IVTHE DIVINE FANTASY

IVTHE DIVINE FANTASY

Brother,from what dim world of lonely light,Trembling on heaven’s pinnacles to-night,Is lifted your sad face of love while youStare upward toward me, staring upward, too,At that faint flame which is your home, betweenThe leafy branches of these poplarsseen—So hushed, so far! Perhaps to-night you scanYour starry heaven for the star of Man,High in the trellis of eternityAnd glittering arches hung; perhaps like meYou, too, look up and wonder. Is it fair,That world of yours? Are there great cities there,Populous millions, hearts that beat as these,Clear meadows and far mountains, shoreless seas,Shadows of moving armies, thrones that shake?Does the heart thrill for love there, does itbreak—Tell me, are there hushed gardens, quiet tombs?And mighty poets weaving at their loomsThe old, dim wisdoms that outweary Time;And saints, and lifted saviours, and sublimeFaiths and high fortitudes beyond belief?—All blotted out by one small poplar leafIn the light wind of languid summer stirred!Brother, what news out of the night, what wordFrom the frontiers of mind beyond our ken,Of mysteries unimagined yet of men,Compassed by travail of your spirit? OCould you but reach to us! Could we but knowAcross the imperturbable old DarkSome answering glimmer of the ancient SparkLifted—some token, tangible to sense,Of the indomitable IntelligenceThat thrones on matter—languagevisible—Crying, “Eternity—and all is well!Brother, be of good cheer; we, too, have known!Not lonely moves, not utterly alone,Your sad fraternity through the dark of God:But the confederate legions are abroad,Life’s flag advances on the starry way,And Consciousness, still battling, still at bay,Holds the bright forts againstOblivion—”What answering thrill would ’round the planet run!For we are one; all Consciousness is one,Whatever form it wear, however dressedIn gray or glamour, in whatever breastIt lift its longing: glimmering it movesThrough the green wave; it stamps with startled hoovesThe upland pastures of the world, and soarsIn heaven with the eagle; on bright shoresIt basks a sunny body, or in dreadLifts from the undergrowth a snaky headAnd darts a flickering tongue; it is most clearIn the lark’s throat; among the grasses here,That couch the ant, it turns a tiny eyeAround the darkness; scampers and is shyIn the scared rabbit; through the murmuring airWheels with the beetle, and, where heaven is bare,Southward with the wild crane at summer’s close,Hungering, an eternal pilgrim goesOn quests implacable. And from the eyesOf the poised panther gleam the crueltiesOf its stern need that roams the world, and rendsWith tooth or talon; in the hawk descendsOn the stunned squirrel; in the squirrel moansAs the hawk strikes; darkens the earth with bonesOf its own wreck and, hungering again,Knows in its body the old spur. For whenHunger, the shadow cast by death, draws near,Life on her thousand thrones feels the one fear,And in the lion’s roar at dusk is heardThe unassuagable, insistent wordOf urgent Being, clamorous to be.Wreaking and wrought upon, eternallyMingling and mixed; inextricably blent,Victor and vanquished, in onesacrament—Body with body—of delight and death,It moves in splendor; lifts the shuddering breathOf the spent stag; and in the mind of ManRebels against the miserableplan—Flings its frail web of thought across the pathOf suns in heaven, and in holy wrath,On blood of murdered brothers nourished, stillThunders to all the world,Thou shall not kill!And the worm’s death is in the sparrow’s song.And I have seen it in the gnats that throngOld shadowy forests, in tumultuous dance;Or in the little measuring-worm advance,Inch by slow inch, along the swaying stemOf some exalted flower; or lift the hemOf the frail butterfly’s embroidered cloakIn gentle breathings that the sun did strokeCaressingly with fingers of his heat;Or from the dog yearn upward, and entreatWith eyes of adoration or of fearThe great god, Man—“What message, master dear,From the dim heights beyond me where you are?”In the mare’s tremulous whinny, in the farLowing of cattle from the upland sward,Or wail of whip-poor-wills, at twilight pouredOn pools of silence plaintively, or cryOf the lone wolf beneath the glittering skyOf soundless winter, I have heard the sameSplendor speak forth, and utter the one nameOf Life, the dreadful, the magnificent.All afternoon the passion of heaven spentOn earth its fiery fury in blind, brightLightnings of dread and laughters of delightDown shuddering deeps of shaken thunder, whereThe delirious longing loosed its sorrowing hairOf wind and shower and overshadowing cloudAcross the belovèd face, in darkness bowedOr glimmering light revealed; and cried aloudFor anger of utter ecstasy; and shedThe wild love of the rushing rain that spedTo the thrilled heart, consenting, of the dimAnd rapturous earth, that lifted up to himDrowsed lips of thirsty flowers; and the cupOf every flower for joy was lifted up,And drank, and swayed! So, wearied out at length,Flagged the bright pulses, and the ebbing strength,With muttering of remembered thunders, passedDown the large shores of evening: till at lastThe exhausted heaven of twilight from afarShone washed of all her sorrows; and a starBrooded above the fading storm, and sawThe winnowed reaches deepening into aweOf gradual darkness, and the fields that layAll drenched and wearied out at dusk of dayAnd the worn end of things; while far awayThe receding fury moaned.And now they lieIn the same peace around me, and the skyHolds up her stars; now in the rain-drenched woodThe tree-toad drinks the rain and finds it good,And trills for joy—the sliding waters grieveQuietly—now the bat begins to weaveWith intricate motion on the cloudy loom,Of glamourous starlight mingled and gray gloom,His dipping flight among the darkened boughsAnd dreamy vistas; and the little mouseFurtively hurries through the lane, his eyeTurned up in terror as the owl goes by:On softest feathers of silence overheadFlits the dim shadow of the ancient dread,Hooded and vague, the cruelty of his beakBent on old lustful mysteries.—Asqueak—A scuffle—beating of wings—and in the laneSilence—and the old wrong is done again,That was ere Adam; the triumphant heartAnd the defeated, each one doomed to his part,They play it through, the old tragedy where onePresence still wars and still is warred upon,Slays and is slain: while fiercely all aroundShakes the eternal love-song in shrill sound,Of grasshopper and cricket—sleepless flowThe immortal tides of longing to and froOn waves of music; endless is the prayerOf life to the belovèd, everywhereLifted in adoration: on dark shoresBeats the insistent passion that imploresThe one dear breast of pity or disdain,To be reborn, to be rebornagain—Nor perish wholly! The blind earth is thrilledAs with vague rites accomplished, dreams fulfilled,Marriage and mystic union; all alongHer brimming meadows rings the bridal songAnd chaunt ecstatic: that great heart of hersIs touched now the eternal longing stirsFrom hill to hollow and hollow to clear hillIn many voices mingled, or the stillEcstasy of the firefly that trailsAmong the shadows where the starlight fails,His body’s burning love. Forever flowsThe dreadful drama to its stately closeAnd endless ending—the fierce carnivalOf death and passion, wherein each and allMix, and are mingled, slaughter, blend, and passEach into other—the high poem that hasNo end and no beginning, that the oneSelf in all living forms beneath the sun,And on all worlds around him and above,Weaves on the strands of hunger, death, and love.I see it all, I hear it all, and lieUnder my swaying poplars, and the skyIs fretted with frail leaves. The mortal dreamIs in my heart: I hear the night-hawk’s screamShatter the silver silences, I hearThe owl’s clear tremolo riseover-clear—The mouse’s blood along his veins has madeHis love-note lovelier and the night afraidOf beauty’s dreadful secret—and I knowSoft shapes of stealth that in the darkness go,Of furry lusts and gnawing hungers, smallTwittering things obscene, that flit or crawlIn furtive secrecy, vague mouths and blurredOf the night creature or nocturnalbird—Amorphous moth and bat-wing—and the earth,With all her burrows, nooks and nests of birthCrowded, and wreck of many a perished might,By the ebbed waters of Life’s fierce delightWashed up on shores of silence—spoiled and spurnedAltars where once the sacred fireburned—Forms flowing back into the Formlessness;In a supreme embrace, a long caress,Mixing their bodies with the mothermould—And all the heaven of stars around me rolled,Whose brooding eyes have stared so many an ageUpon this theatre of lust and rage,Of death and adoration. And a breezeRustles the branches of the poplar-trees.Dear Spark, that shinest in the solitude!One Consciousness, that in the brotherhoodOf all earth’s living creatures movest onThe shaken ramparts ofOblivion—Whose starry cry, across the darkness hurled,Makes music in the silence of the world!Life, whose sole splendor in red slaughter spillsThe blood of its own breast; in many willsWars on the one Will; and in wrath or dreadFeeds on itself and, on itself being fed,Shines forth in song and color; gilds the dressOf the green-fly; and pours its lovelinessIn rapture on the earth; in theatresOf crowded congregation sits—norstirs—Watching itself, itself the spectacle;And builds the swallow’s breast, and shapes the shellAnd all these mansions of its thought that areBetween the morning and the evening-star,On earth, in heaven, or in the glimmering cavesAnd grottoes of the world below thewaves—Butchers the ox, and, gladdened by his meat,In the young mother’s downward smile is sweet;Or, sated on his body, walks abroadIn symphonies, and poems, and prayers to God;Sins, and has conscience and, repenting, sins;And in the lowly patient spider spinsIts fragile web; and in these words of mineFlings out its groping utterance, line by line,Across the intangible abyss ofthought—With infinite passion, infinite patiencewrought—Dread Loveliness! Be strong in me, be strong,To utter forth your meaning in my song!

Brother,from what dim world of lonely light,Trembling on heaven’s pinnacles to-night,Is lifted your sad face of love while youStare upward toward me, staring upward, too,At that faint flame which is your home, betweenThe leafy branches of these poplarsseen—So hushed, so far! Perhaps to-night you scanYour starry heaven for the star of Man,High in the trellis of eternityAnd glittering arches hung; perhaps like meYou, too, look up and wonder. Is it fair,That world of yours? Are there great cities there,Populous millions, hearts that beat as these,Clear meadows and far mountains, shoreless seas,Shadows of moving armies, thrones that shake?Does the heart thrill for love there, does itbreak—Tell me, are there hushed gardens, quiet tombs?And mighty poets weaving at their loomsThe old, dim wisdoms that outweary Time;And saints, and lifted saviours, and sublimeFaiths and high fortitudes beyond belief?—All blotted out by one small poplar leafIn the light wind of languid summer stirred!Brother, what news out of the night, what wordFrom the frontiers of mind beyond our ken,Of mysteries unimagined yet of men,Compassed by travail of your spirit? OCould you but reach to us! Could we but knowAcross the imperturbable old DarkSome answering glimmer of the ancient SparkLifted—some token, tangible to sense,Of the indomitable IntelligenceThat thrones on matter—languagevisible—Crying, “Eternity—and all is well!Brother, be of good cheer; we, too, have known!Not lonely moves, not utterly alone,Your sad fraternity through the dark of God:But the confederate legions are abroad,Life’s flag advances on the starry way,And Consciousness, still battling, still at bay,Holds the bright forts againstOblivion—”What answering thrill would ’round the planet run!For we are one; all Consciousness is one,Whatever form it wear, however dressedIn gray or glamour, in whatever breastIt lift its longing: glimmering it movesThrough the green wave; it stamps with startled hoovesThe upland pastures of the world, and soarsIn heaven with the eagle; on bright shoresIt basks a sunny body, or in dreadLifts from the undergrowth a snaky headAnd darts a flickering tongue; it is most clearIn the lark’s throat; among the grasses here,That couch the ant, it turns a tiny eyeAround the darkness; scampers and is shyIn the scared rabbit; through the murmuring airWheels with the beetle, and, where heaven is bare,Southward with the wild crane at summer’s close,Hungering, an eternal pilgrim goesOn quests implacable. And from the eyesOf the poised panther gleam the crueltiesOf its stern need that roams the world, and rendsWith tooth or talon; in the hawk descendsOn the stunned squirrel; in the squirrel moansAs the hawk strikes; darkens the earth with bonesOf its own wreck and, hungering again,Knows in its body the old spur. For whenHunger, the shadow cast by death, draws near,Life on her thousand thrones feels the one fear,And in the lion’s roar at dusk is heardThe unassuagable, insistent wordOf urgent Being, clamorous to be.Wreaking and wrought upon, eternallyMingling and mixed; inextricably blent,Victor and vanquished, in onesacrament—Body with body—of delight and death,It moves in splendor; lifts the shuddering breathOf the spent stag; and in the mind of ManRebels against the miserableplan—Flings its frail web of thought across the pathOf suns in heaven, and in holy wrath,On blood of murdered brothers nourished, stillThunders to all the world,Thou shall not kill!And the worm’s death is in the sparrow’s song.And I have seen it in the gnats that throngOld shadowy forests, in tumultuous dance;Or in the little measuring-worm advance,Inch by slow inch, along the swaying stemOf some exalted flower; or lift the hemOf the frail butterfly’s embroidered cloakIn gentle breathings that the sun did strokeCaressingly with fingers of his heat;Or from the dog yearn upward, and entreatWith eyes of adoration or of fearThe great god, Man—“What message, master dear,From the dim heights beyond me where you are?”In the mare’s tremulous whinny, in the farLowing of cattle from the upland sward,Or wail of whip-poor-wills, at twilight pouredOn pools of silence plaintively, or cryOf the lone wolf beneath the glittering skyOf soundless winter, I have heard the sameSplendor speak forth, and utter the one nameOf Life, the dreadful, the magnificent.All afternoon the passion of heaven spentOn earth its fiery fury in blind, brightLightnings of dread and laughters of delightDown shuddering deeps of shaken thunder, whereThe delirious longing loosed its sorrowing hairOf wind and shower and overshadowing cloudAcross the belovèd face, in darkness bowedOr glimmering light revealed; and cried aloudFor anger of utter ecstasy; and shedThe wild love of the rushing rain that spedTo the thrilled heart, consenting, of the dimAnd rapturous earth, that lifted up to himDrowsed lips of thirsty flowers; and the cupOf every flower for joy was lifted up,And drank, and swayed! So, wearied out at length,Flagged the bright pulses, and the ebbing strength,With muttering of remembered thunders, passedDown the large shores of evening: till at lastThe exhausted heaven of twilight from afarShone washed of all her sorrows; and a starBrooded above the fading storm, and sawThe winnowed reaches deepening into aweOf gradual darkness, and the fields that layAll drenched and wearied out at dusk of dayAnd the worn end of things; while far awayThe receding fury moaned.And now they lieIn the same peace around me, and the skyHolds up her stars; now in the rain-drenched woodThe tree-toad drinks the rain and finds it good,And trills for joy—the sliding waters grieveQuietly—now the bat begins to weaveWith intricate motion on the cloudy loom,Of glamourous starlight mingled and gray gloom,His dipping flight among the darkened boughsAnd dreamy vistas; and the little mouseFurtively hurries through the lane, his eyeTurned up in terror as the owl goes by:On softest feathers of silence overheadFlits the dim shadow of the ancient dread,Hooded and vague, the cruelty of his beakBent on old lustful mysteries.—Asqueak—A scuffle—beating of wings—and in the laneSilence—and the old wrong is done again,That was ere Adam; the triumphant heartAnd the defeated, each one doomed to his part,They play it through, the old tragedy where onePresence still wars and still is warred upon,Slays and is slain: while fiercely all aroundShakes the eternal love-song in shrill sound,Of grasshopper and cricket—sleepless flowThe immortal tides of longing to and froOn waves of music; endless is the prayerOf life to the belovèd, everywhereLifted in adoration: on dark shoresBeats the insistent passion that imploresThe one dear breast of pity or disdain,To be reborn, to be rebornagain—Nor perish wholly! The blind earth is thrilledAs with vague rites accomplished, dreams fulfilled,Marriage and mystic union; all alongHer brimming meadows rings the bridal songAnd chaunt ecstatic: that great heart of hersIs touched now the eternal longing stirsFrom hill to hollow and hollow to clear hillIn many voices mingled, or the stillEcstasy of the firefly that trailsAmong the shadows where the starlight fails,His body’s burning love. Forever flowsThe dreadful drama to its stately closeAnd endless ending—the fierce carnivalOf death and passion, wherein each and allMix, and are mingled, slaughter, blend, and passEach into other—the high poem that hasNo end and no beginning, that the oneSelf in all living forms beneath the sun,And on all worlds around him and above,Weaves on the strands of hunger, death, and love.I see it all, I hear it all, and lieUnder my swaying poplars, and the skyIs fretted with frail leaves. The mortal dreamIs in my heart: I hear the night-hawk’s screamShatter the silver silences, I hearThe owl’s clear tremolo riseover-clear—The mouse’s blood along his veins has madeHis love-note lovelier and the night afraidOf beauty’s dreadful secret—and I knowSoft shapes of stealth that in the darkness go,Of furry lusts and gnawing hungers, smallTwittering things obscene, that flit or crawlIn furtive secrecy, vague mouths and blurredOf the night creature or nocturnalbird—Amorphous moth and bat-wing—and the earth,With all her burrows, nooks and nests of birthCrowded, and wreck of many a perished might,By the ebbed waters of Life’s fierce delightWashed up on shores of silence—spoiled and spurnedAltars where once the sacred fireburned—Forms flowing back into the Formlessness;In a supreme embrace, a long caress,Mixing their bodies with the mothermould—And all the heaven of stars around me rolled,Whose brooding eyes have stared so many an ageUpon this theatre of lust and rage,Of death and adoration. And a breezeRustles the branches of the poplar-trees.Dear Spark, that shinest in the solitude!One Consciousness, that in the brotherhoodOf all earth’s living creatures movest onThe shaken ramparts ofOblivion—Whose starry cry, across the darkness hurled,Makes music in the silence of the world!Life, whose sole splendor in red slaughter spillsThe blood of its own breast; in many willsWars on the one Will; and in wrath or dreadFeeds on itself and, on itself being fed,Shines forth in song and color; gilds the dressOf the green-fly; and pours its lovelinessIn rapture on the earth; in theatresOf crowded congregation sits—norstirs—Watching itself, itself the spectacle;And builds the swallow’s breast, and shapes the shellAnd all these mansions of its thought that areBetween the morning and the evening-star,On earth, in heaven, or in the glimmering cavesAnd grottoes of the world below thewaves—Butchers the ox, and, gladdened by his meat,In the young mother’s downward smile is sweet;Or, sated on his body, walks abroadIn symphonies, and poems, and prayers to God;Sins, and has conscience and, repenting, sins;And in the lowly patient spider spinsIts fragile web; and in these words of mineFlings out its groping utterance, line by line,Across the intangible abyss ofthought—With infinite passion, infinite patiencewrought—Dread Loveliness! Be strong in me, be strong,To utter forth your meaning in my song!

Brother,from what dim world of lonely light,Trembling on heaven’s pinnacles to-night,Is lifted your sad face of love while youStare upward toward me, staring upward, too,At that faint flame which is your home, betweenThe leafy branches of these poplarsseen—So hushed, so far! Perhaps to-night you scanYour starry heaven for the star of Man,High in the trellis of eternityAnd glittering arches hung; perhaps like meYou, too, look up and wonder. Is it fair,That world of yours? Are there great cities there,Populous millions, hearts that beat as these,Clear meadows and far mountains, shoreless seas,Shadows of moving armies, thrones that shake?Does the heart thrill for love there, does itbreak—Tell me, are there hushed gardens, quiet tombs?And mighty poets weaving at their loomsThe old, dim wisdoms that outweary Time;And saints, and lifted saviours, and sublimeFaiths and high fortitudes beyond belief?—All blotted out by one small poplar leafIn the light wind of languid summer stirred!

Brother,from what dim world of lonely light,

Trembling on heaven’s pinnacles to-night,

Is lifted your sad face of love while you

Stare upward toward me, staring upward, too,

At that faint flame which is your home, between

The leafy branches of these poplarsseen—

So hushed, so far! Perhaps to-night you scan

Your starry heaven for the star of Man,

High in the trellis of eternity

And glittering arches hung; perhaps like me

You, too, look up and wonder. Is it fair,

That world of yours? Are there great cities there,

Populous millions, hearts that beat as these,

Clear meadows and far mountains, shoreless seas,

Shadows of moving armies, thrones that shake?

Does the heart thrill for love there, does itbreak—

Tell me, are there hushed gardens, quiet tombs?

And mighty poets weaving at their looms

The old, dim wisdoms that outweary Time;

And saints, and lifted saviours, and sublime

Faiths and high fortitudes beyond belief?

—All blotted out by one small poplar leaf

In the light wind of languid summer stirred!

Brother, what news out of the night, what wordFrom the frontiers of mind beyond our ken,Of mysteries unimagined yet of men,Compassed by travail of your spirit? OCould you but reach to us! Could we but knowAcross the imperturbable old DarkSome answering glimmer of the ancient SparkLifted—some token, tangible to sense,Of the indomitable IntelligenceThat thrones on matter—languagevisible—Crying, “Eternity—and all is well!Brother, be of good cheer; we, too, have known!Not lonely moves, not utterly alone,Your sad fraternity through the dark of God:But the confederate legions are abroad,Life’s flag advances on the starry way,And Consciousness, still battling, still at bay,Holds the bright forts againstOblivion—”What answering thrill would ’round the planet run!

Brother, what news out of the night, what word

From the frontiers of mind beyond our ken,

Of mysteries unimagined yet of men,

Compassed by travail of your spirit? O

Could you but reach to us! Could we but know

Across the imperturbable old Dark

Some answering glimmer of the ancient Spark

Lifted—some token, tangible to sense,

Of the indomitable Intelligence

That thrones on matter—languagevisible—

Crying, “Eternity—and all is well!

Brother, be of good cheer; we, too, have known!

Not lonely moves, not utterly alone,

Your sad fraternity through the dark of God:

But the confederate legions are abroad,

Life’s flag advances on the starry way,

And Consciousness, still battling, still at bay,

Holds the bright forts againstOblivion—”

What answering thrill would ’round the planet run!

For we are one; all Consciousness is one,Whatever form it wear, however dressedIn gray or glamour, in whatever breastIt lift its longing: glimmering it movesThrough the green wave; it stamps with startled hoovesThe upland pastures of the world, and soarsIn heaven with the eagle; on bright shoresIt basks a sunny body, or in dreadLifts from the undergrowth a snaky headAnd darts a flickering tongue; it is most clearIn the lark’s throat; among the grasses here,That couch the ant, it turns a tiny eyeAround the darkness; scampers and is shyIn the scared rabbit; through the murmuring airWheels with the beetle, and, where heaven is bare,Southward with the wild crane at summer’s close,Hungering, an eternal pilgrim goesOn quests implacable. And from the eyesOf the poised panther gleam the crueltiesOf its stern need that roams the world, and rendsWith tooth or talon; in the hawk descendsOn the stunned squirrel; in the squirrel moansAs the hawk strikes; darkens the earth with bonesOf its own wreck and, hungering again,Knows in its body the old spur. For whenHunger, the shadow cast by death, draws near,Life on her thousand thrones feels the one fear,And in the lion’s roar at dusk is heardThe unassuagable, insistent wordOf urgent Being, clamorous to be.

For we are one; all Consciousness is one,

Whatever form it wear, however dressed

In gray or glamour, in whatever breast

It lift its longing: glimmering it moves

Through the green wave; it stamps with startled hooves

The upland pastures of the world, and soars

In heaven with the eagle; on bright shores

It basks a sunny body, or in dread

Lifts from the undergrowth a snaky head

And darts a flickering tongue; it is most clear

In the lark’s throat; among the grasses here,

That couch the ant, it turns a tiny eye

Around the darkness; scampers and is shy

In the scared rabbit; through the murmuring air

Wheels with the beetle, and, where heaven is bare,

Southward with the wild crane at summer’s close,

Hungering, an eternal pilgrim goes

On quests implacable. And from the eyes

Of the poised panther gleam the cruelties

Of its stern need that roams the world, and rends

With tooth or talon; in the hawk descends

On the stunned squirrel; in the squirrel moans

As the hawk strikes; darkens the earth with bones

Of its own wreck and, hungering again,

Knows in its body the old spur. For when

Hunger, the shadow cast by death, draws near,

Life on her thousand thrones feels the one fear,

And in the lion’s roar at dusk is heard

The unassuagable, insistent word

Of urgent Being, clamorous to be.

Wreaking and wrought upon, eternallyMingling and mixed; inextricably blent,Victor and vanquished, in onesacrament—Body with body—of delight and death,It moves in splendor; lifts the shuddering breathOf the spent stag; and in the mind of ManRebels against the miserableplan—Flings its frail web of thought across the pathOf suns in heaven, and in holy wrath,On blood of murdered brothers nourished, stillThunders to all the world,Thou shall not kill!And the worm’s death is in the sparrow’s song.

Wreaking and wrought upon, eternally

Mingling and mixed; inextricably blent,

Victor and vanquished, in onesacrament—

Body with body—of delight and death,

It moves in splendor; lifts the shuddering breath

Of the spent stag; and in the mind of Man

Rebels against the miserableplan—

Flings its frail web of thought across the path

Of suns in heaven, and in holy wrath,

On blood of murdered brothers nourished, still

Thunders to all the world,Thou shall not kill!

And the worm’s death is in the sparrow’s song.

And I have seen it in the gnats that throngOld shadowy forests, in tumultuous dance;Or in the little measuring-worm advance,Inch by slow inch, along the swaying stemOf some exalted flower; or lift the hemOf the frail butterfly’s embroidered cloakIn gentle breathings that the sun did strokeCaressingly with fingers of his heat;Or from the dog yearn upward, and entreatWith eyes of adoration or of fearThe great god, Man—“What message, master dear,From the dim heights beyond me where you are?”In the mare’s tremulous whinny, in the farLowing of cattle from the upland sward,Or wail of whip-poor-wills, at twilight pouredOn pools of silence plaintively, or cryOf the lone wolf beneath the glittering skyOf soundless winter, I have heard the sameSplendor speak forth, and utter the one nameOf Life, the dreadful, the magnificent.

And I have seen it in the gnats that throng

Old shadowy forests, in tumultuous dance;

Or in the little measuring-worm advance,

Inch by slow inch, along the swaying stem

Of some exalted flower; or lift the hem

Of the frail butterfly’s embroidered cloak

In gentle breathings that the sun did stroke

Caressingly with fingers of his heat;

Or from the dog yearn upward, and entreat

With eyes of adoration or of fear

The great god, Man—“What message, master dear,

From the dim heights beyond me where you are?”

In the mare’s tremulous whinny, in the far

Lowing of cattle from the upland sward,

Or wail of whip-poor-wills, at twilight poured

On pools of silence plaintively, or cry

Of the lone wolf beneath the glittering sky

Of soundless winter, I have heard the same

Splendor speak forth, and utter the one name

Of Life, the dreadful, the magnificent.

All afternoon the passion of heaven spentOn earth its fiery fury in blind, brightLightnings of dread and laughters of delightDown shuddering deeps of shaken thunder, whereThe delirious longing loosed its sorrowing hairOf wind and shower and overshadowing cloudAcross the belovèd face, in darkness bowedOr glimmering light revealed; and cried aloudFor anger of utter ecstasy; and shedThe wild love of the rushing rain that spedTo the thrilled heart, consenting, of the dimAnd rapturous earth, that lifted up to himDrowsed lips of thirsty flowers; and the cupOf every flower for joy was lifted up,And drank, and swayed! So, wearied out at length,Flagged the bright pulses, and the ebbing strength,With muttering of remembered thunders, passedDown the large shores of evening: till at lastThe exhausted heaven of twilight from afarShone washed of all her sorrows; and a starBrooded above the fading storm, and sawThe winnowed reaches deepening into aweOf gradual darkness, and the fields that layAll drenched and wearied out at dusk of dayAnd the worn end of things; while far awayThe receding fury moaned.

All afternoon the passion of heaven spent

On earth its fiery fury in blind, bright

Lightnings of dread and laughters of delight

Down shuddering deeps of shaken thunder, where

The delirious longing loosed its sorrowing hair

Of wind and shower and overshadowing cloud

Across the belovèd face, in darkness bowed

Or glimmering light revealed; and cried aloud

For anger of utter ecstasy; and shed

The wild love of the rushing rain that sped

To the thrilled heart, consenting, of the dim

And rapturous earth, that lifted up to him

Drowsed lips of thirsty flowers; and the cup

Of every flower for joy was lifted up,

And drank, and swayed! So, wearied out at length,

Flagged the bright pulses, and the ebbing strength,

With muttering of remembered thunders, passed

Down the large shores of evening: till at last

The exhausted heaven of twilight from afar

Shone washed of all her sorrows; and a star

Brooded above the fading storm, and saw

The winnowed reaches deepening into awe

Of gradual darkness, and the fields that lay

All drenched and wearied out at dusk of day

And the worn end of things; while far away

The receding fury moaned.

And now they lieIn the same peace around me, and the skyHolds up her stars; now in the rain-drenched woodThe tree-toad drinks the rain and finds it good,And trills for joy—the sliding waters grieveQuietly—now the bat begins to weaveWith intricate motion on the cloudy loom,Of glamourous starlight mingled and gray gloom,His dipping flight among the darkened boughsAnd dreamy vistas; and the little mouseFurtively hurries through the lane, his eyeTurned up in terror as the owl goes by:On softest feathers of silence overheadFlits the dim shadow of the ancient dread,Hooded and vague, the cruelty of his beakBent on old lustful mysteries.—Asqueak—A scuffle—beating of wings—and in the laneSilence—and the old wrong is done again,That was ere Adam; the triumphant heartAnd the defeated, each one doomed to his part,They play it through, the old tragedy where onePresence still wars and still is warred upon,Slays and is slain: while fiercely all aroundShakes the eternal love-song in shrill sound,Of grasshopper and cricket—sleepless flowThe immortal tides of longing to and froOn waves of music; endless is the prayerOf life to the belovèd, everywhereLifted in adoration: on dark shoresBeats the insistent passion that imploresThe one dear breast of pity or disdain,To be reborn, to be rebornagain—Nor perish wholly! The blind earth is thrilledAs with vague rites accomplished, dreams fulfilled,Marriage and mystic union; all alongHer brimming meadows rings the bridal songAnd chaunt ecstatic: that great heart of hersIs touched now the eternal longing stirsFrom hill to hollow and hollow to clear hillIn many voices mingled, or the stillEcstasy of the firefly that trailsAmong the shadows where the starlight fails,His body’s burning love. Forever flowsThe dreadful drama to its stately closeAnd endless ending—the fierce carnivalOf death and passion, wherein each and allMix, and are mingled, slaughter, blend, and passEach into other—the high poem that hasNo end and no beginning, that the oneSelf in all living forms beneath the sun,And on all worlds around him and above,Weaves on the strands of hunger, death, and love.

And now they lie

In the same peace around me, and the sky

Holds up her stars; now in the rain-drenched wood

The tree-toad drinks the rain and finds it good,

And trills for joy—the sliding waters grieve

Quietly—now the bat begins to weave

With intricate motion on the cloudy loom,

Of glamourous starlight mingled and gray gloom,

His dipping flight among the darkened boughs

And dreamy vistas; and the little mouse

Furtively hurries through the lane, his eye

Turned up in terror as the owl goes by:

On softest feathers of silence overhead

Flits the dim shadow of the ancient dread,

Hooded and vague, the cruelty of his beak

Bent on old lustful mysteries.—Asqueak—

A scuffle—beating of wings—and in the lane

Silence—and the old wrong is done again,

That was ere Adam; the triumphant heart

And the defeated, each one doomed to his part,

They play it through, the old tragedy where one

Presence still wars and still is warred upon,

Slays and is slain: while fiercely all around

Shakes the eternal love-song in shrill sound,

Of grasshopper and cricket—sleepless flow

The immortal tides of longing to and fro

On waves of music; endless is the prayer

Of life to the belovèd, everywhere

Lifted in adoration: on dark shores

Beats the insistent passion that implores

The one dear breast of pity or disdain,

To be reborn, to be rebornagain—

Nor perish wholly! The blind earth is thrilled

As with vague rites accomplished, dreams fulfilled,

Marriage and mystic union; all along

Her brimming meadows rings the bridal song

And chaunt ecstatic: that great heart of hers

Is touched now the eternal longing stirs

From hill to hollow and hollow to clear hill

In many voices mingled, or the still

Ecstasy of the firefly that trails

Among the shadows where the starlight fails,

His body’s burning love. Forever flows

The dreadful drama to its stately close

And endless ending—the fierce carnival

Of death and passion, wherein each and all

Mix, and are mingled, slaughter, blend, and pass

Each into other—the high poem that has

No end and no beginning, that the one

Self in all living forms beneath the sun,

And on all worlds around him and above,

Weaves on the strands of hunger, death, and love.

I see it all, I hear it all, and lieUnder my swaying poplars, and the skyIs fretted with frail leaves. The mortal dreamIs in my heart: I hear the night-hawk’s screamShatter the silver silences, I hearThe owl’s clear tremolo riseover-clear—The mouse’s blood along his veins has madeHis love-note lovelier and the night afraidOf beauty’s dreadful secret—and I knowSoft shapes of stealth that in the darkness go,Of furry lusts and gnawing hungers, smallTwittering things obscene, that flit or crawlIn furtive secrecy, vague mouths and blurredOf the night creature or nocturnalbird—Amorphous moth and bat-wing—and the earth,With all her burrows, nooks and nests of birthCrowded, and wreck of many a perished might,By the ebbed waters of Life’s fierce delightWashed up on shores of silence—spoiled and spurnedAltars where once the sacred fireburned—Forms flowing back into the Formlessness;In a supreme embrace, a long caress,Mixing their bodies with the mothermould—And all the heaven of stars around me rolled,Whose brooding eyes have stared so many an ageUpon this theatre of lust and rage,Of death and adoration. And a breezeRustles the branches of the poplar-trees.

I see it all, I hear it all, and lie

Under my swaying poplars, and the sky

Is fretted with frail leaves. The mortal dream

Is in my heart: I hear the night-hawk’s scream

Shatter the silver silences, I hear

The owl’s clear tremolo riseover-clear—

The mouse’s blood along his veins has made

His love-note lovelier and the night afraid

Of beauty’s dreadful secret—and I know

Soft shapes of stealth that in the darkness go,

Of furry lusts and gnawing hungers, small

Twittering things obscene, that flit or crawl

In furtive secrecy, vague mouths and blurred

Of the night creature or nocturnalbird—

Amorphous moth and bat-wing—and the earth,

With all her burrows, nooks and nests of birth

Crowded, and wreck of many a perished might,

By the ebbed waters of Life’s fierce delight

Washed up on shores of silence—spoiled and spurned

Altars where once the sacred fireburned—

Forms flowing back into the Formlessness;

In a supreme embrace, a long caress,

Mixing their bodies with the mothermould—

And all the heaven of stars around me rolled,

Whose brooding eyes have stared so many an age

Upon this theatre of lust and rage,

Of death and adoration. And a breeze

Rustles the branches of the poplar-trees.

Dear Spark, that shinest in the solitude!One Consciousness, that in the brotherhoodOf all earth’s living creatures movest onThe shaken ramparts ofOblivion—Whose starry cry, across the darkness hurled,Makes music in the silence of the world!Life, whose sole splendor in red slaughter spillsThe blood of its own breast; in many willsWars on the one Will; and in wrath or dreadFeeds on itself and, on itself being fed,Shines forth in song and color; gilds the dressOf the green-fly; and pours its lovelinessIn rapture on the earth; in theatresOf crowded congregation sits—norstirs—Watching itself, itself the spectacle;And builds the swallow’s breast, and shapes the shellAnd all these mansions of its thought that areBetween the morning and the evening-star,On earth, in heaven, or in the glimmering cavesAnd grottoes of the world below thewaves—Butchers the ox, and, gladdened by his meat,In the young mother’s downward smile is sweet;Or, sated on his body, walks abroadIn symphonies, and poems, and prayers to God;Sins, and has conscience and, repenting, sins;And in the lowly patient spider spinsIts fragile web; and in these words of mineFlings out its groping utterance, line by line,Across the intangible abyss ofthought—With infinite passion, infinite patiencewrought—Dread Loveliness! Be strong in me, be strong,To utter forth your meaning in my song!

Dear Spark, that shinest in the solitude!

One Consciousness, that in the brotherhood

Of all earth’s living creatures movest on

The shaken ramparts ofOblivion—

Whose starry cry, across the darkness hurled,

Makes music in the silence of the world!

Life, whose sole splendor in red slaughter spills

The blood of its own breast; in many wills

Wars on the one Will; and in wrath or dread

Feeds on itself and, on itself being fed,

Shines forth in song and color; gilds the dress

Of the green-fly; and pours its loveliness

In rapture on the earth; in theatres

Of crowded congregation sits—norstirs—

Watching itself, itself the spectacle;

And builds the swallow’s breast, and shapes the shell

And all these mansions of its thought that are

Between the morning and the evening-star,

On earth, in heaven, or in the glimmering caves

And grottoes of the world below thewaves—

Butchers the ox, and, gladdened by his meat,

In the young mother’s downward smile is sweet;

Or, sated on his body, walks abroad

In symphonies, and poems, and prayers to God;

Sins, and has conscience and, repenting, sins;

And in the lowly patient spider spins

Its fragile web; and in these words of mine

Flings out its groping utterance, line by line,

Across the intangible abyss ofthought—

With infinite passion, infinite patiencewrought—

Dread Loveliness! Be strong in me, be strong,

To utter forth your meaning in my song!


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