KIT LOGAN AND LADY HELEN

Here is Kit Logan with her love-child comeTo Lady Helen's gate:Then down sweeps Helen from the Italian room,She, with her child of hate.Kit's boy was born of violent hot desire,Helen's of hate and dread:Poor girl, betrayed to union with the Squire,Loathing her marriage bed.Kit Logan, who is father to your boy?But Helen knows, too well:Listen what biting taunts they both employ,Watch their red anger swell.Yet each would give her undying soul to beChanged to the other's place.Kit from the wet road's tasking crueltyLooks up to silk and lace,Helen looks down at rags, her fluttering prideCaught in this cage of glass,Eager to trudge, thieve, beg by the road-side,Or starving to eat grass ...Silence. Wrath dies. For Woman's old good nameEach swears a sister's oath;Weeping, they kiss; to the Squire's lasting shame,Who broke the heart in both.

Here is Kit Logan with her love-child comeTo Lady Helen's gate:Then down sweeps Helen from the Italian room,She, with her child of hate.Kit's boy was born of violent hot desire,Helen's of hate and dread:Poor girl, betrayed to union with the Squire,Loathing her marriage bed.Kit Logan, who is father to your boy?But Helen knows, too well:Listen what biting taunts they both employ,Watch their red anger swell.Yet each would give her undying soul to beChanged to the other's place.Kit from the wet road's tasking crueltyLooks up to silk and lace,Helen looks down at rags, her fluttering prideCaught in this cage of glass,Eager to trudge, thieve, beg by the road-side,Or starving to eat grass ...Silence. Wrath dies. For Woman's old good nameEach swears a sister's oath;Weeping, they kiss; to the Squire's lasting shame,Who broke the heart in both.

Here is Kit Logan with her love-child comeTo Lady Helen's gate:Then down sweeps Helen from the Italian room,She, with her child of hate.

Here is Kit Logan with her love-child come

To Lady Helen's gate:

Then down sweeps Helen from the Italian room,

She, with her child of hate.

Kit's boy was born of violent hot desire,Helen's of hate and dread:Poor girl, betrayed to union with the Squire,Loathing her marriage bed.

Kit's boy was born of violent hot desire,

Helen's of hate and dread:

Poor girl, betrayed to union with the Squire,

Loathing her marriage bed.

Kit Logan, who is father to your boy?But Helen knows, too well:Listen what biting taunts they both employ,Watch their red anger swell.

Kit Logan, who is father to your boy?

But Helen knows, too well:

Listen what biting taunts they both employ,

Watch their red anger swell.

Yet each would give her undying soul to beChanged to the other's place.Kit from the wet road's tasking crueltyLooks up to silk and lace,

Yet each would give her undying soul to be

Changed to the other's place.

Kit from the wet road's tasking cruelty

Looks up to silk and lace,

Helen looks down at rags, her fluttering prideCaught in this cage of glass,Eager to trudge, thieve, beg by the road-side,Or starving to eat grass ...

Helen looks down at rags, her fluttering pride

Caught in this cage of glass,

Eager to trudge, thieve, beg by the road-side,

Or starving to eat grass ...

Silence. Wrath dies. For Woman's old good nameEach swears a sister's oath;Weeping, they kiss; to the Squire's lasting shame,Who broke the heart in both.

Silence. Wrath dies. For Woman's old good name

Each swears a sister's oath;

Weeping, they kiss; to the Squire's lasting shame,

Who broke the heart in both.

Downstairs a clock had chimed, two o'clock only.Then outside from the hen-roost crowing came.But why should Shift-wing call against the clock,Three hours from dawn? The shutters click and knock,And he remembers a sad superstitionUnfitting for the sick-bed—Turn aside,Distract, divide, ponder the simple talesThat puzzled childhood; riddles, turn them over,Half-riddles, answerless, the more intense!—Lost bars of music tinkling with no senseRecur, drowning uneasy superstition.Mouth open, he was lying, this sick man,And sinking all the while; how had he comeTo sink? On better nights his dream went flying,Dipping, sailing the pasture of his sleep,But now, since clock and cock, had sunk him downThrough mattress, bed, floor, floors beneath, stairs, cellars,Through deep foundations of the manse; still sinkingThrough unturned earth. How had he cheated spaceWith inadvertent motion or word utteredOf too-close-packed intelligence (such there are)That he should penetrate with sliding ease,Dense earth, compound of ages, granite ribsAnd groins? Consider, there was some word uttered,Some abracadabra—then like a stage-ghost,Funereally with weeping, down, drowned, lost!Oh, to be a child once more, sprawling at ease,On warm turf of a ruined castle court.Once he had dropped a stone between flat slabsThat mask the ancient well, mysteriouslyPlunging his mind down with it. Hear it goRattling and rocketing down in secret void.Count slowly one, two, three! and echoes riseFainter and fainter, merged in the gradual humOf bees and flies; only a thin draught risesTo chill the drowsy air; he for a whileLay without spirit; until that floated backFrom the deep waters. Oh, to renew nowThe bliss of repossession, kindly sunForfeit for ever, and the scent of thyme!Falling, falling! Light closed up behind him,Now stunned by the violent subterrene flowOf rivers, whirling down to hiss belowOn the flame-axis of this terrible world;Toppling upon their water-fall, O spirit ...

Downstairs a clock had chimed, two o'clock only.Then outside from the hen-roost crowing came.But why should Shift-wing call against the clock,Three hours from dawn? The shutters click and knock,And he remembers a sad superstitionUnfitting for the sick-bed—Turn aside,Distract, divide, ponder the simple talesThat puzzled childhood; riddles, turn them over,Half-riddles, answerless, the more intense!—Lost bars of music tinkling with no senseRecur, drowning uneasy superstition.Mouth open, he was lying, this sick man,And sinking all the while; how had he comeTo sink? On better nights his dream went flying,Dipping, sailing the pasture of his sleep,But now, since clock and cock, had sunk him downThrough mattress, bed, floor, floors beneath, stairs, cellars,Through deep foundations of the manse; still sinkingThrough unturned earth. How had he cheated spaceWith inadvertent motion or word utteredOf too-close-packed intelligence (such there are)That he should penetrate with sliding ease,Dense earth, compound of ages, granite ribsAnd groins? Consider, there was some word uttered,Some abracadabra—then like a stage-ghost,Funereally with weeping, down, drowned, lost!Oh, to be a child once more, sprawling at ease,On warm turf of a ruined castle court.Once he had dropped a stone between flat slabsThat mask the ancient well, mysteriouslyPlunging his mind down with it. Hear it goRattling and rocketing down in secret void.Count slowly one, two, three! and echoes riseFainter and fainter, merged in the gradual humOf bees and flies; only a thin draught risesTo chill the drowsy air; he for a whileLay without spirit; until that floated backFrom the deep waters. Oh, to renew nowThe bliss of repossession, kindly sunForfeit for ever, and the scent of thyme!Falling, falling! Light closed up behind him,Now stunned by the violent subterrene flowOf rivers, whirling down to hiss belowOn the flame-axis of this terrible world;Toppling upon their water-fall, O spirit ...

Downstairs a clock had chimed, two o'clock only.Then outside from the hen-roost crowing came.But why should Shift-wing call against the clock,Three hours from dawn? The shutters click and knock,And he remembers a sad superstitionUnfitting for the sick-bed—Turn aside,Distract, divide, ponder the simple talesThat puzzled childhood; riddles, turn them over,Half-riddles, answerless, the more intense!—Lost bars of music tinkling with no senseRecur, drowning uneasy superstition.

Downstairs a clock had chimed, two o'clock only.

Then outside from the hen-roost crowing came.

But why should Shift-wing call against the clock,

Three hours from dawn? The shutters click and knock,

And he remembers a sad superstition

Unfitting for the sick-bed—Turn aside,

Distract, divide, ponder the simple tales

That puzzled childhood; riddles, turn them over,

Half-riddles, answerless, the more intense!—

Lost bars of music tinkling with no sense

Recur, drowning uneasy superstition.

Mouth open, he was lying, this sick man,And sinking all the while; how had he comeTo sink? On better nights his dream went flying,Dipping, sailing the pasture of his sleep,But now, since clock and cock, had sunk him downThrough mattress, bed, floor, floors beneath, stairs, cellars,Through deep foundations of the manse; still sinkingThrough unturned earth. How had he cheated spaceWith inadvertent motion or word utteredOf too-close-packed intelligence (such there are)That he should penetrate with sliding ease,Dense earth, compound of ages, granite ribsAnd groins? Consider, there was some word uttered,Some abracadabra—then like a stage-ghost,Funereally with weeping, down, drowned, lost!

Mouth open, he was lying, this sick man,

And sinking all the while; how had he come

To sink? On better nights his dream went flying,

Dipping, sailing the pasture of his sleep,

But now, since clock and cock, had sunk him down

Through mattress, bed, floor, floors beneath, stairs, cellars,

Through deep foundations of the manse; still sinking

Through unturned earth. How had he cheated space

With inadvertent motion or word uttered

Of too-close-packed intelligence (such there are)

That he should penetrate with sliding ease,

Dense earth, compound of ages, granite ribs

And groins? Consider, there was some word uttered,

Some abracadabra—then like a stage-ghost,

Funereally with weeping, down, drowned, lost!

Oh, to be a child once more, sprawling at ease,On warm turf of a ruined castle court.Once he had dropped a stone between flat slabsThat mask the ancient well, mysteriouslyPlunging his mind down with it. Hear it goRattling and rocketing down in secret void.Count slowly one, two, three! and echoes riseFainter and fainter, merged in the gradual humOf bees and flies; only a thin draught risesTo chill the drowsy air; he for a whileLay without spirit; until that floated backFrom the deep waters. Oh, to renew nowThe bliss of repossession, kindly sunForfeit for ever, and the scent of thyme!

Oh, to be a child once more, sprawling at ease,

On warm turf of a ruined castle court.

Once he had dropped a stone between flat slabs

That mask the ancient well, mysteriously

Plunging his mind down with it. Hear it go

Rattling and rocketing down in secret void.

Count slowly one, two, three! and echoes rise

Fainter and fainter, merged in the gradual hum

Of bees and flies; only a thin draught rises

To chill the drowsy air; he for a while

Lay without spirit; until that floated back

From the deep waters. Oh, to renew now

The bliss of repossession, kindly sun

Forfeit for ever, and the scent of thyme!

Falling, falling! Light closed up behind him,Now stunned by the violent subterrene flowOf rivers, whirling down to hiss belowOn the flame-axis of this terrible world;Toppling upon their water-fall, O spirit ...

Falling, falling! Light closed up behind him,

Now stunned by the violent subterrene flow

Of rivers, whirling down to hiss below

On the flame-axis of this terrible world;

Toppling upon their water-fall, O spirit ...

"Share and share alikeIn the nest" was the rule,But Paul had a wide throat,He loved his belly-full.Over the edge went Peter,After him went John,True-blooded young nestlingsThrown out, one by one.If Mother Church was proudOf her great cuckoo son,He bit off her simple headBefore he had done.

"Share and share alikeIn the nest" was the rule,But Paul had a wide throat,He loved his belly-full.Over the edge went Peter,After him went John,True-blooded young nestlingsThrown out, one by one.If Mother Church was proudOf her great cuckoo son,He bit off her simple headBefore he had done.

"Share and share alikeIn the nest" was the rule,But Paul had a wide throat,He loved his belly-full.

"Share and share alike

In the nest" was the rule,

But Paul had a wide throat,

He loved his belly-full.

Over the edge went Peter,After him went John,True-blooded young nestlingsThrown out, one by one.

Over the edge went Peter,

After him went John,

True-blooded young nestlings

Thrown out, one by one.

If Mother Church was proudOf her great cuckoo son,He bit off her simple headBefore he had done.

If Mother Church was proud

Of her great cuckoo son,

He bit off her simple head

Before he had done.

The unruly member (for reliefOf aching head) clacks without care;Pastures lie sullen; hung with griefThe steading: thunder binds the air.Gulls on the blue sea-surface rock:The cows move lowing to scant shade;Jess lays aside the half-worked smock,Dan, in his ditch, lets fall the spade.Now swoops the outrageous hurricaneWith lightning in steep pitchfork jags;The blanched hill leaps in sheeted rain,Sea masses white to assault the crags.Such menace tottering overhead,Old Jess for ague scolds no more;She sees grey bobtail flung down deadLightning-blazed by the barn door—Wonder and panic chase our grief,Purge our thick distempered blood;Man, cattle, harvest shock and sheaf,Stagger below the sluicing flood....

The unruly member (for reliefOf aching head) clacks without care;Pastures lie sullen; hung with griefThe steading: thunder binds the air.Gulls on the blue sea-surface rock:The cows move lowing to scant shade;Jess lays aside the half-worked smock,Dan, in his ditch, lets fall the spade.Now swoops the outrageous hurricaneWith lightning in steep pitchfork jags;The blanched hill leaps in sheeted rain,Sea masses white to assault the crags.Such menace tottering overhead,Old Jess for ague scolds no more;She sees grey bobtail flung down deadLightning-blazed by the barn door—Wonder and panic chase our grief,Purge our thick distempered blood;Man, cattle, harvest shock and sheaf,Stagger below the sluicing flood....

The unruly member (for reliefOf aching head) clacks without care;Pastures lie sullen; hung with griefThe steading: thunder binds the air.

The unruly member (for relief

Of aching head) clacks without care;

Pastures lie sullen; hung with grief

The steading: thunder binds the air.

Gulls on the blue sea-surface rock:The cows move lowing to scant shade;Jess lays aside the half-worked smock,Dan, in his ditch, lets fall the spade.

Gulls on the blue sea-surface rock:

The cows move lowing to scant shade;

Jess lays aside the half-worked smock,

Dan, in his ditch, lets fall the spade.

Now swoops the outrageous hurricaneWith lightning in steep pitchfork jags;The blanched hill leaps in sheeted rain,Sea masses white to assault the crags.

Now swoops the outrageous hurricane

With lightning in steep pitchfork jags;

The blanched hill leaps in sheeted rain,

Sea masses white to assault the crags.

Such menace tottering overhead,Old Jess for ague scolds no more;She sees grey bobtail flung down deadLightning-blazed by the barn door—

Such menace tottering overhead,

Old Jess for ague scolds no more;

She sees grey bobtail flung down dead

Lightning-blazed by the barn door—

Wonder and panic chase our grief,Purge our thick distempered blood;Man, cattle, harvest shock and sheaf,Stagger below the sluicing flood....

Wonder and panic chase our grief,

Purge our thick distempered blood;

Man, cattle, harvest shock and sheaf,

Stagger below the sluicing flood....

Dame Jane the music mistress,the music mistress;Sharkie the baker of Black Horse Lane,At sound of a fiddleCaught her up by the middle—And away like swallows from the lane,Flying out together—From the crooked lane.What words said Sharkie to her,said Sharkie to her?How did she look in the lane?No neighbour heardOne sigh or one word,Not a sound but the fiddling in Black Horse Lane,The happy noise of music—Again and again.Where now be those two old 'uns,be those two old 'uns,Sharkie the baker run off with Jane?Hark ye up to Flint Street,Halloo to Pepper-Mint Street,Follow by the fells to the great North Plain,By the fells and the river—To the cold North Plain.How came this passion to them,this passion to them,Love in a freshet on Black Horse Lane?It came without warningOne blue windy morningSo they scarcely might know was it joy or pain,With scarce breath to wonder—Was it joy or pain.Took they no fardels with them,no fardels with them,Out and alone on the ice-bound plain?Sharkie he had rocketsAnd crackers in his pockets,Ay, and she had a plaid shawl to keep off the rain,An old Highland plaid shawl—To keep off the rain.

Dame Jane the music mistress,the music mistress;Sharkie the baker of Black Horse Lane,At sound of a fiddleCaught her up by the middle—And away like swallows from the lane,Flying out together—From the crooked lane.What words said Sharkie to her,said Sharkie to her?How did she look in the lane?No neighbour heardOne sigh or one word,Not a sound but the fiddling in Black Horse Lane,The happy noise of music—Again and again.Where now be those two old 'uns,be those two old 'uns,Sharkie the baker run off with Jane?Hark ye up to Flint Street,Halloo to Pepper-Mint Street,Follow by the fells to the great North Plain,By the fells and the river—To the cold North Plain.How came this passion to them,this passion to them,Love in a freshet on Black Horse Lane?It came without warningOne blue windy morningSo they scarcely might know was it joy or pain,With scarce breath to wonder—Was it joy or pain.Took they no fardels with them,no fardels with them,Out and alone on the ice-bound plain?Sharkie he had rocketsAnd crackers in his pockets,Ay, and she had a plaid shawl to keep off the rain,An old Highland plaid shawl—To keep off the rain.

Dame Jane the music mistress,the music mistress;Sharkie the baker of Black Horse Lane,At sound of a fiddleCaught her up by the middle—And away like swallows from the lane,Flying out together—From the crooked lane.

Dame Jane the music mistress,

the music mistress;

Sharkie the baker of Black Horse Lane,

At sound of a fiddle

Caught her up by the middle—

And away like swallows from the lane,

Flying out together—

From the crooked lane.

What words said Sharkie to her,said Sharkie to her?How did she look in the lane?No neighbour heardOne sigh or one word,Not a sound but the fiddling in Black Horse Lane,The happy noise of music—Again and again.

What words said Sharkie to her,

said Sharkie to her?

How did she look in the lane?

No neighbour heard

One sigh or one word,

Not a sound but the fiddling in Black Horse Lane,

The happy noise of music—

Again and again.

Where now be those two old 'uns,be those two old 'uns,Sharkie the baker run off with Jane?Hark ye up to Flint Street,Halloo to Pepper-Mint Street,Follow by the fells to the great North Plain,By the fells and the river—To the cold North Plain.

Where now be those two old 'uns,

be those two old 'uns,

Sharkie the baker run off with Jane?

Hark ye up to Flint Street,

Halloo to Pepper-Mint Street,

Follow by the fells to the great North Plain,

By the fells and the river—

To the cold North Plain.

How came this passion to them,this passion to them,Love in a freshet on Black Horse Lane?It came without warningOne blue windy morningSo they scarcely might know was it joy or pain,With scarce breath to wonder—Was it joy or pain.

How came this passion to them,

this passion to them,

Love in a freshet on Black Horse Lane?

It came without warning

One blue windy morning

So they scarcely might know was it joy or pain,

With scarce breath to wonder—

Was it joy or pain.

Took they no fardels with them,no fardels with them,Out and alone on the ice-bound plain?Sharkie he had rocketsAnd crackers in his pockets,Ay, and she had a plaid shawl to keep off the rain,An old Highland plaid shawl—To keep off the rain.

Took they no fardels with them,

no fardels with them,

Out and alone on the ice-bound plain?

Sharkie he had rockets

And crackers in his pockets,

Ay, and she had a plaid shawl to keep off the rain,

An old Highland plaid shawl—

To keep off the rain.

The seven years' curse is ended nowThat drove me forth from this kind land,From mulberry-bough and apple boughAnd gummy twigs the west-wind shakes,To drink the brine from crusted lakesAnd grit my teeth on sand.The load that from my shoulder slipsStraightway upon your own is tied,You, too, shall scorch your finger-tips,With scrabbling on the desert's faceSuch thoughts I had for this green place,Sent scapegoat for your pride.Now for your cold, malicious brainAnd most uncharitable, cold heart,You, too, shall clank the seven years' chainOn sterile ground for all time curstWith famine's itch and flames of thirst,The blank sky's counterpart.Here, Robin on a tussock sits,And Cuckoo with his call of hopeCuckoos awhile, then off he flits,While peals of dingle-dongle keepTroop discipline among the sheepThat graze across the slope.A brook from fields of gentle sun,Through the glade his water heaves,The falling cone would well-nigh stunThat squirrel wantonly lets drop,When up he scampers to tree-top,And dives among the green.Yet, no, I ask a wider peaceThan peace your heart could comprehend,More ample than my own release;Go, be you loosed from your right fate,Go with forgiveness and no hate;Here let the story end.

The seven years' curse is ended nowThat drove me forth from this kind land,From mulberry-bough and apple boughAnd gummy twigs the west-wind shakes,To drink the brine from crusted lakesAnd grit my teeth on sand.The load that from my shoulder slipsStraightway upon your own is tied,You, too, shall scorch your finger-tips,With scrabbling on the desert's faceSuch thoughts I had for this green place,Sent scapegoat for your pride.Now for your cold, malicious brainAnd most uncharitable, cold heart,You, too, shall clank the seven years' chainOn sterile ground for all time curstWith famine's itch and flames of thirst,The blank sky's counterpart.Here, Robin on a tussock sits,And Cuckoo with his call of hopeCuckoos awhile, then off he flits,While peals of dingle-dongle keepTroop discipline among the sheepThat graze across the slope.A brook from fields of gentle sun,Through the glade his water heaves,The falling cone would well-nigh stunThat squirrel wantonly lets drop,When up he scampers to tree-top,And dives among the green.Yet, no, I ask a wider peaceThan peace your heart could comprehend,More ample than my own release;Go, be you loosed from your right fate,Go with forgiveness and no hate;Here let the story end.

The seven years' curse is ended nowThat drove me forth from this kind land,From mulberry-bough and apple boughAnd gummy twigs the west-wind shakes,To drink the brine from crusted lakesAnd grit my teeth on sand.

The seven years' curse is ended now

That drove me forth from this kind land,

From mulberry-bough and apple bough

And gummy twigs the west-wind shakes,

To drink the brine from crusted lakes

And grit my teeth on sand.

The load that from my shoulder slipsStraightway upon your own is tied,You, too, shall scorch your finger-tips,With scrabbling on the desert's faceSuch thoughts I had for this green place,Sent scapegoat for your pride.

The load that from my shoulder slips

Straightway upon your own is tied,

You, too, shall scorch your finger-tips,

With scrabbling on the desert's face

Such thoughts I had for this green place,

Sent scapegoat for your pride.

Now for your cold, malicious brainAnd most uncharitable, cold heart,You, too, shall clank the seven years' chainOn sterile ground for all time curstWith famine's itch and flames of thirst,The blank sky's counterpart.

Now for your cold, malicious brain

And most uncharitable, cold heart,

You, too, shall clank the seven years' chain

On sterile ground for all time curst

With famine's itch and flames of thirst,

The blank sky's counterpart.

Here, Robin on a tussock sits,And Cuckoo with his call of hopeCuckoos awhile, then off he flits,While peals of dingle-dongle keepTroop discipline among the sheepThat graze across the slope.

Here, Robin on a tussock sits,

And Cuckoo with his call of hope

Cuckoos awhile, then off he flits,

While peals of dingle-dongle keep

Troop discipline among the sheep

That graze across the slope.

A brook from fields of gentle sun,Through the glade his water heaves,The falling cone would well-nigh stunThat squirrel wantonly lets drop,When up he scampers to tree-top,And dives among the green.

A brook from fields of gentle sun,

Through the glade his water heaves,

The falling cone would well-nigh stun

That squirrel wantonly lets drop,

When up he scampers to tree-top,

And dives among the green.

Yet, no, I ask a wider peaceThan peace your heart could comprehend,More ample than my own release;Go, be you loosed from your right fate,Go with forgiveness and no hate;Here let the story end.

Yet, no, I ask a wider peace

Than peace your heart could comprehend,

More ample than my own release;

Go, be you loosed from your right fate,

Go with forgiveness and no hate;

Here let the story end.

Asleep, amazed, with lolling head,Arms in supplication spread,Body shudders, dumb with fear;There lifts the Moon, but who am I,Cloaked in shadow wavering by,Stooping, muttering at his ear?Bound is Body, foot and hand,Bound to lie at my command,Horror bolted to lie stillWhile I sap what sense I will.Through the darkness here come I,Softly fold about the prey;Body moaning must obey,Must not question who or why,Must accept me, come what may,Dumbly must obey.When owls and cocks dispute the dawn,Through the window I am drawnStreaming out, a foggy breath.... Body wakens with a sighFrom the spell that was half Death,Smiles for freedom, blinks an eyeAt the sun-commanded sky,"O morning scent and treetop song,Slow-rising smoke and nothing wrong!"

Asleep, amazed, with lolling head,Arms in supplication spread,Body shudders, dumb with fear;There lifts the Moon, but who am I,Cloaked in shadow wavering by,Stooping, muttering at his ear?Bound is Body, foot and hand,Bound to lie at my command,Horror bolted to lie stillWhile I sap what sense I will.Through the darkness here come I,Softly fold about the prey;Body moaning must obey,Must not question who or why,Must accept me, come what may,Dumbly must obey.When owls and cocks dispute the dawn,Through the window I am drawnStreaming out, a foggy breath.... Body wakens with a sighFrom the spell that was half Death,Smiles for freedom, blinks an eyeAt the sun-commanded sky,"O morning scent and treetop song,Slow-rising smoke and nothing wrong!"

Asleep, amazed, with lolling head,Arms in supplication spread,Body shudders, dumb with fear;There lifts the Moon, but who am I,Cloaked in shadow wavering by,Stooping, muttering at his ear?Bound is Body, foot and hand,Bound to lie at my command,Horror bolted to lie stillWhile I sap what sense I will.

Asleep, amazed, with lolling head,

Arms in supplication spread,

Body shudders, dumb with fear;

There lifts the Moon, but who am I,

Cloaked in shadow wavering by,

Stooping, muttering at his ear?

Bound is Body, foot and hand,

Bound to lie at my command,

Horror bolted to lie still

While I sap what sense I will.

Through the darkness here come I,Softly fold about the prey;Body moaning must obey,Must not question who or why,Must accept me, come what may,Dumbly must obey.

Through the darkness here come I,

Softly fold about the prey;

Body moaning must obey,

Must not question who or why,

Must accept me, come what may,

Dumbly must obey.

When owls and cocks dispute the dawn,Through the window I am drawnStreaming out, a foggy breath.... Body wakens with a sighFrom the spell that was half Death,Smiles for freedom, blinks an eyeAt the sun-commanded sky,"O morning scent and treetop song,Slow-rising smoke and nothing wrong!"

When owls and cocks dispute the dawn,

Through the window I am drawn

Streaming out, a foggy breath.

... Body wakens with a sigh

From the spell that was half Death,

Smiles for freedom, blinks an eye

At the sun-commanded sky,

"O morning scent and treetop song,

Slow-rising smoke and nothing wrong!"

Walking with a virgin heartThe green hills of May,Me, the Wind, she took as loverBy her side to play.Let me toss her untied hair,Let me shake her gown,Careless though the daisies redden,Though the Sun frown.Scorning in her gay courageLesser love than this,My cool spiritual embracing,My gentle kiss.So she walked, the proud lady,So danced or ran,So she loved with a calm heart,Neglecting man....Fade, fail, innocent starsOn the green of May;She has left our bournes for ever,Too fine to stay.

Walking with a virgin heartThe green hills of May,Me, the Wind, she took as loverBy her side to play.Let me toss her untied hair,Let me shake her gown,Careless though the daisies redden,Though the Sun frown.Scorning in her gay courageLesser love than this,My cool spiritual embracing,My gentle kiss.So she walked, the proud lady,So danced or ran,So she loved with a calm heart,Neglecting man....Fade, fail, innocent starsOn the green of May;She has left our bournes for ever,Too fine to stay.

Walking with a virgin heartThe green hills of May,Me, the Wind, she took as loverBy her side to play.

Walking with a virgin heart

The green hills of May,

Me, the Wind, she took as lover

By her side to play.

Let me toss her untied hair,Let me shake her gown,Careless though the daisies redden,Though the Sun frown.

Let me toss her untied hair,

Let me shake her gown,

Careless though the daisies redden,

Though the Sun frown.

Scorning in her gay courageLesser love than this,My cool spiritual embracing,My gentle kiss.

Scorning in her gay courage

Lesser love than this,

My cool spiritual embracing,

My gentle kiss.

So she walked, the proud lady,So danced or ran,So she loved with a calm heart,Neglecting man....

So she walked, the proud lady,

So danced or ran,

So she loved with a calm heart,

Neglecting man....

Fade, fail, innocent starsOn the green of May;She has left our bournes for ever,Too fine to stay.

Fade, fail, innocent stars

On the green of May;

She has left our bournes for ever,

Too fine to stay.

"Fairplay's good sport, and we're all mortal worms."—Mrs. Delilah Becker.

Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Jael, a queen in HeavenSurely will speak out straight in defence of me.Shall I despair Salvation?Was Sisera then more ripe for the knife or nailThan rat-soul'd Becker? Do I misread the tale?I was no stealthy serpent.(Jael flattered and killed her man as he slept.)I was a lion, I challenged before I leapt.Three times I gave clear warning(Fair-play's good sport), then standing I struck him dead.Ram-faced lecher, the blood on his own beast head!Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Ah, she won fame for her triumph,My inward joy was payment enough for me.

Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Jael, a queen in HeavenSurely will speak out straight in defence of me.Shall I despair Salvation?Was Sisera then more ripe for the knife or nailThan rat-soul'd Becker? Do I misread the tale?I was no stealthy serpent.(Jael flattered and killed her man as he slept.)I was a lion, I challenged before I leapt.Three times I gave clear warning(Fair-play's good sport), then standing I struck him dead.Ram-faced lecher, the blood on his own beast head!Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Ah, she won fame for her triumph,My inward joy was payment enough for me.

Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Jael, a queen in HeavenSurely will speak out straight in defence of me.

Blessed above all women

Shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.

Jael, a queen in Heaven

Surely will speak out straight in defence of me.

Shall I despair Salvation?Was Sisera then more ripe for the knife or nailThan rat-soul'd Becker? Do I misread the tale?

Shall I despair Salvation?

Was Sisera then more ripe for the knife or nail

Than rat-soul'd Becker? Do I misread the tale?

I was no stealthy serpent.(Jael flattered and killed her man as he slept.)I was a lion, I challenged before I leapt.

I was no stealthy serpent.

(Jael flattered and killed her man as he slept.)

I was a lion, I challenged before I leapt.

Three times I gave clear warning(Fair-play's good sport), then standing I struck him dead.Ram-faced lecher, the blood on his own beast head!

Three times I gave clear warning

(Fair-play's good sport), then standing I struck him dead.

Ram-faced lecher, the blood on his own beast head!

Blessed above all womenShall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.Ah, she won fame for her triumph,My inward joy was payment enough for me.

Blessed above all women

Shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be.

Ah, she won fame for her triumph,

My inward joy was payment enough for me.

Old Becker crawling in the nightFrom his grave at the stair-foot,Labours up the long flight,Feeble, dribbling, black as soot,Quakes at his own ghostly fright.A cat goes past with lantern eyesShooting splendour through the dark.Murder! Help! a voice criesIn nightmare; the son dreams that starkIn lead his vanished father lies.A stair-top glimmer points the goal.Becker goes wavering up, tongue-tied,Stoops, with eye to keyhole....There, a tall candle by her side,Delilah sits, serene and whole.Her fingers turn the prayer-book leaves,Her forehead hints no mental strife:Soft and calm her breast heaves:So calmly, with his cobbling knifeShe stabbed him through... now never grieves.Baffled, aghast with hate, mouse-poor,He glares and clatters the brass knob ...Through his heart it slid sure:He bowed, he died with never a sob,Again she stabbed, now sits secure.Praying as she has always prayedFor great Victoria's Majesty,Droning prayer for God's aidTo succour long dead Royalty,The Consort Prince, Queen Adelaide....She falls asleep, the clocks chime two;Old Becker sinks to unquiet rest.Loud and sad the cats mew:Lead weighs cruelly on his breast:His bones are tufted with mildew.

Old Becker crawling in the nightFrom his grave at the stair-foot,Labours up the long flight,Feeble, dribbling, black as soot,Quakes at his own ghostly fright.A cat goes past with lantern eyesShooting splendour through the dark.Murder! Help! a voice criesIn nightmare; the son dreams that starkIn lead his vanished father lies.A stair-top glimmer points the goal.Becker goes wavering up, tongue-tied,Stoops, with eye to keyhole....There, a tall candle by her side,Delilah sits, serene and whole.Her fingers turn the prayer-book leaves,Her forehead hints no mental strife:Soft and calm her breast heaves:So calmly, with his cobbling knifeShe stabbed him through... now never grieves.Baffled, aghast with hate, mouse-poor,He glares and clatters the brass knob ...Through his heart it slid sure:He bowed, he died with never a sob,Again she stabbed, now sits secure.Praying as she has always prayedFor great Victoria's Majesty,Droning prayer for God's aidTo succour long dead Royalty,The Consort Prince, Queen Adelaide....She falls asleep, the clocks chime two;Old Becker sinks to unquiet rest.Loud and sad the cats mew:Lead weighs cruelly on his breast:His bones are tufted with mildew.

Old Becker crawling in the nightFrom his grave at the stair-foot,Labours up the long flight,Feeble, dribbling, black as soot,Quakes at his own ghostly fright.

Old Becker crawling in the night

From his grave at the stair-foot,

Labours up the long flight,

Feeble, dribbling, black as soot,

Quakes at his own ghostly fright.

A cat goes past with lantern eyesShooting splendour through the dark.Murder! Help! a voice criesIn nightmare; the son dreams that starkIn lead his vanished father lies.

A cat goes past with lantern eyes

Shooting splendour through the dark.

Murder! Help! a voice cries

In nightmare; the son dreams that stark

In lead his vanished father lies.

A stair-top glimmer points the goal.Becker goes wavering up, tongue-tied,Stoops, with eye to keyhole....There, a tall candle by her side,Delilah sits, serene and whole.

A stair-top glimmer points the goal.

Becker goes wavering up, tongue-tied,

Stoops, with eye to keyhole....

There, a tall candle by her side,

Delilah sits, serene and whole.

Her fingers turn the prayer-book leaves,Her forehead hints no mental strife:Soft and calm her breast heaves:So calmly, with his cobbling knifeShe stabbed him through... now never grieves.

Her fingers turn the prayer-book leaves,

Her forehead hints no mental strife:

Soft and calm her breast heaves:

So calmly, with his cobbling knife

She stabbed him through... now never grieves.

Baffled, aghast with hate, mouse-poor,He glares and clatters the brass knob ...Through his heart it slid sure:He bowed, he died with never a sob,Again she stabbed, now sits secure.

Baffled, aghast with hate, mouse-poor,

He glares and clatters the brass knob ...

Through his heart it slid sure:

He bowed, he died with never a sob,

Again she stabbed, now sits secure.

Praying as she has always prayedFor great Victoria's Majesty,Droning prayer for God's aidTo succour long dead Royalty,The Consort Prince, Queen Adelaide....

Praying as she has always prayed

For great Victoria's Majesty,

Droning prayer for God's aid

To succour long dead Royalty,

The Consort Prince, Queen Adelaide....

She falls asleep, the clocks chime two;Old Becker sinks to unquiet rest.Loud and sad the cats mew:Lead weighs cruelly on his breast:His bones are tufted with mildew.

She falls asleep, the clocks chime two;

Old Becker sinks to unquiet rest.

Loud and sad the cats mew:

Lead weighs cruelly on his breast:

His bones are tufted with mildew.

What's that, who's that comes breaking on my sleepWith groans? What, father, you? (The very look,The same smudged foolish face like an old sheepEven after twenty years scarcely mistook.)Speak, Father, speak; that night what came to youVanished in wrath or terror? Tell the tale;Your beer left still in mug, your half-made shoeOn last, your turnip ticking on its nail!"Son, it was Death. I have not stirred a footOut of this horrible dwelling all these years,But planted like a kail I have taken rootUnder the stairs, my son, under the stairs."Do not avenge me, Henry. Let all slide.I grudge your death. See, do not touch the snake.A cowardice taints you from your father's sideAnd a coward's lusts, but curb them, for my sake!"Back to your grave, back Father, lest she wake!"

What's that, who's that comes breaking on my sleepWith groans? What, father, you? (The very look,The same smudged foolish face like an old sheepEven after twenty years scarcely mistook.)Speak, Father, speak; that night what came to youVanished in wrath or terror? Tell the tale;Your beer left still in mug, your half-made shoeOn last, your turnip ticking on its nail!"Son, it was Death. I have not stirred a footOut of this horrible dwelling all these years,But planted like a kail I have taken rootUnder the stairs, my son, under the stairs."Do not avenge me, Henry. Let all slide.I grudge your death. See, do not touch the snake.A cowardice taints you from your father's sideAnd a coward's lusts, but curb them, for my sake!"Back to your grave, back Father, lest she wake!"

What's that, who's that comes breaking on my sleepWith groans? What, father, you? (The very look,The same smudged foolish face like an old sheepEven after twenty years scarcely mistook.)

What's that, who's that comes breaking on my sleep

With groans? What, father, you? (The very look,

The same smudged foolish face like an old sheep

Even after twenty years scarcely mistook.)

Speak, Father, speak; that night what came to youVanished in wrath or terror? Tell the tale;Your beer left still in mug, your half-made shoeOn last, your turnip ticking on its nail!

Speak, Father, speak; that night what came to you

Vanished in wrath or terror? Tell the tale;

Your beer left still in mug, your half-made shoe

On last, your turnip ticking on its nail!

"Son, it was Death. I have not stirred a footOut of this horrible dwelling all these years,But planted like a kail I have taken rootUnder the stairs, my son, under the stairs.

"Son, it was Death. I have not stirred a foot

Out of this horrible dwelling all these years,

But planted like a kail I have taken root

Under the stairs, my son, under the stairs.

"Do not avenge me, Henry. Let all slide.I grudge your death. See, do not touch the snake.A cowardice taints you from your father's sideAnd a coward's lusts, but curb them, for my sake!

"Do not avenge me, Henry. Let all slide.

I grudge your death. See, do not touch the snake.

A cowardice taints you from your father's side

And a coward's lusts, but curb them, for my sake!

"Back to your grave, back Father, lest she wake!"

"Back to your grave, back Father, lest she wake!"

Two full hours before the dawn,Dotard Parrot cocks an earTo the sleeper's moan, long-drawn,To her slurring tale of fear.Parrot hears Delilah tellWho lies dead below the stair;How he shuddered, stumbled, fell;In whose cause she laid him there.The knife bit, thus: thus, the blood spread!Connoisseur of fo'c'stle speechesParrot tilts his bald, sly head,Learns the spicy yarn she teaches.Soon, when sunlight warms his cage,He plots to cheer the passers-byWith burlesque of murderous rage,Acting how his victims die:Thus, he stabs 'em; there, they lie.

Two full hours before the dawn,Dotard Parrot cocks an earTo the sleeper's moan, long-drawn,To her slurring tale of fear.Parrot hears Delilah tellWho lies dead below the stair;How he shuddered, stumbled, fell;In whose cause she laid him there.The knife bit, thus: thus, the blood spread!Connoisseur of fo'c'stle speechesParrot tilts his bald, sly head,Learns the spicy yarn she teaches.Soon, when sunlight warms his cage,He plots to cheer the passers-byWith burlesque of murderous rage,Acting how his victims die:Thus, he stabs 'em; there, they lie.

Two full hours before the dawn,Dotard Parrot cocks an earTo the sleeper's moan, long-drawn,To her slurring tale of fear.

Two full hours before the dawn,

Dotard Parrot cocks an ear

To the sleeper's moan, long-drawn,

To her slurring tale of fear.

Parrot hears Delilah tellWho lies dead below the stair;How he shuddered, stumbled, fell;In whose cause she laid him there.

Parrot hears Delilah tell

Who lies dead below the stair;

How he shuddered, stumbled, fell;

In whose cause she laid him there.

The knife bit, thus: thus, the blood spread!Connoisseur of fo'c'stle speechesParrot tilts his bald, sly head,Learns the spicy yarn she teaches.

The knife bit, thus: thus, the blood spread!

Connoisseur of fo'c'stle speeches

Parrot tilts his bald, sly head,

Learns the spicy yarn she teaches.

Soon, when sunlight warms his cage,He plots to cheer the passers-byWith burlesque of murderous rage,Acting how his victims die:Thus, he stabs 'em; there, they lie.

Soon, when sunlight warms his cage,

He plots to cheer the passers-by

With burlesque of murderous rage,

Acting how his victims die:

Thus, he stabs 'em; there, they lie.

POETRY BY THE SAME AUTHOR

1916Over the BrazierPoetry Bookshop.(New edition with slight alterations, 1920.)1917Fairies and FusiliersWilliam Heinemann.American edition, 1918. Alfred Knopf.1920Country SentimentMartin Secker.American edition, 1920. Alfred Knopf.Contributions to Georgian Poetry, 1915-1917 and 1918-19.

1916Over the BrazierPoetry Bookshop.(New edition with slight alterations, 1920.)1917Fairies and FusiliersWilliam Heinemann.American edition, 1918. Alfred Knopf.1920Country SentimentMartin Secker.American edition, 1920. Alfred Knopf.Contributions to Georgian Poetry, 1915-1917 and 1918-19.

MCMXXI

NOTE

The prices indicatedin this catalogue arein every case net

NUMBER FIVE JOHN STREETADELPHI LONDON

General Literature

Verse

Drama

Fiction

The Tales of Henry James

The Art and Craft of Letters

Martin Seeker's Series of Critical Studies

Transcriber's NoteMinor punctuation and printer errors were corrected.

Minor punctuation and printer errors were corrected.


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