The Project Gutenberg eBook ofEmbers, Volume 3.This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.Title: Embers, Volume 3.Author: Gilbert ParkerRelease date: August 1, 2004 [eBook #6270]Most recently updated: December 29, 2020Language: EnglishCredits: This eBook was produced by David Widger*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EMBERS, VOLUME 3. ***
This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
Title: Embers, Volume 3.Author: Gilbert ParkerRelease date: August 1, 2004 [eBook #6270]Most recently updated: December 29, 2020Language: EnglishCredits: This eBook was produced by David Widger
Title: Embers, Volume 3.
Author: Gilbert Parker
Author: Gilbert Parker
Release date: August 1, 2004 [eBook #6270]Most recently updated: December 29, 2020
Language: English
Credits: This eBook was produced by David Widger
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EMBERS, VOLUME 3. ***
This eBook was produced by David Widger
By Gilbert Parker
How many years of sun and snowHave come to Camden Town,Since through its streets and in its shade,I wandered up and down.
Not many more than to you hereThese verses hapless flung,Yet of the Long Ago they seemTo me who am yet young.
We strive to measure life by Time,And con the seasons o'er,To find, alas! that days are years,And years for evermore.
The joys that thrill, the ill that thralls,Pressed down on heart and brain-These are the only horologues,The Age's loss or gain.
And I am old in all of these,And wonder if I knowThe man begotten of the boy,Who loved that long ago.
A lilac bush close to the gate,A locust at the door,A low, wide window flower-filled,With ivy covered o'er.
A face—O love of childhood dreams,Lily in form and name—It comes back now in these day-dreams,The same yet not the same.
My childhood's friend! Well gathered areThe sheaves of many days,But this one sheaf is garnered in,Bound by my love always.
Where have you wandered, child, since whenTogether merrily,We gathered cups of columbineBy lazy Rapanee?
The green spears of the flagflower,Down by the old mill-race,Are weapons now for other hands,Who mimic warfare chase.
You were so tender, yet so strong,So gentle, yet so free,Your every word, whenever heard,Seemed wondrous wise to me.
You marvelled if the dead could hearOur steps, that passed at willTheir low green houses in the elm-Crowned churchyard on the hill.
And I, whom your sweet childhood's trust,Esteemed as most profound,Thought that they heard, as in a dream,The shadow of a sound.
We drew the long, rank grass awayFrom tombstones mossy grown,To read the verses crude and quaint,And make the words our own.
One tottering marble, willow-spread,I well remember yet,With only this engraved thereon,"By Joseph to Jeanette."
It held us wondering oft, as wePeeped through the pickets old:There was some mystery, we knew,Some history untold.
Well, better far those simple words,Where weeping phrase is not,Than burdened tablet, and the restForgetting and forgot.
And Lily Minden, do you lieIn some forgotten grave,Where only strangers' feet pass o'erYour temple's architrave?
Or, by some hearthstone, have you learnedThe worst and best of life,And found sweet greetings in the nameOf mother and of wife?
I cannot tell: I know you butAs bee the clover bloom,That sips content, and straightway buildsIts mansion and its tomb.
So took I in child-innocence,So build the House of Life,And in low tone to thee alone,As dead or maid or wife,
I sing this song, borne all alongA space of wasted breath;And build me on from room to roomUnto the House of Death,
Where portals swing forever inTo weary pilgrim guest,And hearts that here were inly dearShall find a Room of Rest.
Three times round has the sun gone, Jean,Since on your lips I pressedMute farewells; if that pain was keenFair were you in your nest.
Smiling, sweetheart, I left you there;You had no word to say;One last touch to your brow and hair,Then I went on my way.
Time it was when the leaves were grownYour rose-colour, my queen;Ere the birds to the south had flown,While yet the grass was green.
Eyes demure, do you ever yearn,Bird-wise to summer lands?Is it to meet your look I turn,Saying, "She understands,"
Saying, "She waits in her quiet placePatient till I shall come,The old sweet grace in her dreaming faceThat made a Heav'n her home"?
No! She is there 'neath Northern skies,And no word does she send;But near to my heart her image lies,And shall lie there to the end.
Come what will I am not bereftOf the memory of that time,When in her hands my heart I leftThere, in a colder clime.
And to my eyes no face is fair,For one face comes between;And if a song has a low sweet air,Through it there whispers, "Jean."
Better for me the world would say,If I had broke the charm,Set in the circle she one dayMade by her round white arm.
Never a king in days of eldGathered about his throatSuch a circlet; no queen e'er heldNecklace so clear of mote.
It sufficeth the charm was set;And if it chance that oneStill remembers, though one forget,Then is the worst thing done—
Done, and I still can say "Let be;I have no word of blame;Though her heart is no more for me,Mine shall be still the same."
I have my life to live and she—Well, if it be so—so;She may welcome or banish meAnd if I go, I go.
Friend, I pray you repress those tears,Comfort from this derive:I am a score—and more-of yearsAnd Jean is only five.
From buckwheat fields the summer sunDrew honeyed breezes overThe lanes where happy children runWith bare feet in the clover.
The schoolhouse stood with pines aboutUpon the hill, and everA creek, where hid the speckled trout,Ran past it to the river.
And rosy faces gathered there,With rustic good around them;With breath of balm blown everywhere,Pure, ere the world had found them.
Behind sweet purple ambuscadesOf lilacs, laws were broken;And here a desk with knives was frayed,There passed forbidden token.
One slipped a butternut betweenHis pearly teeth; a maidenDove-eyed, caressed her cheek; 'twas e'enWith maple sugar laden—
A flock that caught at wiles, becauseThe shepherd's hand that drove them,Reached little toward wise human laws,And less to God above them.
With eyebrows bent and surly lookHe only saw before him,The rule, the lesson, and the book,Not nature brooding o'er him.
One day through drone of locusts fellThe wood-bird's fitful tapping,And in his chair at "dinner-spell,"The teacher grim sat napping.
An urchin creeping in beholdsThe tyrant slumber-smitten,And in his pocket's ample foldsHe thrusts the school-yard kitten.
At length the master waked, and clangedHis bell with anger fitting;His sleep had made it double-fanged,And crossed like needles knitting.
Slow to their seats the children file,And wait "Prepare for classes,"A score of lads across the aisleFrom twice a score of lasses.
But two within the throng betrayA mirth suppressed; the sinner,And Rafe Ridall, the chief at play,At books the easy winner:
The wildest boy in all the school,In mischief first and ever,His daily seat the penance-stool,Disgraced for weeks together.
Just sound of bone and strong of heart,Staunch friend and noble foeman;In life to play the kingly part,True both to man and woman.
Joe's secret now he holds; a deedWith just enough of danger,To win his—ah, what's that? 'Tis freed,The pocket-prisoned stranger!
A moment's riot laughter-filled,Then fear, white-visaged, follows;And through the silence there is trilledThe shrill note of the swallows.
And now a fierce form fronts them all,Two fierce eyes search their faces,Then flash their fire on Rafe Ridall,Whose mirth no peril chases.
"You did it, sir!" "Not I!" "You did!""No!" "You've one chance for showingWho in my coat the kitten hid,Or be well thrashed for knowing."
The master paused, the birch he graspedAgainst his trousers flicking;Rafe said, with hands behind him clasped,"I'd rather take the licking."
Full many a year has passed since then,The lilacs still are blooming,Awaiting childish hands again,But they are long in coming.
Now wandering swallows build their nestsWhere doors and roofs decaying,No more shut in the master's zest,Nor out the children's playing.
All, all are gone who gathered there;Some toil among the masses,Some, overworn with pain and care,Wait Death's "Prepare for classes."
And some—the sighing pines sway onAbove them, dreamless lying;And 'mong them sleeps the master, goneHis anger and their crying.
And Rafe Ridall, brave then, brave now,Amid the jarring coursesOf man's misrule, still takes the blowFor those of weaker forces.
A little brown sparrow came trippingAcross the green grass at my feet;A kingfisher poised, and was peeringWhere current and calm water meet;
The clouds hung in passionless clustersAbove the green hills of the south;A bobolink fluttered to leewardWith a twinkle of bells in its mouth.
Ah, the morning was silver with gloryAs I lay by my tent on the shore;And the soft air was drunken with odours,And my soul lifted up to adore.
Is there wonder I took me to dreamingOf the gardens of Greece and old Rome,Of the fair watered meadows of Ida,And the hills where the gods made their home?
Of the Argonauts sung to by Sirens,Of Andromache, Helen of Troy,Of Proserpine, Iphigenia,And the Fates that build up and destroy?
Of the phantom isle, green Theresea,And the Naiads and Dryads that giveTo the soul of the poet, the dreamer,The visions of fancy that live
In the lives and the language of mortalsUnconscious, but sure as the sea,And that make for great losses repaymentTo wandering singers like me?
But a little brown sparrow came trippingAcross the green grass at my feet;And a kingfisher poised, and was peeringWhere current and calm water meet;
And Alice, sweet Alice, my neighbour,Stands musing beneath the pine tree;And her look says—"I have a loverWho sails on the turbulent sea:
Does he dream as I dream night and daytimeOf a face that is tender and true;Will he come to me e'en as he left me?"Yes, Alice, sweet Alice, for you,
Is the sunlight, and not the drear shadow,The gentle and fortunate peace:But he who thus revels in rhymingHas shadows that never shall cease.
The bay gleams softly in the sun,The morning widens o'er the world:The bluebird's song is just begun,And down the skies white clouds are furled.
The boat lies idly by the shore,The shed I built with happy careIs fallen; and I see no moreThe white tents in the eager air.
The goldenrod holds up its plumesIn the long stretch of meadow grass,The briarrose shakes its sweet perfumes,In coverts where the sparrows pass.
Far off, above, the sapphire gleams,Far off, below, the sapphire flows,And this, my place of morning dreams,The bank where my vain visions rose!
Sweet Alice, he came back again,Across the waste of summer sea,What time the fields were full of grain,But not to thee; but not to thee.
She comes no more when evening falls,To watch the stars wheel up the sky;Then love and light were over all;Alas! that light and love should die.
I feel her hand upon my arm,I see her eyes shine through the mist;Her life was passionate and warmAs the red jewels at her wrist.
Hearts do not break, the world has said,Though love lie stark and light be flown;But still it counts its lost and dead,And in the solitudes makes moan.
We school our lips to make our heartsSeem other than in truth they are;Before the lights we play our part,And paint the flesh to hide the scar.
Masquers and mummers all, and yetThe slaves of some dead passion's fires,Of hopes the soul can ne'er forgetStill sobbing in life's trembling wires.
Fate puts our dear desires in pawn,Youth passes, unredeemed they lie;The leaves drop from our rose of dawn,And storms fall from the mocking sky.
I shall come back no more; my shipWaits for me by the sundering sea;A prayer for her is on my lip—And the old life is dead to me.
I have lain beneath the pine trees just to hear the thrush's calling,I have waited for the throstle where the harvest fields were brown,I have caught the lark's sweet trilling from the depths of cloud-landfallingAnd the piping of the linnet through the willow branches blown.
But you have some singing graces, you who sing because you love it,That are higher than the throstle, or the linnet, or the lark;And, however far my soul may reach, your song is far above it;And I falter while I follow as a child does in the dark.
In elder days, when all the world was silent save the beatingOf the tempest-gathered ocean 'gainst the grey volcanic walls,When the light had met the darkness and the mountains sent their greetingTo each other in sharp flashes as the vivid lightning falls,
Then the high gods said, "In token that we love the earth we fashioned,We will set the white stars singing, and teach man the art of song":And there rose up from the valleys sounds of love and life impassioned,Till men cried, with arms uplifted, "Now from henceforth we are strong!"
Adown the ages there have come the sounds of that first singing,Lifting up the weary-hearted in the fever of the time;And I, who wait and wander far, felt all my soul upspringing,To but touch those ancient forces and the energies sublime,
When I heard you who had heard it—that first song—perhaps in dreaming,Till it filled you with fine fervour and the hopes of its refrain;And I knew that God was gracious and had led me in the gleamingOf a song-shine that is holy and that quiets all my pain.
Though the birds sing in the meadows and fill all the air with sweetness,They sing only in the present, and they sing because they must;They are wanton in their pureness, and in all their fine completeness,They trill out their lives forgotten to the silence of the dust.
But if you should pass to-morrow where your songs could never reach us,There would still be throbbing through us all the music of your voice;And your spirit would speak through the chords, as though it wouldbeseech usTo remember that the noblest ends have ever noblest choice.
In your onward march, O men,White of face, in promise whiter,You unsheathe the sword, and thenBlame the wronged as the fighter.
Time, ah, Time, rolls onward o'erAll these foetid fields of evil,While hard at the nation's coreEat the burning rust and weevil!
Nathless, out beyond the starsReigns the Wiser and the Stronger,Seeing in all strifes and warsWho the wronged, who the wronger.
"No man cared for my soul."
Blind, Lord, so blind! I wander farFrom Thee among the haunts of men,Most like some lone, faint, flickering starGone from its place, nor knoweth whenThe sun shall give it shining doleLord! no man careth for my soul.
Blind, Lord, so blind! In lonelinessBy crowded mart or busy street,I fold my hands and feel how lessAm I to any one I meet,Than to Thee one lost billow's roll:Lord! no man careth for my soul.
Blind, Lord, so blind! And I have knelt'Mong myriads in Thy house of prayer;And still sad desolation felt,Though heavy freighted was the airWith litanies of love: one ghoulCried, "No man careth for thy soul!"
Blind, Lord, so blind! The world is blind;It feeds me, fainting, with a stone:I cry for bread. Before, behind,Are hurrying feet; yet all aloneI walk, and no one points the goalLord! no man careth for my soul.
Blind, Lord, Oh very blind am I!If sin of mine sets up the wallBetween my poor sight and Thy sky,O Friend of man, Who cares for all,Send sweet peace ere the last bell toll—Yea, Lord, Thou carest for my soul!
Over the hills they are waiting to greet us,They who have scanned all the ultimate places,Fathomed the world and the things that defeat us—Evils and graces.
They have no thought for the toiling or spinning,Striving for bread that is dust in the gaining,They have won all that is well worth the winning—Past all distaining.
Now they have done with the pain and the error,Nevermore here shall the dark things assail them,Void man's devices and dreams have no terror—Shall we bewail them?
They have cast off all the strife and derision,They have put on all the joy of our yearning;We falter feebly from vision to vision,Never discerning.
Faint light before us, and shadows to grope in,Stretching out hands to the starbeams to guide us,Finding no place but our life's loves to hope in,Doubt to deride us—
So we climb upward with eyes growing dimmer,Looking back only to sigh through our smiling,Wondering still if the palpitant glimmerLeads past defiling.
They whom we loved have gone over the mountains,Hands beckon to us like wings of the swallow,Voices we knew from delectable fountainsCry to us, "Follow!"
Some were so young when they left us, that morningSeemed to have flashed and then died into gloaming,Leaving us wearier 'neath the world's scorning,Blinder in roaming.
Some, in the time when the manhood is bravest,Strongest to bear and the hands to endeavour,When all the life is the firmest and gravest,Left us for ever.
Some, when the Springtime had grown to December,Said, "It is done: now the last thing befall me;I shall sleep well—ah! dear hearts but remember:Farewell, they call me!"
So the tale runs, and the end, who shall fear it?Is it not better to sleep than to sorrow?Tokens will come from the bourne as we near it—Time's peace, to-morrow.
How has the cloud fallen, and the leaf withered on the tree,The lemontree, that standeth by the door?The melon and the date have gone bitter to the taste,The weevil, it has eaten at the core—The core of my heart, the mildew findeth it;My music, it is but the drip of tears,The garner empty standeth, the oven hath no fire,Night filleth me with fears.O Nile that floweth deeply, hast thou not heard his voice?His footsteps hast thou covered with thy flood?He was as one who lifteth up the yoke,He was as one who taketh off the chain,As one who sheltereth from the rain,As one who scattereth bread to the pigeons flying.His purse was at his side, his mantle was for me,For any who passeth were his mantle and his purse,And now like a gourd is he withered from our eyes.His friendship, it was like a shady wood—Whither has he gone?—Who shall speak for us?Who shall save us from the kourbash and the stripes?Who shall proclaim us in the palace?Who shall contend for us in the gate?The sakkia turneth no more; the oxen they are gone;The young go forth in chains, the old waken in the night,They waken and weep, for the wheel turns backward,And the dark days are come again upon us—Will he return no more?His friendship was like a shady wood,O Nile that floweth deeply, hast thou not heard his voice?Hast thou covered up his footsteps with thy flood?The core of my heart, the mildew findeth it!When his footsteps were among us there was peace;War entered not the village, nor the call of war:Now our homes are as those that have no roofs.As a nest decayed, as a cave forsaken,As a ship that lieth broken on the beach,Is the house where we were born.Out in the desert did we bury our gold,We buried it where no man robbed us, for his arm was strong.Now are the jars empty, gold did not availTo save our young men, to keep them from the chains.God hath swallowed his voice, or the sea hath drowned it,Or the Nile hath covered him with its flood;Else would he come when our voices call.His word was honey in the prince's ear—Will he return no more?
In the sands I lived in a hut of palm,There was never a garden to see;There was never a path through the desert calm,Nor a way through its storms for me.
Tenant was I of a lone domain;The far pale caravans woundTo the rim of the sky, and vanished again;My call in the waste was drowned.
The vultures came and hovered and fled;And once there stole to my doorA white gazelle, but its eyes were dreadWith the hurt of the wounds it bore.
It passed in the dusk with a foot of fear,And the white cold mists rolled in;And my heart was the heart of a stricken deer,Of a soul in the snare of sin.
My days they withered like rootless things,And the sands rolled on, rolled wide;Like a pelican I, with broken wings,Like a drifting barque on the tide.
But at last, in the light of a rose-red day,In the windless glow of the morn,From over the hills and from far away,You came-ah, the joy of the morn!
And wherever your footsteps fell there creptA path—it was fair and wide;A desert road which no sands have swept,Where never a hope has died.
I followed you forth, and your beauty heldMy heart like an ancient song,By that desert road to the blossoming plainsI came, and the way was long.
So, I set my course by the light of your eyes;I care not what fate may send;On the road I tread shine the love-starred skies,The road with never an end.
Oh, the garden where to-day we, sow and to-morrow we reap;Oh, the sakkia turning by the garden walls;Oh, the onion-field and the date-tree growing,And my hand on the plough—by the blessing of God;Strength of my soul, O my brother, all's well!
Take thou thy flight, O soul! Thou hast no moreThe gladness of the morning: ah, the perfumed rosesMy love laid on my bosom as I slept!How did he wake me with his lips upon mine eyes,How did the singers carol, the singers of my soul,That nest among the thoughts of my beloved!All silent now, the choruses are gone,The windows of my soul are closed; no moreMine eyes look gladly out to see my lover come.There is no more to do, no more to sayTake flight, my soul, my love returns no more!