A FROSTY NIGHT.
Mother
Alice, dear, what ails
you,
Dazed and
white and shaken?
Has the chill night
numbed you?
Is it fright
you have taken?
Alice
Mother, I am very well,
I felt never
better,
Mother, do not hold
me so,
Let me write
my letter.
Mother
Sweet, my dear, what
ails you?
Alice
No, but I am well;
The night was cold and
frosty,
There’s no more
to tell.
Mother
Ay, the night was frosty,
Coldly gaped
the moon,
Yet the birds seemed
twittering
Through
green boughs of June.
Soft and thick the snow
lay,
Stars danced
in the sky.
Not all the lambs of
May-day
Skip so
bold and high.
Your feet were dancing,
Alice,
Seemed to
dance on air,
You looked a ghost or
angel
In the starlight
there.
Your eyes were frosted
starlight,
Your heart fire and
snow.
Who was it said, “I
love you”?
Alice
Mother,
let me go!
A SONG FOR TWO CHILDREN.
“Make a song,
father, a new little song,
All
for Jenny and Nancy.”
Balow lalow or
Hey derry down,
Or
else what might you fancy?
Is there any song
sweet enough
For
Nancy and for Jenny?
Said Simple
Simon to the pieman,
“Indeed
I know not any.”
“I’ve counted
the miles to Babylon,
I’ve
flown the earth like a bird,
I’ve ridden
cock-horse to Banbury Cross,
But
no such song have I heard.”
“Some speak of
Alexander,
And
some of Hercules,
But where are
there any like Nancy and Jenny,
Where
are there any like these?”
DICKY.
Mother
Oh, what a heavy sigh!
Dicky, are
you ailing?
Dicky
Even by this fireside,
mother,
My heart
is failing.
To-night across the
down,
Whistling
and jolly,
I sauntered out from
town
With my
stick of holly.
Bounteous and cool from
sea
The wind
was blowing,
Cloud shadows under
the moon
Coming and
going.
I sang old roaring songs,
Ran and
leaped quick,
And turned home by St.
Swithin’s
Twirling
my stick.
And there as I was passing
The churchyard
gate
An old man stopped me,
“Dicky,
You’re
walking late.”
I did not know the man,
I grew afeared
At his lean lolling
jaw,
His spreading
beard.
His garments old and
musty,
Of antique
cut,
His body very lean and
bony,
His eyes
tight shut.
Oh, even to tell it
now
My courage
ebbs...
His face was clay, mother,
His beard,
cobwebs.
In that long horrid
pause
“Good-night,”
he said,
Entered and clicked
the gate,
“Each
to his bed.”
Mother
Do not sigh or fear,
Dicky,
How is it
right
To grudge the dead their
ghostly dark
And wan
moonlight?
We have the glorious
sun,
Lamp and
fireside.
Grudge not the dead
their moonshine
When abroad
they ride.
THE THREE DRINKERS.
Blacksmith Green had
three strong sons,
With bread
and beef did fill ’em,
Now John and Ned are
perished and dead,
But plenty
remains of William.
John Green was a whiskey
drinker,
The Land
of Cakes supplied him,
Till at last his soul
flew out by the hole
That the
fierce drink burned inside him.
Ned Green was a water
drinker,
And, Lord,
how Ned would fuddle!
He rotted away his mortal
clay
Like an
old boot thrown in a puddle.
Will Green was a wise
young drinker,
Shrank from
whiskey or water,
But he made good cheer
with headstrong beer,
And married
an alderman’s daughter.
THE BOY OUT OF CHURCH.
As Jesus and his followers
Upon a Sabbath
morn
Were walking by a wheat
field
They plucked
the ears of corn.
They plucked it, they
rubbed it,
They blew
the husks away,
Which grieved the pious
pharisees
Upon the
Sabbath day.
And Jesus said, “A
riddle
Answer if
you can,
Was man made for the
Sabbath
Or Sabbath
made for man?”
I do not love the Sabbath,
The soapsuds
and the starch,
The troops of solemn
people
Who to Salvation
march.
I take my book, I take
my stick
On the Sabbath
day,
In woody nooks and valleys
I hide myself
away.
To ponder there in quiet
God’s
Universal Plan,
Resolved that church
and Sabbath
Were never
made for man.
AFTER THE PLAY.
Father
Have you spent the money
I gave you to-day?
John
Ay, father
I have.
A fourpence on cakes,
two pennies that away
To a beggar
I gave.
Father
The lake of yellow brimstone
boil for you in Hell,
Such lies
that you spin.
Tell the truth now,
John, ere the falsehood swell,
Say, where
have you been?
John
I’ll lie no more
to you, father, what is the need?
To the Play
I went,
With sixpence for a
near seat, money’s worth indeed,
The best
ever spent.
Grief to you, shame
or grief, here is the story
My splendid
night!
It was colour, scents,
music, a tragic glory,
Fear with
delight.
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark,
title of the tale:
He of that
name,
A tall, glum fellow,
velvet cloaked, with a shirt of mail,
Two eyes
like flame.
All the furies of fate
circled round the man,
Maddening
his heart,
There was old murder
done before play began,
Ay, the
ghost took part.
There were grave-diggers
delving, they brought up bones,
And with
rage and grief
All the players shouted
in full, kingly tones,
Grand, passing
belief.
Oh, there were ladies
there radiant like day,
And changing
scenes:
Great sounding words
were tossed about like hay
By kings
and queens.
How the plot turned
about I watched in vain,
Though for
grief I cried,
As one and all they
faded, poisoned or slain,
In great
agony died.
Father, you’ll
drive me forth never to return,
Doubting
me your son
Father
So I shall, John
John
but that
glory for which I burn
Shall be
soon begun.
I shall wear great boots,
shall strut and shout,
Keep my
locks curled.
The fame of my name
shall go ringing about
Over half
the world.
Father
Horror that your Prince
found, John may you find,
Ever and
again
Dying before the house
in such torture of mind
As you need
not feign.
While they clap and
stamp at your nightly fate,
They shall
never know
The curse that drags
at you, until Hell’s gate.
You have
heard me.
Go!
SONG:
ONE HARD LOOK.
Small gnats that fly
In hot July
And lodge in sleeping
ears,
Can rouse therein
A trumpet’s din
With Day-of-Judgement
fears.
Small mice at night
Can wake more fright
Than lions at midday.
An urchin small
Torments us all
Who tread his prickly
way.
A straw will crack
The camel’s back,
To die we need but sip,
So little sand
As fills the hand
Can stop a steaming
ship.
One smile relieves
A heart that grieves
Though deadly sad it
be,
And one hard look
Can close the book
That lovers love to
see
TRUE JOHNNY.
Johnny, sweetheart,
can you be true
To all those famous
vows you’ve made,
Will you love me as
I love you
Until we both in earth
are laid?
Or shall the old wives
nod and say
His love was only for
a day:
The mood
goes by,
His fancies
fly,
And Mary’s left
to sigh.
Mary, alas, you’ve
hit the truth,
And I with grief can
but admit
Hot-blooded haste controls
my youth,
My idle fancies veer
and flit
From flower to flower,
from tree to tree,
And when the moment
catches me,
Oh, love
goes by
Away I fly
And leave my girl to
sigh.
Could you but now foretell
the day,
Johnny, when this sad
thing must be,
When light and gay you’ll
turn away
And laugh and break
the heart in me?
For like a nut for true
love’s sake
My empty heart shall
crack and break,
When fancies
fly
And love
goes by
And Mary’s left
to die.
When the sun turns against
the clock,
When Avon waters upward
flow,
When eggs are laid by
barn-door cock,
When dusty hens do strut
and crow,
When up is down, when
left is right,
Oh, then I’ll
break the troth I plight,
With careless
eye
Away I’ll
fly
And Mary here shall
die.
THE VOICE OF BEAUTY DROWNED.
Cry from the thicket
my heart’s bird!
The other birds woke
all around,
Rising with toot and
howl they stirred
Their plumage, broke
the trembling sound,
They craned their necks,
they fluttered wings,
“While we are
silent no one sings,
And while we sing you
hush your throat,
Or tune your melody
to our note.”
Cry from the thicket
my heart’s bird!
The screams and hootings
rose again:
They gaped with raucous
beaks, they whirred
Their noisy plumage;
small but plain
The lonely hidden singer
made
A well of grief within
the glade.
“Whist, silly
fool, be off,” they shout,
“Or we’ll
come pluck your feathers out.”
Cry from the thicket
my heart’s bird!
Slight and small the
lovely cry
Came trickling down,
but no one heard.
Parrot and cuckoo, crow,
magpie
Jarred horrid notes
and the jangling jay
Ripped the fine threads
of song away,
For why should peeping
chick aspire
To challenge their loud
woodland choir?
Cried it so sweet that
unseen bird?
Lovelier could no music
be,
Clearer than water,
soft as curd,
Fresh as the blossomed
cherry tree.
How sang the others
all around?
Piercing and harsh,
a maddening sound,
With Pretty Poll, tuwit-
tu
-woo,
Peewit, caw caw, cuckoo-cuckoo.
THE GOD CALLED POETRY.
Now I begin to know
at last,
These nights when I
sit down to rhyme,
The form and measure
of that vast
God we call Poetry,
he who stoops
And leaps me through
his paper hoops
A little higher every
time.
Tempts me to think I’ll
grow a proper
Singing cricket or grass-hopper
Making prodigious jumps
in air
While shaken crowds
about me stare
Aghast, and I sing,
growing bolder
To fly up on my master’s
shoulder
Rustling the thick strands
of his hair.
He is older than the
seas,
Older than the plains
and hills,
And older than the light
that spills
From the sun’s
hot wheel on these.
He wakes the gale that
tears your trees,
He sings to you from
window sills.
At you he roars, or
he will coo,
He shouts and screams
when hell is hot,
Riding on the shell
and shot.
He smites you down,
he succours you,
And where you seek him,
he is not.
To-day I see he has
two heads
Like Janus
calm,
benignant, this;
That, grim and scowling:
his beard spreads
From chin to chin”
this god has power
Immeasurable at every
hour:
He first taught lovers
how to kiss,
He brings down sunshine
after shower,
Thunder and hate are
his also,
He is
yes
and he
is
no
.
The black beard spoke
and said to me,
“Human frailty
though you be,
Yet shout and crack
your whip, be harsh!
They’ll obey you
in the end:
Hill and field, river
and marsh
Shall obey you, hop
and skip
At the terrour of your
whip,
To your gales of anger
bend.”
The pale beard spoke
and said in turn
“True:
a
prize goes to the stern,
But sing and laugh and
easily run
Through the wide airs
of my plain,
Bathe in my waters,
drink my sun,
And draw my creatures
with soft song;
They shall follow you
along
Graciously with no doubt
or pain.”
Then speaking from his
double head
The glorious fearful
monster said
“I am
yes
and I am
no
,
Black as pitch and white
as snow,
Love me, hate me, reconcile
Hate with love, perfect
with vile,
So equal justice shall
be done
And life shared between
moon and sun.
Nature for you shall
curse or smile:
A poet you shall be,
my son.”
ROCKY ACRES.
This is a wild land,
country of my choice,
With harsh
craggy mountain, moor ample and bare.
Seldom in these acres
is heard any voice
But voice
of cold water that runs here and there
Through
rocks and lank heather growing without care.
No mice in the heath
run nor no birds cry
For fear of the dark
speck that floats in the sky.
He soars and he hovers
rocking on his wings,
He scans
his wide parish with a sharp eye,
He catches the trembling
of small hidden things,
He tears
them in pieces, dropping from the sky:
Tenderness
and pity the land will deny,
Where life is but nourished
from water and rock
A hardy adventure, full
of fear and shock.
Time has never journeyed
to this lost land,
Crakeberries
and heather bloom out of date,
The rocks jut, the streams
flow singing on either hand,
Careless
if the season be early or late.
The skies
wander overhead, now blue, now slate:
Winter would be known
by his cold cutting snow
If June did not borrow
his armour also.
Yet this is my country
be loved by me best,
The first
land that rose from Chaos and the Flood,
Nursing no fat valleys
for comfort and rest,
Trampled
by no hard hooves, stained with no blood.
Bold immortal
country whose hill tops have stood
Strongholds for the
proud gods when on earth they go,
Terror for fat burghers
in far plains below.
ADVICE TO LOVERS.
I knew an old man at
a Fair
Who made it his twice-yearly
task
To clamber on a cider
cask
And cry to all the yokels
there:
“Lovers to-day
and for all time
Preserve the meaning
of my rhyme:
Love is not kindly
nor yet grim
But does to you
as you to him.
“Whistle, and
Love will come to you,
Hiss, and he fades
without a word,
Do wrong, and
he great wrong will do,
Speak, he retells
what he has heard.
“Then all you
lovers have good heed
Vex not young
Love in word or deed:
Love never leaves
an unpaid debt,
He will not pardon
nor forget.”
The old man’s
voice was sweet yet loud
And this shows what
a man was he,
He’d scatter apples
to the crowd
And give great draughts
of cider, free.
NEBUCHADNEZZAR’S FALL.
Frowning over the riddle
that Daniel told,
Down through the mist
hung garden, below a feeble sun,
The King of Persia walked:
oh, the chilling cold!
His mind was webbed
with a grey shroud vapour-spun.
Here for the pride of
his soaring eagle heart,
Here for his great hand
searching the skies for food,
Here for his courtship
of Heaven’s high stars he shall smart,
Nebuchadnezzar shall
fall, crawl, be subdued.
Hot sun struck through
the vapour, leaf strewn mould
Breathed sweet decay:
old Earth called for her child.
Mist drew off from his
mind, Sun scattered gold,
Warmth came and earthy
motives fresh and wild.
Down on his knees he
sinks, the stiff-necked King,
Stoops and kneels and
grovels, chin to the mud.
Out from his changed
heart flutter on startled wing
The fancy birds of his
Pride, Honour, Kinglihood.
He crawls, he grunts,
he is beast-like, frogs and snails
His diet, and grass,
and water with hand for cup.
He herds with brutes
that have hooves and horns and tails,
He roars in his anger,
he scratches, he looks not up.
GIVE US RAIN.
“Give us Rain,
Rain,” said the bean and the pea,
“Not
so much Sun,
Not so much
Sun.”
But the Sun smiles bravely
and encouragingly,
And no rain falls and
no waters run.
“Give us Peace,
Peace,” said the peoples oppressed,
“Not
so many Flags,
Not so many
Flags.”
But the Flags fly and
the Drums beat, denying rest,
And the children starve,
they shiver in rags.
ALLIE.
Allie, call the birds
in,
The birds
from the sky.
Allie calls, Allie sings,
Down they
all fly.
First there came
Two white doves
Then a sparrow
from his nest,
Then a clucking bantam
hen,
Then a robin
red-breast.
Allie, call the beasts
in,
The beasts,
every one.
Allie calls, Allie sings,
In they
all run.
First there came
Two black lambs,
Then a grunting
Berkshire sow,
Then a dog without a
tail,
Then a red
and white cow.
Allie, call the fish
up,
The fish
from the stream.
Allie calls, Allie sings,
Up they
all swim.
First there came
Two gold fish,
A minnow
and a miller’s thumb,
Then a pair of loving
trout,
Then the
twisted eels come.
Allie, call the children,
Children
from the green.
Allie calls, Allie sings,
Soon they
run in.
First there came
Tom and Madge,
Kate and
I who’ll not forget
How we played by the
water’s edge
Till the
April sun set.
LOVING HENRY.
Henry, Henry, do you
love me?
Do I love you, Mary?
Oh, can you mean to
liken me
To the aspen tree.
Whose leaves do shake
and vary,
From white to green
And back again,
Shifting and contrary?
Henry, Henry, do you
love me,
Do you love me truly?
Oh, Mary, must I say
again
My love’s a pain,
A torment most unruly?
It tosses me
Like a ship at sea
When the storm rages
fully.
Henry, Henry, why do
you love me?
Mary, dear, have pity!
I swear, of all the
girls there are
Both near and far,
In country or in city,
There’s none like
you,
So kind, so true,
So wise, so brave, so
pretty.
BRITTLE BONES.
Though I am an old man
With my
bones very brittle,
Though I am a poor old
man
Worth very
little,
Yet I suck at my long
pipe
At peace
in the sun,
I do not fret nor much
regret
That my
work is done.
If I were a young man
With my
bones full of marrow,
Oh, if I were a bold
young man
Straight
as an arrow,
And if I had the same
years
To live
once again,
I would not change their
simple range
Of laughter
and pain.
If I were a young man
And young
was my Lily,
A smart girl, a bold
young man,
Both of
us silly.
And though from time
before I knew
She’d
stab me with pain,
Though well I knew she’d
not be true,
I’d
love her again.
If I were a young man
With a brisk,
healthy body,
Oh, if I were a bold
young man
With love
of rum toddy,
Though I knew that I
was spiting
My old age
with pain,
My happy lip would touch
and sip
Again and
again.
If I were a young man
With my
bones full of marrow,
Oh, if I were a bold
young man
Straight
as an arrow,
I’d store up no
virtue
For Heaven’s
distant plain,
I’d live at ease
as I did please
And sin
once again.
APPLES AND WATER.
Dust in a cloud, blinding
weather,
Drums that
rattle and roar!
A mother and daughter
stood together
Beside their
cottage door.
“Mother, the heavens
are bright like brass,
The dust
is shaken high,
With labouring breath
the soldiers pass,
Their lips
are cracked and dry.”
“Mother, I’ll
throw them apples down,
I’ll
bring them pails of water.”
The mother turned with
an angry frown
Holding
back her daughter.
“But mother, see,
they faint with thirst,
They march
away to die,”
“Ah, sweet, had
I but known at first
Their throats
are always dry.”
“There is no water
can supply them
In western
streams that flow,
There is no fruit can
satisfy them
On orchard
trees that grow.”
“Once in my youth
I gave, poor fool,
A soldier
apples and water,
So may I die before
you cool
Your father’s
drouth, my daughter.”
MANTICOR IN ARABIA.
(The manticors of the
montaines
Mighte feed them on
thy braines.
Skelton.)
Thick and scented daisies
spread
Where with surface dull
like lead
Arabian pools of slime
invite
Manticors down from
neighbouring height
To dip heads, to cool
fiery blood
In oozy depths of sucking
mud.
Sing then of ringstraked
manticor,
Man-visaged tiger who
of yore
Held whole Arabian waste
in fee
With raging pride from
sea to sea,
That every lesser tribe
would fly
Those armed feet, that
hooded eye;
Till preying on himself
at last
Manticor dwindled, sank,
was passed
By gryphon flocks he
did disdain.
Ay, wyverns and rude
dragons reign
In ancient keep of manticor
Agreed old foe can rise
no more.
Only here from lakes
of slime
Drinks manticor and
bides due time:
Six times Fowl Phoenix
in yon tree
Must mount his pyre
and burn and be
Renewed again, till
in such hour
As seventh Phoenix flames
to power
And lifts young feathers,
overnice
From scented pool of
steamy spice
Shall manticor his sway
restore
And rule Arabian plains
once more.
OUTLAWS.
Owls:
they whinney
down the night,
Bats go
zigzag by.
Ambushed in shadow out
of sight
The outlaws
lie.
Old gods, shrunk to
shadows, there
In the wet
woods they lurk,
Greedy of human stuff
to snare
In webs
of murk.
Look up, else your eye
must drown
In a moving
sea of black
Between the tree-tops,
upside down
Goes the
sky-track.
Look up, else your feet
will stray
Towards
that dim ambuscade,
Where spider-like they
catch their prey
In nets
of shade.
For though creeds whirl
away in dust,
Faith fails
and men forget,
These aged gods of fright
and lust
Cling to
life yet.
Old gods almost dead,
malign,
Starved
of their ancient dues,
Incense and fruit, fire,
blood and wine
And an unclean
muse.
Banished to woods and
a sickly moon,
Shrunk to
mere bogey things,
Who spoke with thunder
once at noon
To prostrate
kings.
With thunder from an
open sky
To peasant,
tyrant, priest,
Bowing in fear with
a dazzled eye
Towards
the East.
Proud gods, humbled,
sunk so low,
Living with
ghosts and ghouls,
And ghosts of ghosts
and last year’s snow
And dead
toadstools.
BALOO LOO FOR JENNY.
Sing baloo loo for Jenny
And where
is she gone?
Away to spy her mother’s
land,
Riding all
alone.
To the rich towns of
Scotland,
The woods
and the streams,
High upon a Spanish
horse
Saddled
for her dreams.
By Oxford and by Chester,
To Berwick-on-the-Tweed,
Then once across the
borderland
She shall
find no need.
A loaf for her at Stirling,
A scone
at Carlisle,
Honeyed cakes at Edinbro’
That shall
make her smile.
At Aberdeen clear cider,
Mead for
her at Nairn,
A cup of wine at John
o’ Groats
That shall
please my bairn.
Sing baloo loo for Jenny,
Mother will
be fain
To see her little truant
child
Riding home
again.
HAWK AND BUCKLE.
Where is the landlord
of old Hawk and Buckle,
And what of Master Straddler
this hot summer weather?
He’s along in
the tap-room with broad cheeks a-chuckle,
And ten bold companions
all drinking together.
Where is the daughter
of old Hawk and Buckle,
And what of Mistress
Jenny this hot summer weather?
She sits in the parlour
with smell of honeysuckle,
Trimming her bonnet
with red ostrich feather.
Where is the ostler
of old Hawk and Buckle,
And what of Willy Jakeman
this hot summer weather?
He is rubbing his eyes
with a slow and lazy knuckle
As he wakes from his
nap on a bank of fresh heather.
Where is the page boy
of old Hawk and Buckle,
And what of our young
Charlie this hot summer weather?
He is bobbing for tiddlers
in a little trickle-truckle,
With his line and his
hook and his breeches of leather.
Where is the grey goat
of old Hawk and Buckle,
And what of pretty Nanny
this hot summer weather?
She stays not contented
with little or with muckle,
Straining for daisies
at the end of her tether.
For this is our motto
at old Hawk and Buckle,
We cling to it close
and we sing all together,
“Every man for
himself at our old Hawk and Buckle,
And devil take the hindmost
this hot summer weather.”
THE “ALICE JEAN”.
One moonlit night a
ship drove in,
A ghost
ship from the west,
Drifting with bare mast
and lone tiller,
Like a mermaid
drest
In long green weed and
barnacles:
She beached
and came to rest.
All the watchers of
the coast
Flocked
to view the sight,
Men and women streaming
down
Through
the summer night,
Found her standing tall
and ragged
Beached
in the moonlight.
Then one old woman looked
and wept
“The
‘Alice Jean’?
But no!
The ship that took my
Dick from me
Sixty years
ago
Drifted back from the
utmost west
With the
ocean’s flow?
“Caught and caged
in the weedy pool
Beyond the
western brink,
Where crewless vessels
lie and rot
in waters
black as ink.
Torn out again by a
sudden storm
Is it the
‘Jean’, you think?”
A hundred women stared
agape,
The menfolk
nudged and laughed,
But none could find
a likelier story
For the
strange craft.
With fear and death
and desolation
Rigged fore
and aft.
The blind ship came
forgotten home
To all but
one of these
Of whom none dared to
climb aboard her:
And by and
by the breeze
Sprang to a storm and
the “Alice Jean”
Foundered
in frothy seas.
THE CUPBOARD.
Mother
What’s in that
cupboard, Mary?
Mary
Which cupboard, mother
dear?
Mother
The cupboard of red
mahogany
With handles
shining clear.
Mary
That cupboard, dearest
mother,
With shining
crystal handles?
There’s nought
inside but rags and jags
And yellow
tallow candles.
Mother
What’s in that
cupboard, Mary?
Mary
Which cupboard, mother
mine?
Mother
That cupboard stands
in your sunny chamber,
The silver
corners shine.
Mary
There’s nothing
there inside, mother,
But wool
and thread and flax,
And bits of faded silk
and velvet,
And candles
of white wax.
Mother
What’s in that
cupboard, Mary?
And this
time tell me true.
Mary
White clothes for an
unborn baby, mother,
But what’s
the truth to you?
THE BEACON.
The silent shepherdess,
She of my
vows,
Here with me exchanging
love
Under dim
boughs.
Shines on our mysteries
A sudden
spark
“Dout the candle,
glow-worm,
Let all
be dark.
“The birds have
sung their last notes,
The Sun’s
to bed,
Glow-worm, dout your
candle.”
The glow-worm
said:
“I also am a lover;
The lamp
I display
Is beacon for my true
love
Wandering
astray.
“Through the thick
bushes
And the
grass comes she
With a heartload of
longing
And love
for me.
“Sir, enjoy your
fancy,
But spare
me harm,
A lover is a lover,
Though but
a worm.”
POT AND KETTLE.
Come close to me, dear
Annie, while I bind a lover’s knot.
A tale of burning love
between a kettle and a pot.
The pot was stalwart
iron and the kettle trusty tin,
And though their sides
were black with smoke they bubbled love within.
Forget that kettle,
Jamie, and that pot of boiling broth,
I know a dismal story
of a candle and a moth.
For while your pot is
boiling and while your kettle sings
My moth makes love to
candle flame and burns away his wings.
Your moth, I envy, Annie,
that died by candle flame,
But here are two more
lovers, unto no damage came.
There was a cuckoo loved
a clock and found her always true.
For every hour they
told their hearts, “Ring! ting!
Cuckoo!
Cuckoo!”
As the pot boiled for
the kettle, as the kettle for the pot,
So boils my love within
me till my breast is glowing hot.
As the moth died for
the candle, so could I die for you.
And my fond heart beats
time with yours and cries, “Cuckoo!
Cuckoo!”
GHOST RADDLED.
“Come, surly fellow,
come!
A song!”
What, madmen?
Sing to you?
Choose from the clouded
tales of wrong
And terror
I bring to you.
Of a night so torn with
cries,
Honest men
sleeping
Start awake with glaring
eyes,
Bone-chilled,
flesh creeping.
Of spirits in the web
hung room
Up above
the stable,
Groans, knockings in
the gloom,
The dancing
table.
Of demons in the dry
well
That cheep
and mutter,
Clanging of an unseen
bell,
Blood choking
the gutter.
Of lust frightful, past
belief,
Lurking
unforgotten,
Unrestrainable endless
grief
From breasts
long rotten.
A song?
What laughter
or what song
Can this
house remember?
Do flowers and butterflies
belong
To a blind
December?
NEGLECTFUL EDWARD.
Nancy
“Edward back from
the Indian Sea,
What have you brought
for Nancy?”
Edward
“A rope of pearls
and a gold earring,
And a bird of the East
that will not sing.
A carven tooth, a box
with a key
”
Nancy
“God be praised
you are back,” says she,
“Have you nothing
more for your Nancy?”
Edward
“Long as I sailed
the Indian Sea
I gathered all for your
fancy:
Toys and silk and jewels
I bring,
And a bird of the East
that will not sing:
What more can you want,
dear girl, from me?”
Nancy
“God be praised
you are back,” said she,
“Have you nothing
better for Nancy?”
Edward
“Safe and home
from the Indian Sea,
And nothing to take
your fancy?”
Nancy
“You can keep
your pearls and your gold earring,
And your bird of the
East that will not sing,
But, Ned, have you nothing
more for me
Than heathenish gew-gaw
toys?” says she,
“Have you nothing
better for Nancy?”
THE WELL-DRESSED CHILDREN.
Here’s flowery
taffeta for Mary’s new gown:
Here’s
black velvet, all the rage, for Dick’s birthday
coat.
Pearly buttons for you,
Mary, all the way down,
Lace ruffles,
Dick, for you; you’ll be a man of note.
Mary, here I’ve
bought you a green gingham shade
And a silk
purse brocaded with roses gold and blue,
You’ll learn to
hold them proudly like colours on parade.
No banker’s
wife in all the town half so grand as you.
I’ve bought for
young Diccon a long walking-stick,
Yellow gloves,
well tanned, at Woodstock village made.
I’ll teach you
to flourish ’em and show your name is
Dick
,
Strutting
by your sister’s side with the same parade.
On Sunday to church
you go, each with a book of prayer:
Then up
the street and down the aisles, everywhere you’ll
see
Of all the honours paid
around, how small is Virtue’s share.
How large
the share of Vulgar Pride in peacock finery.
THUNDER AT NIGHT.
Restless and hot two
children lay
Plagued
with uneasy dreams,
Each wandered lonely
through false day
A twilight
torn with screams.
True to the bed-time
story, Ben
Pursued
his wounded bear,
Ann dreamed of chattering
monkey men,
Of snakes
twined in her hair...
Now high aloft above
the town
The thick
clouds gather and break,
A flash, a roar, and
rain drives down:
Aghast the
young things wake.
Trembling for what their
terror was,
Surprised
by instant doom,
With lightning in the
looking glass,
Thunder
that rocks the room.
The monkeys’ paws
patter again,
Snakes hiss
and flash their eyes:
The bear roars out in
hideous pain:
Ann prays:
her brother cries.
They cannot guess, could
not be told
How soon
comes careless day,
With birds and dandelion
gold,
Wet grass,
cool scents of May.
TO E.M.
A BALLAD OF NURSERY RHYME.
Strawberries that in
gardens grow
Are plump
and juicy fine,
But sweeter far as wise
men know
Spring from
the woodland vine.
No need for bowl or
silver spoon,
Sugar or
spice or cream,
Has the wild berry plucked
in June
Beside the
trickling stream.
One such to melt at
the tongue’s root,
Confounding
taste with scent,
Beats a full peck of
garden fruit:
Which points
my argument.
May sudden justice overtake
And snap
the froward pen,
That old and palsied
poets shake
Against
the minds of men.
Blasphemers trusting
to hold caught
In far-flung
webs of ink,
The utmost ends of human
thought
Till nothing’s
left to think.
But may the gift of
heavenly peace
And glory
for all time
Keep the boy Tom who
tending geese
First made
the nursery rhyme.
By the brookside one
August day,
Using the
sun for clock,
Tom whiled the languid
hours away
Beside his
scattering flock.
Carving with a sharp
pointed stone
On a broad
slab of slate
The famous lives of
Jumping Joan,
Dan Fox
and Greedy Kate.
Rhyming of wolves and
bears and birds,
Spain, Scotland,
Babylon,
That sister Kate might
learn the words
To tell
to toddling John.
But Kate who could not
stay content
To learn
her lesson pat
New beauty to the rough
lines lent
By changing
this or that.
And she herself set
fresh things down
In corners
of her slate,
Of lambs and lanes and
London town.
God’s
blessing fall on Kate!
The baby loved the simple
sound,
With jolly
glee he shook,
And soon the lines grew
smooth and round
Like pebbles
in Tom’s brook.
From mouth to mouth
told and retold
By children
sprawled at ease,
Before the fire in winter’s
cold,
in June,
beneath tall trees.
Till though long lost
are stone and slate,
Though the
brook no more runs,
And dead long time are
Tom, John, Kate,
Their sons
and their sons’ sons.
Yet as when Time with
stealthy tread
Lays the
rich garden waste
The woodland berry ripe
and red
Fails not
in scent or taste,
So these same rhymes
shall still be told
To children
yet unborn,
While false philosophy
growing old
Fades and
is killed by scorn.
JANE.
As Jane walked out below
the hill,
She saw an old man standing
still,
His eyes in tranced
sorrow bound
On the broad stretch
of barren ground.
His limbs were knarled
like aged trees,
His thin beard wrapt
about his knees,
His visage broad and
parchment white,
Aglint with pale reflected
light.
He seemed a creature
fall’n afar
From some dim planet
or faint star.
Jane scanned him very
close, and soon
Cried, “’Tis
the old man from the moon.”
He raised his voice,
a grating creak,
But only to himself
would speak.
Groaning with tears
in piteous pain,
“O!
O! would
I were home again.”
Then Jane ran off, quick
as she could,
To cheer his heart with
drink and food.
But ah, too late came
ale and bread,
She found the poor soul
stretched stone-dead.
And a new moon rode
overhead.
VAIN AND CARELESS.
Lady, lovely lady,
Careless
and gay!
Once when a beggar called
She gave
her child away.
The beggar took the
baby,
Wrapped
it in a shawl,
“Bring her back,”
the lady said,
“Next
time you call.”
Hard by lived a vain
man,
So vain
and so proud,
He walked on stilts
To be seen
by the crowd.
Up above the chimney
pots,
Tall as
a mast,
And all the people ran
about
Shouting
till he passed.
“A splendid match
surely,”
Neighbours
saw it plain,
“Although she
is so careless,
Although
he is so vain.”
But the lady played
bobcherry,
Did not
see or care,
As the vain man went
by her
Aloft in
the air.
This gentle-born couple
Lived and
died apart.
Water will not mix with
oil,
Nor vain
with careless heart.
NINE O’CLOCK.
I.
Nine of the clock, oh!
Wake my
lazy head!
Your shoes of red morocco,
Your silk
bed-gown:
Rouse, rouse, speck-eyed
Mary
In your
high bed!
A yawn, a smile, sleepy-starey,
Mary climbs
down.
“Good-morning
to my brothers,
Good-day
to the Sun,
Halloo, halloo to the
lily-white sheep
That up
the mountain run.”
II.
Good-night to the meadow,
farewell to the nine o’clock Sun,
“He loves me not,
loves me, he loves me not” (O jealous one!)
“He loves me,
he loves me not, loves me”
O soft
nights of June,
A bird sang for love
on the cherry-bough:
up swam the Moon.
THE PICTURE BOOK.
When I was not quite
five years old
I first
saw the blue picture book,
And
Fräulein
Spitzenburger
told
Stories that sent me
hot and cold;
I loathed
it, yet I had to look:
It was a
German book.
I smiled at first, for
she’d begun
With a back-garden
broad and green,
And rabbits nibbling
there:
page one
Turned; and the gardener
fired his gun
From the
low hedge:
he lay unseen
Behind:
oh, it was mean!
They’re hurt,
they can’t escape, and so
He stuffs
them head-down in a sack,
Not quite dead, wriggling
in a row,
And
Fräulein
laughed,
“Ho, ho!
Ho, ho!”
And gave
my middle a hard smack,
I wish that
I’d hit back.
Then when I cried she
laughed again;
On the next
page was a dead boy
Murdered by robbers
in a lane;
His clothes were red
with a big stain
Of blood,
he held a broken toy,
The poor,
poor little boy!
I had to look:
there was a town
Burning
where every one got caught,
Then a fish pulled a
nigger down
Into the lake and made
him drown,
And a man
killed his friend; they fought
For money,
Fräulein
thought.
Old
Fräulein
laughed,
a horrid noise.
“Ho,
ho!” Then she explained it all
How robbers kill the
little boys
And torture them and
break their toys.
Robbers
are always big and tall:
I cried:
I was so small.
How a man often kills
his wife,
How every
one dies in the end
By fire, or water or
a knife.
If you’re not
careful in this life,
Even if
you can trust your friend,
You won’t
have long to spend.
I hated it
old
Fräulein
picked
Her teeth,
slowly explaining it.
I had to
listen
,
Fräulein
licked
Her fingers several
times and flicked
The pages
over; in a fit
Of rage
I spat at it...
And lying in my bed
that night
Hungry,
tired out with sobs, I found
A stretch of barren
years in sight,
Where right is wrong,
but strength is right,
Where weak
things must creep underground,
And I could
not sleep sound.
THE PROMISED LULLABY.
Can I find True-Love
a gift
In this
dark hour to restore her,
When body’s vessel
breaks adrift,
When hope
and beauty fade before her?
But in this plight I
cannot think
Of song
or music, that would grieve her,
Or toys or meat or snow-cooled
drink;
Not this
way can her sadness leave her.
She lies
and frets in childish fever,
All I can do is but
to cry
“Sleep, sleep,
True-Love and lullaby!”
Lullaby, and sleep again.
Two bright
eyes through the window stare,
A nose is flattened
on the pane
And infant
fingers fumble there.
“Not yet, not
yet, you lovely thing,
But count
and come nine weeks from now,
When winter’s
tail has lost the sting,
When buds
come striking through the bough,
Then here’s
True-Love will show you how
Her name she won, will
hush your cry
With “Sleep, my
baby!
Lullaby!”
RETROSPECT
HAUNTED.
Gulp down your wine,
old friends of mine,
Roar through the darkness,
stamp and sing
And lay ghost hands
on everything,
But leave the noonday’s
warm sunshine
To living lads for mirth
and wine.
I met you suddenly down
the street,
Strangers assume your
phantom faces,
You grin at me from
daylight places,
Dead, long dead, I’m
ashamed to greet
Dead men down the morning
street.
RETROSPECT:
THE JESTS OF THE CLOCK.
He had met hours of
the clock he never guessed before
Dumb, dragging, mirthless
hours confused with dreams and fear,
Bone-chilling, hungry
hours when the gods sleep and snore,
Bequeathing earth and
heaven to ghosts, and will not hear,
And will not hear man
groan chained to the sodden ground,
Rotting alive; in feather
beds they slumbered sound.
When noisome smells
of day were sicklied by cold night,
When sentries froze
and muttered; when beyond the wire
Blank shadows crawled
and tumbled, shaking, tricking the sight,
When impotent hatred
of Life stifled desire,
Then soared the sudden
rocket, broke in blanching showers.
O lagging watch!
O dawn!
O hope-forsaken hours!
How often with numbed
heart, stale lips, venting his rage
He swore he’d
be a dolt, a traitor, a damned fool,
If, when the guns stopped,
ever again from youth to age
He broke the early-rising,
early-sleeping rule.
No, though more bestial
enemies roused a fouler war
Never again would he
bear this, no never more!
“Rise with the
cheerful sun, go to bed with the same,
Work in your field or
kailyard all the shining day,
But,” he said,
“never more in quest of wealth, honour, fame,
Search the small hours
of night before the East goes grey.
A healthy mind, a honest
heart, a wise man leaves
Those ugly impious times
to ghosts, devils, soldiers, thieves.”
Poor fool, knowing too
well deep in his heart
That he’ll be
ready again if urgent orders come,
To quit his rye and
cabbages, kiss his wife and part
At the first sullen
rapping of the awakened drum,
Ready once more to sweat
with fear and brace for the shock,
To greet beneath a falling
flare the jests of the clock.
HERE THEY LIE.
Here they lie who once
learned here
All that
is taught of hurt or fear;
Dead, but by free will
they died:
They were
true men, they had pride.
TOM TAYLOR.
On pay-day nights, neck-full
with beer,
Old soldiers stumbling
homeward here,
Homeward (still dazzled
by the spark
Love kindled in some
alley dark)
Young soldiers mooning
in slow thought,
Start suddenly, turn
about, are caught
By a dancing sound,
merry as a grig,
Tom Taylor’s piccolo
playing jig.
Never was blown from
human cheeks
Music like this, that
calls and speaks
Till sots and lovers
from one string
Dangle and dance in
the same ring.
Tom, of your piping
I’ve heard said
And seen
that
you can rouse the dead,
Dead-drunken men awash
who lie
In stinking gutters
hear your cry,
I’ve seen them
twitch, draw breath, grope, sigh,
Heave up, sway, stand;
grotesquely then
You set them dancing,
these dead men.
They stamp and prance
with sobbing breath,
Victims of wine or love
or death,
In ragged time they
jump, they shake
Their heads, sweating
to overtake
The impetuous tune flying
ahead.
They flounder after,
with legs of lead.
Now, suddenly as it
started, play
Stops, the short echo
dies away,
The corpses drop, a
senseless heap,
The drunk men gaze about
like sheep.
Grinning, the lovers
sigh and stare
Up at the broad moon
hanging there,
While Tom, five fingers
to his nose,
Skips off...And the
last bugle blows.
COUNTRY AT WAR.
And what of home
how
goes it, boys,
While we die here in
stench and noise?
“The hill stands
up and hedges wind
Over the crest and drop
behind;
Here swallows dip and
wild things go
On peaceful errands
to and fro
Across the sloping meadow
floor,
And make no guess at
blasting war.
In woods that fledge
the round hill-shoulder
Leaves shoot and open,
fall and moulder,
And shoot again.
Meadows yet show
Alternate white of drifted
snow
And daisies.
Children
play at shop,
Warm days, on the flat
boulder-top,
With wildflower coinage,
and the wares
Are bits of glass and
unripe pears.
Crows perch upon the
backs of sheep,
The wheat goes yellow:
women reap,
Autumn winds ruffle
brook and pond,
Flutter the hedge and
fly beyond.
So the first things
of nature run,
And stand not still
for any one,
Contemptuous of the
distant cry
Wherewith you harrow
earth and sky.
And high French clouds,
praying to be
Back, back in peace
beyond the sea,
Where nature with accustomed
round
Sweeps and garnishes
the ground
With kindly beauty,
warm or cold
Alternate seasons never
old:
Heathen, how furiously
you rage,
Cursing this blood and
brimstone age,
How furiously against
your will
You kill and kill again,
and kill:
All thought of peace
behind you cast,
Till like small boys
with fear aghast,
Each cries for God to
understand,
‘I could not help
it, it was my hand.’”
SOSPAN
FACH
.
(The Little Saucepan)
Four collier lads from
Ebbw Vale
Took shelter from a
shower of hail,
And there beneath a
spreading tree
Attuned their mouths
to harmony.
With smiling joy on
every face
Two warbled tenor, two
sang bass,
And while the leaves
above them hissed with
Rough hail, they started
“Aberystwyth.”
Old Parry’s hymn,
triumphant, rich,
They changed through
with even pitch,
Till at the end of their
grand noise
I called:
“Give
us the ‘Sospan’ boys!”
Who knows a tune so
soft, so strong,
So pitiful as that “Saucepan”
song
For exiled hope, despaired
desire
Of lost souls for their
cottage fire?
Then low at first with
gathering sound
Rose their four voices,
smooth and round,
Till back went Time:
once more I stood
With
Fusiliers
in Mametz Wood.
Fierce burned the sun,
yet cheeks were pale,
For ice hail they had
leaden hail;
In that fine forest,
green and big,
There stayed unbroken
not one twig.
They sang, they swore,
they plunged in haste,
Stumbling and shouting
through the waste;
The little “Saucepan”
flamed on high,
Emblem of hope and ease
gone by.
Rough pit-boys from
the coaly South,
They sang, even in the
cannon’s mouth;
Like Sunday’s
chapel, Monday’s inn,
The death-trap sounded
with their din.
The storm blows over,
Sun comes out,
The choir breaks up
with jest and shout,
With what relief I watch
them part
Another note would break
my heart!
THE LEVELLER.
Near Martinpuisch that
night of hell
Two men were struck
by the same shell,
Together tumbling in
one heap
Senseless and limp like
slaughtered sheep.
One was a pale eighteen-year-old,
Girlish and thin and
not too bold,
Pressed for the war
ten years too soon,
The shame and pity of
his platoon.
The other came from
far-off lands
With bristling chin
and whiskered hands,
He had known death and
hell before
In Mexico and Ecuador.
Yet in his death this
cut-throat wild
Groaned “Mother!
Mother!” like a child,
While that poor innocent
in man’s clothes
Died cursing God with
brutal oaths.
Old Sergeant Smith,
kindest of men,
Wrote out two copies
there and then
Of his accustomed funeral
speech
To cheer the womenfolk
of each.
HATE NOT, FEAR NOT.
Kill if you must, but
never hate:
Man is but
grass and hate is blight,
The sun will scorch
you soon or late,
Die wholesome
then, since you must fight.
Hate is a fear, and
fear is rot
That cankers
root and fruit alike,
Fight cleanly then,
hate not, fear not,
Strike with
no madness when you strike.
Fever and fear distract
the world,
But calm
be you though madmen shout,
Through blazing fires
of battle hurled,
Hate not,
strike, fear not, stare Death out!
A RHYME OF FRIENDS.
(In a Style Skeltonical)
Listen now this time
Shortly to my rhyme
That herewith starts
About certain kind hearts
In those stricken parts
That lie behind Calais,
Old crones and aged
men
And young children.
About the Picardais,
Who earned my thousand
thanks,
Dwellers by the banks
Of mournful Somme
(God keep me therefrom
Until War ends)
These, then, are my
friends:
Madame Averlant Lune,
From the town of Bethune;
Good Professeur la Brune
From that town also.
He played the piccolo,
And left his locks to
grow.
Dear Madame Hojdes,
Sempstress of Saint
Fe.
With Jules and Susette
And Antoinette.
Her children, my sweethearts,
For whom I made darts
Of paper to throw
In their mimic show,
“
La
guerre
aux tranchees.”
That was a pretty play.
There was
old Jacques Caron,
Of the hamlet
Mailleton
.
He let me look
At his household book,
“
Comment
vivre
cent
ans
.”
What cares I took
To obey this wise book,
I, who feared each hour
Lest Death’s cruel
power
On the poppied plain
Might make cares vain!
By Noeus-les-mines
Lived old Adelphine,
Withered and clean,
She nodded and smiled,
And used me like a child.
How that old trot beguiled
My leisure with her
chatter,
Gave me a china platter
Painted with Cherubim
And mottoes on the rim.
But when instead of
thanks
I gave her francs
How her pride was hurt!
She counted francs as
dirt,
(God knows, she was
not rich)
She called the Kaiser
bitch,
She spat on the floor,
Cursing this Prussian
war,
That she had known before
Forty years past and
more.
There was
also “Tomi,”
With looks sweet and
free,
Who called me cher ami.
This orphan’s
age was nine,
His folk were in their
graves,
Else they were slaves
Behind the German line
To terror and rapine
O, little friends of
mine
How kind and brave you
were,
You smoothed away care
When life was hard to
bear.
And you, old women and
men,
Who gave me billets
then,
How patient and great-hearted!
Strangers though we
started,
Yet friends we ever
parted.
God bless you all:
now ends
This homage to my friends.
A FIRST REVIEW.
Love, Fear and Hate
and Childish Toys
Are here
discreetly blent;
Admire, you ladies,
read, you boys,
My Country
Sentiment.
But Kate says, “Cut
that anger and fear,
True love’s
the stuff we need!
With laughing children
and the running deer
That makes
a book indeed.”
Then Tom, a hard and
bloody chap,
Though much
beloved by me,
“Robert, have
done with nursery pap,
Write like
a man,” says he.
Hate and Fear are not
wanted here,
Nor Toys
nor Country Lovers,
Everything they took
from my new poem book
But the
flyleaf and the covers.