Ballads and Songs (1863):

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Belloc, Bessie Rayner (1829-1925)


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Victorian Women Writers Project: an Electronic Collection

Perry Willett, General Editor.

Ballads and Songs

by Bessie Rayner Belloc
216 p.
Bell and Daldy
London
1863

        The transcribed copy is from the Northwestern University Library.



        All quotation marks, hyphens, dashes, apostrophes and colons have been transcribed as entity references.


        All apostrophes and single right quotation marks are encoded as ’.


        Any hyphens occurring in line breaks have been removed; all hyphens are encoded as "-" and em dashes as —.


        The publisher's advertisement following p.216 has been omitted.




BALLADS AND SONGS.

BY

BESSIE RAYNER PARKES.

LONDON:
BELL AND DALDY, 186, FLEET STREET.
1863.


Page v

    

DEDICATION.


THOSE whom these Poems may concern
    Will each their own true portion know;
No cause that other eyes should learn
    The reason why I penned them so.
But if--I think there is--there be
    One thread of thought that runs throughout,
One heart remembered tenderly,
    One echo caught from strains devout;--
If through the busy Week of Years,
    To which these scattered thoughts belong,
One constant image still appears,
    Reflected in my casual song;--
Dear critic, for whose eyes I wrote the greater part,
Take to thyself the book I give, with all my heart.


Page vii


    

CONTENTS.






Page 1

    

THE PALACE AND THE COLLIERY.


WHEN within that silken-curtained room,
    The dear Husband of our State lay dying,
All the land was shrouded with that gloom,
    Every household echoed to that crying.


"Think of all those children," said the parents;
    "One in Prussia, one across the sea;
One far south, and five within the palace;
    Little Beatrice on her MOTHER'S knee,


Page 2


"Just as in the portraits we see daily."
    Ah, what fellow-feeling touched the land!
What a mist of tears went up to Windsor,
    For a grief that all could understand!


In the churches on that Sunday morning,
    Trembling congregations heard the prayer
With his name omitted, for the first time
    Since we placed the youthful bridegroom there.


All that week upon the roads and markets
    Gathered groups of listening heads were seen--
And we heard the "women in the railways"
    Talk in tearful whispers of "the Queen."


Ere a month had passed, a royal message
    Flies electric through the anxious crowd;
But this time it is the Queen commissions
    Words of fellow-feeling, deep, not loud.


Page 3


"Is there any hope that we can save them?"
    Asked the WIDOW of those death-struck wives.
"Any hope!" But hark! the throbbing answer:
    "No! the Lord hath taken all their lives."


All those "canny fellows," all the husbands,
    Sweethearts, striplings, children even, slept
A not unpeaceful slumber, seated patient
    While the deadly vapour on them crept.


Twice within a month the Lord has smitten
    England with a very heavy hand;
Twice hath roused all hearts with tender mourning
    For a grief that all can understand.


But if Love possesses any healing,
    It has sprung to life amidst these woes;
Taught the nation what a fellow-feeling
    Through the pulses of a people flows.


Page 4


And although the price has been most bitter,
    England gains a truth in making known
To her millions that a common nature
    Tends the cottage hearth and fills the throne.
            January 27, 1862.



Page 5

    

THE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN.


IN summer, eighteen fifty-eight,
    A ship sailed out from Aberdeen;
A gilded pet for summer state
    The little Fox had been.


But ringing hammers night and day
    Her coat of iron mail did fix,
Before they sent the Fox away
    With sailors twenty-six.


I call them sailors every one,
    Since all were true in time of need;
A very little band to run
    Great risk for doubtful meed.


Page 6


True English hearts sent food and drink,
    And every thing the crew could store,
And every blessing heart could think
    Pursued them from the shore.


And so, across the great salt deep,
    From Aberdeen they steamed away;
And, doubling Greenland's ice-clogged steep,
    Pushed up to Baffin's Bay.


But there the cruel ice grew thick,
    And hemmed them in, and hemmed them round;
The little Fox she could not pick
    Her way into the Sound,


Which opens westwards towards the Bay,
    And leads to endless mysteries,
And kept for many a weary day
    The secret of the seas.


Page 7


So, being finally beset,
    Her prow was wedged as in a vice;
And month by month was never wet
    Amidst those leagues of ice.


For eight long months seemed motionless,
    While game and tale the gloom beguiles;
Yet she, in darkness and distress,
    Drifted a thousand miles!


All down the length of Baffin's Bay,
    A southern drift the Fox did keep,
Till darkness melted quite away,
    And she into the deep.


A solemn and an awful track
    That silent passage seems to me,
From midnight and the Frozen Pack,
    To sunshine and the sea!


Page 8


And then the gallant little ship
    Put joyfully into the shore,
And soon her slender paddles dip
    In Northern seas once more.


This time the summer days were long,
    The little Fox is very wise,
And soon she paddles, safe and strong,
    Beneath the western skies.


Now Heaven direct her in her track,
    And send some sure and guiding breeze,
Or she will never bring us back
    The secret of the seas.


She struggles up the Northern route,
    The Northern ice is hard and broad;
The little Fox must put about
    And seek some other road.


Page 9


But, though she struggles day and night,
    She cannot reach the wished-for land;
The captain and his men alight
    Upon a frozen strand.


An awful thing it was to be
    Alone upon the icy plain,
Which broadens imperceptibly
    Into an icy main!


And then they sledged both east and north,
    And then they sledged both south and west,
Till the dread doubt which drove them forth
    At last was set at rest.


What did they find? A paper, scored
    With English writing, English names,
(How long by English hearts deplored!)
    Signed Crosier and Fitzjames!


Page 10


Scant record of their hungry grief
    That blotted page supplied;
But one faint gleam of sad relief--
    The day when Franklin died.


At least he died within his cot,
    While kindly eyes were watching there;
We know no tribute was forgot,
    They buried him with prayer.


And thus the secret of the seas
    Was yielded to their quest,
The mystery of mysteries
    Was solved and set at rest.


Page 11

    

THE SOLDIER'S RETURN.


THEY came across the distant hills
    With trumpet, pipe, and drum;
And all the air with welcome fills,
    Which deepens as they come.


It flashes down the river-banks,
    And broadens on the plain,
A voice of universal thanks
    To greet them home again.


Tall Richard's brother spies him out,
    A head above the crowd;


Page 12


And sweetheart John is clasped about
    By one who weeps aloud.


Wives find their husbands, sons their sires,
    Each man they seek is there;
Ah! bright fulfilment of desires
    Fast changing to despair!


Yet no! a pressure in the rear--
    A something which they hide--
A long black something on a bier,
    With cap and sword beside;--
A woman rushing, wild with fear,
    To draw the veil aside!


And, when she saw the stricken face,
    She did not weep or wail;
But just recoiled a little space,
    And grew a shade more pale.


Page 13


And in her eyes a terror strained,
    And on her mouth there fell
The tremble of a spirit pained
    More than the flesh could tell.


A sudden changing, past all speech,
    That was not grief or fear,
Something which words will never reach--
    The look when Death is near.


Though she was old and he was young,
    And neither called by name,
By that death-light upon them flung,
    Their faces were the same!


And all the happy, joyous crowd,
    Struck with a sudden dread,
Turned, with a whisper growing loud,
    To where she faced her dead.


Page 14


And as she sank, with reverent hands
    They laid her by her son:
For the dread Priest, whom nought withstands,
    Had linked their years in one.


Page 15

    

THE CITY OF REFUGE.


        "Then ye shall appoint you cities to be Cities of Refuge for you; that the slayer may flee thither, which killeth any person at unawares...


        "Ye shall give three cities on this side Jordan, and three cities shall ye give in the land of Canaan, which shall be Cities of Refuge."


THE law which was given abides,
    By mountain and valley and wood,
The slayer is fleeing, and after him rides
    The wrathful Avenger of Blood!


His eyes are aghast with alarm,
    His mouth is agape with his dread;
In his ears the quick steps that pursue him for harm
    Are blent with the shrieks of the dead.


Page 16


And his fancy runs shuddering back,
    To measure each mile of his flying,
Till it comes to the end of the terrible track
    Where the man whom he murdered is lying.


At the sight of his own right hand
    His sick heart throbs and flutters
He urges his horse with a fierce command,
    As thus to himself he mutters:--


"It was dawn when I laid him low,
    And the dawn is approaching again;
I have fled from the sound of the blow,
    But it echoes and echoes in vain.


"No water has slackened my thirst,
    My lips are unstrengthened by food;
And after my footstep accurst
    Swift flies the Avenger of Blood.


Page 17


"The olives gleam white in the chill night-wind,
Mile after mile that I leave behind,
I am just as near to the dead white thing
Which I left in the shade of the vineyard-spring.
And I see her come through the branching vines,
Flying across their burdened lines;
And I see the smile on her tender face
As she welcomes him to the trysting-place;
And I hate him worst of the sons of men,
I hate him worse than I hated him then!
What is that noise on the chill night-wind?
The Avenger of Blood who rides behind!
Through the valley, and over the hill,
Galloping, galloping, galloping still,
Swimming the river that runs between,
Shouting his curses, himself unseen.
There is the city across the plain!
Fair-built city, but built in vain!
I see the gate in the tall white tower--


Page 18


He has gained a mile in the last half hour;
Another mile ere I reach the gate--
Another five minutes will be too late!
Clattering onwards, swift and sure,
Rides the pursuer, of prey secure.
Onward and onward, nearer and nearer,
Walls of the city shine clearer and clearer!
The click of the hoof comes sharp on the wind
I know he is cursing me just behind;
I know what the scowl in his eyes is like;
I know he has lifted his sword to strike.
I ride and he rides, and he rides and I ride,
The gate of the city is opened wide,
I leap with a bound from the flash of his sword,
My life is secure in the law of the Lord!
The gate of the city is dropped in his face,
I drop from my horse in the midst of the place,
The tide of his anger is turned at the flood--
Turn backward, turn backward, Avenger of Blood!"


Page 19

    

THE BLACK DEATH.


        "From plague, pestilence, and sudden death--Good Lord, deliver us!"


WHAT is it? a speck in the distance,
    A rumour that flies in the air,
Too faint to be met by resistance,
    Too strong to be braved by despair.


Just whispered about the street-corners,
    Just traced by the timorous pen;
Like some scandal breathed out by suborners,
    Which poisons the spirit of men.


Where is it? but yesterday even
    A man galloped in from the plain,
His eyes were a terrible leaven
    Of horror, suspicion, and pain.


Page 20


He galloped straight up to the Town House,
    And none heard the news which he said;
Thank God for the miles he had ridden,
    For the horse which he rode dropped dead!


The rumour grows darker and darker,
    Each moment the agony swells;
Some say, "'Tis the trade of the doctors;"
    And some, "They have poisoned the wells."


A threatening doom o'er the city,
    It hangs like a terrible sword;
No man for his fellow has pity,
    When both dread the curse of the Lord.


To-night there's a crowd in the market,
    But scattered like leaves on the blast;
A moment may drive them asunder--
    For whom will this night be the last?


Page 21


No wonder they start in their slumbers,
    Or count every tremulous breath;
Alas! who can reckon the numbers
    To be reaped in the harvest of Death,


When the fear that now floats like a vapour,
    So shadowy, formless, and vague,
Is wrought up to a terrible presence,
    And named, not in whispers, The Plague?


Page 22

    

THE BALLAD OF THE KING'S DAUGHTER.


        [How the King's Daughter, having married me, a peasant, for love, heareth of the death of her only brother, and taketh her little son to the king.]

    

I.


SHE twisted up her royal lengths
    Of fallen hair with a silver pin,
Her eyes were frowning, molten depths
    Which stirred to flame when I looked within;


Dressed in a gown of velvet black,
    With a diamond clasp, and a silver band,
Walked from the door with a stately step,
    And our young son held by his mother's hand.


Page 23


Walter ran by his mother's side,
    More like in his eyes to her than me;
The queen would have bartered her ivory throne
    For such a blossom of royalty.


Heavily over the far-hill tops
    Booms the bell in the minster-tower,
From city to city between the hills
    Echo the bells at the burial hour.


"Amen!" saith the bough in the ten-mile forest;
    "Amen!" saith the sea from its cavernous bed;
"Amen!" saith the people when bowed at the sorest;
    "Who is dead?" said the rooks, "who is dead? who is dead?"


The young man is dead, in his strength, in his beauty,
    His curls lie loose on his white-fringed pall;
Loud cry the people and priests at the altar,
    Soft wails the requiem over them all.


Page 24


Low in the midst of the Church of the Merciful
    Lieth the young man, gone to his rest,
His sword is sheathed and his coronet broken,
    Flowers of yesterday cover his breast.


"Babe, child, brave youth!" wept the Queen in her closet;
    "Heir of my name!" sighed the King on his throne;
"Who leads us to battle?" cried they of the market;
    "My lover!" looked one face as cold as a stone.


Slow tolled the bells from the north to the southern sea,
    Winds caught them up with a desolate cry,
Solemn he lies under darkening arches,
    The hand of eternity pressed on each eye.


Page 25

    

II.


The market-cross, with its sculptured Christ,
    'Mid the crush and the trample stood steady and strong;
The welded masses of voiceless folk
    As a sea at midnight rolled along.


Booming bells, as they struck the ear,
    Died away in the silent skies;
Gossiping women were dumb with fear,
    And each gabled house was alive with eyes.


But lo! in the distance a shadowy file,
    They move to the beat of a muffled drum;
The waves recede as for Israel's march,
    And the thick crowd mutters, "They come, they come."


Where the bier was borne by the central fount,
    She stood as still as the carven stone,


Page 26


Saying, "O King, behold my boy,
    His smile is the dead's, and his eye is your own.


"From my broad domain in one true man's heart,
    From the home I chose of mine own free will,
I give you my jewel to wear in your crown."
    Then snatching him back for one last long fill


Of his rippling smiles, they heard her say,
    With a haughty glance at her marriage-ring,
"Well is my home by the forester's hearth,
    But Walter, my son, is the heir of a king."


When the shadows fell on our quiet pool,
    And the birds were asleep in the firs overhead,
She returned alone, but her face was white,
    And her step as the step of one waked from the dead.


Page 27

    

ROBIN HOOD.


IN a fair wood like this, where the beeches are growing,
    Brave Robin Hood hunted in days of old;
Down his broad shoulders his brown locks fell flowing,
    His cap was of green, with a tassel of gold.


His eye was as blue as the sky in Midsummer,
    Ruddy his cheek as the oak-leaves in June,
Hearty his voice as he hailed the new-comer,
    Tender to maidens in changeable tune.


His step had a strength, and his smile had a sweetness,
    His spirit was wrought of the sun and the breeze,


Page 28


He moved as a man framed in nature's completeness,
    And grew unabashed with the growth of the trees.


And ever to poets, who walk in the gloaming,
    His horn is still heard in the prime of the year;
Last eve he went with us, unseen, in our roaming,
    And thrilled with his presence the shy troops of deer.


When the warm sun sank down in a golden declining,
    And night clomb the slopes and the firs to their tops,
And the faint stars to meet her did brighten their shining,
    And the heat was refined into diamond drops;


Then Robin stole forth in his quaint forest-fashion--
    For dear to the heart of all poets is he--
And in mystical whispers awakened the passion
    Which slumbers within for a life that were free.


Page 29


We follow the lead unawares of his spirit,
    He tells us the tales which we heard in past time;
Ah! why should we forfeit this earth we inherit,
    For lives which we cannot expand into rhyme!


I think, as I lie in the shade of the beeches,
    How lived and how loved this old hero of song;
I would we could follow the lesson he teaches,
    And dwell, as he dwelt, these wild thickets among.


At least for a while, till we caught up the meaning
    The beeches breathe out in the wealth of their growth,
Width in their nobleness, love in their leaning,
    And peace at the heart from the fulness of both.


Page 30

    

NEW YEAR'S WISHES.


CHRISTMAS is over, and Christmas cheer;--
What shall we wish you, O reader dear?
What do you want for your Happy New Year?
People of every age and state
Have somewhat they fain would ask of Fate;
If you had but a slave of the lamp or the ring,
And could rub him up instantly, what should he bring?
Whatever it be, if we can but guess it,
We'll wish from our hearts that you each may possess it.
We'll wish for the Queen that her boys and her girls
May be bright as diamonds and fair as pearls;


Page 31


That virtue and learning, hand in hand,
May fill her counsels and rule her land,
That the sky of her life be bright above her,
And her days be long with the lieges that love her.
We'll wish that the Lords may pass good laws,
And the Commons be strong in each righteous cause;
That army and navy alike may be
The best of defences by land and sea;
That every bishop may rule in peace
Over a flourishing diocese,
And every pastor heartily strive
To save the souls of his flock alive;
That those who hunger in body or soul
This year be fed with a Christian dole;
That the little children be taught to read,
And a harvest reaped from the sower's seed.
We'll wish to the sickly the toughest of lives,
To maidens, husbands--to bachelors, wives--
That babes may increase in strength and grace,


Page 32


And bloom like flowers in their parents' face;
That the fool may grow wise ere he yet be old,
And the purse that lacks find a store of gold,
And the hand that has it a will to spend,
And the heart that loveth not, grace to mend.
We'll wish for workers of each degree
To earn and eat in prosperity;
Plenty of coals at the poor man's door,
Plenty of grain on the farmer's floor,
Plenty of fees to the learned professions,
Plenty of railways through landed possessions,
Plenty of cargoes brought home on the breeze
By the quickest of ships on the calmest of seas,
Unpacked at the docks to the merchant's content,
And sold in the market at fifty per cent.
And we wish, O dear reader, all jesting apart,
That mercy and love may grow strong in your heart,
That dearer than riches, or what they can buy,
Be the creed which shall help you to live or to die.


Page 33


That whatever your portion of joy or of sorrow,
Meted out in the year which is born with to-morrow,
Its close shall behold you, with common accord,
Gather'd into one fold, in the love of the Lord.
            Dec. 31, 1859.



Page 34

    

UP THE RIVER.


TIS April! 'Tis a holyday! and they shut close yester-even
The golden gates of Sydenham with the clang of iron bars;
The terraces lie shadowless beneath the smile of Heaven,
And trodden but by chasing clouds, and the silent feet of stars.
'Tis April! 'Tis a holyday! and the halls of the Museum
Have nothing noisier than the ghosts of Pharaohs on their floors;
The mastodons and elephants feel very dull to see them,


Page 35


And stare with idle eyeballs at the unresponsive doors.
But the river still is open, and its gentle tide comes flowing
With a thousand tender whispers of the everlasting sea;
And I know that in the woodlands all the early flowers are blowing,
And breathing out sweet messages to Laurence and to me.
The sun is mounting towards the noon, and up above the towers
Of the Abbey and the Parliament the sky's without a flaw.
A most disloyal thing it were to disobey the flowers,
So, Laurence, get your Sunday-hat, and clear your brains of law.
I dearly love this London, this royal northern London,


Page 36


And am up in all its history, to Brutus and to Lud;
But I wish that certain Puritan simplicities were undone,
That the houses had more gable-ends, and the river less of mud.
And often, as I wander in the fine new squares, I ponder
The reason why men like to live in long white plastered rows,
And sigh for our old streets, like those across the Channel yonder,
At Bruges or at Antwerp, such as everybody knows.
But our river still is beautiful, rejoicing in the quaintest
Old corners for a painter (till the new quays are begun).
See there the line of distant hills, and where the blue is faintest,


Page 37


The brown sails of the barges lie slanting in the sun.
Here's a steamer--now we're in it--one is passing every minute;
There's the palace of St. Stephen, which they call "a dream in stone;"
But I think, beyond all question, it was in an indigestion
That the architect devised those scrolls whose language is unknown.
Now we pass the Lollards' Tower as we glide upon our journey,
And think of Wicliffe's ashes scattered wide across the sea;
Pass the site of ancient Ranelagh, which (vide Fanny Burney)
Brings up the tales we read at school to Laurence and to me.
At last we get to Putney, and we rush across the river,


Page 38


The gentle rural river, flowing softly through the grass;
And we walk more fast than ever, for our nerves are in a quiver,
Till we mount the hill of Wimbledon, and see the shadows pass
Athwart the budding chestnuts, and clear brown water lying,
Fill'd with the click of insects, among the yellowing gorse;
Here there is no human creature, and the only living feature
Of all this glorious common is that idle old white horse;
And he is very happy, cropping herbage fresh and sappy,
And stretching out his tired legs through all the lonely day,--
And the lark is up on high, singing madly in the sky,--


Page 39


Ah! I see a parasol from that cottage slowly stroll,
And a little dog come barking with a little child at play,--
And, Laurence, look in yonder hedge--is it--it is white May!
Oh! I see the fields of Warwick, and the tower of old St. Mary's--
The grand grey tower which Wren designed--and the common melts away;
I am on the lilied Avon, and among the Stratford fairies,
I am on my own dear Avon, a happy child at play;--
I remember--this is Middlesex--sweet vision, wilt not stay?
Dear Laurence, jump across the stream and bring that branch of May.
It is, indeed, a day of days, the sunlight grows more mellow,
As the sun goes softly sloping down towards the woods of Combe;


Page 40


The sky is blue, the hills are blue, the budding gorse is yellow,
And all the air is happy with a mixture of perfume.
Oh, Laurence! when a judge, and wise in all the learned fudge
Of that book I shut this morning, and on your way to riches,
When, in ample wig and sleeve, your guineas you receive,
They'll not be half so golden as the primrose in these ditches.
See, they drop about the ground, and sing without a sound,
Thick clusters of anemones, and primrose-roots by dozens;
Saucy blooms without a measure blow in wantonness of pleasure,
And nobody to know it but two wandering London cousins;


Page 41


So they blow from day to day as if in weariless devotion,
And gaze full-browed upon the sky through all their lonely hours;
Ah! none but eyes of Londoners could brim with such emotion--
We almost feel inclined to kneel and offer thanks for flowers!
The gracious, golden primroses! the starry, white anemones!
Fill up the basket right and left, we've beggars for the hoard.
Let's sing a refrain in this wood, "May Ruskin rule his enemies!"
(I think that we are trespassing--but never mind the board!)
There scampers off a rabbit! If you catch that cruel habit
Of trenching on God's glorious woods with a murder-loaded gun,


Page 42


I give you warning, Laurence, I shall hold you in abhorrence,
And we two cousins from that day are surely one and one!
I hate a sporting gentleman--now, don't quote Isaak Walton;
And, if you seek the woodlands, take a basket or a book;
If you want to catch a linnet, try if salt has virtue in it,
But leave dear bunny scatheless, and poor fish without a hook.
For if you touch the dainty things with any evil meaning,
And scatter blood and agony through these bright woodland bowers,
Bethink you of a sleepless Eye from highest Heaven leaning--
Don't dare go down upon your knee and offer thanks for flowers.


Page 43


The sun is sinking in the west, let's leave the wood behind us,
Across the road, and up the steps, see here is Richmond Park;
Let's plunge amid the ferny glades, where only deer can find us--
It wants an hour to sunset yet, and two before it's dark.
See! the fairy roofs of Sydenham! they are gleaming in the distance,
The silver roofs of Sydenham in the far enchanted land;
We'll burst those gates some summer-morn, in spite of all resistance,
And hear the organ pealing out the anthem as we planned;
The palms shall wave their fan-like leaves, the eastern flowers shall tremble,
And think it is the desert-wind in the volume of the sound;


Page 44


We'll have a special service there when first the crowds assemble,
And happy feet on Christ's own day shall consecrate the ground.
There, now we're on the terrace; see, this regal Thames is winding
Among its poplared islands with a slow majestic pace;
We should see the towers of Windsor if the sun were not so blinding,
It casts a glow on all the trees, and a glory on your face.
Golden is the landscape, and the river, and the people,
The cedar-stems are molten now the sun is going down,--
Let's keep the vision as it is; the clock in yonder steeple
Reminds us it is getting late, and we're miles away from town;


Page 45


I just see the towers of London, the far, faint towers of London;
We'll jump into the second class, beside that satin gown.
See! we run beside the river, on its breast the last rays quiver;
Oh, what an April holyday! and all for half-a-crown!


Page 46

    

FARMHOUSE GARDENS.


OH, dear to me the simple flowers
    Which bloom in gardens such as these,
Let jasmine shine in ladies' bowers,
    And myrtle fringe the southern seas;


Let gentians star primæval rocks,
    And pierce the late-dissolving snow;
But give me gilly-flowers and stocks,
    And those sweet gardens where they grow.


I like grey walls with ivy hung,
    And roofs where flickering shadows play,
Old apple-trees, where birds have sung
    While generations pass'd away.


Page 47


Thick hedges shaven fine and neat,
    And wild ones where the woodbine creeps,
All clumps of blossom smelling sweet,
    All grassy banks where sunshine sleeps.


Tall firs, like sturdy sentinels,
    Elms habited by cawing rooks,
And lilies ringing various bells
    To prayer and praise in shady nooks.


Let India boast her fan-leafed palm,
    And Lebanon her cedar-trees,
Give me a summer Sunday's calm,
    And garden fill'd with flowers like these;


And any song that I can sing
    Will overflood my lips in rhyme;
My heart, possess'd of every thing,
    Forget the sense of space and time;


Page 48


All sorrow softly melt away,
    Dissolving in a rainbow shower;
And I, for one long happy day,
    Dream that I am a sinless flower.


Page 49

    

CARISBROOKE CHIMES.


CARISBROOKE Church on the fifth of November
    Flung out the silver hid deep in her chimes;
This was her burden, "Be pleased to remember
    The ill which they did in papistical times!"


Over the woods and the fields rich with tillage,
    That fairest of islands embellishing still,
People who walked in the streets of the village
    Might hear the sweet echoes chime back from the hill.


I think, my old church, you are somewhat ungracious,


Page 50


    And do not remember from whence you descended;
Who planned you so skilfully, framed you so spacious,
    And laid your stone walls with zeal pious and splendid!


What was the fount of that bountiful spirit
    Which fashioned each porch to the innermost Throne?
Who pierced the fair windows whose light we inherit,
    And carved the quaint heads of your corbels of stone?


Do you forget how the people rejoicèd
    When first you stood finished, the crown of the vale?
What hymns of thanksgiving rose myriad-voicèd,
    What rich scent of incense was borne on the gale?


Page 51


Or have you forgotten how red were the roses
    Which wreathed the new altar now ancient and gray?
Ah! many a witness around you reposes,
    Whose dead lips, unsealed, would remember that day!


Pacing the churchyard by moonlight in summer,
    Watching the rainbow when green leaves turn sere,
I think to the heart of a thoughtful new-comer,
    Each trace of the old Faith should surely be dear.


All she did here was both noble and tender--
    God save her living core--peace to her dust;
Inspired by her beauty, amazed by her splendour,
    The poet at least can afford to be just.


Page 52


And I cannot endure to hear you assuring,
At the top of your voice, (though a sweet one, 'tis true!)
The mother who rear'd you with love so enduring,
That she and her children are nothing to you.


Page 53

    

ST. LAURENCE, UNDERCLIFF.


    ST. LAURENCE is a church beside the sea,
    Kissed by the southern wind perpetually.
Those who may care to make and keep my grave,
    There, if they love me, they shall bury me.


    It is the tiniest church in all the land,
    By some old Catholic devoutly planned;
Over its belfry and its little porch
    The ivy trickles down on either hand.


    It is the season when green leaves turn sere;
    To me the loveliest time in all the year;
And he who lingers by the churchyard-wall,
    He will not wonder why it seems so dear.


Page 54


    What is this place like on an autumn-day?--
    One whom I love well, who is far away,
A soul with which each tint would softly blend,
    From flame-tipped russet to the tenderest grey.


    If ever I from that belovèd heart,
    By evil Fate--such is--were doomed to part,
I should not struggle with this bitter world;* * *
    Take me, St. Laurence, hide me where thou art!


Page 55

    

THE WIND AMID THE TREES.


THE skies were dark and bright,
    Like the eyes that I love best,
When I looked into the night
    From a window at the west.


And the night was still and clear,
    Save for whispered litanies,
Breaking faintly on the ear
    From the wind amid the trees!


In silence soft and deep,
    On their stalklets every one,
Hung the little flowers asleep;
    The birds to roost had gone.


Page 56


Not the fluttering of a feather,
    Or the faintest chirp from these,
As they nestled close together,
    Though the wind was in the trees!


Too faint to wake the sleeper,
    Too soft to stir the flowers,
Just as voiceless prayers are deeper,
    It murmured on for hours.


And I whispered, low and near,
    "When I'm gone beyond the seas,
Think how I held it dear,
    That wind amid the trees!"


And now this grey November,
    Though your groves are thin and bare,
I know that you'll remember,
    When you hear it murmuring there.


Page 57


Dear island hearts that listen,
    There's a message in the breeze,
And the voice of one who loves you
    In the wind amid the trees!


Page 58

    

A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM.

    (OBERON loquitur.)


ALAS! they have stolen my Fairy Princess,
And where they have hidden her I cannot guess.
But my life is so lonely without her, I ride
Up by the mountain and down by the tide;
I've asked of her Father, I've asked of her Mother,
But they cannot tell, or they will not discover,
And Men, when I question them, laugh me to scorn,
And no one has seen her since yesterday morn!
I went to the wood, and I asked of the Leaves;
But they have a whispering way that deceives;
And the Oak and the Elm, when they will, can entwine,


Page 59


The thickest of screens with the Ivy and Vine.
I went to the Wind, who replied with a scoff,
He had met her, 'twas true; but a longish way off!
And then the wild fellow swept over the hill,
And all in the wake of his bluster was still.
I went to the Water, who promised a vision,
Then suddenly rippled in bursts of derision,
And asked if I thought he was likely to know
Who had look'd in his mirror an hour ago!
(But ah! if one moment she smiled in my eyes,
Within them for ever the memory lies!)
I went to the Flowers; but the secrets she knows
Are tightly curled up in the heart of the Rose,
And nothing that lovers can swear or forget
Is ever betrayed by the dear Mignonette.
The pale Water-lily lies open and bare,
So openly calm that no story is there;
The Hawthorn is busy in painting her bloom,
And shakes her frail head with a burst of perfume;


Page 60


Not one of the Flowers, alas! will confess
Whatever they know of my Fairy Princess.


O wonderful Nature! I know you have hidden
This delicate darling away from my sight,
I dread that you will not restore her unbidden
By spells which my tongue cannot conjure aright!
What is it you want? A fond heart? It is hers.
A life? All that duty allows is her own.
By the passionate longing which suddenly stirs
The depths of my heart--do not leave me alone!
My past? it is thrilled by the sound of her voice--
My future? is what she will give me--no more--
My present? alas, it can only rejoice
In the sight of a face which you will not restore!
Ah! moved by my pleading, the merciful mother
Has spared me the longing that fearfully kills;
And shown me in dreaming, my love, and no other,
Where she lies fast asleep--in the heart of the hills!




Page 61

    

AT FIRST.


IS there anything--
Nightingales that sing--
Violets in the spring--
            As at first?


Sun and moon arise,
But our accustomed eyes
Have grown more coldly wise
            Than at first!


All the woods are green,
And yet I think the scene
Is not as it hath been--
            At the first!


Page 62


Where sight or thought can range,
Something just a little strange,
Ah! so little! yet a change
            From the first!


My Friends! all you that hear!
Let me whisper in your ear,
Do you love all you held dear
            At the first?


Have you come to hold as nought
What you blindly, fondly thought
By God's special blessing brought
            At the first?


Just as, being dead of pain,
It were awfully in vain
To bid love, even, live again
            As at first!


Page 63


Nay; even could we choose,
Would we seek the hopes we lose--
Or the cheating show refuse
            From the first?


Ah! my heart! it may not be;--
Yet I often dream I see
All the treasures dear to me
            Safely nursed,


(All so bitterly deplored,)--
With their early light restored,
In the keeping of the Lord
            --As at first!


Page 64

    

A DROPPED TRINKET.


AT Reigate, underneath the trees,
The autumn ferns were crisped with brown;
And, fluttering on a fitful breeze,
The autumn-leaves came softly down.
As underneath a tree we stopped,
An ornament of gold I dropped,--
Searched for in vain by wistful eyes;
For there until this hour it lies
Beneath some curving fern.
Winter will bury it with leaves,
And if some future spring upheaves
A golden blossom on the sprout,
A fallen acorn then puts out


Page 65


My little gem, obscured so long,
May wake a wandering poet's song,
Who, heedless of his steps, may pass,
And there, amidst the tangled grass,
Its shining may discern.


Just so some little word may fall
From some one lip, forgot by all;
Buried beneath a thousand days,
While every season overlays
Its freshness more and more.
At length some thought, profound and slow,
Within the public heart shall grow,
Such life and force from many a pen,
And shape its inner life for men,
Who add it to their store.
And when its breathing depths are stirred,
Lo! in its bosom--lies the word!


Page 66

    

IN AN ALBUM.


A SMILE and a tear were disputing one day
    On their different merits and skill;
It grieves me to state that in furious debate
    These friends should behave themselves ill.


But Reason stepped in with her magical wand,
    And bade both the disputants cease,
Severely did chide for their folly and pride,
    And sternly insisted on peace.


"Ye are equal," she said, "then why wrangle so loud?
    Ye are equal in charms and in powers;


Page 67


For the sun might decline on the rosebeds to shine,
    If the rain did not water the flowers.


"And, if one seems to triumph, the other may rest
    Undisturbed by the ghost of a fear;
For the heart which a smile can most surely beguile,
    Is ever most touched by a tear."


Page 68

    

THE OLD CHATEAU.


THROUGH these closecut alleys
    Paced Gabrielle;
At her side, in royal pride,
    Henri bon et bel.
Ah! my love across the sea,
    Dost thou love me as well?


On such an Autumn night,
    Long years ago,
Fell the shadows on the meadows
    Of this old chateau;
All along the gabled roof
    The moonlight lay like snow.


Trembling with a world
    Of hope and fears,


Page 69


She would wait by this old gate
    Watching through her tears,
While he rode from Paris streets,
    Unguarded by his peers.


He, as he came riding on,
    Knew full well
Where she stood outside this wood;
    Many a song doth tell
How she loved this knightly king,
    La charmante Gabrielle!


Clash and clang of swords
    Soon dies away,
Shrined apart in a people's heart
    Love lives alway;
France will not forget this name,
    Gabriele d'Estrées!


Page 70

    

ROBERT BURNS.

      

WRITTEN FOR THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS BIRTH, JANUARY 25, 1859.


A HUNDRED years ago, when George was King,
The second monarch of his race and name,
The man was born whom we are met to sing
Because he won by verse a world-wide fame.
The gentle pasture-country, whence he came,
To-day is vocal with his vigorous song;
Our rudest western isles repeat the same,--
And English voices will the strain prolong
Where'er are heard the accents of the English tongue.


Page 71


To inarticulate yearnings of the heart
He gave a voice which millions learnt to use;
And those who lisped the music of his art
Must not forego this day the grateful dues
His country owes unto that manly muse.
All household love, all patriotic fire,
He sang in noble words none can refuse
To adopt into their speech, a fond desire,
Nursed early in his heart and quivering in his lyre.


Born of a peasant, as a peasant bred,
He drank the simplest milk from Nature's breast;
Him as a weanèd child the old dame fed
With other lore she wots of, unconfessed;
Of fairies, brownies, kelpies, and the rest;
Her children, and not less than we her own;
Whom I, indeed, do think she loves the best,
As being beyond our pale cast out alone;
All these to little Robert early she made known.


Page 72


And in imagination he abode
Much with these beings of the middle air;
Often the witch's broom-stick he bestrode,
Or to their feasts with warlocks did repair;
To meet with ghosts he did not quite despair,--
But inly cherished this unearthly lore,
Which for a poet is beyond compare.
So the boy brooded o'er his hidden store,
And wrapped himself in eerie visions more and more.


Yet none the less, as being a son of toil,
To hardest daily labour was he bound;
His lot it was to till a thankless soil,
And wrestle bread from the unwilling ground,
Weaving young verses to the ploughshare's sound.
Scant fare and scanty clothing had the child,
Who one day should be great and famous found;
But songful spirits early on him smiled,
And with their spells a poor and struggling youth beguiled.


Page 73


While yet his summers were but scarce fifteen,
Love found him standing midst the shocks of corn;
Nor thence unto his latest hour I ween
Did the dear goddess leave him quite forlorn;
And do not thou, O Christian, think it scorn,
If I believe that with transfigured feet
She waited on the slopes beyond the dawn,
And being herself redeemed, those two did meet
And walk the heavenly hills in raiment fair and sweet.


For the youth's heart, though often led astray,
Had yet high instincts for the true and pure,
And gradually cast out its gods of clay,
And shunned the unclean form of each allure.
The names of husband and of sire assure
Sweet natural safeguards against evil thought;
But much, alas, this poet must endure,
Ere from the ways of sin he can be brought,
And find the household rest his better nature sought.


Page 74


Amidst the revel of ungodly men
Too often that melodious voice was heard;
The fire-tipped satire of that matchless pen
Too oft a lower loyalty preferred,
When better conscience in his bosom stirred.
His clear descent from all the bards of eld,
The great commission which his soul revered,
Often as these high thoughts within him swelled,--
Alas, how lightly yet were his Insignia held!


Then great men flattered him, and wise men saw
Amazed the ploughman in their middle stand,
With lips uncultured treat of social law,
And bear him with the noblest of the land;
He who must win his bread by toil of hand!
Old Edinburgh flung wide her haughtiest doors,
And crowned him whom she could not understand;
And Burns found welcome on those thronging floors,
While Beauty lavished smiles, and Wit his richest stores.


Page 75


And yet they held not out a helping hand,
But left him, ruthless, to the flail and plough.
The modest independence he had planned,
How shall he win that simple guerdon now!
Must poverty's cold hand depress him low?
How many bitter thoughts and carking cares
Must weigh on that imperial brain and brow!
Alone the burden of his days he bears,
And when he thinks on Jean, the husband's heart despairs.


At length the humble post he needs he gains;
His wife and children, exiled from his arms,
Are once more his, a balm for all his pains;
And Home and Poesie have surely charms,
Far from great cities and their spiritual harms.
Alas! alas! 'tis but a few short years
Ere cruel fate each envious tongue disarms;


Page 76


And he whom each low heart in secret fears,
Lies dead in manhood's prime, 'mid Scotland's useless tears.


What is the moral of this simple tale?
Nations! who know your great men ere they die,--
At least let your unwonted love avail,
That they in obscure poorness shall not lie;
But, as you deem them great, exalt them high!
And ye, O poets, when you read the same,
Seek not the gauds of human dignity;
Your food and raiment, and the poet's name,--
These should be all you need! not this world's wealth or fame!


Page 77

    

PEACE.


THE steadfast coursing of the stars,
    The waves that ripple to the shore,
The vigorous trees which year by year
    Spread upwards more and more;


The jewel forming in the mine,
    The snow that falls so soft and light,
The rising and the setting sun,
    The growing glooms of night;


All natural things both live and move
    In natural peace that is their own;
Only in our disordered life
    Almost is she unknown.


Page 78


She is not rest, nor sleep, nor death;
    Order and motion ever stand
To carry out her firm behests
    As guards at her right hand.


And something of her living force
    Fashions the lips when Christians say
To Him Whose strength sustains the world,
    "Give us Thy Peace, we pray!"


Page 79

    

PRAYER.


WE pray for earth and earthly things,
    Surely such prayer is nought,
A bended knee, a lifted voice
    Unmixed with holy thought.
To pray for grandeur, power, or gain--
Surely such praying is in vain.


We pray for life when death is nigh,
    It is an earnest prayer;
But often when 'tis on the lip
    Submission wanteth there.
We say, "Thy Will," but know too well
How does the frail fond heart rebel!


Page 80


When human creatures pray for light,
    The prayer is very good,
It surely dawns--and if for grace,
    It welleth as a flood;
Yet selfish yearnings half control
The purest and the noblest soul.


Prayer owns one test which they alone
    Can utter with unshrinking voice,
Who, rendering up each earthly joy,
    Can yet find reason to rejoice;
That of the Godhead's sorrowing Son--
"Father, Thy will, not Mine, be done."


Page 81

    

MAGIC RINGS.


WE read in our childhood of rings which were wrought
    By magical fires in the heart of the hills;
Which could whirl one through space with the quickness of thought,
    And heal with a touch the most deadly of ills!
But the one which I coveted more than the rest,
    Was always described as a beautiful blue,
Which changed in a moment if used as a test,
    And called to distinguish the false from the true.


If I had but this ring on my finger to-day,
    And could ask it each question that burns on my tongue,


Page 82


Dare I listen unshrinking to all it could say,
    Dare I use it like those which are fabled in song!
And if it turned green when applied to the root
    Of a hope which I held, or a heart which I cherished,
Could I turn in my path, shake the dust from my foot,
    And fling them aside like a rose that has perished?


Oh! frail as we are, all our life is a chain
    Of links which half-hidden yet strengthen the rest,
No poor little dream is created in vain,
    If we saw what was true, should we do what was best?
And if we could conjure the shadows that lurk
    In the corners of life into being and form,
Would they leave us the calmness that fits us for work,
    Or rob us of courage to weather the storm?


Page 83


Ah, friend of my heart! if a fairy in play
    Should give you a ring which would whisper of me,
I pray you to cast the temptation away;--
    Since you trust in my love, let it be! let it be!
Restore it, sweet heart, to the hand whence it came,
    Although it may be the most beautiful blue,
And cease not to trust me and love me the same,
    Nor peril the test--if we knew! if we knew!


Page 84

    

THE MERSEY AND THE IRWELL.


        Suggested by a very curious and interesting model of the little town of Liverpool, as it existed in the earlier part of the last century.


A CENTURY since, the Mersey flowed
    Unburdened to the sea;
In the blue air no smoky cloud
    Hung over wood and lea,
Where the old church with the fretted tower
    Had a hamlet round its knee.


And all along the eastern way
    The sheep fed on the track;
The grass grew quietly all the day,
    Only the rooks were black;
And the pedlar frightened the lambs at play
    With his knapsack on his back.


Page 85


Where blended Irk and Irwell streamed
    While Britons pitched the tent,
Where legionary helmets gleamed,
    And Norman bows were bent,
An ancient shrine was once esteemed
    Where pilgrims daily went.


A century since, the pedlar still
    Somewhat of this might know,
Might see the weekly markets fill
    And the people ebb and flow
Beneath St. Mary's on the hill
    A hundred years ago.


Since then a vast and filmy veil
    Is o'er the landscape drawn,
Through which the sunset hues look pale,
    And grey the roseate dawn;
And the fair face of hill and dale
    Is apt to seem forlorn.


Page 86


Smoke, rising from a thousand fires,
    Hides all that past from view;
Vainly the prophet's heart aspires,
    It hides the future too;
And the England of our slow-paced sires
    Is thought upon by few.


Yet man lives not by bread alone--
    How shall he live by gold?
The answer comes in a sudden moan
    Of sickness, hunger, and cold;
And lo! the seed of a new life sown
    In the ruins of the old!


The human heart, which seemed so dead,
    Wakes with a sudden start;
To right and left we hear it said,
    "Nay; 'tis a noble heart,"
And the angels whisper overhead,
    "There's a new shrine in the mart!"


Page 87


And though it be long since daisies grew
    Where Irk and Irwell flow,
If human love springs up anew,
    And angels come and go,
What matters it that the skies were blue
    A hundred years ago?


Page 88


    

THE WORLD OF ART.

      

INSCRIBED TO A.M.H. AND ALL TRUE ARTISTS.


THOU that wouldst enter here,
Hold thy breath inward with an holy fear;
Put off thy shoes, thou in this place wilt see
The outward symbol of Divinity;
And so much of the mystery of things
As man may fathom with the light he brings:
A faint and flickering light, which can but show
The dim uncertain form of all we know;
Yet ever and anon shall fire from God
Flash on the Artists as they humbly plod,
Revealing more than knowledge; they must write
With firm recording hand the momentary sight.


Page 89


Thou that wouldst enter here,
Fashion thy being with an aim austere;
Leave thou thy bitterness of heart behind--
Leave thou the wretched questions of the mind--
Take of grief, only such as, inly worn,
Hath grown incorporate, a blossomed thorn--
Take of love, only such as, nursed in prayer,
Serves to thy spirit as an altar stair--
All base ambitions see that thou forsake--
All the bright armour of a Christian take--
Turn thy face forward ever, cast thy lot
With saints and martyrs, and repent it not!


    Thou must be open to all influence,
Whether of brain, or heart, or soul, or sense;
Thou must have nerves more subtle than the strings
Of that mysterious harp which sobs and sings
Under the elements, yet hold the sway,--
Summon and master dreams which shall not pass away.


Page 90


Be humble in interpreting the light,
Like some clear window undiscerned by sight,
Save in its boundary arch, too sadly small
For that clear glory which might lighten all.
Yet confident as one who holds a torch,
And conquers darkness in a midnight church
For some small space around; be faithful, true,
As one who, standing under heaven's blue,
Sees truly all things visible--far skies,
And the fair flowery earth that near him lies--
And gives them truly back, nor fails to know
More noble those above than this below.


    O Artist! Sculptor! Poet! go thy way
With far more trembling care than others may!
Thou art anointed to as high a place,
Wilt thou but know it, as a man may grace.
Great is the lot assigned thee, great the task
As even the most heroic soul dare ask:


Page 91


Great be thy heart to meet it; it demands
A watchful spirit and untiring hands.
Not thine alone the burden and the care,--
Not thine alone the duty and the prayer,--
All earth prays with thee that thy hands be pure,
Thy work untainted and its teaching sure.


    He who profanely touches things divine,
Carving base cups for sacramental wine;
Spoiling each sacred, sweet, and tender thought,
Bringing all natural gifts to worse than nought,
Wringing the heart of matter forth to show
What coarse and sensual meanings lurk below;
Or rather trailing his own evil mood
Over the innocent beauty God called good;
Placing on all he fingers such a mark
As proves his inner soul defiled and dark;
Sings the sad song our fallen hearts rehearse,
And spends his blessing to record the curse.


Page 92


That he was born, is sorrow! Like a blight
Is Art's false priest, he darkens all our light,
He poisons what were else our healing springs,
And casts a slur on all most holy things.


    Oh, far from all who labour and who pray,
Be such an awful vision swept away!
Better to perish as the poor field flower,
Which lives its beautiful unconscious hour;
Better to be that grass whose rock-sown blades
Utterly wither ere full summer fades;
Better to live unknown and die unwept,
In darkest, humblest shades of nature kept;
Better to know no hope, no power, no love,
No grace of earth below, nor heaven above,
Better the darkest doom can fall on us,
Better to have no life than use it thus!
But to the watchful eyes and praying hearts
Of those who nobly sought and used the Arts,


Page 93


Whose very names all noble things suggest,
What shall Earth give them? Lo! they stand confessed
The intellectual kings of Man. Oh! more,
Ten thousand times more bright the crowns they wore
Than any kings of Men; 'twas theirs to be
Prophets and poets of the mystery;
They bore the brightness and the diadem
Which He who call'd them servants gave to them.
Calm are the nights, and happy are the days,
Of those who sing His love or paint His praise;
For them this glorious world reveals her sign,
The mystic warrant of her birth divine,
Unseen of duller eyes; for them are born
Fresh forms of beauty every eve and morn;
For them is nature but a shadowy veil
Of that white Throne before which suns are pale,
And the light blackness: clearly they discern,
And nobly render all the truths they learn,


Page 94


Being with truth infused; happy is he
Who cannot measure what he strives to be!


    O world of Art! O Shrine
Wherein we treasure all we hold divine,
    How art thou blest!
Whoso is weary in this world of care,
Finds in thy presence a perpetual prayer
    And patient rest;
Finds a reminder of those things which bide
When we and all our phantasms drop aside
Into the gulf of death, a hope sublime,
A realm unfading set apart from time.
Did the great heart of Faith itself decay,--
Were Cross and Church and Altar swept away,--
Thou from thy treasury couldst that faith restore,
And light the Lamp of Sacrifice once more!


    O thou fair world of Art!


Page 95


From whence my soul would never fain depart,
But dwell up there and be
Numbered among that goodly company,
No tint of whose bright freshness can decay,
Nor any silver utterance die away!
There lives whatever in past time befel,
There all that Sagas or that Epics tell,
All the great deeds that thrill a nation's heart
Live, bright and deathless, in the world of Art!
All beauty ever dreamt, all faith, all hope,
Hath there a glorious scope;
All of heroic, exquisite, or splendid--
There Raffaelle walks a king with all his peers attended;
There the grand Sibyls sit, in whose dark eyes
Creation's unredeemèd promise lies,
And thunderous prophets of gigantic mould
Wail us degenerate from the days of old.
There the fair woman of Venetian prime


Page 96


Glows as when first she unveiled her face to Time,
And bade him spare that beauty from the tomb;--
He gave her Titian, and reversed the doom!
Our heavenly types, who move in sacred story,
Cast on the threshold a diviner glory,
And from one central figure, as a sun,
Streams of the heavenly radiance earthward run;
Cradled on lilies as a Child He lies,
And sleeps amidst a chorus of the skies,
Or waxes fair beside a Virgin's knee,
And walks in thoughtful prime by Galilee.


    Many are there we know,
Who visit us in dreams we love them so--
The gracious poet and the stern-eyed saint,
And martyrs whom no flame could cause to faint,
Maidens and youths whom love did bind in one,
(That golden thread which doth through ages run,)


Page 97


Pale matrons mourning in their widow weeds,
And babes whose promise gave a pledge for deeds.


    Ah! thou fair world of Art,
From whence my soul would never fain depart,
Thy skies are ever grand!
They cast the shadow of immortal gloom,
Or glow and throb with supernatural bloom,
And open infinite vistas to the enchanted land.
Thy broad transparent river rolls along,
And every ripple breaks into a song;
On the green banks, where happy lovers go,
The golden apples grow,
And the fair fabulous birds of ancient tale
Warble their magic music without fail;
While winds that tremble round thy peaks of fire,
Bring down rich echoes of the angelic choir.


    Ah, thou fair world of Art!


Page 98


Happy are they who dwell in thee apart,
Who, being dead, yet live,--and cannot die,--
In blessed and blessing immortality;
Happy all bred in thine ethereal air,
And all deemed worthy of translation there!
Happy the meanest servitor who waits
Humbly expectant of thine awful gates.
Thou! nobler conquest than a world-wide throne,
Who dost with more than royal sway enrich thine own!


Page 99


    

VOLUNTARIES.


BEHOLD, O Lord! these unhewn stones
    Piled rudely for thy mighty towers,
And I, condemned to work alone,
    Possessor of few fleeting hours;
Not on the carven cornices
    Shall ever mark of mine belong,
But I might place the lowest range--
    Then for my labour make me strong!


I shall not live when this dear race
    Shall widen to its nobler scope;
Nor dare I say I know my soul
    Will see fulfilment of its hope;


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But if I fail this faith to win,
    Nor think the crown reserved for me,
If these few days be all Thou giv'st,
    Help them to pass in serving Thee!


I know not of myself, my soul
    Is stranger to me than the smile
On some beloved face; no lights
    In future days these days beguile;
I only know I live to learn,
    To love, to struggle, to endure--
When all my sight is swathed in mist,
    Thou and my work alone are sure!


But art not Thou enough! unseen,
    Unproved, unknown, but ever near;
The days are interfused with Thee,
    And every day in Thee is dear!


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Lord of my life! I dare to live
    Where thousands of thy children be,
Living to live by Thy dear power,
    And if I sleep to sleep in Thee!
            1851.


Like berries on some inner bough,
    Which swell, grow red, and straight decay,
Finding for beauty no employ,
    Till all their fitness fades away;
Yet join some elemental force
    And fatten soil for other trees--
How often seem our human lives
    Useless, or useful but as these.


Whether, of earthly children, sires,
    Men toil and store--or whether, crossed
In that most ardent of desires,
    The current of their lives seem lost,


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Whether the task be duly done,
    Or the strong word unnoticed fall,
God counts His workmen one by one,
    And surely, too, He uses all.


No life is lost, no hope is vain,
    No prayer without a sequent deed,
He turns all seeming loss to gain,
    And finds a soil for every seed.
Some fleeting glance He doth endow,
    He sanctifies some casual word,
Unconscious gifts His children show,
    For all is potent with the Lord.


We only see the outer thing,
    The secret heart of force ignore,
Lo! from some harsh ungenial Spring
    Full Summer blossoms forth the more!


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Deep lie the channels of God's grace,
    Deep lies the mystery of use,
He setteth in the chiefest place
    That stone the builders all refuse.


The links of time are counted up,
    And all were nought if one were broken;
He knows the drops in every cup,
    No word remains as if unspoken;
We do not guess what we achieve,
    Dim is the ending of our course,
Our faintest impulse may receive
    The aid of supernatural force.


Half blind amidst the stir of things,
    But safe in following out the law,
We know not what a moment brings,
    Nor which way blows the burning straw.


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When earth's great heart hath ceased to beat,
    And all is finished as foreshown,
Marshalled before the Judgment Seat,
    Then shall we know as we are known.
            1853.


Lord! If on earth Thou hast a Church,
    And dost with fulness dwell therein,
Let me not wander past the porch,
    And dwell forlorn in outer sin.
But whether it be straitly built,
    Or, wide as all the world, embrace
Each soul that hates Thy hated guilt,
    And watches for Thy quickening grace;--


Wherever Thine appointed fold
    Doth like the gates of Morning stand,
And, flinging back its bars of gold,
    Show glimpses of the heavenly land--


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Oh! thither guide my wandering feet,
    And grant me sight, and keep me strong,
That, wrapt in Thy communion sweet,
    I fail not from Thy saints among.


So, stable in my inner mind,
    With peace at heart whate'er befall,
May I abide amidst my kind;
    Accepting, trusting, using all
Which Thou dost in Thy love decree,
    And by Thy will before me cast;
Til the true life bestowed by Thee
    Shall be by Thee resumed at last.
            1855.


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THE CLOUD-FACE.


PAINTED on a little cloud,
    Opposite the sunset sky,
Far above the high-piled crowd,
    Sailing slowly softly by,--
I saw a face, its tender rose
    Framed in braids of golden hair;
A beauty underived of earth,
    Was pictured and suggested there.


Oh, beautiful beyond my thought!
    Oh, beautiful beyond my dream!
Half fading in the tremulous nought,
    Half merging in the golden gleam;


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Spiritual as the blue, blue sky,
    And rich as any western ray,
Most like some woman of the past,
    Whose memory knoweth no decay;


Yet humanly expressioned, full
    Of all that Nature teacheth, power,
And grace, and love, and tender joy,
    Unconscious as of any flower.
Was it some heavenly minister?
    Or memory of mine own, more fair!
The golden braids were lost in stars,
    The cloud-face melted into air!


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THE FIRST PRIMROSE.


LITTLE yellow darling,
    Delicate and pale,
Can thy gentle loveliness
    Brook such a wintry gale,
That nestled by this rushing stream,
Thou sleepest like a lost sunbeam!


Little yellow darling,
    At the breath of your perfume,
I sit within that quiet nook
    Where many sisters bloom;
And all believing, (who does not!)
Pore on the lays of Walter Scott.


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Such old romantic fancies
    Your perfume brings to me,
Half of the proud baronial times,
    And half of woodland free.
A blended vision strangely wrought
Of where I was and what I thought.


The thick green boughs above me wave,
    The falling foam-drops leap,
And lazily unto the bank
    The happy cattle creep.
Where thou, the first of Spring's fair daughters,
Art wet with spray of dancing waters.


How many a joyous noontide walk,
    And evening frolic wild,
Of which thou wert the treasure-trove
    While I was yet a child,
Is with thy tender beauty blent,
And wafted on thy pale pure scent!


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No clouded thought of darker hours
    My dreaming spirit grieves;--
(Which for us all clings round some flowers
    And lurks within their leaves,)
Or meets me, greeting thee again
To cause a gladness dashed with pain.


But days as innocent as thou,
    As peacefully employed,
Which left no shadow on my brow,
    I there with thee enjoyed;
And year by year thy smiles once more
Something of that bright dawn restore.


Sleep quietly, fair bud of hope,
    To wake thee were a crime,
Unfold in all thy simple scope
    For all the appointed time--
Some other eye than mine may bless
The teaching in thy loveliness.


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AUTUMN VIOLETS.


TIMID strangers, I can fancy
    How amidst the hedge ye grew,
While the gusty winds of Autumn
    Coloured leaves upon ye blew,
And the robin-redbreasts gaily
    O'er your fragrant precincts flew.


I can see your mossy dwelling,
    Where, beneath my native skies,
Hang the sprays of scarlet berries
    Gorgeous with autumnal dyes,
While above and all around you
    Hover rainbow-tinted flies.


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I can see the little children
    With blue eyes and locks of gold,
Hunting for you through the meadows,
    Though the fitful breeze blow cold,
Shouting in their baby gladness
    When they find thy buds unfold.


And I see the running streamlet,
    Where in Spring the daisies bloom,
Ye are here, but they are absent,
    Frightened at the coming gloom;
Ye are like the blossoms planted
    Tenderly about a tomb.


And, just so, recall the moments
    When, beneath the minster clang,
We, ere yet we knew a sorrow,
    With the robin-redbreast sang,
And the sound of childish laughter
    Through the peaceful meadows rang.


Page 113


Other flowers perhaps are brighter,
    Other scents as sweet may be,
None recall a happier pastime,
    Or a scene more fair to see;
Therefore have I joined your beauty
    With this simple melody.


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THE LITTLE BIRD.


A LITTLE bird sat on a greenwood tree,
And out of a holy book read he,
    His native notes adorning;
'Twas thus he warbled till close of light,
"Sorrow endureth but for the night,
    Joy cometh in the morning."


A little bird sat on a greenwood tree,
And out of a holy book read he,
    "O ye of little faith,
Ceaselessly thus to tremble when
Not even the sparrows, much less men,
    Unheeded fall in death!"


A little bird sat on a greenwood tree,
And out of a holy book read he,
    Look not to the morrow;


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Each day fit strength for its burden brings,
And they who have treasure in heavenly things
    A heavenly strength can borrow!"


A little bird sat on a greenwood tree,
And out of a holy book read he,
    "No heighth nor any depth,
Nor power, nor principality
Can come between that Heart and thee,
    Which watched while others slept!"


Little bird on the greenwood tree,
Read till the volume ended be,
    Words of holy measure;
When the earth is peopled by righteous men,
And the sheep are folded within the pen
By Christ the Shepherd, and not till then
    Warble for thy pleasure.


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SYMBOLS.


IT is not the rose, though the rose is red,
    And as full of love as a flower can be,
And the lily she bows her stately head
    With a certain grace, but is not like thee!
And the purple pansy opens wide
    Her clear bright eye for whoever may see,
So her velvety bloom and her jewelled pride,
    They have not the look which is dear to me!


The jessamine, she is too pale and too slender,
    The violet dear is too timid by far;
The summer-born sweet-pea, though clinging and tender,
    Is no more like thee than the earth to a star


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Of whom poets aver that the distance would lend her
    That beautiful radiance we worship afar;--
But I seek for a flower whose immaculate splendour
    Is changelessly true as the flame-spirits are.


The little blue flower which true lovers adore,
    Which blooms by the banks of the murmuring stream,
Might daintily pave thy luxurious floor,
    But it is not the flower which I saw in my dream.
Each depth of the wild wood is blossoming o'er
    With delicate riches, yet ever they seem
Too fairily vagrant in nurture, the more
    As I seek for a courtly repose in my theme.


This is the time when the year's in its prime,
    And the rich honeysuckle is blent with the clover,
When Nature yearns for the poet's rhyme,
    And the sweetbrier breaks into kisses all over;


Page 118


When young fawns leap to the tender chime
    Of their mother's bells, and quick eyes discover
How the rabbits run and the squirrels climb,
    And we look at the earth with a smile of a lover.


But wait for a while till the summer is past,
    And woods have a rumour that prophesies death--
A sombre foreshadowing borne on the blast,
    Which comes in a moment and dies at a breath;--
A something, a nothing, which touches the leaves,
    And haunts the hot meadows at noon like a wraith,
And crisps the broad cornfields just bare of their sheaves--
    And I'll show you my blossom and say what it saith.


The flower that I love is both solemn and rare,
    The deep-hearted purple it wears in disdain;
When other gay blossoms are flaunting and fair,
    It spreads out its petals like triumphing pain.


Page 119


Its white is for pureness, its green is for hope,
    All golden its fruit in the soft chilly air;--
The dream it suggests is of infinite scope,
    For the Cross and the Passion are symbolised there!


Page 120


    

FATE.


FATE brooded darkly o'er the ancient world,
    Athens and Rome beneath her shadow dwelt;
The snaky terror of her eye lay curled
    In every joy the trembling peoples felt.


What though the skies were blue, and all their light
    Fell full upon the many-coloured crowd;
When the wrapt audience heard with vague affright
    Flying Orestes wail his doom aloud?


Vainly for them the Alban hills were green,
    Or groves of Academe besprent with flowers,
If the dread Deity, with shears unseen,
    Might cut the quivering thread of mortal hours.


Page 121


Her throne was mystery--and men fled the place,
    But now, behold transfigured what they saw!
Sublimely changed for us that awful Face
    Which Faith has recognised and christened Law.


Page 122


    

UNSPOKEN.


WHEN sitting softly, hand in hand,
    Twilight unbars the gates of speech,
And whispered words sink deeplier down
    Than daylight utterances can reach;--


A something yet remains to say,
    Unspoken by the trembling tongue--
Thoughts which like summer lightning play,
    Or music wandering after song.


Then kneeling, nestling, silently
    I clasp you, darling, in my arms,
Dream of the face I cannot see,
    And feel a thousand vague alarms,


Page 123


Born equally in heart and brain,
    Surge up, and fill my eyes with tears;
I count that heart not over-wise
    Which cannot nurse a thousand fears.


"Children are fed on milk and praise,"
    And love by love's communion lives,
By happy hours of happy days,
    By what it takes and what it gives.


It does not grow by spoken word,
    Nor it can spoken word express,
And vows which may its strength record,
    Can neither make it more nor less.


But through a look, and in a tone,
    And when my darling smiles on me,
I see the luminous shadow thrown,
    Which curtains this great mystery.


Page 124


A mystery which we shall not know
    Till earth and stars have passed away;
And spiritual fires, which faintly glow,
    Shall brighten into perfect day.


Page 125


    

TO-MORROW.


AS a ripple on the water,
    As the wind across the grass,
As the shadows of a vapour,
    As the breath upon a glass,


As starlight in the morning,
    As cloudlets in the day,
Or visions in the sunset,
    We are--and pass away.


We waken throbbing music,
    But cannot bid it linger;
It fades away like fairy harp
    When touched by fairy finger.


Page 126


And the very words we utter
    Sink to silence one by one,
Not the same, although repeated,
    And never more undone.


Link by link the generations
    Live, and love, and smile, and weep,
They awaken from oblivion,
    And vanish--into sleep.


What they build, how swiftly crumbled!
    What they swear, forsworn how soon!
And the children of the morning
    Are the grown men of the noon.


But the grown men of the noon,
    Where at evening will they be?--
To-morrow they will only claim
    A grave;--and a memory?


Page 127


    

KING ARTHUR.


WHEN good King Arthur ruled this land,
    He dwelt at Caerleon-upon-Usk;
He held it with an armed right hand,
    And drank red wine from dawn till dusk.


How stalwart were the warriors then,
    In our time no such maidens are;
King Arthur was the first of men,
    The fairest dame Queen Guenevar.


When Merlin waved his silver wand,
    None dared dispute its awful spells;
On summer-nights the moonlit strand
    Was musical with fairy bells.


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And all the knights in Arthur's Court
    Made glorious that enchanted spot;
And who was first in every sport--
    Ah, who was loved but Launcelot!


How bright the armour which they wore
    When setting out at morning-tide,--
The silken banners which they bore,
    By gentle hands were wrought and dyed.


And who shall rise, and who shall fall,
    When they the robber-bands assail;
And whose pure hands shall duty call
    To seek and find the holy Grail!


Fair company of noble knights
    That ride in that mysterious land,
And celebrate your mystic rites
    With stainless sword in stainless hand!


Page 129


Ah, where is Caerleon-upon-Usk!
    Though somewhere in the south of Wales,--
The wanderer there, at gathering dusk,
    When dreaming o'er these ancient tales,--


Will hardly see such lovely dames,
    Will hardly meet such noble men,
Till bards and prophets prove their claims,
    And good King Arthur--comes again!


Page 130


    

FIRELIGHT.


'TIS dark, and I fancy
    A ring at the bell,--
My heart leapeth up
    With a throb and a swell;
Is it a footstep
    Away in the street,--
Or only the sound
    Of my own heart's beat?


Silence is living
    And breathes in my ear;
Twilight is long
    In this Spring of the year:


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Still she is lingering,
    Tender and wan;--
Deeper--and deeper!
    Now she is gone!


Brooding alone
    With my head on my hand;
Watching the fall
    Of the fast-flowing sand,
The sand which falls ever
    When others drop tears,
To measure the fall
    Of my fast-flowing years;--


Brooding alone
    With my eyes on the fire,
The tick of the clock
    Rises higher and higher;


Page 132


Nervously catching
    The beat of my breast,
And changing its note
    Like a creature possessed.


Articulate meanings
    It struggles to speak,
Ere one can catch them
    They shiver and break;--
My books on the shelf,
    And my prints on the wall,
A fantastical goblin
    Makes sport of them all!


My shadow is dancing,
    The thing that is I
Comes nearer, grows larger
    In wavering by:


Page 133


I think it will utter
    My thought or my name,
Seizing something of life
    In this flickering flame!


I seem to be wrapped
    In the shadow of Death;
To tremble and faint
    At the ice of its breath;
I know not whence comes it,
    What name it deserves,
Of God or the Devil,
    Or only the nerves!


But if he would come
    It would vanish away,
He would call back my soul
    With the warm voice of day;


Page 134


The fear and the terror,
    They could not abide;
I know he is true
    When he sits by my side.


He will bring the new book,
    He will bring the new thought,
He will leave me the richer
    For all he has brought;
He will fill my heart fuller,
    And widen its scope,
And leave me for comfort
    Both memory and hope.


The dread is recoiling,
    There's health in the air,
The clock strikes the hour,
    I awake!--I am--where?--


Page 135


In the land of the Living,
    Where happy hearts be,
And, oh! 'tis my love
    Who is coming to me!


Page 136


    

ABSENCE.


I AM not lonely, O my Love,
    Save in so far I have not thee,
Without whose smile the changeful days
    Are all alike to me.


Yet while the Winter blooms to Spring,
    And Summer doth to Autumn wane,
I will not say their various wealth
    Is lavished forth in vain.


Since Nature hath November days,
    Wherein she broods on future flowers,
We may not put less noble use
    To any time of ours.


Page 137


Their own soft lights and tender glooms
    To poet's eye and poet's ear,
Hath every feeling of the heart,
    And season of the year.


Ah! pondering on the hours I gain,
    And counting up the hours I lose,
I find them both so full of love,
    I scarce know which to choose.


With thee the joy is almost pain,
    And swift the days fleet by;
I find thee not in sight more dear,
    Nor less in absence nigh.


Page 138


    

THE DEAD LOVE.


POOR Love! It died a sudden death
While yet 'twas filled with hope and joy;
No lingering failure of the breath,
No cruel doubt did it annoy;
Till in one evil hour it fell,
Struck by a dull shaft weighted well.


I took it up so dead and cold,
I smoothed its garments' silken fold;--
No living Love so dear, so fair!
The glimmer of its drooping hair
Cast a pale light upon my breast;
I crossed its hands in sign of rest,
And in them laid the sweetest flower
That Summer brings us in her dower,


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Sweet as the Love that perished there,
And burning even as my despair.


Thus placed in decent order all,
I wrapped it in a stainless pall,
And bore it on my heart alway;
Its sweetness kept it from decay,
But well-nigh chilled my heart away;
Yet so it to my life had grown
I could not lay the burden down.
How often on that dreary road
I fainted with mine awful load!
Too many years it was to me
A saintship and a company,
A blessing, an idolatry,
To lay it where I could not see.


Then spake my conscience of remorse,
"This lies upon thee like a curse;


Page 140


Thine arms are full, thine heart is dull,
Lay down thine ill lest it grow worse,
Grow heavier as thou weaker grow,
And crush thee with a weight of snow."


Poor Love! Its dead face looked reproach,
It seemed to feel the foe's approach,
The foe Oblivion, worse than death--
I warmed it with my living breath,
I said, "Fear not, thou poor dead thing!
More precious than all Time can bring;
Thee shall the tenderest thoughts embalm
In memory's safe embracing calm;
Where only hushful breezes blow
From the far shores of long ago;
Bringing soft scent of summer flowers
And music of the golden hours,
And loving words which echo still
Through silence (which they cannot fill).


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For thee the present and the past
Shall melt into one moment;--last,
O mournful Love! that still dost dread
Oblivion for the voiceless dead--
A cross for a memorial
Of sweetness issuing forth from gall,
Of use from loss, of health from pain,
And from spent tears the noblest gain,
I will erect, and lilies three
Will twine about its foot; so be,
O dearest Love! content, that I
May walk once more in liberty.
So shall my deeds, in this regret
And earnest fondness strongly set,
Cling round the happy past, and be
One fresh perpetual song of Thee!"


Page 142


    

TWO ARTISTS.


WITHIN a little room
    Doth one dear Painter sit,
'Tis fringed with Summer bloom,
    And the ivy drops o'er it:
Down doth the ivy drop,
    To all the arts akin;
Shy little birds will stop
    And slily peep therein.
The clouds are curious!
    So is the upper blue;
And the tall tree-tops that laugh at us
    Bend their great heads to you.
Of cloud and tree and spray
    The faint wall-shadow dances,


Page 143


Murmurs the summer wind alway,
    Envious of your sweet fancies!
Here doth full silence reign
    Through all the golden morn,
While dreams flit in and out again
    Ere Art's fair child is born.


Out on the far hill-side,
    Begirt with curling fern,
Where chasing clouds do ride,
    Doth the other Painter learn.
There's neither rock nor tree,
    Nor restive mountain-stream,
Cloud-peak nor valley
    Cut by a slanting beam;--
There's no flood on the meadow,
    There's no bird in the sky,
Nor deep mid-forest shadow,
    But fills this Painter's eye.


Page 144


Perched on a crazy paling,
    Deep in a hawthorn hedge,
Or briny air inhaling
    Which whirls by ocean edge;--
Wherever Nature calls
    Will this brave artist speed,
And I!--whate'er befalls,
    Follow like Ganymede!


Page 145


    

THE CATHEDRAL.


        FINE and strong
        'T has stood for long,
Jetting up its slender lances
Far athwart the archèd sky,
On whose tops the sunshine glances,
While the birds wing brightly by.
        Fine and strong,
        A sculptured song
        Of forest hours,
        Boughs, fruit, and flowers.
The oak, the vine, the summer rose,
With buds and bells no herbist knows,
Twisting round each great stone column,
With its aspect high and solemn.


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        Fine and strong,
        Thick trees among.
Statue fretted, each stern King
Girt about with royal ring
On his brow, and sceptre-laden
With his royal arms engraven;
        For all time,
        A form sublime;
        Never moving,
        Grieving, loving,
Ever looking calmly down
From his post as from a throne,
But one calmer than his own.
        Carven niche,
        Wrought in rich
Knotted angles interlacing,
Holds each fast in its enchasing,
Divided by a slender shaft.
Many a face grotesque has laughed


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Ages from the pipes. A Virgin
Stands upon the porch's margin,
        And the Child
        Thus long has smiled,
Praying the weary and the poor
To come unto His Father's door.
Many warriors hereabout
Lie, some with crossèd hands devout,
Under the blue sky, but others
The great inner aisle-roof covers.
Ah! within 'tis all divine,
        With softened shine
        From every pane
        Whose gorgeous stain
        Lies upon
        The pavement stone,
Telling many an awful story
Of the martyr-days divine;
While a dim torch-lighted glory


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Streams from every pictured shrine;
And the anthem slowly rolls
Over the assembled souls,
        With a free
        Full melody.
God Almighty framed this church
In the artist's mind I think;
Beauty's fountains none may search,
Save who religiously will drink.
        This for the Spirit
        To inherit
        Built he humbly,
        Ay, and dumbly.
We can but say some man once thought
In this wise, nought else is known,--
And with long endeavour wrought
His thoughts divinely into stone!


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ON A GROUP OF JUSTICE AND CHARITY.


WHAT do the scales of Justice hold,
    Poised even in that steady hand?--
    What is that measure closely scanned?
Is one side weighted down with gold?
Or is she clamorous for her right?
    Surely for that she bides too still!
Rather, it seems to me, her sight
    Is cognisant of good and ill.
With level brows this Justice stands
    And weighs her duties one by one;--
And if she pleads, or if commands,
    It is lest these be left undone,


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Or slurred through weakness and constraint;--
    This noble Justice was not bred
In hearts defiled with any taint
    Of selfish seeking, dark and dead.
Give, if you will, another name
    To those fine scales so nicely hung,
And call her Conscience, and proclaim
    Her sovereign right with every tongue--
But, because she is mortal, trust
    Her not alone, lest, too severe,
She take account with diamond dust
    Of baser metal; her beside
    Let loving Charity abide,
With her young children gathered near.


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WHAT DISTANCE PARTETH THEE AND ME?


WHAT distance parteth thee and me!
    It is not space, it is not time--
Death hath not put between our souls
    His mystery cruel and sublime.
The love I bore thee thrills me yet
    In ancient dearness unforgot,
Yet day by day my heart implores
    For that--which cometh not.


Time, touching all with tender hand,
    Will doubtless heal this hurt of mine,
Including this torn human love
    In yearnings more divine.


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Time, bringing blossom to the rose,
    And seed-time unto flowers,
Will doubtless take the sting from out
    These long impatient hours.


In the cool shadow of his wings
    Our feverish sorrows sink to sleep,
He gives us faith in nobler things
    Than Nature, but doth keep,
As in some tower made strong to hold
    A king's rich gems, above
The earthly air which waxeth cold,
    Our tender human love.


Then noble Time, in whom I trust,
    More noble Love, my strength and stay,
I will beseech thee till thou must
    To my strong hope give way;


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But this I know thou wilt not do,
    How stern soe'er thou be,
Thou canst not, while my heart is true,
    Wring all my hope from me.


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FOR ADELAIDE.


WHO is the Poet? He who sings
Of high, abstruse, and hidden things,--
Or rather he who with a liberal voice
Does with the glad hearts of all earth rejoice?
O sweetest Singer! rather would I be
Gifted with thy kind human melody,
Than weave mysterious rhymes and such as seem
Born in the dim depths of some sage's dream.
But I have no such art; they will not choose
The utterance of my harsh ungenial muse
For any cradle chant; I shall not aid
The mournful mother or the loving maid
To find relief in song. I shall not be
Placed side by side, O Poet dear, with thee


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In any grateful thoughts, yet be it known
By all who read how much thou hast mine own!
When, with bent brow and all too anxious heart,
I walk with hurrying step the crowded mart,
And look abroad on men with faithless eyes,
Then do sweet snatches of thy song arise,
And float into my heart like melodies
Down dropping from the far blue deeps of heaven,
Or sweet bells wafted over fields at even.
Therefore, if thanks for any gifts be due,
If any service be esteemèd true,
If any virtues do to verse belong,
Take thou the Poet's name, by right of song!
Suffer that I, who never yet did give
False words to that dear art by which I live,
Pluck down bright bay-leaves from the eternal tree,
And place them where they have true right to be!



Page 157

    

ITALY.


Page 159


    

ROME.


IF ever I in Rome should dwell--
    Rome, the desired of all my heart--
Amidst that world loved long and well,
    The infinite world of ancient art;


And there, by graves so dear to fame,
    A dreaming poet, cast my lot;
What voice within would whisper shame,
    Were England and her needs forgot!


So to myself, with museful mouth,
    I said long since--the while I paced,
With heart that trembled towards the south,
    Through London's coiled and stony waste--


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How doubly dreary seemed the smoke,
    The sunless noon, the starless even,
When o'er my dream a vision broke--
    Italy! or the Courts of Heaven!


Now, walking on this Pincian Hill,
    And watching where the day declines,
(Gilding the Cross of Peter still)
    By Monte Mario's fringe of pines,--


Almost, I think, the heart might grow
    Forgetful of its earlier ties,
And all its life-blood learn to flow
    Familiar with Italian skies.


Not with the love of brain or soul,
    But with that fiery strength we use
In leaning towards the strong control
    Of what we must, not what we choose.


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As mother for child, as wife for spouse,
    As one long exiled yearns for home,
As sinner for the Heavenly House,
    So yearned, so loved I thee, O Rome!


Now I have seen thee--seen the plains,
    The desolate plains where thou dost lie;
Where many a rock-built tomb complains
    Of some great name or race gone by.


And past the walls that round thee sweep
    Have daily ridden. Walls sublime!
Which girdle in thy power, and keep
    Inviolate from the hands of Time.


Just touched and softened by decay,
    Each gate some glorious year recalls;
Kings! Consuls! Emperors! Saints! were they
    Who, mile by mile, linked walls to walls.


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All ancient cities, though great they be,
    (And London counts by tens of tens),
Seem pigmy towns compared to thee;
    While Lincoln, throned amidst her fens,


And York upon her meadow-side,
    (A thousand milestones on her road),
Are footprints, just to show the stride
    With which the giant Cæsar strode!


Yet here, where Cæsar lies in state,
    Amidst the cypress and the rose,
A lovelier mountain mourns his fate,
    A nobler river swiftlier flows.


Oh, starlit streets of ancient Rome,
    Baptized in blood of Christian men!
Happy the hearts that call ye home,
    And feet that toward ye turn again!


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I oft in dreams shall seem to see
    Hills where the olive and the vine
Fall rippling down to meet the sea;
    Or underneath the branching pine


Shall watch the storm-clouds sweeping by,
    Down from the Alban Mount in swirls,
And, blackening all the vaulted sky,
    Rush tangling through our sculptor's curls.


Ah! not too distant fall that day
    When I, a pilgrim far from home,
Shall hear upon the Aurelian Way,
    "Allons, postillon, vite! à Rome."


Page 164


    

ST. JOHN LATERAN.


OF temples built by mortal hands,
    Give honour to the Lateran first;
'Twas here the hope of many lands--
    The infant Church--was nursed:


And grew unto a great estate,
    And waxed strong in grace and power,
With Christ for Head and Faithful Mate,
    And Learning for her dower.


Since first this house to Him was raised,
    Three times five hundred years have run;
For this let Constantine be praised,
    An English mother's son!


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He with his own imperial sword
    Did dig foundations broad and deep,
That henceforth in His hand the Lord
    Rome and her hills should keep.


In after ages, one by one,
    Arose the altars vowed to Heaven;
Each crest is sacred now, but none
    Like this of all the Seven!


Behold she stands! The Mother Church!
    A queen among her countless peers!
Ah! open be that sacred porch
    For thrice five hundred years!


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THE LATERAN CLOISTERS.


THE very roses, thick with bloom,
    Are golden in the golden light;
What sanctifies that belt of gloom?
    What makes this court so bright?


Are other pillars half so rich,
    So dainty delicate as these,
Which curl and twist like woodland niche
    Set in a frame of trees!


Two legendary stones are here,
    And cast a mystery round the spot;
Let none to whom his Lord is dear
    Say, he believes them not!


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Behold the well where Jesus stayed,
    (The heart which questioned also nigh!)
And, "wearied with His journey," bade
    To Fountains never dry.


Until for her who stood beside
    His words alone sufficed,
And as she went her way, she cried,
    "But is not this the Christ!"


See measured on that pillar's round
    The stature of His sacred Head;
Let that be counted holy ground
    Of which such things are said.


And do not weigh what men believe,
    When thus from age to age is told
A tale which eager hearts receive
    With love that grows not cold.


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A garden blessed by many prayers,
    And centuries of sacred fame,
A pilgrim's tender footstep spares,
    If only for the claim!


So pluck the golden Lateran rose
    Which blooms about each ancient stone;--
And Faith which towards a legend flows
    Shall not be left alone!


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THE COELIAN HILL.


OF all the seven which Rome doth boast,
    (Fair hills and nobly crowned!)
I love the Coelian Hill the most,
    And think it holy ground.


'Twas here the deacon Laurence died,
    And here was Gregory's cell;
The heart by honours sorely tried
    Remembered it right well;


And as his pious envoys bore
    The British cross on high,
He, like a sailor turned from shore,
    Looked backward with a sigh,


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And though he held within his hand
    The Church from east to west,
He thought of all the Christian land
    This Coelian Hill the best.


I cannot tell, I know not why,
    But Rome from hence doth wear
Peculiar brightness in the sky
    And beauty in the air.


A dreamy light is in the trees,
    The winding walks are still,
And quietly the perfumed breeze
    Creeps o'er the Coelian Hill.


As tranquil convents faintly chime
    The passing hours of prayer,
They give the only hints that time
    Has marked its progress there.


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The martyr's home, the saint's retreat
    Have filled the place with rest,
The centuries with silent feet
    Have touched its leafy crest;


And Gregory, rising from his sleep,
    Himself would scarcely know
That past of his was buried deep
    A thousand years ago!


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THE APPIAN WAY.


ACROSS the broad Campagna fell
    The softly dropping rain,
Obscured the hills I love so well,
    And blotted out the plain.


As those grey mists came sweeping by,
    I seemed to see the ghosts
Of gallant Roman cavalry
    Ride rallying to their posts.


The best of Rome was buried here,
    Yet lonely is the way!
No living race esteems it dear--
    No pilgrim comes to pray.


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The nameless tombs are overthrown
    And open to the air,
And scarce the very race is known
    Of nobles resting there.


A dreary double file of graves
    That stretch across the land,--
The thick wild grass above them waves,
    A fence on either hand;


And, quivering o'er the traveller's head,
    The long electric wires
Wail faint and sweet about the dead,
    A dirge which never tires.


Pale shades that walk the Elysian groves
    Would chant with tones like these,
Whose minor music softly moves
    Responsive to the breeze.


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When homeward bent at twilight hours
    A yearning thrills through me;--
That long dim line of distant towers,
    Like mountains seen at sea!--


How oft it rises in my h