‘Ex ore infantium’.
Little Jesus, wast Thou
shy
Once, and just so small
as I?
And what did it feel
like to be
Out of Heaven, and just
like me?
Didst Thou sometimes
think of there,
And ask where all the
angels were?
I should think that
I would cry
For my house all made
of sky;
I would look about the
air,
And wonder where my
angels were;
And at waking ’twould
distress me-
Not an angel there to
dress me!
Hadst Thou ever any
toys,
Like us little girls
and boys?
And didst Thou play
in Heaven with all
The angels that were
not too tall,
With stars for marbles?
Did the things
Play Can you see me?
through their wings?
And did Thy Mother let
Thee spoil
Thy robes, with playing
on our soil?
How nice to have them
always new
In Heaven, because ’twas
quite clean blue!
Didst Thou kneel at
night to pray,
And didst Thou join
Thy hands, this way?
And did they tire sometimes,
being young,
And make the prayer
seem very long?
And dost Thou like it
best, that we
Should join our hands
to pray to Thee?
I used to think, before
I knew,
The prayer not said
unless we do.
And did Thy Mother at
the night
Kiss Thee, and fold
the clothes in right?
And didst Thou feel
quite good in bed,
Kissed, and sweet, and
thy prayers said?
Thou canst not have
forgotten all
That it feels like to
be small:
And Thou know’st
I cannot pray
To Thee in my father’s
way-
When Thou wast so little,
say,
Couldst Thou talk Thy
Father’s way?-
So, a little Child,
come down
And hear a child’s
tongue like Thy own;
Take me by the hand
and walk,
And listen to my baby-talk.
To Thy Father show my
prayer
(He will look, Thou
art so fair),
And say: ’O
Father, I, Thy Son,
Bring the prayer of
a little one.’
And He will smile, that
children’s tongue
Has not changed since
Thou wast young!
A QUESTION.
O bird with heart of
wassail,
That toss
the Bacchic branch,
And slip your shaken
music,
An elfin
avalanche;
Come tell me, O tell
me,
My poet
of the blue!
What’s your
thought of me, Sweet?-
Here’s
my thought of you.
A small thing, a wee
thing,
A brown
fleck of nought;
With winging and singing
That who
could have thought?
A small thing, a wee
thing,
A brown
amaze withal,
That fly a pitch more
azure
Because
you’re so small.
Bird, I’m a small
thing-
My angel
descries;
With winging and singing
That who
could surmise?
Ah, small things, ah,
wee things,
Are the
poets all,
Whose tour’s the
more azure
Because
they’re so small.
The angels hang watching
The tiny
men-things:-
’The dear speck
of flesh, see,
With such
daring wings!
’Come, tell us,
O tell us,
Thou strange
mortality!
What’s thy
thought of us, Dear?-
Here’s
our thought of thee.’
’Alack! you tall
angels,
I can’t
think so high!
I can’t think
what it feels like
Not to be
I.’
Come tell me, O tell
me,
My poet
of the blue!
What’s your
thought of me, Sweet?-
Here’s
my thought of you.
FIELD-FLOWER.
A Phantasy.
God took a fit of Paradise-wind,
A slip of
coerule weather,
A thought as simple
as Himself,
And ravelled
them together.
Unto His eyes He held
it there,
To teach it gazing debonair
With memory
of what, perdie,
A God’s young
innocences were.
His fingers pushed it
through the sod-
It came up redolent
of God,
Garrulous of the eyes
of God
To all the
breezes near it;
Musical of the mouth
of God
To all had
eyes to hear it;
Mystical with the mirth
of God,
That glow-like
did ensphere it.
And-’Babble!
babble! babble!’ said;
‘I’ll
tell the whole world one day!’
There
was no blossom half so glad,
Since
sun of Christ’s first Sunday.
A poet took a flaw of pain,
A hap of skiey pleasure,
A thought had in his cradle lain,
And mingled them in measure.
That chrism he laid upon his eyes,
And lips, and heart, for euphrasies,
That he might see, feel, sing, perdie,
The simple things that are the wise.
Beside the flower he held his ways,
And leaned him to it gaze for gaze-
He took its meaning, gaze for gaze,
As baby looks on baby;
Its meaning passed into his gaze,
Native as meaning may be;
He rose with all his shining gaze
As children’s eyes at play be.
And-’Babble! babble! babble!’
said;
‘I’ll tell the whole world one
day!’
There was no poet half so glad,
Since man grew God that Sunday.
THE CLOUD’S SWAN-SONG.
There is a parable in the pathless
cloud,
There’s prophecy in heaven,-they
did not lie,
The Chaldee shepherds; seal-ed from the proud,
To cheer the weighted heart that mates the seeing
eye.
A lonely man, oppressed
with lonely ills,
And all the glory fallen
from my song,
Here do I walk among
the windy hills,
The wind and I keep
both one monotoning tongue.
Like grey clouds one
by one my songs upsoar
Over my soul’s
cold peaks; and one by one
They loose their little
rain, and are no more;
And whether well or
ill, to tell me there is none.
For ’tis an alien
tongue, of alien things,
From all men’s
care, how miserably apart!
Even my friends say:
‘Of what is this he sings?’
And barren is my song,
and barren is my heart.
For who can work, unwitting
his work’s worth?
Better, meseems, to
know the work for naught,
Turn my sick course
back to the kindly earth,
And leave to ampler
plumes the jetting tops of thought.
And visitations, that
do often use,
Remote, unhappy, inauspicious
sense
Of doom, and poets widowed
of their muse,
And what dark ’gan,
dark ended, in me did commence.
I thought of spirit
wronged by mortal ills,
And my flesh rotting
on my fate’s dull stake;
And how self-scorn-ed
they the bounty fills
Of others, and the bread,
even of their dearest, take.
I thought of Keats,
that died in perfect time,
In predecease of his
just-sickening song;
Of him that set, wrapt
in his radiant rhyme,
Sunlike in sea.
Life longer had been life too long.
But I, exanimate of
quick Poesy,-
O then, no more but
even a soulless corse!
Nay, my Delight dies
not; ’tis I should be
Her dead, a stringless
harp on which she had no force.
Of my wild lot I thought;
from place to place,
Apollo’s song-bowed
Scythian, I go on;
Making in all my home,
with pliant ways,
But, provident of change,
putting forth root in none.
Now, with starved brain,
sick body, patience galled
With fardels even
to wincing; from fair sky
Fell sudden little rain,
scarce to be called
A shower, which of the
instant was gone wholly by.
What cloud thus died
I saw not; heaven was fair.
Methinks my angel plucked
my locks: I bowed
My spirit, shamed; and
looking in the air:-
‘Even so,’
I said, ‘even so, my brother the good Cloud?’
It was a pilgrim of
the fields of air,
Its home was allwheres
the wind left it rest,
And in a little forth
again did fare,
And in all places was
a stranger and a guest.
It harked all breaths
of heaven, and did obey
With sweet peace their
uncomprehended wills;
It knew the eyes of
stars which made no stay,
And with the thunder
walked upon the lonely hills.
And from the subject
earth it seemed to scorn,
It drew the sustenance
whereby it grew
Perfect in bosom for
the married Morn,
And of his life and
light full as a maid kissed new.
Its also darkness of
the face withdrawn,
And the long waiting
for the little light,
So long in life so little.
Like a fawn
It fled with tempest
breathing hard at heel of flight;
And having known full
East, did not disdain
To sit in shadow and
oblivious cold,
Save what all loss doth
of its loss retain,
And who hath held hath
somewhat that he still must hold.
Right poet! who thy
rightness to approve,
Having all liberty,
didst keep all measure,
And with a firmament
for ranging, move
But at the heavens’
uncomprehended pleasure.
With amplitude unchecked,
how sweetly thou
Didst wear the ancient
custom of the skies,
And yoke of used prescription;
and thence how
Find gay variety no
license could devise!
As we the quested beauties
better wit
Of the one grove our
own than forests great,
Restraint, by the delighted
search of it,
Turns to right scope.
For lovely moving intricate
Is put to fair devising
in the curb
Of ordered limit; and
all-changeful Hermes
Is Terminus as well.
Yet we perturb
Our souls for latitude,
whose strength in bound and term is.
How far am I from heavenly
liberty,
That play at policy
with change and fate,
Who should my soul from
foreign broils keep free,
In the fast-guarded
frontiers of its single state!
Could I face firm the
Is, and with To-be
Trust Heaven; to Heaven
commit the deed, and do;
In power contained,
calm in infirmity,
And fit myself to change
with virtue ever new;
Thou hadst not shamed
me, cousin of the sky,
Thou wandering kinsman,
that didst sweetly live
Unnoted, and unnoted
sweetly die,
Weeping more gracious
song than any I can weave;
Which these gross-tissued
words do sorely wrong.
Thou hast taught me
on powerlessness a power;
To make song wait on
life, not life on song;
To hold sweet not too
sweet, and bread for bread though sour;
By law to wander, to
be strictly free.
With tears ascended
from the heart’s sad sea,
Ah, such a silver song
to Death could I
Sing, Pain would list,
forgetting Pain to be,
And Death would tarry
marvelling, and forget to die!
TO THE SINKING SUN.
How graciously thou
wear’st the yoke
Of use that
does not fail!
The grasses, like an
anchored smoke,
Ride in
the bending gale;
This knoll is snowed
with blosmy manna,
And fire-dropt
as a seraph’s mail.
Here every eve thou
stretchest out
Untarnishable
wing,
And marvellously bring’st
about
Newly an
olden thing;
Nor ever through like-ordered
heaven
Moves largely
thy grave progressing.
Here every eve thou
goest down
Behind the
self-same hill,
Nor ever twice alike
go’st down
Behind the
self-same hill;
Nor like-ways is one
flame-sopped flower
Possessed
with glory past its will.
Not twice alike!
I am not blind,
My sight
is live to see;
And yet I do complain
of thy
Weary variety.
O Sun! I ask thee
less or more,
Change not
at all, or utterly!
O give me unprevisioned
new,
Or give
to change reprieve!
For new in me is olden
too,
That I for
sameness grieve.
O flowers! O grasses!
be but once
The grass
and flower of yester-eve!
Wonder and sadness are
the lot
Of change:
thou yield’st mine eyes
Grief of vicissitude,
but not
Its penetrant
surprise.
Immutability mutable
Burthens
my spirit and the skies.
O altered joy, all joyed
of yore,
Plodding
in unconned ways!
O grief grieved out,
and yet once more
A dull,
new, staled amaze!
I dream, and all was
dreamed before,
Or dream
I so? the dreamer says.
GRIEF’S HARMONICS.
At evening, when the
lank and rigid trees,
To the mere forms of
their sweet day-selves drying,
On heaven’s blank
leaf seem pressed and flatten-ed;
Or rather, to my sombre
thoughts replying,
Of plumes funereal the
thin effigies;
That hour when all old
dead things seem most dead,
And their death instant
most and most undying,
That the flesh aches
at them; there stirred in me
The babe of an unborn
calamity,
Ere its due time to
be deliver-ed.
Dead sorrow and sorrow
unborn so blent their pain,
That which more present
was were hardly said,
But both more now
than any Now can be.
My soul like sackcloth
did her body rend,
And thus with Heaven
contend:-
’Let pass the
chalice of this coming dread,
Or that fore-drained
O bid me not re-drain!’
So have I asked, who
know my asking vain,
Woe against woe in antiphon
set over,
That grief’s soul
transmigrates, and lives again,
And in new pang old
pang’s incarnated.
MEMORAT MEMORIA.
Come you living or dead to me, out
of the silt of the Past, With the sweet of the
piteous first, and the shame of the shameful last?
Come with your dear and dreadful face through
the passes of Sleep, The terrible mask, and the
face it masked-the face you did not keep?
You are neither two nor one-I would
you were one or two, For your awful self is embalmed
in the fragrant self I knew: And Above may
ken, and Beneath may ken, what I mean by these words
of whirl, But by my sleep that sleepeth
not,-O Shadow of a Girl!- Nought
here but I and my dreams shall know the secret of this
thing:- For ever the songs I sing are sad
with the songs I never sing, Sad are sung songs,
but how more sad the songs we dare not sing!
Ah, the ill that we do in tenderness,
and the hateful horror of love! It
has sent more souls to the unslaked Pit than it ever
will draw above. I damned you, girl,
with my pity, who had better by far been thwart, And
drave you hard on the track to hell, because I
was gentle of heart. I shall have
no comfort now in scent, no ease in dew, for this;
I shall be afraid of daffodils, and rose-buds
are amiss; You have made a thing of innocence
as shameful as a sin, I shall never feel a girl’s
soft arms without horror of the skin. My
child! what was it that I sowed, that I so ill should
reap? You have done this to me. And
I, what I to you?-It lies with Sleep.
JULY FUGITIVE.
Can you tell me where
has hid her
Pretty
Maid July?
I would swear one day
ago
She
passed by,
I would swear that I
do know
The
blue bliss of her eye:
‘Tarry, maid,
maid,’ I bid her;
But
she hastened by.
Do you know where she
has hid her,
Maid
July?
Yet in truth it needs
must be
The
flight of her is old;
Yet in truth it needs
must be,
For
her nest, the earth, is cold.
No more in the pool-ed
Even
Wade
her rosy feet,
Dawn-flakes no more
plash from them
To
poppies ’mid the wheat.
She has muddied the
day’s oozes
With
her petulant feet;
Scared the clouds that
floated,
As
sea-birds they were,
Slow on the coerule
Lulls
of the air,
Lulled on the luminous
Levels
of air:
She has chidden in a
pet
All
her stars from her;
Now they wander loose
and sigh
Through
the turbid blue,
Now they wander, weep,
and cry-
Yea,
and I too-
’Where are you,
sweet July,
Where
are you?’
Who hath beheld her
footprints,
Or
the pathway she goes?
Tell me, wind, tell
me, wheat,
Which
of you knows?
Sleeps she swathed in
the flushed Arctic
Night
of the rose?
Or lie her limbs like
Alp-glow
On
the lily’s snows?
Gales, that are all-visitant,
Find
the runaway;
And for him who findeth
her
(I
do charge you say)
I will throw largesse
of broom
Of
this summer’s mintage,
I will broach a honey-bag
Of
the bee’s best vintage.
Breezes, wheat, flowers
sweet,
None
of them knows!
How then shall we lure
her back
From
the way she goes?
For it were a shameful
thing,
Saw
we not this comer
Ere Autumn camp upon
the fields
Red
with rout of Summer.
When the bird quits
the cage,
We
set the cage outside,
With seed and with water,
And
the door wide,
Haply we may win it
so
Back
to abide.
Hang her cage of earth
out
O’er
Heaven’s sunward wall,
Its four gates open,
winds in watch
By
rein-ed cars at all;
Relume in hanging hedgerows
The
rain-quenched blossom,
And roses sob their
tears out
On
the gale’s warm heaving bosom;
Shake the lilies till
their scent
Over-drip
their rims;
That our runaway may
see
We
do know her whims:
Sleek the tumbled waters
out
For
her travelled limbs;
Strew and smoothe blue
night thereon,
There
will-O not doubt her!-
The lovely sleepy lady
lie,
With
all her stars about her!
TO A SNOW-FLAKE.
What heart could have
thought you?-
Past our devisal
(O filigree petal!)
Fashioned so purely,
Fragilely, surely,
From what Paradisal
Imagineless metal,
Too costly for cost?
Who hammered you, wrought
you,
From argentine vapour?-
’God was my shaper.
Passing surmisal,
He hammered, He wrought
me,
From curled silver vapour,
To lust of His mind:-
Thou could’st
not have thought me!
So purely, so palely,
Tinily, surely,
Mightily, frailly,
Insculped and embossed,
With His hammer of wind,
And His graver of frost.’
NOCTURN.
I walk, I only,
Not I only wake;
Nothing is, this sweet
night,
But doth couch and wake
For its love’s
sake;
Everything, this sweet
night,
Couches with its mate.
For whom but for the
stealthy-visitant sun
Is the naked moon
Tremulous and elate?
The heaven hath the
earth
Its own and all apart;
The hush-ed pool holdeth
A star to its heart.
You may think the rose
sleepeth,
But though she folded
is,
The wind doubts her
sleeping;
Not all the rose sleeps,
But smiles in her sweet
heart
For crafty bliss.
The wind lieth with
the rose,
And when he stirs, she
stirs in her repose:
The wind hath the rose,
And the rose her kiss.
Ah, mouth of me!
Is it then that this
Seemeth much to thee?-
I wander only.
The rose hath her kiss.
A MAY BURDEN.
Through meadow-ways
as I did tread,
The corn grew in great
lustihead,
And hey! the beeches
burgeon-ed.
By
Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
It is the month, the
jolly month,
It is the jolly month
of May.
God ripe the wines and
corn, I say
And wenches for the
marriage-day,
And boys to teach love’s
comely play.
By
Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
It is the month, the
jolly month,
It is the jolly month
of May.
As I went down by lane
and lea,
The daisies reddened
so, pardie!
‘Blushets!’
I said, ’I well do see,
By
Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
The thing ye think of
in this month,
Heigho! this jolly month
of May.’
As down I went by rye
and oats,
The blossoms smelt of
kisses; throats
Of birds turned kisses
into notes;
By
Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
The kiss it is a growing
flower,
I trow, this jolly month
of May!
God send a mouth to
every kiss,
Seeing the blossom of
this bliss
By gathering doth grow,
certes!
By
Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
Thy brow-garland pushed
all aslant
Tells-but
I tell not, wanton May!
Note. The
first two stanzas are from a French original-I
have
forgotten what.
A DEAD ASTRONOMER.
(Father Perry, S.J.)
Starry amorist, starward
gone,
Thou art-what
thou didst gaze upon!
Passed through thy golden
garden’s bars,
Thou seest the Gardener
of the Stars.
She, about whose moon-ed
brows
Seven stars make seven
glows,
Seven lights for seven
woes;
She, like thine own
Galaxy,
All lustres in one purity:-
What said’st thou,
Astronomer,
When thou did’st
discover her?
When thy hand its tube
let fall,
Thou found’st
the fairest Star of all!
‘Chose vue’.
A metrical caprice.
Up she rose, fair daughter-well
she was graced
As a cloud her going,
stept from her chair,
As a summer-soft cloud,
in her going paced,
Down dropped her riband-band,
and all her waving hair
Shook like loosened
music cadent to her waist;-
Lapsing like music,
wavery as water,
Slid
to her waist.
‘Whereto art thou come?’
‘Friend, whereto
art thou come?’ Thus Verity;
Of each that to the
world’s sad Olivet
Comes with no multitude,
but alone by night,
Lit with the one torch
of his lifted soul,
Seeking her that he
may lay hands on her;
Thus: and waits
answer from the mouth of deed.
Truth is a maid, whom
men woo diversely;
This, as a spouse; that,
as a light-o’-love,
To know, and having
known, to make his brag.
But woe to him that
takes the immortal kiss,
And not estates her
in his housing life,
Mother of all his seed!
So he betrays,
Not Truth, the unbetrayable,
but himself:
And with his kiss’s
rated traitor-craft,
The Haceldama of a plot
of days
He buys, to consummate
his Judasry
Therein with Judas’
guerdon of despair.
HEAVEN AND HELL.
’Tis said there
were no thought of hell,
Save
hell were taught; that there should be
A Heaven for all’s
self-credible.
Not
so the thing appears to me.
’Tis Heaven that
lies beyond our sights,
And
hell too possible that proves;
For all can feel the
God that smites,
But
ah, how few the God that loves!
TO A CHILD.
Whenas my life shall
time with funeral tread
The heavy death-drum
of the beaten hours,
Following, sole mourner,
mine own manhood dead,
Poor forgot corse, where
not a maid strows flowers;
When I you love am no
more I you love,
But go with unsubservient
feet, behold
Your dear face through
changed eyes, all grim change prove;-
A new man, mock-ed with
misname of old;
When shamed Love keep
his ruined lodging, elf!
When, ceremented in
mouldering memory,
Myself is hears-ed underneath
myself,
And I am but the monument
of me:-
O
to that tomb be tender then, which bears
Only
the name of him it sepulchres!
HERMES.
Soothsay. Behold,
with rod twy-serpented,
Hermes the prophet,
twining in one power
The woman with the man.
Upon his head
The cloudy cap, wherewith
he hath in dower
The cloud’s own
virtue-change and counterchange,
To show in light, and
to withdraw in pall,
As mortal eyes best
bear. His lineage strange
From Zeus, Truth’s
sire, and maiden May-the all-
Illusive Nature.
His fledged feet declare
That ’tis the
nether self transdeified,
And the thrice-furnaced
passions, which do bear
The poet Olympusward.
In him allied
Both
parents clasp; and from the womb of Nature
Stern
Truth takes flesh in shows of lovely feature.
HOUSE OF BONDAGE.
I
When I perceive Love’s
heavenly reaping still
Regard perforce the
clouds’ vicissitude,
That the fixed spirit
loves not when it will,
But craves its seasons
of the flawful blood;
When I perceive that
the high poet doth
Oft voiceless stray
beneath the uninfluent stars,
That even Urania of
her kiss is loath,
And Song’s brave
wings fret on their sensual bars;
When I perceived the
fullest-sail-ed sprite
Lag at most need upon
the leth-ed seas,
The provident captainship
oft voided quite,
And lam-ed lie deep-draughted
argosies;
I
scorn myself, that put for such strange toys
The
wit of man to purposes of boys.
II
The spirit’s ark
sealed with a little clay,
Was old ere Memphis
grew a memory;
The hand pontifical
to break away
That seal what shall
surrender? Not the sea
Which did englut great
Egypt and his war,
Nor all the desert-drown-ed
sepulchres.
Love’s feet are
stained with clay and travel-sore,
And dusty are Song’s
lucent wing and hairs.
O Love, that must do
courtesy to decay,
Eat hasty bread standing
with loins up-girt,
How shall this stead
thy feet for their sore way?
Ah, Song, what brief
embraces balm thy hurt!
Had
Jacob’s toil full guerdon, casting his
Twice-seven
heaped years to burn in Rachel’s kiss?
The Ark of the Egyptian
temple was sealed with clay, which the
Pontiff-king broke when
he entered the inner shrine to offer
worship.
THE HEART.
Two Sonnets.
(To my Critic, who had
objected to the phrase-’The heart’s
burning
floors.’)
I
The heart you hold too
small and local thing,
Such spacious terms
of edifice to bear.
And yet, since Poesy
first shook out her wing,
The mighty Love has
been impalaced there;
That has she given him
as his wide demesne,
And for his sceptre
ample empery;
Against its door to
knock has Beauty been
Content; it has its
purple canopy
A dais for the sovereign
lady spread
Of many a lover, who
the heaven would think
Too low an awning for
her sacred head.
The world, from star
to sea, cast down its brink-
Yet
shall that chasm, till He Who these did build
An
awful Curtius make Him, yawn unfilled.
II
O nothing, in this corporal
earth of man,
That to the imminent
heaven of his high soul
Responds with colour
and with shadow, can
Lack correlated greatness.
If the scroll
Where thoughts lie fast
in spell of hieroglyph
Be mighty through its
mighty habitants;
If God be in His Name;
grave potence if
The sounds unbind of
hieratic chants;
All’s vast that
vastness means. Nay, I affirm
Nature is whole in her
least things exprest,
Nor know we with what
scope God builds the worm.
Our towns are copied
fragments from our breast;
And
all man’s Babylons strive but to impart
The
grandeurs of his Babylonian heart.
A SUNSET.
From Hugo’s ‘Feuilles
d’Automne’.
I love the evenings,
passionless and fair, I love the evens,
Whether old manor-fronts
their ray with golden fulgence leavens,
In
numerous leafage bosomed close;
Whether the mist in
reefs of fire extend its reaches sheer,
Or a hundred sunbeams
splinter in an azure atmosphere
On
cloudy archipelagos.
Oh gaze ye on the firmament!
a hundred clouds in motion,
Up-piled in the immense
sublime beneath the winds’ commotion,
Their
unimagined shapes accord:
Under their waves at
intervals flames a pale levin through,
As if some giant of
the air amid the vapours drew
A
sudden elemental sword.
The sun at bay with
splendid thrusts still keeps the sullen fold;
And momently at distance
sets, as a cupola of gold,
The
thatched roof of a cot a-glance;
Or on the blurred horizons
joins his battle with the haze;
Or pools the glooming
fields about with inter-isolate blaze
Great
moveless mères of radiance.
Then mark you how there
hangs athwart the firmament’s swept track
Yonder a mighty crocodile
with vast irradiant back,
A
triple row of pointed teeth?
Under its burnished
belly slips a ray of eventide,
The flickerings of a
hundred glowing clouds its tenebrous side
With
scales of golden mail ensheathe.
Then mounts a palace,
then the air vibrates-the vision flees.
Confounded to its base,
the fearful cloudy edifice
Ruins
immense in mounded wrack:
Afar the fragments strew
the sky, and each envermeiled cone
Hangeth, peak downward,
overhead, like mountains overthrown
When
the earthquake heaves its hugy back.
These vapours with their
leaden, golden, iron, bronz-ed glows,
Where the hurricane,
the waterspout, thunder, and hell repose,
Muttering
hoarse dreams of destined harms,
’Tis God who hangs
their multitude amid the skiey deep,
As a warrior that suspendeth
from the roof-tree of his keep
His
dreadful and resounding arms!
All vanishes!
The sun, from topmost heaven precipitated,
Like to a globe of iron
which is tossed back fiery red
Into
the furnace stirred to fume,
Shocking the cloudy
surges, plashed from its impetuous ire,
Even to the zenith spattereth
in a flecking scud of fire
The
vaporous and inflam-ed spume.
O contemplate the heavens!
whenas the vein-drawn day dies pale,
In every season, every
place, gaze through their every veil,
With
love that has not speech for need;
Beneath their solemn
beauty is a mystery infinite:
If winter hue them like
a pall; or if the summer night
Fantasy
them with starry brede.
HEARD ON THE MOUNTAIN.
From Hugo’s ‘Feuilles
d’Automne’.
Have you sometimes,
calm, silent, let your tread aspirant rise
Up to the mountain’s
summit, in the presence of the skies?
Was’t on the borders
of the South? or on the Bretagne coast?
And at the basis of
the mount had you the Ocean tossed?
And there, leaned o’er
the wave and o’er the immeasurableness,
Calm, silent, have you
harkened what it says? Lo, what it says!
One day at least, whereon
my thought, enlicens-ed to muse,
Had drooped its wing
above the beach-ed margent of the ooze,
And, plunging from the
mountain height into the immensity,
Beheld upon one side
the land, on the other side the sea.
I harkened, comprehended,-never,
as from those abysses,
No, never issued from
a mouth, nor moved an ear, such voice as this
is!
A sound it was, at outset,
vast, immeasurable, confused,
Vaguer than is the wind
among the tufted trees effused,
Full of magnificent
accords, suave murmurs, sweet as is
The evensong, and mighty
as the shock of panoplies
When the hoarse melee
in its arms the closing squadrons grips,
And pants, in furious
breathings, from the clarions’ brazen lips.
Unutterable the harmony,
unsearchable its deep,
Whose fluid undulations
round the world a girdle keep,
And through the vasty
heavens, which by its surges are washed young,
Its infinite volutions
roll, enlarging as they throng,
Even to the profound
arcane, whose ultimate chasms sombre
Its shattered flood
englut with time, with space and form and
number.
Like to another atmosphere
with thin o’erflowing robe,
The hymn eternal covers
all the inundated globe:
And the world, swathed
about with this investuring symphony,
Even as it trepidates
in the air, so trepidates in the harmony.
And pensive, I attended
the ethereal lutany,
Lost within this containing
voice as if within the sea.
Soon I distinguished,
yet as tone which veils confuse and smother,
Amid this voice two
voices, one commingled with the other,
Which did from off the
land and seas even to the heavens aspire;
Chanting the universal
chant in simultaneous quire.
And I distinguished
them amid that deep and rumorous sound,
As who beholds two currents
thwart amid the fluctuous profound.
The one was of the waters;
a be-radiant hymnal speech!
That was the voice o’
the surges, as they parleyed each with each.
The other, which arose
from our abode terranean,
Was sorrowful; and that,
alack! the murmur was of man;
And in this mighty quire,
whose chantings day and night resound,
Every wave had its utterance,
and every man his sound.
Now, the magnificent
Ocean, as I said, unbannering
A voice of joy, a voice
of peace, did never stint to sing,
Most like in Sion’s
temples to a psaltery psaltering,
And to creation’s
beauty reared the great lauds of his song.
Upon the gale, upon
the squall, his clamour borne along
Unpausingly arose to
God in more triumphal swell;
And every one among
his waves, that God alone can quell,
When the other of its
song made end, into the singing pressed.
Like that majestic lion
whereof Daniel was the guest,
At intervals the Ocean
his tremendous murmur awed;
And I, t’ward
where the sunset fires fell shaggily and broad,
Under his golden mane,
methought, that I saw pass the hand of God.
Meanwhile, and side by side with that
august fan-faronnade, The other voice, like the
sudden scream of a destrier affrayed, Like
an infernal door that grates ajar its rusty throat,
Like to a bow of iron that gnarls upon an iron
rote, Grinded; and tears, and shriekings, the
anathema, the lewd taunt, Refusal of viaticum,
refusal of the font, And clamour, and malediction,
and dread blasphemy, among That hurtling crowd
of rumour from the diverse human tongue, Went
by as who beholdeth, when the valleys thick t’ward
night, The long drifts of the birds of dusk pass,
blackening flight on flight. What
was this sound whose thousand echoes vibrated unsleeping?
Alas! the sound was earth’s and man’s,
for earth and man were weeping.
Brothers! of these two
voices, strange most unimaginably,
Unceasingly regenerated,
dying unceasingly,
Harken-ed of the Eternal
throughout His Eternity,
The one voice uttereth:
Nature! and the other voice: Humanity!
Then I alit in reverie;
for my ministering sprite
Alack! had never yet
deployed a pinion of an ampler flight,
Nor ever had my shadow
endured so large a day to burn:
And long I rested dreaming,
contemplating turn by turn
Now that abyss obscure
which lurked beneath the water’s roll,
And now that other untemptable
abyss which opened in my soul.
And I made question
of me, to what issues are we here,
Whither should tend
the thwarting threads of all this ravelled gear;
What doth the soul;
to be or live if better worth it is;
And why the Lord, Who,
only, reads within that book of His,
In fatal hymeneals hath
eternally entwined
The vintage-chant of
nature with the dirging cry of humankind?
(The metre of the second of these two
translations is an experiment. The splendid
fourteen-syllable metre of Chapman I have treated after
the manner of Drydenian rhyming heroics; with
the occasional triplet, and even the occasional
Alexandrine, represented by a line of eight accents-a
treatment which can well extend, I believe, the majestic
resources of the metre.)