IPS 3507 0717 IV6 1921 Copy 1 K;^ i ■'■'^fkhfi'"-': ' ■''\^i*^j^'i^. >, t ■ ''' ' '.^ ii?.'-:^!'i'0''" ' ■^'fS^I \.yi "I. ;t"< iJOlli^YH'a Copyrighted, 1921 VOYAGERS AND OTHER VERSES AND BALLADS . . . BY , . . Stanley Donovan You led me on; and if percliance I falter, Or stoop to that irhicli is not ivorthy, lead Me ever up; if I profane the altar Of your high hopes, I shall be lost indeed! Dotvn in the inner soul of me Whose sacristy is all my oivn, I know that I alone may see — ■ I stand alone. Within this heart of hate and fear, Of love and passion and desire, Mine is the kingdom; smoidders here The eternal fire. And tho' this world make mock of me, Or hear me upivard to the Throne, I know that I alone may see — I stand (done! DEC 31 7 C1A656450 Pogag^rs Many years I sought no place here and would scorn to lie ) Here at length within the haven, while the fleets were sailing hy, AVhile the tattle-flags were streaming and our banner in the ] sky : Tossed beyond yon battered headland, as we sheered away to sea, [ We that sunk the fleets of Slavers — we that saw the Slave set > free. . . . Ay, but now it is no matter: there is no more neod for me! Strange, to be lying here now lapt in ease Who lately was so blown upon ! 1 taste The heady dregs of lasting memories: jSTo sickly aftermath — no hope nor haste ! What have I now but watching o'er the seas. Who lately was so blown Among the moving tides and swifter foam. Far, far from these lowlands that men call horiie ? The long sea line. Tapering in its sun-lit fastnesses. Its grave aridity — Tapering to gray distances, blue haze And purple shadows far ; Myriad points of pure Avhite light that glitter on the brine. Dance shoreward and weave lazily a broken line; The flashing loom that, seaman says. Wove destinies for ships at sea And caught the falling star. 0, if I could but compass all I see. And let my soul run out, as yon bleak coast Shouldering into the arid light of noon One AVitli utter dignit}- — Piercing the beauty and the mystery; Piercing the menacing void, the winter moon. The huge air-castles soaring, and the host Of mists and storm-clouds moving ceaselessly! My quest might then be ended In all security. then a sunset splendid Might bring some peace to me ! Even as they who gazed Across the verge mist-ridden and sun-hazed — "Who brings us tidings of a younger world! Let him be praised — be praised ! "No more the huge expanse May yield us argosies, Nor laden fleets enhance The tumult of the quays. "Rest here and seek no Islands of the Blest, Sail thou not East nor Vv^est; To sleep and dream and sleep were best — Turn thou and rest!" Strong are the bonds that keep us from lone ways; We are not loath to leave the Works and Days And idle as men idle ; everywhere Burst the spent bubbles of their idle i>raise^ — Fair things — lor were it sense to call them fair, So blown and so. departed? — fit subject for despair! Unresting seas call sullen in the dark And all the coast re-echoes. I have heard That voice that sounds from out the deep — hark To that imperious word! Sullen it may he, heavy with dull care, Yet all the night throbs, and th e outer air Is lightened of the &ilence of despair. Sullen it may he: let me then be stirred To that dull care and ancient restlessness. Haply I look beyond — I can but guess; I look within and find no guerdon there ! Eest here? 1 fain would rest, ah, fain recline On what I have — old age is very hard; The seas call loud and deep, the heavens are starred, The old lamp's beacon, and all things combine To what ? . . . give me some old hulk that bore Brave hearts that dared die to the seats of war, And head her West, and nail her flag before My dying eyes — the flag that I may guard — I will not ask for more. Three (U^ptai ams Out of the firmament. Nebulas, chaos, They that array us Each in his permanent Del 03 or Devon, — Come you the unafraid, Strong and yet gentle. What if Death's mantle Cover you?' Ye liave made Ways unto Heaven. You of eternity, You the undying, Heed to our crying; Heal man's infirmity, Bridge the Seas Seven! Four ^n ^mgrna Te]] me, Love, if we shall be Always bound siipenially, Like the vines that grow^ together; Or, like clouds in stormy weather, Shall we nestle up so nearly That the one we love most dearly Groan for space, and dreadful thunder Drown the words of lovef — I wonder. When the gods have i)ut to sea In a ship with you and me ; Wlien the moans of men behind us. When the last lone ties that bind us Sink beyond the whitened wake, "And there's not a heart to break" — You and I embarked together, Shall we find no stormy weather? Five Ptstnrg ^ymks I am tlie last of your fathers ; I am burdened with toil and prayer; There was nothing I would not tackle, There was nothing I would not dare ; And you seek me, the seed of my efforts ; These centuries past you have come To the shrine of forgotten knowledge, And you have not found me dumb. From the mouths of forgotten peoples, From the ]ii)S of forgotten saints, They seek, with their endless burthens, They seek, with their ceaseless plaints, Some Word of a holy birthright, Whose accent I have not heard; But they turn in the end to my hovel. And they haik in the end to my Word ! I see them in dusty columns, In the heat of an August noon ; I mark their dreadful passage By the bones on a desert dune ; I see them forever arriving, Departing for nowhere, it seems. And I mark with an infinite wonder Their multitudes of dreams ! And the End comes not to my knowledge, Whither ye wend or go, But a memory of brave things done here, Of the things that have been I know. But dreams : if you ask for a vision, Go get you a prophet anew, I have only the knowledge of living, And my dreams have all come true. Six As dry as the dust of the desert, As bleak as an arotie wind, You may gaze in my eyes forever, And I grudge you not what you find. If some portion of truth you cherish, I will mark you aright, my son. For the Liar alone must perish In the light of a thing well done. Seven Aftermath (^ We who have seen red death come swiftly to our kind, Seen them depart like children called to a mother's arms, We who have left the dreadful taint and the scars of war be- hind, Hope against hope that we may forget — we sound no fresh alarms. Weary of lust and blood and shame, we ask some peace on earth. Some chance reward of the holocaust, we who lifted the bond : And our words come bellowing back to us, ''Your triumph's of little worth — ''Better the bloody paths of war than the dull dead years beyond ! ' ' Behold the wheels that have ground alway, they are grinding faster now. And the weary men go down to toil even as you to war. You have seen old evils tramx^led down, and they spring, it boots not how. Fresh from forgotten yesterdays, and flaunt and flourish once more ! We who have toiled these weary miles beneath a mocking sky. Traversed the horrible bloody wastes of the Argonne and the Somme, Died on the Marne and the Yser, and were not ashamed to die For a glorious snow-white standard borne high on a splendid dawn — ■ This we have seen and followed far, strong peoples in their pride ; And who shall say these dreams of ours were vain and fool- ish and fondf But the truth comes bellowing back to us— "Some one has lied — has lied! "Better the bloody paths of war than the dull, dead years beyond ! ' ' Eight Behold the wheels that have ground alway, yon have greased them with your gore; Ton wage new war on a stricken foe — you starve whom you once had fought; And the weary men go down to toil, even as you to w^ar, And the wheels go round — and tlie wheels go round — hut where 's the Peace we bought! Nine i|tta-dlHp The incoming host of seas tliat shatter themselves in laughter, And hiss on the stricken beach at the combers following after — They sing me a song of my own, my bnckies of the sea; From the dull-green shuddering depths they chant it heartily. The spendthrift seas that press— they have roared the ditty long; With white locks jauntily tossed and grizzled flanks that throng To an infamous kind of finish; but you'll ever hear them cry For an inshore wind and a bit of a squall and the cloud-wrack scurrying by. I, in my harbor fastness, or fronting the open sea, I hear them — the desperate buckles — -a-chanting heartily. They spin me their endless sagas, of open sea or bay; Of derelicts, sunken treasure and cargo gone astray; Of the ends and the aims of seafaring — vain echoes of deep- sea lore. Forever they chatter and gossip, but they've alwaj^s some- thing more. Like the creaking gulls that comb them for the refuse of the tide, To pass unheard with the wreaths of oil where ships at anchor ride. Ten t/ m^XtZ ^XMV^ Eleven They have made no mean eomplaint, Their songs are not of pain; No tears were shed for their graveless dead, Whose teeth gleamed through the rain. Their lips move not in agony l^or mercy of the Lord; They heed not prayer, nor douht, nor care, Who are welded to the Sword. But ere the rumble of the guns. Their faded columns go, God grant that there he some — he some To seek and share and. know! Twelve ^Rnut^-^tep Drag your feet — I'm draggin' mine! Pick 'em ii[) an' set 'em down ! Don't you think o' notliin' — ain't no use o' thinkin' now; Get your pack a-ridin' easy — we're leavin' this here town, Headed God knows where today — we'll get there anyhow. Leavin' this here town today. Ain't it mean to leave AVhen you got new billets an' you won a fiiond; When some dark-eyed maiden sympathizes when you grieve For the things you'll never get! Well, it's got to end! Drag your feet — I'm draggin' mine! Hear the hob-nails clumpin' down On the cobbles echoin' up the village street — Clinkety-clink-clink-clink-clink-clink — ^movin' thro' the town. In the early mornin' you can hear them draggin' feet, Movin' out an' movin' in; thousands of 'em following, Some up Front an' some retum'n' — who's the lucky ones? Get your pack a-ridin easy — hold the Colum's swing — Get your feet to marchin' to the music o' the Guns! Pick 'em up an' set 'em down; keep your eyes ahead o' you — Keep 'em on the shoulders o' the man you're just behind; You'll find it's long kilometers they're passin' by instead o' you. An' you'll drag thro' with the Colum' in a cheerful frame o' mind. Don't I know she weighs a ton? Don't I hear you groan When the straps cut in an' tug, A\a^enchin' at your spine? When the muscle of your shoulder's just a raw red bone, You're soldierin', you're soldiei-in'! if you stick, you're doin' fine. Tliirteen Drag your feet — I'm draggin' mine! Pick 'em up an' set 'em down! Route-ste}) — don't it never c«id? I do it in my sleep; I'm seasick with the swing of it — I'm crazy with the sound — I see them brown backs heavin' like a herd of 0. D. sheep! Left hand liooks the gun-sling, right hand swingin' free, Head bent low an' pullin' like a mule, All the way from Breteuil to the Seine, an' to the sea. All the way from Chaumont into Tout! Foiii'tetil (Eantigi ttr Cantigiiy town we took it — ('a]iti.i>iiy town it fell To a liiindred tons o' Yankee steel — bnt sa\, that place was hell! They left us an' forjj;-ot us, where the ni,i>lit sky blay^ed an' shook, An' slee]) was a forgotten thing — we earnt the ground we took! They throwed u]) hills where there was roads ; they shot froin God knows wliere, An' there was gas an' worse than gas wliei'e tliefe usetn^ Out liere wliere the avacado And the loose-leaved mango sway, Where a breath comes down off the mountains From valleys far away. Valleys of heat and thunder, Of labor and dust and sweat — We never do much but wonder Why the world is forever in debt. Not yet! Manana — tomorrow we'll do it; Manana — just try and forget! Tomorrow's an infinite meaning, The verge of undone things, Wliere the shadows of good intentions Meet the ghosts of our blunderings. It '11 all work out in season ; Manana we'll pay — not yet; For tomorrow's an excellent reason Why today should be out o' debt! 'Not yet! Manana' — tomorrow we '11 do it ; Man ana — just try and forget I ''orty IRomante He dreams of her now with her tawny hair ; Her slender length that was more than fair — How he loved her! With her ripple of laughter that set him aflame. With her moods and her ways that were never the same ; She made him a Thing, but she wasn't to blame — He loved her! She was only a girl-^eighteen or so — But a wondrous power for weal or woe — How he loved her! The lies he told her, the vows he swore, The shameless, nameless things he bore. And all for a fool who was half a whore, Foi' he loved her! Love? It was good enough for him To humor and wait on her lightest whim, For he loved her! To feed on her lies till the tainted sweet Grew bitter and stale, like a thing you eat Too often — but then he was under her feet. He loved her! She gave and he gave — it was he who lost ; There was never an hour he reckoned the cost, For he loved her! Till the day she told him, with gearw a frown. And he knew beyond doubt that she turned him down, That she cast him ot¥ like a passe gown — Hoiv he loved her! Forty -one All the whispered vows, the passionate lies ; Yet he could not know that the girl was wise; For he loved her ! I saw her today, and she passed me by With a painted face and a haggard eye. It's a curious thing! I wonder why He loved her ! Forty-twu ®1|2 Jcbt No god of theirs we turn to, no shrine of theirs we hold Worthy of our inclement day — with virtues manifold^ Out of the past they come to me, these rough-hewn hearts of gold ! They had no fear of darkness ; broad lands at their behest Eose on the rims of unknown seas from out the molten West Where the sea-lanes ran with red and gold when the great sun sank to rest. Their spars are grey with salt sprays, their decks with clotted spume, Who fronted the livid Arctic Lights where death's dark portals loom, AVliere mad stars plunge from the zenith and are lost within the gloom. They sailed from out safe harbors, with the Craven at the wake, And the world had neither ban nor bar, and they took — what could they take? Those were the days that bred the men of Grenville and of Drake. And many a shattered wreck drifts up to rest in a shallower main ; They swing with the weed in shadow there, and keep, where they have lain, Strange vigil with that destiny to which all men attain. Forty-tliree m^t ^iink When the long barrage lias lifted an' the dead lay tliick as flies, An' tlie hot sun falls thro' liftin' smoke out-a the brassy skies, When your tongue's like the back o' your hand, an' the sting o' gas in your eyes — The stink, my God, the stinkl When vou're out on workin' detail, or you're witli the Night Patrol, When you've lost your way in the throbbin' dark an' flop in some nasty hole, An' you land with a scrunch on a rotten corpse, it's then it tries your soul — Tlic stink, my God, the stink! When the slum comes up in G. I. cans an' the Java passes round, An' you squat with the chow between your knees on the shakm' quakin' ground. You may resent war's odors, but you scoff 'em up like a hound — The stink, my God, the stink! When the evenin' breeze turns round again an' blow's across the flat, An' lingerin' on each funiin' stiff it flits from this to that, An' wafts 'em to your nostrils in the dugout where you're at— The stink, my God, the stink! Forty- I'our l^nxis ^ead^ Wluit's the name dii' cluufics, Scif/cdiit.^ "It's Private Kelly, sir, l/nder influence o' li(inor!" ('(Ill i/ou fell me irliere you irei'ef "In gay Paree — forgot my ])ass! Yon can stake nie out to eatin' grass For the giddiest goat an' the dunihest ass lu the Army!" r/iist fake his full nmne, Sergennf, And his numher aucl his rani;, "His dog-tags call him Kelly, sir, But his given name's a blank!" "They didn't label me right, you see — While monikers is passiii' free. There's a usitable name for such as me lloiv long's he ahsenf, Sergeuni? "It's goin' on six days, sir!" Noir tell me, Private Kelly, Just tell me where you ire re. "I was somewhere round (lare Mont[)arnass, Suckin' up drink at a franc a glass — That's why I claim I'm the dumbest ass There's a usitable name for such as me ii-ty-llvn Beyoud the baths of a hindly sun, Beyond our utmost quest — Within the outer hemispheres,. . Hateful and hot with heathen, tears. With savage hates and uncoutJt fears — They hear the ancient test. It is th.elr destiny to find The untouched day of hope; To dig with hands that are wearied now For the virgin gold that dreams cdlow; To cut their way — they care not how — To the light, that they need not grope. It is their destiny to see Old lines of creed and birth Swept like a blot from the new-tilled sod That knouts no insolent baron's rod, By the stalwart son, half man, half god. Who serves no lord on earth. l"orty-six ..'T.,W* '■*- Vj*' ,/'»' V,*«*^ vS" <, 4*x * 'i ,*» ■»