Their broken harness lies upon time’s plain,Their wars’ receding tide doth cast the slain,As shifts the battle ground from age to age,And earth its grim memorials retain.
Their broken harness lies upon time’s plain,Their wars’ receding tide doth cast the slain,As shifts the battle ground from age to age,And earth its grim memorials retain.
Their broken harness lies upon time’s plain,
Their wars’ receding tide doth cast the slain,
As shifts the battle ground from age to age,
And earth its grim memorials retain.
These things I marked, as in a moving showBefore mine eyes life passed thro’ gloom and glow—The trappings and the garniture that deckedThis house of shadows still from room to room.
These things I marked, as in a moving showBefore mine eyes life passed thro’ gloom and glow—The trappings and the garniture that deckedThis house of shadows still from room to room.
These things I marked, as in a moving show
Before mine eyes life passed thro’ gloom and glow—
The trappings and the garniture that decked
This house of shadows still from room to room.
Man was; man is; but who shall count the gain,Or measure out the sum of all life’s pain?So to the play my thought made interlude,And still to fate’s sad music sang refrain.
Man was; man is; but who shall count the gain,Or measure out the sum of all life’s pain?So to the play my thought made interlude,And still to fate’s sad music sang refrain.
Man was; man is; but who shall count the gain,
Or measure out the sum of all life’s pain?
So to the play my thought made interlude,
And still to fate’s sad music sang refrain.
Man is, but who can count his being’s cost?Who metes the water from the pitcher lost?The squandered corn upon the sower’s path?Cast in time’s scale hath good or ill the most?
Man is, but who can count his being’s cost?Who metes the water from the pitcher lost?The squandered corn upon the sower’s path?Cast in time’s scale hath good or ill the most?
Man is, but who can count his being’s cost?
Who metes the water from the pitcher lost?
The squandered corn upon the sower’s path?
Cast in time’s scale hath good or ill the most?
Each out of Babel answers for himself,As justice he doth love, or gilded pelf:Who in the school of ignorance should readTruth’s tattered book on thriftless nature’s shelf?
Each out of Babel answers for himself,As justice he doth love, or gilded pelf:Who in the school of ignorance should readTruth’s tattered book on thriftless nature’s shelf?
Each out of Babel answers for himself,
As justice he doth love, or gilded pelf:
Who in the school of ignorance should read
Truth’s tattered book on thriftless nature’s shelf?
Unlettered children, hopeless to the task,And dumb before life’s riddles, still we ask;But labour, sole, is answered—patient thought,And science still doth nature make unmask.
Unlettered children, hopeless to the task,And dumb before life’s riddles, still we ask;But labour, sole, is answered—patient thought,And science still doth nature make unmask.
Unlettered children, hopeless to the task,
And dumb before life’s riddles, still we ask;
But labour, sole, is answered—patient thought,
And science still doth nature make unmask.
Ah! what is life?—A coin but stamped and castInto time’s treasury, counted, weighed, and pass’d,Staked in the fateful race for weal or woe,And, gold or silver, changed for lead at last?
Ah! what is life?—A coin but stamped and castInto time’s treasury, counted, weighed, and pass’d,Staked in the fateful race for weal or woe,And, gold or silver, changed for lead at last?
Ah! what is life?—A coin but stamped and cast
Into time’s treasury, counted, weighed, and pass’d,
Staked in the fateful race for weal or woe,
And, gold or silver, changed for lead at last?
While dread Necessity, great Nature’s nurse,Who rules man’s way for better or for worse,Still watching by death’s bed and birth’s doth sitTo pour life’s blessing or to brand its curse.
While dread Necessity, great Nature’s nurse,Who rules man’s way for better or for worse,Still watching by death’s bed and birth’s doth sitTo pour life’s blessing or to brand its curse.
While dread Necessity, great Nature’s nurse,
Who rules man’s way for better or for worse,
Still watching by death’s bed and birth’s doth sit
To pour life’s blessing or to brand its curse.
Between the flickering lamps of day and night,Cloaked in her age-worn mantle care-bedight,Behold her shape, inexorable, vast—Blind arbitress o’er changeling wrong and right:
Between the flickering lamps of day and night,Cloaked in her age-worn mantle care-bedight,Behold her shape, inexorable, vast—Blind arbitress o’er changeling wrong and right:
Between the flickering lamps of day and night,
Cloaked in her age-worn mantle care-bedight,
Behold her shape, inexorable, vast—
Blind arbitress o’er changeling wrong and right:
Who pain, and bliss, and passion, hope, despair,Casts in life’s cup, she, cunning, mixes fair,And gives, as to a babe, man’s helpless lips,Drawing delicious poison unaware.
Who pain, and bliss, and passion, hope, despair,Casts in life’s cup, she, cunning, mixes fair,And gives, as to a babe, man’s helpless lips,Drawing delicious poison unaware.
Who pain, and bliss, and passion, hope, despair,
Casts in life’s cup, she, cunning, mixes fair,
And gives, as to a babe, man’s helpless lips,
Drawing delicious poison unaware.
Then what is life? Well might we ask again—A spirit from the cup that fills the brainWith teeming images of love and power,And high desires ’tis impotent to gain?
Then what is life? Well might we ask again—A spirit from the cup that fills the brainWith teeming images of love and power,And high desires ’tis impotent to gain?
Then what is life? Well might we ask again—
A spirit from the cup that fills the brain
With teeming images of love and power,
And high desires ’tis impotent to gain?
Protean life which man doth vain pursueFrom youth’s green meads to age’s mountains blue—The painted fly a breathless child doth chase—Through all its changing shapes to change but true:
Protean life which man doth vain pursueFrom youth’s green meads to age’s mountains blue—The painted fly a breathless child doth chase—Through all its changing shapes to change but true:
Protean life which man doth vain pursue
From youth’s green meads to age’s mountains blue—
The painted fly a breathless child doth chase—
Through all its changing shapes to change but true:
This quivering bubble, dyed with every stainOf splendour and of passion, why in vain—Ah! why?—It sails the summer air—An iridescent moment lost in rain?
This quivering bubble, dyed with every stainOf splendour and of passion, why in vain—Ah! why?—It sails the summer air—An iridescent moment lost in rain?
This quivering bubble, dyed with every stain
Of splendour and of passion, why in vain—
Ah! why?—It sails the summer air—
An iridescent moment lost in rain?
But still the cup is passed swift as of yore,As life each new come guest doth pledge and pourThe priceless wine into the fragile glass,Once to the brim filled up, and filled no more.
But still the cup is passed swift as of yore,As life each new come guest doth pledge and pourThe priceless wine into the fragile glass,Once to the brim filled up, and filled no more.
But still the cup is passed swift as of yore,
As life each new come guest doth pledge and pour
The priceless wine into the fragile glass,
Once to the brim filled up, and filled no more.
Some drink with eager thirst; some waste their store,Or drop by drop still watch it shrinking sore;Some, ere the vital juice hath passed their lips,The frail cup shatter on the marble floor.
Some drink with eager thirst; some waste their store,Or drop by drop still watch it shrinking sore;Some, ere the vital juice hath passed their lips,The frail cup shatter on the marble floor.
Some drink with eager thirst; some waste their store,
Or drop by drop still watch it shrinking sore;
Some, ere the vital juice hath passed their lips,
The frail cup shatter on the marble floor.
Yet high the feast-tide rolled, and those who fellFew missed, nor empty long their place did dwell,For great the press is at earth’s table round,And still new streams that company doth swell.
Yet high the feast-tide rolled, and those who fellFew missed, nor empty long their place did dwell,For great the press is at earth’s table round,And still new streams that company doth swell.
Yet high the feast-tide rolled, and those who fell
Few missed, nor empty long their place did dwell,
For great the press is at earth’s table round,
And still new streams that company doth swell.
Ah! bitter was the strife, and hot the breath,Of envy, hate, their smiling masks beneath,And baleful fires I saw in beauties’ eyes,And rosy ensigns veiled the cheek of death.
Ah! bitter was the strife, and hot the breath,Of envy, hate, their smiling masks beneath,And baleful fires I saw in beauties’ eyes,And rosy ensigns veiled the cheek of death.
Ah! bitter was the strife, and hot the breath,
Of envy, hate, their smiling masks beneath,
And baleful fires I saw in beauties’ eyes,
And rosy ensigns veiled the cheek of death.
While grovelled for the crumbs a famished crew,As starvèd hounds for what man careless threw,On wastrel bread and refuse fain to feed,Or none, as deadlier their struggle grew.
While grovelled for the crumbs a famished crew,As starvèd hounds for what man careless threw,On wastrel bread and refuse fain to feed,Or none, as deadlier their struggle grew.
While grovelled for the crumbs a famished crew,
As starvèd hounds for what man careless threw,
On wastrel bread and refuse fain to feed,
Or none, as deadlier their struggle grew.
For very life at all too dear a costAs slaves these toiled, while those as counters tostTheir lives for gold, or gold for lives exchanged,Indifferent, so they did win, who lost.
For very life at all too dear a costAs slaves these toiled, while those as counters tostTheir lives for gold, or gold for lives exchanged,Indifferent, so they did win, who lost.
For very life at all too dear a cost
As slaves these toiled, while those as counters tost
Their lives for gold, or gold for lives exchanged,
Indifferent, so they did win, who lost.
For those the roses, and for these the rue,In man’s unequal measures paid undue:Some murmured loud, some patient bore their fate—The poor were many, and the rich were few.
For those the roses, and for these the rue,In man’s unequal measures paid undue:Some murmured loud, some patient bore their fate—The poor were many, and the rich were few.
For those the roses, and for these the rue,
In man’s unequal measures paid undue:
Some murmured loud, some patient bore their fate—
The poor were many, and the rich were few.
Most weary of the sordid throng I grew,And thence a little space apart withdrew,Weary of life, that it this thing should be,Nor other lot for man that hope foreknew.
Most weary of the sordid throng I grew,And thence a little space apart withdrew,Weary of life, that it this thing should be,Nor other lot for man that hope foreknew.
Most weary of the sordid throng I grew,
And thence a little space apart withdrew,
Weary of life, that it this thing should be,
Nor other lot for man that hope foreknew.
So to the portal dark I turned again,And there, as at the first, the Sisters twain—She who the fruitless garland hung aloft,She on the shattered stone that wept in vain.
So to the portal dark I turned again,And there, as at the first, the Sisters twain—She who the fruitless garland hung aloft,She on the shattered stone that wept in vain.
So to the portal dark I turned again,
And there, as at the first, the Sisters twain—
She who the fruitless garland hung aloft,
She on the shattered stone that wept in vain.
But in the forecourt flashed the fountain’s stream,The wintry tree beside its glittering beamBore now a cloud of blossom, red and pale,As if bright spring had touched it in a dream.
But in the forecourt flashed the fountain’s stream,The wintry tree beside its glittering beamBore now a cloud of blossom, red and pale,As if bright spring had touched it in a dream.
But in the forecourt flashed the fountain’s stream,
The wintry tree beside its glittering beam
Bore now a cloud of blossom, red and pale,
As if bright spring had touched it in a dream.
Alone I stood in that still house of Time,All swept and bare it was as at the prime,And but the sea-wind peopled it with sighs,And, heard afar, the slow waves’ measured chime.
Alone I stood in that still house of Time,All swept and bare it was as at the prime,And but the sea-wind peopled it with sighs,And, heard afar, the slow waves’ measured chime.
Alone I stood in that still house of Time,
All swept and bare it was as at the prime,
And but the sea-wind peopled it with sighs,
And, heard afar, the slow waves’ measured chime.
I saw Time’s shape colossal rising starkAgainst the endless waves, receding darkBeneath a rising dawn that never roseUpon the sea, where yet would Hope embark.
I saw Time’s shape colossal rising starkAgainst the endless waves, receding darkBeneath a rising dawn that never roseUpon the sea, where yet would Hope embark.
I saw Time’s shape colossal rising stark
Against the endless waves, receding dark
Beneath a rising dawn that never rose
Upon the sea, where yet would Hope embark.
Yea! Hope arose and drew the painted veilOf things that are, and furled it like a sail,And on her gilded prow I stood at gazeOn golden sands beyond the morning pale.
Yea! Hope arose and drew the painted veilOf things that are, and furled it like a sail,And on her gilded prow I stood at gazeOn golden sands beyond the morning pale.
Yea! Hope arose and drew the painted veil
Of things that are, and furled it like a sail,
And on her gilded prow I stood at gaze
On golden sands beyond the morning pale.
And from the face of Earth were drawn away,Like clinging mists that do obscure the day,The shadows and the fears which have oppressedHer children long beneath their baneful sway.
And from the face of Earth were drawn away,Like clinging mists that do obscure the day,The shadows and the fears which have oppressedHer children long beneath their baneful sway.
And from the face of Earth were drawn away,
Like clinging mists that do obscure the day,
The shadows and the fears which have oppressed
Her children long beneath their baneful sway.
As new created in her sculptured sphere,I saw her rise again translucent, clear,Robed in the kindling splendour of the sun,Renascent from the sea of crystal air,
As new created in her sculptured sphere,I saw her rise again translucent, clear,Robed in the kindling splendour of the sun,Renascent from the sea of crystal air,
As new created in her sculptured sphere,
I saw her rise again translucent, clear,
Robed in the kindling splendour of the sun,
Renascent from the sea of crystal air,
That limpid broke on her rejoicing shore,Where life’s reviving stream welled evermoreFrom Nature’s fount, through teeming veins that bredMan’s countless kin from one redundant core.
That limpid broke on her rejoicing shore,Where life’s reviving stream welled evermoreFrom Nature’s fount, through teeming veins that bredMan’s countless kin from one redundant core.
That limpid broke on her rejoicing shore,
Where life’s reviving stream welled evermore
From Nature’s fount, through teeming veins that bred
Man’s countless kin from one redundant core.
I saw the dragons slain of lust and greed,Of gold and power, that waste to serve their needPoor human lives; and till earth’s fruitful fieldsWith fire and sword, and bloody vengeance breed.
I saw the dragons slain of lust and greed,Of gold and power, that waste to serve their needPoor human lives; and till earth’s fruitful fieldsWith fire and sword, and bloody vengeance breed.
I saw the dragons slain of lust and greed,
Of gold and power, that waste to serve their need
Poor human lives; and till earth’s fruitful fields
With fire and sword, and bloody vengeance breed.
No more the nations armed did lie and wait,Like bandits fierce, to spoil and desolateWhat each did hold most dear—no dogs of warAt tyrant’s beck, let loose to maim and bait.
No more the nations armed did lie and wait,Like bandits fierce, to spoil and desolateWhat each did hold most dear—no dogs of warAt tyrant’s beck, let loose to maim and bait.
No more the nations armed did lie and wait,
Like bandits fierce, to spoil and desolate
What each did hold most dear—no dogs of war
At tyrant’s beck, let loose to maim and bait.
No peoples blind by blinder leaders ledInto the pit of shame, or daily fedLike swine on empty husks and sophistries,And frozen custom giving stones for bread.
No peoples blind by blinder leaders ledInto the pit of shame, or daily fedLike swine on empty husks and sophistries,And frozen custom giving stones for bread.
No peoples blind by blinder leaders led
Into the pit of shame, or daily fed
Like swine on empty husks and sophistries,
And frozen custom giving stones for bread.
No selfish castes in internecine strifeFought like the beasts to win a worthless life;No ruthless commerce cheapened hope and health,Or held to slavish throats starvation’s knife.
No selfish castes in internecine strifeFought like the beasts to win a worthless life;No ruthless commerce cheapened hope and health,Or held to slavish throats starvation’s knife.
No selfish castes in internecine strife
Fought like the beasts to win a worthless life;
No ruthless commerce cheapened hope and health,
Or held to slavish throats starvation’s knife.
No rights usurped, against the common goodBreathed out defiance, and the claims withstoodOf labour and of life, where all by labour lived:No bonds were there but bonds of brotherhood.
No rights usurped, against the common goodBreathed out defiance, and the claims withstoodOf labour and of life, where all by labour lived:No bonds were there but bonds of brotherhood.
No rights usurped, against the common good
Breathed out defiance, and the claims withstood
Of labour and of life, where all by labour lived:
No bonds were there but bonds of brotherhood.
No temple-gloom obscured the lucent skies,Nor incense fume of faith’s dead sacrifice,No baneful toil made cities desolateWith hellish smoke at morn and eve to rise.
No temple-gloom obscured the lucent skies,Nor incense fume of faith’s dead sacrifice,No baneful toil made cities desolateWith hellish smoke at morn and eve to rise.
No temple-gloom obscured the lucent skies,
Nor incense fume of faith’s dead sacrifice,
No baneful toil made cities desolate
With hellish smoke at morn and eve to rise.
No morbid anchorite with famished creedWould man persuade to sell his nature’s needOf joy—no fevered dream of future fateWould snatch life’s brimming cup, his human meed.
No morbid anchorite with famished creedWould man persuade to sell his nature’s needOf joy—no fevered dream of future fateWould snatch life’s brimming cup, his human meed.
No morbid anchorite with famished creed
Would man persuade to sell his nature’s need
Of joy—no fevered dream of future fate
Would snatch life’s brimming cup, his human meed.
Not there blind dogma flung the bitter fruitOf discord, burning red, or hate uprootThe flower of innocence, or fraud beguiled,Or force laid iron hands on man and brute.
Not there blind dogma flung the bitter fruitOf discord, burning red, or hate uprootThe flower of innocence, or fraud beguiled,Or force laid iron hands on man and brute.
Not there blind dogma flung the bitter fruit
Of discord, burning red, or hate uproot
The flower of innocence, or fraud beguiled,
Or force laid iron hands on man and brute.
I saw regenerate Man, as stainless, free—A child again on mother Nature’s knee;His wistful eyes did scan the starry spheres,His hand outstretched to life’s new-flowering tree.
I saw regenerate Man, as stainless, free—A child again on mother Nature’s knee;His wistful eyes did scan the starry spheres,His hand outstretched to life’s new-flowering tree.
I saw regenerate Man, as stainless, free—
A child again on mother Nature’s knee;
His wistful eyes did scan the starry spheres,
His hand outstretched to life’s new-flowering tree.
The Ages kneeling at his feet did bearThe treasure of their thoughts in caskets rare—The fire-tried gold of science, and the loreOf wisdom, bought with costly toil and care.
The Ages kneeling at his feet did bearThe treasure of their thoughts in caskets rare—The fire-tried gold of science, and the loreOf wisdom, bought with costly toil and care.
The Ages kneeling at his feet did bear
The treasure of their thoughts in caskets rare—
The fire-tried gold of science, and the lore
Of wisdom, bought with costly toil and care.
The thoughts each moment from the quivering brainThat spring like flames, or, born with labour pain,Embodied there I saw—quick thronging spirits fairFrom whose inwoven wings light fell like summer rain.
The thoughts each moment from the quivering brainThat spring like flames, or, born with labour pain,Embodied there I saw—quick thronging spirits fairFrom whose inwoven wings light fell like summer rain.
The thoughts each moment from the quivering brain
That spring like flames, or, born with labour pain,
Embodied there I saw—quick thronging spirits fair
From whose inwoven wings light fell like summer rain.
And each in hand did bear the emblems brightWherein do art and poesy delight,And mysteries of science, hid in time,Her wands of power and globes of knowledge-light
And each in hand did bear the emblems brightWherein do art and poesy delight,And mysteries of science, hid in time,Her wands of power and globes of knowledge-light
And each in hand did bear the emblems bright
Wherein do art and poesy delight,
And mysteries of science, hid in time,
Her wands of power and globes of knowledge-light
For, more than men, lives Man, through death alive;Slow moves the progress vast, still cry and striveNew hopes, new thoughts for utterance and for act,And Use, and Strength, and Beauty yet survive.
For, more than men, lives Man, through death alive;Slow moves the progress vast, still cry and striveNew hopes, new thoughts for utterance and for act,And Use, and Strength, and Beauty yet survive.
For, more than men, lives Man, through death alive;
Slow moves the progress vast, still cry and strive
New hopes, new thoughts for utterance and for act,
And Use, and Strength, and Beauty yet survive.
Yea, beauty’s image graven on the mindBeats with the pulse of life, in life enshrined;Irradiant she moves in love’s own flame,And joy with her, and the sweet graces kind.
Yea, beauty’s image graven on the mindBeats with the pulse of life, in life enshrined;Irradiant she moves in love’s own flame,And joy with her, and the sweet graces kind.
Yea, beauty’s image graven on the mind
Beats with the pulse of life, in life enshrined;
Irradiant she moves in love’s own flame,
And joy with her, and the sweet graces kind.
Like Venus flashing from the lucent sea,Or, from the earth, the flower Persephone;She that was buried, lo! is born again,And time her resurrection brings to be.
Like Venus flashing from the lucent sea,Or, from the earth, the flower Persephone;She that was buried, lo! is born again,And time her resurrection brings to be.
Like Venus flashing from the lucent sea,
Or, from the earth, the flower Persephone;
She that was buried, lo! is born again,
And time her resurrection brings to be.
Daughter of earth yet is not mortal she,Though time hath shook the blossoms from her tree,Her spring returns, her summer and her fruit,And Art by her hath Immortality.
Daughter of earth yet is not mortal she,Though time hath shook the blossoms from her tree,Her spring returns, her summer and her fruit,And Art by her hath Immortality.
Daughter of earth yet is not mortal she,
Though time hath shook the blossoms from her tree,
Her spring returns, her summer and her fruit,
And Art by her hath Immortality.
I saw, I heard no more, for sleep, like rainFell soft at last upon my restless brain;For Sleep in all the pageant made the last,And with her poppies swept mine eyes again:
I saw, I heard no more, for sleep, like rainFell soft at last upon my restless brain;For Sleep in all the pageant made the last,And with her poppies swept mine eyes again:
I saw, I heard no more, for sleep, like rainFell soft at last upon my restless brain;For Sleep in all the pageant made the last,And with her poppies swept mine eyes again:
Yea, far upon her wings then I was borneAll dreamlessly till, like a dream, the mornBroke on my sense and sight, and swift and loud,Day, like a hunter, blew his golden horn.
Yea, far upon her wings then I was borneAll dreamlessly till, like a dream, the mornBroke on my sense and sight, and swift and loud,Day, like a hunter, blew his golden horn.
Yea, far upon her wings then I was borneAll dreamlessly till, like a dream, the mornBroke on my sense and sight, and swift and loud,Day, like a hunter, blew his golden horn.
FLORA’S·FEAST·A·MASQVE·OF·FLOWERS
THE sullen winter nearly spent,Queen Flora to her garden wentTo call the flowers from their long sleep,The year’s glad festivals to keep:And one by one each making boldTheir silken vesture to unfold,And peeping forth to meet the sun,The long procession is begun:—The snowdrops, first upon the scene,White-crested braved King Frost’s demesne:The little Crocus reaches upTo catch a sunbeam in his cup:The Daffodil his trumpet blows,And after spring a-hunting goes:Anemones rode out the gale,Frail wind-flowers fluttered, red and pale:The Violet and the Primrose dame,With modest mien but hearts a-flame:Green kirtled from the brooklet’s fold,The rustic maid Marsh Marigold:The “Lady smocks all silver white”The milkmaids of the meadows bright,Where shining Buttercups aboundAmong the Cowslips on the ground.Here, Lords and Ladies of the wood,With shaking spear and riding hood:Black knight-at-arms, the white-plumed Thorn;In pomp the Crown Imperial borne.While Tulips lift the banner red,Or fill their cups with fire instead:Sweet Hyacinths their bells did ring,To swell the music of the spring.With blazoned pennons from each spearThe Iris and the Flag appear:Sweet masking May, in white or red,Her snowy cloud of blossom spread:And Chaucer’s Daisy, small and sweet—“Si douce est la Margarete.”The little Lilies of the Vale,White ladies delicate and pale.Great Peonies in crimson pride,And budding ones in green that hide:Fair Columbines that drew the carOf Venus from her distant star:And Love’s own flower, the blushing Rose,The Queen of all the garden close:And Roses from the hedgerow wild,Behind their thorns that faintly smiled:And from the cressy brook’s green side,“Forget-me-Not,” a small voice cried.Here stately Lilies pale and proud,In vesture pure as summer cloud;Or, burning like an orange flame,With torches borne aloft they came.The Monk that wears the Hood of blue,The Belles of Canterbury, too:Wide Oxeyes in the meads that gazeOn scarlet Poppy heads ablaze:Ere Evening Primrose lights her lamp,A beacon to the garden camp:When Lilies of the Day are done,And sunk the golden westering sun:Fresh Pinks cast incense on the air,In fluttering garments fringed and rare.Their cousin from the corn in blue;Corn Marigold of golden hue.The fond Convolvulus still clings,The Honeysuckle spreads his wings:The Hollyhock his standard high,Rears proudly to the autumn sky:The blazing Sunflower, black and bold,Burns yet to win the sunset’s gold,That, reddening on the Triton’s spearForetells the waning of the year:When Lilies, turned to Tigers, blazeAmid the garden’s tangled maze;Where still in triumph, stiff with gold,The rich Chrysanthemums unfold;Ere doth the floral pageant closeWith one last flower—a Christmas Rose.
THE sullen winter nearly spent,Queen Flora to her garden wentTo call the flowers from their long sleep,The year’s glad festivals to keep:And one by one each making boldTheir silken vesture to unfold,And peeping forth to meet the sun,The long procession is begun:—The snowdrops, first upon the scene,White-crested braved King Frost’s demesne:The little Crocus reaches upTo catch a sunbeam in his cup:The Daffodil his trumpet blows,And after spring a-hunting goes:Anemones rode out the gale,Frail wind-flowers fluttered, red and pale:The Violet and the Primrose dame,With modest mien but hearts a-flame:Green kirtled from the brooklet’s fold,The rustic maid Marsh Marigold:The “Lady smocks all silver white”The milkmaids of the meadows bright,Where shining Buttercups aboundAmong the Cowslips on the ground.Here, Lords and Ladies of the wood,With shaking spear and riding hood:Black knight-at-arms, the white-plumed Thorn;In pomp the Crown Imperial borne.While Tulips lift the banner red,Or fill their cups with fire instead:Sweet Hyacinths their bells did ring,To swell the music of the spring.With blazoned pennons from each spearThe Iris and the Flag appear:Sweet masking May, in white or red,Her snowy cloud of blossom spread:And Chaucer’s Daisy, small and sweet—“Si douce est la Margarete.”The little Lilies of the Vale,White ladies delicate and pale.Great Peonies in crimson pride,And budding ones in green that hide:Fair Columbines that drew the carOf Venus from her distant star:And Love’s own flower, the blushing Rose,The Queen of all the garden close:And Roses from the hedgerow wild,Behind their thorns that faintly smiled:And from the cressy brook’s green side,“Forget-me-Not,” a small voice cried.Here stately Lilies pale and proud,In vesture pure as summer cloud;Or, burning like an orange flame,With torches borne aloft they came.The Monk that wears the Hood of blue,The Belles of Canterbury, too:Wide Oxeyes in the meads that gazeOn scarlet Poppy heads ablaze:Ere Evening Primrose lights her lamp,A beacon to the garden camp:When Lilies of the Day are done,And sunk the golden westering sun:Fresh Pinks cast incense on the air,In fluttering garments fringed and rare.Their cousin from the corn in blue;Corn Marigold of golden hue.The fond Convolvulus still clings,The Honeysuckle spreads his wings:The Hollyhock his standard high,Rears proudly to the autumn sky:The blazing Sunflower, black and bold,Burns yet to win the sunset’s gold,That, reddening on the Triton’s spearForetells the waning of the year:When Lilies, turned to Tigers, blazeAmid the garden’s tangled maze;Where still in triumph, stiff with gold,The rich Chrysanthemums unfold;Ere doth the floral pageant closeWith one last flower—a Christmas Rose.
THE sullen winter nearly spent,Queen Flora to her garden wentTo call the flowers from their long sleep,The year’s glad festivals to keep:And one by one each making boldTheir silken vesture to unfold,And peeping forth to meet the sun,The long procession is begun:—
THE sullen winter nearly spent,
Queen Flora to her garden went
To call the flowers from their long sleep,
The year’s glad festivals to keep:
And one by one each making bold
Their silken vesture to unfold,
And peeping forth to meet the sun,
The long procession is begun:—
The snowdrops, first upon the scene,White-crested braved King Frost’s demesne:
The snowdrops, first upon the scene,
White-crested braved King Frost’s demesne:
The little Crocus reaches upTo catch a sunbeam in his cup:
The little Crocus reaches up
To catch a sunbeam in his cup:
The Daffodil his trumpet blows,And after spring a-hunting goes:
The Daffodil his trumpet blows,
And after spring a-hunting goes:
Anemones rode out the gale,Frail wind-flowers fluttered, red and pale:
Anemones rode out the gale,
Frail wind-flowers fluttered, red and pale:
The Violet and the Primrose dame,With modest mien but hearts a-flame:
The Violet and the Primrose dame,
With modest mien but hearts a-flame:
Green kirtled from the brooklet’s fold,The rustic maid Marsh Marigold:
Green kirtled from the brooklet’s fold,
The rustic maid Marsh Marigold:
The “Lady smocks all silver white”The milkmaids of the meadows bright,
The “Lady smocks all silver white”
The milkmaids of the meadows bright,
Where shining Buttercups aboundAmong the Cowslips on the ground.
Where shining Buttercups abound
Among the Cowslips on the ground.
Here, Lords and Ladies of the wood,With shaking spear and riding hood:
Here, Lords and Ladies of the wood,
With shaking spear and riding hood:
Black knight-at-arms, the white-plumed Thorn;In pomp the Crown Imperial borne.
Black knight-at-arms, the white-plumed Thorn;
In pomp the Crown Imperial borne.
While Tulips lift the banner red,Or fill their cups with fire instead:
While Tulips lift the banner red,
Or fill their cups with fire instead:
Sweet Hyacinths their bells did ring,To swell the music of the spring.
Sweet Hyacinths their bells did ring,
To swell the music of the spring.
With blazoned pennons from each spearThe Iris and the Flag appear:
With blazoned pennons from each spear
The Iris and the Flag appear:
Sweet masking May, in white or red,Her snowy cloud of blossom spread:
Sweet masking May, in white or red,
Her snowy cloud of blossom spread:
And Chaucer’s Daisy, small and sweet—“Si douce est la Margarete.”
And Chaucer’s Daisy, small and sweet—
“Si douce est la Margarete.”
The little Lilies of the Vale,White ladies delicate and pale.
The little Lilies of the Vale,
White ladies delicate and pale.
Great Peonies in crimson pride,And budding ones in green that hide:
Great Peonies in crimson pride,
And budding ones in green that hide:
Fair Columbines that drew the carOf Venus from her distant star:
Fair Columbines that drew the car
Of Venus from her distant star:
And Love’s own flower, the blushing Rose,The Queen of all the garden close:
And Love’s own flower, the blushing Rose,
The Queen of all the garden close:
And Roses from the hedgerow wild,Behind their thorns that faintly smiled:
And Roses from the hedgerow wild,
Behind their thorns that faintly smiled:
And from the cressy brook’s green side,“Forget-me-Not,” a small voice cried.
And from the cressy brook’s green side,
“Forget-me-Not,” a small voice cried.
Here stately Lilies pale and proud,In vesture pure as summer cloud;
Here stately Lilies pale and proud,
In vesture pure as summer cloud;
Or, burning like an orange flame,With torches borne aloft they came.
Or, burning like an orange flame,
With torches borne aloft they came.
The Monk that wears the Hood of blue,The Belles of Canterbury, too:
The Monk that wears the Hood of blue,
The Belles of Canterbury, too:
Wide Oxeyes in the meads that gazeOn scarlet Poppy heads ablaze:
Wide Oxeyes in the meads that gaze
On scarlet Poppy heads ablaze:
Ere Evening Primrose lights her lamp,A beacon to the garden camp:
Ere Evening Primrose lights her lamp,
A beacon to the garden camp:
When Lilies of the Day are done,And sunk the golden westering sun:
When Lilies of the Day are done,
And sunk the golden westering sun:
Fresh Pinks cast incense on the air,In fluttering garments fringed and rare.
Fresh Pinks cast incense on the air,
In fluttering garments fringed and rare.
Their cousin from the corn in blue;Corn Marigold of golden hue.
Their cousin from the corn in blue;
Corn Marigold of golden hue.
The fond Convolvulus still clings,The Honeysuckle spreads his wings:
The fond Convolvulus still clings,
The Honeysuckle spreads his wings:
The Hollyhock his standard high,Rears proudly to the autumn sky:
The Hollyhock his standard high,
Rears proudly to the autumn sky:
The blazing Sunflower, black and bold,Burns yet to win the sunset’s gold,
The blazing Sunflower, black and bold,
Burns yet to win the sunset’s gold,
That, reddening on the Triton’s spearForetells the waning of the year:
That, reddening on the Triton’s spear
Foretells the waning of the year:
When Lilies, turned to Tigers, blazeAmid the garden’s tangled maze;
When Lilies, turned to Tigers, blaze
Amid the garden’s tangled maze;
Where still in triumph, stiff with gold,The rich Chrysanthemums unfold;
Where still in triumph, stiff with gold,
The rich Chrysanthemums unfold;
Ere doth the floral pageant closeWith one last flower—a Christmas Rose.
Ere doth the floral pageant close
With one last flower—a Christmas Rose.
FROM·HELLAS·HOMEWARD
FROM sea to sea our steamer glides,The Adriatic laves her sides,Her engines, deep pulsating, beat,A throbbing heart of fire and heat;Its freight of human hearts to bearWith good and ill as time doth wear.Still changeful as the changing seasBeneath the wayward winds’ increase,Or like the bird that eastward flies,Our thoughts fare backward with our eyesWhich still the blue Ægean holds;Round Grecian isles its cincture folds,Where on Sunium falls the light,And carves anew the columns white;Where the gulf of Nauplia fillsThe sculptured sides of Argos’ hills;And through their gates thrown back do showFair gardens rich and trees arow,Where yet in waking dreams one seesThe Apples of Hesperides,With but the gleaming scales betweenOf water in the sunsets’ sheen.Past the twinkling lights that show,Like stars to mock celestial glow,And light us back to antique ground—To Tiryn’s buried ruins found,And Agamemnon’s house of old,With treasures of Mykenæ’s gold,Where stands the lion-guarded gate,To keep the city’s shattered state,Among the lonely hills forgotOf ages long, as it were not.Hill and dale dissolving glide,As the winged wheels swiftly slide,By Nemæan crags that stillThe legendary echoes fill.Or by Corinth’s fortressed steep,And shattered temple, still that keepThe record of her ancient fame,Her glory past into a name.What oracle from Delphi hear?What message from Apollo bear?Speaks no more the god of light?Doth he no word to men indite?Yea, day by day his arrows’ flightBehold! Dividing dark and bright,Till they strike Athena’s fanes—Still upon the rock she reigns,Though, alas! Her house of state,Empty is, and desolate:Fair still her shrine of marble shines,Whenas the sun-like moon definesWith opal lights and shadows blueThat well nigh build the temple new,Which day by day o’erlays with goldAs in the sun’s bright flame of old.Many a morn and eve have weWatched him rise and set at sea,His foaming steeds with tossing crestsTurn fire the watery way they breast,Where dolphins leaping drive the sprayBefore them in their wanton play.What if the ancient gods no moreAre seen of men on sea or shore?What if a sterner creed and coldDid drive them from the Temple’s fold?Or pride of rule, or curse of gold,With wasting care that makes youth old,Do blind men’s eyes to all save gain,And beauty pleads with them in vain?Though greed would all the earth degradeAnd see the world a market made,And drive the peasant from his soil,And lay the yoke of hopeless toilUpon the millions seeking bread,To art and love and beauty dead;Not all has gone while these have holdIn some true hearts not bought and sold.Though fallen, Aphrodité’s shrinesStill through the opal wave she shines,Or, veiled in light doth sail the blueWhere breaks the foam in iris hue;And still from dangerous rocks is heardThe siren’s song Odysseus feared,Far wandering from his sea-girt homeIn Ithaca across the foam.The same stars shine above his headAs watch us on our rocking bed;As turned his thoughts to child and wife,And homestead dear, and pleasant life;So, tossing on the houseless seasSweet thoughts of home our hearts do please.
FROM sea to sea our steamer glides,The Adriatic laves her sides,Her engines, deep pulsating, beat,A throbbing heart of fire and heat;Its freight of human hearts to bearWith good and ill as time doth wear.Still changeful as the changing seasBeneath the wayward winds’ increase,Or like the bird that eastward flies,Our thoughts fare backward with our eyesWhich still the blue Ægean holds;Round Grecian isles its cincture folds,Where on Sunium falls the light,And carves anew the columns white;Where the gulf of Nauplia fillsThe sculptured sides of Argos’ hills;And through their gates thrown back do showFair gardens rich and trees arow,Where yet in waking dreams one seesThe Apples of Hesperides,With but the gleaming scales betweenOf water in the sunsets’ sheen.Past the twinkling lights that show,Like stars to mock celestial glow,And light us back to antique ground—To Tiryn’s buried ruins found,And Agamemnon’s house of old,With treasures of Mykenæ’s gold,Where stands the lion-guarded gate,To keep the city’s shattered state,Among the lonely hills forgotOf ages long, as it were not.Hill and dale dissolving glide,As the winged wheels swiftly slide,By Nemæan crags that stillThe legendary echoes fill.Or by Corinth’s fortressed steep,And shattered temple, still that keepThe record of her ancient fame,Her glory past into a name.What oracle from Delphi hear?What message from Apollo bear?Speaks no more the god of light?Doth he no word to men indite?Yea, day by day his arrows’ flightBehold! Dividing dark and bright,Till they strike Athena’s fanes—Still upon the rock she reigns,Though, alas! Her house of state,Empty is, and desolate:Fair still her shrine of marble shines,Whenas the sun-like moon definesWith opal lights and shadows blueThat well nigh build the temple new,Which day by day o’erlays with goldAs in the sun’s bright flame of old.Many a morn and eve have weWatched him rise and set at sea,His foaming steeds with tossing crestsTurn fire the watery way they breast,Where dolphins leaping drive the sprayBefore them in their wanton play.What if the ancient gods no moreAre seen of men on sea or shore?What if a sterner creed and coldDid drive them from the Temple’s fold?Or pride of rule, or curse of gold,With wasting care that makes youth old,Do blind men’s eyes to all save gain,And beauty pleads with them in vain?Though greed would all the earth degradeAnd see the world a market made,And drive the peasant from his soil,And lay the yoke of hopeless toilUpon the millions seeking bread,To art and love and beauty dead;Not all has gone while these have holdIn some true hearts not bought and sold.Though fallen, Aphrodité’s shrinesStill through the opal wave she shines,Or, veiled in light doth sail the blueWhere breaks the foam in iris hue;And still from dangerous rocks is heardThe siren’s song Odysseus feared,Far wandering from his sea-girt homeIn Ithaca across the foam.The same stars shine above his headAs watch us on our rocking bed;As turned his thoughts to child and wife,And homestead dear, and pleasant life;So, tossing on the houseless seasSweet thoughts of home our hearts do please.
FROM sea to sea our steamer glides,The Adriatic laves her sides,Her engines, deep pulsating, beat,A throbbing heart of fire and heat;Its freight of human hearts to bearWith good and ill as time doth wear.Still changeful as the changing seasBeneath the wayward winds’ increase,Or like the bird that eastward flies,Our thoughts fare backward with our eyesWhich still the blue Ægean holds;Round Grecian isles its cincture folds,Where on Sunium falls the light,And carves anew the columns white;Where the gulf of Nauplia fillsThe sculptured sides of Argos’ hills;And through their gates thrown back do showFair gardens rich and trees arow,Where yet in waking dreams one seesThe Apples of Hesperides,With but the gleaming scales betweenOf water in the sunsets’ sheen.
FROM sea to sea our steamer glides,
The Adriatic laves her sides,
Her engines, deep pulsating, beat,
A throbbing heart of fire and heat;
Its freight of human hearts to bear
With good and ill as time doth wear.
Still changeful as the changing seas
Beneath the wayward winds’ increase,
Or like the bird that eastward flies,
Our thoughts fare backward with our eyes
Which still the blue Ægean holds;
Round Grecian isles its cincture folds,
Where on Sunium falls the light,
And carves anew the columns white;
Where the gulf of Nauplia fills
The sculptured sides of Argos’ hills;
And through their gates thrown back do show
Fair gardens rich and trees arow,
Where yet in waking dreams one sees
The Apples of Hesperides,
With but the gleaming scales between
Of water in the sunsets’ sheen.
Past the twinkling lights that show,Like stars to mock celestial glow,And light us back to antique ground—To Tiryn’s buried ruins found,And Agamemnon’s house of old,With treasures of Mykenæ’s gold,Where stands the lion-guarded gate,To keep the city’s shattered state,Among the lonely hills forgotOf ages long, as it were not.Hill and dale dissolving glide,As the winged wheels swiftly slide,By Nemæan crags that stillThe legendary echoes fill.Or by Corinth’s fortressed steep,And shattered temple, still that keepThe record of her ancient fame,Her glory past into a name.
Past the twinkling lights that show,
Like stars to mock celestial glow,
And light us back to antique ground—
To Tiryn’s buried ruins found,
And Agamemnon’s house of old,
With treasures of Mykenæ’s gold,
Where stands the lion-guarded gate,
To keep the city’s shattered state,
Among the lonely hills forgot
Of ages long, as it were not.
Hill and dale dissolving glide,
As the winged wheels swiftly slide,
By Nemæan crags that still
The legendary echoes fill.
Or by Corinth’s fortressed steep,
And shattered temple, still that keep
The record of her ancient fame,
Her glory past into a name.
What oracle from Delphi hear?What message from Apollo bear?Speaks no more the god of light?Doth he no word to men indite?Yea, day by day his arrows’ flightBehold! Dividing dark and bright,Till they strike Athena’s fanes—Still upon the rock she reigns,Though, alas! Her house of state,Empty is, and desolate:Fair still her shrine of marble shines,Whenas the sun-like moon definesWith opal lights and shadows blueThat well nigh build the temple new,Which day by day o’erlays with goldAs in the sun’s bright flame of old.Many a morn and eve have weWatched him rise and set at sea,His foaming steeds with tossing crestsTurn fire the watery way they breast,Where dolphins leaping drive the sprayBefore them in their wanton play.What if the ancient gods no moreAre seen of men on sea or shore?What if a sterner creed and coldDid drive them from the Temple’s fold?Or pride of rule, or curse of gold,With wasting care that makes youth old,Do blind men’s eyes to all save gain,And beauty pleads with them in vain?Though greed would all the earth degradeAnd see the world a market made,And drive the peasant from his soil,And lay the yoke of hopeless toilUpon the millions seeking bread,To art and love and beauty dead;Not all has gone while these have holdIn some true hearts not bought and sold.
What oracle from Delphi hear?
What message from Apollo bear?
Speaks no more the god of light?
Doth he no word to men indite?
Yea, day by day his arrows’ flight
Behold! Dividing dark and bright,
Till they strike Athena’s fanes—
Still upon the rock she reigns,
Though, alas! Her house of state,
Empty is, and desolate:
Fair still her shrine of marble shines,
Whenas the sun-like moon defines
With opal lights and shadows blue
That well nigh build the temple new,
Which day by day o’erlays with gold
As in the sun’s bright flame of old.
Many a morn and eve have we
Watched him rise and set at sea,
His foaming steeds with tossing crests
Turn fire the watery way they breast,
Where dolphins leaping drive the spray
Before them in their wanton play.
What if the ancient gods no more
Are seen of men on sea or shore?
What if a sterner creed and cold
Did drive them from the Temple’s fold?
Or pride of rule, or curse of gold,
With wasting care that makes youth old,
Do blind men’s eyes to all save gain,
And beauty pleads with them in vain?
Though greed would all the earth degrade
And see the world a market made,
And drive the peasant from his soil,
And lay the yoke of hopeless toil
Upon the millions seeking bread,
To art and love and beauty dead;
Not all has gone while these have hold
In some true hearts not bought and sold.
Though fallen, Aphrodité’s shrinesStill through the opal wave she shines,Or, veiled in light doth sail the blueWhere breaks the foam in iris hue;And still from dangerous rocks is heardThe siren’s song Odysseus feared,Far wandering from his sea-girt homeIn Ithaca across the foam.The same stars shine above his headAs watch us on our rocking bed;As turned his thoughts to child and wife,And homestead dear, and pleasant life;So, tossing on the houseless seasSweet thoughts of home our hearts do please.
Though fallen, Aphrodité’s shrines
Still through the opal wave she shines,
Or, veiled in light doth sail the blue
Where breaks the foam in iris hue;
And still from dangerous rocks is heard
The siren’s song Odysseus feared,
Far wandering from his sea-girt home
In Ithaca across the foam.
The same stars shine above his head
As watch us on our rocking bed;
As turned his thoughts to child and wife,
And homestead dear, and pleasant life;
So, tossing on the houseless seas
Sweet thoughts of home our hearts do please.
decoration: fish
RONDEAUS·RONDELS·& TRIOLET
BEYOND the verge of night dost sighTo watch the glow of reddening sky,While sleep the worldlings wrapt in greyOf mist and dreams that round them playIn semblance of reality?Thought’s craggy cliff is steep to try,That walls the future, yet Hope’s eyeDoth catch the breaking beacon rayBeyond the verge.Now gleam and glance in gold arrayBright vanes on towers that meet half-wayLike spears and torches held on high,And flashing as the wind sweeps by—The herald’s fleet of that new dayBeyond the verge.
BEYOND the verge of night dost sighTo watch the glow of reddening sky,While sleep the worldlings wrapt in greyOf mist and dreams that round them playIn semblance of reality?Thought’s craggy cliff is steep to try,That walls the future, yet Hope’s eyeDoth catch the breaking beacon rayBeyond the verge.Now gleam and glance in gold arrayBright vanes on towers that meet half-wayLike spears and torches held on high,And flashing as the wind sweeps by—The herald’s fleet of that new dayBeyond the verge.
BEYOND the verge of night dost sighTo watch the glow of reddening sky,While sleep the worldlings wrapt in greyOf mist and dreams that round them playIn semblance of reality?
BEYOND the verge of night dost sigh
To watch the glow of reddening sky,
While sleep the worldlings wrapt in grey
Of mist and dreams that round them play
In semblance of reality?
Thought’s craggy cliff is steep to try,That walls the future, yet Hope’s eyeDoth catch the breaking beacon rayBeyond the verge.
Thought’s craggy cliff is steep to try,
That walls the future, yet Hope’s eye
Doth catch the breaking beacon ray
Beyond the verge.
Now gleam and glance in gold arrayBright vanes on towers that meet half-wayLike spears and torches held on high,And flashing as the wind sweeps by—The herald’s fleet of that new dayBeyond the verge.
Now gleam and glance in gold array
Bright vanes on towers that meet half-way
Like spears and torches held on high,
And flashing as the wind sweeps by—
The herald’s fleet of that new day
Beyond the verge.
THE Old and New together meet,Around the world, across the street,As neighbours, side by side, that grew;As friends, or foes, as false or true,Whose tale the heedless hours repeat.Two stems entwined to part and greet,From one root springing, bitter-sweetWith flower and fruitage, seed to strew,The Old and New.Since, serpent-twined, their knowledge knewThe heart of man, between the two,With clinging hands and winged feetHe stands the sport of Time’s deceit,The parti-coloured shield in view—The Old and New.
THE Old and New together meet,Around the world, across the street,As neighbours, side by side, that grew;As friends, or foes, as false or true,Whose tale the heedless hours repeat.Two stems entwined to part and greet,From one root springing, bitter-sweetWith flower and fruitage, seed to strew,The Old and New.Since, serpent-twined, their knowledge knewThe heart of man, between the two,With clinging hands and winged feetHe stands the sport of Time’s deceit,The parti-coloured shield in view—The Old and New.
THE Old and New together meet,Around the world, across the street,As neighbours, side by side, that grew;As friends, or foes, as false or true,Whose tale the heedless hours repeat.
THE Old and New together meet,
Around the world, across the street,
As neighbours, side by side, that grew;
As friends, or foes, as false or true,
Whose tale the heedless hours repeat.
Two stems entwined to part and greet,From one root springing, bitter-sweetWith flower and fruitage, seed to strew,The Old and New.
Two stems entwined to part and greet,
From one root springing, bitter-sweet
With flower and fruitage, seed to strew,
The Old and New.
Since, serpent-twined, their knowledge knewThe heart of man, between the two,With clinging hands and winged feetHe stands the sport of Time’s deceit,The parti-coloured shield in view—The Old and New.
Since, serpent-twined, their knowledge knew
The heart of man, between the two,
With clinging hands and winged feet
He stands the sport of Time’s deceit,
The parti-coloured shield in view—
The Old and New.
ACROSS the fields like swallows flySweet thoughts and sad of days gone by,From Life’s broad highway turned away,Like children thought and memory play,Nor heed Time’s scythe though grass be high.Beneath the blue and shoreless sky,Time is but told when seedlings dryBy love’s light breath are blown like sprayAcross the fields.Now comes the scent of fallen hay,And flowers bestrew the foot-worn clay,While summer breathes a passing sigh,As westward rolls the day’s gold eye,And Time with Labour ends his dayAcross the fields.
ACROSS the fields like swallows flySweet thoughts and sad of days gone by,From Life’s broad highway turned away,Like children thought and memory play,Nor heed Time’s scythe though grass be high.Beneath the blue and shoreless sky,Time is but told when seedlings dryBy love’s light breath are blown like sprayAcross the fields.Now comes the scent of fallen hay,And flowers bestrew the foot-worn clay,While summer breathes a passing sigh,As westward rolls the day’s gold eye,And Time with Labour ends his dayAcross the fields.
ACROSS the fields like swallows flySweet thoughts and sad of days gone by,From Life’s broad highway turned away,Like children thought and memory play,Nor heed Time’s scythe though grass be high.
ACROSS the fields like swallows fly
Sweet thoughts and sad of days gone by,
From Life’s broad highway turned away,
Like children thought and memory play,
Nor heed Time’s scythe though grass be high.
Beneath the blue and shoreless sky,Time is but told when seedlings dryBy love’s light breath are blown like sprayAcross the fields.
Beneath the blue and shoreless sky,
Time is but told when seedlings dry
By love’s light breath are blown like spray
Across the fields.
Now comes the scent of fallen hay,And flowers bestrew the foot-worn clay,While summer breathes a passing sigh,As westward rolls the day’s gold eye,And Time with Labour ends his dayAcross the fields.
Now comes the scent of fallen hay,
And flowers bestrew the foot-worn clay,
While summer breathes a passing sigh,
As westward rolls the day’s gold eye,
And Time with Labour ends his day
Across the fields.
IN love’s disport, gay bubbles blown,On summer’s winds, light-freighted, flown;—A child intent upon delightThe painted spheres would keep in sight—Dissolved too soon in worlds unknown.Lo! from the furnace mouth hath grownFair shapes, as frail, with jewelled zoneClear globes which fate might read arightIn love’s disport.O frail as fair! Though in the whiteOf flameful heat with force to fight,Art thou by careless hands cast downOr killed—when frozen hearts disownThe children born of love of lightIn love’s disport.
IN love’s disport, gay bubbles blown,On summer’s winds, light-freighted, flown;—A child intent upon delightThe painted spheres would keep in sight—Dissolved too soon in worlds unknown.Lo! from the furnace mouth hath grownFair shapes, as frail, with jewelled zoneClear globes which fate might read arightIn love’s disport.O frail as fair! Though in the whiteOf flameful heat with force to fight,Art thou by careless hands cast downOr killed—when frozen hearts disownThe children born of love of lightIn love’s disport.
IN love’s disport, gay bubbles blown,On summer’s winds, light-freighted, flown;—A child intent upon delightThe painted spheres would keep in sight—Dissolved too soon in worlds unknown.
IN love’s disport, gay bubbles blown,
On summer’s winds, light-freighted, flown;—
A child intent upon delight
The painted spheres would keep in sight—
Dissolved too soon in worlds unknown.
Lo! from the furnace mouth hath grownFair shapes, as frail, with jewelled zoneClear globes which fate might read arightIn love’s disport.
Lo! from the furnace mouth hath grown
Fair shapes, as frail, with jewelled zone
Clear globes which fate might read aright
In love’s disport.
O frail as fair! Though in the whiteOf flameful heat with force to fight,Art thou by careless hands cast downOr killed—when frozen hearts disownThe children born of love of lightIn love’s disport.
O frail as fair! Though in the white
Of flameful heat with force to fight,
Art thou by careless hands cast down
Or killed—when frozen hearts disown
The children born of love of light
In love’s disport.
WHAT makes the world for you and I?A space of lawn a strip of sky,The bread and wine of fellowship,The cup of life for love to sip,A glass of dreams in Hope’s blue eye.So let the days and hours still fly,Let Fortune flout, and Fame deny,With feathered heel shall fancy trip—What makes the world?The wealth that never in the gripOf blighting greed shall heedless slip—When bought and sold is liberty:With worth of life and love gone by,What makes the world?
WHAT makes the world for you and I?A space of lawn a strip of sky,The bread and wine of fellowship,The cup of life for love to sip,A glass of dreams in Hope’s blue eye.So let the days and hours still fly,Let Fortune flout, and Fame deny,With feathered heel shall fancy trip—What makes the world?The wealth that never in the gripOf blighting greed shall heedless slip—When bought and sold is liberty:With worth of life and love gone by,What makes the world?
WHAT makes the world for you and I?A space of lawn a strip of sky,The bread and wine of fellowship,The cup of life for love to sip,A glass of dreams in Hope’s blue eye.
WHAT makes the world for you and I?
A space of lawn a strip of sky,
The bread and wine of fellowship,
The cup of life for love to sip,
A glass of dreams in Hope’s blue eye.
So let the days and hours still fly,Let Fortune flout, and Fame deny,With feathered heel shall fancy trip—What makes the world?
So let the days and hours still fly,
Let Fortune flout, and Fame deny,
With feathered heel shall fancy trip—
What makes the world?
The wealth that never in the gripOf blighting greed shall heedless slip—When bought and sold is liberty:With worth of life and love gone by,What makes the world?
The wealth that never in the grip
Of blighting greed shall heedless slip—
When bought and sold is liberty:
With worth of life and love gone by,
What makes the world?
THE field is wide, broadcast the seedOf human hope and human need,As, to and fro, from end to end,The furrows of the world ye wendIts legioned hungry mouths to feed.Though lowering o’er the landscape bendThe brows of winter, rains descend,And tempest sowings whirlwinds breed,The field is wide.Sowing, ye shall reap indeedGolden grain, or grisly weed,Or dragon’s teeth, that in the end,Perchance, in golden ears depend,Sunward, as our path doth lead,The field is wide.
THE field is wide, broadcast the seedOf human hope and human need,As, to and fro, from end to end,The furrows of the world ye wendIts legioned hungry mouths to feed.Though lowering o’er the landscape bendThe brows of winter, rains descend,And tempest sowings whirlwinds breed,The field is wide.Sowing, ye shall reap indeedGolden grain, or grisly weed,Or dragon’s teeth, that in the end,Perchance, in golden ears depend,Sunward, as our path doth lead,The field is wide.
THE field is wide, broadcast the seedOf human hope and human need,As, to and fro, from end to end,The furrows of the world ye wendIts legioned hungry mouths to feed.
THE field is wide, broadcast the seed
Of human hope and human need,
As, to and fro, from end to end,
The furrows of the world ye wend
Its legioned hungry mouths to feed.
Though lowering o’er the landscape bendThe brows of winter, rains descend,And tempest sowings whirlwinds breed,The field is wide.
Though lowering o’er the landscape bend
The brows of winter, rains descend,
And tempest sowings whirlwinds breed,
The field is wide.
Sowing, ye shall reap indeedGolden grain, or grisly weed,Or dragon’s teeth, that in the end,Perchance, in golden ears depend,Sunward, as our path doth lead,The field is wide.
Sowing, ye shall reap indeed
Golden grain, or grisly weed,
Or dragon’s teeth, that in the end,
Perchance, in golden ears depend,
Sunward, as our path doth lead,
The field is wide.
ASEAT for three, where host and guestMay side by side pass toast or jest;And be their number two or threeWith elbow-room and liberty,What need to wander east or west?A book for thought, a nook for rest,And meet for fasting or for fest,In fair and equal parts to beA seat for three.Then give you pleasant company,For youth or eld a shady tree;A roof for council or sequest,A corner in a homely nest,Free, equal, and fraternally,A seat for three.
ASEAT for three, where host and guestMay side by side pass toast or jest;And be their number two or threeWith elbow-room and liberty,What need to wander east or west?A book for thought, a nook for rest,And meet for fasting or for fest,In fair and equal parts to beA seat for three.Then give you pleasant company,For youth or eld a shady tree;A roof for council or sequest,A corner in a homely nest,Free, equal, and fraternally,A seat for three.
ASEAT for three, where host and guestMay side by side pass toast or jest;And be their number two or threeWith elbow-room and liberty,What need to wander east or west?
ASEAT for three, where host and guest
May side by side pass toast or jest;
And be their number two or three
With elbow-room and liberty,
What need to wander east or west?
A book for thought, a nook for rest,And meet for fasting or for fest,In fair and equal parts to beA seat for three.
A book for thought, a nook for rest,
And meet for fasting or for fest,
In fair and equal parts to be
A seat for three.
Then give you pleasant company,For youth or eld a shady tree;A roof for council or sequest,A corner in a homely nest,Free, equal, and fraternally,A seat for three.
Then give you pleasant company,
For youth or eld a shady tree;
A roof for council or sequest,
A corner in a homely nest,
Free, equal, and fraternally,
A seat for three.
WHEN Time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies,Love-birds forget to singBeneath the lucent skies:For now belated springWith her last blossom hies,When time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies.What summer hope shall bringTo wistful dreaming eyes?What fateful forecast flingBefore life’s last surpriseWhen Time upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies?
WHEN Time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies,Love-birds forget to singBeneath the lucent skies:For now belated springWith her last blossom hies,When time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies.What summer hope shall bringTo wistful dreaming eyes?What fateful forecast flingBefore life’s last surpriseWhen Time upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies?
WHEN Time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies,Love-birds forget to singBeneath the lucent skies:
WHEN Time, upon the wing,
A swallow heedless flies,
Love-birds forget to sing
Beneath the lucent skies:
For now belated springWith her last blossom hies,When time, upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies.
For now belated spring
With her last blossom hies,
When time, upon the wing,
A swallow heedless flies.
What summer hope shall bringTo wistful dreaming eyes?What fateful forecast flingBefore life’s last surpriseWhen Time upon the wing,A swallow heedless flies?
What summer hope shall bring
To wistful dreaming eyes?
What fateful forecast fling
Before life’s last surprise
When Time upon the wing,
A swallow heedless flies?
THIS Book of Hours Love wroughtWith burnished letters gold,Each page with art and thoughtAnd colours manifold.His calendar he taughtTo youths and virgins cold—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.Love’s priceless book is boughtWith sighs and tears untoldOf votaries who soughtHis countenance of old—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.
THIS Book of Hours Love wroughtWith burnished letters gold,Each page with art and thoughtAnd colours manifold.His calendar he taughtTo youths and virgins cold—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.Love’s priceless book is boughtWith sighs and tears untoldOf votaries who soughtHis countenance of old—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.
THIS Book of Hours Love wroughtWith burnished letters gold,Each page with art and thoughtAnd colours manifold.
THIS Book of Hours Love wrought
With burnished letters gold,
Each page with art and thought
And colours manifold.
His calendar he taughtTo youths and virgins cold—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.
His calendar he taught
To youths and virgins cold—
This Book of Hours Love wrought
With letters burnished gold.
Love’s priceless book is boughtWith sighs and tears untoldOf votaries who soughtHis countenance of old—This Book of Hours Love wroughtWith letters burnished gold.
Love’s priceless book is bought
With sighs and tears untold
Of votaries who sought
His countenance of old—
This Book of Hours Love wrought
With letters burnished gold.