II. First Poems

II. First PoemsRimeO scholargrey, with quiet eyes,Reading the charactered pages, brightWith one tall candle’s flickering light,In a turret chamber under the skies;O scholar, learned in gramarye,Have you seen the manifold things I see?Have you seen the forms of tracèd towersWhence clamorous voices challenge the hours:Gaunt tree-branches, pitchy blackAgainst the long, wind-driven wrackOf scurrying, shuddering clouds, that raceEver across the pale moon’s face?Have you heard the tramp of hurrying feet.There beneath, in the shadowy street,Have you heard sharp cries, and seen the flameOf silvery steel, in a perilous game,A perilous game for men to play,Hid from the searching eyes of day?Have you heard the great awakening breath,Like trump that summons the saints from death,Of the wild, majestical wind, which blowsLoud and splendid, that each man knowsFar, O far away is the sea,Breaking, murmuring, stark and free?[pg 25]All these things I hear and see,I, a scholar of gramarye:All are writ in the ancient booksClear, exactly, and he that looksFinds the night and the changing sea,The years gone by, and the years to be:(He that searches, with tireless eyesIn a turret-chamber under the skies)Passion and joy, and sorrow and laughter,Life and death, and the things thereafter.[pg 26]To an Elzevir CiceroDust-coveredbook, that very few men know,Even as very few men understandThe glory of an ancient, storied landIn the wild current of the ages’ flow,Have not old scholars, centuries agoCaressed you in the hollow of their hand,The while with quiet, kindly eyes they scannedYour pages, yellowed now, then white as snow?A voice there is, cries through your every word,Of him, that after greatest glory cameDown the grey road to darkness and to tears;A voice like far seas in still valleys heard,Crying of love and death and hope and fameThat change not with the changing of the years.[pg 27]To a Dürer Drawing of Antwerp HarbourFiguredby Dürer’s magic hand wast thou,That, lightning-like, traced on the lucid pageRough, careless lines, with wizardry so sageThat yet the whole was fair, I know not how:Ships of gaunt masts, and stark, sea-smitten prow,Idle, yet soon again to sweep the mainIn the swift service of old merchants’ gain,Where are ye now, alas, where are ye now?Gone are ye all, and vanished very long,Sunk with great glory in the storied wars,Or conquered by the leaping breakers wild:And yet we love your image, like some songThat tells of ancient days and high, becauseOld Dürer looked upon you once and smiled.[pg 28]Pure VirginiaYork River ReturnsLikesmoke that vanishes on the morning breezeAre passed the first beginnings of the world,When time was even as a bud still curled,And scarce the limit set of lands and seas;Like smoke, like smoke the composite auguriesOf Hebrew and of Hellene are all furled,Fulfilled or else forgot, and idly hurledThis way or that way, as the great winds please:Aye, and like smoke of this delicious herbBrought by strange ways the curious mind may guess,From where the parrot and the leopard be,My thoughts, that should be strong, the years to curbGo up, and vanish into nothingnessOn a blue cloud of exquisite fragrancy.[pg 29]A Preface for a Tale I have never toldHereinis nought of windy citadelsWhere proud kings dwell, that with an iron handDeal war or justice: here no historyOf valiant ships upon the wine-dark seasPassing strange lands and threading channels straitBetween embalmed islands: here no songThat men shall sing in battle and rememberWhen they are old and grey beside the fire:Only a story gathered from the hillsAnd the wind crying of forgotten days,A story that shall whisper, “All things change—For friends do grow indifferent, and lovesDie like a dream at morning: bitternessIs the sure heritage of all men born,And he alone sees truly, who looks outFrom some huge aery peak, considering notFast-walled cities, or the works of men,But turns his gaze unto the mountain-topsAnd the unfathomable blue of heavenThat only change not with the changing years”——A tale that shod itself with ancient shoonAnd wrapped its cloak, and wandered from the west.[pg 30]A SonnetThereis a wind that takes the heart of a man,A fresh wind in the latter days of spring,When hate and war and every evil thingThat the wide arches of high Heaven spanSeems dust, and less to be accounted thanThe omened touches of a passing wing:When Destiny, that calls himself a king,Goes all forgotten for the song of Pan:For why? Because the twittering of birdsIs the best music that was ever sung,Because the voice of trees finds better wordsThan ever poet from his heartstrings wrung:Because all wisdom and all gramaryeAre writ in fields, O very plain to see.[pg 31]“It was all in the Black Countree”Itwas all in the Black Countree,What time the sweet o’ the year should be,I saw a tree, all gaunt and grey,As mindful of a winter’s day:And that a lonely bird did sitUpon the topmost branch of it,Who to my thought did sweeter singThan any minstrel of a king.[pg 32]To a PianistWhenothers’ fingers touch the keysThen most doleful threnodiesChase about the air, and runLike Pandæmonium begun.Rhythm strained and false accordIn a ceaseless stream are poured;Then sighs are heard, and men departTo seek the sage physician’s art,Or silence, and a little ease,When others’ fingers touch the keys.When your fingers touch the keysHark, soft sounds of summer seasIn a melody most fairWhisper through the pleasant air,Or a winding mountain streamGlitters to the pale moonbeam,Or a breeze doth stir the topsOf springtime larches in a copse,Or the winds are loosed and hurledAbout the wonder-stricken worldWith immortal harmonies,When your fingers touch the keys.[pg 33]A Fragment————Andsome came down in a great windUnder grey scurrying skiesTo where the long wave-beaten shoreFor ever shrieks and cries.O, fling aside your toil, your care,When one cries of the sea,And the great waves that foam and toss,And the white clouds that flee:Let us forget our weariness,Forget that we have sinned,So we but sail, what matters itIf Death ride on the wind?Storm from the sky, storm from the seaBeat on them as they stood,And a great longing sprang in themTo cross the roaring flood. . . .[pg 34]Sea Poppies’Twixtlonely lands and desert beach,Where no wind blows and no waves reach,A sunken precinct here we keep,With woven wiles of endless sleep;Our twisted stems of sere-hued green,Our pallid blooms what sun has seen?And he that tastes our magic breathShall sleep that sleep whose name is death.Wild clouds are scurrying overhead,The wild wind’s voice is loud and dread,Sounding the knell of the dying day,Yet here is silence and gloom alway.And a great longing seizes meTo burst my bondage and be free,To look on winds’ and waters’ strife,And breathe in my nostrils the breath of life.Give me not dim and slumbrous ease,But sounding storm and labouring seas,Not peaceful and untroubled years,But toil and warfare and passion and tears.And I would fall in valorous fight,And lie on lofty far-seen height.Yet how to burst these prison-bands,Forged by unseen spirit-hands?O seek not to burst our prison bandsForged by unseen spirit-hands.Clashing battle and labouring sea,These be for others, not for thee.Thou lover of storm and passion and warBreak’st our charmed circle never more.[pg 35]“O, sing me a Song of the Wild West Wind”O, singme a song of the wild west wind,And his great sea-harrying flail,Of hardy mariners, copper skinned,That fly with a bursting sail.They see the clouds of crispèd whiteThat shadow the distant hills,And filled are they with a strange delightAs shaking away old ills.O, give me a boat that is sure and stark,And swift as a slinger’s stone,With a sail of canvas bronzèd dark,And I will go out alone:Nor fear nor sorrow my soul shall keepWhen around me lies the sea,And I will return with the night, and sleepIn the wind’s wild harmony.[pg 36]Ære PerenniusWritten on Commemoration Sunday, Corpus Christi College, OxfordWepraise, we praise the immortal dead,Who strove beneath unheeding skiesFor truth that raised the drooping head,For light that gladdened weary eyes:The martyr’s cross, the warrior’s sword,How should they be of lesser worthThan some unprofitable hoardIn ancient mines below the earth?The song that one alone has sung,The great uncompromising page,Are these but glittering baubles, flungAbout the world from age to age?But ruin’d columns, wondrous tall,Built in old time with labour sore,The mighty deeds done once for all,The voice heard once, and heard no more?Rather they shine as doth the starAbout the close of winter’s day,That cheers the traveller afarAnd draws him on, and points the way.————We praise, we praise the immortal dead.Do they not verily wait till weOf the spoilt years unharvestedBe also of their company?[pg 37]The Old KingsFaraway from sunny rills,Far away from golden broom,Far away from any townWhither merchants travel down—In a hollow of the hillsIn impenetrable gloomSit the old forgotten kingsUnto whom no poet sings,Unto whom none makes bequest,Unto whom no kingdoms rest,——Only wayward shreds of dreams,And the sound of ancient streams,And the shock of ancient strifeOn the further shore of life.————When our days are done, shall weEnter their pale company?[pg 38]“O there be Kings whose Treasuries”O therebe kings whose treasuriesAre rich with pearls and goldAnd silks and bales of cramasyAnd spices manifold:Gardens they have with marble stairsAnd streams than life more fair,With roses set and lavenderThat do enchant the air.O there be many ships that sailThe sea-ways wide and blue,And there be master-marinersTo sail them straight and true:And there be many women fairWho watch out anxiously,And are enamoured of the dayTheir dear ones come from sea:But riches I can find enowAll in a barren land,Where sombre lakes shine wondrouslyWith rocks on either hand:And I can find enow of loveUp there, alone, alone,With none beside me save the wind,Nor speech except his moan.For there far up among the hillsThe great storms come and goIn a most proud processionalOf cloud and rain and snow:There light and darkness only areA changing benisonOf the old gods who wrought the worldAnd shaped the moon and sun.[pg 39]A StudyInchamber hung with white,Lit by the dawning light,Upon a slender bedShe lies, as she were dead:Most carven-ivory fair,And palely gold her hair.Lo, the sun’s yellow ray,That, with the rise of day,Through quartered casement cameTo wake her life’s pale flame.[pg 40]The EremiteWhenthe world is still in the hush of dawn,And yet fast sleeping are hate and scorn,From my grey lodging under the hillI do go out, and wander at will.Of nights when the riven clouds are hurled,And strife and rancour possess the world,I sit alone, with thoughts that are chill,In my grey lodging under the hill.[pg 41]The House of EldNowthe old winds are wild about the house,And the old ghosts cry to me from the airOf a far isle set in the western sea,And of the evening sunlight lingering there.Ah! I am bound here, bound and fettered,The dark house crumbles, and the woods decay,I was too fain of life, that bound me here;Away, old long-loved ghosts, away, away![pg 42]The South-west WindThesouth-west wind has blown his fill,And vanished with departing day:The air is warm, and very still,And soft as silks of far Cathay.This is a night when spirits stray.Their wan limbs bear them where they will;They wring their pallid hands alway,Seeing the lights upon the hill.[pg 43]Schumann: Erstes VerlustO, drearyfall the leaves,The withered leaves;Among the treesComplains the breeze,That still bereaves.All silent lies the mere,The silver mere,In saddest wiseReflecting skiesForlorn and sere.Would autumn had not claimed its ownAnd would the swallows had not flown.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!And she has passedAnd left the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!Does she that passedDream of the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone?[pg 44]“Dark Boughs against a Golden Sky”Darkboughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And sweet it is, for hope is high,And sad it is, for we have sinned.Perfect is nature’s every partIn sunny rest, or windy strife:But never yet the perfect heart,And never yet the perfect life!Dark boughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And in the cold earth we must lie,What matter then if we have sinned?For evermore and evermoreShall the great river onward roll:And ever winding streams and poorShall lose them in the mighty whole.[pg 45]“Wind of the Darkness”Windof the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea,Lo, you have loosed the cords that bound us,Lo, you have set our spirits free:Free to take wings, like the sea-bird lonelyBeating hardily up the wind:Fixed are his eyes on the waters only,Never a glance for the land behind.Wind of the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea.Was it the old gods’ voice that found usHere, where the bars of prison be?From the far isle that neither knowethChange of season, nor time’s increase,Where is plenty, and no man soweth:Calling to strife that shall end in peace.[pg 46]Creator SpiritusThewind that scatters dying leavesAnd whirls them from the autumn treeIs grateful to the ship that cleavesWith stately prow the scurrying sea.Heedless about the world we playLike children in a garden close:A postern bars the outward wayAnd what’s beyond it no man knows:For careless days, a life at will,A little laughter, and some tears,These are sufficiency to fillThe early, vain, untroubled years,Till at the last the wind upheavesHis unimagined strength, and weAre scattered far, like autumn leaves,Or proudly sail, like ships at sea.[pg 47]Wind over the SeaOnlya grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them.Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, and when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?Out of the gathering darkness crashes a wind from theocean,Rushing with league-long paces over the plain of thewaters,Driving the clouds and the breakers before it in suddencommotion.Who are these on the wind, riders and riderless horses?Riders the great ones that have been and are, and thoseto come shall be:These are the children of might, life’s champions andhistory’s forces.Might I but grasp at a bridle, and fear not to be troddenunder,Swing myself into a saddle, and ride on greatly, exultingOn down the long straight road of the wind, a gallopingthunder!Only a grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them,Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, for when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?[pg 48]Songs on the Downs1Thisis the road the Romans made,This track half lost in the green hills,Or fading in a forest-glade’Mid violets and daffodils.The years have fallen like dead leaves,Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),Since first this road the Romans made.2A miser lives within this house,His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,And there’s no peace upon his brows.A many ancient trees and thinDo fold the place their shade within,And moan, as for remembered sin.[pg 49]

II. First PoemsRimeO scholargrey, with quiet eyes,Reading the charactered pages, brightWith one tall candle’s flickering light,In a turret chamber under the skies;O scholar, learned in gramarye,Have you seen the manifold things I see?Have you seen the forms of tracèd towersWhence clamorous voices challenge the hours:Gaunt tree-branches, pitchy blackAgainst the long, wind-driven wrackOf scurrying, shuddering clouds, that raceEver across the pale moon’s face?Have you heard the tramp of hurrying feet.There beneath, in the shadowy street,Have you heard sharp cries, and seen the flameOf silvery steel, in a perilous game,A perilous game for men to play,Hid from the searching eyes of day?Have you heard the great awakening breath,Like trump that summons the saints from death,Of the wild, majestical wind, which blowsLoud and splendid, that each man knowsFar, O far away is the sea,Breaking, murmuring, stark and free?[pg 25]All these things I hear and see,I, a scholar of gramarye:All are writ in the ancient booksClear, exactly, and he that looksFinds the night and the changing sea,The years gone by, and the years to be:(He that searches, with tireless eyesIn a turret-chamber under the skies)Passion and joy, and sorrow and laughter,Life and death, and the things thereafter.[pg 26]To an Elzevir CiceroDust-coveredbook, that very few men know,Even as very few men understandThe glory of an ancient, storied landIn the wild current of the ages’ flow,Have not old scholars, centuries agoCaressed you in the hollow of their hand,The while with quiet, kindly eyes they scannedYour pages, yellowed now, then white as snow?A voice there is, cries through your every word,Of him, that after greatest glory cameDown the grey road to darkness and to tears;A voice like far seas in still valleys heard,Crying of love and death and hope and fameThat change not with the changing of the years.[pg 27]To a Dürer Drawing of Antwerp HarbourFiguredby Dürer’s magic hand wast thou,That, lightning-like, traced on the lucid pageRough, careless lines, with wizardry so sageThat yet the whole was fair, I know not how:Ships of gaunt masts, and stark, sea-smitten prow,Idle, yet soon again to sweep the mainIn the swift service of old merchants’ gain,Where are ye now, alas, where are ye now?Gone are ye all, and vanished very long,Sunk with great glory in the storied wars,Or conquered by the leaping breakers wild:And yet we love your image, like some songThat tells of ancient days and high, becauseOld Dürer looked upon you once and smiled.[pg 28]Pure VirginiaYork River ReturnsLikesmoke that vanishes on the morning breezeAre passed the first beginnings of the world,When time was even as a bud still curled,And scarce the limit set of lands and seas;Like smoke, like smoke the composite auguriesOf Hebrew and of Hellene are all furled,Fulfilled or else forgot, and idly hurledThis way or that way, as the great winds please:Aye, and like smoke of this delicious herbBrought by strange ways the curious mind may guess,From where the parrot and the leopard be,My thoughts, that should be strong, the years to curbGo up, and vanish into nothingnessOn a blue cloud of exquisite fragrancy.[pg 29]A Preface for a Tale I have never toldHereinis nought of windy citadelsWhere proud kings dwell, that with an iron handDeal war or justice: here no historyOf valiant ships upon the wine-dark seasPassing strange lands and threading channels straitBetween embalmed islands: here no songThat men shall sing in battle and rememberWhen they are old and grey beside the fire:Only a story gathered from the hillsAnd the wind crying of forgotten days,A story that shall whisper, “All things change—For friends do grow indifferent, and lovesDie like a dream at morning: bitternessIs the sure heritage of all men born,And he alone sees truly, who looks outFrom some huge aery peak, considering notFast-walled cities, or the works of men,But turns his gaze unto the mountain-topsAnd the unfathomable blue of heavenThat only change not with the changing years”——A tale that shod itself with ancient shoonAnd wrapped its cloak, and wandered from the west.[pg 30]A SonnetThereis a wind that takes the heart of a man,A fresh wind in the latter days of spring,When hate and war and every evil thingThat the wide arches of high Heaven spanSeems dust, and less to be accounted thanThe omened touches of a passing wing:When Destiny, that calls himself a king,Goes all forgotten for the song of Pan:For why? Because the twittering of birdsIs the best music that was ever sung,Because the voice of trees finds better wordsThan ever poet from his heartstrings wrung:Because all wisdom and all gramaryeAre writ in fields, O very plain to see.[pg 31]“It was all in the Black Countree”Itwas all in the Black Countree,What time the sweet o’ the year should be,I saw a tree, all gaunt and grey,As mindful of a winter’s day:And that a lonely bird did sitUpon the topmost branch of it,Who to my thought did sweeter singThan any minstrel of a king.[pg 32]To a PianistWhenothers’ fingers touch the keysThen most doleful threnodiesChase about the air, and runLike Pandæmonium begun.Rhythm strained and false accordIn a ceaseless stream are poured;Then sighs are heard, and men departTo seek the sage physician’s art,Or silence, and a little ease,When others’ fingers touch the keys.When your fingers touch the keysHark, soft sounds of summer seasIn a melody most fairWhisper through the pleasant air,Or a winding mountain streamGlitters to the pale moonbeam,Or a breeze doth stir the topsOf springtime larches in a copse,Or the winds are loosed and hurledAbout the wonder-stricken worldWith immortal harmonies,When your fingers touch the keys.[pg 33]A Fragment————Andsome came down in a great windUnder grey scurrying skiesTo where the long wave-beaten shoreFor ever shrieks and cries.O, fling aside your toil, your care,When one cries of the sea,And the great waves that foam and toss,And the white clouds that flee:Let us forget our weariness,Forget that we have sinned,So we but sail, what matters itIf Death ride on the wind?Storm from the sky, storm from the seaBeat on them as they stood,And a great longing sprang in themTo cross the roaring flood. . . .[pg 34]Sea Poppies’Twixtlonely lands and desert beach,Where no wind blows and no waves reach,A sunken precinct here we keep,With woven wiles of endless sleep;Our twisted stems of sere-hued green,Our pallid blooms what sun has seen?And he that tastes our magic breathShall sleep that sleep whose name is death.Wild clouds are scurrying overhead,The wild wind’s voice is loud and dread,Sounding the knell of the dying day,Yet here is silence and gloom alway.And a great longing seizes meTo burst my bondage and be free,To look on winds’ and waters’ strife,And breathe in my nostrils the breath of life.Give me not dim and slumbrous ease,But sounding storm and labouring seas,Not peaceful and untroubled years,But toil and warfare and passion and tears.And I would fall in valorous fight,And lie on lofty far-seen height.Yet how to burst these prison-bands,Forged by unseen spirit-hands?O seek not to burst our prison bandsForged by unseen spirit-hands.Clashing battle and labouring sea,These be for others, not for thee.Thou lover of storm and passion and warBreak’st our charmed circle never more.[pg 35]“O, sing me a Song of the Wild West Wind”O, singme a song of the wild west wind,And his great sea-harrying flail,Of hardy mariners, copper skinned,That fly with a bursting sail.They see the clouds of crispèd whiteThat shadow the distant hills,And filled are they with a strange delightAs shaking away old ills.O, give me a boat that is sure and stark,And swift as a slinger’s stone,With a sail of canvas bronzèd dark,And I will go out alone:Nor fear nor sorrow my soul shall keepWhen around me lies the sea,And I will return with the night, and sleepIn the wind’s wild harmony.[pg 36]Ære PerenniusWritten on Commemoration Sunday, Corpus Christi College, OxfordWepraise, we praise the immortal dead,Who strove beneath unheeding skiesFor truth that raised the drooping head,For light that gladdened weary eyes:The martyr’s cross, the warrior’s sword,How should they be of lesser worthThan some unprofitable hoardIn ancient mines below the earth?The song that one alone has sung,The great uncompromising page,Are these but glittering baubles, flungAbout the world from age to age?But ruin’d columns, wondrous tall,Built in old time with labour sore,The mighty deeds done once for all,The voice heard once, and heard no more?Rather they shine as doth the starAbout the close of winter’s day,That cheers the traveller afarAnd draws him on, and points the way.————We praise, we praise the immortal dead.Do they not verily wait till weOf the spoilt years unharvestedBe also of their company?[pg 37]The Old KingsFaraway from sunny rills,Far away from golden broom,Far away from any townWhither merchants travel down—In a hollow of the hillsIn impenetrable gloomSit the old forgotten kingsUnto whom no poet sings,Unto whom none makes bequest,Unto whom no kingdoms rest,——Only wayward shreds of dreams,And the sound of ancient streams,And the shock of ancient strifeOn the further shore of life.————When our days are done, shall weEnter their pale company?[pg 38]“O there be Kings whose Treasuries”O therebe kings whose treasuriesAre rich with pearls and goldAnd silks and bales of cramasyAnd spices manifold:Gardens they have with marble stairsAnd streams than life more fair,With roses set and lavenderThat do enchant the air.O there be many ships that sailThe sea-ways wide and blue,And there be master-marinersTo sail them straight and true:And there be many women fairWho watch out anxiously,And are enamoured of the dayTheir dear ones come from sea:But riches I can find enowAll in a barren land,Where sombre lakes shine wondrouslyWith rocks on either hand:And I can find enow of loveUp there, alone, alone,With none beside me save the wind,Nor speech except his moan.For there far up among the hillsThe great storms come and goIn a most proud processionalOf cloud and rain and snow:There light and darkness only areA changing benisonOf the old gods who wrought the worldAnd shaped the moon and sun.[pg 39]A StudyInchamber hung with white,Lit by the dawning light,Upon a slender bedShe lies, as she were dead:Most carven-ivory fair,And palely gold her hair.Lo, the sun’s yellow ray,That, with the rise of day,Through quartered casement cameTo wake her life’s pale flame.[pg 40]The EremiteWhenthe world is still in the hush of dawn,And yet fast sleeping are hate and scorn,From my grey lodging under the hillI do go out, and wander at will.Of nights when the riven clouds are hurled,And strife and rancour possess the world,I sit alone, with thoughts that are chill,In my grey lodging under the hill.[pg 41]The House of EldNowthe old winds are wild about the house,And the old ghosts cry to me from the airOf a far isle set in the western sea,And of the evening sunlight lingering there.Ah! I am bound here, bound and fettered,The dark house crumbles, and the woods decay,I was too fain of life, that bound me here;Away, old long-loved ghosts, away, away![pg 42]The South-west WindThesouth-west wind has blown his fill,And vanished with departing day:The air is warm, and very still,And soft as silks of far Cathay.This is a night when spirits stray.Their wan limbs bear them where they will;They wring their pallid hands alway,Seeing the lights upon the hill.[pg 43]Schumann: Erstes VerlustO, drearyfall the leaves,The withered leaves;Among the treesComplains the breeze,That still bereaves.All silent lies the mere,The silver mere,In saddest wiseReflecting skiesForlorn and sere.Would autumn had not claimed its ownAnd would the swallows had not flown.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!And she has passedAnd left the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!Does she that passedDream of the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone?[pg 44]“Dark Boughs against a Golden Sky”Darkboughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And sweet it is, for hope is high,And sad it is, for we have sinned.Perfect is nature’s every partIn sunny rest, or windy strife:But never yet the perfect heart,And never yet the perfect life!Dark boughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And in the cold earth we must lie,What matter then if we have sinned?For evermore and evermoreShall the great river onward roll:And ever winding streams and poorShall lose them in the mighty whole.[pg 45]“Wind of the Darkness”Windof the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea,Lo, you have loosed the cords that bound us,Lo, you have set our spirits free:Free to take wings, like the sea-bird lonelyBeating hardily up the wind:Fixed are his eyes on the waters only,Never a glance for the land behind.Wind of the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea.Was it the old gods’ voice that found usHere, where the bars of prison be?From the far isle that neither knowethChange of season, nor time’s increase,Where is plenty, and no man soweth:Calling to strife that shall end in peace.[pg 46]Creator SpiritusThewind that scatters dying leavesAnd whirls them from the autumn treeIs grateful to the ship that cleavesWith stately prow the scurrying sea.Heedless about the world we playLike children in a garden close:A postern bars the outward wayAnd what’s beyond it no man knows:For careless days, a life at will,A little laughter, and some tears,These are sufficiency to fillThe early, vain, untroubled years,Till at the last the wind upheavesHis unimagined strength, and weAre scattered far, like autumn leaves,Or proudly sail, like ships at sea.[pg 47]Wind over the SeaOnlya grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them.Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, and when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?Out of the gathering darkness crashes a wind from theocean,Rushing with league-long paces over the plain of thewaters,Driving the clouds and the breakers before it in suddencommotion.Who are these on the wind, riders and riderless horses?Riders the great ones that have been and are, and thoseto come shall be:These are the children of might, life’s champions andhistory’s forces.Might I but grasp at a bridle, and fear not to be troddenunder,Swing myself into a saddle, and ride on greatly, exultingOn down the long straight road of the wind, a gallopingthunder!Only a grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them,Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, for when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?[pg 48]Songs on the Downs1Thisis the road the Romans made,This track half lost in the green hills,Or fading in a forest-glade’Mid violets and daffodils.The years have fallen like dead leaves,Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),Since first this road the Romans made.2A miser lives within this house,His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,And there’s no peace upon his brows.A many ancient trees and thinDo fold the place their shade within,And moan, as for remembered sin.[pg 49]

RimeO scholargrey, with quiet eyes,Reading the charactered pages, brightWith one tall candle’s flickering light,In a turret chamber under the skies;O scholar, learned in gramarye,Have you seen the manifold things I see?Have you seen the forms of tracèd towersWhence clamorous voices challenge the hours:Gaunt tree-branches, pitchy blackAgainst the long, wind-driven wrackOf scurrying, shuddering clouds, that raceEver across the pale moon’s face?Have you heard the tramp of hurrying feet.There beneath, in the shadowy street,Have you heard sharp cries, and seen the flameOf silvery steel, in a perilous game,A perilous game for men to play,Hid from the searching eyes of day?Have you heard the great awakening breath,Like trump that summons the saints from death,Of the wild, majestical wind, which blowsLoud and splendid, that each man knowsFar, O far away is the sea,Breaking, murmuring, stark and free?[pg 25]All these things I hear and see,I, a scholar of gramarye:All are writ in the ancient booksClear, exactly, and he that looksFinds the night and the changing sea,The years gone by, and the years to be:(He that searches, with tireless eyesIn a turret-chamber under the skies)Passion and joy, and sorrow and laughter,Life and death, and the things thereafter.[pg 26]

O scholargrey, with quiet eyes,Reading the charactered pages, brightWith one tall candle’s flickering light,In a turret chamber under the skies;O scholar, learned in gramarye,Have you seen the manifold things I see?

O scholargrey, with quiet eyes,

Reading the charactered pages, bright

With one tall candle’s flickering light,

In a turret chamber under the skies;

O scholar, learned in gramarye,

Have you seen the manifold things I see?

Have you seen the forms of tracèd towersWhence clamorous voices challenge the hours:Gaunt tree-branches, pitchy blackAgainst the long, wind-driven wrackOf scurrying, shuddering clouds, that raceEver across the pale moon’s face?

Have you seen the forms of tracèd towers

Whence clamorous voices challenge the hours:

Gaunt tree-branches, pitchy black

Against the long, wind-driven wrack

Of scurrying, shuddering clouds, that race

Ever across the pale moon’s face?

Have you heard the tramp of hurrying feet.There beneath, in the shadowy street,Have you heard sharp cries, and seen the flameOf silvery steel, in a perilous game,A perilous game for men to play,Hid from the searching eyes of day?

Have you heard the tramp of hurrying feet.

There beneath, in the shadowy street,

Have you heard sharp cries, and seen the flame

Of silvery steel, in a perilous game,

A perilous game for men to play,

Hid from the searching eyes of day?

Have you heard the great awakening breath,Like trump that summons the saints from death,Of the wild, majestical wind, which blowsLoud and splendid, that each man knowsFar, O far away is the sea,Breaking, murmuring, stark and free?

Have you heard the great awakening breath,

Like trump that summons the saints from death,

Of the wild, majestical wind, which blows

Loud and splendid, that each man knows

Far, O far away is the sea,

Breaking, murmuring, stark and free?

[pg 25]

All these things I hear and see,I, a scholar of gramarye:All are writ in the ancient booksClear, exactly, and he that looksFinds the night and the changing sea,The years gone by, and the years to be:(He that searches, with tireless eyesIn a turret-chamber under the skies)Passion and joy, and sorrow and laughter,Life and death, and the things thereafter.

All these things I hear and see,

I, a scholar of gramarye:

All are writ in the ancient books

Clear, exactly, and he that looks

Finds the night and the changing sea,

The years gone by, and the years to be:

(He that searches, with tireless eyes

In a turret-chamber under the skies)

Passion and joy, and sorrow and laughter,

Life and death, and the things thereafter.

[pg 26]

To an Elzevir CiceroDust-coveredbook, that very few men know,Even as very few men understandThe glory of an ancient, storied landIn the wild current of the ages’ flow,Have not old scholars, centuries agoCaressed you in the hollow of their hand,The while with quiet, kindly eyes they scannedYour pages, yellowed now, then white as snow?A voice there is, cries through your every word,Of him, that after greatest glory cameDown the grey road to darkness and to tears;A voice like far seas in still valleys heard,Crying of love and death and hope and fameThat change not with the changing of the years.[pg 27]

Dust-coveredbook, that very few men know,Even as very few men understandThe glory of an ancient, storied landIn the wild current of the ages’ flow,Have not old scholars, centuries agoCaressed you in the hollow of their hand,The while with quiet, kindly eyes they scannedYour pages, yellowed now, then white as snow?

Dust-coveredbook, that very few men know,

Even as very few men understand

The glory of an ancient, storied land

In the wild current of the ages’ flow,

Have not old scholars, centuries ago

Caressed you in the hollow of their hand,

The while with quiet, kindly eyes they scanned

Your pages, yellowed now, then white as snow?

A voice there is, cries through your every word,Of him, that after greatest glory cameDown the grey road to darkness and to tears;A voice like far seas in still valleys heard,Crying of love and death and hope and fameThat change not with the changing of the years.

A voice there is, cries through your every word,

Of him, that after greatest glory came

Down the grey road to darkness and to tears;

A voice like far seas in still valleys heard,

Crying of love and death and hope and fame

That change not with the changing of the years.

[pg 27]

To a Dürer Drawing of Antwerp HarbourFiguredby Dürer’s magic hand wast thou,That, lightning-like, traced on the lucid pageRough, careless lines, with wizardry so sageThat yet the whole was fair, I know not how:Ships of gaunt masts, and stark, sea-smitten prow,Idle, yet soon again to sweep the mainIn the swift service of old merchants’ gain,Where are ye now, alas, where are ye now?Gone are ye all, and vanished very long,Sunk with great glory in the storied wars,Or conquered by the leaping breakers wild:And yet we love your image, like some songThat tells of ancient days and high, becauseOld Dürer looked upon you once and smiled.[pg 28]

Figuredby Dürer’s magic hand wast thou,That, lightning-like, traced on the lucid pageRough, careless lines, with wizardry so sageThat yet the whole was fair, I know not how:Ships of gaunt masts, and stark, sea-smitten prow,Idle, yet soon again to sweep the mainIn the swift service of old merchants’ gain,Where are ye now, alas, where are ye now?Gone are ye all, and vanished very long,Sunk with great glory in the storied wars,Or conquered by the leaping breakers wild:And yet we love your image, like some songThat tells of ancient days and high, becauseOld Dürer looked upon you once and smiled.

Figuredby Dürer’s magic hand wast thou,

That, lightning-like, traced on the lucid page

Rough, careless lines, with wizardry so sage

That yet the whole was fair, I know not how:

Ships of gaunt masts, and stark, sea-smitten prow,

Idle, yet soon again to sweep the main

In the swift service of old merchants’ gain,

Where are ye now, alas, where are ye now?

Gone are ye all, and vanished very long,

Sunk with great glory in the storied wars,

Or conquered by the leaping breakers wild:

And yet we love your image, like some song

That tells of ancient days and high, because

Old Dürer looked upon you once and smiled.

[pg 28]

Pure VirginiaYork River ReturnsLikesmoke that vanishes on the morning breezeAre passed the first beginnings of the world,When time was even as a bud still curled,And scarce the limit set of lands and seas;Like smoke, like smoke the composite auguriesOf Hebrew and of Hellene are all furled,Fulfilled or else forgot, and idly hurledThis way or that way, as the great winds please:Aye, and like smoke of this delicious herbBrought by strange ways the curious mind may guess,From where the parrot and the leopard be,My thoughts, that should be strong, the years to curbGo up, and vanish into nothingnessOn a blue cloud of exquisite fragrancy.[pg 29]

York River Returns

Likesmoke that vanishes on the morning breezeAre passed the first beginnings of the world,When time was even as a bud still curled,And scarce the limit set of lands and seas;Like smoke, like smoke the composite auguriesOf Hebrew and of Hellene are all furled,Fulfilled or else forgot, and idly hurledThis way or that way, as the great winds please:Aye, and like smoke of this delicious herbBrought by strange ways the curious mind may guess,From where the parrot and the leopard be,My thoughts, that should be strong, the years to curbGo up, and vanish into nothingnessOn a blue cloud of exquisite fragrancy.

Likesmoke that vanishes on the morning breeze

Are passed the first beginnings of the world,

When time was even as a bud still curled,

And scarce the limit set of lands and seas;

Like smoke, like smoke the composite auguries

Of Hebrew and of Hellene are all furled,

Fulfilled or else forgot, and idly hurled

This way or that way, as the great winds please:

Aye, and like smoke of this delicious herb

Brought by strange ways the curious mind may guess,

From where the parrot and the leopard be,

My thoughts, that should be strong, the years to curb

Go up, and vanish into nothingness

On a blue cloud of exquisite fragrancy.

[pg 29]

A Preface for a Tale I have never toldHereinis nought of windy citadelsWhere proud kings dwell, that with an iron handDeal war or justice: here no historyOf valiant ships upon the wine-dark seasPassing strange lands and threading channels straitBetween embalmed islands: here no songThat men shall sing in battle and rememberWhen they are old and grey beside the fire:Only a story gathered from the hillsAnd the wind crying of forgotten days,A story that shall whisper, “All things change—For friends do grow indifferent, and lovesDie like a dream at morning: bitternessIs the sure heritage of all men born,And he alone sees truly, who looks outFrom some huge aery peak, considering notFast-walled cities, or the works of men,But turns his gaze unto the mountain-topsAnd the unfathomable blue of heavenThat only change not with the changing years”——A tale that shod itself with ancient shoonAnd wrapped its cloak, and wandered from the west.[pg 30]

Hereinis nought of windy citadelsWhere proud kings dwell, that with an iron handDeal war or justice: here no historyOf valiant ships upon the wine-dark seasPassing strange lands and threading channels straitBetween embalmed islands: here no songThat men shall sing in battle and rememberWhen they are old and grey beside the fire:Only a story gathered from the hillsAnd the wind crying of forgotten days,A story that shall whisper, “All things change—For friends do grow indifferent, and lovesDie like a dream at morning: bitternessIs the sure heritage of all men born,And he alone sees truly, who looks outFrom some huge aery peak, considering notFast-walled cities, or the works of men,But turns his gaze unto the mountain-topsAnd the unfathomable blue of heavenThat only change not with the changing years”——A tale that shod itself with ancient shoonAnd wrapped its cloak, and wandered from the west.

Hereinis nought of windy citadels

Where proud kings dwell, that with an iron hand

Deal war or justice: here no history

Of valiant ships upon the wine-dark seas

Passing strange lands and threading channels strait

Between embalmed islands: here no song

That men shall sing in battle and remember

When they are old and grey beside the fire:

Only a story gathered from the hills

And the wind crying of forgotten days,

A story that shall whisper, “All things change—

For friends do grow indifferent, and loves

Die like a dream at morning: bitterness

Is the sure heritage of all men born,

And he alone sees truly, who looks out

From some huge aery peak, considering not

Fast-walled cities, or the works of men,

But turns his gaze unto the mountain-tops

And the unfathomable blue of heaven

That only change not with the changing years”——

A tale that shod itself with ancient shoon

And wrapped its cloak, and wandered from the west.

[pg 30]

A SonnetThereis a wind that takes the heart of a man,A fresh wind in the latter days of spring,When hate and war and every evil thingThat the wide arches of high Heaven spanSeems dust, and less to be accounted thanThe omened touches of a passing wing:When Destiny, that calls himself a king,Goes all forgotten for the song of Pan:For why? Because the twittering of birdsIs the best music that was ever sung,Because the voice of trees finds better wordsThan ever poet from his heartstrings wrung:Because all wisdom and all gramaryeAre writ in fields, O very plain to see.[pg 31]

Thereis a wind that takes the heart of a man,A fresh wind in the latter days of spring,When hate and war and every evil thingThat the wide arches of high Heaven spanSeems dust, and less to be accounted thanThe omened touches of a passing wing:When Destiny, that calls himself a king,Goes all forgotten for the song of Pan:For why? Because the twittering of birdsIs the best music that was ever sung,Because the voice of trees finds better wordsThan ever poet from his heartstrings wrung:Because all wisdom and all gramaryeAre writ in fields, O very plain to see.

Thereis a wind that takes the heart of a man,

A fresh wind in the latter days of spring,

When hate and war and every evil thing

That the wide arches of high Heaven span

Seems dust, and less to be accounted than

The omened touches of a passing wing:

When Destiny, that calls himself a king,

Goes all forgotten for the song of Pan:

For why? Because the twittering of birds

Is the best music that was ever sung,

Because the voice of trees finds better words

Than ever poet from his heartstrings wrung:

Because all wisdom and all gramarye

Are writ in fields, O very plain to see.

[pg 31]

“It was all in the Black Countree”Itwas all in the Black Countree,What time the sweet o’ the year should be,I saw a tree, all gaunt and grey,As mindful of a winter’s day:And that a lonely bird did sitUpon the topmost branch of it,Who to my thought did sweeter singThan any minstrel of a king.[pg 32]

Itwas all in the Black Countree,What time the sweet o’ the year should be,I saw a tree, all gaunt and grey,As mindful of a winter’s day:And that a lonely bird did sitUpon the topmost branch of it,Who to my thought did sweeter singThan any minstrel of a king.

Itwas all in the Black Countree,

What time the sweet o’ the year should be,

I saw a tree, all gaunt and grey,

As mindful of a winter’s day:

And that a lonely bird did sit

Upon the topmost branch of it,

Who to my thought did sweeter sing

Than any minstrel of a king.

[pg 32]

To a PianistWhenothers’ fingers touch the keysThen most doleful threnodiesChase about the air, and runLike Pandæmonium begun.Rhythm strained and false accordIn a ceaseless stream are poured;Then sighs are heard, and men departTo seek the sage physician’s art,Or silence, and a little ease,When others’ fingers touch the keys.When your fingers touch the keysHark, soft sounds of summer seasIn a melody most fairWhisper through the pleasant air,Or a winding mountain streamGlitters to the pale moonbeam,Or a breeze doth stir the topsOf springtime larches in a copse,Or the winds are loosed and hurledAbout the wonder-stricken worldWith immortal harmonies,When your fingers touch the keys.[pg 33]

Whenothers’ fingers touch the keysThen most doleful threnodiesChase about the air, and runLike Pandæmonium begun.Rhythm strained and false accordIn a ceaseless stream are poured;Then sighs are heard, and men departTo seek the sage physician’s art,Or silence, and a little ease,When others’ fingers touch the keys.

Whenothers’ fingers touch the keys

Then most doleful threnodies

Chase about the air, and run

Like Pandæmonium begun.

Rhythm strained and false accord

In a ceaseless stream are poured;

Then sighs are heard, and men depart

To seek the sage physician’s art,

Or silence, and a little ease,

When others’ fingers touch the keys.

When your fingers touch the keysHark, soft sounds of summer seasIn a melody most fairWhisper through the pleasant air,Or a winding mountain streamGlitters to the pale moonbeam,Or a breeze doth stir the topsOf springtime larches in a copse,Or the winds are loosed and hurledAbout the wonder-stricken worldWith immortal harmonies,When your fingers touch the keys.

When your fingers touch the keys

Hark, soft sounds of summer seas

In a melody most fair

Whisper through the pleasant air,

Or a winding mountain stream

Glitters to the pale moonbeam,

Or a breeze doth stir the tops

Of springtime larches in a copse,

Or the winds are loosed and hurled

About the wonder-stricken world

With immortal harmonies,

When your fingers touch the keys.

[pg 33]

A Fragment————Andsome came down in a great windUnder grey scurrying skiesTo where the long wave-beaten shoreFor ever shrieks and cries.O, fling aside your toil, your care,When one cries of the sea,And the great waves that foam and toss,And the white clouds that flee:Let us forget our weariness,Forget that we have sinned,So we but sail, what matters itIf Death ride on the wind?Storm from the sky, storm from the seaBeat on them as they stood,And a great longing sprang in themTo cross the roaring flood. . . .[pg 34]

————

————

Andsome came down in a great windUnder grey scurrying skiesTo where the long wave-beaten shoreFor ever shrieks and cries.

Andsome came down in a great wind

Under grey scurrying skies

To where the long wave-beaten shore

For ever shrieks and cries.

O, fling aside your toil, your care,When one cries of the sea,And the great waves that foam and toss,And the white clouds that flee:Let us forget our weariness,Forget that we have sinned,So we but sail, what matters itIf Death ride on the wind?

O, fling aside your toil, your care,

When one cries of the sea,

And the great waves that foam and toss,

And the white clouds that flee:

Let us forget our weariness,

Forget that we have sinned,

So we but sail, what matters it

If Death ride on the wind?

Storm from the sky, storm from the seaBeat on them as they stood,And a great longing sprang in themTo cross the roaring flood. . . .

Storm from the sky, storm from the sea

Beat on them as they stood,

And a great longing sprang in them

To cross the roaring flood. . . .

[pg 34]

Sea Poppies’Twixtlonely lands and desert beach,Where no wind blows and no waves reach,A sunken precinct here we keep,With woven wiles of endless sleep;Our twisted stems of sere-hued green,Our pallid blooms what sun has seen?And he that tastes our magic breathShall sleep that sleep whose name is death.Wild clouds are scurrying overhead,The wild wind’s voice is loud and dread,Sounding the knell of the dying day,Yet here is silence and gloom alway.And a great longing seizes meTo burst my bondage and be free,To look on winds’ and waters’ strife,And breathe in my nostrils the breath of life.Give me not dim and slumbrous ease,But sounding storm and labouring seas,Not peaceful and untroubled years,But toil and warfare and passion and tears.And I would fall in valorous fight,And lie on lofty far-seen height.Yet how to burst these prison-bands,Forged by unseen spirit-hands?O seek not to burst our prison bandsForged by unseen spirit-hands.Clashing battle and labouring sea,These be for others, not for thee.Thou lover of storm and passion and warBreak’st our charmed circle never more.[pg 35]

’Twixtlonely lands and desert beach,Where no wind blows and no waves reach,A sunken precinct here we keep,With woven wiles of endless sleep;Our twisted stems of sere-hued green,Our pallid blooms what sun has seen?And he that tastes our magic breathShall sleep that sleep whose name is death.

’Twixtlonely lands and desert beach,

Where no wind blows and no waves reach,

A sunken precinct here we keep,

With woven wiles of endless sleep;

Our twisted stems of sere-hued green,

Our pallid blooms what sun has seen?

And he that tastes our magic breath

Shall sleep that sleep whose name is death.

Wild clouds are scurrying overhead,The wild wind’s voice is loud and dread,Sounding the knell of the dying day,Yet here is silence and gloom alway.And a great longing seizes meTo burst my bondage and be free,To look on winds’ and waters’ strife,And breathe in my nostrils the breath of life.Give me not dim and slumbrous ease,But sounding storm and labouring seas,Not peaceful and untroubled years,But toil and warfare and passion and tears.And I would fall in valorous fight,And lie on lofty far-seen height.

Wild clouds are scurrying overhead,

The wild wind’s voice is loud and dread,

Sounding the knell of the dying day,

Yet here is silence and gloom alway.

And a great longing seizes me

To burst my bondage and be free,

To look on winds’ and waters’ strife,

And breathe in my nostrils the breath of life.

Give me not dim and slumbrous ease,

But sounding storm and labouring seas,

Not peaceful and untroubled years,

But toil and warfare and passion and tears.

And I would fall in valorous fight,

And lie on lofty far-seen height.

Yet how to burst these prison-bands,Forged by unseen spirit-hands?

Yet how to burst these prison-bands,

Forged by unseen spirit-hands?

O seek not to burst our prison bandsForged by unseen spirit-hands.Clashing battle and labouring sea,These be for others, not for thee.Thou lover of storm and passion and warBreak’st our charmed circle never more.

O seek not to burst our prison bands

Forged by unseen spirit-hands.

Clashing battle and labouring sea,

These be for others, not for thee.

Thou lover of storm and passion and war

Break’st our charmed circle never more.

[pg 35]

“O, sing me a Song of the Wild West Wind”O, singme a song of the wild west wind,And his great sea-harrying flail,Of hardy mariners, copper skinned,That fly with a bursting sail.They see the clouds of crispèd whiteThat shadow the distant hills,And filled are they with a strange delightAs shaking away old ills.O, give me a boat that is sure and stark,And swift as a slinger’s stone,With a sail of canvas bronzèd dark,And I will go out alone:Nor fear nor sorrow my soul shall keepWhen around me lies the sea,And I will return with the night, and sleepIn the wind’s wild harmony.[pg 36]

O, singme a song of the wild west wind,And his great sea-harrying flail,Of hardy mariners, copper skinned,That fly with a bursting sail.They see the clouds of crispèd whiteThat shadow the distant hills,And filled are they with a strange delightAs shaking away old ills.

O, singme a song of the wild west wind,

And his great sea-harrying flail,

Of hardy mariners, copper skinned,

That fly with a bursting sail.

They see the clouds of crispèd white

That shadow the distant hills,

And filled are they with a strange delight

As shaking away old ills.

O, give me a boat that is sure and stark,And swift as a slinger’s stone,With a sail of canvas bronzèd dark,And I will go out alone:Nor fear nor sorrow my soul shall keepWhen around me lies the sea,And I will return with the night, and sleepIn the wind’s wild harmony.

O, give me a boat that is sure and stark,

And swift as a slinger’s stone,

With a sail of canvas bronzèd dark,

And I will go out alone:

Nor fear nor sorrow my soul shall keep

When around me lies the sea,

And I will return with the night, and sleep

In the wind’s wild harmony.

[pg 36]

Ære PerenniusWritten on Commemoration Sunday, Corpus Christi College, OxfordWepraise, we praise the immortal dead,Who strove beneath unheeding skiesFor truth that raised the drooping head,For light that gladdened weary eyes:The martyr’s cross, the warrior’s sword,How should they be of lesser worthThan some unprofitable hoardIn ancient mines below the earth?The song that one alone has sung,The great uncompromising page,Are these but glittering baubles, flungAbout the world from age to age?But ruin’d columns, wondrous tall,Built in old time with labour sore,The mighty deeds done once for all,The voice heard once, and heard no more?Rather they shine as doth the starAbout the close of winter’s day,That cheers the traveller afarAnd draws him on, and points the way.————We praise, we praise the immortal dead.Do they not verily wait till weOf the spoilt years unharvestedBe also of their company?[pg 37]

Written on Commemoration Sunday, Corpus Christi College, Oxford

Wepraise, we praise the immortal dead,Who strove beneath unheeding skiesFor truth that raised the drooping head,For light that gladdened weary eyes:

Wepraise, we praise the immortal dead,

Who strove beneath unheeding skies

For truth that raised the drooping head,

For light that gladdened weary eyes:

The martyr’s cross, the warrior’s sword,How should they be of lesser worthThan some unprofitable hoardIn ancient mines below the earth?

The martyr’s cross, the warrior’s sword,

How should they be of lesser worth

Than some unprofitable hoard

In ancient mines below the earth?

The song that one alone has sung,The great uncompromising page,Are these but glittering baubles, flungAbout the world from age to age?

The song that one alone has sung,

The great uncompromising page,

Are these but glittering baubles, flung

About the world from age to age?

But ruin’d columns, wondrous tall,Built in old time with labour sore,The mighty deeds done once for all,The voice heard once, and heard no more?

But ruin’d columns, wondrous tall,

Built in old time with labour sore,

The mighty deeds done once for all,

The voice heard once, and heard no more?

Rather they shine as doth the starAbout the close of winter’s day,That cheers the traveller afarAnd draws him on, and points the way.

Rather they shine as doth the star

About the close of winter’s day,

That cheers the traveller afar

And draws him on, and points the way.

————

————

We praise, we praise the immortal dead.Do they not verily wait till weOf the spoilt years unharvestedBe also of their company?

We praise, we praise the immortal dead.

Do they not verily wait till we

Of the spoilt years unharvested

Be also of their company?

[pg 37]

The Old KingsFaraway from sunny rills,Far away from golden broom,Far away from any townWhither merchants travel down—In a hollow of the hillsIn impenetrable gloomSit the old forgotten kingsUnto whom no poet sings,Unto whom none makes bequest,Unto whom no kingdoms rest,——Only wayward shreds of dreams,And the sound of ancient streams,And the shock of ancient strifeOn the further shore of life.————When our days are done, shall weEnter their pale company?[pg 38]

Faraway from sunny rills,Far away from golden broom,Far away from any townWhither merchants travel down—In a hollow of the hillsIn impenetrable gloomSit the old forgotten kingsUnto whom no poet sings,Unto whom none makes bequest,Unto whom no kingdoms rest,——Only wayward shreds of dreams,And the sound of ancient streams,And the shock of ancient strifeOn the further shore of life.

Faraway from sunny rills,

Far away from golden broom,

Far away from any town

Whither merchants travel down—

In a hollow of the hills

In impenetrable gloom

Sit the old forgotten kings

Unto whom no poet sings,

Unto whom none makes bequest,

Unto whom no kingdoms rest,——

Only wayward shreds of dreams,

And the sound of ancient streams,

And the shock of ancient strife

On the further shore of life.

————

————

When our days are done, shall weEnter their pale company?

When our days are done, shall we

Enter their pale company?

[pg 38]

“O there be Kings whose Treasuries”O therebe kings whose treasuriesAre rich with pearls and goldAnd silks and bales of cramasyAnd spices manifold:Gardens they have with marble stairsAnd streams than life more fair,With roses set and lavenderThat do enchant the air.O there be many ships that sailThe sea-ways wide and blue,And there be master-marinersTo sail them straight and true:And there be many women fairWho watch out anxiously,And are enamoured of the dayTheir dear ones come from sea:But riches I can find enowAll in a barren land,Where sombre lakes shine wondrouslyWith rocks on either hand:And I can find enow of loveUp there, alone, alone,With none beside me save the wind,Nor speech except his moan.For there far up among the hillsThe great storms come and goIn a most proud processionalOf cloud and rain and snow:There light and darkness only areA changing benisonOf the old gods who wrought the worldAnd shaped the moon and sun.[pg 39]

O therebe kings whose treasuriesAre rich with pearls and goldAnd silks and bales of cramasyAnd spices manifold:Gardens they have with marble stairsAnd streams than life more fair,With roses set and lavenderThat do enchant the air.

O therebe kings whose treasuries

Are rich with pearls and gold

And silks and bales of cramasy

And spices manifold:

Gardens they have with marble stairs

And streams than life more fair,

With roses set and lavender

That do enchant the air.

O there be many ships that sailThe sea-ways wide and blue,And there be master-marinersTo sail them straight and true:And there be many women fairWho watch out anxiously,And are enamoured of the dayTheir dear ones come from sea:

O there be many ships that sail

The sea-ways wide and blue,

And there be master-mariners

To sail them straight and true:

And there be many women fair

Who watch out anxiously,

And are enamoured of the day

Their dear ones come from sea:

But riches I can find enowAll in a barren land,Where sombre lakes shine wondrouslyWith rocks on either hand:And I can find enow of loveUp there, alone, alone,With none beside me save the wind,Nor speech except his moan.

But riches I can find enow

All in a barren land,

Where sombre lakes shine wondrously

With rocks on either hand:

And I can find enow of love

Up there, alone, alone,

With none beside me save the wind,

Nor speech except his moan.

For there far up among the hillsThe great storms come and goIn a most proud processionalOf cloud and rain and snow:There light and darkness only areA changing benisonOf the old gods who wrought the worldAnd shaped the moon and sun.

For there far up among the hills

The great storms come and go

In a most proud processional

Of cloud and rain and snow:

There light and darkness only are

A changing benison

Of the old gods who wrought the world

And shaped the moon and sun.

[pg 39]

A StudyInchamber hung with white,Lit by the dawning light,Upon a slender bedShe lies, as she were dead:Most carven-ivory fair,And palely gold her hair.Lo, the sun’s yellow ray,That, with the rise of day,Through quartered casement cameTo wake her life’s pale flame.[pg 40]

Inchamber hung with white,Lit by the dawning light,

Inchamber hung with white,

Lit by the dawning light,

Upon a slender bedShe lies, as she were dead:

Upon a slender bed

She lies, as she were dead:

Most carven-ivory fair,And palely gold her hair.

Most carven-ivory fair,

And palely gold her hair.

Lo, the sun’s yellow ray,That, with the rise of day,

Lo, the sun’s yellow ray,

That, with the rise of day,

Through quartered casement cameTo wake her life’s pale flame.

Through quartered casement came

To wake her life’s pale flame.

[pg 40]

The EremiteWhenthe world is still in the hush of dawn,And yet fast sleeping are hate and scorn,From my grey lodging under the hillI do go out, and wander at will.Of nights when the riven clouds are hurled,And strife and rancour possess the world,I sit alone, with thoughts that are chill,In my grey lodging under the hill.[pg 41]

Whenthe world is still in the hush of dawn,And yet fast sleeping are hate and scorn,From my grey lodging under the hillI do go out, and wander at will.

Whenthe world is still in the hush of dawn,

And yet fast sleeping are hate and scorn,

From my grey lodging under the hill

I do go out, and wander at will.

Of nights when the riven clouds are hurled,And strife and rancour possess the world,I sit alone, with thoughts that are chill,In my grey lodging under the hill.

Of nights when the riven clouds are hurled,

And strife and rancour possess the world,

I sit alone, with thoughts that are chill,

In my grey lodging under the hill.

[pg 41]

The House of EldNowthe old winds are wild about the house,And the old ghosts cry to me from the airOf a far isle set in the western sea,And of the evening sunlight lingering there.Ah! I am bound here, bound and fettered,The dark house crumbles, and the woods decay,I was too fain of life, that bound me here;Away, old long-loved ghosts, away, away![pg 42]

Nowthe old winds are wild about the house,And the old ghosts cry to me from the airOf a far isle set in the western sea,And of the evening sunlight lingering there.

Nowthe old winds are wild about the house,

And the old ghosts cry to me from the air

Of a far isle set in the western sea,

And of the evening sunlight lingering there.

Ah! I am bound here, bound and fettered,The dark house crumbles, and the woods decay,I was too fain of life, that bound me here;Away, old long-loved ghosts, away, away!

Ah! I am bound here, bound and fettered,

The dark house crumbles, and the woods decay,

I was too fain of life, that bound me here;

Away, old long-loved ghosts, away, away!

[pg 42]

The South-west WindThesouth-west wind has blown his fill,And vanished with departing day:The air is warm, and very still,And soft as silks of far Cathay.This is a night when spirits stray.Their wan limbs bear them where they will;They wring their pallid hands alway,Seeing the lights upon the hill.[pg 43]

Thesouth-west wind has blown his fill,And vanished with departing day:The air is warm, and very still,And soft as silks of far Cathay.

Thesouth-west wind has blown his fill,

And vanished with departing day:

The air is warm, and very still,

And soft as silks of far Cathay.

This is a night when spirits stray.Their wan limbs bear them where they will;They wring their pallid hands alway,Seeing the lights upon the hill.

This is a night when spirits stray.

Their wan limbs bear them where they will;

They wring their pallid hands alway,

Seeing the lights upon the hill.

[pg 43]

Schumann: Erstes VerlustO, drearyfall the leaves,The withered leaves;Among the treesComplains the breeze,That still bereaves.All silent lies the mere,The silver mere,In saddest wiseReflecting skiesForlorn and sere.Would autumn had not claimed its ownAnd would the swallows had not flown.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!And she has passedAnd left the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone.Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!Does she that passedDream of the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone?[pg 44]

O, drearyfall the leaves,The withered leaves;Among the treesComplains the breeze,That still bereaves.

O, drearyfall the leaves,

The withered leaves;

Among the trees

Complains the breeze,

That still bereaves.

All silent lies the mere,The silver mere,In saddest wiseReflecting skiesForlorn and sere.

All silent lies the mere,

The silver mere,

In saddest wise

Reflecting skies

Forlorn and sere.

Would autumn had not claimed its ownAnd would the swallows had not flown.

Would autumn had not claimed its own

And would the swallows had not flown.

Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!And she has passedAnd left the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone.

Skies overcast!

Leaves falling fast!

And she has passed

And left the woodland strown,

The woodland strown,

The silver mere,

The dying year,

And me alone.

Skies overcast!Leaves falling fast!Does she that passedDream of the woodland strown,The woodland strown,The silver mere,The dying year,And me alone?

Skies overcast!

Leaves falling fast!

Does she that passed

Dream of the woodland strown,

The woodland strown,

The silver mere,

The dying year,

And me alone?

[pg 44]

“Dark Boughs against a Golden Sky”Darkboughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And sweet it is, for hope is high,And sad it is, for we have sinned.Perfect is nature’s every partIn sunny rest, or windy strife:But never yet the perfect heart,And never yet the perfect life!Dark boughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And in the cold earth we must lie,What matter then if we have sinned?For evermore and evermoreShall the great river onward roll:And ever winding streams and poorShall lose them in the mighty whole.[pg 45]

Darkboughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And sweet it is, for hope is high,And sad it is, for we have sinned.

Darkboughs against a golden sky,

And crying of the winter wind:

And sweet it is, for hope is high,

And sad it is, for we have sinned.

Perfect is nature’s every partIn sunny rest, or windy strife:But never yet the perfect heart,And never yet the perfect life!

Perfect is nature’s every part

In sunny rest, or windy strife:

But never yet the perfect heart,

And never yet the perfect life!

Dark boughs against a golden sky,And crying of the winter wind:And in the cold earth we must lie,What matter then if we have sinned?

Dark boughs against a golden sky,

And crying of the winter wind:

And in the cold earth we must lie,

What matter then if we have sinned?

For evermore and evermoreShall the great river onward roll:And ever winding streams and poorShall lose them in the mighty whole.

For evermore and evermore

Shall the great river onward roll:

And ever winding streams and poor

Shall lose them in the mighty whole.

[pg 45]

“Wind of the Darkness”Windof the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea,Lo, you have loosed the cords that bound us,Lo, you have set our spirits free:Free to take wings, like the sea-bird lonelyBeating hardily up the wind:Fixed are his eyes on the waters only,Never a glance for the land behind.Wind of the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea.Was it the old gods’ voice that found usHere, where the bars of prison be?From the far isle that neither knowethChange of season, nor time’s increase,Where is plenty, and no man soweth:Calling to strife that shall end in peace.[pg 46]

Windof the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea,Lo, you have loosed the cords that bound us,Lo, you have set our spirits free:

Windof the darkness, breathing round us,

Wind from the never-resting sea,

Lo, you have loosed the cords that bound us,

Lo, you have set our spirits free:

Free to take wings, like the sea-bird lonelyBeating hardily up the wind:Fixed are his eyes on the waters only,Never a glance for the land behind.

Free to take wings, like the sea-bird lonely

Beating hardily up the wind:

Fixed are his eyes on the waters only,

Never a glance for the land behind.

Wind of the darkness, breathing round us,Wind from the never-resting sea.Was it the old gods’ voice that found usHere, where the bars of prison be?

Wind of the darkness, breathing round us,

Wind from the never-resting sea.

Was it the old gods’ voice that found us

Here, where the bars of prison be?

From the far isle that neither knowethChange of season, nor time’s increase,Where is plenty, and no man soweth:Calling to strife that shall end in peace.

From the far isle that neither knoweth

Change of season, nor time’s increase,

Where is plenty, and no man soweth:

Calling to strife that shall end in peace.

[pg 46]

Creator SpiritusThewind that scatters dying leavesAnd whirls them from the autumn treeIs grateful to the ship that cleavesWith stately prow the scurrying sea.Heedless about the world we playLike children in a garden close:A postern bars the outward wayAnd what’s beyond it no man knows:For careless days, a life at will,A little laughter, and some tears,These are sufficiency to fillThe early, vain, untroubled years,Till at the last the wind upheavesHis unimagined strength, and weAre scattered far, like autumn leaves,Or proudly sail, like ships at sea.[pg 47]

Thewind that scatters dying leavesAnd whirls them from the autumn treeIs grateful to the ship that cleavesWith stately prow the scurrying sea.

Thewind that scatters dying leaves

And whirls them from the autumn tree

Is grateful to the ship that cleaves

With stately prow the scurrying sea.

Heedless about the world we playLike children in a garden close:A postern bars the outward wayAnd what’s beyond it no man knows:

Heedless about the world we play

Like children in a garden close:

A postern bars the outward way

And what’s beyond it no man knows:

For careless days, a life at will,A little laughter, and some tears,These are sufficiency to fillThe early, vain, untroubled years,

For careless days, a life at will,

A little laughter, and some tears,

These are sufficiency to fill

The early, vain, untroubled years,

Till at the last the wind upheavesHis unimagined strength, and weAre scattered far, like autumn leaves,Or proudly sail, like ships at sea.

Till at the last the wind upheaves

His unimagined strength, and we

Are scattered far, like autumn leaves,

Or proudly sail, like ships at sea.

[pg 47]

Wind over the SeaOnlya grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them.Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, and when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?Out of the gathering darkness crashes a wind from theocean,Rushing with league-long paces over the plain of thewaters,Driving the clouds and the breakers before it in suddencommotion.Who are these on the wind, riders and riderless horses?Riders the great ones that have been and are, and thoseto come shall be:These are the children of might, life’s champions andhistory’s forces.Might I but grasp at a bridle, and fear not to be troddenunder,Swing myself into a saddle, and ride on greatly, exultingOn down the long straight road of the wind, a gallopingthunder!Only a grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them,Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, for when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?[pg 48]

Onlya grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them.Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, and when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?

Onlya grey sea, and a long grey shore,

And the grey heavens brooding over them.

Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,

Twilight of ceaseless eld, and when was youth?

Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?

Out of the gathering darkness crashes a wind from theocean,Rushing with league-long paces over the plain of thewaters,Driving the clouds and the breakers before it in suddencommotion.

Out of the gathering darkness crashes a wind from the

ocean,

Rushing with league-long paces over the plain of the

waters,

Driving the clouds and the breakers before it in sudden

commotion.

Who are these on the wind, riders and riderless horses?Riders the great ones that have been and are, and thoseto come shall be:These are the children of might, life’s champions andhistory’s forces.

Who are these on the wind, riders and riderless horses?

Riders the great ones that have been and are, and those

to come shall be:

These are the children of might, life’s champions and

history’s forces.

Might I but grasp at a bridle, and fear not to be troddenunder,Swing myself into a saddle, and ride on greatly, exultingOn down the long straight road of the wind, a gallopingthunder!

Might I but grasp at a bridle, and fear not to be trodden

under,

Swing myself into a saddle, and ride on greatly, exulting

On down the long straight road of the wind, a galloping

thunder!

Only a grey sea, and a long grey shore,And the grey heavens brooding over them,Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,Twilight of ceaseless eld, for when was youth?Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?

Only a grey sea, and a long grey shore,

And the grey heavens brooding over them,

Twilight of hopes and purposes forgot,

Twilight of ceaseless eld, for when was youth?

Is it not lonely here, beyond the years?

[pg 48]

Songs on the Downs1Thisis the road the Romans made,This track half lost in the green hills,Or fading in a forest-glade’Mid violets and daffodils.The years have fallen like dead leaves,Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),Since first this road the Romans made.2A miser lives within this house,His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,And there’s no peace upon his brows.A many ancient trees and thinDo fold the place their shade within,And moan, as for remembered sin.[pg 49]

1Thisis the road the Romans made,This track half lost in the green hills,Or fading in a forest-glade’Mid violets and daffodils.The years have fallen like dead leaves,Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),Since first this road the Romans made.

Thisis the road the Romans made,This track half lost in the green hills,Or fading in a forest-glade’Mid violets and daffodils.

Thisis the road the Romans made,

This track half lost in the green hills,

Or fading in a forest-glade

’Mid violets and daffodils.

The years have fallen like dead leaves,Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),Since first this road the Romans made.

The years have fallen like dead leaves,

Unwept, uncounted, and unstayed

(Such as the autumn tempest thieves),

Since first this road the Romans made.

2A miser lives within this house,His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,And there’s no peace upon his brows.A many ancient trees and thinDo fold the place their shade within,And moan, as for remembered sin.[pg 49]

A miser lives within this house,His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,And there’s no peace upon his brows.

A miser lives within this house,

His patron saint’s the gnawing mouse,

And there’s no peace upon his brows.

A many ancient trees and thinDo fold the place their shade within,And moan, as for remembered sin.

A many ancient trees and thin

Do fold the place their shade within,

And moan, as for remembered sin.

[pg 49]


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