury my lieart — one grave more to tlie many ! ON TIII«: SEA. (.'oMK ! breathe thou soft, or blow thou bold. Thy comin;X br; it kind or cold, Thou soul of the hee<]l(;ss ocean wind; — Little I rcd(! and little I rerik, Tlio' the mast be snapt on the mizen-deck, Sfj thou blow her last kiss from my neck, And h(;r memory from my mind ! Comrades around tlie mast The welkin is o'ercast : ()ri(! wat(di is wellnigh past — Out of sight of shore at last ! Fade fast thou falling shore. With that fair falscj Jacc of yore, And the love, and the life, now o'er ! SG TlIK WANDKKKR. What she sou^jht, that lot her have — The })raise of* traitor ami knave, The simper of coward and shive, And the worm that elin^s and stings — The knowh'dii'e of nobler things. l^nt here shall the miu;hty sea Make moan with my lu'art in mo, And her name bo toj'ii By the winds in si'orn, Tn whose march we are moving; free. I am free, I am free, 1 am free ! Hark! ln)w the wilii waves roar! Hark ! how the wild winds rave ! ConratiO, true hearts and brave, Whom Kate can alllict no more ! Comrades, the niijht is lonii. 1 will sino; yon an ancient song Of a tale that was told In the days of oUi, Of a Haron blithe and strong, — High heart and bosom bold. To strive for the right with wrong ! " Who left his castled liomo, When the Cross was raised in Rome, And swore on his sword To fight for the Lord, And the banners of Christemlom. To die or to overcome ! * In hanberk of mail, and helmet of steel, And armonr of [>roof from head to heel, Oh, what is the woni\d which he shall feel? And where the i'oe that shall make him reel V Trne knight on whoso crest the cross doth shine I They bnckled his harness, brought him his steed — A stallion bhu-k of the lanil's best breed — lieltoil his s])urs, and bade him God-speed ON THE SKA. 87 'Mid the Paynim in Palestine. But the wife that lie loved, when she pour'd him up A last deep health in her golden eup, Put poison into the wine. " So he rode till the land he loved jjjrevv dim, And that poison began to work in him, — A true knight ehaunting his Christian hymn, With the eross on his gallant erest. Eastward, a3'e, from tlie waning west, ■J'oward the land when; the bones of the Saviour rest. And the liattle of Cod is to win : Willi his young wife's picture upon his breast, And her poison'd wine within. " Alas ! poor knight, poor knight! He carrli's tlu; foe he cannot light Jn his own true breast shut up. He shall die or ever he fight for the Lord, And his heart be broken I)elbre his sword, He hath ])ledged his life To a faithless wife, In the wine of a poisoned eup ! " Comrade, thy hand in mine ! Pledge nie in our last wine, While all is dark on the brine. My friend, I reck not now If tlu? wild night-wind should blow Our bark beyond the poles: — To drift thro' fire or snow. Out of reach of all we know — Cold heart, and narrow brow, Smooth faces, sordid souls ! Lost, likt^ some ])aly crew Fi-om Ophii', in golden galleys. On a witch's island ! who Wander the Tamarisk alleys. 88 THE WANDKKKR. Whore tlio heaven is blue, And the ooean too, That murmurs amon<;; the valleys. " Terisht with all (mi board ! " So runs the vagrant fame — Thy wile weds another lord, My ehildren forget niy name. While we count new stars by night. ]*jach Avanders out of sight Till the beard on his chin grows white And scant grow the curls on his head. One paces the placid hours In dim enchanted bowers, \\y a soft-i'yed Panther led To a magical millc-white bed Of di'cp, pale poisou-llowers. ^Vith i-uin'd (Jods one dwells, In caverns among tlu>. fells, Where, with desolate arms outspread, A single tree stands dead. Smitten by savage spells, And vstriking a silent dread From its black and blighted head Thro' the horrible, ho[)cless, sultry dells Of Klei)hanta, the Ked. BOOK I I . IN FUANCK. "PllENSUS IN ylOCLEO." 'TiH toil mnsl, hcl]) iis to fori>(!t. In strife, tlicy say, j^ricf" fitids ropose. Well, tlicrc's the jijaiiu; ! I throw the stakes A liCe of war, a world of foes, A heart that triiiinplis whik; It breaks. Soiiu! (lay I too, perehaiiee, may lose This shade wliich meinory o'er me throws, And laM;;h as others hiugh (who knows V) But ah, 'twill not he yet ! How nvmy years sinee she and I Walk'd tiiat old terrace, hand-in-hand ! Just one star in the rosy sky, And sihmee on the sunnner land. And she V I think I JK-ar her sing That song — the last of all our songs. How all comes hack ! — thing after thing, The old life o'er me throngs ! But T must to the j)alac(! go ; The ambassador's to-morrow : Hi'.re's little time for thought,, I know, And little more for sorrow. 90 THE WANDERER. Already in the porfe-cochere The carriao-e sounds. . . my hat and gloves ! I hear my friend's foot on the stair, — Mow joyously it moves ! He must have done some wicked thing To make him tread so light : Or is it only that the king Admired his wife last night? We talk of nations by the Avay, And ])raise the Nuncio's manners, And cud with something Cino to say About the " allied banners." 'Tis well to mix with all conditions Of men in every station : I sup to-morrow with musicians, Upon the invitation Of my elever friend, the journalist. Who writes the reading ])lays Which no one reads ; a socialist Most social in his ways. But [ am sick of all the din That's made in praising Verdi, Who only know a violin Is not a hurdy-gurdy. Here oft, while on a nerveless hand An aching brow reclining, Thro' this tall window where I stand, r see the great town shining. Hard by, the restless Boulevart roars, Heard all the night thi'o', even in dreaming ; While from its hundred open doors The many-headed Life is streaming. Upon the world's wide thoroughfares My lot is cast. So be it ! Each on his back his burthen bears. And feels, though he may not see it. My life is not more hai'd than theirs Who toil on either side : A l'kntuksol. 91 Tlioy cry for quiet in tlieir j>rayers, And it is still denied. But sometimes, wlien 1 stand alone, Life pauses — now and then : And in tlie distance dies the moan Of miserable men. As in a dream (how stranjjje !) T seem To be lapsinjT, slowly, slowly. From noise and strife, to a stiller life, Where all is husht and holy. Ah, love! our way's in a stranger land. VVc may not rest together. For an Angel takes me l)y the hand. And leads me .... whither V whither V A L'FNTllESOL. Onk circle of all its golden hours The ilitting hand of the Time-[)i(!ce there, In its close white bower of china flowers, Ilath rounded unaware : While the firelight, ilung from the flickering wall On the large and limpid mirror behind, Hath redden'd and darktufd down o'er all, As the fire itself declined. Something of pleasure, and something of pain There lived in that sinking light. What is it ? Faces I never shall look at again, In places you never will visit, Keveal'd themselves in each faltering ember. While, under a palely-wavering flame. 92 THE WANDERER. Half of the years life aches to remember lleajDpear'cl, and died as they came. To its dark Forever an hour hath gone Since either you or I have spoken.: Each of us might have been sitting alone In a silence so unbroken. I never shall know what made me look up (In this cushion'd chair so soft and deep, By the table where, over the empty cup, I was leaning, half asleep) To catch a gleam on the picture up there Of the saint in the wilderness under the oak; And a light on the brow of the bronze Voltaire, Like the ghost of a cynical joke. To mark, in each violet, velvet fold Of the curtains that fall twixt room and room, The dip and dance of the manifold Shadows of rosy gloom. O'er the Rembrandt there — the Caracci here — Flutter warmly the ruddy and wavering hues; And St. Anthony over his book has a leer At the httle French beauty by Greuze. There — the Leda, weigh'd over her white swan's back, By the weight of her passionate kiss, ere it falls ; O'er the ebony cabinet, glittering black Thro' its ivory cups and balls : Your scissors and thimble, and work laid away. With its silks, in the scented rosewood box ; The journals, that tell truth every day, And that novel of Paul de Kock's : A l'entresol. 93 The flowers in the vase, with their bells shut close In a dream of the far green fields where they grew ; The cards of the visiting people and shows In that bowl with the sea-green hue. Your shawl, with a queenly droop of its own, Hanging over the arm of the crimson chair : And, last — yourself, as silent as stone, In a gl9w of the firelight there I I thought you were reading all this time. And was it some wonderful page of your book Telling of love, with its glory and crime, That has left you that sorrowful look ? For a tear from those dark, deep, humid orbs 'Neath their hishes, so long, and soft, and sleek, All the light in your lustrous eyes absorbs, As it trembles over your cheek. Were you thinking hoAV we, sitting side by side, Might be dreaming miles and miles apart ? Or if lips could meet over a gulf so wide As separates heart from heart ? Ah, well ! when time is flown, how it fled It is better neither to ask nor tell. Leave the dead moments to bury their dead. Let us kiss and break the spell ! Come, arm in arm, to the window here ; Draw by the thick curtain, and see how, to-night, In the clear and frosty atmosphere, The lamps are burning bright. All night, and forever, in yon great town, The heaving Boulevart flares and roars ; And the streaming Life, flows up and down From its hundred open doors. 94 THE WANDERER. It is scarcely so cold, but I and you, With never a friend to find us out, May stare at the shops for a moment or two, And wander a while about. For when in the crowd we have taken our place, ( — Just two more lives to the mighty street there !) Knowing no single form or face Of the men and women we meet there, — Knowing, and known of, none in the whole Of that crowd all round, but our two selves only, We shall grow nearer, soul to soul. Until we feel less lonely. Here are your bonnet and gloves, dear. There — How stately you look in that long rich shawl ! Put back your beautiful golden hair, That never a curl may fall. Stand in the firelight ... so, ... as you were — Oh my heart, how fearfully like her she seem'd ! Hide me up from my own despair, And the ahost of a dream I dream'd ! TERRA INCOGNITA. How sweet it is to sit beside her, When the hour brings nought that's better I All day in my thoughts to hide her, And, with fancies free from fetter, Half remember, half forget her. Just to find her out by times In my mind, among sweet fancies Laid away : TERRA INCOGNITA. 95 In the fall of mournful rhymes ; In a dream of distant climes ; In the sights a lonely man sees At the dropping of the day ; Grave or gay. As a maiden sometimes locks With old letters, whose contents Tears have faded, In an old worm-eaten box, Some sweet packet of faint scents. Silken-braided ; And forgets it : Careless, so I hide In my life her love, — Fancies on each side, Memories heap'd above : — There it lies, unspied : Nothing frets it. On a sudden, when Deed, or word, or glance, Brings me back again To the old romance, With what rapture then, — W^hen, in its completeness, Once my heart bath found it, By each sense detected. Steals on me the sweetness Of the air around it, Where it lies neglected ! Shall I break the charm of this In a single minute ? For some chance with fuller bliss ProfFer'd in it ? Secrets unseal'd by a kiss, Could I win it ! 'Tis so sweet to linger near her, Idly so ! Never reckoning, while I hear her W^hispering low. 96 THE WANDERER. If each wliisper will make clearer Bliss or woe; Never roused to hope or fear her Yes or No ! What if, seekinoj something more Than before, All that's given I displace — Calm and grace — Nothing ever can restore, As of yore, ' That old quiet face ! Quiet skies in (piiet lakes. No wind wakes, All their beauty double : But a single pebble breaks Lake and sky to trouble ; Then dissolves the foam it makes In a bubble. With the pebble in my hand, Here, upon the brink, I stand; Meanwhile, standing on the brink, Let me think ! Not for her sake, but for mine. Let those eyes iinquestion'd shine, Half divine : Let no hand disturb the rare Smoothness of that lustrous hair Anywhere : Let that white breast never break Its calm motion — sleep or wake — For my sake. Not for her sake, but for mine, All I might have, I resign. Should I glow To the hue — the fragrance fine — The mere first sight of the Avine, If I drain'd the goblet low ? AVho can know ? With her beauty like the snow. A REMEMBRANCE. 97 Let her go ! Shall I repine That no idle breath of mine Melts it ? No ! 'Tis better so. All the same, as she came, With her beauty like the snow, Cold, unspotted, let her go ! A REMEMBRANCE. 'TwAS eve and May when last, thro' tears, Thine eyes sought mine, thy hand my hand. The night came down her silent spheres, And up the silent land. In silence, too, my thoughts were furl'd, Like ]-ing-doves in the dreaming grove. Who would not lightly lose the Avorld To keep such love ? But many Mays, with all their flowers, Are faded since that blissful time — The last of all my happy hours I' the golden clime ! By hands not thine these wreaths were curl'd That hide the care my brows above : And I have almost gain'd the world. But lost that love. As tho' for some serene dead brow. These wreaths for me I let them twine. I hear the voice of praise, and know It is not thine. How many long and lonely days I strove with life thy love to gain ! 7 98 TllK WANDERER. I know my work was worth thy fjraise ; But all was vain. Vain Passion's (ire, vain Music's art ! For who i'roni thorns iirape-bnnchos gathers ? What depth is in the shallow heart V What weight in featliers V As drops the blossom, ere the growtti Ot'irnit, on some antunmal tree, I drop i'rom my ehanged life, its youth And joy in thee : And look beyond, and o'er thee, — right To some sublimer end than lies Within the compass of the sight Of thy colli eyes. Witli thine my soul hath ceased its strife. Thy })art is till'd ; thy work is done ; Thy falsehood buried in my life. And known to none. Yet still will golden nuMiiories frame Thy broken image in my heart. And love lor what thou wast shut blame From what thou art. In T^ife's long galh'ries, haunting-eyed. Thy ]>ictured face no clianiii> shall show ; Like some dead (Queen's who lived and died An aale ; And her eyes are dark and blue Like the violet of the vale ; And her hand is frail and fair ; Could you but have seen it lie O'er the convent deathbed, where Wept the Nuns to watch her die, 102 THE WANDERER. Yon, I think, had wept as well ; For the patience in her face, (Where the dying snnbeam fell) Had such strange heart-breaking grace. There's a lover, eager, bold, Knocking at the convent gate : But that little hand grows cold ; And the lover knocks too late. There's a high-born lady stands At a golden mirror, pale ; Something makes her jewoU'd hands Tremble, as she hears the tale AVhich her maid (while weaving roses For the ball, thro' her dark hair) ]\Iix'd with other news, discloses. Oh, to-night she will look fair ! There's an old man, feeble-handed, Counting gold ..." My son shall wed With the Princess, as I plann'd it, Now that little girl is dead." There's a young man, sullen, husht, By remorse and grief unmann'd. With a wither'd primrose crusht In his hot and feverish hand. There's a broken-hearted woman, . Haggard, desolate, and wild, Says ..." The world hath grown inhuman ! Bury me beside my child." And the little God of this world Hears them, laughing in his sleeve. He is master still in his world. There's another, we believe. AUX ITALIENS. 103 Of this history every part You have seen, yet did not heed it ; For 'tis written in my lieart, And you have not learn'd to read it. AUX ITALIENS. At Paris it was, at the Opera there ; — And she look'd like a queen in a book that night, With the wreath of pearl in her raven hair, And the brooch on her breast, so bright. Of all the operas that Verdi wrote, The best, to my taste, is the Trovatore : And Mario can soothe with a tenor note The souls in Purgatory. The moon on the tower slept soft as snow : And who was not thrill'd in the strangest way. As we heard him sing, while the gas burn'd low, " Non ti scordar dl nie ?" The Emperor there, in his box of state, I^ook'd grave, as if he had just then seen The red flag wave from the city-gate. Where his eagles in bronze had been. The Empress, too, had a tear in her eye. You'd have said that her fancy had gone back again, For one moment, under the old blue sky, To the old glad life in Spain. Well I there in our front-row box we sat, Together, my bride-betroth'd and I : My gaze was lix'd on my opera-hat. And hers on the stage hard by. 104 riiK \v \M>KKi:i{. A\\(\ bolli wor(> sIUmiI, ami bolli wt>ro sad. Lik(' a (iiuHMi, she loaiiM on Iu>r I'liU whlti' arm, With that renal, iii(h)UMil air she had; So coiiIhUmU of her i-hann ! I have not. a (h)iil>i she was lljinUinet to th(> kinL;;dom oi" heaven, 'IMiro' a nee(He's eye he had not to pass. I wish liim well, tor the jointure <»iven To my lady ot" Carabas. ]\Ieainvhile, 1 was thinkinn thinkiuii- ot'aniiht tor years. Till over my eyes there beiian tt) move Somethin*;^ that felt like "tears. 1 thouuht of the dress that she wore: last time, \\'lien we stood, 'neath the ey[)ress trees, to- gether, In that'lost land, in that soft elinu\ In the crimson evening; uhmiIum-: Of that muslin dress (lor the »>ve was hot) And her warm white neck in its j^olden chain : Antl her full, soft hair, just tied in a knot, And fallinji; loose again : And the jasmin-llower in lier fair younjj; breast: (() the taint, sweet smell of that jasnun-llovver !) And the one bird siniiing alont^ to liis nest : And the one star over tlu' towei-. 1 thouiiht of our little (juarreis and strifes; And the K-tter that brounht nui bacdc my rinj;. And it all seem'd then, in the waste of life, Such a verv little thinV(! Iic.r !" And I swear, ns I llioii;.dil of lici* llius, in tliat hour, And of how, al'ln- all, old tliiiiKKKK, Slio is not (load, and slu' is not wed ! Rut slie lovos ino now, and sho lovoii nu> thon ! And tlio vorv first word tliat hiM* sweet lips said, My heart grew yoiithl'iil ai^ain. The INIarehioness there, of Carabas, 8hi> is wealthy, and younii", and handstMiie still, And hut for her . . . well, we'll let that pass, She may marry whomever she will. Hut 1 will marry my own firsl love, With her primrose laee : for old thiui^sare best; And the llower in hiM' bosom, I pri/.e it above The brooch in uxy lady's breast. The world is flird with folly and sin, And Jjove must elino- where it ean, I say : For Beauty is easy enoujih to win ; But one isn't loveil every day. And 1 thiidv, in (he lives of niost women and men. There 'i^ a moment when all would go smooth and even, If only the dead eould (ind out when To eome baek, and be forgiven. Hut () the smell of that jasmin flower! And () that musie ! and () the way That voice rang out from the donjon tower Non ii scordar
  • een forgotten coldly, As First Love's face; And, like a rat that comes to wanton boldly In some lone place. Once festal, — in th(; realm of light and laughter Orim JJoubt appc^ars ; Whilst weird Suggestions from Death's vague IJenvafter, O'er ruin'd yciars, Creej), o \Yorse Than this hath been ; Tlu'n when thro' 'IMionnht's gold chain, so frail and slender, No link Avill meet ; When all the broken hai-j)s of Lan<>;na!j;o render No sound that's sw(>et ; When, like torn books, sad days weigh down eaeh othei- r the dusty shell'; () INlan, what ai"t thou, () my i'rieiul, my brother, Even to thvselCV TTTR POKTRATT. MiDNKiiir ]iast ! Not a sound ol' aught 'i'hro' the silent house, but the wind at his prayers, 1 sat by the dying (ire, and thought Of the dear dead woman upstairs. A night ol' tears ! for the gusty rain Had ceased, but the eaves were dripping yet ; And the moon look'd forth, as the' in pain, With her face all white and wet : Nobody with me, my watch to keep, lint (lie friend of my bosouj, the man I love: And grief had sent him fast to sleep In the chambtM- up above. Nobody else, in the country place All round, that knew of my loss beside, IJut the good young Priest with the Raphael-face, Who eonfess'd her when she died. TIIK rOKTUAlT. 109 Tliaf pood }oiinL'' Priest is ofijondc nerve, And my ""irief had moved him beyond control; For his lip rii«i-, as sott and slow As falls ilio fallino- rain, Tlio thi>niihts i>t' (lays i^ono lon^ ago llavo lillM my hoail as ^vildv in tlio wind. Tlio narrow, siltMit stroot 1 pass : Tho luniso stands oVr tln> rivnr : A liii'ht is at tho casonjont-jilass, That loads my sonl forovor. 1 I'oi'l my way alonii' tho nhnMn, IStair al'tor stair, I pnsh the tloor: 1 (ind wo ohanoo within tlio I'ooni, And all things as i^t' yoro. Ono litth> room was all wo had For.Innoand tor HiH-ombor. Tho worhl is wido, bnt oh how sad It sooms. "svhon I riMnombor ! Tho oago with tho oanary-bird llanii's in tho window still: Tho small rod roso-troo is not stlrr'd Upon tho Avindow-sill. Wido opoi\ hor piano stands; — That song 1 mado to oaso A passing j^ain whilo hor soft hands AVont faintly oVr tho koys ! Tho iiro within tho sti>vo bnrns down ; 'i'ho light is dying last. How dear is all it shines npou, That firelight of tho Past ! A'l IIOMK l>i:iil.\(; IMK I5ALL. 115 No Kourid I \.\n', iJrowsy Dulcli-cloclc tickH. Oil, liow hluji4l(l 1 I'or^'ct 'J'Im! Hl(;ti(J<;r choti cni(;i(ix, 'I'liat l)y licr IhmI Ih wet V Ilcr lilll(; bed is wliifr; as snow — Ilrnv (l(;ar lliat liuN; bed! Svv(;c.t (Ircaiiis abrjut llx; curtains ^o, And wliisj)<;r round licr head. That iH'AiiUi head »lo(!pH o'or her arm — Sleeps all its soft brown liair: And those dear <;lotlies of liers, yet warm, J)roo[> open on the; ehair. YcA warm llie snowy jxittieoat ! The dainty eors(!t too I J low warm tlni ribbon from hr;r throat, And warm each litth; shoe I Lie sfil'i, dear arm upon the pillow ! Sleep, foolish little he;id ! AIj, well hIk; Hl(je[>s ! I know the willow That curtains her cold b(Ml. — Since last I trod tliat silent street 'Tis many a y(;ar hKKKK. Nut. coi^ltM* tViMu till' crowiiinu; waUz, She tiikos my halt' tho ])ill(>w. — Well, — woll ! — tho womon tVco tVom faults llavo 1)imIs l)i>l()\v tlio willow! X'V llOMK AFTKK. TllK MALL. TiiK cloi'ks arc fallliiii" Tliroo AtToss tho slItMit tloors. Tho liro In tho Librarv nios out; thro' the opon tloi>rs The vcd c\\\\>{y room yon nwy S(W 111 tho Nnrsory, up stairs, The ohihi hail p,ono to sict'p. llalt'-wav 'twixt (iroams ami jiravors, Whou tlu> llall-iloor made him loaj) 'Vo its tlmu(hM- unawaros. liiko lovo in a worhlly breast, AIom< ill my lady's I'haiubor, Tho lamp burns low. siipprost Mitl satins oi' bri)itlt>r'il amber. Where she stands, halt" iindrest: Wi'f bosom all nnlaeed : ller 1'lieek.s with a briiiht reil spot : Her loiiu; dark hair displaced, Down streaniinij;, heeded not, From her white throat to her waist : She stands up her tnll heiiilit. With her ball dress slipping- down her. And her eyes as tix'tl and briulit As the diamond stars that erowii her — An awt'iil, beautiful siiiht. no Ml', A I'll, It rill', ii.Mi, 117 I5(';iiili(nl, yrn . . . with licr liair So wild, Hiid lier clu'.cks .so (Iiislit! Avv/ul, y('.s . . . for llimi In Iter beauty, slid sland.s IniHlit Jiy till', pomp oriu'.r own despair 1 And (1x1, tliere, williont donhl, l'\ic(^ l,o fact^ will) lier own soitow, She will .stand, (ill, from willionl, 'J'lu) li^lil of Ihe nei;^lil)oniin;^ morrow Crec[)8 in, and linds Iter onl. Willi last night's innsie pealin<^ Yonlli's diijjies in lier i-ars : Willi last night's lamps ievealinower, You dare take not froui the shelf That book with the dry flower, Lest it make you hang yourself For being yourself tor an hour? Why can't you let thought be For even a little while ? There's nought in memory Can bring you back the smile Those lips have lost. Just see, Here what a costly gem To-night in your hair you wore — Pearls on a diamond stem ! When sweet things are no more, Better not think of them. Are you savetl by jiangs that paiu'd you Is there comfort in all it cost you, Before the world had gain'd you, Before that (lod had lost you, Or your soul had quite disdain'd you ? AU CAFE * * * 119 For your soul (and this is worst To bear, as you well know) Has been watching you, from first, As sadly as God could do ; And yourself yourself have curst. Talk of the (lames of Hell ! We fuel ourselves, I conceive, The fire the Fiend lights. Well, Believe or disbelieve, We know more than we tell ! Surely you need repose ! To-morrow again — the Ball. And you must revive the rose In your cheek, to bloom for all. Not go V . . . why the whole world goes ! To bed ! to bed ! 'Tis sad To find that Fancy's wings Have lost the hues they had. In thinking of these things Some women have gone mad. AU CAFE * * *. A PARTY of friends, all light-hearted and gay, At a certain French cafe, where every one goes, Are met, in a well-curtain'd warm cabinet, Overlooking a street there, which every one knows. The guests are, three ladies well known and admired : One adorns the Lyrique ; one ... I oft have beheld her 120 IHK NVANOKin K. At the Vau(Itrill<\ with i;iptun>s; the (hlnl livos rotirod *' I\tns .Nf'.s- nuuhhs" . . . (^\vo all kiunv Ium" hoiisi') . . . Ivuo lie lloltKr. BosiiU's tlu'jso is a tourth ... a adiiiii: l'!n'j,lislm»an, latoly Pivscnti'il (lu> rouml (it'tlio rlubs in [\\c iowu : A tHcituriv Aui^'lii'aii (.'olilucss si^latt'lv Invests him : uuthawM b}- Clarisso, ho sits ilo>Yn. }>ut little ho s])oaks, and bnt rarolv ho shares In the laniihter aimind hlni; his smiles ai'o b\it few; There's a sneer in the \ook that his oonntonanoo ■wears In ivjmse ; anil taligno in the eves' ^vea^y bine. The rest are throe Fronehmon. Throe Frenohmon nhank Heaven!) Arc l)ut rarely morose, >vith (Mianipai;ne and l>ordean\ : And their >vit, and their lan^htor, sulliees to leaven With \uirth their unite quest's imitation ot' snow. The dinner is done: the Lalitto in its basket. The Champagne in its eooler, is pass'd in gay haste; "Whatever yon wish tor, you ha\ o but to ask it : Here are eotVoo, eiiiars, and liijuonrs to your taste. And forth tVon» the bottles the eorks fly ; and ehilly. The briii'ht wine, in bubbling ami blushing, eon- touuds Its wannth with the iee that it seethes round: and shrilly (Till stilled by kisses) the kuighter resounds. Strike, Htrikc. tlic I'hiuo, hc.-il loud al, tlic; wall! Let wcallJiy old Lyctus willi j(s-iloiisy i^ioaii Next door, wliilc, !;iir (MiloriH icH[)OMds to 1 lie, call, Too lair U) Ix; hii|)|>iii;f vvitli LyciiH alone, ! * (Jlarisse, vvilli a smile, li;is subsided, oppresi, — llair, perliai)s, by Cliaiiipaj:;rie . . . lialC, perliaps, by alleeliori, — III I he arms of tlic laeiturii, (-old, Kii^^disli ^'iiest, Willi, Just risiii;^ allivvart her imperial com- pl(^\ioll, One tiii;!;e lliat, yoim^ K\viu liims*;!!" mi^^dit liavG kist I^'roiii tlie fairest, of M;eMadH lliat danced in his troop ; And li(!r dee[) liair, unloosed from its Humpluons twist, ()v(!islio\veriii;_'; liei' I lii'oal and lier bosom a-droop. 'i'lie soft snowy throat, and the; loiind, dinij)Ied ehiu, ll[)liirn'd from iJic arm-fold where lian;j;s tin; rich head ! And tin; warm lips apart, while the white lids bej^in To elos(! over (he dark languid eyes which they Hhad(i ! And Jiexl to (Mariss(^ (with her wild hair all wet IKKKU. A woman, as palo as a damo on a lonibstono, \\\\\\ (U'solat(> vloU'l t'vi'.s, o))iMi widi'; Hit look, as she turns it, turns all in Iho room stone: She sits (h)\vn on tiie sola, the stranotT hi'sich'. Her hair it is yeUow, as moonlight on water U'hieli stones in some, tuhly toiMuent into waves; Her lips are as rtMJ as new blood spill in sjjui^h- (er; Her cheek Mke a i^host's seen by nijiht o'er the }2;ravt»s. Her j)laee by the laritui'n slu* has HUM with fham- pauni'. As slie bows o'er tlie board, all the revidh'i\s awaken. Slio has ph-di^i'd her unite friend, and she Hlls up aoain. (^larisse has awaked ; and with shrieks leaves the table. .Juliette wakes, and faints in the arms of Arnold. Anil Charles and iMigene, with what speed thevare able. Are oir to the elub, whei-e this tale shall be told. Cidestine lor her bi-ou^hani, on the stairs, was ap- j)ealinii-, AVith hystei'ieal sobs, to the surlv roncirnjc, AN'hen a ray thi-o' the doorway stole to her, reveal- ino- A siii'ht that soon ehaniiiMl her appeal to " La r/V/v/c." All the liuht-hearled fric>nds from the ehand)er are tied : And the eafe itself has urown silent bv this. Air (JAFK * * * 125 Vvom i\\(^ (lark stroel; Ixilovv, yf)ii can scarce, hvnr a tread, Save tlio (ieiidanne'H, who reigns tliere as ^looiny as Dis. The shadow of ni^ht is })ent yon wakenM to my call. I knew why, in yonr slinnber. Yon were nioanino- luteonsly : Yon heard a sonnd ol'harjiiniv From a Falaee by the sea. Thro' the wilderness toiivther AVe mnst wander everywhere. Till we find the ninijie berry That shall maki> ns what we were. Tis a berry sweet and bitter, 1 have heard ; there is bnt one ; On a tall tree, by a tbnntain, In the desert all alone. When at last 'tis fonnd and eaten. We shall both be what we were ; — Y'on, a Prineess of the water, 1, a (ilenins of the air. See! the Oecident is tlarinses in the uarden Droop stupid all the day, — lied, thirsty mouths Avide open, With ni>t a word to say ! Their last meaninut think kiiuUy ot" ymi still ; And oarh moniont C^t' your ]>rotty intant auuors, (\\'ho could holp but suulo at . . . -svluMi Thoso small fl>ot would stamp our lovo out V) Why, 1 pass them now, as thou, AVithout c'ommont. (.)nly, luM-o, Nvhon I am soari'hlnjj; For the hook 1 oannot tind, I i\Hist somotimos pass your boudoir, lloNvsoOYor disini'lininl ; And must moot thoro Tho oohl bird-caiiv in tho windt^w, Whoro no bird is singino- now; Tho small sofa, and tiio tootstool, AVhoro 1 miss ... I know not how . . . Your young t'eot there, Silken-sof\ in eacli quaint slipper; And the jewell'd writinir-ease. Where you never more will write now ; And the visitui ot'your t'aee, Just tnrn'd to me : — I would save this, if T could, child, But that's all. . . . September's here ! I must write a book : read twenty : Learn a lantiuai^e . . . what's to fear V AVho grows gloomy Being free to Avork, as 1 an\ ? Yet these autumn nights are cold. Ilow T wonder how vou'U pass them ! Ah could all be as of old! r>ut 'tis best so. COMPENSATION. 141 All rlinnner With a supernatural dawn ; And the Genius at the door Turns the torch down to the tloor. Till the Morld is seen no more ; .Ti\ the iloubt, the ilark, the tear, 'Mid the spirits eome to take thee, Shall mine to thine be near. Anil mv kiss the tirst to wake thee, ^leanwhile, in life's Deeember, On the wind that strews the ember, Shall a voice still moan . . . '• Remember TRANSLATIONS FROM PKTKU RON- SARD. " rOICI LE BOIS QUE MA SAiyCTE AyOELEl'TEy Hkrk is the wood that tVeshen'd to her song; See hei'e, the tlowei-s that keep her toot-prints yet ; AVhere, all alone, my saintly Angelette "Went wandering, with her maiden thoughts, along. Here is the little rivulet where she stop{>'d ; Antl here the greenness ot' the grass shows where She lingered thro' it, searching here and there Those daisies dear, which in her breast she dropp'd. TRANSLATIONS FKOM PF:TEK IIONSAKD. 143 Here did she sing, and here she wept, and here Her smile came back ; and here I seem to hear Those faint half-words with which my thoughts are rife ; Here did she sit ; here, childlike, did she dance, To some vague impulse of her own romance — Ah, Love, on all these thoughts, winds out my life ! ''CACHE POUR CETTE NUICT/' Hide, for a night, thy horn, good Moon ! Fair fortune For this shall keep Endymion ever prest Deep-dreaming, amorous, on thine argent breast, Nor ever shall enchanter thee importune. Hateful to me the day ; most sweet the night ! I fear the myriad meddling eyes of day ; But courage comes with niglit. Close, close, I pray, Your curtains, dear dark skies, on my delight! Thou too, thou Moon, thou too hast felt love's power ! Pan, with a white fleece, won thee for an hour; And you, sidereal Signs in yonder blue. Favour the fire to which my heart is moved. Forget not. Signs, the greater part of you Was only set in heaven for having loved ! ''PAGE SUY MOYP Follow, my Page, where the green grass em- bosoms The enamell'd Season's freshest-fallen dew ; 144 THE WANDERER. Then home, and my still house with handfuls strew Of frail-lived April's newliest nurtured blossoms. Take from the wall now, my song-tuned Lyre ; Here will I sit and charm out the sweet pain Of a dark eye whose light hath burn'd my brain ; The unloving loveliness of my desire ! And here my ink, and here my papers, p'ace : — A hundred leaves of white, whereon to trace A hundred words of desultory woe — Words which shall last, like graven diamonds, sure ; — That, some day hence, a future race may know And ponder on the pain which I endure. " LES ESPICES SONT A CERES:' Ceres hath her harvests sweet : Chlora's is the young green grass : Woods for Fawns with cloven feet : His green laurel Phojbus has : Minerva has her Olive-tree : And the Pine's for Cybele. Sweet sounds are for Zephyr's wings: Sweet fruit for Pomona's bosom : For the Nymphs are crystal springs And for Flora bud and blossom : • But sighs and tears, and sad ideas. These alone are Cytherea's. " MA DOUCE JOVVENCE,'' My sweet youth now is all done ; The strength and the beauty are gone. TRANSLATIONS FROM PETER RONSARD. 145 The tooth now is black, and the head now is white, And the nerves now are loosed : in the veins Only water (not blood now) remains, Where the pulse beat of old with delight. Adieu, O my lyre, O adieu. You sweet women, my lost loves, and you Each dead passion ! . . . The end creepeth nigber. Not one pastime of youth has kept pace With my age. Nought remains in their place But the bed, and the cup, and the fire. My head is confused with low fears. And sickness, and too many years ; Some care in each corner I meet — And, wherever I linger or go, I turn back, and look after, to know If the Death be still dogging my feet : — Dogging me down the dark stair. Which windeth, I cannot tell where, To some Pluto that opens forever His cave to all comers — Alas ! How easily down it all pass, And return from it — never, ah never ! 10 BOOK III IN ENGLAND. THE ALOE. A STRANCER sont froui burninsjj lands, In roahns wlioi-e buz/ and mutter yot Old ^ods, with hundred heads and hands, On jcwell'd thrones of jet, — (Old gods as old as Time itself,) And, in a hot and level calm, llcelinc o'er many a sandy shelf Dusk forms beneath the palm, — To Lady Eve, wlio dAvells beside The river-meads, and oak-trees tall, Whose dewy shades encircle wide Her old liaronial Hall, An Indian plant with leaves like horn. And, all along its stubborn spine. Mere hum])s, with angry spike and thorn Arm'd like the porcupine. In midst of which one sullen bud Survey 'd the Avorld, with head aslant, Iligh-throned, and looking like the god Of this strange Indian plant. TIIK ALOE. 147 A stubborn plant, from looking cross It seeni'd no kindness could retrieve ! But for his sake whose gift it Avas It pleased the Lady Eve. She set it on the terraced walk, Within her own fair garden-ground ; And every morn and eve its stalk Was duly water'd round. And every eve and morn, the while She tended this uncourteous thing, I stood beside her, — watch'd her smile, And often heard her sing. The roses I at times would twist To deck her hair, she oft forgot ; But iHiver that dark aloe miss'd The daily watering-pot. She seem'd so gay, — I felt so sad, — ■ Iler laugh but made me frown the more : For each light word of hers I had Some sharp reply in store. Until she laugh'd ..." This aloe shows A kindlier nature than your own "... Ah pjve, you little dream'd what foes The plant and I had grown ! At last, one summer night, when all The garden-flowers were dreaming still, And still the old liaronial Hall, The oak-trees on the hill, A loud and sudden sound there stirr'd, As when a thunder cloud is torn ; Such thunder-claps are only heard When little sods are born. 148 THE WANDERER. The echo went from place to place, And waken'd every early sleeper. Some said that poachers in the chase Had slain a buck — or keeper. Some hinted burglars at the door: Some question'd if it had not lighten'd : While all the maids, as each one swore, From their seven wits were frighten'd. The peacocks scream'd, and every rook Upon the elms at roost did caw : Each inmate straight the house forsook : They scare h'd — and, last, — they saw That sullen bud to flower had burst Upon the sharp-leaved aloe there ; — A wondrous flower ; whose breath disperst Rich odours on the air. A flower, colossal — dazzling white. And fair as is a Sphinx's face, Turn'd broadly to the moon by night From some vast temple's base. Yes, Eve ! your aloe paid the pains With which its sullen growth you nurst. But ah ! my nature yet remains As churlish as at first. And yet, and yet — it might have proved Not all unworth your heart's approving. Ah, had I only been beloved, — (Beloved as I was loving !) I might have been . . . how much, how much, I am not now, and shall not be ! One gentle look, one tender touch, Had done so much for me ! " MEDIO DE FONTE LEPORUM." 149 I too, perchance, if kindly tended, Had roused the nappino; generation, With something novel, strange, and splendid, Deserving admiration : For all the while there grew, and grew A germ, — a bud, within my bosom : No flower, fair Eve ! — for, thanks to you, It never came to blossom. "MEDIO DE FONTE LEPORUM SURGIT AMARI ALIQUID." Lucretius. We walk'd about at Hampton Court, Alotie in sunny weather, And talk'd — half earnest, and half sport, Link'd arm in arm together. I press'd her hand upon the steps. Its warmest light the sky lent. She sought the shade : I sought her lips : We kiss'd : and then were silent. Clare thought, no doubt, of many things. Besides the kiss I stole there ; — The sun, and sunny founts in rings, The bliss of soul with soul there. The bonnet, fresh from France, she wore. My praise of how she wore it, The arms above the carven door, The orange-trees before it ; — But I could only think, as, mute I watch'd her happy smile there. 150 THE WANDERER. With rising pain, of this curst boot, That pinch'd me all the while there. THE DEATH OF KING HACOX. It was Odin that whisperM in Yingolf, " Go forth to the heath by the sea ; Find Haeon before the moon rises, And bid him to supper with me." They 20 forth to choose from the Princes Of Yniivon, and summons from tight A man who must perish in battle, And sup where the gods sup to-night. Leaning over her brazen spear. Gondula Thus bespake her companions, " The least Of the gods shall, in Vingolf, this evening, O ye Daughters of War, be encreast. " For Odin hath beckon'd unto me. For Odin hath whisper'd me forth, To bid to his supper King Ilacon With the half of the hosts of the North." Their horses gleam'd white thro* the vapour : In the moonlight their corselets did shine : As they waverVl and whisper'd together, And fashion'd their solemn design. Hacon heard them discoursing — •'• Why hast thou Thus disposed of the battle so soon ? Oh were we not worthy of conquest ? Lo I we die by the rise of the moon." "It is not the moon that is rising. But the glory which penetrates death, THE DEATH OF KING HACON. 151 When heroes to Odin are summon'd : Rise Hacon, and stand on the heath ! " It is we," she replied, " that have jjiven To thy pasture the flower of the fight, It is we, it is we that have scatter'd Thine enemies yonder in llight. " Come now, let us push on our horses Over yonder green worlds in the east, Where the great gods are gather'd together, And the tables are piled for the feast. " Betimes to give notice to Odin, Who waits in his sovran abodes, That the King to his palace is coming This evening to visit the gods." Odin rose when he heard it, and with him Rose the gods, every god to his feet. He beekon'd Hennoder and Brago, They came to him, each from his seat. " Go forth, O my sons, to King Hacon, And meet him and greet him from all, A King that we know by his valour Is coming to-night to our hall." Then faintly King Hacon approaches, Arriving from battle, and sore With the wounds that yet bleed thro' his armour. Bedabbled and dripping with gore. His visage is pallid and awful With the awe and pallor of death. Like the moon that at midnight arises Where the batfle lies strewn on the heath. To him spake Ilermoder and Brago, " We meet thee and greet thee from all, 152 THE WANDERER. To the gods tliou art known b}' thy valour, And they bid thee a guest to their hall. " Come hither, conio hither, King Ilacon, And join those eight brothers of thine, AVho already, awaiting thy eoniing, With the gods in Walhala recline. " And loosen, () Ilaoon, thy corselet, For thy wounds are yet ghastly to see. Go ])our ale in the circle of heroes, And drink, for the gods drink to thee." But he answer'd, the hero, " I never Will part with the armour I wear. Shall a warrior stand before Odin Unshamed, without hehnet antl spear ? " Black Fenrls, the wolf, the destroyer, Shall arise and break loose from his chain, Betbre that a hero like llacon Shall stand in the battle auain. « CARFE DIEM." IIOKACK. To-MOKROw is a day too flir To trust, whate'er the day be. We know, a little, what we are, But who knows what he may be ? The oak that on the mountain grows A goodly shi{) may be. Next year; but it as well (who knows?) Ma y be a gallows-tree. TIIK FOUNT OF TIlUTir. 153 'Tis God made man, no doubt, — not Chance : lie made us, jjreat and small ; But, being made, 'tis Circumstance That finishes us all. The Author of. this world's great plan The same residts will draw From human life, however man May keep, or break, His law. The Artist to his Art doth look ; And Art's great laws exact That those portray'd in Nature's Book, Should freely move and act. The moral of the work unchanged Endures eternally, Ilowe'er by human wills arranged The work's details may be. " Give us this day our daily bread, The morrow shall take heed Unto itself." Tiie Master said No more. No more we need. To-morrow cannot make or mar To-day, whate'er the day be : Nor can the men which now we are Foresee the men we may be. THE FOUNT OF TRUTH. It was the place by legends told, I read tiie tale when yet a child. The castle on the mountain hold, The woodland in the wild. 154 THE WANOKRKK. Tho wrecks of uiiremembiM'M days Wero hea|)\l arouiul. It was the hour Whon bold moii I'oar, and timorous Fays (irow bold, ami know their power. Tlio mouth was in the downward year. The brt'ath of Autumn chill'd the sky : And useU'ss Uvives, too e:irly sere, JNIutterM ami eddied by. ' It seem'd that 1 was wendin<; baek xVuioiil:: the ruins of my youth. Along a wild uilaces, void of cheer. Long have I roam'd. These features scan: If magic lore be thine, look here, Behold the Talisman ! " I cross'd the court. The bloodhound bay'd Behind me from the outer wall. The drowsy grooms my call obey'd And lit the haunted hall. They brought me horse, and lance, and helm, They bound the buckler on my breast, Spread the weird chart of that wild realm, And ann'd me for the quest. Upro.se the Giant of the Keep. " Rash fool, ride on ! "... I lieard him say. *' The night is late, the heights are steep, And Truth is far away ! " MIDGES. 157 And ..." Far away ! " . . . the echoes fell Behind, as from that grisly hold I turn'd. No tongue of man may tell What mine must leave untold. The Fount of Truth — that wondrous fount ! Far off I heard its waters play. But ere I scaled the solemn mount, Dawn broke. The trivial day To its accustom'd course flow'd back, And all the glamour faded round. Is it forever lost — that track V Or — was it never found V MIDGES. She is talking aesthetics, the dear clever creature ! Upon Man, and his functions, she speaks with a smile. Her ideas are divine upon Art, upon Nature, The Sublime, the Heroic, and Mr. Carlyle. Ino more am found worthy to join in the talk, now ; So I follow with my surreptitious cigar ; While she leads our poetical friend up the walk, now, Who quotes Wordsworth and praises her " Thoughts on a star." Meanwhile, there is dancing in yonder green bower A swarm of young midges. They dance high and low. 'Tis a sweet little species that lives but one hour, And the eldest was born half an hour ago. 158 THE WANDERER. One impulsive young midge I hear ardently pour- ing In tlie ears of a sliy little wanton in gauze, His eternal devotion ; his ceaseless adoring ; Which shall last till the Universe breaks from its laws : His passion is not, he declares, the mere fever Of a ra})turous moment. It knows no control : It will burn in his breast thro' existence forever, Immutably fix'd in the deeps of the soul ! She wavers : she flutters : . . . male midges are fickle : Dare she trust him her future ? . . . she asks with a sigh : He implores, . . . and a tear is beginning to trickle: She is Aveak : they embrace, and . . . the'lovers pass by. While they pass me, down here on a rose leaf has lighted A pale midge, his feelers all drooping and torn : His existence is wither'd ; its future is blighted : His hopes are betray'd: and his breast is forlorn. By the midge his heart trusted his heart is de- ceived now : In the virtue of midges no more he believes : From love in its falsehood, once wildly believed, now He will bury his desolate life in the leaves. His friends would console him . . . the noblest and sagest Of midges have held that a midge lives again ; In Eternity, say they, the strife, thou now wagest With sorrow, shall cease ... but their words are in vain ! MIDGES. 159 Can Eternity bring back the seconds now wasted In hopeless detire ? or restore to his breast The belief he has lost, with the bliss he once tasted, Embracing the midge that his being loved best ? His friends would console him . , . life yet is before him ; INIany hundred long seconds he still has to live : In the state yet a mighty career spreads before him : Let him seek in the great world of action to strive ! There is Fame ! there's Ambition ! and, grander than either, There is Freedom ! . . . the progress and march of the race ! . . . But to Freedom his breast beats no longer, and neither Ambition nor action her loss can replace. If the time had been spent in acquiring assthetics I have squander'd in learning this language of midges, There might, for my friend in her peripatetics, Have been now two asses to help o'er the bridges. As it is, . . . I'll report her the whole conversation. It would have been longer ; but, somehow or other, (In the midst of that misanthrope's long lamenta- tion,) A midge in my right eye became a young mother. Since my friend is so clever, I'll ask her to tell me Why the least living thing (a mere midge in the egg!) 160 THE WANDERER. Can make a man's tears How, as now it befell me . . O you dear clever woman, explain it, I beg ! THE LAST TIME THAT I MET LADY llUTll. There are some Iblnjrs hard to understand. () help me, my (ukI, to trust in thee ! But 1 never shall foroet her soft white hand, And her eyes when she look'd at me. It is hard to pray the vei-y same prayer Which once at our mother's knee we pray'd — When, where we trusted our whole heart, there Our trust hath been betray 'd. I swear that the milk-white muslin so light On her virgin breast, -where it lay demure, Seem'd to be toucht to a purer white By the touch of a breast so pure. I deem'd her the one thing undefiled By the air we breathe in a world of sin : The truest, the tenderest, purest child A man ever trusted in ! AVhen she blamed me (she, with her fair child's foce !) That never with her to the Church I went To partake of the Gosi)el of truth and grace, And the Christian sacrament, And I said I Avould go for her own sweet sake, Tho' it was but herself 1 should w^orship there, How that happy chiUl's tiice strove to take On its dimples a serious air ! MATRIMONIAL COUNSELS. 161 I remember the chair slie would set for me, By the flowers, when all the house was gone To drive in the Park, and 1 and she Were left to be happy alone. There she lean'd her head on my knees, my Ruth, With the primrose loose in her half-closed hands : And I told her tales of my wandering youth In the far fair foreign lands. — The last time I met her was here in town, At a fancy ball at the Duchess of D, On the stairs, where her husband was handing her down. — Tliere we met, and she talk'd to me. She, with powder in hair, and patch on chin, And I, in the garb of a pilgrim Priest, And between us both, without and Avithin, A hundred years at least ! We talk'd of the House, and the late long rains, And the crush at the French Ambassador's ball, And . . . well, I have not blown out my brains. You see I can laui>h. That is all. MATRIMONIAL COUNSELS. You are going to marry my pretty relation, My dove-like young cousin, so soft in the eyes. You are entering on life's settled dissimulation. And, if you'd be happy, in season be wise. Take my counsel. The more that, in church, you are tempted To yawn at the sermon, the more you'll attend. 11 162 THE WANDEUEU. The more you'd from milliner's bills bo exempted, The more on your wife's little wishes you'll spend. You'll be sure, every Christmas, to send to the rector, A dozen of wine, and a hamper or two. The more your wife plagues you, the more you'll respeet her, She'll be pleasing your friend, if she's not plaguing you. For women of course, like ourselves, need emotion; And happy the husband, whose failings afford To the wife of his heart, such good cause for com- motion, That she seeks no excitement, save plaguing her lord. Above all, you'll be careful that nothing offends, too. Your wife's lady's maid, tho* she give herself airs. With the friend of a friend it is well to be friends too. And especially so, when that friend lives upstairs. Under no provocation you'll ever avow yourself, A little put out when you're kept at the door. And you never, I scarcely need say, will allow yourself To call your wife's mother, a vulgar old bore. However she dresses, you'll never suggest to her, That her taste, as to colours, could scarcely be Avorse, Of the rooms in your house, you wdl give up the best to her. And ) ou never will ask for the carriage, of course. SEK-SAW. 163 If, at times witli a doubt on the soul, and herfuture, Revelation, and reason, existence should trouble you, You'll be always on guard to keep carefully mute your Ideas on the subject, and read Dr. W. Bring a shawl with you, home, when you come from the Club, sir, Or a ring, lest your wife, when you meet her, should pout; And don't fly in a rage and behave like a cub, sir, If you find that the fire, like yourself, has gone out. In eleven good instances out of a dozen, 'Tis the husband's a cur, when the wife is a cat. She is meekness itself, my soft-eyed little cousin, But a wife has her rights, and I'd have you know that. Keep my counsel. Life's struggles are brief to be borne, friend. In Heaven there's no marriage nor giving in marriage. When Death comes, think how truly your widow will mourn, friend, And your worth not the best of your friends will disparage ! SEE-SAW. SiiK was a harlot, and I was a thief: But we loved each other beyond belief: She lived in the garret, and I in the kitchen, And love was all that we both were rich in. 164 THE WANDEllER. When they sent her at last to the hospital, Both day and niijht my tears did fall ; They fell so fast that, to dry their grief, I borrow'd my neighbour's handkerchief. The world, which, as it is brutally taught, Still judges the act in lieu of the thought. Found my hand in my neighbour's pocket, And clapp'd me, at once, under chain and locket. When they ask'd me about it, I told them plain. Love it was that had turn'd my brain : How should I heed wliere my hand had been, When my heart was dreaming of Celestine ? Twelve friends were so struck by my woful air, That they sent me abroad for change of air : And, to prove me the kindness of their intent. They sent me at charge of the government. When I came back again, — whom, think you, 1 meet But Celestine, here, in Regent Street ? In a carriage adorn'd with a coronet, And a dress, all lloiinces, and lace, and jet : For her carriage drew up to the bookseller's door, Where they publish those nice little books for the poor : I took oft' my hat : and my face she knew. And gave me — a sermon by Mr. Bellew. [book. But she gave me (God bless her !) along with the Such a sweet sort of smile, such a heavenly look, That, as long as I live, I shall never forget Celestine, in her coach with the earl's coronet. [town ; There's a game that men play at in great London- Whereby some must go up, sir, and some nmst go down : BABYLONIA. 165 And, since the mud sticks to your coat if you fall, Why, the strongest among us keep close to the wall. But some day, soon or late, in my shoes I shall stand. More exalted than any great Duke in the land; A clean shirt on my back, and a rose in my coat, And a collar conferr'd by the Queen round my throat. And I know that my Celcstine will not forget To be there, in her coach with my lord's coronet : She will smile to me then, as she smiled to me now : I shall nod to her gayly, and make her my bow ; — Before I rejoin all those famous old thieves Whose deeds have immortalized Home, sir, and Greece : Whose names are inscribed upon History's leaves, Like my own on the books of the City Police : — Alexander, and Caesar, and other great robbers. Who once tried to pocket the whole universe : — Not to speak of our pwn parliamentary jobbers. With their hands, bless them all, in the popular purse ! BABYLONIA. Enough of simpering, and grimace ! Enough of damning one's soul for nothing ! Enough of Vacuity trimm'd with lace ! And Poverty proud of her purple clothing ! In Babylon, whene'er there's a wind, (Whether it blow rain, or whether it blow sand,) The weathercocks change their mighty mind ; And the weathercocks are forty thousand. 166 THE WANDERER. Forty thousand weathercocks, Each well-minded to keep his place, Turning about in the great and small ways ! Each knows, whatever the weather's shocks, That the wind will never blow in his face ; And in Babylon the wind blows always. I cannot tell how it may strike you, But it strikes me now, for the first and last time, That there may be better things to do, Than watching the weathercocks for pastime. And I wish I were out of Babylon, Out of sight of column and steeple, Out of fashion and form, for one, And out of the midst of this double-faced people. Enough of catgut ! Enough of the sight Of the dolls it sets dancing all the night ! For there is a notion come to me, As here, in Babylon, I am lying, That far away, over the sea, And under another moon and star. Braver, more beautiful beings are dying (Dying, not dancing, dying, dying !) To a music nobler far. Full well I know that, before it came To inhabit this feeble, faltering frame, My soul was weary ; and, ever since then, It has seem'd to me, in the stir and bustle Of this eager Avorld of women and men, That my life was tired before it began, That even the child had fatigued the man, And brain, and heart, have done their part To wear out sinew and muscle. Yet, sometimes, a wish has come to me. To wander, Avander, I know not where, Out of the sight of all that I see. Out of the hearing of all that I hear ; BABYLONIA. 167 Where only the tawny, bold, wild beast Roams his realms ; and find, at least, The strenfjth which even the beast finds there. A joy, tho' but a savase joy ; — Were it only to find the food I need. The scent to track, and the force to destroy, And the very appetite to feed ; The bliss of the sense without the thought. And the freedom, for once in my life, from aught That fills my life with care. And never this thought hath so wildly crost My mind, with its wildering, strange temptation. As just when I was enjoying the most The blessings of what is call'd Civilization : — The glossy boot which tightens the foot ; The club at which my friend was black-ball'd (I am sorry, of course, but one must be ex- clusive) ; The yellow kid glove whose shape I approve, And the journal in which I am kindly call'd Whatever's not libellous — only abusive : The ball to which I am careful to go. Where the folks are so cool, and the rooms are so hot ; The opera, which shows one what music — is not ; And the simper from Lady .... but why should you know V Yet, I am a part of the things I despise. Since my life is bound by their common span : And each idler I meet, in square or in street, Hath within him what all that's without him be- lies, — The miraculous, infinite heart of man. With its countless capabilities ! The sleekest guest at the general feast. That at every sip, as he sups, says grace, Hath in him a touch of the untamed beast ; 168 THE WAXDKRKK. And change of nature is change of place. The judge on tlie bench, and the scamp at the dock, Have, in each of them, nuich that is common to both ; Each is part of the parent stock, And their ditVerence comes of their di He rent cU^th. 'Twixt the Seven Dials and Exeter Ilall The gulf that is fix'd is not so wide : And the fool that, last year, at Her :\[aiesty's Ball, Sicken'd me so Avith his simjier of pride. Is the hero now heard of, the iirst on the wall, With the bayonet-wound in his side. Oh, for the times which were (if any Time be heroic) heroic indeed ! When the men were few, And the deeds to do Were mighty, and many. And each man in his hand held a noble deed. Now the deeds are few, And the men are many, And each man has, at most, but a noble need. Blind fool ! . . . I know that all acted time By that which succeeds it, is ever received As calmer, completer, and more sublime, Only because it is iinish'd : because We only behold the thing it achieved ; AVe behold not the thing that it was. For, while it stamls whole, and immutable. In the marble of memory, — we, who have seen But the statue before us. — how can we tell What the men that have hewn at the block may have been ? Their passion is merged in its passionlessness ; Their strife in its stillness closed t'orever: Their change upon change in its changelessness : HAIJYLONIA. 169 Tn its final acliievenient,tlieirfeverisli endeavour: Who knows how sculptor on sculptor starved With the tliought in the head by the hand un- carved V And he that spread out in its ample repose That ^rand, indilFerent, godlike brow, How vainly iiis own may have ached, who knows, 'Twixt the laurel above and the wrinkle below ? So again to Babylon I come back, Where this fett(;r'd giant of Human Nature Cramp'd in limb, and constraint in stature, In the torture-chamber of Vanity lies ; Helpless and weak, and conipell'd to speak The things he nmst despise. You stars, so still in the midnight blue, Which over these huddling roof's I view. Out of reach of tliis Babylonian riot, — We so restless, and you so ([uiet. What is difference 'twixt us and you ? You each may have pined with a pain divine, For augiit I know. As wildly as this weak heart of mine, In an Age ago : For whence should you have that stern repose, Which, here, dwells but on the brows of those Who have lived, and survived life's fever, Had you never known the ravage and fire Of that inexpressible Desire, Which wastes and calcines whatever is less In the soul, than the soul's deep consciousness Of a life that shall last forever ? Doubtless, doubtless, again and again. Many a mouth has starved for bread In a city whose wharves are choked with corn; And many a heart hath perish'd dead From being too utterly forlorn, 170 Tin: WANOKHKK, In a i'ity whoso stivots are t'liokM wltli moii. Yot the bread is thoiv, ooiiUi one liml it out And tliore is a heart tor a heart, no doubt, Wherever a human heart may beat ; And room tor emtraiie, antl trutli, and love. To move, wherever a man may move, In the thiekUest erowiled street. O Lonl of the soul of man, whose will Made earth tor man, and man for iieaven, llel}> all thy ereatures to fultil The hopes to eaeh one j^iven I So fair thou matl'st, and so eomj^lete. The little daisies at our teet ; So sound, and so robust in heart. The jKttient beasts, that bear their part In this world's labour, never askiui*: The reason of it^ eeaseless taskiuii' ; Hast thou made man, tho' more in kind, l>v reason of his soul and mind. Yet less in unison with lit'e, Hy reason of an inward strife. Than these, thy simpler ereatures, are. Submitted to his use and eare ? For these, indeed, appear to live To the full verge of their own power. Nor ever need that tin\e shouhl uive To life one spaee beyond the hour. They do not pine for what is not ; Nor quarrel with the thinjis whieh are ; Their yesterdays are all forgot ; Their morrows are not tearM tVom far : They do not weep, and wail, anil moan. For what is past, or what's to be. Or what's not yet, and may be never; They do not their own lives disown, Nor haggle with eternity For some unknown Forever. HA15YL0MA. 171 All yot, — in tliis must I belicvo That man is nobler than the rest : — That, lookinrr in on his own breast, He measures thus his strength and size With supernatural d(;stinies, Wliose shades o'er all his being fall ; And, in that dn-ad comparison 'Twixt what is deem'd and what is done, He can, at intervals, perceive How weak, he is, and small. Therefore, he knows himself a child. Set in this rudimental star, To learn the alphabet of Reing ; By straws dismay'd, by toys beguil'd. Yet conscious of a home afar ; With all things here but ill agreeing, Because he trusts, in nianhood's prime, To walk in some celestial clime ; Sit in his FathiM-'s house; and be The inmate of Eternity. BOOK I y . IN SWITZERLAND. THE HEART AND NATURE. The lako ijs calm ; and, calm, tlie skies In yonder silent sunset olow, Where, o'er the woodland, homeward flies The solitary crow ; The woodman to his lint is gone ; The wood-dove in the elm is still ; The last sheep drinks, and wanders on To graze at Avill. Nor aught the pensive prospect breaks. Save where my slow feet stir the grass, Or where the trout to diamonds breaks The lake's pale glass. No moan the cushat makes, to heave A leaflet round her windless nest ; The air is silent in the eve ; The world's at rest. All bright below ; all calm above ; No sense of" pain, no sign of w-rong ; Save in thy heart of hopeless love, Poor child of Song ! THE IIKAIIT AXD NATURE. 173 Wliy must the soul tliro' Nature rove, At variance with lier general plan ? A stranger to the Power, whose love Soothes all save Man V Why lack the strength of meaner creatures ? The wandering sheep, the grazing kine, Are surer of their simple natures Than I of mine. For all their wants the poorest land Affords supply ; they browse and breed ; I scarce divine, and ne'er have found, What most I need. O God, that in this human heart Hath made Belief so hard to grow, And set the doubt, the pang, the smart In all we know — Why hast thou, too, in solemn jest At this tormented thinking-power, Inscribed, in flame on yonder West, In hues on every flower, Thro' all the vast unthinking sphere Of mere material Force without, Rebuke so vehement and severe To the least doubt ? And robed the world and hung the night, With silent, stern, and solemn forms; And strown with sounds of awe, and might. The seas and storms ; — All lacking power to impart To man the secret he assails, But arm'd to crush him, if his heart Once doubts or fails ! 171 TIIK >VANl>KKl':U. To luako him tool the same forlorn Despair, tlio Fioiul hath loll oro now, In <>aziiiii- at tho stoni swoot sroiii On Miohaol'ti brow. A CiUlET MOMENT. Stay with mo, Tiatly, Avhilo you may ! For lif'o's so sail, — this hour's so swoet; Ah, Laily, — lit'o too louo- will stay ; Too soon this hour will Jloot. IIow fair this mountain's purj)lo bust, Alone in high and liliunnorinii- air ! And see, . . . those villauo spiros, uj)thrust From yon dark plain, — liow tair! How swoot yiu) louo ami lovoly soono, AtuI yondor droppiuji- fiory i)all. And ovo's swoot spirit, that steals, unsei'u. With ilaiknoss o\or all ! 1'his blessed hour is yours, and eve's ; And this is why it seems so sweet, To lie, as husht as tiillen leaves In autumn, at your loot ; And wateh, awhile released iVt>m oaro, Tho twiliiilU in yon ipiiet skies, Tho twilight in youv (piiot hair, The twiliiiht in your eyes : Till in n\y soul tho twilight stays, — Eve's twilloht, sinoe the dawn's is o'er! And life's too well-known worthless days Beeome unknown oneo more. A QUIET MOMKNT. 175 Your fciue is no iincomnion face ; \j\ki', it, I have seen many a one, And may a^^ain, before my race Of care l)C wholly run. But not th(; less, those earnest brows, And that pure oval cheek can charm ; — Those eyes of tender deej) re[)ose ; That l;reast, the heart keeps warm. Because a sense of ^loodness sleeps In every sober, soft, brown tress, "^riiat o'er those brows, uncared for, keeps Its shadowy (juietness : Because that lip's soft silence shows, 'I'ho' f)assion it hath n(!ver known, That well, to kiss one kiss, it knows — — A wonmn's holiest one ! Yours is tlie charm of calm good sense. Of wholesome views of eai'th and heaven, Of f)ity, touch'd with reverence, To all things freely given. Your face no sleepless midnight fills, For all its seritnis sweet endeavour ; It i)lants no pang, no rapture thrills. But ah ! — it pleases ever ! Not yours is Cleopatra's eye, And Juliet's tears you never knew : Never will amorous Antony Kiss kingdoms out for you ! Never for you will Romeo's love. From de('[)s of moonlit musing, break To ])oetry about the glove Whose touch may press your cheek. 170 Till: WANUKKKK. Hut ah, in ono, — no Antony Nor KonuM now, nor like to tluso, — (A\ liom nolthor Cleopatra's ovo, Nor JuliotV tears, eonUl [ileasiO How well thov Inll tlie lurklnu' earo Whieh olso within the minil emlures, — That sott white haml, that soft dark hair, Ami that sott voiee of yonrs ! 80, whik^ yon staml, a fragile form. With that elose shawl aronml you ilrawn, Ami eve's last ardours tailing warm Adown the mountain lawn, 'Tis sweet, although we part to-morrow. And ne'er, the same, shall meet again. Awhile, t'rom old habitual sorrow- To eease ; to eease t'rom pain ; To feel that, ages past, the soul Hath lived — and ages henee will live ; And taste, in hours like this, the whole C)f all the }ears ean give. Then, Lady, yet one moment stay. While your sweet faee makes all things sweet. For ah, the eharm will |x\ss away Bet'ore again we meet I SoFr, soft be thy sleep in the land of the West, Fated maiden I Far lie the llowers, love, and light, on thy breast Passion-laden, n;i<:ni^':. 177 III tlic place wbere thou art, by tlie storm-beaten strand Of the moaninjij Atlantic, While, alone with my sorrow, I roam thro' thy land, The belov'd, \\n', romantic ! And thy faults, child, sleep where in those dark eyes JJeath closes All their doings and undoings ; For who counts the thorns on last year's perLsht roses V Smile, dead rose, in thy ruins ! With thy beauty, its frailty is over. No token Of all which thou wast ! Not so much as the stem whence the blossom was broken Hath been spared by the frost. With thy lips, and thine eyes, and thy long golden tresses, Cold . . . and so young too ! All lost, like the sweetness which died with our kisses, On the lips we once clung to. Be it so ! O too loved, and too lovely, to linger AVliere Age in its bareness Creeps slowly, and Time with his terrible finger Effaces all fairness. Thy being was but beauty, thy life only rapture, And, ere both were over. Or yet one delight had escaped from thy capture. Death came, — thy last lover, And found thee, ... no care on thy brow, in thy tresses No silver — all gold there I On thy lips, when he kiss'd them, their last human kisses Had scarcely grown cold there. Thine was only earth's joy, not its sorrow, its sinning. Its friends that are foes too. 12 17S IIIK \\ ANDI'.in'.K. Oil lair was (hy liti> in its lovt^ly Ix'oimiinuf, And lair in its closi> too ! l)iit I ? . , . sini'c wo partoil, bolli inourMriil ami many Lilo's cliauiios liavo Iuhmi lo \ni' : And of all tho lovi'-^arlands ^'outh wovo mo, not any l\omain that i\rc urtHMi to mo. Oil, wluMo AW [\\c nights, with thy tiMu-h, and Ihy hroalh in thom, Faint witii hoart-boatinir ? The tVajjrani'O, tho davknoss, iho lil'o and the doath in thiMn, — Partinii' and nuH>tinii? All tho world onrs in that lu>nr ! . . . oh, th.o siliMU'C, The moonliiiht, aiul, far in it, Oh Iho oni> nijihtinualo singint^ a mile honco ! VUc opod wind«)w — one star in it! Solo witiu>ss iA' stolon swoot moments, nn^nest oi' Hy the world in its primness; — .Inst one smile to adore hy the starliolit : the ri'st oi' Thy sonl in the dimness ! If I i:;liilo thro' tho (Uhu* of thy ohambor, and sit thoio, Tho old, faint, niu'orlain FraovaneiN that tollow'd thee, snroly will Hit there, — O'er the i-hairs, — in tho enrtain : — Hnt thon y . . . () tluni missM, and tiiou monrn'il, one I oh never, Nevermore, shall we rove Thro' elunnbor, t)r garden, or by tho dark river Soft lamps burn above ! O dead, ehild, iloaxl, iload — all the shrnnken ro- mance Of the droam lite bounn with ! Bnt thon, lovo,eanst alter no more — smlh> or lilaneo ; Thy last ehanjio is done with. As a moon that is sunken, a sunset that's o'er, So thy faoo keeps the semblance NACNI^:. 179 Of the last look of love;, tjio last ar her, there !) Jiike (hat old s[)itefnl (^iieen. in hei- last hour, Whom S[)enser, Shakespeare sung to . . . nothing left But wrinkles, and red hair ! LEAFLESS IIOUKS. TiiK pale sun, thro' (he sjiectral wood, Gleams si)arely, where 1 pass: My Ibotst*^}), silent as my mood, Falls in the silent grass. ON MY TWKNTY-FOUllTII YKAR. 181 Only my sliadovv yxMiits before mc, AVlioro I am movlti;; now: Only sad memories murmur o'er me From every h'alless bou all as fully as tho' life Avere doubled 'Lo its tbrty-eighth year. If the pros{)eet srrow dim, 'tis because it grows wide. Every loss hath its gain. So, from sphere on to sphere, Man mounts up the ladder of Time : so 1 stride Up my twenty-fourth year ! Exulting ? . . . no . . . sorrowing V .... no with a mind Whose regret chastens hope, whose faith triumphs o'er tear : JAOCiUKLINP:. 183 Nol, rcpliiin;^' : not coiiridcnt : no, but rcsign'd To my tvventy-fotirlli ycur. JACQUELINE, COIINTESM OK HOLLAND AM) HAINAITLT* Ih it, llic. tvvili;.rlit, or my fading wght, M;ikcs ;ill so dim around me V No, the niglit Is coine alrcndy. Sec ! tln-o' yonder pane, Alone in tlu; ;^ray air, that star n<^ii'\n — Which shines so wan, I used toe;ill it mine For its pah', lace ; like Countess Jac(|uc;line Who rei<^n'd in IJrabant once . . . tliat's years ago. I call'd so much mine, then : so much seem'd so ! And see, my own I — of all those tilings, my star (IJecause (iod hung it there, in heaven, so far Above the reach and want of those; hard men) Is all th " n,,,,,! niikd Jliiinphry," of (Houccstor, niid liiiiill.v wcililcd U> Km.nk von ISorscilcri, a Kontlcrnan of Zea- liiiid, ill coiistMiiiciicc not, doar, thoso ibnd oyos down. No ii'oni in all that shattorM ooronot ^Vas halt" so prooions as tho toar which wot ,Inst now this palo siok t'oroluvul. O my own. My hnsband, nood was, that I shonld havo knmvn Aluoh sorrow, — more than most Qnoons — all know somo, — Kro, dyinii', 1 oonld bloss thoo for tho homo Far tloaivr than tho Palaoo, — oall thy toar, Tho oostliost gom that ovor s{»arklod liore. I'utold mo, my UoKnOii. ()no moro kiss. Oh, 1 nuist go I 'Twas willM I shonld not miss Lito's soorot, ero 1 loft it. And now soe — ^ly lips touoh thino — thino arm onoirolos me — Tho soorot's t'onnd — Ciod bookons — I mnst go. Earth's bost is givon. — lloavon's turn is oonio to slu>w How nuu'h its bost oarth's bost may yot oxoeed, Lost oarth's should soom tho vory bost indoed. So wo nuist part a littlo ; but not long. 1 soom to soo it all. ]My laiuls bolong To Philip still ; but thino will bo my gravo, (Tho only strip oi' land whioh 1 oonld s;ivo I) Not nuioh, but wido onough tlir somo t'ow tlowers, Thou'lt plant thoro, by and by, in lator hou^-s: l)uko Ihnnphry, Avhon thoy toll him I am doad (And so voung too I) will sigh, and shako his head. And it' Ins wito should ohido, ** Poor Jaotpieline," Ilo'll add, " yon know sho never oonld bo mine." And men will say, whon some one speaks of me, '• Alas, it was a piteous history. The life of that poor Countess ! " For the rest JACQUELINE. 185 Will nover know, my love, liow I was }>le.st. Sonic i'tiw of my [)oor Zealanders, perchance, Will ke(!p kind memories of me ; anty windows. As there sprout Daisies, and dimpling tut\s of violets, out Among the grass where some corpse lies asleep, So round thy life, where I lie buried deep, A thousand little tender thoughts shall spring. JACQUELINE, 187 A thousand frcntlo nu-morics wind, and cling. Oh, promise me, my own, bcifore my soul Is liouseless, — let the great world turn and roll U[)on its way unvcxt Its pomps, its ])owers ! The dust says to the dust, ..." the earth is ours." I would not, if I could, be (^uoen again For all the walls of the wide world contain. Be thou content with silence. Wlio would raise A little dust and noise of human praise, If he could see, in yonder distance dim, The silent eye of God that watches him? Oh ! couldst thou see all that I see to-night Upon the brinks of the gi-eat Infinite ! " Come out of her, my people, lest ye be Partakers of her sins ! " My love, but we Our treasure where no thieves break in and steal Have stored, I trust. Earth's weal is not our weal. Let the world mind its business — peace or war; Ours is elsewhere. Look, look, — my star, my star ! It grows, it glows, it spreads in light unfurl'd; — Said I " my star ? " No star — a world — God's world ! What hymns adown the jasper sea are roll'd, Even to these sick pillows ! Who enfold AVhite wings about me V llest, rest, rest I come ! O Love ! 1 think that I am near my home. Whence was that music V Was it Heaven's I heard ? Write " Blessed are the dead that die i' the Lord, Because they rest," . . . because their toil is o'er. The voice of weeping shall be heard no more In the Eternal city. Neither dying Nor sickness, pain nor sorrow, neither crying, For God shall wipe away all tears. Rest, rest. Thy hand, my husband, — so — upon thy breast ! 188 TIIK WANDKKKK MACROMICROS. It is the star of solitude, Alight in yon lonely sky. The sea is silent in its mood, Motheilike moaning a lullaby, To hush the hungering mystery To sleep on its breast subdued. The night is aloue, and I. It is not the seene I am seeing, The lonely sky and the sea, It is the pathos of Being That is making so dark in me This silent and solemn hour: — The bale of ba tiled power, The Avail of unbatUed desire, The tire that must ever devour The souree by which it is lire. INIy spirit expands, expands ! I spread out my soul on the sea. I feel for yet nntbund lands, And I find but the hnul Avhere She Sits, Avith her sad "white hands. At her gohlen broidery. In sight of the sorrowful sands, In an antique gallery, AVhere, ever beside her, stands (Moodily mimieking me) The ghost of a something her heart demands For a blessing Avhieh cannot be. And broider, broider by night and day The brede of thy blazing broidery ! Till thy beairty be wholly woven away Into the desolate tapestry. MACKOMICROS. 189 Let the thread be scarlet, the gold be gay, For the damp to dim, and the moth to fray : AVeave in the azure, and crimson, and green ! Till the slow threads, needling out and In, To take a fashion and form begin : Yet, for all the time and toil, I see The work is vain, and will not be Like what it was meant to have been. woman, woman, with face so pale ! Pale woman, weaving away A frustrate life at a lifeless loom, Early or late, 'tis of little avail That thou lightest the lamp in the gloom.- Full well, I see, there is coming a day When the work shall forever rest incomplete. Fling, fling the foolish blazon away. And weave me a winding sheet ! It is not for thee, in this dreary hour, That I walk, companlonless here by the shore. 1 am caught in the eddy and whirl of a power Which is not grief, and is not love, Tho' it loves, and grieves. Within me, without me, wherever I move In the going out of the ghostly eves, And is changing me more and more. I am not mourning for thee, altho' I love thee, and thou art lost : Nor yet for myself, albeit I know That my life is flaw'd and crost : But for that sightless, sorrowing Soul That is feeling, blind with immortal pain, All round, for what it can never attain ; That prison'd, pining, and passionate soul, So vast, and yet so small ; That seems, now nothing, now all. That moves me to pity beyond control, And repulses pity again. 190 rilK WANOKKKU. 1 ;m\ nunirnlnu, siiii'o n\i>urn 1 nmst, Willi those pationt Powers tliat boar, 'Noatli tho unattainablo stars up tliore. With tho pomp an*! pall oi' tiiuoral, Subjoi't ami yt>t aiiuust, Tho woiiiht ot" this woiKl's dust : — Tho ruiuM iiiaut uudor tho rook : Tho strirkoti spirit boloNv tho oeoau : And tho \viuu;M thiuus wouudod ot" old by tho slunk That sot tho oarth iu motion. Ah yot. . . . anil yot. ami yot. It' Sho woro hore with mo. It" sho woro horo by tho soa, With tho. t'aoo I oannot t'oruot. Thou all thiug-s would not bo So tVauiiht with own rogrot, Hut what I should fool, and soo, And soi/o it at last, at last,— Tho seorot known and lost in tho past. To unsoal tho (lonii that sloop In'vials long- hid in tho doop ; l>y t"orgotton, t'ashionloss spoils hoKl t'ast, Whoro thro' stroots of tho oitios ot' ooral, aghikiit, riio soa-nymphs wandor and woop. MYSTKUY. The hour was ono of mystery, AVhon we were s^iiling, I and she, Down the dark, the silent stivam. The stars aln^ve were pale with love. Ami a wizard wind did faintly move, Like a whisper thro' a divam. iMVHTKllV, 191 Her Ikj.'u] was on my breast, Her l()\in^' littNi head! ]I(;r' liatid in nnuv, was prn^sf, And not a word we .said ; Hut round and round tlic ni;;}it we wound, Till w(* came at last to the IsN; of Fays; And, all llie while, from th(i ma;.'i(; isle, (Jarjie that nujsic, that music of other days! The, lam[)S in the j^arden KKKK. rho jvUai'o i-look stnuils in (lu> hall. Ami talks, imhoanl. of tho tli>iht of (imo: >N'ith .'i I'ai'o too palo lor ;» tostival It ti^lloth .'v lalo too sail tor vhvwio. Vho palaoo rUnk. with ;v sihor nt>to. Is ihantiui); thv> doath ot' tho hour that dio •' What aih'th tlu>o V tor I soo tloat A shailo into thino ovo.s."" "]S\>Uiiht ailoth mo." . . . Knv murmurM slio, " I am taint with tho danoo, my lovo. (^ivo mo thino arm : tho air is warm : Load n\o unto tho jirovo." ^^■o watulorM into tho oi\no. ^^'o touuvl A bowor by woodlnno wovon rounil. I'pon my bivast sho loauM hor ho;\d : I ilrow hor into tho bowor apart. " I swi>ar to thoo, my lovo." sho s;\id, »• Thou hast my hoart I " *» Ah, loavo tlty littlo hoart at ivst 1 Wr it is so liiiht. I thmk. so li>*ht. Soujo witid woulil blow it away to-niglit. It' it woro not s;U"o in thy broast. Hut tho womlrous briiihtnoss on thino hair Piil novor soom tuoro biiiiht : And thy boauty novor lix^k'd uioiv t'air rhai\ thv boauty looks tivniiiht : And this dim hour. a»id this wild bowor. Woro mado tor our dolight : lloro will wo stay, utuil tho day. l«\ yon dark oast iiivws whito." '• This n\ay not bo," . . . sho answorod mo, " For I was latoly wod ^Vith a diainoml ring to an C^jiiv-king, MYhJi-JiV. 195 Ari'J I am IjIh wifl;," . . . nhc hh'kI. '' My liuhhand ]h old ; but liiw crown in of j/oKi : A(ifl \ii; Ijaf.li a orii«;l eye : And }iin arm in Uhk/, arnJ IiIh hand \h Hfron;.^, And liin body Ih Hcvcn <;IIm lii;/li : Afid ala« I I fi;ar, if h(; found uh here, That w(j hoth hhould hurely die. "All day I tak*-, my harp, and [>lay To him ()i\ a (.'oldftn Ktrin^: 'J'horou;.'h th<; weary livelon;^ day I fjlay to him, and Hinj< : I Hiri;/ to hirn till hi.H white hair l*«;;.'inH U> eurl and f.nu'.u : And liiw wrinkleH fjld wlowiy unfohJ, And liin hrowH ^aow Hnujotfi aH Mh^en. Jiut at ni^'ht, when he ealln for hJH ^'olden fMjp, Into his win(5 I fjour A juice which he drinks duly \\\), Aiifi kIc(^[)H till the nijiht is o'(*r. For <>i\tt moment I wait : I look at him »trai;ent; and beffjre the first rent 196 THE WANDERER. In yon dark blue sky overhead, My husband will wake, and the spell will break, And peril is near," . . . she said. " For if he should wake, and not find me, By bower and brake, thoro' bush and tree, He will come to seek me here ; And the Palace of Fays, in one vast blaze. Will sink and disappear ; And the nightingales will die in the vales, And all will be changed and drear ! For the fays, and elves, can take care of them- selves : They will slip on their slippers, and go : In their little green cloaks they will hide in the oaks, And the forests and brakes, for their sweet sakes, Will cover and keep them, I know. And the knights, with their spurs, and velvets and furs. Will take olF their heads, each one, And to horse, and away, as fast as they may. Over brook, and bramble, and stone : And each dame of the house has a little dun mouse. That will whisper her when to be gone ; But Ave, my love, in this desolate grove, We shall be left alone ; And my husband will find us, take us and bind us : In his cave he will lock me up. And pledge me for spite in thy blood by night When he drains down his golden cup." ** Thy husband, dear, is a monster, 'tis clear, But just now I will not tarry Thy choice to dispute — how on earth such a brute Thou hadst ever the fancy to marry. For wherefore, meanwhile, are we two here, In a fairy island under a spell, By night, in a magical atmosphere. In a lone enchanted dell. MYSTERY. 197 If we are to say and do no more Than is said and done by the dull daylight, In that dry old world, where both must ignore, To-morrow, the dream of to-night." Her head droop'd on my breast, Fair foolish little head ! Her lips to mine were prest. Never a word was said. If it were but a dream of the night, A dream that I dream'd in sleep — Why, then, is my face so white. And this wound so red and deep ? But whatever it was, it all took place In a land where never your steps will go, Tho' they wander, wherever they will, thro' space ; In an hour you never will know, Tho' you should outlive the crow That is like to outlive your race. And if it were but a dream, it broke Too soon, albeit too late I woke. Waked by the smart of a sounding stroke Which has so confused my wits, That I cannot remember, and never shall. What was the close of that festival, Nor how the Palace was shatter'd to bits : For all that, just now, I think I know, Is what is the force of an Ogre's blow. As my head, by starts and fits. Aches and throbs; and, when I look round. All that I hear is the sickening sound Of the nurse's watch, and the doctor's boots, Instead of the magical fairy flutes ; And all that I see, in my love's lost place, Is that gin-drinking hag, Avith her nut-cracker face, By the hearth's half-burn'd out wood : li>S rUK \VANJ>1'KKU. And tlio only stroani is this stroani of Mood That tlows t'lHMU nio. ivii and wido : Yi't still I hoar. — as sharn and oloar, la tho horriblo horrihlo sdonoo ontsido, Tho olook that stands in tho onuuy hall, And talks to my sonl of tho tlight of timo ; With a faoo liko a faoo at a t'nnoral, Tt'llini; a talo too sad tor rhynio : And still I hoar, with as littlo ohoor. In tho yot inoro horriblo silonoo inside. Chanted, perohanee, by elves and lays. From some tar island, ont of my ua/.e, )Vhere a. honse luv* tallen, and some one has died. That mnsio. that mnsie of other days. With its minstrelsy nndeseried ! For Time, whieh snrviveth everythinix. And Memory whieh snrviveth Time : — 'J'hese two sit by my side, and sing, A sonii' too sad tor rln me. TllK CAXriCLK (>F l.OVF. 1 ONOK heanl an anu:el, by niiiht. in the sky. SinixiniX softly a song to a doep g\>Ulen Into : The polestar. the seven little planets, and I, Vo the song that he snng listenM mnte. For the song that he sung was so strange ami so sweet. And so tender the tones of his lute's golden strings. That the Seraphs of Heaven sat husht at his feet. And iolded their heads in their winixs. 'I UK CANTirLK OF LOVK. 190 Arifl the Hon;^ tliat lio H\in<^ hy thoso Serapli« up there Ih eall'fJ . . " Lov(;." liut tlie words. I }i;]'J liftard thetri els:ew}if;r(;. For, v/h(;n I was last in tlie nethermost Hell, On a roek 'mid the sulfJiunjuH sur;((;s, I heard A pal(i spirit sin^ to a wiM hollow shell, And his son^r was the same, every word, lint so sad was his sin;riri;;, all llcW to the sound Moan'd, an<], wailing, complain'd like a monster in pain. While the ficjnds lioverM near o'er tlie dismal pro- fijurid. With their blaek win;rs wei;fh'd down by the strain. Anfl th(; song t.hat was sung by the Lost Ones down there Is call'd . . " Love." But the spirit that sung was D(;sj)air. \Vh(!n the moon sets to-night, I will go down to oeean, Jiare my brow to thr; bre(;ze, and n)y heart to its anguish ; And sing till the Siren with pining emotion ([Jndrousc.d in he.r sea-eaves) shall languish. And the. Sylphs of the watLi i:iu:aki). I WAS to woil yoimii; Fatima, As {)urt^ as A[>rirs snowdrops aro, In whoso lovo lay hid my crookod lilo, As in its shoath n»y soiniitar. Anionji" the lu>t pomojxi'iViiJito bouglis, At snnsot, lioro aUmo wo sat. To oall bai'k scnnothinu' from tliat hour I'll iiivo away my Caliphat. Sho bn^ki' hor sonjj; to ii'azo at mo : I lor lips sho loanM my lips abo\o . . . "■ Why art thon silont all this >vhilo, Loni otiuy lit'o, and ot"my love?". '' Sih'til 1 am, iiouiHj Fatiina, For silent in niif soul in tnt\ And tiVK/uafU' will nol lulp the want 0/ that tchich cannot ever be." " Hnt whorotbro is thy spirit sad, My lord, my lovo, my lit'o V" . . . sho said. " lieeaitse th if face is irondrous ///r, 'J 'he face o/one I k'netr, that's dead" " Ah ornol, ornol," oriod Fatima, " That I shonUl not possoss tho past ! What woman's lips lirst kiss'd tho lips \\'horo my kiss livod and lingor'il last"? " And sho that's doad was lovod by thoo. That so hor momory movos thoo yet ? . . Tliv t'ai'o Ljrows oold and white, as looks The moon o'er vender minaret ! " FATIMA. — CIOING IJACK AGAIN. 207 " Ay, Fatimn ! I loved her ivell, With all of love's and lifers despair, Or else J laid not slranfjled her, That ni(jht, in her oivn fatal hair." FATIMA. A YEAU ago thy cheek was briiiond," . . . you say, oi' ooiirso ! Yot thoro may bo somothiiijj; in it, too. Kill, in- bo kill'd . . , whii'h I'hoioo were the worse ? I know not. 8olvo it you. But even the wolf must have his prey : And even the gallows will have her food : And a king, my iVientl, will have his way, Tho' that way may lie thro* blood, !My heart is Imnsijry, and must be toil ; ]\ly lite is empty, and must be liU'd ; One is not a (Ihoul, to live on the ilead : "NVhat then it" tVesh blood be s})iird ? We tbllow the way that nature leads. AVhat's the very lust thinii- that we learn V . . . To lie V our. Eaeh life the death of some other neeils To help it from hour to hour. From the animaleule that swallows his friends, Nothing- loath, in the wave as it rolls. To man, as Ave see him, this law ascends; 'Tis the same in the world ol' souls. The law of the one is still to absorb : To be absorbed is the other's lot : — The lesser orb by the larger orb. The weak by the strong . . . Avhy not ? My want's at the worst : so why should I spare (^Sinee just sueh a thing my want sup})lies) This little girl with the silky hair. And tho love in her two larue eNOs? THE FUGITIVE. 211 THE fugitivp:. TuEUE is no quiet left in life, Not any inoment brings me rest : For evermore, from shore to shore, J bear about a laden breast. I see new lands : I meet new men : 1 learn strange tongues in novel places. J earmot ehase one phantom faee 'J'hat haunts me spite of newer faces. Vov me the wine is pour'd by night, And deep enough to drown much sadness ; But from the cup that faee looks up, And mirth and music turn to madness. There's many a lip that's warm for me : Many a heart witli passion bounding : But ah, my breast, when closest prest. Creeps to a cold step near me sounding. To this dark pent-house of the mind I lure the Ijat-wing'd Sleep in vain ; For on his wings a dream he brings 'J'hat deepens all the dark with pain. I may write books which friends will praise, I may win fame, I may win treasure ; But hope grows less with each success. And pain grows more with every pleasure. The draughts T drain to slake my thirst But fuel more the infernal flame. There tangs a sting in everything : — The more I chanjie, the more the same ! 212 THE WANDERER. A man that flies before the pest, From wind to wind my course is whirl'd. This lly accurst stuufj Jo first, And drove her wild across the world ! THE SHORE, Can it be women that walk in the sea-mist, under the dills there V Where, 'neath a briny bow, creaming, advances the lip Of the foam, and out from the sand-chok'd an- chors, on to the skitfs there, The long ropes swing thro' the surge, as it tum- bles; and glitter, and drip. All the place in a lurid, glimmering, emerald glory, Glares like a Titan world come back under heaven again : Yonder, up there, are the steeps of the sea-kings, famous in story ; But who are they on the beach ? They are neither women, nor men. Who knows, are they the land's, or the water's, living creatures ? Born of the boiling sea ? nurst in the seething storms ? With their woman's hair dishevell'd over their stern male features. Striding, bare to the knee ; magnified maritime tbrms ! They may be the mothers and wives, they may be the sisters and dauirhters TIIK SHORE. 213 Of men on the dark mid-seas, alone in those black-coil'd hulls, That toil 'neath yon white cloud, whence the moon will rise o'er the waters To-nif;ht, with her face on fire, if the wind in the evening lulls. But they may be merely visions, such as only sick men witness, (Sittin^ij as I sit here, fiU'd with a wild regret) Framed from the sea's misshapen spume with a horrible fitness To the winds in which they walk, and the surges by which they are wet : — Salamanders, sea-wolves, witches, warlocks; marine monsters. Which the dying seaman beholds, when the rats are swimming away. And an Indian wind 'gins hiss from an unknown isle, and alone stirs The broken cloud which burns on the verge of the dead, red day. I know not. All in my mind is confused ; nor can I dissever The mould of the visible world from the shape of my thoughts in me. The Inward and Outward are fused : and, thro' them, murmur forever The sorrow whose sound is the wind, and the roar of the limitless sea. 91i 'niK \v.\M>KKi:i{. TllK N' OK Til Sr.A. r»v {\w m";\v sand hills, o'cv tho I'oM st'a-sliov<> ; wluM'o, iliimMv jH*iM"n\i»", Pass tho palo-{Yhat it linds iit^vor. (>\"r tho saml-roai'hos, hays, billows. l>lo\vi\ boaohos. lumu»U'ss t'oi'ON or ! Anil, in a vision oi' iho l»aro hoaNvMi soon and S()on hist aj;ain, O>or (ho folliuii (oa»n, ou( in (ho »niil soas. roniul bv tho ooas( ao\o, o'or (ho Moak sm'm\s, in (ho m-i'on hriuy liloani, briotly rovoalM ami ^ono ; . . (hu>(. as oniorot's (>ut of (ho (nn\ult ot* stnui^ biain whoro nuMnorv labours, auvl lVot('ully Moans all tho niiiht-loi»>j[,— j\ wild wiiv^od \\o\h\ soon tadiuii ivurot fully. Uoio walk tho \i^s( (lods i>' dark Soandinavia, niornino- at\d ovoti ; l\\in( palo ilivini(ios. roabnloss anil sorrowt'nl. oxil'd (Von\ Uoavon ; r>ur(hon'd Nvith niouiorios ot' old (luH\iiiM\ios ; oaoh ruinM nu>nari'hy luvuninji" juna/od by soas oblivivMJs t>('ani'iont toalty. Novor, a>iain at (ho tablos ot' Ovlin. in thoir lost najujuot Hall, Shall thoy \'\ou\ iiv>Klon onps drink, hoariuii' ii\>ldou harps, ha>*ini\ir hii;h tostival, Novor prajso bri^lK-hairM Kivya, in VinuoU', tor \wv lost lovolinoss I Novor, with .Kiiir. sail ixnuul oool moonlit islos v^t' s^ivon wiUlornos!! ! TIIK NOIITII HKA. '21.0 wlicrj (i;iy \h wafiiriaHH Hil«;nlly, (onus of flisriovviM'd kiii^s, Willi Hwciqjiii;/, (loal.iii;.^ fold.s of (Jim firariiKniJH ; waiid(!riii^ in wonder or llicif own aHpcrf,; lroo[)in;^ lowardn nii (,he, Ijir-ak hay (In; l''ihlie,r-iVIaid(!n, I (,oo, (orlornly wanderiii;^, wanderin*^, He*;, willi (,he, rnind'H <'-y(;, ShadowH h(!Hide me, . . . (hea,rin;^ (Ik; wave moan, heariii^ th<5 wind Hiirli). . ShadowH, aiui iiiia;^(;» bal<;('ully heanliCul, oi' days def)ar(.vandf.ukk. Yomloi's the light in tho Kishonnan's hut : Hut tho oKl wolt" hiuvsolt" is. I kuow, otV at soi\ ; Ami 1 soo thro" tho ohinks, tho' tho shuttoi*s bo shut, lU tho tirolliiht that sou\o ono is watohing tor mo. Throo yoars ago, on this vorv samo night, I walkM in a ballroom ot" portumo ami splon- tlour ^Vith a {loarl-botlook'd lady bolow tho lamii-li^ht : — ^\nv I walk with tho wild wiml, whoso broath is more tomlor. Hark I tho horsos ot' oooan that oi-ouoh at n\y toot, riiovaro moaning in impotont pain on tho boaoh! Lo I tho storm-light, that swathos in its blno wind- ingshoot That lono dosort ot' skv, whoro tho stars aro dead, oaoh I Holloa, thoro ! opon. yon littlo wild girl I Hush. . . . 'lis hor sott littlo foot oVr tho lloor. Stay not to tio up a single dark onrl, lint ipuok with tho oandlo. and opon tho door. Ono kiss "? . . . thoro's twonty I . . . but (irst, take my ooat there, Salt as a sea-sponge, and dripping all thro*. Tho old wolt*. your t'athor. is out in the boat there. Hark to the thunder 1 . . . we're safe, — I ami you. Put on tho kettle. And now I'or the oask Oi'that t'amous old rum of your t'ather's, the king \Vould have elaw'd on our t'rontier. There, fill me tho tlask. Ah, what a quiok^ little, noat-hamlod thing I There's my pipe. StutV it with blaok negro-head. Soon 1 shall be in the eloud-laud ol' ulorv. A NIGHT rX TIIK FISriKUMAN'S HUT. 219 Faitli, 'tis bettor with you, dear, than 'fore the irjast-hcad, With such Mghts at the windows of niglit's upper story ! Next, over the round open hole in the shutter You may pin up your sliawl, . . . lest a mermaid shouhJ peep. Come, now, the ketthi's be;^innin;^ to splutter, And the cat reconiposes herself into sleep. Poor little naked feet, . . , put them up there . . . Little white foam ilakes ! and now the soft head, Here, on my shoulder ; while all the dark hair Falls round us like seaweed. What matter the If skicp will visit it, if kisses feel there Swe(;t as they feel under curtains of silk? So, shut your eyes, while the firelight will steal there O'er the black bearskin, the arm white as milk ! Meanwliile I'll tell to you all I remember Of the old legend, the northern romance I heard of in Sweden, that snowy D(;cember I {(ass'd there, about the wild Lord Uosencrantz. 'J'hen, when you're tired, take the cards from the (Mjjjboard, Thumb'd ov(!r by every old thief in our crew, And rU tell you your fortune, you little Dame Hubbard ; My own has been squandcjr'd on witches like you. Knave, King, and Queen, all the villainous pack of 'em, 1 know what they're worth in the game, and have found 220 TllK AVANUKKKK. Upon all the tnuup-oards the small mark at. tlio baik of 'om, The Devil's nail mark, who still cheats us all nnnul. TAUr II. TlIK LKiniM^ OK l.OKO KOSKNOK.VNT/. TllK lamps in the eastle hall burn bright. Ami the musie souuils, and the daneers dani e. Ami lovelv the \ounoks to-night, liut pale is J^ord Uoseuerantz. TiOrd Kosenerant/ is always pale, l>ut never uu>re deailly pale than now . . . Oh, there is a whisper, — an aneient tale, — A rumour, . . . but who should know ? lie has steppM to the dais. He has taken her hand. And she ^ives it him with a tender glanee. And the hautboys sound, anil the daneei^ stand. And envy Lord Kosenerant/. That jewellM hand to his lips he ]u-est ; And lightly he leails her towards the daneo : And the blush on the youno- Queen's eheek eonfest Her love tor Lord Kosenerant/. The mcX)n at the mnllion'd window sluuie ; There a t'aee and a hand in the moouliiiht alanee ; l>ut that taee and that hand were seen ot'none, Save only Lord Kosenerantz. A league aloof in the t'orest-land There's a dead blaek jiool, where a man by chance A NIGHT IN THE FISIIKRMAN'S HUT. 221 . . . . Afjain, again, that beckoning hand ! And it beckons Lord llosencrantz. While the young Queen turn'd to wliisper him, Lord llosencrantz from the hall was gone ; And the liautlKjys ceased, and the lamps grew dim ; And the castle clock struck One ! It is a bleak December night, And the snow on the highway gleams by fits : But the fire on the cottage-hearth burns bright, Where the little maiden sits. Iler spinning-wheel she has laid aside ; And her blue eyes soft in the firelight glance; As slie l(;ans with love, and she leans with pride, On the breast of Lord Kosencrantz. JSIother's asleep, up-stairs in bed : And the black cat, she looks wondrous wise As she licks her paws in the firelight red, And glares with her two green eyes : And the little maiden is half afraid. And closely she clings to Lord llosencrantz ; For she has been reading, that little maid. All day, in an old romance, A legend wild of a wicked pool A league aloof in the forest-land. And a ci-ime done there, and a sinful soul. And an awful face and hand. " Our little cottage is bleak and drear," Says the little maid to Lord llosencrantz ; " And this is the loneliest time of the year, And oft, when the wind, by chance, 222 TlIK WANDKUKH. " The ivy beats on the window-pane, T wake to the sound in the pjnsty nifjhts ; Atid often, outside, In the di'it't and rain, There seem to ])ass strange sights. " And oil, it is dreary hero alone ! AN'hen mother's asK'ep, in bed, up-stairs, And the bhiek eat, there, to the forest is gone, Look at her, how she gUires ! " " Thou littU^ niaidi'u, my heart's own bliss, Have thou no fear, for I love thee well ; And sweetest it is upon nights like this. When the wind, like the blast of hell, " Roars up and down in the chimneys old, And the wolf howls over the distant snow. To kiss away both the night ami the cold With such kisses as we kiss now." " Ah ! more than life 1 love thee, dear ! " Says the little maiden with eyes so blue ; " And, when thou art near, I have no fear. Whatever the night may do. " But oh, it is dreary when thou art away ! And in bed all night 1 pray i'or thee : Now tell me, thou dearest heart, and say. Dost thou ever i)ray tor me ? " " Thou little maiden, I thaidc thee much, And well I would thou shouldst pray lor me; Ibit I am a sinful man, and such As ill should pray li)r thee." Hist ! . . . was it a iace at the window past ? ())• was it the ivy leaf, by chance, Tapping the pane in the litful blast, That startled Lord Rosenerantz ? A NIGHT IN THE FISHERMAN'S HUT. 223 The little maid, she has seen it plain, For she shriek'd, and down she fell in a swoon : Mutely it came, and went again, In the liffht of the winter moon. The young Queen, — oh ! but her face was sweet I- IShe died on the night that she was wed : And they laid her out in her windingsheet, Stark on her marriage-bed. The little maiden, she went mad; But her soft blue eyes still smiled the same, With ever that wistful smile they had : Her mother, she died of shame. The black cat lived from house to house, • And every night to the forest hied ; And she kill'd many a rat and mouee Beibre the day she died. And do you wish that I should declare What was the end of Lord Rosencrantz ? Ah ! look in my heart, you will find it there, The end of the old romance ! PART III. DAYBREAK. Yes, you have guess'd it. The wild Rosencrantz, It is I, dear, the wicked one ; who but I, maiden ? My life is a tatter'd and worn-out romance. And my heart with the curse of the Past hath been laden : For still, where I wander or linger, forever Comes a skeleton hand that is beckoning for me; 224 TiiK >vani>i:kkk. And still, (lojxging my footsteps, life's loiiYind citul tho wator to luuttor tOiivthor rhoir >Yoii\l inotaphysioal >irioU as of old. For dav's Inisiiiosj! begins, and tho olork ot' tho woathor To tho powoi'S ot' tho air doth his pnrposo nutolih Uo vou smv tha^o divad Titatis. whatovor thoy be, Ihat sport with this ball in tho givat courts at' Tinio. To play praotioal ji^kos upoi\ you. doar. and mo, \\ ill novor dosist t'lxnii a sj^ort so sublituo. Tho old (>ligjiivhy ot* (iivooo. now abolish'd, Woiv iillo aristocrats, tond of tho arts. Init tho* thus rotinod. all thoir tastos woiv so polishM. Thoy WOIV turbulent, dissolute go thankt'ul. meanwhile, we have something to eat. And nothing, just now, n\oiv important to do. Than to sit down at once, and say grace Ivtbiv meat. A l)llKA\f. 227 You may boil nut Homc eoff'oo, an ^pr^, if it*H handy; 'J |j«', h(';i'h rollin*^ mountairiH ju«t now. J «hall waif, lor KiM;^ N(;[^f uri<;'H rnoHiHui/ma tf/fupora Jhndi.^ Who will prewjntly lift up his curly whilri paf.o, Jiid KurijH and XotuH to mind thcirown buninoHH, And mak dizziness, Shall yield hiju my ofl'eringH, and make him my bow. A OltKAM. 1 iiAi> aoui(;tdream last nij^ht: \''<)r I in palo ilul o\or mo pass, ^^'itl^ hair liko snaki^s of" uo^l' Sho ivad my iiai\H> n\^on my iiravo : Slu< ivavl my namo with a smih*. A NviKl moau oamo fivm a NvamliM-ing >vavo, Hut tho slat's smilM all tho \vhih\ Tho stai*s smilM sot't. That woman paU^ C>vor my uravo d'\d movo. Siuiiin^" all to horsolt' a tale 0[' o\w that ilioil tor lovo. Thoro i'an\o a sparrow-hawk to tho troo. noro i'an\o a sparrow-n; Tho littlo bint to slav ; Thoiv oamo a sliip t'rvMii ovor tho soa. To lako that wou\au an ay. Tho littlo bii\l 1 wishM to savo. To t'mish his nost sv» swoot : l>ut sv> iloop 1 lay within my jiravo That I oonKl not movo my toot. That woman pale I wishM to koop To finish tho talo 1 hoard : l>ut within my «;raYO I lay so iloop That I oouUl not speak a >Yoi\i. Kl\C^ SOl.OMt^N. IviNi; Solomon stvXHl, in his oivwn ot' g\>Ul, Hot ween the pillai*:*, bo tore the altar In the House ot' the l.oixi. Ami tho l\.inle rolic, with his signet ring, And his beard as white as snow, And his face to the Oracle, where the hymn JJies unhir, and scent of myrrh, And purple of 'i yre, The King cloth'd her. IJy the soul of each slumbrous instrument JJrawn soft thro' the musical misty air, The stream of the folk that came and went. For worship, and praise, and prayer, Flow'd to and fro, and up and down, And round The King in his golden crown. And it came to pass, as The King stood there, And look'd on the house he had built, with pride, That the Hand of The Lord came unaware, And touch'd him ; so that he died. In his purple robe, with his signet ring. And the crown wherewith they had crown'd hira king. And the stream of the folk that came and went To worship the Lord with prayer and praise, *2:U> rUK WAMM'UIU. A\\mi( st>l'(lv miM", in womU'rnuMit, Vov riu' Kinir sttHxl ihoro jihvays ; And it ^^•;ls solomn and stratJiiV to boljoUl That iKmiI kin^' crowuM with a orowii ot* lioUL Vov ho loauM on his i-hony statV upright ; And over his shonlilors tho pnrplo robo ; Anil his hair, and his board, wo ro both snow-whito ; Anil tho toar of him lillM tho olobo ; So that i»ono darod tmu'li him, thou<:h ho was doad, llo lookM so royal about tho hoad. And tho n\oons woro ohaniiod : and tho yoars roll'd on : And tho now kinij roign'd in tho old kinji's stoail: Aiiil mou woro marriod and buriod anon : l>ut Tho King stood, stark and doad ; Loaning njnight on his obony statl"; Trosorvi'd by tho sign ot* tho rontogra[ih. \t\il tho stroan\ ot" lito, as it wont and oamo, ICvor tor worship and praise and prayor. Was awod by tlu> taoo, and tho toar, and tho tamo ()t" tho doail king standing thoro ; I'or his hair was st> w hiti\ and Ins oyos so oold. That thoy lot\ him alono with his orown ot* gxild. So Kiuii" Solomon st^nnl up, doad. in tho llouso Of Tho Lord, hold thoro by tho rontograi)h, I'ntil out tVoni a pillar thoro ran a rod n\ouso, And gnawM thro* his obony statV: Thou, tlat on his t'aoo, Tho King foil down : And thoy piok'd t'rom tho dust a goldon orown.* * Mv kiiowloa.cx' of tho K;»\*)>inii"!vl losroml whioh tVioiui Uobort nivwuiusr, I hoiH< thoso linos inav iviuiiul him of liours whioh his siH'iotv rv'uiloiwl piv»io\is luul ilotiuhtful to ivio, aiul whioli !U\» aiiiong tlie imvst plt»asiint momovios of ui> Ufo. COKDELIA. 231 CORDELIA. Tiio' thou never liast soiir^ht to divine it, Tlio' to know it thou hast not a eare, Yet niy lieart can no longer confine it, U'lio' n»y lip may be blaneh'd to d(;clare 'I'liat I love thee, revere thee, adore thee, my dream, my desire, my desj)air ! Tho' in life it may never be ^'iven 'JV) my lieart to nqjose upon thine ; 'J'ho' nctither on earth, nor in h(!aven. May the f)liss 1 have dn^am'd of be mine ; Yet thou canst not forbid me, in distance. And silence, and lon(;loved. Thou hast not a grace that escapes me. Nor a nunement that leaves m(} unmoved. 1 live but to see the(;, to hear thee ; I count but th(i liours where thou art ; 1 ask — only ask — to be near thee. Albeit 80 far from thy heart. 232 THE WANDERER. In my life's lonely galleries never AVill be silenced thy lightest footfall : For it lingers, and echoes, forever Unto Memory mourning o'er all. All thy fair little footsteps are bright O'er the dark troubled spirit in me, As the tracks of some sweet water-sprite O'er the heaving and desolate sea. And, tho' cold and unkind be thine eyes, Yet, unchill'd their unkindness below. In my heart all its love for thee lies, Like a violet cover'd by snow. Little child ! . . . were it mine to watch o'er thee, To guide, and to guard, and to soothe ; To shape the long pathway before thee, And all that was rugged to smooth ; To kneel at one bedside by night, And mingle our souls in one prayer ; And, awak'd by the same morning-light, The same daily duties to share ; Until Age with his silver dimm'd slowly Those dear golden tresses of thine ; And Memory render'd thrice holy The love in this poor heart of mine ; Ah, never . . . (recalling together. By one hearth, in our life's winter time, Our youth, with its lost summer- weather, And our love, in its first golden prime,) Should those loved lips have cause to record One word of unkindness from me. Or my heart cease to bless the least word Of kindness once spoken by thee ! But, whatever my path, and whatever The future may fashion for thine, Thy life, O believe me, can never, " YE SEEK JESUS OF NAZARETH," ETC. 233 My belov'd, be indifferent to mine. When far from the sight of thy beauty, Pursuing, unaided, alone. The path of man's difficult duty In the land where my lot may be thrown ; When my steps move no more in the place Where thou art : and the brief days of yore Are forgotten : and even my face In thy life is remember'd no more ; Yet in my life will live thy least feature ; I shall mourn the lost light of thine eyes ; And on earth there will yet be one nature That must vearn after thine till it dies. "YE SEEK JESUS OF NAZARETH WHICH WAS CRUCIFIED : HE IS RISEN : HE IS NOT HERE." MAPac xvi. 6. If Jesus came to earth again, And walk'd, and talk'd, in field and street, Who would not lay his human pain Low at those heavenly feet ? And leave the loom, and leave the lute. And leave the volume on the shelf, To follow Him, unquestioning, mute, If 'twere the Lord himself? How many a brow with care o'er worn, How many a heart with grief o'erladen. How many a youth with love forlorn. How many a mourning maiden. Would leave the baffling earthly prize Which fails the earthly, weak endeavour, To gaze into those holy eyes. And drink content forever ! 2JM TIIK WANOKKKK. 'IMio lUtM'tal \\o\H\ I ask Avilli trars Ot" IKmvou, to soothe this mortal pain, — Tho (lri>am ot'all my ihn'kt'uM yoars, — I should not i-linii' to thiMi. Thit initio that prompts tho hiltor Jost — (Sharj) styptio of a bloi'tlinu; heart !) AVoiihl tail, ami humbly loavo coiilost The sill that broii<>;ht tho smart, It" I miiiht crtnu'h within tho t'oitl (.)t"tliat \vhiti> roho (a wouiulod binl) Tho I'avo that Mary saw bohoKl, Ami lu'ar tho words jiiu' hoai'd. 1 would not ask om» word of all That m>w my nature yiwrns to know ; — The leiivnd of the aneient Fall ; The sonree ol' human wt>e : "What hopes in other worKls niay hide ; What iiriefs yet unexplored in this ; How tares the sj>irit within the wide Waste traet of that abyss Whieh seares the heart (sinee all we know Of life is only I'onseious sorrow) Lest novel life be novel woe In death's undawn'd to-morrow ; 1 would not ask iMie word oi' this If 1 miiiht only hide my head, Oi\ that beloved breast, and kiss The wountls wiiore desus bled. And I, where'er lie went, would i:;o. Nor ipiestiou where the path might lead, Enouiih to know that, here below, I walk'd with ({od indeed ! " YE SKIOK JKHUH OF N AZAICKTIf ," KTC. 235 I lis sheep alon^ tlio cool, the shade, liy the still watercourse He leads, His lartihs uj)Oii His breast are laid, His hungry ones He le(;ds. Safe in His bosom I shouhi li(5, Hearing, where'er His steps nriight Ik;, Calm waters, murmuring, murmuring by, To meet the mighty sea. If" this be tlius, O Lord of mine, In absence is Thy love foi-got V And must I, where I walk, rej)ine JJettause I see th(;e not V If this be thus, if this be thus. And our poor ])rayers yet reacli Thee, Lord, Since we are wciak, once more to us lieveal the IJving Word! Yet is my heart, indeed, so W(;ak My course alorie 1 dare not trace V Alas ! 1 know my heart must break Before I see Thy face. I lov(!d, with all my human soul, A human creature, here below. And, tho' thou bad'st thy sea to roll Forever 'twixt us two, And tho' her form I may not see Thro' all my long and lonely life, And tho' she never now may be My helpmate and my wife;, Yet in my dreams her dear eyes shine, Yet in my heart her face i bear. And yet each holiest thought of mine 1 seem with her to share. l>ut, Lonl, Thy t)u'o I homm' saw, Mor ovor hoard Thy liinnan voii'o : My lito. bonoatli an Iron law. Moves on withont my ohoico. No nuMnory ot' a happior tinio, Whon in Thino aims, porohanco, 1 slept. In some lost ante-natal elime, ]\ly mortal trame hath kept : Ami all is dark — betoro — behind. I cannot reaeh Thee, where Tlu>u art, I eannot brino: Thee to my mind, Nor elasp Thee to my heart. And this is wliy, by niuht and day. Still with so many an nnseen tear. These lonely lips have learnM to pray That (lod would spare me liere, AVhile } et my do\ibt1"ul eonrse I go Along the vale ot' mortal years. By Lite's dull stream, that will not tlow As fast as llow n\y tears. One human hand, my hand to take : One human heart, my own to raise: One loving human voiee. to break The silence of my days. Saviour, if this wiUl prayer be wrong. Ami what 1 seek 1 may not tind. Oh. make more hard, and stern, and strong, The framework of my mind I Or, nearer to me, in the dark Of life's loAv hours, one moment stand. Ami give me keener eyes to mark The moviuii of Thv hand. TO COIiDKLIA. 237 TO CORDELIA. I DO not blame thco, that my life Is lonelier now than ev(;n btjfore ; For hadst thou been, indeed, my wife, (Vain dream that cheats no more !) Th(; fate, which from my earliest years Hath mad(j so dark the j)ath I tread, Had tau<£ht thee too, perchance, such tears As I have learn'd to shed. And that fix'd r^loom, wliich souls like mine Are school'd to wear with stubborn pride, Had cast too dark a shade o'er thine, — Hadst thou been by my side. 1 blame thee not, that thou shouldst flee From paths where only weeds have sprung, Tho' loss of thee is loss to me Of all that made youth young. For 'tis not mine, and 'twas not thine, To shajje our course as first we strove : And powers which I could not combine Divide me from thy love. Alas ! we cannot choose our lives, — We can but bear the burthen given. In vain the feverish spirit strives With unrelenting heaven. For who can bid those tyrant stars The injustice of their laws repeal ? Why ask who makes our prison bars. Since they are made of steel V 2,SS TIIK \VAN1>K.KKU. Tho star that rules my darkcnM lunir Is li\t in roat'liloss sj>liort>s on hioh : Tlio curso whirh toils my batlloil power Is si'vawlM a('ri\>ait knows all it t'olt. and tools: But nioro than this I shall not know, Till llo that mailo tho hoart vovoals AVh\ niiuo must sulVor so. 1 only know that, novor yot, My lit'o hath tbumi what othors liiul, — ■ That poai'o of hoart whioh will not tVot Tho libros ot' tho niind. 1 only knmv that not for mo Tho hmnan lovo, tho olasp, tho kiss; ]\ly lovo in othor wi)rUls nmsf bi>, — Why was 1 born in this ? Tho boo is framod \o tlnd lior tbod In ovtM'v waysido llowor and boll, And biiilil within tho lu^llow woml llor own ambrosial ooil : Tho spidor hath »\ot loarn'd hor art, A honjo in rnin'd towors to sj>in ; l>nt what it sooks, my hoart. my hoart Is all unskill'il to win. Tho world was till'd, oro I was born. With n\an and maid, with bowor and brako. And nothing but tho barron thorn Kon\ain'd tor n\o to lako : 1 \oo\< tho thorn. 1 wove it round. I mado a pioroin^- orown to woar : M\ own sad hands mysolf havo orown'd, Lord oi' my own despair. TO coKr>i;f,iA. 239 Tliat whicli we. an;, wc an;. 'Twcn! vain 'I'o plant willi toil what will not ^vow. The. cloud will hn!ak,an(l hrin^ the rain, VVh(;lli<;r w(; rcaf), or 80W. I cannot tuiTi tin; tlnindcr-hlast, Nor jjliick the hjvin's lurid root; I cannot chan^^c; th(j chan^^cjles.s past, Nor make the ocean mute. And if tlie l)olt of d(!ath must fall When!, bare of h(!ad, I walk my way, Why fet it fall! I will not call 'Jo bid the Thunderer stay. "J'is mucli to know, whate'er betide 'I'hc f)ilroud to fly, too weak to cope, I yet will wait, nor bow my head. Those wlio liave nothing left to ho[)e, Jlave nothin'' left to dread. 240 THE WANDERER. A LETTER TO CORDELIA. Perchance, on earth, I shall not see thee ever Ever again : and my unwritten years Are sign'd out by that desolating " Never," And blurr'd with tears. 'Tis hard, so young — so young as I am still. To feel for evermore from life depart All that can flatter the poor human will. Or fill the heart. Yet there was nothing in that sweet, and brief, And perisht intercourse, now closed for me, To add one thought unto my bitterest grief Upbraiding thee. 'Tis somewhat to have known, albeit in vain. One woman in this sorrowful bad earth, Whose very loss can yet bequeathe to pain New faith in worth. If I have overrated, in the wild Blind heat of hope, the sense of aught which hath From the lost vision of thy beauty smiled On my lone path, My retribution is, that to the last I have o'errated, too, my power to cope With this fierce thought . . . that life must all be past Without life's hope ; And I would bless the chance which let me see Once more the comfort of thy face, altho' It were with beauty never born for me That face should glow. A LETTER TO CORDELIA. 241 To see thee — all tliou wilt be — loved and loving — Even tho' another's — in the years to come — To -watch, once more, thy gracious sweetness moving Thro' its pure home, — Even this would seem less desolate, less drear, Than never, never to behold thee more — Never on those beloved lips to hear The voice of yore ! These weak words, O my friend, fell not more fast Than the weak scalding tears that with them fell. Nor tears, nor words came, when I saw thee last . . . Enough ! . . . Farewell. Farewell. If that dread Power which fashion'd man To till this planet, free to search and find The secret of his source as best he can. In his own mind. Hath any care, apart from that which moves Earth's myriads thro' Time's ages as they roll, For any single human life, or loves One separate soul, May He, whose wisdom portions out for me The moonless, changeless midnight of the heart, Still all his softest sunshine save for thee, Where'er thou art : And if, indeed, not any human eyes From human tears be free, — may Sorrow bring Only to thee her April-rain, whose sighs Soothe flowers in Spring. 16 rUK W ANOKKKK. FAILIKF.. 1 11 AVI' soon tlioso that Wvmo lli-aviMi's aniumr worst Oil : I havo hoai\l Truth lio : Soon Lit'o, boslilo tho t'ounts lor whioh it thirstotl, Curso IuhI anil dio : 1 havo t'olf thi^ haiul. whoso touoh was raptnro, braidinii" Anu^Uii my hair Love's ohoioost tlowrots. ami havo louud how lading Thoso garlanils woiv : 1 havo watv'h'd my tirst and holiost hv^pos doparl. Owe af'tor v>no : I havo hoKl tho hand ol Ooath upon my hoart, And mailo no moan : I havo soon hor wlu>m lil'o's wholo saorllioo Was maiio to koop. Tass ooldly l\v mo witli a st rancor's oyos, Yot did not woop : Now ovou luy lH>dy tails mo : and u\y brow Aohos night anil ilay : I am woak w ith ovoi^work : how oan 1 now lio ibrth and play ? >Vhatl now that Youth's tbrgotton as[>irations Aro all ni) n\oiv, Uost thon\ mdood. all Youth's glad rooroatlons, - An nntriod storo V Alas, what skills this hoart ot' sad oxporionoo. This tVan\o oVrwnnight. This momory with lito's niotion all at varianoo, This aohiuii thouiiht "? MIHAN'l IfltOI'OH. 24.'{ I low Hliall I <;om<;, with tli(;Hf!, to follow jjIcaMun; Will! re, ollM',rH find it y Will not tli(Mr Had Htf.pH mar tlic jitcvncHl in<;aHiin;, Or \iif^ iM'.Iiind it V Still rniiHt llii; iii.in nifiv*^ sadlici- for tlin f;iilnr«', Ut have, faii'd VVhcn; man halli on by Charity : Faith has fled JDistress. Those grim tipstaves at the gate Freely may their work begin. Let them in ! they shall not wait. MISANTIIROrOS. 245 There is little now within Left for Scorn and Hate. Oh, no doubt the air is foul ! 'Tis the last lamp spits and stinks, Shuddering downward in the bowl Of the socket, from the brinks. What's a burn'd-out soul V Let them all go, unreproved ! For the source of tears is dried. What ! . . . One rests? . . . hath nothing moved That pale woman from my side, Whom I never loved ? You, with those dim eyes of yours, Sadder than all eyes save mine ! That dim forehead which immures Such faint helpless griefs, that pine For such hopeless cures ! Must you love me, spite of loathing ? Can't you leave me where I'm lying ? Oh, . . . you wait for our betrothing V I escape you, tho' — by dying ! Lay out my death-clothing. Well I would that your white face Were abolisht out of sight. With tiie glory and the grace Swallow'd long ago in night — Gone — without a trace ! Reach me down my golden harp. Set it here, beside my knee. Never fear that I shall warp All the chords of ecstasy, ^ Striking them too sharp ! 246 THE WANDERER. Crown me with my crown of flowers. Faded roses every one ! Pluckt in those long-perisht bowers, By the nightshade overrun — Fit for brows like ours ! Fill me, now, my golden cup. Pour the black wine to the brim ! Till within me, while I sup, All the fires, long quench'd and dim, Flare, one moment, up. I will sing you a last song. I will pledge you a last health . . . Here's to Weakness seeming strong ! Here's to Want that follows Wealth ! Here's to Right gone wrong ! Curse me now the Oppressor's rod, And the meanness of the weak ; And the fool that apes the nod ; And the world at hide and seek With the wrath of God. Dreams of man's unvalued good, By mankind's unholy means ! Curse the people in their mud ! And the wicked Kings and Queens, Lying by the Rood. Fill ! to every plague . . . and first. Love, that breeds its own decay ; Rotten, ere the blossom burst. Next, the friend that slinks away. When you need him worst. O the world's inhuman ways ! And the heartless social lie ! MISANTHROPOS. 247 And the coward, cheapening praise ! And the patience of the sky, Lighting such bad days ! Cursed be the heritage Of the sins we have not sinn'd ! Cursed be this boasting age, And the Wind that lead the blind O'er its creaking stage ! O the vice within the blood. And the sin within the sense ! And the fallen angelhood. With its yearnings, too immense To be understood ! Curse the hound with beaten hide, When he turns and licks the hand ! Curse this woman at my side ! And the memory of the land Where my first love died. Cursed be the next and most, (With whatever curse most kills) Me . . . the man whose soul is lost ; Foul'd by each of all these ills — Fill'd with death and dust ! Take away the harp of gold. And the empty wine-cup too. Lay me out : for I grow cold. There is something dim in view. Which must pass untold : — Something dim, and something vast — Out of n;ach of all I say. Language ceases . . . husht, aghast. What am I, to curse or pray ? God succeeds at last ! B K VI. PALINGENESIS. A PRAYER. INIy Saviour, dare I oonie to Thee, Who lot the httle chiUlron come ? But 1 ? . . . my tsoul is taiut iu me ! I oome Irom wauilerino- to autl fro This -weary workl. There still his rouuil The Aoeuser goes : but Thee I t'ouud Not any^vhere. Both joy and woe Have pass'd me by. 1 am too weak To grieve or smile. And yet I know That tears lie deep in all I do. The homeless that are sick tor home Are not so wretched. Ere it break. Receive my heart ; and tor the sake, Not of my sorrows, but of Thine, Bend down Thy holy eyes on mine, AVhich are too full of misery To see Thee clearly, tho* they seek. Yet. if I heard Thy voice say ..." Come So might I. ilying, ilie near Thee. It shames me not, to have pass'd by The temple-doors in every street AVhere men protaned Thee : but that I Have left neglected, choked with weeds, Defrauded of its incense sweet I'ALINGKNKSIH. 249 From holy tlioiifrlits and loyal (IccmIs, The f'airu^ Thou navest mo to inshririG Thco in this wn^tchcd heart of mine. The Satyr tlicu'e hath enter'd in ; The Owl that loves the darken'd hour; And obscene i^hapes of"niluck the unfading rose Of peace, that bows its beauty to my hand. Here Reason fails, and leaves me ; my }>ale guiile Across the wilderness — by a stern command, Shut out, like Moses, from the Promist Land. Touching its own achievement, it hath died. Ah yet ! I have but wrung the victory From Thought! Not passionless svill be my path. Yet on my life's pale forehead I can see The flush of squander'd fires. Passion hath THE soul's science. 257 Yet, in the purpose of my days its place. But clianged in aspect : turn VI unto the East, Whence grows the dayspring from on high, at least A finer fei-vour trembles on its face. THE SOUL'S SCIENCE. Can History prove the truth which hatli Its record in the silent soul V Or Mathematics mete the path Whereby the spirit seeks its goal V Can Love of aught but Love inherit The l)lesslng which is born of Love ? The spirit knoweth of the spirit : The soul alone the soul can prove. The eye to see : the ear to hear : The working hand to help the will : To every sense his separate sphere : And unto each his several skill. The ear to sight, the eye to sound, Is callous : unto each is given His lorddom in his proper bound. The soul, the soul to find out heaven ! There is a glory veil'd to sight ; A voice which never ear hath heard; There is a law no hand can write, Yet stronger than the written word. And hast thou tidings for my soul O teacher V to my soul intrust Alone the purport of thy scroll : Or vex me not with learned dust. 17 TlIK NVANnKKKK. A rSALMi OF I'ONFKSSION. Fri I s»H>M iloth Sori'inv niako lior ct^vonant \\'lth Liti< ; ;ui(l Kwvo hor sh;uU>w In tlio docu' : And ;Ul thoso t'liluro tlavs, tor >vhu'li wo pant, Uo omno in nuMirninii' tor the days ot" yoro. Still thro' tho worKl uio.uns IMonjorv soi>kinii; Lovo, Palo as tho \ovc\\ which iiriovinii" t\Mvs ho\\\ SookiniT Prosorpina, on that dark shmv ^^ lu'ro luily phantoms tliro' tho twiU^ht njovo. Tho n>oro ayo I'hatiiiO. tlio nuu"o is all tho sanio. Our last griof was a talo oi' otlior yoars Qnito outworn, till to our own hoarts it oamo. W'ishos aro pili^rinis to tho A'alo of Toars. Our brii:htt\>(: dacA too f have; faird. Ah yet, Albeit witli <;yf;H from reoent weepin^rs wet, Sir);( thou, niy Soul, thy psalrii unto The Lord ! Tlie burthen of the desert and the sea ! 'J'h(; burthen of the vision in the vale ! My threhhiriM-f!r>or, iny tlirehliin^f-lloor I ah, me, 'J'hy wind lial.li strewn my eorn, and spoil'd the flail : ■J'he burthen of J>)uniah and of" JJedanirn ! What of the ni;fht, O wat.ehinan, of tlie night V The j/Iory of K<;dar faileth: and the rniyht Of nii;.dity men i.s mini-slied and dim. Tlie iriorninesire, with garments torn ; Sing many songs, make melody, and ntourn 'i'hat thou may'st be remember'd unto pity. Just, awfid (jo(J ! here at thy feet I lay My life's most precious offering: dearly bought, Tliou knowest willi what tfjil by night and day : 1'liou knowest tin; pain, the pansion, and the thought. I bring thecj my youth's failure. J liave spent My youth ujjon it. All J have is here. iJlU) rill" UANJMKKU. ^Vo^'^» it uoiih all it is no(, ptico iwvmv »U>;ir l\nilil 1 h;»\ o paiil tor its ari'Oiuplislimont V Yi>t is it imu'h. It" I co\i\d say to tlioo **Ao(|uit mo, .^u^llio; tor I an\ thus, aiul thus; Anil havo aohiovod— ovon so nuu'h." ShouUl I bo Thus wholly toarloss ami impotuous Vo rush iuto thy prosoiu'O ? I >ni>xht woiiih Tho littlo dono against tho uiulono uuu'h : My uiorit with thy luori'y : and. as suoh, llag^lo Nviih pardon tor a prioo to pay. l>ut uiTvv tho tulnoss ot' its tailuro n»akos My spirit toarloss ; and dospair >innvs hold. My lu\>w, bonouth its sad solt-knowlodvix* aohos. l.itV's prosonoo passos ' Phi no a thousiuid toUl In oontou^platod torror. Tun I Kxso Aught by that ilosnorato toniority \Vhii'h loavos no onoioo but to suirondor Thoe My lito without oouditiou ? Could 1 oluuvso A stipulatoil sontonoo. 1 unght ask For ooilod dalHanv'o to smno ohorisht vioo: ()r hali*-ivu\issiot\ ot' somo dosporato task : Now. all I havo is hatotul. What is tho prioo ? Spoak, \An\\ I 1 hoar tho Fiond's hanii nt tho dixir. llolTs slavory or hoavon's sorvioo is it tho ohoioo V How i>a>i I paltor with tho toru\s ? (.) voioo AN'honoo ilo 1 hoar thoo ..." lu>: and sin no uioro"? No nioro. no nioro ? Hut I havo kist iload whito Tho ohook of \"ioo. No nioro tho harlot hiilos Hor loathsonionoss ot' litioainont t'mm my sight. No n\oiv within my Invsiim thoro abidos llor ptnson'il portumo. Oh, tho witoh's mioo Havo oat hor soarlot robo ami diapor, •Vnil sho t'aivs nakod I Fart t*j\>m hor — fi\m\ hor? Is this the prioo, O l^ml, is this the price '? A f'KAf-M OF r;oNFK«Hro.v. 2G1 Yet, tlio' \if'-r wi',\) \)<; l>rok(;ri, bori'ln, I know, Slow fUHtorn frarnc-« in tlic. hf.ron;; f'or^<; of time, \Vlii<:l) outlant lovo, antJ will not w<;ar wltfi woo, i\or hr«*,ak l>(;ri(;ath tlic, co^^nizanoo of" crime. 'Ilir; witch iioun bare. Jiut he, — the father fiend, 'I'hat roams the nntJinfty f'urrowB of my 'layw. Vet w;ilkH the fiehJ oflife ; and, where he strays, Tlic hu-handry of heaven for heil is glean'd. Lulls ar(! thrtre in man's life whif;h are not peace. 'runiults whicli are not trimrifjIiH. J)o I take 'i'he pauwj fjf paHwion for the fiend's dc^r-case V 'I'hiH fro.-t of ^oief hath nutiil/d the drow»ing Knak<; ; Wliicfi yet may wake, and hUu<^ me in the heat Of new emotirniH. What Hhall bar the door A;:ainst the old familiar, tliat of yore (Jame without call, and Hat within my «(!at V When e.v(;nirij.' I;rinf.'s its must r-ount to fall. But (v'lch new fall will prf>ve tJKMn climbin;.»; still. O wn;tc}i(;d man ! the body of this death Which, groaning in th<5 spirit, I yet bear 262 THE WANDERKR.- On to the end (so that I breathe the breath Of its corruption, even tho' breathing prayer) What shall take iVoni me ? JNIust I drag forever The eoUi corpse of the life which I have kill'd Hut cannot bury V JNlust my heart be fill'd With the dry dust of every dead endeavour ? For often, at the mid of the long night, Some devil enters into the dead clay, And gives it life unnatural in my sight. The dead man rises np ; and roams away, Back to the mouUler'd mansions of the Past: And lights a lurid revel in the halls Of vacant years ; and lifts his voice, and calls, " Till troops of phantoms gather round him fast. Frail gold-hair'd corpses, in whose eyes there lives A strange regret too wild to let them rest : Crowds of pale maidens, who were never wives ; And infants that all died npon the breast That suckled them. And these make revelry ^lingled with wailing all the midnight thro', Till the sad day doth with stern light renew The toiling land, and the complaining sea. Full well T know that in this world of ours The dreadful Commonplace succeeds all change. We catch at times a gleam of Hying powers That ])ass in storm some windy mountain range : But, while we gaze, the cloud returns o'er all. And each, to guitle him up the devious height. Must take, and bless, whatever earthly light From household hearths, or shepherd fires, may fall. This wave, that groans and wi-ithes npon the beach, To-morrow will submit itself to calm ; That wind that rushes, moaning, ont of reach, Will die anon beneath some breathless palm ; A PSALM OF CONFESSION. 2C3 These tears, these sighs, tliese motions of the soul, This inexpressible pining of the mind, The stern indifferent laws of life shall bind, And fix forever in their old eontrol. Behold this half-tamed universe of things ! That cannot break, nor wholly bear, its chain. Its heart by fits grows wild : it leaps, it springs ; Then the chain galls, and kennels it again. If man were formed with all his faculties For sorrow, I should sorrow for him less. Considering a life so brief, the stress Of its short passion I might well despise : But all man's faculties are for delight; But all man's life is compass'd with what seems Framed for enjoyment : but from all that sight And sense reveal a magic murmur streams Into man's heart, which says, or seems to say, " Be happy ! " . . . and the heart of man replies " Leave happiness to brutes : I would be wise : Give me, not peace, but science, glory, art." Therefore, age, sickness, and mortality Are but the lightest portion of his pain : Therefore, sluit out from joy, incessantly Death finds him toiling at a task that's vain. I weep the want of all he pines to have : I weep the loss of all he leaves behind : — Contentment, and repose, and peace of mind, Pawn'd for the purchase of a little grave : I weep the hundred centuries of time ; I weep the millions that have squander'd them In error, doubt, anxiety, and crime. Here, where the free birds sing from leaf and stem : I weep . . . but what are tears ? What I deplore I knew not, half a hundred years ago: 2(54 TllK AVAN1>KUKU. \\u\ hall' a liundrod yi^ars iVoiu Iumu'O,! know That what 1 wi'i'j) fur I shall know no more. Tin' spiiit of that wldo and loalloss wind That wandors o'or the nn('oni])anlonM son, Soari'liioL!; tor what it novor siHuns to tind, Stirr'd in u\y hair, and niovod my hoart in mo. To follow It, tar ovor land and niain : And ovorvwhoro ovor this earth's searr'd taoo The tootsto|>s ot' a (Jod I siHMn'd to trace; l>nt everywhon^ slopes of a (\od in pain. If. haply, he that made this heart of mine, llims(>lf in sorrow walkM the world erewhilc, ^^'hat then am 1, to marvel or repine That 1 i;o monrnini:; ever in tlu> smile Of universal nature, searehinjx ever 'I'ho phantom of a joy whioh here I miss? My hoart iidiahits other worlds than this. Therefore niy searoh is here a vain endoavonr. Methoiight, ... (it was (ho nndnioht of my sonl. Dead midnight) that I stood on Calvary : I fonnd iho t'ross, but not the (''hrist. 'I'he whole Ot" heaven was dark: and I wont bitterly Wi>opinund hin> not. ISIethonjiht, . . (It was the twilight ot"(ho dawn and mist) I stood botbro the sepnlohre of Christ: The sojmlohre was vaoant, void of au<>ht Saving the oore-olothos ol'tho ^rave, whioli were UplbKlon straight and empty : bitterly Weeping I sttuHl. beoanse not even there 1 fonnd him. Then a voioe spake nnto me, "Whom seokt>st thon V Why is thy hoart dis- may 'd ? .Josns i>f Na/.aroth, ho is not hero : HohoKl. tlu> \An\\ is risen. Ho of oheer: Approaeh, belu)M the place where he was laid." RKqiIIKH(;AT. 2G.'> And while lie spako, tlic. Kunriso smoto the, world. " (jIo forth, and tell thy brethren," spake the voiee; " The Lord is risen," .Sijd(h;nly iinfurl'd, 'I'he whoh; iineh»ii(h'd ()ri(Uit did i-ejf)ic(; In ^dory. Wherefon; sliouhl I mourn that liere My h(!art feeds vacant of what most it needs V (yhrist is arisen ! . . . the C(!re-(de>th(;s and the weeds That wra[)j)'d him lyin^i; in this sepnhdii-e Ol" earth, he hatli ahaiKhiri'd ; Ix'in^ _trone Ha(di into hi^aven, where w(! too must turn Our ^'aze to find him. I'our, O risen Sun Of Kii^hteousness, the h;^ht for wlii(di J y(!arn Uj)on th(! darkness of this mortal hour, This traet of nifj^lit in whieh 1 walk forlorn : Behold the ni;^lit is now far sixmt. The morn J>reaks, breakin;^ from afar thro' a ni^fht shower. KEQIJIESCAT. T HOJKjiir to l)uild a (h'.'ithh^ss monument To my dead love. Therein I meant to f)laeo All j)reci()us thin<;s, and rare : as Nature bhuit All siiiuh' s\v(!(!tn(!ss(!s in one sw(!et fiiee. I could not build it worthy her mute mcirit, Nor wr)rthy lier white brows and holy eyes, Nor worthy of her perfcict and [)ure s[)irit, Nor of my own immortal nximories. r>ut, as some rapt arti(i(;er of old, To (iiishrine the aslu^s of a virji;in saint, Mijfht scheme to work with ivory, and fine ^old, And ca,rven \\>«>V0»\\(0 tUo (oil of tVMMXMVt l\;Uuls. Auil i«siko his KUmuv. liko Uor virtuo, iVir ; Kitowiu^ »u» K\\utv bonutit\>l ns sho. ,\\ul rtU his UlMur voivi. h«» to U\iiuiU> A !<'UMV<1 sv>n\nv ; j*v> I \vv>rkM. Ah, soo llo>\^ nw tho l\\>iiu\outs of uw shj^UorM piU» ! I koop thorn. nuil tikon \vv»ikmju»shi|> iho tU>\voi>! unil wotnls ' Slvvp sv^t AiuoUij tho \ioU^ts» l> mv (.v^uoon Lio onlm «nuM\vt i«y ruiuM thou^jhts auvI vioinls. KrilAHUK. r \i;r i. Cm VNiJK willunu tvM'm. aiul strito without ivsult. ^o^>^M\s thvU jv^ss, juul sluuKnvs thsU »vmaiiu Ono sn\u\iiv. iu\iHM\otrahK\ auU vhvuU Suii^jx^stion ot .11 hopo, ths'^t's hojHnl in \\Vu\» lH>hv4v\ tho woiKl uvjuv iviijus iu 1 1 1 is Uolijjht IVvoivos; his ^Mwor tAtijjwi^; his stn^njith is hriof; VNon his ivliijiou pivsup^vvjos ijriot* Uis iuomii\i» is uv>t oottniu i4' tho nijjht. I hjwv U^holil, without ivjiwt* tho tn»uk» Whioh ^nvp^Al th»vo huiuhvil smuiuoi-s on its K>U)ihvS NNhioh hovis^nK ot' oKK tho i«orrv Im»\K »»ui ilrunk Tho ^iiviwo »lo\vs ot »i»\ a, Its pi\n\\is\> is l\ilt\U\h It is no uunv, r>nt it luth Ihvu» Its iK>*ttuv is nu'/H aJ>ov<'. tl)<; ritarhh I Siron;;, and i»up, it nnan it't-j- iIk; wild, Vaifi ttiiiT'^y oi' \h'Au^ I Vor \ht'. JiarKfi Afj'J fiilia <)()'/M it\n">u\y fiatli M'tUff U) hn bofiprlit!. '1 !«? Iiiiinid wind \'oln ffi«^fn. 'I'Ua vapourx warp t\nun. All ']«'/- '•linrid, /l« lifit l);iJ|i r.i'umt], ura it hatli cttuHul U> \'iv<:. (Jl/ild of t|j<', waHf.<', and niir«linj/ of fhc p.t. Yt'/drn chiiu'/y,. Oay irf-nroodin;^ hud. Hati fair, Aii'l too niu';li rt:-:('iil wtanon I hl<;nt and halfJiy air I \Vavid they lie, of old. Your thouHand voieew j^rophenyin;/ hlinH V That trouhle,ri all the current of a fate. Which <;he mi;_d«t have been [)<;ace,ful ! I await 'J h<; thin;.^ I hav<; not fourid, y<;t would not iniKM. 2G8 THE WANDERKR. To face out chiUlliood, and grow up to man, To make a noise, and question all one sees, The astral orbit of a world to span, And, after a few days, to take one's ease Under the graveyard grasses, — this, my friend, Appears to me a thing too strange but what 1 wish to know its meaning. 1 would not Depart before I have perceived the end. And I would know what, here below the sun, lie is, and what his place, that being which seems The end of all means, yet the means of none ; Who searches, and combines, aspires, and dreams ; Seeking new things with ever the same hope, Seeking new hopes in ever the same thing ; A king without the powers of a king, A beggar Avith a kingdom in his scope ; AVho only sees in what he hath attain'd The means whereby he may attain to more ; Who only linds in that whitdi he hath gain'd The want of what he did not want belbre ; Whom weakness strengthens ; who is soothed by strife ; Who seeks new joys to prize the absent most; Still from illusion to illusion tost, Himself the great illusion of his life ! Why is it, all deep emotion makes us sigh To (juit this world '? AVhat better thing than death Can follow after i-aj^fure ? " Let us die ! " This is the last wish on the lover's breath. If thou Avouldst live, content thee. To enjoy Is to begin to perish. \Vhat is bliss. But transit to some other state from this ? That, which we live for, must our life destroy. EPILOGUE. 2G9 Hast thou not ever long'd for death ? If not, Not yet thy life's experience is attain'd. But if thy days be favour'd, if thy lot Be easy, if hope's summit thou hast o;ain'd, Die ! Death is the sole future left to thee. The knowledge of this life is bound, for each. By his own powers. Death lies between our reach And all which, living, we have lived to be. Death is no evil, since it comes to all. For evil is the exception, not the law. What is it in the tempest that doth call- Our spirits down its pathways > or the awe Of that abyss and solitude beneath High mountain passes, which doth aye attract Such strange desire V or in the cataract V The sea ? It is the sentiment of death. If life no more than a mere seeming be. Away with the imposture ! If it tend To nothing, and to have lived seemingly Prove to be vain and futile in the end. Then let us die, that we may really live, Or cease to feign to live. Let us possess Lasting delight, or lasting rpiictness. What life desires, death, only death, can give. Where are the violets of vanisht years ? The sunsets Rachel watch'd by Laban's well ? Where is Fideie's face V where Juliet's tears V There comes no answer. There is none to tell What we go (|uestioning, till our mouths are stopt By a clod of earth. Ask of the plangent sea, The wild wind wailing thro' the leafless tree. Ask of the meteor from the midnight dropt ! Come, Death, and l)ring the beauty back to all ! I do not seek thee, but I will not shun. 270 THE WANDERER. And let tliy coming be at even-tall, Thy pathway thro' the setting of the sun. And let us go together, I witli thee, What time the lamps in Eden bowers are lit. And Melancholy, all alone, doth sit Bv the wide mariie of some neglected sea. PART II. One hour of English twilight once again ! Lo I in the rosy regions of the dew The conliiivs of the world begin to wane. And Ilesper doth his trembling lamp renew. Now is the inauguration of the night ! Nature's release to wearied earth and skies ! Sweet truce of Care ! Labour's brief aruiisiice ! Best, loveliest interlude of dark and light ! The rookery, babbling in the sunken wood ; The watchdog, barking from the distant farm ; The dim light tading from the horned tlood. That winds the woodland in its silver arm; The mass'd, and inunemorial oaks, whose leaves Are husht in yonder heathy dells below ; The fragrance of the meadows that I know ; The bat, that now his wavering circle weaves Around these antiipie towers, and casements deep That glimmer, thro' the ivy and the rose, To the faint moon, which doth begin to creep Out of the inmost heart o' the heavens' ?'epose, To wander, all night long, without a sound, Above the fields my feet oft wander'd once ; The larches tall and dark, which do ensconce The little churchyard, in whose hallow'd ground Sleep half the simple friends my childhood knew: All, all the sounds and sights of this blest hour, EPILOGUE. 271 Sinking within my heart of hearts, like dew, Revive that so long parcht and drooping flower Of youth, the world's hot breath for many years Hath burn'd and wither'd ; till once more, once more. The revelation and the dream of yore Return to solace these sad eyes with tears ! AVhere now, alone, a solitary man, I pace once more the pathways of my home, Light-hearted, and together, once we ran, I, and the infant guide that used to roam With me, the meads and meadow-banks among, At dusk and dawn. How light those little feet Danced thro' the dancing grass, and waving wheat, Where'er, far off, we heard the cuckoo's song ! I know now, little Ella, what the flowers Said to you then, to make your cheek so ])ale ; And why the blackbird in our laurel bowers Spake to you, only ; and the poor, pink snail Fear'd less your steps than those of the May- shower. It was not strange these creatures loved you so, And told you all. 'Tvvas not so long ago You were, yourself, a bird, or else a flower. And, little Ella, you were pale, because So soon you were to die. I know that now. And why there ever seem'd a sort of gauze Over your deep blue eyes, and sad young brow. You were too good to grow up, Ella, you, And be a woman such as I have known I And so upon your heart they put a stone. And left you, dear, amongst the flowers and dew. God's will is good. He knew what would be best. I will not weep thee, darling, any more ; 'J t 'Z T 1 1 E W A N D i: H K H . I have not wept thee ; tho' mv heart, opprcst AVith many memories, ibr thy sake is sore. God's will is ijoocl, and great His wisilom is. Thou wast a little star, and thou didst shine Upon my eiaille ; but thou wast not mine. Thou wast not mine, my darling ; thou art His. IMy morning star ! twin sister of my soul ! ^ly little eltiu friend from Fairy-Land ! AVhose memory is yet innoceiU of the whole Of that whieh makes me doubly need thy hand. Thy little guiding hand so soon withdrawn I Here where I lind so little like to thee. For thou wert as tiie breath of dawn to me, Starry, anil pure, and brief as is the dawn. Thy knight was I, and thou my Fairy Queen. ('Twas in the days of loye ami ohivali'y !) And thou didst hide thee in a bower of green. But thou so well hast hidden thee, that 1 Have never found thee since. And thou didst set Many a task, and tjuest, and high enijirise. Ere I should win my guerdon from thine eyes, So many, and so many, that not yet My tasks are emled or my wanderings o'er. But some ilay thou wilt send across the main A nuigic bark, and I shall quit this shore Of care, and iind thee, in thy bower, again ; And thou wilt say " ^ly brother, hast thou found Our home, at last V "... Whilst I, in answer, Sweet. Shall heap my life's last booty at thy feet. And bare my breast with many a bleeding wound. The spoils of time I the trophies of the world I The keys of conquer'd towns, and eaptived kings ; EPILOGUE. 273 And many a broken sword, and banner furl'd ; The heads of giants, and swart Soldan's rings ; And many a maiden's scarf; and many a wand Of baffled wizard ; many an amulet ; And many a shield, with mine own heart's blood wet ; And jewels, dear, from many a distant land I God's will is good. He knew what would be best. I thought last year to pass away from life. I thought my toils were ended, and my quest Completed, and my part in this world's strife Accomplisht. And, behold ! about me now There rest the gloom, the glory, and the aAve Of a new martyrdom, no dreams foresaw ; And the thorn-crown hath blossom'd on my brow. A martyrdom, but with a martyr's joy ! A hope I never hoped for ! and a sense That nothing henceforth ever can destroy : — Within my breast the serene confidence Of mercy in the misery of things ; Of meaning in the mystery of all ; Of blessing in whatever may befall ; Of rest predestined to all wanderings. How sweet, with thee, my sister, to renew. In lands of light, the search for those bright birds Of plumage so ethereal in its hue. And music sweeter than all mortal words. Which some good angel to our childhood sent With messages from Paradisal flowers, So lately left, the scent of Eden bowers Yet linger'd in our hair, where'er we went ! Now, they are all fled by, this many a year, Adown the viewless valleys of the wind, And never more will cross this hemisphere, Those birds of passage ! Never shall I find, 18 t>74 TlIK WAISDKUER. Dropt iVoiu the lli^lit, vou followM, doar, !^o tar 'J'hat yon will nevor conic ai>ain, I know, One phnnclct on the ])atlis by which I er, where 1 meet From wall to wall the fathers of my race ; The jMctures of the })ast from wall to wall ; AVandering o'er which, my wistful glances fall, To sink, at last, on little Ella's face. This is my hon\e. And liither I return. After much wandering in the ways of men, "NVcary but not outworn. Here, with her urn iShall Memory come, and be my denizen. And blue-eyed Hope shall through the window look, KI'ILOGUE. 275 And lean her fair ehild's face into the room, Wliat time the hawthorn buds anew, and Ijloom The bright forget-me-nots beside the brook. Father of all which is, or yet may be, Ere to the pillow which my childhood prest This night restores my troubhnl ]>rows, by Thee May this, the last prayer I have learn'd, be blest ! ^ Grant me to live that I may need from life No more than life hath given me, and to die That T may give to death no more than I Have long abandon'd. And, if toil and strife Yet in the portion of my days must be, Firm b(^ my faith, and (juiet be my heart ! That so my work may with my will agree. And strength be mine to calmly fill my part In Nature's purpose, questioning not the end. For love is more than raiment or than food. Shall I not take the evil with the good ? Blessed to me be all which thou dost send ! Nor blest the least, recalling what hath been, The knowledge of the evil I have known Without me, and within me. Since, to lean Upon a strength far mightier than my own Such knowledge brought me. In whose strength I stand. Firmly upheld, even tho', in ruin hurl'd. The fix'd foundations of this rolling world Should top[)le at the waving of Thy hand. PART III. IIatl thou ! sole Muse that, in an age of toil, Of all the old Uranian sisterhood, 276 THE WANDERER. Art left to light us o'er the furrow'd soil Of this laborious star ! Muse, unsubdued By that strong hand which hath in ruin raz'd The temples of dread Jove ! Muse most divine, Albeit but ill by these pale lips of mine, In days degenerate, first named and praised ! Now the high airy kingdoms of the day Hyperion holds not. The disloyal seas Have broken from Poseidon's purple sway. Thro' Heaven's harmonious golden palaces No more the silver sandal'd messengers Slide to sweet airs. Upon Olympus' brow The gods' great citadel is vacant noAV. And not a lute to Love in Lesbos stirs. But thou wert born not on the Forked Hill, Nor fed from Hybla's hives by Attic bees. Nor on the honey Cretan oaks distil, Or once distill'd, when gods had homes in trees. And young Apollo kncAv thee not. Yet thou With Ceres wast, when the pale mother trod The gloomy pathway to the nether god. And spake with that dim Power which dwells below The surface of whatever, where he wends, The circling sun illumineth. And thou Wast aye a friend to man. Of all his friends, Percliance the friend most needed : needed now Yet more than ever ; in a complex age W^hich changes while we gaze at it : from heaven Seeking a sign, and finding no sign given. And questioning Life's worn book at every page. Nor ever yet, was song, untaught by thee. Worthy to live immortally with man. Wherefore, divine Experience, bend on me Thy deep and searching eyes. Since life began, Meek at thy mighty knees, tho' oft reproved, EPILOGUE. 277 I have sat, spelling out slow time with tears, Where down the riddling alphabet of" years, Thy guiding finger o'er the horn-book moved. And I have put together many names : Sorrow, and Joy, and Hope, and Memory, And Love, and Anger ; as an infant frames The initials of a language wherein he In manhood must with men communicate. And oft, the words were hard to understand, Harder to utter ; still the solemn hand Would pause, and point, and wait, and move, and wait ; Till words grew into language. Language grew To utterance. Utterance into music pass'd. I sang of all I leani'd, and all I knew. And, looking upward in thy face, at last. Beheld it tlusht, as when a mother hears Her infant feebly singing his first hymn, And dreams she sees, albeit unseen of him, Some radiant listener lured from other spheres. Such songs have been my solace many a while And oft, when other solace I had none. From grief which lay heart-broken on a smile, And joy that glitter'd like a winter sun, And froze, and fever'd : from the great man's scorn. The mean man's envy; friends' unfriendliness ; Love's want of human kindness, and the stress Of nights that hoped for nothing from the morn. From these, and worse than these, did song unbar A refuge thro' the ivory gate of dreams, Wherein my spirit grew familiar With spirits that glide by spiritual streams ; Song hath, for me, unseal'd the genii sleeping Under mid seas, and lured out of their lair 278 THE WANDERER. Beings with wondering eyes, and wondrous hair, Tame to my feet at twilight softly creeping. And song hath been my cymbal in the hours Of triumph ; when behind me, far away. Lay Egypt, with its plagues ; and, by strange powers, Not mine, upheld, life's heaped ocean lay On either siile a ])assage for my soul. A passage to the Land of Promise ! trod By giants, where the chosen race of God Shall find, at last, its long predestin'd goal. The breath which stirr'd these songs a little while Has tieeted by ; and, with it, ileeted too The days I sought, thus singing, to beguile Of thoughts that spring like weeds, which will creep thro' The blank interstices of ruin'd fines. Where Youth, adoring, sacrificed — its heart, To gods forever fallen. Now, we part. My songs and I. We part, and what remains ? Perchance an echo, and perchance no more. Harp of my heart, from thy brief music dwells In hearts, unknown, afar: as the wide shore Retains within its hundred hollow shells The voices of the spirits of the foam. Which murmur in the language of the deeps, Tho' haply far away, to one who keeps Such ocean wealth to grace an inland home. Within these cells of song, how frail soe'er, The vast and wandering tides of human life Have murmur'd once ; and left, in passing, there, Faint echoes of the tumult and the strife Of the great ocean of humanity. Fairies have danced within these hollow caves. EPILOGUE. 279 And Memory mused above the moonlit Avaves, And Youth, the lover, here hath linger'd by. I sung of life, as life would. have me sing, Of falsehood, and of evil, and of wrong; For many a false, and many an evil thing, 1 found in life: and by my life my song Was shaped within me while I sung: I sung Of Good, for good is life's predestin'd end; Of Sorrow, for 1 knew her as my friend ; Of Love, for by his hand my harp was strung. I have not scrawl'd above the tomb of Youth Those lying epitaphs, which represent All virtues, and all excellence, save truth. 'Twere easy, thus, to have been eloquent, If I had held the fashion, of the age AVhich loves to hear its sounding flattery Blown by all dusty winds from sky to sky, And find its praises blotting avery page. And yet, the Poet and the Age are one. And if the age be flaw'd, howe'er minute, Deep thro' the poet's heart that rent doth run, And shakes and mars the music of his lute. It is not that his symj)athy is less With all that lives and all that feels around him, But that so close a sympathy hath bound him To these, that he must utter their distress. We build the bridge, and swing the wondrous wire, Bind with an iron hoop the rolling world; Sport with the spirits of the ductile fire; And leave our spells upon the vapour furl'd ; And cry — Behold the progress of the time ! Yet are we tending in an unknown land. Whither, we neither ask nor understand. Far from the peace of our unvalued prime ! 280 TJIK AVAISDKKKK. Alul Strongtli and Foive, tl>e lieiuls which minister To sonic now-risen J^ower beyond our s[vvn, On either hand, with hook and nail, conior To rivet the Promethean heart of man Under tlie raveninji- and relenthv^s beak Ot" nnappeasable Desire, wliieh yet The very vitals of the age (Uith fret. The hmbs are miiihty, but the heart is weak. "Writhe on, rrometheus! or whate'er thou art, Thou giant sulVerer, groaning for a, rai'c Thou canst not save, for all thy bleeding heart ! Thy wail my harp hath waken'd; and my place Shall be beside thee ; and my blessing be On all that makes me worthy yet to share Thy lonely martyrdom, anil with thee wear That crown of anguish given to })oets, and thee! If to have wept, and wildly ; to have loved Till love grew torture ; to have grieved till grief Became a i)art of life ; if to have jn-oved The want of all things ; if, to draw relief Fi'om j)oesy tor passion, this avail, 1 lack no title to my crown. The sea Hath sent up nymphs lor my siK'iety, The mountains have been moved to hear my wail. Nature and man were children long ago In glad simplicity of heart and s[)eech. Now they are strangers to each other's woe; And each hath language iliHerent from each. The simplest songs sound sweetest, and most good. The simplest loves arc the most loving ones. Happier were song's forefathers than their sons. And Homer sung as Byron never could. But Homer cannot come again : nor ever The quiet of the age in which he sung. KIM 1,00 CK. 281 TliiH a^'O is one of" tninult and endeavour, And by a fevet'd liand its liar[)S are strung. And yet, I do not (|uarrel witli the time; Nor (juarrel with the tumidt of my lieart, Wliieh of the tumidt of tlic; a^^e is part; ]5(;eause its very weakru^ss is sublime. ■^rhe passions are as winds on tlie wide sea Of Innnan life; whieli do impvA the sails CM" man's gnvit enterprise, Avliat(^'er tliat be. The reckless helmsman, (;au^dit upon these gales, Under the roaring gulfs go(;s down aghast. The prudent ])ilot to the; stearlying breeze Spandy gives h(;ad ; and, over perilous S(!a9, ]Jio[)S anchor 'mid the Fortunate Jsles, at last. W(; pray against the tut (iod halh spoken out, and man hath heard ! Farewell, you lost inhabitants of my mind, You fair cphemerals of faded hours ! 282 THE WAXDKKER. Farowoll, YOU lands of exile, whence each wind Of nieniorv steals with fragrance over flowers ! Farewell Cordelia ! Ella ! . . . But not so Farewell the memories of you which I have Till stranjicrs shall be sitting on my jiravo And babbling of the dust which lies below. Blessed the man whose life, how sad soc'er, I lath felt the preseni'e, and yet keeps the trace Of one pure woman ! With religious care We close the doors, with reverent feet we pace The vacant chambers, where, of yore, a Queen ()nc night hath rested. From my Past's pale walls Yet gleam the unlatled fair nuunorials Of her whose beauty tliere, awhile, hath been. She pass'd into my youth, at its night-time, When low the lamplight, and the music husht. She pass'd, and ])ass\l away. Some broken rhyme Scrawl'd on the panel or the pane : the crusht And faded rose she dropp'd : the page she turn'd And finish'd not : the ribbon or the knot That Ihitter'd from her . . . Stranger, harm them not ! I keep these sacred relics nndiscern'd. Men's truths are often lies, and women's lies Often the setting of a truth most tender In an unconscious jiocsy. The child cries To clutch the star that lights its rosy spleiulour In airy Edens of the west afar. "Ah, folly ! " sighs the father, o'er his book. " JNIillions of miles above thy foolish nook Of infantile desire, the llesperus-star " Descends not, child, to twinkle on thy cot." Then readjusts his blind-wise spectacles, W^hile tears to sobs are changing, were it not The mother, with those tender syllables EPILOGUE. 283 Wlii(Uims in his own bri;);ht eyes when he awakes. So sle(!p ! so dream ! jf auf^ht I read aright That star, {)oor l)abe, whi('h o'er thy cradle shakes, Thy fate may fall, in after years, to be That other child that, like thee, loves the star, And, like thee, weeps to find it all so far, Feelin^i; its force in his nativity : — That other infant, all as weak, as wild. As f)assionate, and as li('l[)less, as thou art. Whom men will call a Poet (]*oet, or child, Th(; star is still so distant from the heart !) If so, heaven rjrant that thou may'st find at last, Since such there are, some Avoman, whose sweet smile, Pityinjr, may thy fond fan(;y yet beguile To dream the star, which thou hast sought, thou hast ! For m(!n, if thou shouldst heed what they may say, Will break thy heart, or leave thee, like them- selv(!s No heart for breaking. Wherefore I do pray My book may lie upon no learned shelves. But that in some (le(!p summer eve, perchance. Some woman, melancholy-eyed, and pale. Whose heart, like mine, hath suffered, may this tale Head by the soft light of her own romance. Go forth over the wide world. Song of mine ! As Noah's dove out of his bosom flew 284 THE WANDKKKH. C)vor llio (losiolate, vast, and Avanderinp; brine. Seok thou thy nest afar. Thy plaint renew From lieart to heart, and on from hind to hand Fly boldly, till thou find that unknown friend Whose taee, in dreams, above my own doth bend. Then (ell that s})irit, what it will untlerstand, AVhy men ean tell to strangers all the tale From friends reserved. And tell that spirit, my Song, AVheretbre I have not talter'd to unveil The eryj)lic' fi)rms ol" error and of wrong. And say, I snlVer'd more rhau I reeoi-ded, 'J'hat eai'h man's life is all men's lesson. Say, And let the world believe thee, as it may, Thy tale is true, however weakly worded. CLYTEMNESTRA, THE EARL'S RETURN, THE ARTIST, AND OTHER POEMS. CLYTEMNESTRA. PERSONS OF THE DRAMA. Agamemnon. iEciSTHUS. Okestes. Phocian. Herald. Clytemnestra. Electra. Cassandra. 'Chorus. Scene. — Before the Palace of Agamemnon in Argos. Tro- phies, amongst which, the shield of Agamemnon, on the wall. Time, Morning. The action continues till Sunset. I. CLYTEMNESTRA. CLYTEMNESTRA. Morning at last ! at last the lingering day Creeps o'er the dewy side of yon dark world. O dawning light already on the hills ! O universal earth, and air, and thou, First freshness of the east, which art a breath Breath'd from the rapture of the gods, who bless Almost all other prayers on earth but mine ! Wherefore to me is solacing sleep denied ? And honourable rest, the right of all ? So that no medicine of the slumbrous shell, Brimm'd with divinest draughts of melody, Nor silence under dreamful canopies, Nor purple cushions of the lofty couch May lull this fever for a little while. Wherefore to me — to me, of all mankind, l'^^ IM.Y IKMNKSTK V. This retribution tor a doed umloiio ? For many nion outlive their ;;uui of orinies. And oat. ami drink, and Htl up thankt'ul hands, And take their rest seenrely in tlie dark. An\ I not innoeent — or more than those ? There is no blot ot* nuirder on my brow, Nor any taint of blood upon my robe. — It is the thought I it is the thouiiht ! . . . and men Judge us by aots ! . . as tho' one tliunder-elap Let all Olympus out. l"nq\net heart, 111 fares it with thee siuee, ten sad vears past, In one wild hour of unaoijuainted loy Thou didst set wide thy lonely bridal doors For a forbidden guest to enter in ! Last night, methought ]iale Helen, with a frown, Swept by me. nnirmuring, " I — sueh as thou — A Queen in Cireece— weak-hearted (woe is me I) Allured by love — did, in an evil hour. Fall oil' tVom duty. Sorrow eame. Beware I "* And then, in sleep, there passM a baleful band — The ghosts of all the slaughterM under Troy, From this side Styx, who cried, " For sueh a erime '• We tell tVoui our fair palaees on earth, '* And waniler, starless, here. For sueh a erime *' A tjaousand ships were launeh'd, and tumbled down •' The topless towers of llion. tho' they rose " To magle inusie, in the time of Gods I" With sueh fierce thoughts for evermore at war, A'ext not alone by hankering -wild regrets Hut fears, yet worse, of that which soon must come. My heart waits armM, and from the citailel Oi' its high sorrow, sees tar otV dark shapes. And hears the tootsteps ot' Necessity Tread near, and nearer, hand in hand with Woe. La>t night the tlaming Herald warning urged Up all the hills — small time to pause and plan I Counsel is weak : and much remains to do. That Aiiamcumon, and, if else remain CLYTEM.VEKTUA. 289 Oi' thai y the retributive Deity, AVhosoe'er he be Of the Immortal Powers — Or mad'ning Pan, if he chastise His Shepherd's Phrygian treacheries ; Or vengeful Loxias ; or Zeus, Anger'd for the sliame and abuse Of a great man's hospitaHty. As wide as is Olympus' span Is the power of the high Gods ; Who, in their gohlen blest abodes See all things, looking from the sky ; And Heaven is hard to pacify For the Avickedness of man. My heart is fill'd with vague forebodings, And opprest by unknown terrors Lest, in the light of so much gladness, Kise the shadow of ancient wrong. O Diemon of the double lineage Of Tantalus; and the Pleisthenidae, Inexorable in thy mood. On the venerable threshold Of the ancient House of Pelops Surely is enough of blood ! Wherefore does my heart misgive me ? Wherefore comes this doubt to grieve me ? O, may no Divine Envy Follow home the Argive army, Being vext for things ill-done In wilful pride of stubborn war, Long since, in the distant lands ! May no Immortal wrath pursue Our dear King, the Light of Argos, For the unhappy sacrifice Of a daughter ; working evil In the dark heart of a woman ; 21>4 n.YTKMXKSTUA. Or somo hdiisohoKl tro.ii'hory. Ami a ouiNo iVoiu kiiulrcd lianJs 111. ri.Y IKMNKSTKA. tLYTKMMCSTKA. [ Iiteiittrin(/ fi-oin the fioust\ To-morrow . . . ay, what it' to-day ? . . . Well — thou ? Wiiy, it" thoso tonoiu's of Ihimo, with whioh last night The laiul was oUniiuMit, spoko I'ortaiii truth, l>y this })erclwuu'o thro' green Sarouic rocks Those hlaek ships glide . . . perchance . . . well, what's to tear V 'Twere well to dare the worst — to know the end — Pio soon, or live seeure. \V hat's left to atld To years ot' nights like those whieh I have known ? Shall 1 shrink now to meet one little hour Whieh I have dareil to contemplate for years? l>y all the Cuids, not so! 'J'he end crowns all, Whieh if we fail to seize, that's also lost Which went before : as who would lead a host Thro' desolate ilry places, yet return In sight of kingdoms, when the Cuxls are roused To mark the issue ? . . . Anil vet. vet — I think Three nights ago there nnist have been sea-storms. The wind was wiKl among the Palace towers : Far oil" upon the hideous Element 1 know it huddleil up the petulant waves, Whose shajieless and bewihlering preci[)ices Led to the belly of Orcus . . . oh, to slip Into dark Lethe from a dizzy plank. When even the tunls are reeling on the poop! To di*own at night, and have no sepulchre ! — That were too horrible ! . . . yet it may be Some easy chance, that comes with little pain, CLYTEMNESTRA. 295 Mi^ht rid me of the haunting of those eyes, And tliesc wild thoughts . . . To know he roved among His old companions in the Happy Fields, And rangi^l with heroes — I still innocent ! tSleej) would be natural then. Yet will the old time Never return ! never those pea(.'eful hours ! N(iver that careless heart ! and nevermore, Ah, nev(!rmore that laughter without pain ! IJut I, that languish for r(!pose, must fly it, Nor, save in daring, doing, taste of rest. Oh to have lost all these ! To have barter'd calm. And all the irr(;vocable wealth of youth. And gain'd . . . what? But this change had surely come. Even wen; all things other than they are. I blame mys(df o'(;rnmch, who should Ijlame time. And life's inevitabh; loss, and fate, And days grown loveli(!r in the retrospect. We change : wherefore look back ? The path to safety Lies forward . . . forward ever. [In pnsmifj toward the house, she recognizes the shield of Af/uvieiimon, and pauses before it. Ha! old shield, Hide up for shame that honest face of thine. Stare not so bluntly at us . . . Oh, this man ! Why sticks the thought of him so in my heart? If 1 had loved him once — if for one hour — Then were there treason in this falling off. But never did I feel this wretched heart Until it leap'd l)en(iath AOgisthus' eyes. Who could have so forecounted all from first ? From that flusht moinent when his hand in mine Rested a thought too long, a touch too kind, 'Jo leave its pulse unwarm'd . . . but I remember I dream'd sweet dreams that night, and slept till dawn, 296 CLYTEMNK8TUA. And Avoko witli ilntterin«js of a happy tliought, And felt, not worse, but bettor . , . and now . . . now ? When first a sti-anuo and novel tenderness (iuiver'd in these salt eyes, had one «aiil then " A bead of dew may drajj a delude down : " — In that first ptMislve i)ause, through wliieh I wateh'd Unwonted sadness on ^Etthat had help'd nnieh ill ... oh Destiny Makes cowards or makes culprits of ns all ! Ah, had some Trojan Aveapon . . . Fool ! fool ! fool ! Surely S(Mnetimes the unseen Eumenides Ho prompt our musing moods Avith Avieked hints, And lash ns tor our crimes ere Ave commit them. Here, rour.d this silver boss, he cut my name, Oiu'e — long ago: he cut it as he lay Tired out Avith braAvling pastimes — prone — his limbs At length diflused — his head droopt in my lap — His spear (lung by : ]^lectra by the hearth Sat Avith the young Orestes on her knee ; While he, Avith an old broken sword, hack'd out These crooked characters, and laugh'd to sec (SpraAvl'd from the unusetl strength of his large hands) CLYTKMNKSTRA. 297 The marks make Cf.ytkmnksti{A. I low lie laii^rliM ! TlC^iisthus' hands an; smallcf. Yet I know That matrons envi(M] me my husband's strc'n;>;lh. And I renuMnher when h(i sticxh; amonj; 'J'he Art on i-oui^h soas. Ami almost rudilorloss I () yot 'tis murh To t'ool a power, solf-oontroil, solf-assurod, l>ri(llini»- a glorious dauijor ! as whon ouo That knows tho nature of the elements tiuiiles some frail plank with sublime skill that wins rross trou\ all obstruetion ; and, erect, Looks lH>ld and t'ree (h>wn all the drippiui); stars, llcariuL;; the huuurv storm boom batlled. by. .Kiiisthus ! . . . hark I . . . .T.i;isthus ! . . . there . . . .Kuisthus ! 1 would to all tho (uids 1 know hin\ sal'o ! Who counts this way, ' his racing foot Safe to us, like a nimble I'harioteer? IV. cM.Y rKMXl.SlK'A. llKKAl.n. ei.Y ri.MNKSTUA. Now, gloom-bird ! are there prodigies about'? What new ill-thiuir sHMit thoo before '? O Queen— ei,\ rKMNKsruA. Speak, if thou hast a voice I I listen. niKAi.n. O Queen— CI.YTEMNESTIIA. 299 CLYTEMNKSTIfA. Ilatli an ox trodden on tliy ton;.MU', V . . , Spnak then ! IlICIiALI). () Quoon (for haste hath oauj,dit away my breath), The Kin^ is coming. C'LV'/KMNKSTKA. 8ay again — tlie King Is coming — 1IKUAM>. Even now, the broad sea-fieMs Grow white with flocks of sails, and toward the west The slo[)ed liorizon teems with rising beaks. (•I.VrrCMNKSTJJA. The people know this V nKi:A[>i). Heard yon not the noise ? For soon as this wing'd news had toucht the gates The whole; land shouted in the sun. CI>YTKMNKSTI«A. So soon ! The tliought's outsped by the njality, And halts agape . . . the King — iiki:ai>o. How she is moved ! A noble woman ! CLYTEMNESTItA. Wherefore beat so fast, Thou foolish heart V 'tis not thy master — 300 ci.ytp:mxkstua. HKRALP. Truly She looks all over A«ramemnoivs mate. ci.yte:mnesti{A. Destiny, Destiny ! The deed's half done. IIKKAI.P. She will not speak, save by that brooding eye Whose light is language. Some great thought, I see, ^Mounts up the royal chambers of her blood, As a king mounts his palace ; holds high pomp In her Olympian bosom; gains her face, Possesses all her noble glowing cheek With sudden state ; and gathers grandly up Its slow majestic meanings in her eyes ! OLYTEMNESTltA. So quick this sudden joy hath taken us, I scarce can realize the sum of it. You say the King comes here — the King, my hus- band, Whom we have waited for ten years — O joy ! Pardon our seeming roughness at the first. Hope, that Avill often fawn npon des]mir And Hatter des])erate chances, when the event Falls at our feet, soon takes a querulous tone, And jealous of that perfect joy she guards (Lest the ambrosial fruit by some rude hand Be stol'n away from her, and never tasted), Barks like a lean watch-dog at all who come. But now do you, with what good speed you may, Make known this glad intelligence to all. Ourselves, within, as best befits a wife And woman, will prepare my husband's house. Also, I pray you, summon to our side Our cousin, A'gisthus. AVe ^^ould speak with him. AVe would that our own lips should be the first CLYTEMNKSTKA. 301 To break these tidinirs to him ; so obtaining; New joy by sharing liis. And, for yourself, Receive our gratitude. For this great news liencefortli you hold our royal love in fee. Our fairest fortunes from this day I date, And to the House of Tantalus new honour. She's gone ! With what a majesty she fill'd The whole of space ! The statues of the Gods Are not so godlike. She has Here's eyes, And looks immortal ! V. CLYTEMNESTRA. CHORUS. CLYTKMNKSTHA {(IS slic ascends (he steps of the Palace). So . . . while on the verge Of some wild purpose we hang dizzily, AVeighing the danger of the leap below Against the danger of retreating steps, Upon a sudden, some forecast event, Issuing full-arm'd from Councils of the Gods, Strides to us, plucks us by the hair, and hurls Headlong pale conscience, to the abyss of crime. AVell — I shrink not. 'Tis but a leap in life. There's fate in this. Why is he here so soon ? The sight of whose abhorred eyes will add Whatever lacks of strength to this resolve. Away with shame ! I have had enough of it. What's here for shame V . . . the weak against the strong ? And if the Aveak be victor ? . . . what of that ? Tush! . . . there — my soul is set to it. AVhat need Of argument to justify an act Necessity compels, and must absolve ? 1 have been at play with scruples — like a girl. Now they are all Hung by. I have talk'd with Crime 302 CLYTEMNESTRA. Too long to play the prude. These thoughts have been Wild guests by night. Now I shall dare to do That which I did not dare to think . . . oh, now I know myself! Crime's easier than we dream. Upon the everlasting hills Throned Justice works, and waits. Between the shooting of a star. That falls unseen on summer nights Out of the bosom of the dark, And the magnificent march of War, Roll'd from angry lands afar Hound some doomed city-gates, Nothing is to her unknown ; Nothing unseen. Upon her hills she sits alone, And in the balance of Eternity Poises against the What-has-been The weight of What-shall-be. She sums the account of human ills. The great world's hoarded wrongs and rights Are in her treasures. She will mark, With inward-searching eyes sublime, The frauds of Time. The empty future years she fills Out of the past. All human wills Sway to her on her reacliless heights. Wisdom she teaches men, with tears. In the toilful school of years : Climbing from event to event. And, being patient, is content To stretch her sightless arms about, And find some human instrument. From many sorrows to work out Her doubtful, far, accomplishment. CLYTEMNESTRA. 303 Slie the two Atrida? sent Upon Ilion : being intent The hcapt-np wrath of" Heaven to move Against th(> faithless Phrygian crime. Them the Tlunuler-bii-d of Jove, Swooping sudden from above, Sunmion'd to fates subhme. She, being injured, for the sake Of her, the often-wedded wife (Too loved, and too adoring !) Many a brazen band did break In many a breathless battle-strife ; Many a noble life did take ; Many a headlong agony, Frenzied shout, and frantic cry. For Greek and Trojan storing. When, the spear in the onset being shiver'd, The reeling ranks were roU'd together Like mad waves mingling in windy weather, Dasht fearfully over and over each other. And the plumes of Princes were toss'd and thrust, And dragg'd about in the shameful dust; And the painful, panting breath Came and went in the tug of death : And the sinews were loosen'd, and the strong knees stricken : And the eyes began to darken and thicken : And the arm of the mighty and terrible quiver'd. O Love ! Love ! Love ! How terrible art thou ! How terrible ! Oh, what hast thou to do With men of mortal years, Who toil below, And have enough of griefs for tears to flow ? Oh, range in higher spheres ! Hast thou, O hast thou, no diviner hues To paint thy wings, but must transfuse 304 CLYTEMNKSTllA. An Iris-liglit from tears ? For human hearts are all too -weak to l^old thee. And how, O Love, sliall human arms enfold thee ? There is a seal of sorrow on thy brow. There is a deadly fire in thy breath. AVith life thou lurest, yet thou givest death. O Love, the Cxods are weak by reason of" thee ; And many wars have been upon the earth. Thou art the sweetest source of saltest sorrov/s. Thy blest to-days bring such unblest to-morrows ; Thy softest ho})e makes saddest memory. Thou hadst destruction in thee from the birth ; Incomprehensible ! O Love, thy brightest bridal garments Are poison'd, like that robe of agonies Which Deianira wove for Hercules, And, being put on, turn presently to cerements ! Thou art unconquered in the fight. Thou rangest over land and sea. O let the tbolish nations be ! Keep thy divine desire To upheave mountains or to kindle fire From the frore frost, and set the world alight. Why make thy red couch in the damask cheek V Or light thy torch at languid eyes V Or lie entangled in soft sighs On pensive lips that will not speak ? To sow the seeds of evil things In the hearts of headstrong kings ? Preparing many a kindred strife For the fearful future hour ? O leave the wretched race of man, Whose days are but the dying seasons' span ; Vex not his painful life ! Make thy innnortal sport In Heaven's high court, And cope with Gods that are of equal power. CLYTEMNESTRA. 305 VI. ELECTRA. CHORUS. CLYTEMNESTRA. ELECTKA. Now is at hand the hour of retribution. For my father, at last returning, In great power, being greatly injur'd, Will destroy the base adulterer, And efface the shameful Past. CIIOKUS. O child of the Godlike Agamemnon ! Leave vengeance to the power of Heaven ; Nor forestall with impious footsteps The brazen tread of black Erinnys. KLECTRA. Is it, besotted with the adulterous sin, Or, as with flattery pleasing present power, Or, being intimidate, you speak these words ? ciioitus. Nay, but desiring justice, like yourself. ELECTRA. Yet Justice ofttimes uses mortal means. CHORUS. But flings aside her tools when work is done. CLYTEMNESTRA. dearest friends, inform me, went this way ^gisthus ? CHORUS. Even now, hurrying hitherward, 1 see him walk, with irritated eyes. 20 306 CLYTEMNESTRA. CLYTKMNESTRA. A reed may show which way the tempest blows. That face is pale — those brows are dark ... ah ! VII. yEGISTHUS. CLYTEMNESTRA. ^EGISTHUS. Agamemnon — CLYTEMNESTRA. My husband . . . well ? .t:gisthus. (Whom may the great Gods curse !) Is scarce an hour hence. CLYTEMNESTRA. Then that hour's yet saved From sorrow. Smile, xEgisthus — Plear me speak. CLYTE]MNESTRA. Not as your later wont has been to smile — Quick, fierce, as tho' you scarce could hurry out The wild thing fast enough ; for smiling's sake, As if to show you could smile, tho' in fear Of what might follow — but as first you smiled Years, years ago, when some slow loving thought Stole down your face, and settled on your Hps, As tho' a sunbeam halted on a rose And mix'd with franrrance, li<>ht. Can you smile still Just so, iEgisthus ? ^GISTIIUS. These are idle words. CLYTEMNESTRA. 307 And like the wanderings of some fever'd brain : Extravagant phrases, void of import, wild. CLYTE3INESTKA. Ah, no ! you cannot smile so, more. Nor I ! .EGISTHUS. Ilark ! in an hour the King — CLYTEMNESTKA. Hush ! listen now — I hear, far down yon vale, a shepherd piping Hard by his milk-white flock. The lazy things ! How quietly they sleep or feed among The dry grass and the acanthus there ! . . . and he, He hath flung his faun-skin by, and white ash-stick, You hear his hymn ? Something of Dryope, Faunus, and Pan ... an old wood tale, no doubt ! It makes me think of songs when 1 was young I used to sing between the valleys there. Or higher up among the red ash-berries. Where the goats climb, and gaze. Do you remember That evening when we linger'd all alone, Below the city, and one yellow star Shook o'er yon temple ? ... ah, and you said then " Sweet, should this evening never change to night, But pause, and pause, and stay just so — yon star Still steadfast — and the moon behind the hill. Still rising, never risen — would this seem strange ? Or should we say, ' why halts the day so late ? ' " Do you remember ? JEGISTHUS. Woman ! woman ! this Surpasses frenzy ! Not a breath of time Between us and the clutch of Destiny — Already sound there footsteps at our heels, Already comes a heat against our cheek. Already Angers cold among our hair. 308 CLYTEMNESTRA. And you speak lightly thus, as tho' the day Linger'd toward nuptial hours ! . . . awake ! arouse! CLYTEMNESTRA. I do wake . . . well, the King — ^GISTHUS. Even while we speak Draws near. And we — CLYTEMNESTRA. Must meet him. ^EGISTHUS. Meet ? ay . . . how ? CLYTEMNESTRA. As mortals should meet fortune — calmly. ^GISTHUS. Quick ! Consult ! consult ! Yet there is time to choose The path to follow. CLYTEMNESTRA. I have chosen it Long since. .EGISTHUS. How ?— CLYTEMNESTRA. Oh, have we not had ten years To ripen counsel, and mature resolve ? What's to add now ? ^GISTHUS. I comprehend you not. The time Is plucking at our sleeve. CLYTEMNESTRA. 309 CLYTEMNESTRA. ^gisthiis ! There shall be time for deeds, and soon enough, Let that come when it may. And it may be Deeds must be done shall shut and shrivel up All quiet thoughts, and quite preclude repose To the end of time. Upon this awful strait And promontory of our mortal life We stand between what was, and is not yet. The Gods allot to us a little space, Before the contests which must soon begin, For calmer breathing. All before lies dark And difficult, and perilous, and strange ; And all behind . . . What if we take one look, One last long lingering look (before Despair, The shadow of failure, or remorse, which often Waits on success, can come 'twixt us and it. And darken all) at that which yet must seem Undimm'd in the long retrospect of years — The beautiful imperishable Past ! Were this not natural, being innocent now — At least of that which is the greater crime? To-night we shall not be so. ^GISTHUS. Ah, to-night ! CLYTEMNESTRA. All will be done which now the Gods foresee. The sun shines still. I oft have mark'd some day Begin all gold in its flusht orient, With splendid promise to the waiting world. And turn to blackness ere the sun ran down. So draws our love to its dark close. To-night — 310 CLYTEMNESTRA. CLYTEMNESTRA. Shall bring our bridals, my Belov'd ! For, either Upon the melancholy shores of Death (One shadow near the doors of Pluto) greeted By pale Proserpina, our steps shall be, Or else, secure, in the great empty palace We shall sleep crown'd — no noise to startle us — And Argos silent round us— all our own ! ,T:GisTrius. In truth I do not dare to think this thing. For all the Greeks will hate us. CLYTEMNESTRA. What of that ? If that they do not harm us — as who shall ? .EGISTHUS. Moreover, tho' we triumph in the act (And we may fail, and fall) we shall go down Cover'd with this reproach into the tomb, Hunted by all the red Euraenides ; And, in the end, the ghost of him we slew, Being beforehand there, will come between Us and the awful Judges of the dead ! And no one on this earth will pray for us ; And no hand will hang garlands on our urns, Either of man, or maid, or little child ; But we shall be dishonour'd. CLYTEMNESTRA. O faint heart ! When this poor life of ours is done with — all Its foolish days put by — its bright and dark — Its praise and blame — roll'd quite away — gone o'er Like some brief pageant — will it stir us more. Where we are gone, how men may hoot or shout After our footste]3s, than^the dust and garlands CLYTEMNESTRA. 311 A few mad boys and girls fling in the air When a great host is pass'd, can cheer or vex The minds of men already out of sight Toward other lands, with paean and with pomp Array'd near vaster forces ? For the future, We will smoke hecatombs, and build new fanes, And be you sure the gods deal leniently With those who grapple for their life, and pluck it From the closed gripe of Fate, albeit perchance Some ugly smutch, some drop of blood or so, A spot here, there a streak, or stain of gore. Should in the contest fall to them, and mar That life's original whiteness. ^EGISTIIUS. Tombs have tongues That talk in Hades. Think it ! Dare we hope. This done, to be more happy ? CLYTEINIMESTKA. My Belov'd, We are not happy — we may never be, Perchance, again. Yet it is much to think We have been so : and ev'n tho' we must weep. We have enjoy 'd. The roses and the thorns We have pluckt together. We have proved both. Say, Was it not worth the bleeding hands they left us To have won such flowers ? And if 'twere possible To keep them still — keep even the wither'd leaves, Even the wither'd leaves are worth our care. We will not tamely give up life — such life ! What tho' the years before, like those behind. Be dark as clouds the thunder sits among, Tipt only here and there with a wan gold More bright for rains between ? — 'tis much — 'tis more, For we shall ever think " the sun's behind. 812 CL YTF.MN KSTK A. The sun must shine before the day ooos down ! " Anythinii- better than the lon«r, h)ni>- ni«iht, Anil that perpetual silence of the tomb ! 'Tis not tor happier hours, but lite itself AVhieh may brino- happier hours, Me strike at Fate. AVhy, tho' from all the treasury of the Past 'Tis but one solitary gem we save — One kiss more such as we have kist, one smile, One more embraee, one nioht more such as those Whieh we have shared, how costly were the prize, How riehly Avorth the attem]it ! Indeed, I know, AVhen yt't a I'hild, in those dim }>leasant dreams A girl will dream, perehanee in twilit hours, Or under eve's first star (when we are young Happiness seems so possible — so near ! One says, '• it must go hard, but T shall find it ! ") C)tttimes I umseil — " ]My life shall be my own. To make it what 1 Avill." It is their fault (I thought) who miss the true delights. I thought ^len might have saved themselves : they flung away, Too easily abasht, life's opening ]n'omise : But all things will be different ft)r me. For 1 felt life so strong in me I indeed I was so sure of my own power to love And to enjoy — T had so much to give, I said, '-'• be sure it must win something back ! " Youth is so eonfident ! And tho' 1 saw All women sad — not only those T knew. As Helen (whou\ from youth 1 knew, nor ever Hivined that sail impenetrable smile AVhieh oft would darken thro' her lustrous eyes, As drawino- slowly down o'er her eold cheek The yellow braids of odorous hair, she turn'd From ^Nlenelans praising her, and sigh'd — That was before he, flinging bitterly down The trampled parsley-crown and uiulrain'd goblet, Curs'd before all the Gods his sudden shame And young Hermione's deserted youth !) Kot only her — but all whose lives I learn 'd, CLYTEMNE8TRA. 313 Medea, Deianeira, Ariadne, And many others — all weak, wrong'd, oj;)prest, Or sick and sorrowful, as I am now — Yet in tlieii- fate I would not see my own. Nor grant allcgianee to that general law From which a few, I knew a very few, With whom it seem'd I also might be number'd. Had yet escaped securely : — so exempting From this world's desolation everywhere One fate — my own ! Well, that was foolish ! Now I am not so exacting. As we move Further and further down the path of fate 1 o the sure tomb, we yield up, one by one, Our claims on Fortune, till with each new year VVe seek less and go further to obtain it. 'Tis the old tale — aye, all of us must learn it! ]>ut yet 1 would not empty-handed stand Before the House of Hades. Still there's life. And hope with life ; and much that may be done. Look up, O thou most dear and cherisht head ! AV^e'U strive still, conquering ; or, if falling, fall In si^ht of iirand results. ^KGISTIIUS. May these things be ! I know not. All is vague. I should be strong Fven were you weak. 'Tis otherwise — I see No path to safety sure. We have done ill things. ]>est let the past be past, lest new griefs come. Best we part now. Part ! what, to part from thee I Never till death — not in death even, part ! 7F.GISTHUS. But one course now is left. 814 CLYTEMNKSTRA. CLYTKMNKSTKA. And that is- .•KGISTIU'S. Flight. Cl-YTKMNKSTUA. Coward -KGISTIIUS. I care not. OLYTKM NKSTKA . Flight ! T am a Queen. A goddoss once you said — and why not jjoddess ? Scoing the (lods arc mightier than we By so much more of courage. Oh, not I, But you, arc mad. .EGisrnus. Nay, wiser than I was. CLYTKMNKSTRA. And you will leave me? JEOISTUVS. Not if you Avill come. CLYTEMKKsrUA. This was the Atlas of the world I built ! -Kcusrnus. Flight ! . . . yes, I know not . . . somewhere . . . anywhere. You come ? . . . you come not ? . . . well ? . . . no time to pause ! CLYTEMNKSTRA. 315 CLYTEMNKSTKA. And this is he — this he, the man I loved ! And this is retribution ! O my heart ! O Ajramemnon, how art tliou avenged ! And I have done so mueh for him ! . . . would do So much ! . . . a universe lies ruin'd here. Now by Apollo, be a man for once I Be for once strong, or be forever weak ! If shame be dead, and honour be no more, i\o more true faith, nor that which in old time Made us like Gods, sublime in our high place, Yet all surviving instincts warn from flight. Flight I — oh, impossible ! Even now the steps Of fate are at the threshold. Which way fly ? For every avenue is barr'd by death. AVill these not scout your flying heels ? If now They hate us powerful, will they love us weak ? No land is safe ; nor any neighbouring king Will harbour Agamemnon's enemy. Reflect on Troy ; her ashes smoulder yet. yKGTSTIIUS. Her words compel me with their awful truth. For so would vengeance hound and earth us down. CLYTKMNESTRA. If I am weak to move you by that love You swore long since — and seal'd it with false lips ! — Yet lives there nothing of the ambitious will ? Of those proud plots, and dexterous policy, On which you builded such high hopes, and swore To rule this people Agamemnon rules ; Supplant him eminent on his own throne, And push our power thro' Greece ? ^•:gisthus. The dream was great ! ,'UG 01 N I KMM S I KA. It uas a iliiMUi. ^^'o ilroam'l it liki^ a king. Ay. antl shall so tultil it liko ;i lun^- I ^^'l^o talks of tliiiht ? Vov now, botliiiik you woll. It to livtMMi. tho byworil ot'a nvoiKI, Im> any iiain. ovon suoh lli;i;ht oI1\m-s woi. Will lonii-annM Noniiiwun* novor liiul yon iMit \\ lion you ha\o lolt tho Avtwpon in hor hands? Im» hold, and n\oot hor ! ^^ ho toivstnll tho holts (>t'hoa\on. tho iJods «loon\ worthy ot'tho (uuis. Snoot>ss is ni.ado tho n\oasnro ot'onv aots. .\i\d. think .Kiiisthns, thoro lias Ihumi ono thoujiht. Hot'oro us \n tho intorvals ot'yoars. l>ot\voon us ovor in tho loni>- tlark niiihts, \\'hon. lyinu all awako. >vt^ hoanl tho wind. ni»l yon shrii\k thon ? or, oidy olosor drawinsr Your lips to tiiino. your arn\s about luy tUH'k, Say, *• ^^'lu^ wmdd toar siu'h thanoos. whon ho saw Hohinil thtMU suoh a pri/o lor hin\ as this ? " Po >ou shrink now ? O.aro von put all this tVoin you ? l\o\i>ko tho pron\iso ot'thoso yoars. and say This prospoot nioots you iinproparoil at last ? Our n\otlvOvS aro so mixt in thoir bouitiuinii'j! And so oont'usod, wo UH'Oii'nizo thotn not rill thoy aro uroMu to aots; but uo'or woro ours So blindly wov'n. but what wo both nniauiiloil (>ut ot'tho intrioaoios ot'tho hoart (>no pur[)oso :— boinu' touml. host urapplo to it. I'or to otuiooivo ill iloods yot daro not do thoni. This is not \irtuo. but a twi^told shamo. InMwoon tho oulprit antl tho Ponii-iiMd I'horo's but ono dilVoronoo niou lOiia rd —suoooss. Tho woakly-wiokod shall bo tloubly ilamuod I \ oisnu s. I am not woak .... wha( will you ? .... oh, too woak (;t,vTKM\»:H'H{.A. .51 7 Tf) heir- lliis H(!orfi ! . . . SIm; is n ^'odlikc ficrxJ Ami licll ;in(;rat(j (;lian<;.;. And if w(; fall (hh wc, I lliink, must fall) 1 1, irt hut houk; few Hunny Iiouth W(; ios(!, Souk; few bri<.';lit days. True! arid a liltl<; leH8 Of life, or cIh(; of wron;^ a little more, VVIial's that V For one HJiade rnfjre or leHS tlic ni-ht Will Hearee Heeni darkctr or li;/liler the lon;^ "i;^'''' ! We'll fall trj;.M;ther, if wc fall ; and if- Oli if wc live ! ClyVTKMNKHIItA. Ay, that was nohller tliou<^lit ! Now yon w haek into yoursctif, your true .self, My Kin;.'! njy s paintod on a wall : 'I'o n\o thoy had not olthor hoart, or brain. Or lips, or languago — pioturosi nothing nuMV. Thon, sudilonly, athwart those lonely hours ^^'hu■h, day by ilay ilreamM listlessly away, Ked to the tlark and melaneholy tomb. Thy presenee passed and toueh'd me with a soul. My lite ilid but begin when 1 Ibuml thee. O what a strength was hidden in this heart I As, all unvalued, in its eold dark eave Tudor snow hills, some rare and prieeless gem May sparkle and burn, so in this life ot'mine Kove lay shut up. You broke the rook away. You lit upon the jewel that it hid, You pluek'd it tbrth — to wear it, my Helov'd I To set in the erown of thy dear lit'e I To en\belllsh tortune I Cast it not away. Now eall me by the old familiar names : Call me agaiti your Queen, as onee you used ; Your large-eved Here I CLVTKMNK.STIIA. 821 Ax;i.s'rn(;H. Oil, you an; a Qu(!(;n That Hlionld }iav(; none; but OocJs to ruN; over ! Make me iruiaortal with one eo«tIy kisH ! i^ VIII. (;I1()IM:S. KLKCTHA. CLVIKMNKSTJiA. yi':(iisTjn;,s. lo ! lo ! I hear the [jeo{)h; shout. ii.Kf/ritA. See how these two do mutually confer, Hatching new infamy. Now will lie dare, In his unhoundfid impudenee, to mim:s'I'ka. Leave nie to deal with these. I know the arts That iinide the (hnibtl'nl pnrpose of diseonrse Thro' many windings t(^ the ap])ointed uoah I'll draw them on io sneh a frame of mind As best befits onr jnirpose. Yon, meanwhile, Scatter vaiine words amonji; the other crowd, Lest the event, when it is dne, fall I'onl Of unpropitions natnres. .lunsrnis. Do yon fear The helpless, blind ill-will of sneh a crowd ? CIA'TKMNKSTIJA. He only fears mankiiul who knows them not. lint him I praise not who despises them. AVhiMice come. KK'ctra V la.K.rrKA. l<^'om my t'ather's hearth To meet him ; tor the honr is nigh at hand. Ol.YTKMNKSTKA. So do onr hopes race hotly to one end, (A noble rivalry !) as Avho shall first CLYTKMNKBTHA. 828 Erri}jrfu;(! tliiH Ii?»f)[>y forluiKj. 'Vnvry not Wc too will follow. TCfJCCTUA. Justice, O be Hwif't! IX. CLYTKMNESTKA. CllOkl'S. SEMI-CHOKL'S. UVAIAIA). c;i>yticmn7chti:a. A i'r()w;ir(] clilM ! Sh(!'.s ^orn;. My blood's in li(5r. Ilcr fntlicr'H, too, looks out of tliat [>rou(] faoc. SIk; is l(;o bold . . . ha, well — yiO^iintlius V . . . gone ! () falc ! to bo a •woman ! You ^rcat OodH, Wliy did you fashif)n rnc in this soft mould V (iiv<; ni(! tli(;H(j htn^^llis of" nilky hair V these hands Too delicately dimf)Ied ! and these arms 'I'oo whit«!, loo weak ! yet leave the man's heart in m<5, To mar your mast'irpieee — that I should p(;riHli, Who else had won renown amon;^ my peers, A man, with men — perehanee a i^od with you, Had you but Ixitter sex'd me, yon blind (jods ! J>ut, as fV>r man, all tliin;:s are filtin;; to him. Jl(! str-ikes his fellow 'mid the (;lari;.'in^ shields, And h'aps amon^ the smokin;^ walls, and lak(!S SoiiK! lon^-hair'(l vir^dri 'wailin;^ at the shrines, iler brethren havin;^ fallen ; and you (jods Cfimnutnd him, erown him, f^rant him am[)le days, And dyin^ honour, and an endl(!HS peace Amon^ the d(;ep I'.lysian asphod(!ls. () fate, to be a woman ! 'J'o be led ])umb, like a poor nmle, at a master's will. And be a slave;, tho' bred in palaces, And be a fool, tho' seat(;d with the wise — A poor and pitiful fool, as I am now, Ixjving and liating my vain life, away ! 844 01 YTKMNVSTKA. V UvMU S. Thoso tUnviM^^- wo pluokM thoi\i At u\on\inii, anil 10v>k thon\ Kj\m\\ brijiiit boos that sviokM (hon\ Avul wanu wuuls that shook thorn Xoath hhu> hills that o'orlook thorn. SKM\-v uvuas. \Vith tho ilows of tho luoaiioNV Our »\>sy Nvarju tiuiiors Sjvuklo yot, aiul tho shavlo>Y Ottho suimwotM'lotnJ lu\iivi^ In tho hair ot"us siniivi-s. viKf.v SKM\ oiunus. Kiv thoso biuls on our altars Fado ; otv tho torkt tuv, Kovi with pvuv honoy taltors. And tails ; lomior. highor Kaiso tho Tjoan. SKl\>NO SlMl I'HOKl'S. Oraw nighor, Stantl olosor I First praiso wo Tho Fathor of all. To him tho song I'juso wo. ()vor Hoavon's gv^Uion wall hot it tall 1 l.o\ it tall ! KlUSr SKMl 1 lUMU s. Thon Apollo, tho king of Tho lyiv anil tho Ih-jw ; Who tanght ns to sing of Tho ilooils that wo know — Dooils woll dono long ag\"». SKOv^NO SK>U-OUOKl'S. Noxt. of all tho luuuortAb, (;/,y'j i-MM'HiiiA. 825 Alli<;n«;'H ^ray cycn ; Who hifH tliron<;n'M falnc «onH : And Sr^rnand<;r'H wihJ wavr; 'i'h jo' Ui<; tjh-ak plain that miiH. '•I'.CDsn hi'.Mi 'noj:t;h. 'i'hr-.n, tlic, death offhc, brave. KIllhT HKMt-<:tiom:H. L'riHt, of wliorn the Oofl8 Have ]''or new honoiirH : oftfiern none So i^<)()<\ or HO ;.n-eat Ah oiir elii<',r A^rarn<;rnnon 'J'he crown of our State. ei.VTKM.M'.h'l liA. r> friendH, true lieartw, rejoice witfi me I 'I'hl« day Shall erown th<; hope of t<;n uncertain yearn ! <:it<)iif:r. For Ai/ainernno/i efjnnot bi; far off — S2l? Ol.Y I KMNKSrUA. OL\ TKMNKSrKA. lie oomes — and yet — O lleavon proservo 1155 all ! My heart is weak — theiv's One he brings not baek ; \Vho went witli him ; who Avill not come again ; \\ lunn we sliall never see I — euoius. O Queen, tor Avhoui, Lamenting thus, is your great heart east down ? ei.\ VKMNKsrUA. The earliest loved — the earlv lost ! mv ehild — Iphigenia? Cl.\ rKMNKSTKA. She — mv ehild — — Alas: That was a terrible necessity I Ol.YrKMNKSrUA. Was it necessity ? O panion, triends, Init in the dark, unsolaeed solitude, AVild thonghts eome to me, and perplex my heart. This, whieh you eall a dread necessity. Was it a murder or a siierillee ? cnouis. h was a Ciod that did deei-ee the death. Ol.Y IKMNKSntA. *Tis through the heart the Gods do speak to us. High instincts are the oracles ot' heaven. Diil ever heart — did ever God. betbre, SuiXgest such tbul intanticidal lie ? CLYTKMMiSlJtA. $27 CHORUS. Be comforted I The universal good Needed tliis single, individual loss. OLVTKMNKSTUA. Can all men's good be helped by one man's crime? c J I onus, lie loosed the Greeks from Aulls by that deed. CLyXKMXKSTJiA. O casual argument I Who gave the Greeks Such bloody claim upon a virgin's life ? Shall the pure bleed to purge impurity V A hundred Helens were not worth that death ! What! had tlie manhood of combined Greece, ^Vhose boast was in its untamed strength, no help Better than the spilt blood of one poor girl ? Or, if it were of need that blood should flow, AVhat God ordain'd him executioner ? Was it for him the Armament was plann'd ? For him that angry Greece was leagued in war? For him, or Menelaus, was this done ? Was the cause his, or Menelaus' cause ? ^Vas he less sire tlian Menelaus was? He. too, had children ; did he murder them? O, was it manlike V was it human, even ? CHORUS. Alas ! alas I it was an evil thing. CLYTEMNESTRA. O friends, if any one among you all. If any be a mother, bear with me I She was my earliest born, my best beloved. The painful labour of that perilous birth That gave her life did almost take my own. lie had no pain. He did not bring her forth. How should he, therefore, love her as I loved ? 328 ChYTEMNESTRA. CHORUS. Ai ! ai ! alas ! Our tears run down with yours. CLYTEMNESTRA. Oh, who shall say with what delicious tears, With what ineffable tenderness, while he Took his blithe pastime on the windy plain. Among the ringing camps, and neighing steeds, First of his glad compeers, I sat apart, Silent, within the solitary house : Kocking the little child upon my breast ; And soothed its soft eyes into sleep with song ! Ai ! ai ! unhappy, sad, unchilded one ! CLYTEMNESTRA. Or, when I taught, from inarticulate sounds, The little, lisping, lips to breathe his name. Now they will never breathe that name again Alas ! for Hades has not any hope. Since Thracian women lopp'd the tuqeful head Of Orpheus, and Ileracleus is no more. CLYTEMNESTRA. Or, spread in prayer the helpless, infant hands, That they, too, might invoke the Gods for him. Alas, who now invokes the Gods for her ? Unwedded, hapless, gone to glut the womb Of dark, untimely Orcus ! CHORUS. Ai ! alas ! CLYTEMNESTRA. I would have died, if that could be, for her ! CLYTEMNESTUA. 329 When Hie is half-way set to feeble eld, And memory more than hope, and to dim eyes The goro;eous tapestry of existence shows Moth'd, finger'd, fray'd, and bare, 'twere not so hard To fling away this ravell'd skein of life, Which else, a little later, Fate had cut. And who would sorrow for the o'erblown rose Sharp winter strews about its own bleak thorns? But, cropp'd before the time, to fall so young ! And wither in the gloomy crown of Dis ! Never to look upon the blessed sun — Ai ! ai ! alinon ! woe is me, this grief Strikes pity paralyzed. All words are weak ! CLYTE^INESTRA. And I had dreamed such splendid dreams for her ! Who would not so for Agamemnon's child ? For we had hoped that she, too, in her time Would be the mother of heroic men ! CHORUS. There rises in my heart an awful fear, Lest from these evils darker evils come ; For heaven exacts, for wrong, the uttermost tear, And death hath language after life is dumb ! CLYTEMNESTRA. It works ! it works ! CHORUS. Look, some one comes this way. HERALD. O Honour of the House of Tantalus ! The king's wheels echo in the brazen gates. CLYTEMNESTRA. Our heart is half-way there, to welcome him. 3S0 Ol Y IKMNKsrU A. How looks ho? Woll ? Aiul all our UM\o'-K>st tVioiuls— ^ Thoir taoos givw hotoiv mi> I l,t\ul tho wav AVIuM'O >vo luav moot thorn. All our hasto sooius slow. t'luua s. >VouM that ho brouulu his ih\ul ohiUl luok with him ! CIATKMM SiKV. Now \cl him oomo. Tho uiisoluof works apaoo I \. OlhUJlS. i'lunu s. Tho wluils woro luUM in Aulis; and tho day, Uow n-vslopod, was loltoriuii- to tho lazy west. Thoro was no motion ot" tho glassy hay, Imu all things by a hoavv liolit oppivst. Windloss. out oir upon tho dostimnl wav — Park shivuds, distinot against tho lurid lull — Park n^pos hung nsoloss, looso, t"t\)n\ mast to iuiU — Tho blaok ships lay abivast. Not nny oloud would omss tho brtHulinu; skies. Tho ilistant soa boiuuM taintly. Nothiuii" n\oro. Thoy walkotl about upiui tho yolKnv shoro ; 0\\ lying listloss. huddlovl groups supine, With taoes turn'd towa^^l tho tlat sea-spino. Thoy plann'd tho Phrygian battle o'er, and o'er ; Till eaoh givw sullen, and would talk no nuMV. But sat. dun\b-drean\ing. Then wouhl sv>uie one rise. And look towarvl the hollow hulls, with haggard, hopeless eyes — • AVild eyes — ^and, erowding round, yet wilder eyes — And gaping, languid lips ; And evervwheiv that njon eouUl see. CLYTKMNKSTJtA. 331 About lh(; black, blaok nliipK, Was notliiii^r but tlj(i deep-J'-red hhoro ; '1 he, (kiop-rc'd hkl<;H ; TIk; dee|)-r(;d silence, tlil'k with lliirsty sighs; And dayli;zlit, dyinjz wlowly. Nothing more. 'J'he tall iiiaKtH stood upright; And not a sail above th<; burnish'd prores ; I'lie languid sea, like one outwearied quite, Shrank, dying inward into hollow shores. And breathless harbours, under sandy bars; And, one by one, down tracts of (juivering blue, T\i(t sinifed and siiltry stars T>ook'd f'rotn the inmost heaven, far, faint, and few, While, all below, the sick, and steaming brine 'J'he spill'd-out sunset did incarnadine. At last one broke the silence ; and a word Was lisp'd and buzz'd af>out, from mouth to mouth ; J'ale fac(;s grew more pale ; wild whis{>ers stirr'd ; And men, with moody, murmuring li[)S, conferr'd In ominous tones, from shaggy beards uncouth : As tho' som(; wind had brok«;n from thcj blurr'd And blazing prison of tlxi stagnant drouth, And stirr'd the salt sea in the stifled south. The long-robed priests etood round; and, in the gloom, L'nd(ir black brows, their bright and greedy eyes Shone deathfidly; there was a sound of sighs, Thick-sobb'd from choking throats among the crowd, That, whispering, gather'd close, with dark heads bow'd ; liut no man lifted up liis voice aloufl. For heavy hung o'er all the hel[)les.s sense of doom. Then, after solemn prayer, Th(i father bade the attendants, tenderly J^ift her upon the lurid altar-stone. oo2 CLYTKMNK8TUA. There ^vas no ho})e in any lace ; eaeli eye Swam teai't'nl, that her own ilid uaze npon. They bonnd her helpless hands with nionriit'ul eare ; And loopM up her lono- hair, That hunt:; about her, like an amber shower, ISIix'd with the sallVon robe, and tairm8 ci.\rKiMNK!>rKA. llo siands up liko a towor. vSKMJ-OUOKlS. Ay, liko sonu> luovinji' towor i>t*nniuHl lutMi, Tliat i-avrios oinmuost iimlor c'ity- walls. sjou-niom s. llo litis lus suMImo hoail, and in his port Inwrs ou\inont authority. SI Mi-OHvnas. HohoKl, ^ llis spoar shows liko tho spimllo ota Vato ! SVMl OUOKl s. Oh, what an arm I sKMi-onoius. Most fit for siuh a swonl ; Look at that sworJ. sv^n-onoius. AVhat shouKlors I si:>ii-tMu>Krs. What a throat! s> Mi-ouoins. ^Vhat aro thoso boarinii' ? vSK>ll-ClUMaS. Urns. si:>u-0JU>ius. Alas ! alas ! SlMl-tlUMU S. O frionds, look hoiv ! how aro tho miuhtv nion CLYrKMNKHTKA. 889 Slirurik up into a littU; xhhc of (-hrih, A cliilfl rni;/lit lift.. Sfi'^atJi'd caoh in brazf;ri platoH, 'l"h<;y w(;rit H*") }i<;avy, t,)i*;y oorrn; baok :-:o lij.'lit, .Sh<;atli''J, caoli one, in tli<5 brazf;n urrj of" 'J<;ath ! BKMI-CUOJ'.i;.H. Willi what, a HtaUiWtUiHn ha movcH along! Sf;f;, how th(;y touch his skirt, anfl f(rahj> his hand I hl-MI-C'IfOHi;H. Ih tliat th(i ({ucj'Ai '{ hI'.MI-CIfOJU;H. Ay, how hfio rnatoliCH him ! With what ;/ran(l <;yr;s hh*; look.-; u[>, full in hin ! .si.Mj-Mfo/:(;H. Say, what arc thcHC V HKMI-Cnoi'.f.H. O PhryjfianH I how they walk ! TIk; only nad men in the erowfi, I think. KK.Mi-ciro/c(;H. Hut who is thin, that with 8ueh Heornful hrow.s, Anf] looks avertcfJ, walk,« among the rcHt V hK.Mr-cno/{i;h. 1 know not, hut homc Phrygian worrjan, sure. 8KM/-eiIOK(;H. Tier heavy-fallen hair down her white neek (A 'lying Hunhf;am tarigl(;-, from Strophius, and your sister's court, l)os|)aU'hM with this sealM tablet, and with gifts ; Tho' both oxpross, so says my royal Head, lint poorly the rich welcome they intend. AVill you see this ? — and these ? AOAIMKMNON. Anon ! anon ! We'll look at them Avithin. () child, thine eyes Look warmer welcome than all words express. Thou art mine own child by that royal brow. Nature hath niark'd thee mine. O Father ! Conic ! AGAMKIMNON. And our Orestes ! lie is nobly grown ; lie shall do great deeds when our own are dim. So shall men come to say " the lather's swonl In the son's hands hath hewn out nobler fame." Think of it, little one ! where is our cousin ? .KdisrniTs. Here ! And the keys of the Acropolis ? AC. AM KM NUN. O well ! this dust and heat are over much. And, cousin, you look pale. Anon ! anon ! Speak to US by and bye. Let business wait. Is our house order'd V we will take the bath. CLYTKMNESTRA. 843 CLYTKMNKSTKA. Will you wltliin ? where all Is ordcrM fair J>(;fitl;inf]f state : cool chambers, marhle-floor'd Or piled Avitli Lla/inj^ carjxits, scented rare With the sweet spii-it of each odorous gum Tn dim, delicious, auiorous mists about Tlu; pur|)le-paven, silver-sided bath, JJeep, flashing, pure. ACAMKMNON. Look to our captives then. T charge you chiefly with this woman here, Cassand)'a, tlu; mad prophetess of Troy. See that you chafe her not in her wild moods. XIII. CLYTKMNESTRA. JCGISTHUS. CLYTICMNKSTJJA. Linger not ! What ? you will to-day — CLYTKMNE.ST11A. — This hour. .ICGISTirUS. Oh, if some chance mar all ! CLYTEMNKSTltA. AVe'll make chance sure. Doubt Is the doomsman of self-judged disgrace : But every chance brings safety to self-help. yKGISriIUS. Ay, but the means — the time — 3-44 0LYT1.MXE8TKA. ri.\TKMNi:sTlJA. — Fulfil thomsolvos. O most Irrosoluto heart I is this a time ^Viion thro* the a\vt'ul pauso ot" lito, distinct, Tho soiimllni:; shears ot" Fate slope near, to stand ISIeek, like tame wethers, and be shorn ? Ilow say you. The blithe Avind up. and the broad sea before him, AVho >vould eroueh all day louix beside the mast Counting- the surges beat his idle helm. Because between him anil the golden isles The siiadow of a passing storm might hang ? Danger, being pregnant, doth beget resolve. -v:oiSTnes. Thou Avert not born to tail, (live me thy hand. I l.\ n.MM-.STKA. T'ake it. -KOISTHIS. It iloes not ti^jmble. ei.\TKMNESTll.V. O be strong ! The t'uture hangs upon the die we cast : Fortune j^lavs high I'or us — .KGlSTlirS. Gods i:;rant she win ! XIV. ClIOKl'S. SKMI-CTIOIU'S. CASS.VNPKA. IIIOUIS. O thou that dost with globed glory Sweep the dark world at noon ot' night. Or an\ong snowy summits, wild, and hoary, CLYTEMNESTRA. 845 Or thro' tlic iiii;:^lity silences Of iintnernorial hcjih, With all th(; stars heliind thee i\y'iU'^ white, tal<(; with thee, where'er Thou wan(ler(;st, ancient Care, AnrJ liide her in some iiiterlunar liaunt ; \Vher(j but th(; wild hird's chaunt Af, rii;-d)l, tliro' ro(.-ky ri(l;.';es ^aunt. Or inoanin^rs of" some homeUtss sea may find her. There, (ioddess, bar, and bind her ; Where she; may y)ine, but wand(;r not; Loatlie her haunts, but hjave them not; Wail and rave to the wind and wave 'J'hat hear, yet understand her not; And curse h<;r cliains, yet cleave them not; And bate her lot, yet help it not. Or let her rove with Gods undone Who dwell below the setting sun, And the sad western hours That burn in fiery bowers; Or in Amphitrit(-'s grot Where the vexird tides unite, And the spent wind, howling, breaks O'er sullen oceans out of sight Among sea-snakes, tliat the white moon wakes Till they shake thcmiscjlves into diamond flakes, Coil and twine in the glittering brine And swing themselves in tlie long moonshine ; Or by wild shores lioarsely rage, And moan, ami v(!nt li(;r s[)ite, Jn some inhospitable liarbourage Of 'J'hracian waters, whit(i, 'J'here let her grieve, and grieve, and hold her breath Until she hate herself to death. 1 seem with rajjture lifted higher, Like one; in mystic trance. O l*an ! Pan ! Tan ! First friend of man, 346 CLYTEMNESTRA. And founder of Heaven's choir, Come thou from old Cylleno, and inspire The Gnossian, and Nysrean dance ! Come thou, too, DeHan king, From the blue JEgean sea. And Mycone's yellow coast : Give my spirit such a -vving As there the foolish Icarus lost, That she may soar above the cope Of this high pinnacle of gladness, And dizzy height of hope ; And there, beyond all reach of sadness, May tune my lips to sing Great Pa'ans, full, and free. Till the "whole -world ring With such hcart-mcltiug madness As bards are taught by thee ! SEMI-CHOIU'S. Look to the sad Cassandra, how she stands ! SEMI-CHORUS. She turns not from the wringing of her hands. SEMI-CHOKUS. What is she doing ? SEMI-CHOKl'S. Look, her lips are moved ! SEMl-CHOUrS. And yet their motion shapes not any sound. SEMi-cnoiius. Speak to her. SEMI-CHOKUS. She will heed not. CLYTEMNESTRA. 347 SEMI-CHOKUS. But yet speak. SEMI-CHORUS. Unhappy woman, cease a little while From mourning. Recognize the work of Heaven. Troy smoulders. Think not of it. Let the past Be buried in the past. Tears mend it not. Fate may be kindlier, yet, than she appears. SEMI-CHOKUS. She does not answer. SEMI-CHORUS. Call to her again. SEMI-CHORUS. O break this scornful silence ! Hear us speak. We would console you. SEIMI-CIIORUS. Look, how she is moved ! SEMI-CHORUS. O speak ! the heart's hurt oft is help'd by words. CASSANDRA. O Itys ! Itys ! Itys ! SEMI-CHORUS. What a shriek ! She takes the language of the nightingale, Unhappy bird ! that mourns her perish'd form, And leans her breast against a thorn, all night. CASSANDRA. The bull is in the shambles. 348 CLYTEMNESTRA. SEMI-CHORUS. Listen, friends ! She mutters something to herself. CASSANDRA. Alas! Did any name Apollo ? woe is me ! SEMI CHORUS. She calls upon the God. SEMI-CHORUS. Unhappy one, What sorrow strikes thee Avith bewilderment ? se:\ii-ciiorus. Now she is mute again. chorus. A Stygian cold Creeps thro' my limbs, and loosens every joint. The hot blood freezes in its arteries, And stagnates round the region of the heart. A cloud comes up from sooty Acheron, And clothes mine eyelids With infernal night. My hair stands up. What supernatural awe Shoots, shrivelling thro' me. To the marrow, and bone ? O dread, and wise Prophetic Powers, Whose strong-compelling law Doth hold in awe The labouring hours, Your intervention I invoke, My soul from this Avild doubt to save ; Whether you have Your dwelling in some dark, oracular cave, CLYTEMNESTllA. 349 Or solemn, sacred oak ; Or in Dodona's ancient, lionour'd beech, Whose mystic boughs above Sat the wise dove ; Or if the tuneful voice of old Awake in Delos, to unfold Dark wisdom in ambiguous speech. Upon the verge of strange despair My heart grows dizzy. Now I seem Like one that dreams some ghastly dream, And cannot cast away his care. But harrows all the haggard air With his hard breath. Above, beneath, The empty silence seems to teem With apprehension. O declare What hidden thing doth Fate prepare, What hidden, horrible thing doth Fate prepare? For of some hidden grief my heart seems half aware. XV. CLYTEMNESTRA. CASSANDRA. CHORUS. clyte:mni:stka. One blow makes all sure. Ay, but then — beyond ? I cannot trammel up the future thus. And so forecast the time, as with one blow To break the hundred Hydra-heads of Chance. Beyond — beyond I dare not look, for who. If first he scann'd the space, would leap the gulf? One blow secures the moment. Oh, but he ... . Ay, there it lies ! I dread lest my love, being So much the stronger, scare his own to death ; As what they comprehend not, men abhor. He has a wavering nature, easily Unpoised ; and trembling ever on extremes. Oh, what if terror outweigh love, and love, Having defiled his countenance, take part 350 CLYTEMNESTRA. Aoainst himself, self-loathed, a fallen God ? Ah, his was never yet the loving soul, But rather that which lets itself be loved ; As some loose lily leans npon a lake, Letting the lympii reilect it, as it will, Still idly sway'd, whichever way the stream Stirs the green tangles of the water moss. The llower of his love never bloom'd upright, But a sweet jiarasite, that loved to lean On stronger natures, winning strength from them — Not such a llower as whose delirious cup Maddens the bee, and never can give forth Enough ol' fragi'ance, yet is ever sweet. Yet which is sweetest — to receive or give V Sweet to receive, and sweet to give, in love ! When one is never sated that receives, Nor ever all exhausted one that gives. I think I love him more, that I resemble So little aught that pleases me in him. Perchance, if I dared (juestion this dark heart, 'Tis not for him, but for n\ysclf in him. For that which is my softer self in him — I have done this, and this — and shall do more : Hoped, wept, dared wiUlly, and will overcome ! Does he not need me V It is sweet to think That I am all to him, whate'er I be To others; and to one — little, I know! But to him, all things — sceptre, sword, and crown ! For who would live, but to be loved by some one ? Be fair, but to give beauty to another? Or wise, but to instruct some sweet desire ? Or strong, but that thereby love may rejoice ? Or who for crime's sake would be criminal '? And yet for love's sake would not dare wild deeds ? A mutual necessity, one fear. One hope, and the strange posture of the time Unite us now; — but this need over-past, Oh, if, 'twixt his embrace and mine, there rise The reliex of a umrder'd head ! and he. CLYTEMNESTRA. 351 Remembering the crime, remember not It was for him that T am criminal, But rather hate me for the part he took — Against his soul, as he will say — in this ? — I will not think it. Upon this wild venture, Freighted with love's last wealthiest merchandise, My heart sets forth. To-morrow I shall wake A beggar, as it may l)e, or thrice rich. As one who plucks his last gem from his crown (Some pearl for which, in youth, he barter'd states), And, sacrificing with an anxious heart, Toward night puts seaward in a little bark For lands reported far beyond the sun. Trusting to win back kingdoms, or there drown — So I — and with like perilous endeavour ! Oh, but I think I could implore the Gods More fervently than ever, in my youth, I pray'd that help of Heaven 1 needed not, And lifted innocent hands to their great sky. So much to lose ... so much to gain ... so much . . . I dare not think how .... Ha, the Phrygian slave ! He dares to bring his mistress to the hearth ! She looks unhappy. I will speak to her. Perchance her hatred may approve my own, And help me in the work I am about. 'Tvvere well to sound her. ^ Be not so cast down, Unhappy stranger ! Fear no jealous hand. In sorrow I, too, am not all untried. Our fortunes are not ho dissimilar. Slaves both — and of one master. Nay, approach ! Is my voice harsh in its appeal to thee V If so, believe me, it belies my heart. A woman speaks to thee. What, silent still V O look not on me Avith such sullen eyes, There is no accusation in my own. 352 CLYTEMNESTRA. Rather on liim that brought thee, than on thee, Our scorn is settled. I would help thee. Come ! Mute still ? I know that shame is ever dumb, And ever weak ; but here is no reproach. Listen ! Thy fate is given to thy hands. Art thou a woman, and dost scorn contempt ? Art thou a captive, and dost loathe these bonds ? Art thou courageous, as men call thy race ? Or, helpless art thou, and wouldst overcome ? If so — look up ! For there is hope for thee. Give me thy hand — CASSANDRA. Pah ! there is blood on it ! CLYTEMNESTRA. What is she raving of? CASSANDRA. The place, from old, Is evil. CLYTEMNESTRA. Ay, there is a sickness, here, That needs the knife. CASSANDRA. Oh, horrible ! blood ! blood ! CLYTEMNESTRA. I see you are a Phrygian to the bone ! Coward, and slave ! be so for evermore ! CASSANDRA. Apollo ! O Apollo ! O blood ! blood ! The whole place swims with it ! The slippery steps^ Steam with the fumes! The rank air smells of blood ! CLYTEMNESTKA. 353 CLYTEMNESTRA. Heed her not ! for she knows not what she says. This is some falling sickness of the souh Her fever frights itself CASSANDEA. It reeks ! it reeks ! It smokes ! it stifles ! blood ! blood, everywhere ! CLYTEMNESTRA. See, he hath brought this mad woman from Troy, To shame our honour, and insult our care. Look to her, friends, my hands have other work ! CHORUS. Alas, the House of Tantalus is doom'd! CLYTEMKESTRA. The King sleeps — like an infant. His huge strength Holds slumber thrice as close as other men. How well he sleeps ! Make garlands for the Gods. I go to watch the couch. Cull every flower, And honour all the tutelary fanes With sacrifice as ample as our joy, Lest some one say we reverence not the Gods ! O doomed House and race ! O toilsome, toilsome horsemanship Of Pelops ; that ill omen brought to us ! For since the drowned Myrtilus Did from his golden chariot slip To his last sleep, below the deep, Nothing of sad calamitous disgrace Hath angry Heaven ceased to heap On this unhappy House of Tantalus. 23 354 CLYTEMNESTRA. Not only upon sacred leaves of old, Preserved in many a guarded, mystic fold, But sometimes, too, enroU'd On tablets lair Of stone, or brass, -vvltli (juaint and curious care, In characters of gold. And many an iron-bound, melancholy book, The wisdom of the wise is writ ; And hardly shall a man. For all he can. By painful, slow degrees, Anil nightly reveries Of long, laborious thought, grow learn'd in these. But who, that reads a woman's wily look, Shall say what evil hides, and lurks in it ? Or lathom her false wit ? For by a woman fell the man Who did Neuuva's pest destroy, And the brinded Hydra slew. And many other womlers wrought. By a woman, fated Troy Was overset, and fell to nought. Royal Amphiaraus, too. All his wisdom could not free From his false Eriphyle, Whom a golden necklace bought — So has it been, and so shall be, Ever since the world began ! O woman, woman, of what other earth Hath da?dal Nature moulded thee ? Tliou art not of our clay compact, Not of our common clay ; — But when the painful woild in labour lay — Labour long — and agony, In her heaving throes distract. And vext with angry Heaven's red ire, Nature, kneading snow and fire, In thy mystic being pent CLYTKMNESTRA. 355 Each contrary element. Life and death within thee blent : All despair and all desire : There to min^rle and ferment. While, mad mid wives, at thy birth, Furies mixt with Sirens bent, Inter-wreathino; snakes and smiles — Fairest dreams and falsest guiles ! Such a splendid mischief thou ! With thy light of languid eyes : And thy bosom of pure snow : And thine heart of fire below, Whose red light doth come and go Ever o'er thy changeful cheek When love-whispers tremble weak : Thy warm lips and pensive sighs, That the breathless spirit bow : And the heavenward life that lies In the still serenities Of thy snowy, airy brow — Thine ethereal airy brow. Such a splendid mischief, thou ! What are all thy witcheries V All thine evil beauty V All Thy soft looks, and subtle smiles ? Tangled tresses ? Mad caresses Tendernesses ? tears and kisses V And the long look, between whiles That the helpless heart beguiles, Tranced in such a subtle thrall ? What are all thy sighs and smiles ? Fairest dreams and falsest guiles ! Hoofs to horses, teeth to lions, Horns to bulls, and speed to hares, To the fish to glide thro' waters. To the bird to glide thro' airs, Nature gave : to men gave courage. And the use of brazen spears. SaG CLYTEMNESTRA. What Mas loft to uivc to woman, All her gifts thus given ? Ah, tears, Smiles, ami kisses, whispers, glanees, Only these ; and merely beauty On her areheil brows nnfurl'd. Ami with these she shatters lanees, All unarmM binds armed Outy, And in triumph drags the world ! XVI. sEMi-ciioinis. rrioRus. cassandra. AGAMKMXON. CLVTEMNKS TKA. .EG18T11US. SKSU-OHOUUS. Break otV, break ofV! It seems T heard a ery! Surely one eall'd within the house. sEMi-enouus. Stand bv cnoKus. The Prophetess is troubled. Look, her eye llolls fearfully. SEMI-CHOUeS. Now all is husht onec more. OUOKITS. I hear the feet of some one at the door. (agamkmnon, icidiin.^ Murdress ! oh, oh ! sKMi-onouus. The house is fdl'd with shrieks. CUlUiUS. The sound deceives or that Avas the King's voice. CLYTEMNESTRA. 357 SEMI-CHOKUS. The voice of Agamemnon ! (AGAMEMNON, Vnthin.) Ai ! ai ! ai ! CASSANDRA. The bull is in the toils. (AGAMEMNON, WnVAm.) I will not die ! (yEGiSTHL'S, vnthin.) O Zeus ! he will escape ! ( CLYTEMKESTKA, wiOdn. ) He has it. (AGAMEMNON, within.) Ai ! ai ! CHORUS. Some hideous deed is being done within. Burst in the doors ! SEMI-CHORUS. I cannot open them. Barr'd, barr'd within ! CASSANDRA. The axe is at the bull ! Call the elders. SEMI-CHORUS. And the People. O Argives! Argives! Alinon ! Alinon ! S58 CLYTEMNKSTIIA. ClIOUUS. You to tlio Agora. SKMI-ruOKUS. To tlio teniplos wo. OMOKUS. Iloarkcii, O mn'ulons ! sKsii-cnoiu's. This way. ciiouus. That way. SKMl-rilOlU'S. Quick ! quick ! OASSANOUA. Seal my sight, O Ai>ollo ! O Apollo ! 1 noiuTs. To the Agora ! SEMI-CIIOKI'S. To the temples ! CHOKHS. Haste! haste! (AOAMKMNON, wilhitl.) Stabb'd, oh ! cnouus. Too late ! CASSAN1>KA. The bull is bellowing. CLYTEMNKSTIlA. 359 ( /I'/JISTIIUH, within. ) Thrust there again : ( CLYTKMXKSTKA, v/dMn. ) One blow has done it all. (yi^iLSTirus, vithin. ) Is it quite thro' ? ( CLYTEM NK.STIiA , V/itldn. ) He win not move again. BKMI-CHOKUS. O Heaven, and Eartli ! My heart stands still with awe ! Where will this murder end ? ciroRUft. Hold ! some one comes ! XVTT. ELECTRA. OKESTES. CHORUS. A PHO- CIAN. (KLKCTRA Uo/linfJ OltliSTES.) Save us ! save him — Orestes ! CIIOEUS. AVhat has fall'n ? An evil thing. Oh, we are fatherless ! cnoitus. Ill-starr'd Electra ! But how fell tlils chance ? KUCCTIiA. Hfire is no time for words — scarce time for flight. AVhcn from his royal bath the King would rise — Tliat devilish woman, lying long in lurk, 360 CLYTEMNESTRA. Behind him crept, with stealthy feet unheard, And flung o'er all his limbs a subtle web. Caught in the craft of whose contrived folds, Stumbling, he fell, ^gisthus seized a sword ; But halted, half irresolute to strike. My father, like a lion in the toils. Upheaved his head, and, writhing, roar'd with wrath. And angry shame at this infernal snare. Almost he rent the blinding nets atwain. But Clytemnestra on him flung herself. And caught the steel, and smit him through the ribs. He slipp'd, and reel'd. She drove the weapon thro'. Piercing the heart ! CHORUS. O woe ! what tale is this ? ELECTKA. I, too, with him, had died, but for this child, And that high vengeance which is yet to be. Alas ! then Agamemnon is no more. Who stood, but now, amongst us, full of life, Crown'd with achieving years! The roof, and cope Of honour, fall'n ! Where shall we lift our eyes ? Where set renown ? Where garner up our hopes ? All worth is dying out. The land is dark, And Treason looks abroad in the eclipse. He did not die the death of men that live Such life as he lived, fall'n among his peers, AVhom the red battle roll'd away, while yet The shout of Gods was ringing thro' and thro' them; But Death that fear'd to front him in full field, CLYTEMNESTRA. 361 Lurk'd by tlie hearth and smote him from behind. A mighty man is gone. A mighty grief Remains. And rumour of undying deeds For song, and legend, to the end of time ! What tower is strong ? ELECTRA. O friends — if friends you be — For who shall say where falsehood festers not, Those being falsest, who should most be true ? Where is that Phocian ? Let him take the boy, And bear him with him to his master's court. Else will ^gisthus slay him. Fear you not Orphan'd one, ORESTES. I am Agamemnon's son. CHORUS. Therefore should'st fear — ORESTES. And therefore cannot fear. PHOCIAN. I heard a cry. Did any call ? CHORUS. Oh, well ! You happen this way in the need of time. O loyal stranger, Agamemnon's child Is fatherless. This boy appeals to you. O save him, save him from his father's foes! 362 CLYTK]M^'l:STRA. ruociAx. UnlKVji}>}- lady, what >Yil(l -words are these ? The house runs bUiod. .Kulsthus, like a (icnd, Is raii'luii; loose, his weapon dripping gore. Tiu> king is death I'UOtl.VN. Is dead ! KLKOTKA. Dead. rUOCIAN. Do I dream ? F.KKOTUA. Such dreams are dreamed in hell — such dreams — oh no ? Is not the earth as solid — heaven above — The sun In heaven — and Nature at her work — And men at theirs — the same ? Oh, no ! no dream ! Wo shall not wake — nor he ; tho' the Goils sleep ! Unnaturally murder'd — rmuMAN. JMurder'd ! KLECTKA. Ay. And the sun blackens not ; the world is green ; The fires of the reil west are not put out. Is not the cricket singing in the grass ? And the shy lizard shooting thro' the leaves ? CLYTKM.NKHTIIA. 363 T }if;ar tho ox low In the laboured field. 'J'ho.se swallows build, and ar<; as ^^arrulous IIi;_di up i' the towers. Yet J speak the truth ! l>y heaven I speak the truth — How died the kin; I'HOCIAN. Yet more, vouchsafe. KIJCCTUA. Oh, there shall be a time For words hereafter. While we dally here, Fate haunts, and hounds us. Friend, receive this boy. Jiear him to Strophius. All this tragedy Jtelate as best you may ; it beff^^ars speech. 1 ell hijn a tower of hope is fall'n this day — A name in Greece — I'JIOrjIAN. — But you — j:lkc'j jiA. Away I away ! J)estruction posts apace, while we delay. Come then ! ELECTI'.A. I dare not leave my father's hearth. For who would then do honour to his urn V Jt may be that my womanhood, and youth May help me here. It may be J shall fall. And mix my own with A^^amemnon's blood. No matter. On Orestes hanj.^s the hope (Jf all this House. Him save for better days, And ripen'd vengeance. 364 CLYTEMNKSTRA. PHOCIAN, Noblc-liearted one ! Come then, last ofls])ring of this fated race. The future calls thee ! ORESTKS. Sister ! Sister ! ELECTRA. Go! O Sister ! ELE(TKA. O my brother ! . . . One last kiss — One last lonp; kiss — how I have loved thee, boy ! Was it for this I nonrish'd thy youn<]j years With stately tales, and legends of the gods ? For this ? . . . How the past crowds upon me ! Ah— Wilt thou recall, in lonely, lonely hours. How once we sat together on still eves, (Ah me !) and brooded on all serious themes Of sweet, and high, and beautiful, and good, That throng the ancient years. Alcmena's son, And how his lil'e went out in fire on OEta ; Or of that bright-hair'd wanderer after fame, That brought the great gold-llcece across the sea. And left a name in Colchis ; or we spake Of the wise Theseus, councils, kingdoms, thrones, And laws in distant lands ; or, later still, Of the great leaguer set round Ilion, And what heart-stirring tidings of the war Bards brought to Hellas. But when I would breathe Thy father's name, didst thou not grasp my hand, And ii'lorious deeds shone round us like the stars CLYTEMXESTKA. 3G5 That lit the dark world from a jj^reat way ofF, And died up into heaven, among the Gods V Sister, O Sister KLKCTRA. Ah, too long Ave linger. Away ! away ! I'irOCIAN. Come ! CHORUS. Heaven go with thee ! To Crissa points the hand of" Destiny. O boy, on thee Fate hangs an awful weight Of retribution ! Let thy father's ghost Forever whisper in thine ear. Be strong. About thee, yet unborn, thy mother wove The mystic web of life in such-like form That Agamemnon's spirit in thine eyes Seems living yet. His seal is set on thee ; And Pelops' ivory slioulder marks thee his. Thee, child, nor contests on the Isthmian plain, Nor sacred apple, nor green laurel-leaf. But graver deeds await. Forget not, son, Whose blood, unwash'd, defiles thy mother's doors ! CHORUS. O haste ! I hear a sound within the house. ELECTRA. Farewell, then, son of Agamemnon ! Come! 366 CLYTEMNESTRA. XVIII. ELECTRA. CHORUS. .EGISTHUS. ELECTRA. Gone ! gone ! Ah saved ! . . . Oh fool, thou missest, here ! CHORUS. Alas, Electra, whitlier wilt thou go ? KLECTRA. Touch me not ! Come not near me ! Let me be ! For this day, which I hoped for, is not mine. CHORUS. See how she gathers round her all her robe, And sits apart with grief. Oh, can it be Great A<>amemnon is among the shades ? ELECTRA. Would I had grasp'd his skirt, and follow'd him ! CHOltUS. Alas ! there is an eminence of joy, Where Fate grows dizzy, being mounted there, And so tilts over on the other side ! O fallen, O follen The tower, which stood so high ! Whose base, and girth were strong i' the earth, Whose head was in the sky ! O fiiU'n that tower of noble power, That fill'd up every eye ! lie stood so sure, that noble tower ! To make secure, and fill with power. From length to length, the land of Greece ! In whose strong bulwarks all men saw, Garner'd on the lap of law, CLYTEMNESTRA. 367 For dearth, or danger, spears of war, And harvest sheaves of peace ! O fall'n, O fall'n that lofty tower — The loftiest tower in Greece ! His brows he lift above the noon, Fill'd with the day, a noble tower ! Who took the sunshine, and the shower, And flung them back in merry scorn. Who now shall stand when tempests lower ? He was the first to catch the morn, The last to see the moon. O friends, he was a noble tower ! O friends, and fall'n so soon ! Ah, well ! lament ! lament ! His walls are rent, his bulwarks bent, And stoop'd that crested eminence, Which stood so high for our defence ! For our defence — to guard, and fence From all alarm of hurt and harm, The fulness of a land's content ! O fall'n away, fall'n at mid-day. And set before the sun is down. The highest height of our renown ! O overthrown, the ivory throne ! The spoils of war, the golden ci*own, And chiefest honour of the state ! O mourn with me ! what tower is free From over-topping destiny ? What strength is strong to fate ? O mourn with me ! when shall we see Another such, so good, so great ? Another such, to guard the state ? ^GISTHUS. He should have staid to shout thro' Troy, or bellow With bulls in Ida— 368 clytk:mi:stiia. oHouns. Look ! ul'iiiislluis t'onies ! Like some loan (isjor, having; ilipt in blood His (lrij)j>inhitid(;ring bloodshedder, tho' thou boast thyself As huge as (^ssa pih;d on Pelion, Or anything but that weak wretch thou art ! Oh, tliou hast only half done thy black work ! Thou should'st have slain the young lion with the old. Look that he come not back, and find himself Ungivcn food, and still the lion's share 1 yi;f;isTni;H. Insolent ! but I know to seal thy lips — KMCC'lItA. — For thou art only strong among the weak. We know thou hast an aptitude lor blood. To take a woman's is an easy task, And one well worthy thee. TIXJIHXnUH. Oh, but for words ! KLKCTIIA. Yet, could'st thou feed on all the noble blood (){' god-like generations on this earth. It should not help thee to a hero's heart. CUOIiCH. O peace, Electra, but for pity's sake ! 24 370 CLYTEMNESTRA. Heap not his madness to such dangerous heights. ELECTRA. I will speak out my heart's scorn, tho' I die. .EGISTHUS. And thou shalt die, but not till 1 have tamed That stubborn spirit to a wish for lite. CHORUS. O cease, infatuate ! I hear the Queen. [By a movement of the Eccydcma the 2^olace is throum open, and disconrs Cl-yti;mkkstka standing over the body of AoAaiKMNON. XIX. CLYTEMNESTRA. CHORUS. iEGlSTHUS. ELECTRA. CLYTEMNESTRA. Argives ! behold the man who was jour King ! CHORUS. Dead ! dead ! CLYTEMNESTRA. Not I, but Fate hath dealt this blow. CHORUS. Dead ! dead, alas ! look where he lies, O friends ! That noble head, and to be brought so low ! CLYTEMNESTRA. He who set light by woman, with blind scorn, And held her with the beasts we sacrifice, Lies, by a woman sacrificed himself. This is high justice which appeals to you. CI.XTEMNESTRA. 371 CHORUS. Alas ! alas ! I know not words for this ! CLYTEMNESTKA. We are but as the instrument of heaven. Our work is not design, but destiny. A God directs the lightning to its fall ; It smites and slays, and passes other-where, Pure in its self, as when, in light, it left The bosom of Olympus, to its end. In this cold heart the Avrong of all the past Lies buried. I avenged, and 1 forgive. Honour him yet. He is a king, tho' fallen. CHORUS. Oh, how she sets Virtue's own crest on Crime, And stands there stern as Fate's wild arbitress ! Not any deed could make her less than great. CClytemnestra desceiuls the steps, and lays her hand on the arm of ^gisthus. J clytemxestra. Put up the sword ! Enough of blood is spilt. iEGISTIIUS. Hist ! Oh, not half — Orestes is escaped. CLYTEMNESTRA. Sufficient for the future be that thought. What's done is well done. What's undone — yet more : Some thing still saved from crime. ^GISTHUS. This lion's whelp Will work some mischief yet. CLYTEMNESTKA. He is a child — 372 OI-YTKMNICS'I'IIA. — Our own — \v(\ will bill w;ir upon ilic. strong. Mot upon inlanls. Litt lliis m.ilter n^st. /lOiilHTiniM. Oh, ever, In (lui wake of thy "rrcat will Lot nio stocr siirii ! and wc; will loavu behind (Jroat tracks of light upon tho wondering world. If but you err not lujrc-— « LVnilMNKSTKA. 'rhos(^ ])alo-oycd grotips 1 S(H^ how they huddle, slmdd(U-ing, and stand round ; As when sonic, mighty beast, the brindled lord or the rough woodside, sends his wild d(;ath-roar Up the shrill eaves, the nieajuM- di'iii/ens Of an(U(Uit woods, shy (Uhm*, and timorous hares, l*(H',r from the hairy thicki'ls, and shrink back. We fear'd the lion, and we smote him down. Now fear is over. Shall we turn aside 'J\) harry ja.ckalls V Laugh! we have not langh'd So long, I think you have (bigotten liovv ! Have we no right lo laugh like other men ? ]Ia ! l!a! I laugh. Now it is time lo laugh ! CMOKIIS. O awful sight! Look where the bloody sun, As tho' witii Agamemnon he were slain, Jiuns reeking, lurid, down the [)ala,i'e (loors ! ('l.V'ri'.IMNIOS'l'H.V. O my belov'd ! Now will wc^ reign sublinn^ And set our foot upon the neck of Fortune ! And, for the rest — oh, much remains ! — For yon, ( To /he (Mionis.) A mildm- sway, if mildly you submit 'I\) our free servici^ and su|)remaey. Nor tax, nor toll, to carry »lim results Of distant war beytmd the ptM-ilous seas. But gateless justice in our halls of state, CLYTEMNESTRA. 373 And peace in all the borders of our land ! For you — ( To I'j.Kcri'HA, v'lio hdn lliroiim herself' upon the body of A(iAIM]';iMN(>N.) KI.IOC'I'IiA. Ob, hush ! What more remains to mo, But this dead harjd, wliose clasp is cold in mine V And all the halllcd mcmiory of the past, Buried with him V What more V ClA'TEMNKSTUA. — A mother's heart, If you will come to it. Free confidence. A liberal share in all our future hope. Now, more than ever — mutually weak — We stand in need, each of the other's love. Our lov(5 ! it shall not sacrifice thee, child. To wanton whims of war, as he, of old. Did thy dead sister. If you will not these, But answer love with scorn, why then — —What then ? CliYTKMNKSTKA. Safe silence. And permission to forget. XX. CHORUS. SEMI-CirORUS. CLYTEMNESTRA. CASSANDRA. iEGlSTHUS. What shall we sa}' ? What has been done ? Shed no tear ! Oh, shed no tear ! Ilanjjf up his harness in the sun ; The hooked car, and barbed spear ; 374 CLYTEMNESTRA. And all war's adamantine gear Of tropliied spoils ; for all his toils Are over, alas ! are over, and done ! What shall we say? what has been done ? Shed no tear ! 6, shed no tear ! But keep solemn silence all, As befits when heroes fall ; Solemn as his fame is ; sad As his end was ; earth shall Avear Mourning for him. See, the sun Blushes red for what is done ! And the wild stars, one by one, Peer out of the lurid air, And shrink back Avith awe, and fear, Shuddering, for what is done. When the night comes, dark, and dun, As our sorrow ; blackness far Shutting out the crimson sun ; v Turn his face to the moon, and star, — These are bright as his glories are — And great Heaven shall see its son ! What shall Ave say ? Avhat has been done ? Shed no tear ! oh, shed no tear ! Gather round him, friends ! Look here ! All the wreaths Avhich he hath Avon In the race that he* hath run — Laurel garlands, every one ! These are things to think upon, Mourning till the set of sun — Till the mourning moon appear. Now the Avreaths Avhicli Fame begun To uplift, to crown his head, Memory shall seize upon, And make chaplets for his bier. He shall have Avreaths tho' he be dead ! But his monument is here. Built up in our hearts, and dear To all honour. Shed no tear ! Oh, let not any tear be shed ! CLYTEMNESTRA. 375 SEMI-CIIORUS. Look at Cassandra ! she is stooping down. SEMI-CHORUS. She dips and moves her fingers in the blood ! SEMI-CIIORUS. Look to her ! There's a wildness in her eye ! SEMI-CIIORUS. What does she ? SEMI-CHORUS. Oh, in Agamemnon's blood, She hath writ Orestes on the palace steps ! ^Sjisthus CLYTEMNESTRA. iEGISTHUS. Queen and bride ! CLYTEMNESTRA. We have not fail'd. Come, venerable, ancient Night ! From sources of the western stars. In darkest shade that fits this woe. Consoler of a thousand griefs, And likest death unalterably calm. We toil, aspire, and sorrow. And in a little while shall cease. For we know not whence we came. And who can ensure the morrow ? Thou, eternally the same, From of old, in endless peace Eternally survivest ; 876 CLYTEMNESTRA. Endurinp; on thro' good and ill, Coeval with the Gods ; and still In thine own silence livest. Our days thou leadest home To the great Whither which has no Again ! Impartially to pleasure and to pain Thou sett'st the bourne. To thee shall all thlno-s CLYTEMNESTRA. But, if he cease to love me, what is gain'd ? CASSANDRA. With wings darkly spreading, Like ravens to the carcass Scenting far off the savour of blood. From shores of the unutterable lliver, They gather and swoop. They waver, they darken. From the fangs that raven, From the eyes that glare Intolerably fierce. Save me, Apollo ! Ai ! Ai ! Ai ! Alinon ! Alinon ! Blood, blood ! and of kindred nature, Which the young wolf returning Shall dip his fangs in. Thereby accursedly Imbibing madness ! The wild woman is uttering strange things Fearful to listen to. CLYTEMNESTRA. Within the House Straightway confine her, There to learn wisdom. CLYTEMNESTRA. 377 .EGISTRUS. Orestes — oli, this child's life now outweighs That mighty ruin, Agamemnon dead ! CLYTEMNESTRA. ^Egisthus, dost thou love me ? iEGISTHUS. As my life ! CLYTEMNESTRA. Thou lovest me ! O love, we have not fail'd. Give me thy hand. So . . . lead me to the House. Let me lean on thee. I am very weak. CHORUS. Only Heaven is high. Only the Gods are great. Above the searchless sky, In unremoved state, They from their golden mansions, Look over the lands, and the seas ; The ocean's wide expansions, And the earth's varieties : Secure of their supremacy. And sure of affluent ease. Who shall say " I stand ! " nor fall ? Destiny is over all ! Rust will crumble old renown. Bust and column tumble down ; Keep, and castle ; tower, and town ; Throne, and sceptre ; crest and crown. Destiny is over all ! One by one, the pale guests fall At lighted feast, in palace hall ; And feast is turn'd to funeral. Who shall say " I stand ! " nor fall ? Destiny is over all ! 378 GOOD-NIGHT IN THE PORCH. GOOD-NIGHT IN THE PORCH. A LITTLE longer in the light, love, let me be. The air is warm. I hear the cuckoo's last good-night float from the copse below the Farm. A little longer, Sister sweet — your hand in mine — on this old seat. In yon red gable, which the rose creeps round and o'er, your casement shines Against the yellow west, o'er those forlorn and solitary pines. The long, long day is nearly done. How silent all the place is grown ! The stagnant levels, one and all, are burning in the distant marsh — Hark ! 'twas the bittern's parting call. The frogs are out : with murmurs harsh The low reeds vibrate. See ! the sun catches the long pools one by one. A moment, and those orange flats will turn dead gray or lurid white. Look up ! o'erhead the winnowing bats are come and gone, eluding sight. The little worms are out. The snails begin to move down shining trails. With slow pink cones, and soft wet horns. The garden-bowers are dim with dew. With sparkling drops the white-rose thorns are twinkling, where the sun slips thro' Those reefs of coral buds hung free below the purple Judas-tree. GOOD-NIGHT IN THE PORCH. 379 From the warm upland comes a gust made fragrant with the brown hay there. The meek cows, with their white horns thrust above the hedge, stand still and stare. The steaming horses from the wains droop o'er the tank their plaited manes. And o'er yon hill-side brown and barren (where you and I as children play'd, Starting the rabbit to his warren), I hear the sandy, shrill cascade Leap down upon the vale, and spill his heart out round the muffled mill. O can it be for nothing only that God has shown his world to me ? Or but to leave the heart more lonely with loss of beauty . . . can it be ? () closer, closer. Sister dear . . . nay, I have kist away that tear. God bless you, Dear, for that kind thought which only upon tears could rise ! God bless you for the love that sought to hide them in those drooping eyes, Whose lids I kiss ! . . . poor lids, so red ! but let my kiss fall there instead. Yes sad indeed it seems, each night — and sadder, Dear, for your sweet sake ! To watch the last low lingering light, and know not where the morn may break. To-night we sit together here. To-morrow night will come .... ah, where ? O child ! howe'cr assured be faith, to say farewell is fraught with gloom, When, like one flower, the germs of death and genius ripen toward the tomb ; 380 GOOD-NKillT IN THE rORCII. And earth each day, as some fond face at parting, gains a graver grace. Tliere's not a flower, there's not a tree in this ohl garden where we sit, ]5ut wliat some fragrant memory is closed and folded up in it. To-night the dog-rose smells as wild, as fresh, as when I was a child. 'Tis eight years since (do you forget ?) we set those lilies near the wall : You were a blue-eyed child : even yet I seem to see the ringlets fall — The golden ringlets, blown behind your shoulders in the nien-y Avind. Ah, nie ! old limes, they cling, they cling ! And oft by yonder green old gate The field shows thro,' in morns of sj^ring, an eager boy, I paused elate With all sweet fancies loos'd from school. And oft, you know, when eves were cool. In sunnner-time, and thro' the trees young gnats began to be about. With some old book upon your knees 'twas here you watch'd the stars come out. While oft, to please me, you sang thro' some foolish song I made for you. And there's my epic — I began when life seem'd long, tho' longer art — And all the glorious deeds of man made golden riot in my heart — Eight books ... it will not number nine ! I die before my heroine. Sister! they say that drowning men in one wild moment can recall GOOD-NIGIIT IN THE PORCn. 381 Tlieir wliole life lon^, and feel again the pain — the bliss — that tlirong'd it all : — Last night those phantoms of the Past again came crowding round me fast. Near morning, when the lamp was low, against the wall they seem'd to flit ; And, as the wavering light would glow or fall, they came and went with it. The ghost of boyhood seem'd to gaze down the dark verge of vanisht days. Once more the garden where she walk'd on sum- mer eves to tend her flowers, Once more the lawn where first we talk'd of future years in twilight hours Arose ; once more slie seem'd to pass before me in the waving grass To that old terrace ; her bright hair about her warm neck all undone, And waving on the balmy air, with tinges of the dying sun. Just one star kindling in the west : just one bird singing near its nest. So lovely, so beloved ! Oh, fair as tho' that sun had never set Which staid upon her golden hair, in dreams I seem to see her yet ! To see her in that old green place — the same husht, A little older, love, than you are now ; and I was then a boy ; And wild and wayward-hearted too; to her my passion was a toy, Soon broken ! ah, a foolish thing — a butterfly with crumpled wing ! 882 GOOD-NIGIIT IN THE PORCH. Pier hair, too, was like yours — as bright, but with a warmer golden tinge : Her eyes — a somewhat deeper hght, and dream'd below a longer fringe : And still that strange grave smile she had stays in my heart and keeps it sad ! There's no one knoAvs it, truest friend, but you : for I have never breath'd To other ears the frozen end of those spring-gar- lands Hope onee wreath'd ; And death Avill come before again I breathe that name untouch'd by pain. From little things— a star, a flower — that touch'd us with the self-same thought. My passion deepen'd hour by hour, until to that fierce heat 'twas Avrought, Which, shrivelling over every nerve, crumbled the outworks of reserve. I told her then, in that wild time, the love I knew she long had seen ; The accusing ])ain that burn'd like crime, yet left me nobler than I had been ; What matter with what words I woo'd her ? She said 1 had misunderstood her. And something more — small matter what! of friendship something — sister's love — She said that I was young — knew not my own heart — as the years would prove — ~ She wish'd me hajipy — she conceived an interest in me — and believed I should grow up to something great — and soon for- get her — soon ibrget This fancy — and congratulate my life she had re- leased it, yet — GOOD-NIGHT IN THE PORCH. 383 With more such words — a lie ! a lie ! She broke my heart, and flung it by ! A life's libation lifted up, from her proud lip she dash'd untasted : There trampled lay love's costly cup, and in the dust the wine was wasted. She knew I could not pour such wine again at any other shrine. Then I remember a numb mood : mad murmurings of the words she said : A slow shame smouldering through my blood; that surged and sung within my head : And drunken sunlights reeling thro' the leaves: above, the burnish't blue Hot on my eyes — a blazing shield : a noise among the waterfalls : A free croAv up the brown cornfield floating at will : faint shepherd-calls : And. reapers reaping in the shocks of gold : and girls with purple frocks : All which the more confused my brain : and noth- ing could 1 realize But the great fact of my own pain : I saw the fields : I heard the cries : The crow's shade dwindled up the hill : the world went on : my heart stood slill. I thought I held in my hot hand my life crusht up : I could have tost The crumpled riddle from me, and laugh'd loud to think what I had lost. A bitter strength was in my mind: like Samson, when she scorned him — blind. And casting reckless arms about the props of life to hue: them down — 384 GOOD-NIGIIT IN THE PORCH. A madman with his eyes put out. But all my anger -svas my own. I spared the worm u))on my walk : I left the white rose on its stalk. All's over long since. Was it strange that I was mad with griut* and shame '? And I would cross the seas, and change my ancient home, my father's name V In the wild hope, if that might be, to change my own identity ! I know that I was wrong: I know it was not well to be so wild. But the scorn stung so ! . . . Pity now could Avound not ! . . . I have seen her child : It had the self-same eyes she had : their gazing al- most made me mad. Dark violet eyes whose glances, deep with April- hints of sunny tears, 'Neath long soft lashes laid asleep, seem'd all too thoughtful for her years; As tho' from mine her gaze had caught the secret of some mournful thought. But, when she spoke her fother's air broke o'er her . . . that clear confident voice ! Some happy souls there are, that wear their nature lightly ; these rejoice The world by living ; and receive from all men more than what they give. One handful of their buoyant chaff exceeds our hoards of careful grain : Because their love breaks thro' their laugh, while ours is fraught with tender pain : The world, that knows itself too sad, is proud to keep some faces glad : GOOD-NIGHT IN THE PORCH. 385 And, so it is ! from such an one Misfortune softly steps aside To let him still walk in the sun. These things must be. I cannot chide. Had I been she I might have made the selfsame choice. She shunn'd the shade. To some men God hath given laughter : but tears to some men He hath given : He bade us sow in tears, hereafter to harvest holier smiles in Heaven : And tears and smiles, they are His gift : both good, to smite or to uplift : Pie knows His sheep : the wind and showers beat not too sharply the shorn lamb : His wisdom is more wise than ours : He knew my nature — what I am : He tempers smiles with tears : both good, to bear in time the Christian mood. O yet — in scorn of mean relief, let Sorrow bear her heavenly fruit ! Better the wildest hour of grief than the low pas- time of the brute ! Better to weep, for He wept too, than laugh as every fool can do ! For sure, 'twere best to bear the cross ; nor lightly fling the thorns behind ; Lest we grow happy by the loss of what was noblest in the mind. — Here — in the ruins of my years — Father, I bless Thee thro' these tears ! It was in the far foreign lands this sickness came upon me first. 25 38G GOOD-NIGHT IN THE POKCII. Below strange suns, 'mid alien hands this fever of the south was nurst, ' Until it reach'd some vital part. I die not of a broken heart. O think not that ! If I could live . . . there's much to live for — worthy life. It is not for what fame could give — tho' that I scorn not — but the strife Were noble for its own sake too. I thought that T had much to do — But God is wisest ! Hark, again ! . . . 'twas yon black bittern, as he rose Against the wild light o'er the fen. How red your little casement glows ! The night falls last, llow lonely. Dear, this bleak old house will look next year ! So sad a thought ? . . . ah, yes ! I kuow it is not good to brood on this : And yet — such thoughts will come and go, unbid- den. 'Tis that you should miss. My darling, one familiar tone of this weak voice when I am gone. And, for what's past — I will not say in what she did that all was right, But all's forgiven ; and I pray for her heart's wel- iare, day and night. All things are changed ! This cheek would glow even near hers but faintly now ! Thou — God ! before whose sleepless eye not even in vain the sparrows fall, Receive, sustain me ! Sanctify my soul. Thou know'st, Thou lovest all. Too weak to walk alone — I see Thy hand : I falter back to Thee. GOOD-NIGIIT IX THE PORCH. 387 Saved from the curse of time which throws its baseness on us tlay by day : Its wretched joys, and worthless woes ; till all the heart is worn away. I feel Thee near. I liold my breath, by the half- open doors of Death. And sometimes, glimpses from within of glory (wondrous sight and sound !) Float near me : — faces pure from sin ; strange music ; saints with splendor crown'd : I seem to feel my native air blow down from some high region there. And fan my spirit pure : I rise above the sense of loss and pain : Faint forms that lured my cl)ildhood's eyes, long lost, I seem to find again : I see the end of all : I feel hope, awe, no language can reveal. Forgive me, Lord, if overmuch I loved that form Thou mad'st so fair ; I know that Thou didst make her such ; and fair but as the flowers were — Thy work : her beauty was but Thine ; the human less than the divine. My life hath been one search for Thee 'mid thorns found red with Thy dear blood : In many a dark Gethsemane I seem'd to stand where Thou hadst stood : And, scorn'd in this world's Judgment-Place, at times, thro' tears, to catch Thy face. Thou suffered'st here, and didst not fail : Thy bleeding feet these paths have trod : But Thou wert strong, and I am frail : and I am man, and Thou v/ert God. l>o noar n\o : koon mo in Thv si^lit : or lav niv soul asloop in liu;l>t. O to bo whoiv tho ujoanost mind is nioro than Sliakosnoaiv I whoiv ono loi^k Sho>YS moro tuan hoiv tho wiso oau tin^l. tho' toil- inu' s^low t'»\>ni hook to hook ! Whoiv lito is knmvloiliio : lovo is sure : and hopo's hriot* proniiso niailo soouro. dyinof voioo ot' human praiso I tlu> orudo ambitions i^t' mv youth I 1 loui;- to pour inunortal h»ys ! groat pawns ot' poivn- nial Truth ! A largor work I a U>t)ior aiu\ ! . . . auil what aro h\uivl-loa\ OS, and tamo ? And what aro words? How httlo thoso tlio siUMU'O ot" tho soul oxpross I Moro t'lvth — tho llvun and tlowor of soas whoso huniivriuji- watoi's hoavo and pi\'ss AsjJiinst tho planots and tho sidos ot night — muto, yoarning. mystio tidos I To oaso tho hoart with song is sw oot : swoot to bo hoal^l it' hoaiil by lovo. Auil you havo hoaril mo. Whoji wo moot shall wo not sing tho old sv>ng-s abovo To grandor u\usio ':* Swoot, ono kiss. (.) blest it is to dio liko this I To lapso t'rom boing without pain : your hand in mine, on mino your hoart : Tho unshakon t'aith to moot again that shoaths tho pang with whioh wo part : My hoaii upon your Uxsotu, swoot : yonr hand in uiino, on this old soat I 'JUK kahi.'h jit'/n:us. .'{80 So; cIoHJif wififj tljat, l(;n'l<-.r arrn . . . Jfow iFir; liot i.c.nfH fall I J>o not wcj'.p, r>(;lov'(J, hut h;t your «uiilo «tay warm about ruo. " In tli(t I^omJ tlnty hlccp." Vou know tli(; wonJH tlui Scripture haitli . , . O li;/lit, (ilory !...!« tluM 'J«;ath V 'JJli: KAKL'S HJ/rciix. l{.Af;(;Ki> ani;\nlon boloNV wIumv, in ilosolato oonioi^ rmiiM" the mossv oroon mrapot thoiv, PUo lilies ervnieiiM. iwking their white heads like mournei-s. And InirnM otV the heads ot' the tlowers that ^Yero riuiuixaiul pale in their eoiut'ortless bowei*s, Prv-bushM with the sharp stubborn lavender, And paven with disks ot" the torn snn-tlowers, ^^'hi^•h, dav by day, were stranuled, and stripp'd Ot their ravelling; trin>ies and bra/en bosses. And the hanly nu\ry-buds nippM and ripp'd Into shreds tor the beetles that InrkM in the Here she lived alone, and t'j\Mn year to year She saw the blaek belt of the oeean appear At her easen\ent eaoh nu">rn as she rose ; and eaeh morn Uer eye tell tii-st on the baiv blaek thorn. This was all : nothing more : or sometimes on the shore The tlshennen san^r when the tishioi; was o'er; Or the lowing ot' oxen t'ell ilreamily. Close on the shut ot' the glimmering eves, Thiv' some gusty pause ii\ the moaning sea, AVhen the pools woiv splash'd pink by the thiivty beeves. Or sometimes, when the pearl-lighted morns divw the tinges Ot' the eold sunrise np their amber t'ringes, A white sail peerM over the rim ot' the main, Look'd all about o'er the en\pty sea. Stagger'd baek t'rom the tine line ot' white light ag-aiti. And di\tpp*d down to another world silently. Then she breath'd t'reer. With siekening dread She had wateh'd tlve pale young moons nnt'oUl Fivn\ their notehy eaveru in light, and spread 'JIIK KAKI/S JtK'J CJIN. '3'Jl 'J'o t.li(; fuller li;^ht, and n{' th(; night, whose lustrous surface of black J II sf)Ots to an intense blue; was worn, liut later, when up on the sullen sea-bar 'i'he wide large-lighted moon liad arisen. Where the dark and voluminous ocean grew luminous, IJel[)ing aft(;r her slowly one little shy star That shook blue in the cold, and look'd forlorn, The clouds were troubled, and the wind from his prison Behind them leap'd down with a light laugh of scorn ; Than th(i last thing she saw was that bare black thorn ; For the forked tree as the bleak blast took it, Ilowl'd thro' it, and beat it, and bit it, and shook it, S(;em'd to visibly waste and wither and wi/cn. And the snow was lifted into the air Layer by layer, S5>^ lUK KAKlV KKll KN. And (uvwM u\tv> Vs\st wluto olovuls that tlow v'^ilont iuul tloot ui> tho sky, nuvi wimv rivoii Aiul jork\i into imuj^ius wluoh tho sun lortpM llu\>\ 0{H>»\inii onstal gnlts of ;» luvorv Hno Tovl AYvt1» miuy lii>htsof (ho Apnl hojwon. l''.\>n\ iwvos {U\d lovuos (ho i\uivoriniV ^Unv Sivu'kU\l otV; rtuvi (ho rioh oju*(h. blju^k a»ul K^itv, NV.^s stiU'vM witli snow-t\ir»\\i its (kuno, ntvvl InvrtiM llojv rtn»i (how. **Tho Siuninor." sho s;M»k "v\Mi\o(h bh(l\o «nil K>Ki ; Ami tho oi\HMts is lit tor hor wolooiuinij; Vuvl tho il;»vs will luuo gju*monts i^t' pnrplo ;unl gvUl : Inu I »onUl Iv loti bv tho |v\lo gwon Sj^rit^ij N\ ith (ho snow-ilivps svxnxowhoro umlor (hontould; " For I ikniv not thit\k what tho Svnnuu>r ni»Y bring." r.Uo sho wns jk< tho br.r.nblo bUnnns That (ill tho louij tioKls with thoir taint port\unos, NVl»on tho Ms\v-wind tlits tinoly tluv* snn-thiwuloii shvnvors, r>ivathinji' low tv> hintsolt' iii his dim mojulow- Unvoi^s. Ai\il hor ohook t\noh voar wc»s ^v>lor and thint\*>r. And whito as (ho poarl (liat was hm\u »'»t b^'«* <^»«*. As lior sad hoart siokonM and jnnovl within hor. And t'ailM anvl t'aintod t'i\Mn yoar to yi^u\ S,^ that tho Soi\osv>l»al. ixnigh ai\d gray, Saivl. a->5 ho UxxkM in hor taoo ono day. " St. Cathorino j^avo all gvKxl soids I pray, For onr ^vdo vonng lady is |vding away. O tho Svunts,*^ ho s.ud. smiling bittor and grim, " Know sho's tw (air and (vh> gwxl (br hi»n I " Svnnotimos vi int^mory, tminh ntnl ('Jt\ti^ 'J \,:x\, nU'^ti in h<;r h/c.ar't lik »n»'/tlior 'J'Ikj awkwar'l Srjuir*; that w'mn'd th<; niark. And, all day long, itt'Xwttau tUa dull wn^'M <)f' the, \K/wk, and th<; t/dihi(, and the wnging voi';<;», The H^;a h'xjin'd hoarw; till the »kiii5» were sand« hurn'd whit<;, and );i'rkenVl Men'i* ^-ijrht in the glaring horn of the I/ay; And all things that ta^ti^n, or tl^/at at ea»e In the wlvery light of the iaproiiH man With the pul»<; of a UuU'Jam lif<; were qui^;ken*d, 894 THE eart/s keturn. Fi'U looso from the rocks, and crawrd cro-^swise away, Slipporv sidcloiiij; crabs, halt" strani»lcd l>y the white sea trasses in which they were tangled, And those halt-Hvini>; creatures, orb'd, ray'd, and sharp-an«iled. Fan-fish, and star-lish, and polyjions ]nnij)s, Ilueless and boneh^ss, that hinouidly tlticken'd, Or Ihit-taced, or sjiiked, or ridged with hnnips, INIidting oil' tVoni their clotted clusters and clumps, Sprawl'd over the shore in the heat ot" the day. An hour before the sun was set A darker ripple roU'd oyer the sea ; The Avhite rocks (piiverM in wells of jet ; And the great West, opening breathlessly Up all his inmost orange, gave Hints of something distant and sweet 'I'hat made her lu>art swell ; far up the Avave The idouds that lay pileil in the goUlen heat AVere turn'd into types of the ancient mountains In an ancient land; the weeds, which ibrlorn AVaves were swaying neglectt'nlly, l>y their sound, as they dipp'd into sparkles that drijij)'d In the emerald creeks that ran \i\) from the shore, lirought back to her fancy the bubble of fountains Leaping and falling continually In valleys where she should wander no more. And when, over all of these, the night Among her mazy and milk-white signs, And clnsterM orbs, and zig-zag lines, l>nrst into blossom of stars and light, The sea was glassy ; the glassy brine AN'as paven with lights — blue, crystalline, Anil emerald keen ; the dark Avorld hung Ixilanceil under the moon, and swujig In a net of silver sparkles. Then she llippled her yellow hair to her kuee, THE earl's return. 395 Bared her warm white bosom and tliroat, And from the hittice leau'd athirst. 'J'liere, on the silence did slie ^^hrdt Witli a dizzy pleasure steef)'d in pain, Half catching the soul of the seci-et that blended God with his starlight, then feciling it vain, J-iike a [)ining poet ready to burst With the weight of the wonder that grows in his brain, Or a nightingale, mute at the sound of a lute That is swi'llini; and breakinj; his heart with its sti-ain, Waiting, breathless, to die when the music is ended. For the sleek and beautiful midnight stole, Like a faithless fri(;nd, her secret care, Crept thro' each pore to the source of the soul. And mock'd at the anguish which he found there, Shining away from her, scornful and fiiir In his pitihiss beauty, refusing to share The discontent which he could not control. The water-rat; as he skulk'd in the moat. Set all the slumbrous lilies afloat. And sent a sharp rpiick pulse along The stagnant light, that heaved and swung The leaves together. Suddenly At times a shooting star Avould spin Shell-like out of heaven, and tumble in. And burst o'er a city of stars ; but she, As he dash'd on the back of the zodiac. And quiver'd and glow'd down arc and node, And split sparkling into infinity. Thought that some angel, in his reveries Thinking of earth, as he pensively Lean'd over the star-grated balcony In his yralace among the Pleiades, And grieved for the sorrow he saw in the land, Had dropp'd a white lily from his loose hand. 396 THE earl's return. And thus many a night, steep'd pale in the light Of the stars, when the bells and clocks Had ceased in the towers, and the sound of the hours Was eddying about in the rocks, Deep-sunken in bristling broidery between the black oak Fiends sat she, And under the moth-flitted canopy Of the mighty antique bed in her chamber, With wild eyes drinking up the sea, and her white hands heavy with jewelry, Flashing as she loosed languidly Her satins of snow and of amber. And as, fold by fold, these were rippled and roil'd To her feet, and lay huddled in ruins of gold, She look'd like some pale spirit above Earth's dazzling passions forever Hung by, Free'd from the "stains of an earthly love, And those splendid shackles of pride that press On the heart till it aches with the gorgeous stress, Quitting the base Past remorsefully. And so she put by the coil and care Of the day that lay fiirl'd like an idle weft Of heaped spots which a bright snake hath left, Or that dark house, the blind worm's lair, When the star-winged moth from the windows hath crept, Steep'd her soul in a tearful prayer, Shrank into her naked self, and slept. And as she slumber'd, starr'd and eyed All over with angry gems, at her side, The Fiends in the oak kept ward and watch ; And the querulous clock, on its rusty catch, With a quick tick, husky and thick, Clamour'd and clack'd at her sharply. There was (Fronting a portrait of the Earl) A shrine with a dim green lamp, and a cross THE earl's return. 397 Of orlowing cedar wreath'd with pearl, Which the Arimath^ean, so it was writ, When he came from the holy Orient, Had worn, with his prayers embalming it, As with the San-Grael thro' the world he went. Underneath were relics and gems From many an antique king-saint's crown, And some ('twas avouch'd) from the dusk diadems And mighty rings of those Wise Kings That evermore sleep 'mid the marble stems, 'Twixt chancel and chalice in God his palace, The marvel of Cologne Town. In a halo dim of the lamp all night Smiled the sad Virgin, holy and white, With a face as full of the soul's affliction As one that had look'd on the Crucifixion. At moon-rise the land was suddenly brighter ; And thro' all its length and breadth the casement Grew large with a luminous strange amazement ; And, as doubting in dreams what that sudden blaze meant, The Lady's white face turn'd a thought whiter. Sometimes in sleep light finger-tips Touch'd her behind ; the pain, the bliss Of a long slow despairing kiss Doubled the heat on her feverish lips, And down to her heart's-heart smouldering burn'd ; From lips long mute she heard her name ; Sad dreams and sweet to vex her came ; Sighing, upon her pillow she turn'd, Like a weary waif on a weary sea That is heaving over continually, And finds no course, until for its sake The heart of the silence begins to ache. Unsooth'd from slumber she awoke An hour ere dawn. The lamp burn'd faint. The Fiends glared at her out of the oak. 898 TlIK KAKl/s UKTUUX. 8ho rosi\ and tMl at tho slii-iiic of tlio Saint. 'riuM'o with claspod hands to tho JNlothor Ot" many sorrows, in sorrow, sho prayM ; Till all things in tho room moltod into oach othor, And vanishM in jryres of llickorinu; shade, lAWvino; hor all alono, with tho iaoe Of tho Saint orowintj: lariio in its one bright plai'o Then on a sr.ddon, from lar, a foar Thro' all her heart its horror drew, As oi' somothinii' hichn^ns oTowinii' near. (\ild lingers soiMnM roamin hair. Her lips weiv look'cL Tho power of pra^oi* Left luM-. She clai'od not tnrn. Sho know, From his panel atilt on the wall np there, The grin\ lOarl was gazing- her thro' and thro'. Hut when tho easement, a grisly S(|nare, Fliekor'd with day, she thing it wide. And look'd below. The shore was bare. In the mist tumbled the dismal tide. One gliastly pool soem'd solid white ; The ibrked shadow of tho thorn Fell thro' it, like a raven rent In tho steadfast blank ilown whieh it went. The blind world slowly gather'il sight. The sea was moaning on to morn. And the Summer into the Autumn waned. And nnder tho watery llyados Tho gray sea swoH'd. and the thick sky rainM, And the land was darken'd by slow degrees. Kut oft, in tho low West, the day Smouldering sent up a sullen tlamo Along the dreary waste of gray, As tho* in that roil region lay, lleap'd up, like Autuuui woods and llowers For tiro, its thorny fruitless hours, And God said, " burn it all away ! " TrrK EAin/H itirruKX. 399 Wlion all was drcariost in flu; skies, And the, ^usfy tnicX of twili;flit rnuttor'd, A Hti'ati;;(i slow stiiilc frrcAv into Iicr eyes, As tho' from a ;^r(;at way off it oame And was weary c.rit down to lior lips it flutter'd, And turn'd into a si^li, or some soft name VVIios(; syllables sounded likest sij^Iis, Half sinf)llier'd in sorrow before they were utter'd. Sometimes, at ni^dit, a musie was roll'd — A ripple of silver liarp-strin^s eold — I'Vom the lialls below when; th(! Minstrel sun^r, With th(! silver hair, and the f^oidcm ton^^iie, And the (!yes of passionh^ss, j)eaeefnl blue (Like twili^xlit which faint, stars ;raz(; tJiro',) Wis(; willi the yciars which nr) man kn(;w. And first the; nmsic;, as tho' tiu; winut once—and it was at the fall of the day, WluiTi she, if she (dosecl hei" eyes, did seem 'i'o b(; wandering fa)-, in a sort of dream, With some lost shadow, away, away, J)o\vn tli(! heart of a gold('n l^ind whidi slie lieinember'd a great way over the s(!a. There came a trample of horses and num ; And a blowing of horns at tlui Castle-fiate ; Th(!n a clattering nois(i ; then a pause ; and then, With the sudden jerk of a heavy weight. And a wrari'ding and janMing and clirdcing and clanking, T\ni sound of the falling of cable and chain ; And a grumbling over the dewy planking 400 niK vAuTs kkiikn. That shriokM and suuii' with tlu> woiiihi anil strain Ami tho tvugh Sotioisohal lv\Nvl\i oiit in tho \u\\\ " The Karl and tho Oovil a»v oon\o bav^k agaii\ ! ** llov heart stvx^l still tor a nwMMOut or n»oro. Thoti siulvlonly tUii-^iM. atul strait\M. ami toro At tho nxM!^ wliio^x soomM to liivo >Yay bonoath. Slio rnshM to tho window, and hold hor Invatlu lliii'h up on tho boaoh woiv tho Ion*; blaok shipjj : And tho bivwn ,«5culs hnn^- tWnu tho masts in strips; And tho surt* was whirl'd over and over thorn. And swopt thorn drippinjv fivm storn to stoni. AVithin. in tho givat sv^uaiv oonrt Ivlow, AVoro a hnndivd jvngli-lavoil mon, or so. Ai\d ono or two yvvlo t'air-hair'd slaves AVhloh tho Karl had bixnight ovov tho wituor wavos. The IV was a wrincinir ot" horny l\amls ; And a swearinj* ot"i>aths; and a givat deal »>t* lauiihter ; Tho o-rinx Karl ijrowlinj; his hoai'so oo:nmands To tho N\'anlon that tollowM him iiivwling at\er ; A lowing ol' I'attle along tho wot s^\nds ; And a plashing ot' lux^ts on tho slippery rat\er. As the long'-tailM blaok-mctnod hoj-ses eaoh Went over the bridge t*i\>nv tho gray soa-beaoh. Then qnoth tho grim Karl, "tetoh mo a stv>^t> I " And they bivught him a givat Innvl that iiripp'd ti\)m the brim. Whioh he sei/M njx^n with a s^itistiovl wh«.H>p, OrainM. and thing at tho head ol" him That bivnght it ; then, with a lani^h like a howl. Stivk'd his Kwnl ; and stixnlo in thi\>' tho d».v>r with a grvnvl. Meanwhile the i-wvlo ladv givw white and whiter. As the [M>plar pales wKon the keen winds sjnite her: lilE KAUJ.B ilKTLUN. 401 And, an tho tree «way» to llie gust, and heaves Quick ripples of white alarm up the leaveo, 80 did she se<;m to shrink and reel From the casement — one quiver from head U) hcjA on whitest fear. For she heard below, On thoud as he came near the Chamber door. 'J'hen there fell, with a rattle and shock, An iron jrlove on the iron lock, And the door burst open — the Karl burst thro' it — Jiut she saw him not. 'Jhe window-pane. Far off, grew larg<; and small again ; The sta^g(;ring light did wax arid wane, Till there came; a snap of the heavy brain ; And a slow-subsiding pulse of pain ; And the whol<; world darken'd into rest, As the grim Karl pres.s'd to his grausfjme breast His white wife. She hung heavy there On liis shoulder without br(;ath, J)arkly fill'd with sleepy death From her heart up to her eyes; Dead asleep : and ere he knew it (IIow JJeath Ujok her by surprise Helpless in her great d(^spair) Smoothing baf;k her yellow hair, He kiss'd her icy brows ; unwound His rough arms, and she fell to the ground. " 'J'li.fi v'ornan v) an fairer than, aha vmn vme: Bui llm serpfint vms vmer t/ian she v:(iiffair: For the serpent vmx lord in Paradise 2G Or f ivr ihd' n^mnv* camf thety. Jiut H'htn Ktitn-ttottrs ittiY fnirrd amain. Ami (heriern su\^ni on ^nani in the Kasty The Hon «i\kvy ;W>m a /«)««/ rf/Hwf, Anti (fui^h he, as he shtntk out his rojfai mane^ • yoir J am (he {(tntntfest fteast.^ Had the woman fnen wiser when she was ^ueen J'he lion had nei^r been iinp, I ween, £ut eiyr siniY stonns betfan to lower l>eautff on earth hath Nen seet>fui to I^ower.'^ And this is tho sono- that the Minstivl sung. With tho silver hair auvl tho gohlon toniiuo. Wlto sung bv nielit in tho grim Karl's hall. And thoy hoVi lum in rovoronoo one and all. And so sho diod — tho ^v\lo-taood girl. Anvl. tor nino r. And toaring his blaok boanl as ho wont In (ho tit ot* his snllon disoontont. And tho Sonosohal scjid it Avas toartiil to hoar him: And not ovou iho woaihoj^worii Wanion woiu near him ; And tho slux'k-hoadod Tagvs hudtllod auoar. And bit their Avhite lij\s till thoy bUni, tor toiir. Init at last ho lv\do thorn lit> her lightly. And bury her by tho gray sea-shore. ^^holV tho winds that blew I'lvni hor onn land nightly Might wail ivund hor gnwo thiv" tho wild iwks h«.\*ir. Sv> they lit\«.Hl hor lightly at dead ot" night. And Ihmv her down by the long toivh-light — l.ank-hair\i taoes, sallow and keen. That burn'd out of the irlassy jhx^Is U^twoon rho splashing si\nds whioh. as thoy plungvd thiv\ Tho ootUn-lead >Yeiiih*d them down into ; THK KAiir/H nt/ix:us. 403 Aii(] t,l)(;ir i'cc.i, HH \\i(:y f>Iiiok' and out of by fitn — — And HO U) th(; fJc,lack hrirn, Wh(;re th(i pale f;ri<;HtH, all wliite-Ktoied and dim, Lifted the oroHH and f'hanted the liyrnn, 'i'liat ]i(tr .soul rni^djt Jiavi; pe;i/;e when her hones were duHt, And lier name; he written arnon;.^ the JuHt. 'J"h(j Warden walke,d after the Senenehal t^nxn ; And the Hhoek-headed I'a^res walk'd after }jini : And with rnattrjf;k and HpafJe a ^'rav<; waH nrjade, Wiiere they carved tlie croHs, and they wrote her name, And, returning/ each by the way that he eaine, 'J li(;y left her under the bare black thorn. 'J'iif; Halt sea-wind sanj^ shrill in ihf; head of it ; Anr] tF)e bittxjr nijrlit '^rt;w chill with tlie dread of it ; When the jrreat round moon rose up forlorn From tli(i reefs, and whit(;n'd towards th(i morn. For the forked tree, as tlie bleak bla^.t took it, ilowl'd thro' it, and beat it, and bit it, and shr>ok it, Lik(j a livin;^ thin;/ bewitch'd and bc^devil'd, Visibly shrunk, and shudder'd and shrivel'd. And a;/airi tha swallow, that false new-<;omer, Flutter'cJ ov<;r the sea in tlie frorit of the summer; A careless sin^rer, as he should br; 'I'hat only skitnmeth the mi;/|ity sea; J>if>f/d his wind's as he came an'i went. And chirrup'd and twitter'd for heart's content, And built on tlie new-made f^rave. iiut when 'Jhe Summer was over he flew back again. And the Karl, as years went by, and his life Grew listless, t/>ok him another wife : And the Seneschal j;rim, and the Warden gray Walk'd about in their wonted way: And the lean-jaw'd shock-hair'd Fages too 404 THE earl's uetukn. Sung and swillM as they used to do. And the grooms, and the squires gamed and swore And quarrel'd again as they ([uarrerd before ; And the llowers decay'd in their dismal beds, And dropp'd ott' from tlieir lean shanks one by one, Till nothing was left but the stalks and the heads, Clump'd into heaps, or ripp'd into shreds, To steam into salt in the sickly sun. And the cattle low'd late up the glimmering plain, Or dipp'd knee-deep, and splash'd themselves In the pools spat out by the spiteful main, Wallowing in sandy dykes and delves : And the blear-eyed tilmy sea did boom With his old mysterious hungering sound : And the wet wind wail'd in the chinks of the tomb. Till the weeds in the surf were drench'd and droAvn'd. But once a stranger came over the wave, And paused by the pale-faced Lady's grave. It was when, just about to set, A sadness held the sinking sun. The moon delayed to shine as yet : The Ave-lNIary chime was done : And from the bell-tower lean'd the ringers ; And in the chancel paused the singers, AVith lingering looks, and clasped lingers: And the day reluctantly turn'd to his rest, Like some untold life, that leaves exprest But the half of its hungering love ere it close : So he went sadly toward his repose Deep in the heart of the slumbrous waves Kindled far oft' in the desolate West. And the breeze sprang up in the cool sea-caves. The castle stood -with its courts in shade, And all its toothed towers imprest On the sorrowful light that sunset made — Such a light as sleeps shut up in the breast THE earl's return. 405 Of some pining crimson-hearted rose, "Which, as you gaze at it, grows and grows And all the warm leaves overflows ; Leaving its sweet source still to be guest. The crumpled shadow of the thorn Crawl'd over the sand-heaps raggedly, And over the gray stone cross forlorn. And on to that one man musing there Moveless, while o'er him the night crept on. And the hot yellow stars, slowly, one after one, Mounted into the dark blue air And brightened, and brightened. Then suddenly, And sadly and silently, Down the dim breezy rim of the sea sank the sun. Ere the moon was abroad, the owl Made himself heard in the echoing tower Three times, four times. The bat with his cowl Came and went round the lonely Bower Where dwelt of yore the Earl's lost Lady. There night after night, for years, in vain The lingering moon had look'd through the pane, And miss'd the face she used to find there. White and wan like some mountain flower In its rocky nook, as it paled and pined there Only known to the moon and the wind there. Lights flitted faint in the halls down lower From lattice to lattice, and then glow'd steady. The dipping gull : and the long gray pool : And the reed that shows which way the breeze blows cool. From the wide warm sea to the low black land : And the wave makes no sound on the soft yellow sand : But the inland shallows sharp and small Are swarm'd about with the sultry midge : -106 TllF. KAKI.'S UKTUKX. Ami tlio woods in tlio riftod rot'ks at will iMovo iM\ tho tiilo, ami tloiit or ulido. And into tho silont wostorn sido Ot' tho hoavou tho moon boiiins to tall. Hut is it tho tall of a plovor's oall That is ausworM Avarily, low yot shrill, From tho saml-hoapt mound and tho rooky ridoo? Ami now oVr tho ilark plain so wild and wido Falls tho noto of n i\orn from tho old draw-bridgo. Who is it that waits at tho oastlo-gatos ? C\ill in tho minstrol, and till the bowl. IVul him looso tho uroat nmsio and lot tho son^^- roll. Fill tho bowl. An^l tirst, as was duo, to tho Ivirl ho bowM : Next to all tho Sea-i'hioftains. blitho tVionds o\.' tho Karl's : Thou advanood thro' tho praiso o\' tho murmuring orowd. And sat down, as thov bado him, and all his blaok ourls Uow'il ovor his harp, as in iloubt whioh to ohoose From tho molodios ooil'd at his hoart. For a man OVr somo Boauty asloop for one momont might muso. Halt' in lovo, oro ho woko hor. Si> oro ho bogan, llo paused ovor his song. Ami thoy brought him, tho Sipiiros, A heavy gold oup with tho rod wine ripe in it, Then wave ovor wave of tho sweet silver wires '(lan ripjilo, ai\d the minstrol took heart to begin it. A harjuM" that har[>s thorough mountain and glen. Wandering, wandering tho wide world ovor, Sweetest of singers, yet sadilost ot' men, His soul's lost Lady in vain to disoin-or. ;Most fair, and n\ost frail of the daughters ot" men, O blest, and O eurst, tho man that should love her ! Who has not loveil V and -who has not lost? TIIK EAIir/s IlKTURN. 407 Wherever he wander, tlie wide world over, Smo'iufr by city, and castle, and plain, Abidinj^ never, forever a rover. Each man that shall hear him will swear almost In th(; minstrePs son;^ that his heart can discover The selfsame laxly by whom it was crost, For love is love the wide world over. What shall ]ut liken his love unto V Have you set'tlu> ciu-koo soiiiuly i\ovor fotloni As you boar it I'ar oil' thro' tho ilt>op purpK^ valh'vs. Ami tlio tirolly danoos by niiilit in tho oorn. Ami tho UttU» rouml owls in tho h>nu: oy pro5»sftllovs ^^'hoop tor joy >vhon tho moon is bv>rn. Thoro rinon tho oHvo and tho tulip troo, Antl in tho sun broailons tho m'oon priokly poar. And tho briiibt uah'^iialos in tho grass you n\av soo. And tho vino, with hor n\val bluo globos, dwolloth thoro. Clinvbino- and hanging dolioiously Uy OYory doorway and lono laitiood obambor, Whoro tho dan\soltly tlits. and tho boavy brown boo Hums alono. and tho ijuiok. lizards rustlo and olam- bor. And all things, tlioro. livo and rojoioo togotbor, l'ron\ tho trail poaoh-blosstnn that tirst appoars ^Vhon birds aro about in tho bluo siunmor woatber. To tho iwk that has livod thwugh bis oight bundrod yea J"}!. And tho oastlos aro built on tho bills, not tho plains, (And tho wiKl windflowors burn about in the oourts thoro") Thoy aro Avbito and undromhd by tho gray wintor rains. And tho swallows, and all things, aro blitbo at tboir sports thoro. O tor ono nunuont. at sunsot. to stand Far, tar a>Yay, in that lioar ilistant laud >N'honoo thoy Umv boi" — tho lovoliost lady that ovor Crost tho bloak oooan. 0\\ novormoro, nover. Shall sho stand with hor toot in tho warm dry grassos Whero tho taint bahu-hoaping broozo boavily pa ssos. And tho -whito lotus-tlowor loans loi\o on tho river ! Kaiv •Nvoro tho goms 'vvhioh sho had tor hor dower. But all the wild llowers she ioti behind her. 'I III. kmu.'h i{KTj;i:N. 400 — \ brokf;n li«;arf and a ro,s(;-roof''oriely and far from her own land tfiey laid her ! — A Kwallow flew ov(;r the Hea to find \u-.r. Ah cold, cold and narrow, the b(;d that they made her: 'i'he Kwallow vv(;nf, forth witli thf; Kumrner to find her. The HurniiKjr and the hwallow came back o'er the Hea, And strange were the tidin;.rs the bird brought to me. And tlie rnin.strel nung, and they prai.s'd and listen'd— ri«2;htiM\in!i-, whiliMiinij; in tlio tli^taiu'O yoiulor ? Slowly o\er tlio slumbrous dark Tp tVmu those tbuntains ot'liro spark on sj>ark (Vou miiiht count tlunn almost) tloats silout : ami (.'loar In the stoadt'ast glow the great eross beams. And the sharp and delieate masts show black ; AV'hile Nvlder and hiiiher the red liiiht streams. And oo/es, and overtlows at the back. Then taint thro' the ilistanee a sound you hear, And the bare poles tottor and ilisappear. Ot' the Karl, in truth, the Seneschal swore (And over the ocean this tale he bore) That when, as he tied oti that last wild night, lie had gain'd the other side of the moat, Dripping, he shook oiX his wet leathern coat, Anel turning round beheld, from basement To cope, the castle swathed in light. And, revcalM in the glai-e thro' My T/idy's case- ment, lie saw, or dream'd he saw, this sight — Two tbrn\s (and one for the Karl's he knew, By the long shaggy beard ami the bnxul back too) Struggling, grapjiling, like things half human. The other, he saitl, he but vaguely distingnish'd. When a sound like the shriek of an agonizeil "woman ISlade him shudiler, ami lo, all the vision was gone! Ceiling ami tloor had fillen thro'. In a glut of vomited llame extinguish 'd ; And the still tire rose and broadeu'd on. How fcart'ul a thing is lire ! You might n\ake up your mind to die by water A slow cool death — nay, at tinies, when Aveary Of pains that pass not, and pleasures that pall, TiriO EAI{L'H ItKTJJKX. 413 Wfien tlic temples tlirob, arul llie lieart is dreary, And life is dried up, you eould even desire Tliro' the flat (rraan weeds to fall and fall Ilalf-asleep down the ^'reen li;^ht under them all, As in a dream, whihj all thin;rs seem WawTirin^', waverin;^, to fe(;l the strc^am Wind, and f^ur^^le, and sound and gleam. And who would very much fear to expire Jiy steel, in th(; front of victorious slaughter, The blithe; battle about liim, and comrades in call? liut to die by fire () that night in the hall I And th(; f;astl(; burn'd from base; to top. You had thought that the fire would never stop, For it roar'd like the great north wind in the pines, And shon(; as the boreal met(!or shines Watch'd by wihl hunters in shuddering bands, When wolves are about in the icy lands. From the sea you might mark.lbr a space of three days. Or fainter, or fiercer, the didl red l>laze. And wlien this <;eased, the smoke above it Hung so heavy not even the wind seem'd to move it; So it glared and groan'd, and night after night Smoulder'd — a terrible beacon-light. Now tlje Earl's old minstrel — he that had sung His youth out in those halls — the man beloved, With the silver hair and the golden tongue, 'J'hey bore him out from the fire ; but he roved liack to the stified courts; and there They watch'd him hov(;ring, day after day. To and fro', with his long wiiite hair And his gold harp, chanting a lonely lay ; Chanting and changing it o'er and o'er. Like th(; mournful mad melodious breath Of some wild swan singing himself to death, 414 THE earl's return. As lie floats down a strange land leagues away. One day the song ceased. They heard it no more. Did you ever an Alpine eagle see Come down from Hying near the sun To find his eyrie all undone On lonely clills where chance hath led Some spying thief the brood to plunder '? How hangs he desolate overhead, And circling now aloft, now under, His ruin'd home screams round and round, Then dro|)s Hat Ihittcring to the ground. So moaning round the roofs they saw him, AVith his gleaming harp and his vesture white : Going, and coming, and ever returning To those chambers, emptied of beauty and state And chok'd with blackness and ruin and burning, Then, as some instinct seem'd to draw him. Like hidden hands, down to his fate, lie paused, plunged, dropp'd forever from sight ; And a cone of smoke and sparkles roll'd up. As out of some troubled crater-cup. As for the rest, some died ; some fled Over the sea, nor ever return'd. But until to the living return the dead And they each shall stand and take their station Again at the last great conllagration, Never more Avill be seen the r2arl or the stranger. No doubt there is nnich here that's fit to be burn'd. Christ save us all in that day from the danger ! And this is why these fishermen say, Sitting alone in their boats on the bay, AVhen the moon is low in the wild windy nights, They hear strange sounds, and see strange sights. Spectres gathering all forlorn Under the bouiihs of this bare black thorn. A soul's loss. 415 A SOUL'S LOSS. " If Beauty liave a soul this is not she." — Tkoilus and Ckkssida. 'TwixT the Future and the Past There's a moment. It is o'er. Kiss sad hands ! we part at last. I am on the other shore. Fly stern Hour ! and hasten fust Nobler things are gone before. From the dark of dying years Grows a face with violet eyes, Tremulous thro' tender tears — Warm lips heavy with rich sighs — Ah, they fade ! it disappears. And with it my whole heart dies ! Dies .... and this chok'd world is sickening. Truth has nowhere room for breath. Crusts of falsehood, slowly thickening From the rottenness beneath These rank social forms, are {|uickening To a loathsome life-in-death. those devirs-markctj)1aces! Knowing, nightly, she was there, Can I marvel that the traces On her spirit are not fair? 1 Ibrgot that air debases When I knew she breath'd such air. This a fair inmiortal spirit For which God prepared his spheres ? 416 A soul's loss. What ! sliall this the stars inherit ? And the worth of honest tears ? A fool's fancy all its merit ! A fool's judgment all its fears ! No, she loves no other ! No, That is lost which she gave me. Is this comfort — that I know All her spirit's poverty ? When that dry soul is drain'd low, His who wills the dregs may be ! Peace ! I trust a heart forlorn Weakly upon boisterous speech. Pity were more fit than scorn. Finger'd moth, and bloomless peach ! Gather'd rose without a thorn, Set to fleer in all men's reach ! I am cloth'd Avith her disgrace. O her shame is made my own ! O I reel from my high place ! All belief is overthrown. What ! This whirligig of lace, This the Queen that I have known ? Starry Queen that did confer Beauty on the barren earth ! Woodlands, wander'd oft with her In her sadness and her mirth, Feeling her ripe influence stir Brought the violets to birth. The great golden clouds of even. They, too, kneAV her, and the host Of the eternal stars in heaven ; And I deem'd 1 knew her most. I, to whom the AVord was given How archano-els have been lost ! A soul's loss. 417 Given in vain ! . . . But all is over ! Every spell that bound me broken ! In her eyes I can discover Of that perisht soul no token. I can neither hate nor love her. All my loss must be unspoken. Mourn I may, that from her features All the angel light is gone. But I chide not. Human creatures Are not angels. She was none. Women have so many natures ! I think she loved me well with one. All is not with love departed. Life remains, tho' toucht with scorn. Lonely, but not broken-hearted. Nature changes not. The morn Breathes not sadder. Buds have started T« white clusters on the thorn. And to-morrow I shall see How the leaves their green silk sheath Have burst upon the chestnut-tree. And the white rose-bush beneath My lattice which, once tending, she Made thrice sweeter with her breath, Its black buds thro' moss and glue Will swell greener. And at eve Winking bats will waver thro' The gray warmth from eave to eave, While the daisy gathers dew. These things grieve not, tho' I grieve. What of that ? Deep Nature's gladness Does not help this grief to less. And the stars will show no sadness, And the flowers no heaviness, 27 418 A soni/s 1.0S8. Tlio' oaoli thoiip;ht sliouUl turn to madness Noatli the strain oi' its distress ! No, if lite seem lone to me, 'Tis searee lonelier than at lirst. Lonely natures there must bo. Eai2;les are so. I was nurst Far from love in intaney : I have sought to slake my thirst At high founts; to tly alone, Haunt the heaven, and soar, and sing. Earth's warm joys 1 have not known. This one heart held everything. Now my eirie i?; o'erthrown ! As of old, 1 spread the wing, And vise u]> to meet my fate AVith a yet unbroken will. AVhen Heaven shut up Kden-gate INlan was given the earth to till. There's a world to oultivate, And a solitude to till. AVeleome man's old helpmate, Toil ! How may this heart's hurt be heal'd '? Crush the olive into oil ; Turn the jiloughshare ; sow the Held. All are tillers of the soil. Eaeh some harvest hopes to yield. Shall I perish with the whole Of the eoming years in view Unattempted ? To the soul Every hour brings something new. Still suns rise : still ages roll. Still some deed is left to do. Some . . . but what V Small matter now For one lilv for her hair. A SOIJLB LOSS. 419 For one rose to wreathe her brow, For one j^em to spaikle there, I Jiad . . . words, old words, I know ! AV^lial. was f, that slie should care ]Jow I difler'd from the common Crowd that thrills Mfjt to her touch V liow I (leemM her more than human, And had died to crown her such V [ire wo much ! Fool, she haunts me still ! No wonder ! Not a hud on yon black bed, Not a swathiid lily yonder, But recalls some f'ra^^rance fled ! II wfak ; Chooslnii- rallior it) rot'onl Socivts l)»>lor(> llo.'ivtM\ : iioi- broak l"'ai(h willi aum'ls by a word. Ami lloavcM IhmmIs this wro(rluMlu(>ss Which I siillor. Lot it, lu>. Would thai I could lovo (1uh> less ! 1, too, aiu «lra hhvssiuii; ol' a heart, (NiMcr more to h<>at hi'side theo!) Which in blessiuii breaks. l)e[>art. Farewell ! I that dellied theo Dare not question what thou art. TllK ARIMST. () Aurisr, rai\m' not over wide : Lest what thou seek W haply hid Li braiuble-blossoius at thy side, Or shut within the daisy -lid. (lod's lilory lies n*)! out ol' reach. The moss we crush beneath «)nr I'eet, Tho pebbles on the wet sea-beach. Have soUunn nu\iuiu«i's stranu;*' and sweet. Tho peasant at his eottaiio dom' Mi\\ tcjioh theo more than Plato knew : Sei» that thou scorn him not : adoro (Jod in him, and Ihv nature too. IKK AHltHT. 421 Know wf.ll tliy fVicri'lH. TIkj woofll^ino'H }»rf;;tt,fi, Tlif, woolly tr-ndrjl on tli«; vln'-., Arr-, tnorc; to tlicc. Mian (JaloV H<: ]h fliy next In }>](>()<\ : Sliarc. Nal.rirc wifli lic.r, and l.liy li'-.arL TIm', kin;/rnr>H an; t.liy HiHUtrlKK^d : (JonHuIt, (iK'.rn duly on Un'nc, art. Nor r;roHH flic Hca for i/cuih. Nor Kfjc.k : I'c, Kfin^'lit. I''<'.ar not to flw<-,ll aion(!. I'oMHftHS ihyncM'. \'t<; proudly-rncok. S(;<', tlioij \>(: wortliy to h<; known. 'I'll*', ^icniiJH on tliy daily wayn Shall fn«'r',t, and tal<<; tlico \>y tli«; liand : I'.iit H«',rv<'. Iiini not an who (An-.yn: lie, i<« thy HJavo if thou cornrrianrl : Anfl hloHHonm on tfir; lilackhc.rry-HtalkH Il<'. Hliall itnchant as thou doHt riasM, Till tlM-y drf fall. Something/ ^^ofl hath tr> Hay \<) thee Worth h(;ariug from the lip« of all. 422 THE ARTIST. All tliinos arc thine estate : yet must Thou first display the title-deeds, And sue the world. Be strong : and trust High instincts more than all the creeds. The world of Thought is pack'd so tight, If thou stand up another tumbles : Heed it riOt, tho' tliou have to fight AVith giants : whoso follows stumbles. Assert thyself : and by-and-by The world will come and lean on thee. But seek not praise of men : thereby Shall false shows cheat thee. Boldly be. Each man was worthy at the first : God spake to us ere we were born : But we forget. The land is curst : We plant the brier, reap the thorn. Remember, every man He made Is diiferent : has some deed to do, Some work to work. Be undismay'd, Tho' thine be humble : do it too. Not all the wisdom of the schools Is wise for thee. Hast thou to speak ? No man hath spoken for thee. Rules Are well : but never fear to break The scaffolding of other souls : It was not meant for thee to mount ; Tho' it may serve thee. Separate wholes Make up the sum of God's account. Earth's number-scale is near us set ; The total God alone can see ; But each some fraction : shall I fret If you see Four where I saw Three ? THE ARTIST. 423 A unit's loss the sum would mar ; Therefore if I have One or Two, I am as rich as others arc, And help the whole as well as you. This wild white rose-bud in my hand Ilath meaninpjs meant for me alone. Which no one else can understand ; To you it breathes with alter'd tone : How shall I class its properties For you ? or its wise Avhisperings • Interpret ? Other cars and eyes It teaches many other things. We number daisies, fringe and star : We count the cinqfoils and the poppies: Wc know not what they mean. We are Degenerate copyists of copies. We go to Nature, not as lords. But servants : and she treats us thus : Speaks to us with indifferent words. And from a distance looks at us. Let us go boldly, as we ought, And say to her " We are a part Of that supreme original Thought Which did conceive thee what thou art : " We will not have this lofty look : Thou shalt fall down, and recognize Thy kings : we will write in thy book, Command thee with our eyes." She hath usurpt us. She should be Our model: but we have become Her miniature-painters. So when we Entreat her softly she is dumb. 424 THE ARTIST. Nor sorvG tlio subjoct ovennucli : Nor rliydiin aiul rliymo, nor colour and form Know 'I'rntli liatli all ii^reat <>;rac('.s, such As shall with these thy Avork inform. Wo. ransack History's talterM \m^e : We prate oCciioch and costume : C-all this, and that, the Classic Age : Choose tunic now, now helm and plume : But while Avo halt in weak debate 'Twixt that and this apiiropriale theme, The ollended wild-(lowers stare and wait, The bird hoots at us IVom the stream. Next, as to laws. What's beautiful We rcKuignize in form and face : And judge it thus, and thus, by rule, As perfect law brings perfect grace : If thro' the effect we drag the cause, ])issect, divide, anatomize, Results are lost in loathsome laws, And all the ancient beauty ilies: Till wc, instead of bloom and light. See only sinews, nerves, and veins : Nor will the elfect and cause unite, For one is lost if one remains: But from some higher ])oint behold This dense, ])erplexing, com))lication ; And laws involved in laws unfold, And orb into thy contemplation. (rod, wlien he made the seed, conceived The (lower ; and all the work of sun And rain, belbre the stem was leaved, In that prenatal thought Avas done : THE ARTIST. 425 The f^Irl who twines in her soft hair The oranfre-flovver, with love's devotion, By the mere ar;t of beinof fair Sets countless laws of life in motion : So thou, by one thoufrht thoroujihiy great, Shalt, without heed thereto, fulfil All laws of art. Create ! create ! Dissection leaves the dead dead still. All Sciences arc branches, each, Of that first science — Wisdom. Seize The true point whence, if thou shouldst reach Thine arm out, thou may'st grasp all these, And close all knowledge in thy y)alm. As History proves Philosophy : Philosophy, with warnings calm, Prophet-like, guiding History. Burn catalogues. Write thine own hooks. What need to pore o'er Greece and Rome ? When whoso thro' his own life looks Shall find that he is fully come Thro' Greece and Rome, and Middle- Age : Hath been by turns, ere yet full-grown. Soldier, and Senator, and Sage, And worn the tunic and the gown. Cut the world thoroughly to the heart. The sweet and bitter kernel crack. Have no half-dealings with thine art. All heaven is waiting : turn not back. If all the world for thee and me One solitary shape possess'd. What shall I say V a single tree — Whereby to type and hint the rest. 426 TiiK AiMisr. And 1 oould imitate tlu> l>ark Ami foliaiio. both in form and hno, Or silvorv-y tlutterinii" switts that dip and wink : Deeji eattle in the eowslips ninllUnl. Or lazy-eyed upon the brink : Or, wlien — a stMiill of stars — liie night (l>y (lod withdrawn), is rollM away, The silent sun, on some eold height, Breaking the great seal of the day: Are these not words more rieh than ours ? O seize their in\port if you ean ! C)ur souls are pareli'd like withering tlowers. C)ur knowledge ends where it began. While yet about us fall (lod's dews. And whisper seerets o'er the earth Worth all the weary years we lose In learning legends of our birth, Arise, O Artist ! and restore Their musie to the moaning winds. Love's broken pearls to life's bare shore, And freshness to our tainting minds. 'i/ii, wii i;'h \\iA(,iA)Y. 427 THK VVIFK'S T\IA(',VA)Y. I. 'I III; KVKXfX'; r,i;ioi;j; rni; \\a<:\vw Takk tlif, fliamonfls from my hnir! Takf, i.\\('. Ilo.wor.s from t.lic urn ! '* Filri^' tlic lattice wifle ! moro air ! Air — more air, or else I burn I Put the bracelets l>y. And tlirust Out of Hi;.4it these liatf.d ftearls. I coulrj trample tliem to dust, Tho' they 'werr: Iiis gift, the lOarl's ! Fluslit T am ? The danoo it was. Only that. Now leave me, Sw(;et. Tak(5 the flowers, fx)ve. })ecause I'hey will wither in this heat. (tood night, dearest! Leave the door Half-way op(;n as you go. — Oh, thank (iod ! . . . Alone onf;e more. Am I dt(;aming V . . . JJreaming ? . . . r Still that music underneath VVor-ks to madness in my brain. Even tlie roses seem to breathe Toison'd perfiimes, full of j)ain. Let me think . . . my head is aching. r have little strength to think. And I know my heart is breaking. Yet, () love,' I will not shrink ! In his look was such sweet sadness. And Ik; fix'd that look on me. I was helpless. . . call it madness, (Jail it guilt . . . but it must be. 428 THE wife's tkagedy. I can hear it, if, in losing All thinjis else, I lose him not. All the jirief is my own choosing. Can I mnrmur at my lot ? Ah, the night is bright and still Over all the fields I know. And the chestnuts on the hill : And the quiet lake below. By that lake I yet remember How, last year, we stood together One wild eve in warm September Bright with thunder : not a feather Stirr'd the slumbrous swans that floated Past the reed-beds, huslit and white : Towers of sultry cloud hung moated In the lake's unshaken light : Far behind us all the extensive Woodland blacken'd against heaven : And we sjioke not : — pausing pensive : Till the thunder-cloud was riven, And the black wood whiten'd under, And the storm began to roll. And the love laid up like thunder Burst at once upon my soul. There ! . . . the moon is just in crescent In the silent hajipy sky. And to-night the meanest peasant In her light's more blest than I. Other moons I soon shall see Over Asian headlands green : Ocean-spaces sjiarkling free Isles of breathless balm between : THE wife's tragedy. 429 And the rosy-rislntr star At the setting of tlie day From tlie distant sandy bar Shining over Africa : Steering tliro' the glowing weather Past the tracts of crimson light, Down the sunset lost together Far athwart the summer niglit. " Canst thou make such life thy choice My heart's own, my chosen one V " So he whisper'd and his voice Had such magic in its tone ! But one hour ago we parted. And we meet again to-morrow. Parted — silent, and sad-hearted : And we meet — in guilt and sorrow. But we shall meet . . . meet, O God, To part never . . . the last time I Yes ! the Ordeal shall be trod. Burning ploughshares — love and crime ! O with him, with him to wander Thro' the wide world — only his ! Heart and hope and heaven to squander On the wild wealth of his kiss ! Then ? . . . like these poor flowers that wither In my bosom, to be thrown Lightly from him any whither When the sweetness all is flown ? Oh I know it all, my fate ! But the gulf is crost forever. And regret is born too late. The shut Past reopens never. 430 THE wife's tragedy. Fear ? . . . I cannot fear ! for fear Dies with hope in every breast, Oh I see the frozen sneer, Careless smile, and callous jest ! But my shame shall yet be worn Like the purple of a Queen. I can answer scorn with scorn. Fool ! I know not what I mean. Yet beneath his smile (his smile !) Smiles less kind I shall not see. Let the whole wide world revile. He is all the world to me. So to-night all hopes, all fears. All the bright and. brief array Of my lost youth's happier years, With these gems I put away. Gone ! . . . so . . . one by one ... all gone ! Not one jewel I retain Of my life's wealth. All alone I tread boldly o'er my pain On to him . . . Ah, me ! my child — My own fair-hair'd, darling boy ! In his sleep just now he smiled. All his dreams are dreams of joy. How those soft long lashes shade That young cheek so husht and warm. Like a half-blown rosebud laid On the little dimpled arm ! He will wake without a mother. He will hate me when he hears From the cold lips of another All my faults in after years. THE wife's tragedy. 431 None will tell the deep devotion Wherewith I have brooded o'er His young life, since its first motion Made me hope and pray once more. On my breast he smiled and slept, Smiled between my wrongs and me, Till the weak warm tears I wept Set my dry, coil'd nature free. Nay, . . . my feverish kiss would wake him. How can I dare bless his sleep ? They will change him soon, and make him Like themselves that never weep ; Fitted to the world's bad part : Yet, will all their wealth afford him Aught more rich than this lost heart Whose last anguish yearns toward him ? Ah, there's none will love him then As I love that leave him now ! He will mix with selfish men. Yes, he has his father's brow ! Lie thou there, thou poor rose-blossom, In that little hand more light Than upon this restless bosom. Whose last gift is given to-night. God forgive me ! — My God cherish His lone motherless infancy ! Would to-night that I might perish ! But heaven will not let me die. O love ! love ! but this is bitter ! O that we had never met ! O but hate than love were fitter ! And he too may hate me yet. 432 THE wife's tragedy. Yet to liiin have I not given All life's sweetness '? . . . lame ? and name ? Hope '? and happiness ? and heaven '? Can he hate me for my shame ? " Child," he said, " thy life was glad In the dawning of its years ; And love's morn should be less sad, For his eve may close in tears. " Sweet in novel lands," he said, " Day by day to share delight ; On by soft surprises led. And tooether rest at night. " We will see the shores of Greece, And the temples of the Nile : Sail where summer suns increase Toward the sooth from isle to isle. " Track the first star that swims on Glowing depths toward night and us, While the heats of sunset crimson All the purple Bosphorus. " Leaning o'er some dark ship-side. Watch the wane of mighty moons ; Or thro' starlit Venice glide. Singing down the blue lagoons. " So from coast to coast we'll range. Growing nearer as we move On our charm'd way ; each soft change Only deepening changeless love." *Twas the dream which I, too, dream'd Once, long since, in days of yore. Life's long-faded fancies seem'd At his words to bloom once more. THE wife's tragedy. 433 The old hope, the wrcckt belief, The lost light of vanisht years, Ere my heart was worn with grief, Or my eyes were dimm'd with tear ! When a careless girl I clung With proud trust to my own powers ; Ah, long since I, too, was young, I, too, dream'd of happier hours ! Whether this may yet be so, (Truth or dream) I cannot tell. But where'er his footsteps go Turns my heart, I feel too well. Ha ! the long night wears away. Yon cold drowsy star grows dim. The long fear'd, long wisht-for, day Comes, when I shall fly with him. In the laurel wakes the thrush. Thro' these dreaming chambers wide Not a sound is stirring. Hush ; — Oh, it was my child that cried ! II. THE POETRAIT. Yes, 'tis she ! Those eyes ! that hair With the selfsame wondrous hue ! And that smile — which was so fair, Is it strange I deemed it true ? 28 484 THE wife's tragedy. years, years, years T have not drawn .l>at'k this curtain ! there she stands By the terraee on the hwvn, With the white rose in her hands : And ahout her the armorial Scutcheons of a hauuhty race, Graven each Avith its memorial Of the oUl Lords of the Place. You, who do profess to see In the face the written mind, Loo}v in that face, and tell me In what part of it you lind All the I'alsehood, and the wronjv, And the sin, which must have been Hid in balel'ul beauty lonjij. Like the worm that lurks unseen Li the shut heart of the tlower. 'Tis the Sex, no doubt ! And still Some n\ay lack the means, the power, There's not one that lacks the will. Their oavu Avay they seek the Devil, Ever prone to the deceiver ! If too deep 1 feel this evil And this shame, may God forgive her ! For I loved her, — loved, ay, loved her As a man just once may love. I so trusted, so approveil her, sSet her, blindly, so above This poor world Avhich was about her ! And (so loving" her) because, Wilo 1 claim more. Strange ! these crowds Avhose instincts guide them Fail to get the thing they would, Till we nobles stand beside them, Give our names, or shed our blood. From of old this hath been so. For we too were with the llrst In the light fought long ago When tiie chain of Charles was burst. Who but we set Freedom's border Wrench'd at Kuunymede from John ? Who but we stand, towers of order, 'Twixt the red cap and the Throne V THE wife's tragedy. 437 And th(;y wrong us, P^ngland's Peers, Us, the vanguard of the land, Who should say the marcli of years Makes us shrink at Truth's right hand. 'Mid the armies of Reform, To the People's cause allied, We — the forces of the storm ! We — the planets of the tide ! Do I seem too much to fret At my own peculiar woe ? Would to heaven I could forget How I loved her lonji ajjo ! As a father loves a child, So I loved her : — rather thus Than as youth loves, when our wild New-found passions master us. And — for I was proud of old ('Tis my nature) — doubtless she In the man so calm, so cold. All the heart's warmth could not see. Nay, I blame myself— nor lightly. Whose chief duty was to guide Her young careless life more rightly Thro' the perils at her side. Ah, but love is blind ! and I Loved her blindly, blindly ! . . . Well, Who that ere loved trustfully Such strange danger could foretell ? As some consecrated cup On its saintly shrine secure. All my life seem'd lifted up On that heart I deem'd so pure. 488 riiK \\iKK*s rijAiJiov. ^Voll, iW mo tluM'O yot roinains I.aboiM' -that's inuoh : thou, tho stato : \\u\, what pays a thousaiul pains, Sonso o( rioht ami si-orn ot" tato. And. o\\. n\oro ' . . . niy own bravo hoy, With his tVank i\\u\ oauor brow. And his hoarty iniux'vMit joy. For as yot ho doos uo[ kninv All tho wronii' his tnothoi* did. ^^'onhl that tins \nii>ht pass nnknown I For his yt)anmtort. oonnsol both in owo. UiMibtloss. lirst, in that whii'h n\tnod n»o Man's strong- natnral wrath had part. "\Vn>n>i'd by iino 1 doom'd had lovod nu% FiH" I lovod hor tVvMn m\ ho;\rt ! \hi\ that's past I It" 1 was soro Ti) tho hoart. and bhml with shan\o, 1 soo oahnly ntnv. Nay. moiv — V\>r I pity whoro I blamo. For. it' ho botray or i^i-iovo hor. What is horsto turn to still? And at last, whon ho shall loavo hor. As at last ho siu'oly will, Whoro shall sho lind rot'ni^o ? what That worst widi>whoi>d oati soothe '? V\>r tho Fast oonsolos hor not. Nor tho monuM'ios of hor youth. ■n\i. vvifk'h 'riiAdKUY. iVJ NciUif'.r that w\i\t-]i in tho dmt Hhc hath filing' thr; nam<; nha U>ro ; iJut witfi li«;r own Mharnc, hIk'. rnunt l)w<;\\ fornnkt-.ti (•.v(;ru\(jrii. Nothirijir I'-.ft J'Ut y^tar.H ofan^uinh, Anf )ti;r own H«;ir-hatent IIk; pant. iJoth muHt HfiiVf.r : \KA\t feel pain : I'^re Ood p;irdori f>oth at lawt. Fare,we,ll, thou falne f'ar;e ! lyife Hpeed.s mc On its rJjjtieH. I munt H^rht : I miiHt, toil. Th*', I'e,r)ph; need<4 me: And I Hp<;ak for th(;m to-ni;.djt. m. THK LAST j\'ri:i:vn:w. Thanks, I)<;ar ! Put the lamp f|r>wri .... ho! Ff)r my eyes are, weak and dim. I low the, shadows eome, and i^o ! .S[>e,ak truth — liav(; the,y "rent for him ? -MO THK AVIKK8 TKA(,KnY. Ye.^ ? thank lloaven I Ami he will oomo. Come anil wati'h my ilyino- honi" — Tho' I lott anil shamoil his honu\ — I am \uthor\l liko this tlowor Which ho gavo mo lonix ago. ' Twas upon n\y bridal ovo. When I swoi\> to love him so As a Avifo should — ssnilo or griovo AVith him, ibr him — and not shrink. And now ? () tho long, long pain Soo this snnkon ohook I You think Uo would know my taoo again ? All its wrotohod beauty gone ! Only tho iloop oare survives. Ah, oould yoai"s ot' griot* atone For those fatal hours I It drives Past the pain, tho bitter blast I li\ this garret one might t'ix>eze. Hark there I wheels below I At last lie is eome then ? ^'o . . . tho tivo* And the night-wind — nothing more ! Set the ohair tor him to sit, AVhen he eomes. Aiul elose the iloor, For the gust blows eold thi\V it. When I think, I eau remember I was born in eastle halls — IIow yon dull and dying ember Glares against the whitewasht walls ! If he eome not (inxt you said That the messengvr was sent Louii situ'o V) Tell him when I'm dead How my littt's last hours were spent THE wife's tragedy. 441 In repenting that life's sin, And the room grows strangely dark ! See, tlie rain is oozing in. Set the lamp down nearer. Hark, Footsteps, footsteps on the stairs ! His . . . no, no! 'twas not the wind. God, I know, has heard my prayers. We shall meet. 1 am resign'd. Prop me up upon the pillows. Will he come to my bed.side ? Onee 'twas his ... . Among the willows How the water seems to glide ! Past the woods, the farms, the towers, It seems gliding, gliding thro'. " Dnarent .sv?^, Oicse younrj June-Jlowers^ I have pluckt them all for you, Here^ v;here pass'd my boyhood musing On the bride v^hich I mifjlit v^ed" Ah, it goes now ! I am losing All things. What was tliat he said ? Say, where am I V . . . this strange room V THE EAUL. Gertrude ! GERTRUDE. Ah, his voice ! I knew it. But this place ? .... Is this the tomb. With the cold dews creeping thro' it ? THE EARL. Gertrude I Gertrude ! 442 THE avife's tragedy. GEUTKUDE. will you stand Near me ? Sit down. Do not stir. Tell n\e, may I take your hand V Tell me, will you look on her Who so wronpf'd you V I have wept () such tears tor that sin's sake ! And that thonv. Anil \\\y bi\>\vji }uv worn with \v»>o. WouKI y\>u. K>ok\ntf rtt ino» si\y SI\o WAS lovolv lonij {\g\> ? UuslvuuK «nswvr! In nil ihoso Atv \^M> n\>t {vvonuvil V U I (,\>nKl viso now, nj^on \ny knoos, At y\>nr loot, ivloiv Itiio. I w*>\»lvJ tall ilown in \ny stMM>>w Anil n\\ sh;\n\o. ami swy " t'ln^^lvo,** That whiv^h will Iv ilnst to \nonv\v, rivis woak olc\y I vnK ». vui, IWr sutUMvr. H\o ! t uhI tot^iiw^s. ShjUl \ not 5»v> ? Na\, <\ Wttor lit'o. in trnth, I tlo hojH> tvM\ Not bolow. r.uMnor ot' n\y jHMnsht yonth. UnsKuwl. wM\M\jiM ono ! T.ot \x>«r Wo^injj r>o with n\o. Voto\>\ to-nijjht. bVnu tho lito thcUV |v^st nn^ws.'^insj This ?itiN\\ M s\>nl nnjst tv-^ko its tlijjht I 'IVat^. wrtvnx t\\^t^ ! \ tool tho\\\ o>vop lV>wn »ny ohook. *rort\>- not \ny ow t\. It i?J lonii sinoo I ov>nKl woo}>, l\\st ;ill tOiU"^ »ny jiiiot' hrtlh jjwwtv. 0\\M^ this ilry withorM oluvk, l>i\>p by »l\v|v I t'vH^l thorn tj^lK Unt n\\ v\Moo is ji<\>wing wo»>^k : Anvl I h.wo nv>t spokon JxlK t hft/\ umt^t Ut »iy My v/n, My UM t'M'M ihfti fK',vt',r kin'.w uth \ All \m UuUi W'4y» (.tfitm Ut un% h hf*, iirowft y t ifawy U'un ! Siiffn that t'MtiU\i ' OVr ttty un'uyny %yr Aii'l U\n Utuif^ UhU ' I ■ I' r/,;>/,K y Or M wUui WH4 oit'h ? f Iw utfAitttr Urn \ui itrtfWfi U) iovti hitfAht^f-' Htftnh nirnfn//', wi/iitau tuA UUh inh V W'/fil'l !><{ H\nt'UU',r i/f \ti'.\nM 'Wttn iffxUi i'lU'A', aiA ift^UA ionn li' Ut', kftt',w, ift (hyn tA' oUif Wnw Ut', %\itiiA>i-yi\ on my urin'/ \\h¥f \ tmrni him V l//v«yJ liiiri V uuwt^ti hirn All thj)» \uw^ U*'/4riUrikij my yti'*'y-l c/mUi tuA uwaA \t. HuJtl/an'l, \tH%\niUt\ ! ( am <\yiu^i, hy'itiii ! Let mh iw\ yonr k\*M On my hrow wUf^ra I urn \yhi'/. Yon am itmut, t',wmii)t ior tU'tn ! Ami voull Uv uif',, w}»<;r< I'm ^ritany ; And many more renowned knights whereof The names are glorious. Also all the earls. And all the dukes, and all the mighty men PARTING OF LAUNCELOT AND GUENEVERE. 451 And famous heroes of the Table Kound, From far Northumberland to where the wave Rides rough on Devon from the outer main. So that there was not seen for seven years, Since when, at Whitsuntide, Sir Galahad Departed out of Carlyel from the court, So fair a fellowship of goodly knights. Then would King Arthur that the Queen should ride With him from Carlyel to Camelot To see the jousts. But she, because that yet The sickness was upon her, answer'd nay. Then said King Arthur, " This repenteth me. For never hath been seen for seven years, No, not since Galahad, at Whitsuntide, Departed from us out of Carlyel, So fair a fellowship of goodly knights." But the Queen would not, and the King in wrath Brake up the court, and rode to Astolat On this side Camelot. Now men said the Queen Tarried behind because of Launcelot, For Launcelot staid to heal him of his wound. And there had been estrangement 'twixt these two r the later time, because of bitter words. So when the King with all his fellowship Was ridden out of Carlyel, the Queen Arose, and call'd to her Sir Launcelot. Then to Sir Launcelot spoke Queen Guenevere. " Not for the memory of that love whereof No more than memory lives, but. Sir, for that Which even when love is ended yet endures Making immortal life with deathless deeds, Honour — true knighthood's golden spurs, the crown And priceless diadem of peerless Queens — 452 PAUTING OF LAUNOKLOT AND GUKXKVKRE. 1 make appeal lo you, tliat hoar ])ei"oliaiu'o The last appeal wh'u-h 1 shall over make. So woiiih my words not lightly ! I'or 1 feel The lluttoriniv lires of lite grow faint and cold About my heart. And oft, indeed, to me Lying whole hours awake in the iload nights The end seems near, as tlio' the darkness knew The angel waiting there to eall my soul Perehanee before the honse awakes ; and oft AVhon faint, and all at once, from far away, The monrnfid midnight bolls begin to sound Across the river, all the days that were (Brief, evil days!) return upon my heart, And, where the sweetness seem'd, I see the sin. For, waking lone, long hours before the dawn, Beyoml the borders of the dark 1 seem To see the twilight of another world. That grows and grows and glinnnoi's on my gaze. And oft, when late, betbre the languorous moon Thro' yonder windows to the ^^\^st goes down Among the pines, doe[) peace upon me falls, Deo}) peace like death, so that 1 think 1 know The blessed Mary and the righteous saints Stand at the throne, and intercede for me. AVherefore these things are thus I cannot tell. But now I pray you of your fealty, And by all knightly faith which may be left, xVrise and get you hence, and join the King. For wherefore hold you thus behind the court, Seeing my liege the King is moved in wrath '? For wete you well what say your foes and mine. ' See how Sir Launeelot aiul C^ueen (nienevere Do hold them over thus behind the King- That they may take their pleasure ! ' Knowing not How that for me all those ilolights are come To be as withorM violets." Half in tears She ceased abrupt. Ciiven up to a proud griet, PARTING OF LAUXCELOT AND GUENEVERE. 453 Vex'd to be vext. With love and anger moved. Love toucht with scorn, and anger pierced with love. About her, all unheeded, her long hair Loos'd its warm, yellow, waving loveliness, And o'er her bare and shining shoulder cold Fell floating free. Upon one full white arm, To which the amorous purple coverlet Clung dimpling close, her drooping state was propt. There, half in shadow of her soft gold curls. She lean'd, and like a rose enricht witli dew. Whose heart is heavy with the clinging bee, Bow'd down toward him all her glowing face, While in the light of her large angry eyes Uprose, and rose, a slow imperious sorrow. And o'er the shine of still, unquivering tears Swam on to him. But he, with brows averse And orgolous looks, three times to speech address'd, Three times in vain. The silence of the place Fell like a hand upon his heart, and hush'd His foolish anger with authority. He would not see the wretched Queen : he saw Only the hunter on the arrass'd wall Prepare to wind amort his bugle horn. And the long daylight dying down the floors. For halfway through the golden gates of eve The sun was roU'd. The dropping tapestry glow'd With awful hues. Far ofl" among his reeds The river, smitten with a waning light, Shone : and, behind black lengths of pine reveal'd, The red West smoulder'd, and the day declined. Then year by year, as wave on wave a sea, The tided Past came softly o'er his heart, And all the days which had been. ' So he stood Long in his mind divided : with himself 454 PARTING OF LAUNCELOT AND GUENEVERE. At strife : and, like a steed that hotly chafes His silver bit, which yet some silken rein Sway'd by a skill'd acciistom'd hand restrains, His heart against the knowledge of its love Made vain revolt, and fretful rose and sunk. But at the last, quelling a wayward grief. That swell'd against all utterance, and sought To force its salt and sorrowful overflow Upon weak language, " Now indeed," he cried, " I see the face of the old time is changed, And all things alter'd ! Will the sun still burn ? Still burn the eternal stars ? For love wa.s deem'd Not less secure than these. Needs should there be Something remarkable to prove the world I am no more that Launcelot, nor thou That Guenevere, of whom, long since, the fame, Fi'uitful of noble deeds, with such a light Did fill this nook and cantle of the earth, That all great lands of Christendom beside Show'd darken'd of their glory. But I see That there is nothing left for men to swear by. For then thy will did never urge me hence, But drew me thro' all dangers to thy feet. And none can say, least thou, I have not been The staff and burgonet of thy fair fame. Nor mind you. Madam, how in Surluse once, AVhen all the estates were met, and noble judges, Arm'd clean with shields, set round to keep the right. Before you sitting throned with Galahault In great array, on fair green quilts of samyte. Rich, ancient, fringed with gold, seven summer days. And all before the Earls of Northgalies, Such service then with this old sword was wrought, To crown thy beauty in the courts of Fame, That in that time fell many noble knights, And all men marvell'd greatly ? So when last The loud horns blew to lodging, and we supp'd PARTING OF LAUNCELOT AND GUENEVERE. 455 With Palamedes and with Lamorak, All those great dukes and kings, and famous queens, Beholding us with a deep joy, avouch'd Across the golden cups of costly wine ' There is no Queen of love but Guenevere, And no true knight but Launcelot of the Lake ! ' " Thus he, transported by the thought of days And deeds that, like the mournful martial sounds Blown thro' sad towns where some dead king goes Made music in the chambers of his heart, Swept by the mighty memory of the past. Nor spake the sorrowful Queen, nor from deep muse Unbent the grieving beauty of her brows, But held her heart's proud pain superbly still. But when he lifted up his looks, it seem'd Something of sadness, in the ancient place. Like dying breath from lips beloved of yore, Or unforgotten touch of tender hands After long years, upon his spirit fell. For near the carven casement hung the bird, With hood and jess, that oft had led them forth, These lovers, thro' the heart of ripling woods At morning, in the old and pleasant time. And o'er the broider'd canopies of state Blazed Uther's dragons, curious, wrought with gems. Then to his mind that dear and distant dawn Came back, when first, a boy at Arthur's court, He paused abasht before the youthful Queen. And, feeling now her long imploring gaze Holding him in its sorrow, when he mark'd How changed her state, and all unlike to her. The most renowned beauty of the time, And pearl of chivalry, for whom himself All on a summer's day broke, long of yore 456 r\KTlN(^ OK l.Al'NOKLOT AND (iUKNKVERK. A Imndrcil laucrs in tlio Tu'ld, In' spranij; Aiul t';iiiiili( luM' liaiul, and, laHin<2, lo ono knee, Arch'd all Ills haiiiility nock (o a (|nl('k kiss. And tluM'o >vas sIKmu-o. Silently llio West (ireAv red and roddiM-, and the day deollnod. As o'vv llie lnin<2;(>rinii' heart ol' S(nne deep sea, I'hat swells against (lu* planets and the moon AVitli sad eontinnal strllt> and vain nnrest, Jn silenee rise and loll the labonrino- elouds That bind the tluinder. o'cv tlu> heavin<: heart Of (Jnenevere all sorrows franiiht with love, All sti)rniy sorrows, in that silenee pass'd. And like a star in that tinnnltnons nii»ht liOve wa\'d aiul wamul, and eanie and -went, ehaniiod hue, And was and was not : till the elond eanie down, And all her sonl dissolved in showers : and love Ivose thro' the broken storm : and, with a ery Of l^assion sheath'd in sharpest pain, she streteliM Wide her w arm arms : she rose, she reel'd, and fell (All her great heart nn(|neen'd) npon the breast Of Jianni'elot ; and, lilting- np her voiee. She weptalond " llnhaj)))y that 1 am," She wei>t, " Unhappy ! VVonld that 1 had died Long- slnee, lon<^- ere I loved thee l.auneelot ! AVonld 1 had died lonu; sint'e ! ere 1 had known This pain, whieh hath beeome my pnnishment, 'J\> have thirsted lor the sea : to have received A drop no biuiior than a droi> ot" dew^ ! 1 have done ill," she wept, " 1 am forlorn, Forlorn ! I talter where 1 stood seenre : The tower 1 bnilt is lall'n, is fall'n : the staiV 1 leanM npon hath broken in my hand. And 1, disrobed, dethroned, diserownM, and all un- done, Survive my kiuiidom, widowM of all rule. And men shall moek me tor a foolish Queen. For now 1 see thy love for me is deail, j'AiiTiN^; OF lai:nci;i,0'i am> (;i;i:m;vki{i:. 457 I)(;aut, whih; she wc;})!, ufjon her brows and lips Warm kiss(!S fell, warm klss(;s wet with tears. Foj- all his mind was nK^lted with remorse, And all his scorn was kill'cJ, and all his heart (iave way in that caress, and all the love Of ha[)pier years rollM down upon liis soul Redoubled; and he bowM his head, and cried, " Tho' thf;u b(! variable as the waves, More shar[) than winds among the llebrides 'J'hat shut th(! fro/en Sf)ring in stormy clouds, As wayward as a child, and all unjust, Yet nmst I love thee in dcsfiite ol" pain, Thou j)eerlcss (2""'''" ^>f ft<'-rf(!ct love ! Tliou star That draw'st all tides ! 'J'liou goddess far above My heart's W(^ak w(jrship ! so adored thou art. And I so iri-elrievably all thitK; ! J)Ut now I will ai'ise, as thou hast said, And join the King: and thes(? thine enemies Shall know thee not defenceless any more. For, (iither, living, I yet hold my life To arm for thine, or, dying, by my deatli Will ste(!p love's injured honour in such blood Shall wash out every stain ! And so farewell r>elov'(]. Forget me not when 1 am far, Jiut in thy prayers and in thine evening thoughts 458 PAllTINC. OF LAUNCKLOT AND GUENEVERE. Romombcr nio, : as 1, Avlieu sundown crowns I'lic distant liills, and Ave-Mary vinjis, Shall pine for thoc on ways where thou art not." So these two lovers in one lonji; embrace, An alin(ied in tears and kisses, lip to lip, And tranced from past and future, time and space. But by this time, tlie beam of the slope day, Kdf^inji; blue mountain jxlooms with sullen gold, A dyinii' fire, fell mournfully athwart Tlu^ purple chambcM-s. In the courts below 'Vhti shadow of the kee]) from wall to wall Shook his dark skirt : d, ( Jod knows ! v Good-night. It is night so soon now. Look there ! you have droi)t your rose. ARISTOCRACY. — THE MKRMAIDEN. 463 Nay, I have one that is wither'd and dearer to mc. 1 came To say good-night, little Alice. She does not remember my name. It is but the damp tliat is making my head and my heart ache so. I never was strong in the old time, as the others were, you know. And you'll sleep well, will you not, Darling? The old words sound so dear ! 'Tis the last time 1 shall use them; you need show neither anger nor fear. It is well that you look so cheerful. And is time so smooth with you V How foolish I am ! Good-night, Dear. And bid Alice ffood-niffht too. ARISTOCRACY. To thee be all men heroes : every race Noble : all women virgins : and each place A temple : know thou nothing that is base. THE MEUMAIDEN. IIk was a Prince with golden hair (In a palace besidci the sea), And I but a ])oor Mermalden — And how should he care for me ? Last sunnn(>r I came, in the long blue nights, To sit in the cool sea-caves : ' 464 Vr UIK t AS KM I.N T. L;\st smunior ho onnio to couiU (ho stars From his torraoo abovo tlio waves. Tlioro's nothinu' so tair In tho soa down thoro As tho hixht on his ^iWdon trossos: Thoro's nothinii' so swoot as his vi>loo : all. nothin; So warn\ as tho wanmh ot" his kisses ! 1 oonUl not holp bnt hno him, li>\ o him, Till my lovo arow pain to mo. Ami to-niorrow ho woils tho Princess In that palace beside the sea. AT iiKK rASi:Mi:N r. T AM knee-deep in grass, in this warm Jnne-night, In tho shade here, shut otV trom the ijivat moon- light. All alone, at her casement there. 8he sits in the light, and she eon\bs her hair. She shakes it over the earven seat. And combs it down to her stately toot. And I watch her. hid ii\ tho blue ,hine-night, Till my sonl grows t'aint with the costly sight. There's no tlaw on that tair tine brow of hei*s. As tair and as proud as Lueiter's. She looks in the glass as she tnrns her heail : She knows that the rose on her cheek is red : She knows how her dark eyes shine — their light AVould scarcely be dhnm'd tho* 1 died to-night. I would that there in her chamber 1 stood, FuU-taco to her terrible beauty : 1 would 1 were laid on her ipieenly biva:>t, at her lips. With her warm hair wound thro' my iinger-tips, AN KVKNING IN TUSCAN Y. 4Cjl Drainiri;^ }ior soul at f>nf; doop-flrawn kiss. Ari(J I would bt; hurrihly oontcnt for tnis To (li(!, as is fiu<;, b(;fbrc the morn, Kill'd by her slovvly-r(;tuiriirig scorn. A FAIIEVVELL. I*K happy, cliild. The last wild words arc spoken. I'o-rriorrow, mine no more, tlie world will elaim thee. I blame thee? not. But all my life is broken. Of that brief J*ast I liavc no «in;:Ie token. Never in years to eome my lips shall name thee, Never, child, never ! I will not say " For^^et me ;" nor those liours Which were so sweet. Some scent dead leaves retain. Keep all the flowers I gave thee — all the flowers Dead, dead ! 'J'ho' years on years of life were ours, As yva have met we shall not meet again ; Forever, child, forev(;r ! AN EVENING IN TUSCANY. Lo«^)K ! the Sim sets. Now's the rarest Hour of all the blessed day. (Just the hour, love, you look fairest !) Even the snails are out to play. Cool the breeze mounts, like this Chianti Which I drain down to the sun. — There ! shut up that old green Dante — Turn the page, where we begun, 30 466 AX EVENING IN TUSCANY. At the last news of Ulysses — A oraml iinaiio, fit to closo Just such i^rand gold eves as this is, Full ot'spleudoiir ami repose ! So loop \ip those long bright tresses — Only, one or two must tall Down yonr warm neck Evenin^j kisses Thro' the soft curls spite of all. Ah hut rest in your still plaee there ! Stir not — turn not! the warm pleasure Coming, going in your face there. And the rose (no richer treasure) In your bosom, like my love there, ,Iust half secret and half seen ; Ai\d the soft light trom above there Streaming o'er you where you lean, With yonr tair head in the shatlow Of that grass hat's glancing brim, Like a daisy in a meadow Which its own deep fringes dim. O you laugh — you cry " What folly ! " Yet you'd scarcely have me wise. If I judge right, judging wholly l^y the secret in your eyes. Ibit look ilowi\ now, o'er the city Sleeping sot't among the hills — Our dear Florence ! That great Fitti With its steady shadow fills Half the town up : its imwinking Cold white wimlows as they ghire J)own the long streets, set one thinking Of the old bukes who lived there ; AN KVENING IN TUSCANY. 467 And one, pictures those strange men so! — Subtle brains, and iron thews ! There, the gardens of Lorenzo — Tlie long cypress avenues — Creep up slow the stately hill-side Where the merry loungers are. But far more 1 love this still side — The blue plain you see so far ! Where the shore of bright white villas Leaves off faint : the purple breadths Of the olives and the willows : And the gold-rimm'd mountain-widths : All transfused in slumbrous glory To one burning point — the sun ! But up here — slow, cold, and hoary Reach the olives, one by one : And the land looks fresh : the yellow Ari)ute-berries, here and there, Growing slowly ripe and mellow Thro' a Hush of rosy hair. For the Tramontana last week Was about : 'Tis scarce three weeks Since the snow lay, one white vast streak, Upon those old purple peaks. So to-day among the grasses One may pick up tens and twelves Of young olives, as one passes, Blown about, and by themselves Blackening sullen-ripe. The corn too (Irows each da}' from green to golden. The large-eyed windllowers forlorn too Blow among it, unbeholden : 468 AN EVENING IN TUSCANY. Some white, some crimson, others Purple blackening to the heart. From the deep wheat-sea, which smothers Their bright globes up, how they start ! And the small wild pinks from tender Feather-grasses peep at us : While above them burns, on slender Stems, the red gladiolus : And the grapes are green : this season They'll be round and sound and true, If no after-blight should seize on Those young bunches turning blue. O that night of purple weather! (Just before the moon had set) You remember how together We walk'd home ? — the grass was wet — The long grass in the Podere — With the balmy dew among it : And that Nightingale — the fairy Song he sung — O how he sung it ! And the fig-trees had grown heavy With the young figs white and woolly : And the fireflies, bevy on bevy Of soft sparkles, pouring fully Their warm life thro' trance on trances Oflhick citron-shades behind, Rose, like swarms of loving fancies Thro' some rich and pensive mind. So we reach'd the Logia. Leaning Faint, we sat there in the shade. Neither spoke. The night's deep meaning Fill'd the silence up unsaid. SONG. Hoarsely thro' the Cypress-alley A Civetta out of tune Tried his voice by fits. The valley Lay all dark below the moon. Until into song you burst out — That old song I made for you When we found our rose — the first out Last sweet Spring-time in the dew. Well ! ... if things had gone less wildly- Had I settled down before There, in England — labour'd mildly — And been patient — and learn'd more Of how men should live in London — Been less happy — or more wise — Left no great works tried, and undone— Never look'd in your soft eyes — I . .' . but what's the use of thinking ? There ! our Nio-htingale becrins — JNow a rismg note — now smkmg Back in little broken rings Of warm song that spread and eddy — Now he picks up heart — and draws His great music, slow and steady, To a silver-centred pause ! SONG. The purple iris hangs his head On his lean stalk, and so declines The spider spills his silver thread Between the bells of columbines : 470 SONG. An alter'd liiiht in flit'kerino- eves Draws clews thro' these dim eyes of ours; Death walks in yonder waning bowers, And burns the bhstering leaves. Ah, well-a-day ! Blooms overblow : Suns sink away : Sweet things decay. The drunken beetle, roused ere night, Breaks blundering from the rotting rose, Flits thro' blue spidery aconite. And hums, and comes, and goes: His thick, bewilder'd song receives A drowsy sense of grief like ours : He hums and hums alnong the bowers. And bangs about the leaves. Ah, well-a-day ! Hearts ovei-tlow: Joy tlits away : Sweet things decay. Her yellow stars the jasmin drops In mihhiw'd mosses one by one: The hollyhocks fall off their tops : The lotus-blooms ail white i' the sun : The freckled Ibx-glove faints and grieves : The smooth-paced slumbrous slug devoui-s The glewy globes of gorgeous tlowers, And smears the glistering leaves ! Ah, well-a-day ! Life leaves us so. Love dare not stay. Sweet things decay. From brazen sunflowers, orb and fringe, The burning burnish dulls and dies : Sad Autumn sets a sullen tinge Upon the scornful peonies : SEA-SIDE SONGS. 471 The dewy fropf limps out, and heaves A speckled lump in speckled bowers : A reekinc; moisture, clings, and lowers The lips of lapping leaves. Ah, well-a-day ! Ere the cock crow, Life's charm' d array Reels all away. SEA-SIDE SONGS. I. Drop down below the orbed sea, O lino-erino; lifjht in jrlowing skies, And bring my own true-love to me — My dear true-love across the sea — With tender-lighted eyes. For now the gates of Night are flung Wide-open her dark coasts among : And the happy stars crowd up, and up, Like bubbles that brighten, one by one, To the dark wet brim of some glowing cup Fill'd full to the parting sun. And moment after moment grows In grandeur up from deep to deep Of darkness, till the night hath clomb, From star to star, heaven's highest dome : And, like a new thought born in sleep, The slumbrous glory glows, and glows : While, far below, a whisper goes That heaves the happy sea : For o'er faint tracts of fragrance wide, A rapture pouring pp the tide — A freshness thro' the heat — a sweet. Uncertain sound, like fairy feet — The west wind blows my love to me. •172 JSKA-SinK IHOi\(jy. Lovc-ladi'ii iVoui the lin^htcd west Thou t'onu'sl, with thy sonl oppivst For joy ol' him: all up tho dim, Delicious soa blow fcai'tcssly, Warm wiud, (hat art the tcmlorost Of all that, l)roalho iVom south or west, lUow whispers of hiui up tlu> si^a : llpou ujy cheek, ami ou my breast, Aud ou the lips whii-h he hath prest, .Blow all his kisses back to uve ! Far oir, the tlark ijreeu locks about, All niiiht shiues, I'aiut aud l;iir, the tar light : Far olV, the loue, latt^ lishers shout Frou\ boat to boat i' the listeniuo- starlight : Far oil', aud fair, the sea lies bare, Leagues, leagues beyoud the reaeh of rowing Up creek aud horn the siuooth wave swells And falls asleep ; or, inland flowing, Twinkles among the silver shells, From sluice to sluice of shallow wells ; Or, ilown , dri'nu\lik(> brilliancy. And I feel the dark sails gri>wiug Nearer, clearer, u[» the sea: And I catch the warm west bh)wing All n\y own love's sighs to nu^ : On the deck Ihear them singing Soug>^ they sing in my own laud : Jiights are swinging: liells are ringing: On the divk 1 see hin\ stand 1 The day is down into his bower: In languid lights his I'oet he steeps : TIIK SIJMMKIt-riMK TIIy\T WAS. 473 'VUr. (litslit sky darlvctis, low hikI lowi-i-, And (;l()Hi!S on (Ik; ^^lowin;^ deeps. In crcepin;:,- curves of yellow foam U|) shallow sands the wat(!i\s slide: And warmly blow wlial, wliis|)(!is roam From isle to isle the- lulliid tide : ']'h(^ boats arc drawn : tlio nefs drip brij^ht : Dark easiunents j^leani : old songs are. snnl.A\r. O TMAr 8\voot soasiui i>u tho April-voi'jio Ot'wvMuanluHHlI Whon smllosaro touoht with toars, A»\(l all tho unsolaooil smimflM" sooius tt) uriovo N\'ith somo Mind want : whon Kilon-oxilot! tool Tlioir Taivulisal naron(a tVau;raj\oo thri>" tho thorny yoars Y^vom roaohloss <:anlons iiuanlod In- tho sword. Thon ihoso that brood ahovo tho t'allon ^iu^, Ov loan tVoiu lonoly oasonionls to tho moon, Tnrn round and tuiss tho touohinji' oi' a hatui : Thon sad thon an»on- near. KLAYXIC LK I{LA\('. 47 fj lli'v lull! lay i'/» (jiiarr(;l in the; inarrfli : And now and l,li(!n, AvilJi drowsy son<^ and oar, Soni(5 dim b;i,r;^(.' Hlidinjf slow from brid^'c to bridge, J)own tin; wliiic river past, arid far behind J>eft a n(!\v silcMicc!. Then she fell to muse Unto what end she eauie into this earth Whose reachi(!ss beauty made her heart so sad, As one that lov(;s, but hofies not, inly ails In ;.'azin<^ on some fiiir unlovin;^ face. Anon, there dro[)t down a ^n;at IVom far, love, to behold the(;, 'J'hat hast wailed for me so bravely an(i wcill Thy sweet life long (lor the Fairies had told thee I am the Knight that shall loosen the si)ell) And to-morrf>w moi-n mine arms shall enfold thee : And to-m(jrrow night ah, who can tell V As the s|)irit of some dark lake Tines at nightlall, wild-avvakc;, Foi- l,he appi'oaehing consummation Of a great moon he divines 47G - KLAYNK LK ULANO. Coiulnii- to hov coronation Ol" tlio tla/./.lin;^ stars anil siijnij, So niv heart, my heart, l)nrkly (^ah. ami trombllnLrly I) \N aits in mystic oxpoi'tation (From its wiKl sonroo tar aj)art) I'ntil it bo tillM uith thee — With the t'nll-orl)\l lioht of thee— () boKnedas tluni art ! With the soft sad smile that Hashes I'ntKM-neath thy lonii- dark lashes; And thy lloatini;- raven hair. From its wi-eaihod pearls let sli[>; Anil thy breath, like bahny air; And thy warm wet rosy lip, With my tirst kiss lingering; there ; Its sweet secret unreveard — Seal'd by me, to me nnscal'd ; And but, ah I she lies asleep In yon jiray stone castle-keep, 0\\ her hds the happy tear ; And alone I lin«ier here ; And to-morrow morn the fiuht ; And .... ah. me ! to-morrow night ? Here she brake, tremblinir, otV; and on the Inte, Yet vibratinix thn^ its mehHlioiis nerves, A great tear plashM and tinklcil. For awhile She sat and nuised ; and, heavily, dro|> by drop, llcr tears tell ilown ; then thro' them a slow smile Stole, fnll of April-sweetness ; and she sang — — It was a sort of ballad of the sea: A song of weather-beaten mariners, (i ray-headed men that had snrvived all winds Ami held a perilous sport among the waves. Who yet sang on with hearts a* boUl as when They clear'd their native harbour with a shont. And liftcil iioKlon anchoi^s in the sun. ELAYNK LE IJLANC. " 477 Morrily, merrily drove our barks — M(!rrily up from the morninfj beach ! And the brine broke under the prows in sparks; J^'or a spirit sat high at the liehn of each. We sail'd all day ; and, when day was done, Steer'd after the wake of the sunken sun, For we meant to follow him out of reach Till tlie gold(Mi dawn was again begun. With lift(Hl oars, with shout and song, Merry mariners all were we ! Iwery heart beat stout and strong. 'I'hro' all the world you would not sec, Tho' you should journey wide and long, A comelic^r company. And wh(!re, the echoing creeks among, Merrily, steadily, From bay to bay our barks did fall, You might hear us sitiging, one and all, A song of the mighty sea. 15ut, just at twilight, down the rocks Dim forms troop'd fast, and clearer grew : For out upon the sea-sand came The island-people, whom w(! knew, And call'd us : — girls with glowing locks ; And sunburnt boys that tend the herd Far uf) tlie vale ; gray elders too With silver beards : — their cries we heard : They call'd us, each one by his name. " Could ye not wait a little while," We heard them sing, " for all our sakes ? A little Avhile, in this old isle," They sung, " among the silver lakes ? For here." they sung, " from horn to horn Of (lowery bays the land is fair : TUv, hill-side glows with gra})es : the corn (Irows golden in the vale down there. Our maids are sad for you," -they sung: 478 ' KI.AYNK I.K Vn.AXO. ''Against the licUl no sickle iiiUs : UjKMi tlio trees onr harps are hung : Our doors are void : and in the stalls The little foxes nest; anuing The herd-roved hills no shei)hei'd ealls : Your brethren mourn lor you," they sung. " Here wee}> your wives : liere pass'd your lives Among the vines, when you were young : Here ihvell your sires : your househoUl tires Grow eohl. Keturn ! return ! " they sung. Tlien each one saw his kinsman stand Upon the shore, and wave his hanil : Anil each grew sad. But still we sung Our oeean-ehorus bold and elear ; And still upon our oars Ave hung, And held our course with steadtiist ehecr. " For we are bound lor distant shores," We eried, and taster swej)t our oars : " We pine to sec the I'aees there Of men whose tleeds we heard long sinee, AVho haunt our dreams : gray heroes : kings AVhose fame the wandering minstrel sings : And maidens, too, vnore fair than ours. With deeper eyes, and softer hair. Like hers that lel't her island bowers To wed the sullen Cornish Trinee A\'ho keeps his court upon the hill l\v the gray coasts of Tyntagill, And each, betbre he dies, must gain Some t'airy-lanil across the main." But still *' return, belov'd, return ! " The simple island-people sung : And still each mariner's heart did burn. As each his kinsman could discern. Those dim green rocks a«noug. KI.Ay.SK LE IJLAXC. 4 79 '• O'er you the; rough sea-blasts will hlow," They sung, " while here the skies are fair: Our paths arc thro' the fiehls we know : And yours you know not where." P)Ut we waved our hands ..." farewell ! farewell ! We cried . . " our white sails flap the mast : Our course is set: our oars ar(5 wet : One day " we cried, is " nearly past : C)ne day at sea ! Farewell ! farewell ! No more with you wc now may dwell !" And the next day wc were driving free (With never a sail in sight) Over the face of the mighty sea : And we counted the stars next night Rise over us by two and three With melancholy light : A grave-eyed, earnest company — And all round the salt foam white ! With this, she ceased, and sigli'd . . " tho' I were far, I know yon moated iris would not shed His f)urple crown : yon clover-field would ripple As merry in the waving wind as now : As soft the Spring down this bare hill would steal, And in the vale below tling all her flowers: Each year the wet primroses star the woods : And violets muflle the sharp rivulets : Ikound this lone casement's solitary panes The wandering ivy move and mount each year : Each year the red wheat gleam near river-banks : While, ah, with each my memory from the hearts Of men would fade, and from their lips my name. O which were best — the wide, the windy sea, With golden gleams of undiscover'd lands. Odours, and murmurs — or the placid Tort, From wanton winds, from scornful waves secure, Under the old, green, happy hiUs of home ?" ■4Sv^ » I VVNK IK 151 ANO. Sho s;U tl»rlori\. ami {>oiuKm'\1. Niuht was noar, Aiul. u\a>*slK\lliuii oVr tlto hills hov ilowv oaiups, Cauvo ilowu tho outposts of tho sontiuol stars. All in tho owlot light sho siU torlovn. Now luKstlo. hall, and gianiiv. that ovo woi\> oranmiM : Tho town boinii ohokod to Inirstin^- ot" tho oatos : V'or thoiv tho Kinii yot lav with all his Karls, Ami tho Konnvl Tablo, uuniboriuii all s.ivo one. On many a ourvinii" torraoo whioh o'orhung Tho long grav ri\or, swan-llko, tln-vV tho liioon 0( quaintost vows, movod. inuMng statoly bv, Tho lovolv I'ulios of King Arthur's I'onrt, Sighing, slio oyod thorn ti-v>m that lonoly koep. Tho nVag\Mi-lKU\novs o'or tho turrots ilivop'il, Tho hoavy twilight hangiitg in thoir tolds. Ai\il now ami thon. tWnu postorns in tho wall rho Knights stolo, lingoring tor somo last Cuhh]- night, Whispor'tl or sighM th»\>' oUxsing lattioes; (h* pausovl with rovoivnoo ot' boi\ding plumes, And lips on JowollM tingors gayly prost. rho silvor oivssots shono t"i\nn pano to pano : And tapoi-s tlittod by with tlitiing t'orms : riat\g\l tho dark stroots with olash of ii\M\ hools; C>r toll a sound of ooits in olattoring oonrts, And ihvwsy horst^boys singing in the straw, rhoso noisos lloatod upwanl. Anil within. From tho givat Hall, torovor anil anon. r>!ako gusts o( rovol ; snatohos of wild song; And laughtor ; whoro, hor siro among his mou Tannisoil botwoon tho twilight and tho dark, riio silonoo i\>u»ul about hor whoro sho sat. N'oxt in itsolf. grow sad^lor tor tho sound. Sho oUvsoil hor oyos: bot'oiv thom sooniM to tUut A djvam of lightod mvels — ilanoo auil song KLAYNK LE IJLANC. -181 in (incnvar'H palace: gorj/(?ous lournanicnts ; And rows of glitterirjj^ ayttH about tlic Queen, (Like htars in galaxies around llje moon) That sparkled reeo;/nition down below, Where rode the Knights amort witli lance and plume ; And each his lady's sleeve upon his helm : Murmuring ..." none ride fV)r me. Am I not fair, Whom men call the White Flower of Ajtolat V " Far, far without, the wiM gray marish spread, A heron startled from the pools, and flapp'd The waUir from his wings, and skirr'd away. The last long limit of the dying light Dropp'd, all on fire, behind an iron cloud : And, here and there, thro' some wild chasm of blue, Tumbled a star. The mist upon the fens Thicken'd. A billowy ojjal grew i' the crofts, Fed on the land, and suck'd into itself J^aling and park, close copse and bushless down, Changing the world for Fairies. Then the moon in the low east, unprison'd from black bars Of stagnant fog (a white light, wrought to the full, Sumrn'd in a perfect orb) rose suddenly up U[>fm the silence with a great surprise, And took the inert landscape unawares. Wliite, white, the snaky river: dark the banks : And dark the folding distance, where her eyes W(jre wildly turn'd, as tho' the whole world lay In that far blackness over Carlyel. There she espied Sir Launcelot, as he ro^le His coal-black courser downward from afar. For all his armour glitter'd as he went. And show'd like silver : and fiis mighty shield, liy dint of knightly combat hackt and worn, r>ook'd like some crackt and frozen moon tliat hangs I'jy night o'er lialtic headlands -all alone. •IS'J Ol KKN iUKNKVKKK. ro As. in lono tairv-luuls, in> st>nH> r'u'h sl»olt' Of iix>KUM\ siinvi tho wlKl wavo n\iv\nius»lv Hoaps its uiwahiod soa-wo.Uth. wooil {u\il gvm, riuni oivops K\ok slow iiito tho jjcvU sjuI sea: So t\\^n» u\v lit"o\s now soau'luni iloops to thoo. l>olo\\i, I I'ast thoso wotHl-tlowoi's. Siullo on them. Mojv than thov wioan I know not to oxpiw^. So I shrink ba^k inti> n\v oKl sail soil'. Far t\\>u\ all wonls N\horo lovo lios t"athiMnK\<5«. C,n KKN lUKNKVKKK. 'ruKNOK. \jp tiio soa-uivo«i th>oi\ atnong- iho stoms 0( miuhtv columns wluvso unnioasuivil shailes Ki\^m aislo to aislo, unhoovlovl in tho sun, MoYod >Yithout sound. I, t'ollowiuii all alono A strauiio ilosiiv that vlivw mo liko a hand, Camo unawaivs upon tho Quoon. Sho Silt In a giTat silonoo. >Yhioh hor boautv tillM Full to tho hoart i^t" it. ot» a blaok chair M.>il\l all about with suUon iioms. ami ornsts 0( sultrv bla/otirv. llor taoo was KuvVi, A panso ot' sUnnbjxnis K^auty. oVr tho liuht Ot' somo dolioious thought now-rison abovo Tho vU^^ps ol* }v»ssiou. Konnd hor stattUy hoad A sitiglo oitvlot ol* tho ivil ii~v>ld tino Biiru'd I'tvo, tivm which, on cither siilo stivauui down Twiliiihts ot* hor sott hair, t'i\>n\ nock to t*iK>t. liivon was hor kirtlo as tho onuM\>Klo is. And stitVt*ivn» hom to horn with scams at* stones l>cvond all value; which. fi\>m lci\ to rijiht lUK SKdl.l.r/H'.l) UIAJIT. 4H'.i \)\H\)ii.ti'ifti/, lialC rc,v<:;il'(J th(; hfio wy j/l<;arn Of ;i vvliiU; roix; of «poll<;HH Hainyf<; piir<;. Aii'l from lh(j wift rcpr'-Ht-ion of lutr zofn;, VVIii<;li lik<; a li;.'lif, liatj'J on a luU-Hlrin^/ pn^wnM HariMony from ilH tourrli. flovvM warmly l>ack 'IIkj horjoWtf^iiM oullirniM of a ^'lowiriff jrra^;c, Nor y<;l oul(lr>w'<;n'i th<; rcfj trar:t of tlic J'yramidH, ]m KurJpon th<; window-hill, Hard hy a lalonn bowl Ihaf, hlaz<;d i' l.|j<; Hun r<',r<;h'd a htran;."; fowl, a l'"ah'on l'<;nver(!i;;nty of old Had lieauly In all eoaHtn of ChrJKtendom !) 'J'o look into the ^reat aynH of th(; ilni^i.ix. THE NEGLKCTKO J J i. A JIT. TiiiH heart, you would not have, I laid up in a ^'rav<; Of Kon;^: with love en wound it; And wet Hweet fancicH blowing round it, 484 THE NEGLECTED HEART. Then I to others gave it ; Because you would not have it. '■' See you keep it well," I said ; " This heart's sleeping — is not dead ; But will wake some future day : See you keep it while you may." All great Sorrows in the world, — Some Avith crowns upon their heads. And in regal purple furl'd : Some with rosaries and beads ; Some with lips of scorning, curl'd At false Fortune ; some, in weeds Of mourning and of widowhood, Standing tearful and apart — Each one in his several mood, Came to take my heart. Then in holy ground they set it : With melodious weepings wet it: And revered it as they found it, AVith wild fancies blowing round it. And this heart (you would not have) Being not dead, tho' in the grave, Work'd miracles and marvels strange, xVud heal'd many maladies : Giving sight to seal'd-up eyes. And legs to lame men sick for change. The fame of it grew great and greater. Then said you '• Ah. Avhat's the matter ? How hath this heart, I would not take. This weak heart, a child might break — This poor, foolish heart of his — Since won worship such as this ? *' You bethought you then . . . *' Ah me What if this heart, I did not choose APPEARAKCES. 485 To retain, hath found the key Of" the kingdom ? and I lose A great power ? Me he gave it : Mine the right, and I will have it." Ah, too late ! For crowds exclaim'd " Ours it is : and hath been claim'd. Moreover, where it lies, the spot Is holy ground : so enter not. None but men of mournful mind — Men to darken'd days resign'd ; Equal scorn of Saint and Devil ; Poor and outcast ; halt and blind ; Exiles from Life's golden revel ; Gnawing at the bitter rind Of old griefs ; or else, confined In proud cares, to serve and grind, — May enter : whom this heart shall cure. But go thou by : thou art not poor : Nor defrauded of thy lot : Bless thyself: but enter not ! " APPEARANCES. Well, you have learn'd to smile. And no one looks for traces Of tears about your eyes. Your face is like most faces. And who will ask, meanwhile, If your face your heart belies ? Are you happy ? You look so. Well, I wish you what you seem. Happy persons sleep so light ! In your sleep you never dream ? But who would care to know What dreams you dream'd last night ? 48G KKTKOSrKOTlOXS. now TIIK SON(^, WAS MADE. 1 SAT low down, at miilniiiht. in a valo Mystorlous with tlio silence of bine pines : Wlnte-elovi-n by a snaky river-tail, VneoilM from tanjiled wefts of silver twines. Out of a ernniblin^- eastle. on a spike Of splinter'd roek, a mile of ehangeless shade (lOrjzed half the landscape. Down a ilismal dyke Of black hills the slniced moonbeams stream'd, and staid. The world lay like a poet in a swoon. When (lOil is on him. tillM with heaven all thro' — A dim face fnll of dreams tnrn'd to the moon. With milil lips moist in melancholy dew. T ]ilnck'd bine mnLI•^vort, livid mandrakes, balls C)f blossonfd nightshade, heatls of hemlock, long White urasses, grown in oozy intervals (.)f marsh, to make ingredients tor a song: A song of monrning to embalm the Past — The corpse-cold Past — that it shonld not decay; lint in dark vaidts of memory, to the last. Endure unchanged: for in some future day 1 will bring m} new love to look at it (Laying aside her gay robes tor a moment) That, seeing what love came to, she may sit Silent awhile, and muse, but make no comment. RETUOSrECriONS. To-Nnmr she will dance at the Palace, With the diamonds in her hair : THY VOICE ACIIOSS MY SPIRIT FALLS. 487 And tlio Prince will praiso her beauty — U'hc loveliest lady there ! But tones, at times, in the music Will brin^^ back for^^'otten thin;^3 : vVnd her heart will fail h(;r sometimes, When her beauty is praised at the King's. There sits in his silent eliamber A stern and sorrowful man : ]>iit a strange sweet dream comes to him, While the lamp is burning wan, Of a sunset among the vineyards In a lone and lovely land. And a maiden standing near him, With fresh wild-flowers in her hand. THY VOICE ACIIOSS MY SPIRIT FALLS. Tmy voice across my spirit falls Like some spent sea-wind thro' dim halls Of ocean-kings, left bare and wide ((ireeri floors o'er which the sea-weed crawls !) Where once, long since, in festal pride Some Chief, who roved and ruled the tide, Amon^ his brethren reign'd and died. I dare not meet tliine eyes ; for so, In gazing there, I sec^m once more To lapse away thro' days of yore To homes where laugh and song is o'er, Whose inmates each went long ago — Like some lost sotil, that keeps the semblance On its brow of ancient grace Not all faded, wandering back 488 A visu^x OF viuaiNs. To slloiit I'hninbors, iti (lio track Of tlio. tAvilioht, iVoiu the Plat'O Of rolrlbutlvo luMuoiubraiico. Ah, turn aside thoso ovos ajiain ! Thoir liijlit lias loss of jov than pain. Wo aro not now what wo woro thou. THE RUINF.D PALACE. BisoKKN aro Iho I'aiax'O windows: Kotlinp; is tho Palaoo floor. Tho damp wind lifts tho arras. Anil swings tho oroakinj:; door ; l>nt it only startlos tho whito owl From his juM-oh on a nionaroh's throne, And tho rat that was onawino- tho harpstrings A Qnoon onoo jilay'd upon. l\iro you lingor horo at niidniiiht Alouo, whon tho wind is about. And tho bat, and tho nowt, and tho viper, And tho oroeping tliinas oomo out ? Beware of these ghostly ohanibers ! Soaroh not what my heart hath been, Lest you find a phantom sitting Where onoo there sat a (^ueon. A VISION OF VIRGINS. I ii.\i> a vision of tho night. It soemM There Avas a long red traot of barren land, I>U>ekt in by blaok hills, Avhere a half-moon dream'd Of morn, and whiten'd. Drifts of drv brown sand, A VISION OF VIIIOIXS. 4H'J Tills way and tliaf, woro licapt IhsIow : and Mats Of water :—j(lann^' sJiallows. wlicn; Hlran^^o bats Canne and went, and moths lliek(!r'd. To tlie rlo;h<, A dusty road that crept alon^f; the wastr; Ivike a \vhit(! snake; : and, further nj), I traced The shachnv of a ^reat house, far In sij^lit : A Iiiiiidred cas(unents all ablaze with li^^ht: And forms that fht atliwart them as in hast(; : And a slow music, such as sometimes kings Command at mighty revels, softly sent From viol, and flute, and tabor, and tlic strings Of many a HW(!et and slumbrous instiiimeiit That wound into tlie mute heart of the night Out of that dist,anee. Then I could perceive A glory pouring thro' an open door, And in tlu; light five wonum. I l)elievo They wore white vestments, all of them. They were Quite calm ; and eatdi still face unearthly fair, Unearthly cpiiet. So lik(^ statu(!S all. Waiting t,hey stood wit.hout that lighted hall ; And in their hands, like a blue star, they held Each one a silver lamp. ^J'hen T beheld A shadow in the doorway. And One came Crown'd for a feast. T could not see the Face. The Form was not all human. As tbe flame Stream'd over it, a presence took the place With awe. He, turning, took them by the hand, And led than. 1 knew INly hour had »'on\e, and to the bark I went. Still were the stately deeks, and hung with silk Of stoled erinison : at the masthead burn'd A steadt'ast tire with inllnenee like a star, And underneath a eoueh of gold. 1 loosed The dri[)ping ehain. There was not any wind : Hut all at onee the magie sails began To belly and hea\e, and like a bat that wakes And tlits by night, l)eneath her swarthy wings The blaek shij) roek'd, ami moved. I heard anon A hunnning in the eonlage and a sound Like bees in sirmmer, and the bark went on, Atul on, and on, until at last the worhl Was roU'd away and I'olded out of sight. And I was all alone on tlie great sea. 'I'here a tleep awe fell on my spirit. My wound Began to bite. 1, ga/ing round, beheld A Lady sitting silent at the helm, A woman white as death, and fair as dreams. 1 would have asked her *' Whither do we sail ? " Ami " how ? " but that my fear elung at my heart, And held me still. She, answering my doubt, Said slowly, '• To the Isle of Avalon." Ami straightway we were nigh a strand all gold, That glittered in the nuion between the dusk ()f han*>in'v bowers made rieh with blooms and balms. From whirh faint gusts eame to me ; and 1 heard A sound of lutes among the vales, and songs And Yoiees faint like voiees thro' a dream That siiid or seem'd to say, " Hail Uermandiaz ! " SONG. 497 SONG. In llio warm, bla(;k mill-pool winking, The first (ImiI^UuI star sliincis blue : And alone here 1 lie lliinkin<( O such lia[)[)y thoughts of you 1 Up tlic porch the roses clamber, And the Uowers we sowM last June ; And the casement of your (diamber Shines between them to the moon. Look out, love ! flinir wide the lattice: Wind the red rose in your hair, And the little white clematis Which 1 pluck'd for you to wear : Or come down, and let me Iiear you Singing in the scented grass. Thro' tall cowsli[)S nodding near you, Just to touch you as you pass. For, where you pass, the air With warm hints of love grows wise: You — the dew on your dim hair. And the smile in your soft eyes ! From the hayfield comes your brother; There, your sisters stand together, Singing clear to one another Tliro' the dark blue summer weather ; And the maid the latch is- clinking. As she lets her lover thro' : But alone, love, 1 lie thinking O such tender thoughts of you ! 32 498 THE SWALLOW. — CONTRABAND. THE SWALLOW. SWALLOW chirping in the sparkling eaves, AVhy hast thou left lar south tliy fairy homes, To buikl between tliese drenched April-leaves, And sing me songs ol" Spring before it comes ? Too soon thou singest ! Yon black stubborn thorn Bursts not a bud : the sneaping -wind drit'ts on. She that once thing thee crumbs, and in the morn Sang from the lattice Avhere thou sing'st, is gone. Here is no Spring. Thy Jlight yet further follow. Fly ott', vain ^wallow ! Thou com'st to mock me with remember'd things. 1 love thee not, O bird for me too gay. That which I want thou hast — the gift of wings : Grief — -which I have — thou hast not. Fly away ! What hath my roof for thee ? my cold dark roof, Beneath whose weei)inii' thatch thine eulaces Sudden warmths of sunny faces : Many a lovely laughing maiden Bearing on her loose dark locks Bich fruit-baskets heavy-laden, In and out among the rocks. Knowing not that we behold her. Now, love, tell me can you hear, Growing nearer, and more near, Sound of song, and plash of oar, From wild bays, and inlets hoar, While above yon isles atar Ghostlike sinks last night's last star ? CFIANGKS. 505 CHANGES. Wtiom first wo love, you know, we seldom wed. Time rules us all. And Life, indeed, is not The tliinjij we [)lanned it out ere hope was dead. And then, we women cannot choose our lot. Much must be borne which it is hard to bear: Much given away which it w(!re sweet to keep. God help us all ! who need, indexed His care. And yet, I know, tlx; ShcplKu-d loves his sheep. My little boy befrins to babble now Upon my knee his earliest infant prayer. lie has his father's eagc^r eyes, I know. And, they say too, his mother's sunny hair. But when he sleeps and smiles upon my knee. And 1 can fe(!l his light breath come and go, I think of one (Heaven help and pity me !) Who loved me, and whom I loved, long ago. Who might have been ... ah, what I dare not think ! We all are changed. God judges for us best. God help us do our duty, and not shrink. And trust in heaven humbly for the rest. But blame us women not, if some appear Too cold at tinies ; and some too gay and light. Some griefs gnaw deep. Some woes are hard to bear. Who knows the Past ? and who can I'udge us right ? Ah, were we judged by what we might have been, And not by what we are, too apt to fall ! My little child — he sleeps and smiles between These thoughts and me. In heaven we shall know all ! 506 JUDICIUM PAUIDIS. JUDICIUM PARIDIS. I SAID, when young, " Beauty's the supreme joy. Her I will choose, and in all forms will face her; Rye to eye, lip to lip, and so embrace her With my whole heart." I said this being a boy. " First, I will seek her — naked, or clad only In her own god-head, as I know of yore Great bards beheld her." So by sea and shore I sought her, and among the mountains lonely. " There be great sunsets in the wondrous West; And marvel in the orbings of the moon ; And glory in the jubilees of June; And power in the deep ocean. For the rest, " Green-glaring glaciers ; purple clouds of pine ; AVhite walls of ever-roaring cataracts ; Blue thunder drifting over thirsty tracts; The homes of eagles; these, too, are divine, " And terror shall not daunt me — so it be Beautiful — or in storm or in eclipse : Rocking pink shells, or wrecking freighted ships, I shall not shrink to find her in the sea. " Next, I will seek her — in all shapes of wood. Or brass, or marble ; or in colours clad ; And sensuous lines, to make my spirit glad. And she shall change her dress with every mood. " Rose-latticed casements, lone in summer lands — Some witch's bower : pale sailors on the marge Of magic seas, in an enchanted barge Stranded, at sunset, upon jevvell'd sands : JUDICIUM PARIDIS. 507 " White nymphs amonfi the lilies : shepherd kings : And pink-hoov'd Fawns : and moon'd Endymions: From every channel thro' which Beauty runs To fertilize the world with lovely things " I will draw freely, and be satisfied. Also, all legends of her apparition To men, in earliest times, in each condition, I will inscribe on portraits of my bride. " Then, that no single sense of her be wanting, Music ; and all voluptuous combinations Of sound, with their melodious palpitations To charm the ear, the cells of fancy haunting. -^ "And in her courts my life shall be outroU'd As one unfurls some gorgeous tapestry, Wrought o'er with old Olympian heraldry, All purple-woven stiff with blazing gold. "And I will choose no sight for tears to flow : I will not look at sorrow : I will see Nothing less fair and full of majesty Than young Apollo leaning on his bow. "And I will let things come and go : nor range For knowledge: but from moments pluck delight: The while the great days ope and shut in light, And wax and wane about me, rich with change. "Some cup of dim hills, where a white moon lies, Dropt out of weary skies without a breath. In a great pool : a slumb'rous vale beneath : And blue damps prickling into white fire-liies : "Some sunset vision of an Oread, less Than half an hour ere moonrise caught asleep With a flusht cheek, among cnisht violets deep — A warm half-glimpse of milk-white nakedness, 508 JUDICIUM TARIDIS. *' On sumptuous summer eves : shall wake for me Rapture from all the various stops of life ; Making it like some eharm'd Arcadian fife Fill'd by a wood-god with his ecstasy." These things I said while I was yet a boy, And the world show'd as between dream and waking A man may see the face he loves. So, breaking Silence, I cried ..." Thou art the supreme Joy ! " My spirit, as a lark hid near the sun, *• Caroll'd at morning. But ere she had dropt Half down the rainbow-colour'd years that propp'd Her gold cloud up, and broadly, one by one, The world's great harvest-lands broke on her eye, She changed her tone, ..." What is it I may keep '? For look here, how the merry reapers reap : Even children glean : and each puts something by. " The pomps of morning pass : when evening comes, What is retain'd of these which I may show ? If for the hills I leave the fields below I fear to die an exile from men's homes. " Tho' here I see the orient pageants pass, I am not richer than the merest hind That toils below, all day, among his kind. And clinks at eve glad horns in the dry grass." Then, pondering long, at length I made confession. " I have err'd much, rejecting all that man did : For all my pains I shall go empty-handed : And Beauty, of its nature foils possession." JUDICIUM PARIDIS. 509 Thereafter, 1 said ..." Knowledge is most fair. Surely to know is better than to see. To see is loss : to know is fjain : and we Grow old. I will store thriftily, with care." In which mood I endured for many years, Valuing all things for their iurther uses : And seeking knowledge at all open sluices : Tho' oft the stream turn'd brakish with my tears. Yet not the less, for years in this same mood I rested : nor from any ol)ject turn'd That had its secret to be spell'd and learn'd, Murmuring ever " Knowledge is most good." Unto which end I shunn'd the revelling And ignorant crowd, that eat the fruits and die : And call'd out Plato from his century To be my helpmate : and made Homer sing. Until the awful Past in gather'd heaps AA^eigh'd on my brain, and sunk into my soul, And sadden'd thro' my nature, till the whole Of life was darken'd downward to the deeps. And, wave on wave, the melancholy ages Crept o'er my spirit : and the years displaced The landmarks of the days : life waned, effaced From action by the sorrows of the sages : And my identity became at last The record of those others : or, if more, A hollow shell the sea sung in : a shore Of footprints which the waves wash'dTrom it fast. And all was as a dream whence, holding breath, It seem'd, at times, just possible to break By some wild nervous eHbrt, with a shriek, Into the real world of life and 'death. 510 JUDICIUM PARIDIS. But tliat thought saved me. Thro' the dark I scream'd Against the darkness, and the darkness broke, And broke that nightmare: back to life ,1 woke, Tho' weary with the dream which I had dream'd. O life ! life ! life ! With laughter and with tears I tried myself: I knew that I had need Of pain to prove that this was life indeed, With its warm privilege of hopes and fears. O Love of man mathi Life of man, that saves ! O man, that standest looking on the light : That standest on the forces of the night : That standest up between the stars and graves ! O man ! by man's dread privilege of pain, Dare not to scorn tliine own soul nor thy brother's : Tho' thou be more or less than all the others. Man's life is all too sad for man's disdain. The smiles of seraphs are less awful far Than are the tears of this humanity, That sound, in drop])ing, thro' Eternity, Heard in God's ear beyond the furthest star. If that be true — the hereditary hate Of Love's lost Rebel, since the worlds be- gan,— The very Fiend, in hating, honours Man : Flattering with Devil-homage Man's estate. If two Eternities, at strife for us. Around each human soul wage silent war, Dare we disdain ourselves, tho' faU'n we are, With Ilell and Heaven lookiuij; on us thus? JUDICIUM PARIDIS. 511 Whom God bath loved, whom Devils dare not scorn, Despise not thou — the meanest human creature. Climb, if" thou canst, the heights of thine own nature, And look toward Paradise where each was born. So I spread sackcloth on my former pride : And sat down, clothed and cover'd up with shame : And cried to God to take away my blame Among my brethren : and to these 1 cried To come between my crime and my despair, That they might help my heart up, when God sent Upon my soul its proper punishment, Lest that should be too great for me to bear. And so I made my choice : and learn'd to live Again, and wor'ship, as my spirit yearn'd : So much had been admired — so much been learn'd — So much been given me — O, how much to give ! Here is the choice, and now the time, O chooser ! Endless the consequence tho' brief the choice. ' Echoes are waked down ages by thy voice : Speak : and be thou the gainer or the loser. And I bethought me long ..." Tho' garners split, If none but thou be fed art thou more full ? " For surely Knowledge and the Beautiful Are human ; must have love, or die for it ! To Give is better than to Know or See : And both are means : and neither is the end : Knowing and seeing, if none call thee friend. Beauty and knowledge have done nought ibr thee. .012 .IIIDICIUM I'AltlDIS. 'J'ho' fat A))lir()(lil(i all d wavering into rest, Half seen athwart the dim dclicioMs light Of languid eyes : J3ut softly, soberly; and dark — more dark ! 'J'ill my lilt's shadow lose ilsidf in thine. Athwart the light of slo\vly-gatlu>riiig tears, That come between me and the starlight, shine From (hstant melandioly de(!ps divine, AVhile day slips downward thro' a rosy are To otluM" spheres. SONG. Flow, freshly flow, Dark stream, below ! While stars grow light above : 15y willowy l)anks, thro' lonely down^ Fast terraced walls in silent towns. And bear me to my love ! Still, as we go, Blow, gently blow, Warm wijul, and blithely move These dreamy sails, that slowly glide- A shadow on the shining tide 'I'hat bears me to my love. Ml KOUHKAKAMM':. Fade, swot'tly fadt^ In dowv sluulo On lonely graniio and iirovo, O lin<>orini; day I aiul brinijj the niijht Thro* all hor nHlk->vhiti> nia/.os briijht 'ri\at tivnible o'or my lovo. The snnset wanes From t\vinklin hy TICKNOU AND FIELDS. ir^" Sont free of postage on receipt of price. ,^^^ LONOFELLOW'S PKOSE WORKS. 2 voIh. $1.75. LONOFELLOVV'S POKTICAL WORKS. 2 vols. $1.76 LOWELL'S I'OKTICAL WORKS. 2 vols. $1.50. TENNYSONS POIiTKJAL WORF^S. 1 vol. 76 cents. PI'^RCIVALS POETICAL WORKS. 2 vols. $1.75. MOTHERWELL'S POETKJAL WORKS. 1 voL 75 cents. OWEN MEREDITir'S I'OETKJAL WORKS. 1vol. 75 ceiitrj. WIIITTIERS POETKJAL WORKS. 2 voIh. $1.50. LEIOir HUNT'S POETKJAL WORKS. 2 vols. $1.50 GERALD MASSEY'S I'OETICAL WORKS. 1 vol. 75 cents. BOWUING'S MATINS AND VESPERS. 1 vol. 75 cents. MRS. JAMESON'S CHARACTERISTICS OF WOMEN. 1 vol. 75 cents. MRS. JAMESON'S LOVES OF THE POETS. 1 vol. 75 cents. MRS. JAMESON'S DIARY OP AN ENNUYEE. 1 vol. 76 cents. MRS. .JAMESON'S SKETCHPIS OF ART. 1 vol, 75 cents. 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