"Audemus dicere 'Pater Noster.'"—CANON OF THE MASS.
There is a bolder way,There is a wilder enterprise than thisAll-human iteration day by day.Courage, mankind! Restore Him what is His.
Out of His mouth were givenThese phrases. O replace them whence they came.He, only, knows our inconceivable "Heaven,"Our hidden "Father," and the unspoken "Name";
Our "trespasses," our "bread,"The "will" inexorable yet implored;The miracle-words that are and are not said,Charged with the unknown purpose of their Lord.
"Forgive," "give," "lead us not"—Speak them by Him, O man the unaware,Speak by that dear tongue, though thou know not what,Shuddering through the paradox of prayer.
Here are my thoughts, alive within this fold,My simple sheep. Their shepherd, I grow wiseAs dearly, gravely, deeply I beholdTheir different eyes.
O distant pastures in their blood! O streamsFrom watersheds that fed them for this prison!Lights from aloft, midsummer suns in dreams,Set and arisen.
They wander out, but all return anew,The small ones, to this heart to which they clung;"And those that are with young," the fruitful fewThat are with young.
FROM RECOLLECTIONS OF EARLY CHILDHOOD
A simple child ...That lightly draws its breathAnd feels its life in every limb,What should it know of death?WORDSWORTH.
It knows but will not tell.Awake, alone, it counts its father's years—How few are left—its mother's. Ah, how wellIt knows of death, in tears.
If any of the three—Parents and child—believe they have prevailedTo keep the secret of mortality,I know that two have failed.
The third, the lonely, keepsOne secret—a child's knowledge. When they comeAt night to ask wherefore the sweet one weeps,Those hidden lips are dumb.
"EYELESS, IN GAZA, AT THE MILL, WITH SLAVES"Milton's "Samson."
The wind is blind.The earth sees sun and moon; the heightIs watch-tower to the dawn; the plainShines to the summer; visible lightIs scattered in the drops of rain.
The wind is blind.The flashing billows are aware;With open eyes the cities see;Light leaves the ether, everywhereKnown to the homing bird and bee.
The wind is blind,Is blind alone. How has he hurledHis ignorant lash, his aimless dart,His eyeless rush upon the world,Unseeing, to break his unknown heart!
The wind is blind,And the sail traps him, and the millCaptures him; and he cannot saveHis swiftness and his desperate willFrom those blind uses of the slave.
A DAUGHTER'S PARADOX
To his devoted heart*Who, young, had loved his ageing mate for life,In late lone years Time gave the elder's part,Time gave the bridegroom's boast, Time gave a younger wife.
A wilder prank and plotTime soon will promise, threaten, offering meImpossible things that Nature suffers not—A daughter's riper mind, a child's seniority.
Oh, by my filial tearsMourned all too young, Father! On this my headTime yet will force at last the longer years,Claiming some strange respect for me from you, the dead.
Nay, nay! Too new to knowTime's conjuring is, too great to understand.Memory has not died; it leaves me so—Leaning a fading brow on your unfaded hand.
*Dr. Johnson outlived by thirty years his wife, who was twenty years his senior.
No "fan is in his hand" for theseYoung villagers beneath the trees,Watching the wheels. But I recallThe rhythm of rods that rise and fall,Purging the harvest, over-seas.
No fan, no flail, no threshing-floor!And all their symbols evermoreForgone in England now—the sign,The visible pledge, the threat divine,The chaff dispersed, the wheat in store.
The unbreathing engine marks no tune,Steady at sunrise, steady at noon,Inhuman, perfect, saving time,And saving measure, and saving rhyme—And did our Ruskin speak too soon?
"No noble strength on earth" he sees"Save Hercules' arm"; his grave decreesCurse wheel and steam. As the wheels ranI saw the other strength of man,I knew the brain of Hercules.
O delicate! Even in wooded landsThey show the margin of my world,My own horizon; little bandsOf twigs unveil that edge impearled.
And what is more mine own than this,My limit, level with mine eyes?For me precisely do they kiss—The rounded earth, the rounding skies.
It has my stature, that keen line(Let mathematics vouch for it).The lark's horizon is not mine,No, nor his nestlings' where they sit;
No, nor the child's. And, when I gainThe hills, I lift it as I riseErect; anon, back to the plainI soothe it with mine equal eyes.
Dear fool, be true to me!I know the poets speak thee fair, and IHail thee uncivilly.O but I call with a more urgent cry!
I do not prize thee less,I need thee more, that thou dost love to teach—Father of foolishness—The imbecile dreams clear out of wisdom's reach.
Come and release me; bringMy irresponsible mind; come in thy hours.Draw from my soul the stingOf wit that trembles, consciousness that cowers.
For if night comes without theeShe is more cruel than day. But thou, fulfilThy work, thy gifts about thee—Liberty, liberty, from this weight of will.
My day-mind can endureUpright, in hope, all it must undergo.But O afraid, unsure,My night-mind waking lies too low, too low.
Dear fool, be true to me!The night is thine, man yields it, it beseemsThy ironic dignity.Make me all night the innocent fool that dreams.
(IN THE BACH-GOUNOD "AVE MARIA")
That seeking Prelude found its unforetoldUnguessed intention, trend;Though needing no fulfilment, did enfoldThis exquisite end.
Bach led his notes up through their delicate slopeAspiring, so they sound,And so they were—in some strange ignorant hopeThus to be crowned.
What deep soft seas beneath this buoyant barque!What winds to speed this bird!What impulses to toss this heavenward lark!Thought—then the word.
Lovely the tune, lovely the unconsciousnessOf him who promised it.Lovely the years that joined in blessednessThe two, the fit.
Bach was Precursor. But no Baptist's cryWas his; he, who beganFor one who was to end, did prophesy,By Nature's generous act, the lesser man.
IN ANTITHESIS TO ROSSETTI'S "ON THE REFUSALOF AID BETWEEN NATIONS"
Not that the earth is changing, O my God!Not that her brave democracies take heartTo share, to rule her treasure, to impartThe wine to those who long the wine-press trod;Not therefore trust we that beneath Thy nod,Thy silent benediction, even nowIn gratitude so many nations bow,So many poor: not therefore, O my God!
But because living men for dying manGo to a million deaths, to deal one blow;And justice speaks one great compassionate tongue;And nation unto nation calls "One clanWe succourers are, one tribe!" By this we knowOur earth holds confident, steadfast, being young.
(IN TIME OF WAR)
Man pays that debt with new munificence,Not piecemeal now, not slowly, by the old:Not grudgingly, by the effaced thin pence,But greatly and in gold.
(I) IN IRELAND
A mirror faced a mirror: ire and hateOpposite ire and hate: the multiplied,The complex charge rejected, intricate,From side to sullen side;
One plot, one crime, one treachery, nay, one name,Assumed, denounced, in echoes of replies.The doubt, exchanged, lit thousands of one flameWithin those mutual eyes.
(II) IN "OTHELLO"
A mirror faced a mirror: in sweet painHis dangers with her pity did she track,Received her pity with his love again,And these she wafted back.
That masculine passion in her little breastShe bandied with him; her compassion heBandied with her. What tender sport! No restHad love's infinity.
(III) IN TWO POETS
A mirror faced a mirror: O thy word,Thou lord of images, did lodge in me,Locked to my heart, homing from home, a bird,A carrier, bound for thee.
Thy migratory greatness, greater farFor that return, returns; now grow divineBy endlessness my visiting thoughts, that areThose visiting thoughts of thine.
"Compel them to come in."—ST. LUKE'S GOSPEL
You "made a virtue of necessity"By divine sanction; you, the loth, the grey,The random, gentle, unconvinced; O beThe crowned!—you may, you may.
You, the compelled, be feasted! You, the caught,Be freemen of the gates that word unlocks!Accept your victory from that unsought,That heavenly paradox.
"He shall rise up at the voice of a bird."—ECCLESIASTES
Who then is "he"?Dante, Keats, Shakespeare, Milton, Shelley; allRose in their greatness at the shrill decree,The little rousing inarticulate call.
For they stood upAt the bird-voice, of lark, of nightingale,Drank poems from that throat as from a cup.Over the great world's notes did these prevail.
And not aloneThe signal poets woke. In listening man,Woman, and child a poet stirs unknown,Throughout the Mays of birds since Mays began.
He rose, he heard—Our father, our St. Peter, in his tears—The crowing, twice, of the prophetic bird,The saddest cock-crow of our human years.
IL POETA MI DISSE, "CHE PENSI?"
Virgil stayed Dante with a wayside word;But long, and how, and loud and urgentlyThe poets of my passion have I heardSummoning me.
It is their closest whisper and their call.Their greatness to this lowliness hath spoken,Their voices rest upon that interval,Their sign, their token.
Man at his little prayer tells Heaven his thought,To man entrusts his thought—"Friend, this is mine."The immortal poets within my breast have sought,Saying, "What is thine?"
Dear laws, come to my breast!Take all my frame, and make your close arms meetAround me; and so ruled, so warmed, so pressed,I breathe, aware; I feel my wild heart beat.
Dear laws, be wings to me!The feather merely floats. O be it heardThrough weight of life—the skylark's gravity—That I am not a feather, but a bird.
Histories of Modern Poetry
(I) PROMETHEUS
It was the south: mid-everything,Mid-land, mid-summer, noon;And deep within a limpid springThe mirrored sun of June.
Splendour in freshness! Ah, who stoleThis sun, this fire, from heaven?He holds it shining in his soul,Prometheus the forgiven.
(II) THETIS
In her bright title poets dareWhat the wild eye of fancy sees—Similitude—the clear, the fairLight mystery of images.
Round the blue sea I love the bestThe argent foam played, slender, fleet;I saw—past Wordsworth and the rest—Her natural, Greek, and silver feet.
"SPACE, THE BOUND OF A SOLID": SILENCE, THEN,THE FORM OF A MELODY
Silence, for thine idleness I raiseMy silence-bounded singing in thy praise,But for thy moulding of my Mozart's tune,Thy hold upon the bird that sings the moon,Thy magisterial ways.
Man's lovely definite melody-shapes are thine,Outlined, controlled, compressed, complete, divine.Also thy fine intrusions do I trace,Thy afterthoughts, thy wandering, thy grace,Within the poet's line.
Thy secret is the song that is to be.Music had never stature but for thee,Sculptor! strong as the sculptor Space whose handUrged the Discobolus and bade him stand.* * * * *Man, on his way to Silence, stops to hear and see.
The rooted liberty of flowers in breezeIs theirs, by national luck impulsive, terse,Tethered, uncaptured, rules obeyed "at ease,"Time-strengthened laws of verse.
Or they are like our seasons that admitInflexion, not infraction: Autumn hoar,Winter more tender than our thoughts of it,But a year's steadfast four;
Redundant syllables of Summer rain,And displaced accents of authentic Spring;Spondaic clouds above a gusty plainWith dactyls on the wing.
Not Common Law, but Equity, is theirs—Our metres; play and agile foot askance,And distant, beckoning, blithely rhyming pairs,Unknown to classic France;
Unknown to Italy. Ay, count, collate,Latins! with eye foreseeing on the time,And numbered fingers, and approaching fateOn the appropriate rhyme.
Nay, nobly our grave measures are decreed:Heroic, Alexandrine with the stay,Deliberate; or else like him whose speedDid outrun Peter, urgent in the break of day.
Wide waters in the waste; or, out of reach,Rough Alpine falls where late a glacier hung;Or rivers groping for the alien beach,Through continents, unsung.
Nay, not these nameless, these remote, alone;But all the streams from all the watersheds—Peneus, Danube, Nile—are the unknown.Young in their ancient beds.
Man has no tale for them. O travellers swiftFrom secrets to oblivion! Waters wildThat pass in act to bend a flower, or liftThe bright limbs of a child!
For they are new, they are fresh; there's no surpriseLike theirs on earth. O strange for evermore!This moment's Tiber with his shining eyesNever saw Rome before.
Man has no word for their eternity—Rhine, Avon, Arno, younglings, youth uncrowned:Ignorant, innocent, instantaneous, free,Unwelcomed, unrenowned.
We too (one cried), we too,We the unready, the perplexed, the cold,Must shape the Eternal in our thoughts anew,Cherish, possess, enfold.
Thou sweetly, we in strife.It is our passion to conceive Him thusIn mind, in sense, within our house of life;That seed is locked in us.
We must affirm our SonFrom the ambiguous Nature's difficult speech,Gather in darkness that resplendent One,Close as our grasp can reach.
Nor shall we ever restFrom this our task. An hour sufficed for thee,Thou innocent! He lingers in the breastOf our humanity.
'Tis royal and authentic JuneOver this poor soil blossoming;Here lies, beneath an upright noon,Thin nation for so wild a king.
Far off, the noble Summer rules,Violent in the ardent rose,His sun alight in mirroring pools,Braggart on Alps of vanquished snows;
Away, aloft, true to his hour,Announced, his colour, his fire, his jest.But here, in negligible flower,Summer is not proclaimed:—confessed.
A woman I marked; for her no state,Small joy, no song. She had her boon,Her only youth, true to its date,Faintly perceptible, her June.
THE TRACK OF A HUMAN MOOD
Not wish, nor fear, nor quite expectancyIs that vague spirit Surmise,That wanderer, that wonderer, whom we seeWithin each other's eyes;
And yet not often. For she flits away,Fitful as infant thought,Visitant at a venture, hope at play,Unversed in facts, untaught.
In "the wide fields of possibility"Surmise, conjecturing,Makes little trials, incredulous, that fleeAbroad on random wing.
One day this inarticulate shall find speech,This hoverer seize our breath.Surmise shall close with man—with all, with each—In her own sovereign hour, the moments of our death.
"... REVERENCE FOR OUR FATHERS, WITH THEIRSTORES OF EXPERIENCES"An author whose name I did not note
O our young ancestor,Our boy in Letters, how we trudge oppressedWith our "experiences," and you of yoreFlew light, and blessed!
Youngling, in your new town,Tight, like a box of toys—the town that isOur shattered, open ruin, with its crownOf histories;
You with your morning words,Fresh from the night, your yet un-sonneted moon,Your passion undismayed, cool as a bird'sIgnorant tune;
O youngling! how is this?Your poems are not wearied yet, not dead,Must I bow low? or, With an envious kiss,Put you to bed?
"IF I CANNOT SEE THEE PRESENT I WILL MOURNTHEE ABSENT, FOR THIS ALSO IS A PROOF OF LOVE"Thomas à Kempis
We do not find Him on the difficult earth,In surging human-kind,In wayside death or accidental birth,Or in the "march of mind."
Nature, her nests, her prey, the fed, the caught,Hid Him so well, so well,His steadfast secret there seems to our thoughtLife's saddest miracle.
He's but conjectured in man's happiness,Suspected in man's tears,Or lurks beyond the long, discouraged guess,Grown fainter through the years.
* * * * *
But absent, absent now? Ah, what is this,Near as in child-birth bed,Laid on our sorrowful hearts, close to a kiss?A homeless childish head.
Autumn is weary, halt, and old;Ah, but she owns the song of joy!Her colours fade, her woods are cold.Her singing-bird's a boy, a boy.
In lovely Spring the birds were bentOn nests, on use, on love, forsooth!Grown-up were they. This boy's content,For his is liberty, his is youth.
The musical stripling sings for playTaking no thought, and virgin-glad.For duty sang those mates in May.This singing-bird's a lad, a lad.
"I HAVE FIVE BRETHREN.... FATHER, I BESEECHTHEE ... LEST THEY COME TO THIS PLACE"St. Luke's Gospel
Thou wouldst not part thy spoilGained from the beggar's want, the weakling's toil,Nor spare a jot of sumptuousness or stateFor Lazarus at the gate.
And in the appalling nightOf expiation, as in day's delight,Thou heldst thy niggard hand; it would not shareOne hour of thy despair.
Those five—thy prayer for them!O generous! who, condemned, wouldst not condemn,Whose ultimate human greatness proved thee soA miser of thy woe.
"EVERLASTING FAREWELLS! AND AGAIN, ANDYET AGAIN ... EVERLASTING FAREWELLS!"De Quincey
"Farewells!" O what a word!Denying this agony, denying the affrights,Denying all De Quincey spoke or heardIn the infernal sadness of his nights.
How mend these strange "farewells"?"Vale"? "Addio"? "Leb'wohl"? Not one but seemsA tranquil refutation; tolling bellsThat yet behold the terror of his dreams.
You bid me hold my peace,Or so I think, you birds; you'll not forgiveMy kill-joy song that makes the wild song cease,Silent or fugitive.
Yon thrush stopt in mid-phraseAt my mere footfall; and a longer noteTook wing and fled afield, and went its waysWithin the blackbird's throat.
Hereditary song,Illyrian lark and Paduan nightingale,Is yours, unchangeable the ages long;Assyria heard your tale;
Therefore you do not die.But single, local, lonely, mortal, new,Unlike, and thus like all my race, am I,Preluding my adieu.
My human song must beMy human thought. Be patient till 'tis done.I shall not hold my little peace; for meThere is no peace but one.
To W. M.
Home, home from the horizon far and clear,Hither the soft wings sweep;Flocks of the memories of the day draw nearThe dovecote doors of sleep.
Oh, which are they that come through sweetest lightOf all these homing birds?Which with the straightest and the swiftest flight?Your words to me, your words!
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