THE CHRISTM AsTR AIL AND OTHER POEMS Skirley Harvey J LIBRARY OF CAUPORNIA SAN DIEGO THE CHRISTMAS TRAIL AND OTHER POEMS THE CHRISTMAS TRAIL AND 3 3 OTHER POEMS BY SHIRLEY HARVEY CONCORD NEW HAMPSHIRE 1916 Copyright, 1916, by Shirley Harvey To EDWIN LESLIE MCFALLS To The Aegis and The Bema the author is indebted for permission to reprint many of the poems appearing in this volume CONTENTS Page The Christmas Trail i Dream Paths 2 The Chapel Bells 3 The Cabin 4 Dartmouth to Her Sons 5 The Trophy Room 6 To the College Church 7 To the Old Bridge 8 Path o Dreams 9 The Elms of Easton Gray 10 The Butterfly u A Pool in the Woods 12 The Song of St. Martin s Bridge 13 Christmas Eve 14 Failure 15 The Toy-Shop 16 The Song of the Riders 17 Youth Calls 19 Evening 20 An Eastern Parable 21 A Challenge 22 Vox Tempestatis 23 The Search of Spring 25 Galatea 26 To a Girl Who Couldn t Endure Tobacco" 28 To a Plagiarist 29 Here s to - 30 August 1914 31 The Shadow 32 To One Who Died in the Service of the Red Cross 33 vii Page Tramp Steamers at Dawn 34 A Railroad Yard at Night 35 The Song of the Crickets 36 The Oxen 38 A Cow-Path 40 The Song of the Ground-Hog 41 The Sestina of the New Englander 42 Going Down the Hill 44 viii THE CHRISTMAS TRAIL I HE snows drift deep on the mountain s breast, A And the winds from the north are still, There s a star in the east, and one in the west, And the moonlight s on the hill. Tis vain you look for the campfire glow, And hark for a friendly hail, For every manjack s cut the snow And packed on the Christmas Trail. And what is the Christmas Trail, you say? And where do its travelers roam? Just chuck this thought in your kit to stay : The Christmas Trail leads home! DREAM PATHS A SILENT moment in the moonlit night, A glimpse through leafy paths that wind along Under the shadows pierced with trembling light, And then, quick laughter and a burst of song Across the campus. Wind-whispers in the trees, a distant star, A sudden flood of restless, throbbing dreams, A flash of seer-like vision, and afar The waver of a myriad twinkling gleams From shaded windows. THE CHAPEL BELLS OUT o er the snow-bound campus, Breaking the frozen night, Wrangling one with the other In hurrying headlong flight, The bells ring out through the twilight, Chapel bells in the twilight Iron bells in the twilight, That challenge the winter night. Hurrying feet o er the campus, Crunching the brittle snow, Shadows surging forward And calling to and fro, Answer the bells through the twilight, Chapel bells in the twilight Iron bells in the twilight, That challenge the winter snow. THE CABIN AN OPEN door at the end of the trail, A bunk of boughs at the long day s end, A shadowy form, a long clear hail, And a grip, may be, from the hand of a friend. Then we ll burn our bacon and spoil our dough, And send our cares where the dead men go. An open door at the end of the trail, And a leaping fire as the night draws in, With a pipe to smoke as the hours fail, A snatch of song, and a yarn to spin. While the shadows shake on the rafters wide, And the winds sweep free on the mountain s side. DARTMOUTH TO HER SONS YOU have breathed of the headless winds That sweep from the silent north ; With blenchless eye you have faced the hills And the storms that their wrath brings forth. You have struggled as man to man, Sought shelter side by side ; You have seen the way my spirit blazed In the paths that the fearless ride. I have taught you to break the shell, To value the man not birth ; The toil of the trail has stripped your soul To know what that soul is worth. I have wrought the north in your heart, I have swept her wind in your face. Go forth with hand and vision clean, Go! carve in the world my place. THE TROPHY ROOM A CHIEVEMENT S calm broods o er thy bannered ** wall, Silence, yet faint like thunder from the past, A whisper on the crest of memory s blast Seems still to haunt the shadows of thy hall. Motionless, soulless trophies, yet ye call A quickened pulse, a tightened hand ; thou hast The power to sweep us backward, hold us fast While surge upon surge about us ever fall The whirling phantoms of dead victories. Rank upon rank, in crashing marches, tread Those legions that have gone to chart the way. Silence, but like the beat of changeless seas, We feel that unformed murmur from the dead, Sounding the charge, like wind- wraith of the fray! TO THE COLLEGE CHURCH HOW shall we answer thee, Mother of Men, If thou shouldst bid us halt our onward race, And say, "Here in the quiet altar space Of this my temple, knelt thy fathers, when Walled in by silent hill and wooded fen They dared to fear their God, yet dared to face The wilderness, and carve therein a place ; And then in reverence thank their God again?" Ah! must we answer thus, and say to thee, "The fear of God no longer steels the heart." Our vaunting knows no compass or regret ; No longer are we brave to bend the knee Unless in mockery. Thou standst apart. Oh, spirit of our fathers, we forget. TO THE OLD BRIDGE OFT have I glimpsed you from the river s turn At sunset, when the glories of the sky Warned me with blazing beacons to return, And cease my ramble ere the night drew nigh. Oft have I trod your dim and shadowed way, Where gilded dust-motes tremble at the sun, And vagrant river-breezes bid one stay To dream a moment when the day is done. And still, when other paths shall guide my feet, And sterner tasks shall fret these hands of mine ; Amid the change and hurry of the street, I ll dream again I glimpse you through the pine, At evening, when the sunset s burning glow Crimsons in turn the weaving stream below. PATH O DREAMS dream with me along this golden strand; Flee this dark, shadowed shore, and breast the light, Treading this path o dreams to fairy-land, Leaving the world behind to slumber in the night. Come live with me along this golden strand, And build our days out of its laughing light, Nor fear to face the shadows of the land, That guard the quiet of the slumbering night. THE ELMS OF EASTON GREY DIM are thy shadows, black thy naked limbs, Castilian lace against a winter sky. The memory of past ages ever dims The present. Underneath thy branches lie The molds of ancient shadows long since gone To join the multitude of passing things That phantom-like shine out, and then anon Fade in oblivion. Well might kings Envy the wisdom in thy silent calm. Sublime ye watch the struggling life that rolls And throbs around thee, soothing with the balm Of thine eternal shade those stricken souls Who creep to thee from failure s lash, to feel Thy benediction through their beings steal. 10 THE BUTTERFLY (From the French of Lamartine) BORN with the spring, and dead with the rose, Swinging with zephyrous wings to the sky, Quivering, drunk with the perfume that flows From the light, on the breast of the flowers you lie. Shaking in youth the bright dust from your wing, Like a breath to the uttermost heavens you swing. Butterfly, thus is your destiny played, Like desire which never a resting place knows, Unattained, flitting lightly wherever it goes. So seek the deep sky ere your pleasures shall fade. ii A POOL IN THE WOODS STILL mirror of wood mysteries, you lie Silent and placid in the quiet glade Where broods perpetual dusk. Are you afraid To mirror aught but these dim forms? Dare try No brighter fancies to embrace, to pry No deeper into life than matching shade With equal shade? Were you not made To parody as well a sunset sky? Close sheltered in the calm of your retreat, The blackest tempest of the lightning flare Scarce touch your surface, for you stand apart. Oh, might some venturing sunbeam swiftly beat Down through the canopy of trees and dare To light the very depths of your still heart ! 12 THE SONG OF ST. MARTIN S BRIDGE /^ASTILIAN skies flash blue above, ^* Sing! Toledan maids. Castilian hearts are made for love, Leap! Toledan blades. At sunset-tide I ll wait you where St. Martin s bridge is mirrored fair, All rose-red in the crimson flare ; With sword or song I ll meet you there. Leap! Toledan blades. Castilian skies flash blue above, Sing! Toledan maids. Castilian hearts are made for love, Leap! Toledan blades. For rose-lipped, dancing gypsy-maid, Beneath St. Martin s balustrade, I ll sing of love or draw the blade, Till passion s youth shall wane and fade, Leap! Toledan blades. CHRISTMAS EVE A BLAZING log-fire and a happy thought, ** A touch of wind about the gables ends, A dance of dreams and visions fancy wrought, The play of children, and the laugh of friends. FAILURE {STOOD upon the gray November shore, And watched the steel tide ebb complainingly, And wondered vaguely could it flow again. Its helpless, slow retreat half matched the pain That chilled my heart. For like the pounding sea, I, too, knock ever at a fast closed door. THE TOY-SHOP LIFE is such a little thing, What s the use of worrying! Like a child upon the stair, Standing in the sunlight there, Crying for a broken toy Or frightened at a puppy s joy! We ve the universe to trace, Earth is such a tiny place ! Like a silent toy-shop, say, Lots of toys but none to play, Just the owners walking slow, And figuring profits as they go. Here s a man who cannot sleep Because the shadows round him creep ; Another, trembling at a noise, Fears a robber steals his toys. Frightened still, as children are Wandering lost in Life s Bazar. Oh, why can t we laugh and sing, Life is such a little thing! 16 THE SONG OF THE RIDERS OUT, out on the road and away, With the dawn burning red on the brow of the hill, And an answering fire in the pond and the rill, With the shoe striking sparks on the flint of the ledge, And the slash of the green when it s flanks to the hedge, Out, out horsemen, out and away! Chorus: Out, out on the road and away And away, Out, out horsemen, out and away! Up, up o er the hills and away, With the noon burning down on the red cottage roof, And the dust smoking back from beneath the swift hoof, With the creak o the leather and smell o the land, And the foam from the snaffle thrown back on your hand, Up, up through the heat, and away! Chorus: Up, up o er the hills, and away And away, Up, up through the heat, and away! On, on through the dusk, and away, With the chill of the night wind caressing your cheek, The whippoorwill s cry from the reeds at the creek, The gall o the saddle, the tug at the rein, The ring on the highway, the thud on the lane, On, on, spur on, and away! * Chorus: On, on through the dusk, and away And away, On, on, spur on, and away! 18 YOUTH CALLS tramp away the dawn with me, Hip, knee, and arm joints swinging free; No dainty, mincing promenade Where city pavements jar your heel, But country paths where you may feel The springy earth that God has made! Come tramp the Greater Road with me ; And take the paths where we can see The foot-prints of the pioneer; No beaten trails where herds have gone, But just a dim path leading on, Blazed by some unknown seer. EVENING AFAR, dim stretch of gray road winding free, A timid bird-note in the evening calm, The shadowy pine trees murmuring their psalm, A still light burning in the dusk for me. 20 AN EASTERN PARABLE I CAUGHT the flickering of jade, The flash of silver and of pearl, And underneath, as if afraid, The brilliant eye-gems of a girl That mocked and laughed and fled away. No longer flickered pearl or jade, Dead jewels without light or ray, The hollow shell of life betrayed! 21 A CHALLENGE ""THERE S a wind running wild on the mountain ; A Who ll tame it with me? Who ll breast the cold rush of the fountain Whose torrents surge free? Who ll dare the storm and the thunder, The dark and the pain, Dim groping in paths where hands blunder, Lose grip, and regrip in vain? Who ll face the wild laughter and mocking Of Nature s harsh bourn? Who ll battle on pathways the earthquake is rocking In anger and scorn? Battle the winds that storm, leaping Round mountain and cloud, While smug in the valley are sleeping The dull-hearted crowd! 22 VOX TEMPESTATIS I WATCHED the night come down apace; I heard the barren trees Mutter their scandal each to each ; I heard the hard surf on the beach Mocking the chilly breeze. I watched the cold moon s brilliant face Dim neath the gathered clouds; I caught the first rush of the gale, I heard the snarling breakers hail The reefs in their foam-spun shrouds. And then above the tempest s blast, Out of the wind that hurried past, I heard the cry of souls aghast At the hungry rolling sea, Chant loud and wild, like souls forlorn, A dirge of death, on the breezes borne, The wail of men when the heart is torn : Miserere Domine! I heard the whine of the coming sleet, The hiss of the rain-scourged sea ; Only a moment the moon shone out, Through tattered clouds gold edged about, But the waves showed clear to me, Blank and clear where the surges beat, Then the moon was veiled again. The storm broke with a sullen roar, The lightning bridged from shore to shore, And the sea was dark with rain. Was it the souls of the ocean s dead, Torn by the gale from their weedy bed, Who chanted low in accents dread That hollow chant to me? Bewailing with their hopeless groan That surged above the ocean s moan A sinless sin they cannot atone? Miserere Domine! 24 THE SEARCH OF SPRING WHEN the Spring is on the hill, Laughing in each brook and rill, Peering slyly down the vale, Peeking into every dale, What is it he seeks to find? Something Winter left behind? Does he seek a place to hide When the Autumn s winds shall chide, Urging him to flee again From the Winter s sleet and rain? Or, perhaps, he hopes to see Fairies dancing fancy-free, Criss and cross on dainty toe Weaving charms no one can know! South Wind, tell me from your lore What the Spring is looking for! GALATEA CAN you not feel me with your chisel point? Does it not tremble, sense the sacred thrill Of the warm marble that is o er my breast? No, you are like the others ; so I still am blind. Your chisel gropes like theirs, your hand is weak; And I who sheltered here, as I have often crept Into rough marble that the sculptor waits, Must flee again, and leave the marble cold. And you shall carve as you have done before, As others have, and men shall mock or praise, While I, still blind, must hurry on again. And yet I thought, when I had fled and left That painter with his lifted brush in air Whose master hand I hoped might find me sight, When I left him, to blindness and half truths, And came to you, and crept in the chill stone ; How cold, your chisel groping at my heart! I felt the tremor of your guiding hand, I thought, Ah, here at last is one whose soul Shall catch the flutter of my heart, and steal The darkness from my eyes, and set me free : The perfect beauty of a Perfect Art! But no, your chisel erred I felt the point. Your soul, too little to conceive my shape, Must guide the chisel in its little way; And I, with wounded heart, must flee again. Oh, could I only see, to watch you work Your blundering will upon the shapeless stone That once I thought to warm with my own life! 26 Out of whose radiant virgin purity I was to step beneath your god-like hand! No, I must hurry on to some brave soul, Make heart and marble one, or lurk unseen Behind the blankness of some painter s frame ; Or creep within some poet s drying line, Perchance to find some wild musician s strain That, issuing from the organ, shall lay bare My soul, and give my eyes their starry sight! So I have dreamed before, and yet in vain. Blind! blind till some seer-like soul, with mind Immortal to the petty thoughts of earth, Shall find me hiding in his shapeless clay And set me free, perfect in form and line! Why do I tarry? Already I can hear A youth who calls to me with joyous heart, With soul that throbs with dreams of wondrous things. Into his canvas will I cramp my limbs ; And warm his blending colors while I feel His hot breath laboring through parted teeth, Feel his brush tremble at his passion s touch ; And his clear eyes, beaming like stars, unseen But even in my darkness felt, shall watch With awe, while slowly neath his quivering hand In perfect purity my soul shall leap Into clear being; and his earthly paint, Warm on my bosom, laughing in my eyes, Lustrous in shadows where my tresses fall, Shall mock the very earth from whence they sprang! TO A GIRL WHO "COULDN T ENDURE TOBACCO" I M NOT surprised you couldn t stand my pipe; That s woman s way. You ve not the knack of seeing hah* the worth In good P. A. The poetry of the curling smoke is Lost on you. You "can t endure it!" No, of course you can t, You re not expected to. It takes a mind, and not complexion, To understand The peace and fellowship encircled By a cigar band. 28 TO A PLAGIARIST YOU have given us dross from the many, And gold from the few ; You have given us much that was ancient, A little that s new. You have played the thief with the dead, That s shameful I know ; And yet you have picked with discretion The men you would owe. Your sin of a truth is unholy, And yet I condone ; Far better to give us the worst of another Than the best of your own. HERE S TO """THE little poets of little thought and song, I Who sing so carelessly, and jog along; Who without thought of critic, or of gain, Go spattering lyrics like an April rain! AUGUST 1914 A MILLION war-swept people raise Their stricken hands in air ; The women voice a nation s woe Too great for them to bear ; And babes stretch out a tiny palm And find no mother there ; For kings into each other s hands Have thrust the sword of war. The humming mills no longer pour Their smoke across the sky; Where once the harvest fields stretched fair The grinding armies lie ; And women learn with blenchless face To watch their husbands die ; For kings into each other s hands Have thrust the sword of war. How long, how long, oh, Silent Christ, Must we, thy children, hear The iron words of mimic gods Call out their war-like gear; How long must we thus blindly die Beasts brutalized by fear, When kings into each other s hands Shall thrust the sword of war? THE SHADOW ALONG, low, level stretch of plain, Rich with a harvest that never will be Garnered, except by wheeling crows that scream About marauding hares and nibbling mice : The only gleaners left to claim a share. Sunlight, and warm winds that stir the grain, The silence of a summer afternoon, Perpetual Sabbath kept in No Man s Land. Out of the south, drifting on the tide Of peaceful winds, a sweeping veil of smoke, A thin, dun cloud that ever surges on, Waxing in blackness, billowing fold on fold, Until The Shadow darkens all the plain, Turning the yellow wheat to dusky bronze That glints the blood-red sunlight struggling through The tumult of the skies. TO ONE WHO DIED IN THE SERVICE OF THE RED CROSS R. N. H. NOT for the petty broils or rage of kings, Not for the lust of land or empired pride, Have you made sacrifice! The hand that flings The tri-color on your bier can never hide With partisan flag the cause for which you fell! "For France?" Nay, rather say Mankind; the path That led your feet to death can truly tell Of Calvary. Your mercy mocked the wrath That surged insanely round you, as your hand Toiled to undo the evil hate had wrought. Greater because you served at no command Except the call that spoke within; and nought Can dim the laurel now, or stem the tear That falls, a benediction, on your bier. 33 TRAMP STEAMERS AT DAWN PHANTOM ships in the fog-gray dawn, Masters of wind and tide, Leaving your land-locked anchorage, The wind-stripped seas your guide, Beating out from the harbor s peace To the toil of a road untried, What is the call that comes to you From out of the weaving mist? What do you seek in the voiceless sea? What shadow keeps your tryst? Some dingy quay in an island-port, Or a reef where the breakers twist? 34 A RAILROAD YARD AT NIGHT HERE in the night, Half mystic, half realistic in its lure, Twinkling with weaving, streaming light, Red and green spattered, here garish, here obscure, With many-fingered beams criss-crossing And retreating back again, The Yard binds in a Gordian knot These silver threads that, creeping from the night, Are seized as by a genii s hand and wrought Into this maze of shifting light, A murmuring, threatening, human firmament That mocks the heavens. 35 THE SONG OF THE CRICKETS WHEN the birds of night are hovering, and day is on the wane, And the shadows stretch and cover all around, You can hear the summer crickets, through the medley of the sound, Sawing out their quaint and shrill refrain. As the mists are slowly gathering across the meadow land, A white haze out of nothing, where nothing was before, Then the fiddles of the crickets set to music all the lore That s been taught them by the flitting fairy band. With a zing-ing-ing, and a trill at the close, And a rasp where the rosin fails, They fiddle the tune that the cricket knows, When the saffron sunset pales, With a trit, trit, trit, and a tee-ee-ee, And a rasp where the rosin fails. Now it swings in double volume ; and then slowly dies away, As its beat and throb flows smoothly up the hill. Now it rings a sharp falsetto, or bursts into a trill, As the fiddles strike into another lay. Then at last in slower cadence ; and with muted fiddle strings, They sweep the meadow with their lullaby; And the hillside sounds are silent as the last strains slowly die, And the cricket troupe aside its music flings. With a zing-ing-ing, and a trill at the close, And a rasp where the rosin fails, They fiddle the tune that the cricket knows, When the saffron sunset pales, With a trit, trit, trit, and a tee-ee-ee, And a rasp where the rosin fails. 37 THE OXEN THEY were toiling on the hillside in the golden- yellow gloaming, With the purple of the shadows lying thick along the wall. Dumb, they walked along the furrow, and their sweaty flanks were foaming As they bent their steaming shoulders to the labor of it all. Dumb, they toiled along the furrow in the labor of it all. And the brown dust warm and heavy hung in clouds about their shoulders, And the yoke-pins shook and rattled with the plow- share s rise and fall. Indistinct upon the hillside, there they loomed like living boulders. Indistinct upon the hillside, black and gray like living boulders, Toiling grimly in the twilight, never knowing whence they wrought, Like a vague and quaint enchantment that in ancient saga smoulders, Toiled the oxen on the hillside in the dusk the shadows brought. Labored mutely, uncomplaining, in the dusk the shadows brought, Never asking, never knowing, blindly toiling neath the goad, Blindly bending in the twilight to the labor of their lot, By the gods foredoomed to struggle, living, dying, neath their load. 39 A COW-PATH YOU wander like a vagrant child across the weed grown pasture-side, Lying among the hardback bloom, hah* buried in the golden-rod. A ragged tramp of slender means, you prove indeed a rambling guide Who winds about nor ever leads to paths that other men have trod. You skirt the hill, and ford the brook, seeking the coolness of the brush. Care-free and blithe you wind about, a rattle-brain without a thought Or worry as to whence you come. At evening in the twilight hush, When faint and still the pasture lies, wrapped in the gloom the dusk has brought, Your way becomes a fairy path, rich with the fantasy of dreams That leads one into gypsy lands that reckon not the rule of kings, But, filled with hope and peace and love, the quiet world about you seems A land where wishes spring to life, a prodigal who freely flings His riches lavishly to all who seek him when the day is done, Crowning his gift-cup with the gold that scatters from the setting sun. 40 THE SONG OF THE GROUND-HOG D ASKING on the stone- wall, sleepy in the sun, *- Watching out for shepherd dogs, and farmer- boys with guns, Rolling in the barley patch, nibbling at the peas, Hiding where the alder shoots are whipping in the breeze ; For the warmer winds are blowing, And the farmer s sowing rye, The sunshine s in the clover field, And Spring is marching by. Lying underneath the bank, listening to the rain, Whistling at the bay mare browsing in the lane, Drowsing at the burrow s mouth, when the weather s fine, Listening to the baby crows squabbling in the pine ; For the warmer winds are blowing, And the farmer s sowing rye, The sunshine s in the clover field, And Spring is marching by. THE SESTINA OF THE NEW ENGLANDER AN HOUR to dream in, and an hour to sing, An hour to think of friends who are not by; Yes, that is all that I would ever ask The day to grant me ere it fled away; To watch the sunset kindle on the hill, Knowing it burnt no evil that was mine. To know that somewhere in this heart of mine, There dwelt a thought that made another sing, And, when the shadows stretched along the hill, To feel no loss that day was hurrying by; So could I watch the sunset die away, And answer anything my soul could ask. So will the labor that the world may ask, The daily toil or sorrow that is mine, Breed no remorse to steal my peace away, And bid my heart to weep or falsely sing. I ll find my sermons in the wood hard by, And read my benedictions from the hill. For as our life is like a rough-scarred hill, So let us climb in wonder, never ask To know the hidden dangers we ve passed by. I am content if these slow feet of mine Take but a faltering step ; my heart can sing The longer if the end looms far away. 42 The log that burns the quiet night away, The hollow bird-note from the darkened hill,- These have so many songs I cannot sing, My swelling heart can only fondly ask That all these simple treasures that are mine May fall to others, too, ere they pass by. No, let the pomp and glitter pass me by, And bear ambition s longings far away; They leave no sorrow, for they are not mine, They cannot scourge me faster up the hill. The happy gift of plodding that I ask ; I would not hurry so I may not sing. Let life slip by, night gather on the hill, And if from far away comes one to ask The secret that is mine, I bid him sing! 43 GOING DOWN THE HILL NIGHT is on the high-road, The tavern lights shine fair, The lanterns of the farm hands Are swinging here and there. The primrose cups are open, The golden-rod looks gray, And the deep gloom of the apple tree Is blotted cross the way. The night is on the high-road, The countryside is still, And the home-light smiles a welcome As I go down the hill. 44 913- UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY A 000 672 400 9