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Wessex Poems And Other Verses
By
Thomas Hardy
Contents
A
CONFESSION TO A FRIEND IN TROUBLE.
THOUGHTS
OF PHENA AT NEWS OF HER DEATH
TO A
LADY OFFENDED BY A BOOK OF THE WRITER'S.
TO
AN ORPHAN CHILD - A WHIMSEY
IN A
EWELEAZE NEAR WEATHERBURY
THE
FIRE AT TRANTER SWEATLEY'S
Of the miscellaneous collection of verse that
follows, only four pieces have been published, though many were written long
ago, and other partly written. In
some few cases the verses were turned into prose and printed as such, it ha=
ving
been unanticipated at that time that they might see the light.
Whenever an ancient and legitimate word of the
district, for which there was no equivalent in received English, suggested
itself as the most natural, nearest, and often only expression of a thought=
, it
has been made use of, on what seemed good grounds.
The pieces are in a large degree dramatic or
personative in conception; and this even where they are not obviously so.
The dates attached to some of the poems do not
apply to the rough sketches given in illustration, which have been recently
made, and, as may be surmised, are inserted for personal and local reasons =
rather
than for their intrinsic qualities.
T. H.
September 1898.
Change and chancefulness in my flowering
youthtime,
Set me sun by sun near to one unchosen;
Wrought us fellow-like, and despite divergence=
,
Friends interlinked us.
"Cherish him can I while the true one
forthcome -
Come the rich fulfiller of my prevision;
Life is roomy yet, and the odds unbounded.&quo=
t;
So self-communed I.
Thwart my wistful way did a damsel saunter,
Fair, the while unformed to be all-eclipsing;<= o:p>
"Maiden meet," held I, "till ar=
ise
my forefelt
Wonder of women."
Long a visioned hermitage deep desiring,
Tenements uncouth I was fain to house in;
"Let such lodging be for a
breath-while," thought I,
"Soon a more seemly.
"Then, high handiwork will I make my
life-deed,
Truth and Light outshow; but the ripe time
pending,
Intermissive aim at the thing sufficeth."=
Thus I . . . But lo, me!
Mistress, friend, place, aims to be bettered
straightway,
Bettered not has Fate or my hand's achieving;<= o:p>
Sole the showance those of my onward earth-tra=
ck -
Never transcended!
I marked her ruined hues,
Her custom-straitened views,
And asked, "Can there indwell
My Amabel?"
I looked upon her gown,
Once rose, now earthen brown;
The change was like the knell
Of Amabel.
Her step's mechanic ways
Had lost the life of May's;
Her laugh, once sweet in swell,
Spoilt Amabel.
I mused:
"Who sings the strain
I sang ere warmth did wane?
Who thinks its numbers spell
His Amabel?" -
Knowing that, though Love cease,
Love's race shows undecrease;
All find in dorp or dell
An Amabel.
- I felt that I could creep
To some housetop, and weep,
That Time the tyrant fell
Ruled Amabel!
I said (the while I sighed
That love like ours had died),
"Fond things I'll no more tell
To Amabel,
"But leave her to her fate,
And fling across the gate,
'Till the Last Trump, farewell,
O Amabel!'"
1865.
If but some vengeful god would call to me
From up the sky, and laugh: "Thou suffering thing,
Know that thy sorrow is my ecstasy,
That thy love's loss is my hate's profiting!&q=
uot;
Then would I bear, and clench myself, and die,=
Steeled by the sense of ire unmerited;
Half-eased in that a Powerfuller than I
Had willed and meted me the tears I shed.
But not so.&n=
bsp;
How arrives it joy lies slain,
And why unblooms the best hope ever sown?
- Crass Casualty obstructs the sun and rain,
And dicing Time for gladness casts a moan . . =
.
These purblind Doomsters had as readily strown=
Blisses about my pilgrimage as pain.
1866.
TO -
In vision I roamed the flashing Firmament,
So fierce in blazon that the Night waxed wan,<= o:p>
As though with an awed sense of such ostent;
And as I thought my spirit ranged on and on
In footless traverse through ghast heights of =
sky,
To the last chambers of the monstrous Dome,
Where stars the brightest here to darkness die=
:
Then, any spot on our own Earth seemed Home!
And the sick grief that you were far away
Grew pleasant thankfulness that you were near?=
Who might have been, set on some outstep spher=
e,
Less than a Want to me, as day by day
I lived unware, uncaring all that lay
Locked in that Universe taciturn and drear.
1866.
TO -
When you paced forth, to wait maternity,
A dream of other offspring held my mind,
Compounded of us twain as Love designed;
Rare forms, that corporate now will never be!<= o:p>
Should I, too, wed as slave to Mode's decree,<= o:p>
And each thus found apart, of false desire,
A stolid line, whom no high aims will fire
As had fired ours could ever have mingled we;<= o:p>
And, grieved that lives so matched should
mis-compose,
Each mourn the double waste; and question dare=
To the Great Dame whence incarnation flows.
Why those high-purposed children never were:
What will she answer? That she does not care
If the race all such sovereign types unknows.<= o:p>
1866.
Snow-bound in woodland, a mournful word,
Dropt now and then from the bill of a bird,
Reached me on wind-wafts; and thus I heard,
Wearily waiting:-
"I planned her a nest in a leafless tree,=
But the passers eyed and twitted me,
And said:&nbs=
p;
'How reckless a bird is he,
Cheerily mating!'
"Fear-filled, I stayed me till summer-tid=
e,
In lewth of leaves to throne her bride;
But alas! her love for me waned and died,
Wearily waiting.
"Ah, had I been like some I see,
Born to an evergreen nesting-tree,
None had eyed and twitted me,
Cheerily mating!"
1866.
Your troubles shrink not, though I feel them l=
ess
Here, far away, than when I tarried near;
I even smile old smiles--with listlessness -
Yet smiles they are, not ghastly mockeries mer=
e.
A thought too strange to house within my brain=
Haunting its outer precincts I discern:
- That I will not show zeal again to learn
Your griefs, and sharing them, renew my pain .=
. .
It goes, like murky bird or buccaneer
That shapes its lawless figure on the main,
And each new impulse tends to make outflee
The unseemly instinct that had lodgment here;<= o:p>
Yet, comrade old, can bitterer knowledge be
Than that, though banned, such instinct was in=
me!
1866.
We stood by a pond that winter day,
And the sun was white, as though chidden of Go=
d,
And a few leaves lay on the starving sod,
--They had fallen from an ash, and were gray.
Your eyes on me were as eyes that rove
Over tedious riddles solved years ago;
And some words played between us to and fro -<= o:p>
On which lost the more by our love.
The smile on your mouth was the deadest thing<= o:p>
Alive enough to have strength to die;
And a grin of bitterness swept thereby
Like an ominous bird a-wing . . .
Since then, keen lessons that love deceives,
And wrings with wrong, have shaped to me
Your face, and the God-curst sun, and a tree,<= o:p>
=
And a pond edged with grayish leav=
es.
1867.
They bear him to his resting-place -
In slow procession sweeping by;
I follow at a stranger's space;
His kindred they, his sweetheart I.
Unchanged my gown of garish dye,
Though sable-sad is their attire;
But they stand round with griefless eye,
Whilst my regret consumes like fire!
187-.
Upon a poet's page I wrote
Of old two letters of her name;
Part seemed she of the effulgent thought
Whence that high singer's rapture came.
- When now I turn the leaf the same
Immortal light illumes the lay,
But from the letters of her name
The radiance has died away!
1869.
The two were silent in a sunless church,
Whose mildewed walls, uneven paving-stones,
And wasted carvings passed antique research;
And nothing broke the clock's dull monotones.<= o:p>
Leaning against a wormy poppy-head,
So wan and worn that he could scarcely stand,<= o:p>
- For he was soon to die,--he softly said,
"Tell me you love me!"--holding hard=
her
hand.
She would have given a world to breathe
"yes" truly,
So much his life seemed handing on her mind,
And hence she lied, her heart persuaded throug=
hly
'Twas worth her soul to be a moment kind.
But the sad need thereof, his nearing death,
So mocked humanity that she shamed to prize
A world conditioned thus, or care for breath
Where Nature such dilemmas could devise.
1866.
Though I waste watches framing words to fetter=
Some spirit to mine own in clasp and kiss,
Out of the night there looms a sense 'twere be=
tter
To fail obtaining whom one fails to miss.
For winning love we win the risk of losing,
And losing love is as one's life were riven;
It cuts like contumely and keen ill-using
To cede what was superfluously given.
Let me then feel no more the fateful thrilling=
That devastates the love-worn wooer's frame,
The hot ado of fevered hopes, the chilling
That agonizes disappointed aim!
So may I live no junctive law fulfilling,
And my heart's table bear no woman's name.
1866.
When you shall see me in the toils of Time,
My lauded beauties carried off from me,
My eyes no longer stars as in their prime,
My name forgot of Maiden Fair and Free;
When in your being heart concedes to mind,
And judgment, though you scarce its process kn=
ow,
Recalls the excellencies I once enshrined,
And you are irked that they have withered so:<= o:p>
Remembering that with me lies not the blame,
That Sportsman Time but rears his brood to kil=
l,
Knowing me in my soul the very same -
One who would die to spare you touch of ill! -=
Will you not grant to old affection's claim
The hand of friendship down Life's sunless hil=
l?
1866.
Perhaps, long hence, when I have passed away,<= o:p>
Some other's feature, accent, thought like min=
e,
Will carry you back to what I used to say,
And bring some memory of your love's decline.<= o:p>
Then you may pause awhile and think, "Poor
jade!"
And yield a sigh to me--as ample due,
Not as the tittle of a debt unpaid
To one who could resign her all to you -
And thus reflecting, you will never see
That your thin thought, in two small words
conveyed,
Was no such fleeting phantom-thought to me,
But the Whole Life wherein my part was played;=
And you amid its fitful masquerade
A Thought--as I in yours but seem to be.
1866.
I will be faithful to thee; aye, I will!
And Death shall choose me with a wondering eye=
That he did not discern and domicile
One his by right ever since that last Good-bye=
!
I have no care for friends, or kin, or prime
Of manhood who deal gently with me here;
Amid the happy people of my time
Who work their love's fulfilment, I appear
Numb as a vane that cankers on its point,
True to the wind that kissed ere canker came;<= o:p>
Despised by souls of Now, who would disjoint
The mind from memory, and make Life all aim,
My old dexterities of hue quite gone,
And nothing left for Love to look upon.
1866.
This love puts all humanity from me;
I can but maledict her, pray her dead,
For giving love and getting love of thee -
Feeding a heart that else mine own had fed!
How much I love I know not, life not known,
Save as some unit I would add love by;
But this I know, my being is but thine own--
Fused from its separateness by ecstasy.
And thus I grasp thy amplitudes, of her
Ungrasped, though helped by nigh-regarding eye=
s;
Canst thou then hate me as an envier
Who see unrecked what I so dearly prize?
Believe me, Lost One, Love is lovelier
The more it shapes its moan in selfish-wise.
1866.
(E. L G.)
Beneath a knap where flown
Nestlings play,
Within walls of weathered stone,
Far away
From the files of formal houses,
By the bough the firstling browses,
Lives a Sweet: no merchants meet,
No man barters, no man sells
Where she dwells.
Upon that fabric fair
"Here is she!"
Seems written everywhere
Unto me.
But to friends and nodding neighbours,
Fellow-wights in lot and labours,
Who descry the times as I,
No such lucid legend tells
Where she dwells.
Should I lapse to what I was
Ere we met;
(Such can not be, but because
Some forget
Let me feign it)--none would notice
That where she I know by rote is
Spread a strange and withering change,
Like a drying of the wells
Where she dwells.
To feel I might have kissed -
Loved as true -
Otherwhere, nor Mine have missed
My life through.
Had I never wandered near her,
Is a smart severe--severer
In the thought that she is nought,
Even as I, beyond the dells
Where she dwells.
And Devotion droops her glance
To recall
What bond-servants of Chance
We are all.
I but found her in that, going
On my errant path unknowing,
I did not out-skirt the spot
That no spot on earth excels,
--Where she dwells!
1870.
(1803)
When Lawyers strive to heal a breach,
And Parsons practise what they preach;
Then Little Boney he'll pounce down,
And march his men on London town!
Rollicum-rorum, tol-lol-lorum,
Rollicum-rorum, tol-lol-lay!
When Justices hold equal scales,
And Rogues are only found in jails;
Then Little Boney he'll pounce down,
And march his men on London town!
Rollicum-rorum, &c.
When Rich Men find their wealth a curse,
And fill therewith the Poor Man's purse;
Then Little Boney he'll pounce down,
And march his men on London town!
Rollicum-rorum, &c.
When Husbands with their Wives agree,
And Maids won't wed from modesty;
Then Little Boney he'll pounce down,
And march his men on London town!
Rollicum-rorum, tol-tol-lorum,
Rollicum-rorum, tol-lol-lay!
1878.
Published in "The Trumpet-Major," 18=
80.
(1793)
BY CORP'L TULLIDGE: see "The Trumpet-Major"<= o:p>
IN MEMORY OF S. C. (PENSIONER). DIED 184-
We trenched, we trumpeted and drummed,
And from our mortars tons of iron hummed
Ath'art the ditch, the month we bombed
The Town o'
Valencieen.
'Twas in the June o' Ninety-dree
(The Duke o' Yark our then Commander been)
The German Legion, Guards, and we
Laid siege=
to
Valencieen.
This was the first time in the war
That French and English spilled each other's g=
ore;
--Few
dreamt how far would roll the roar
Begun at
Valencieen!
'Twas said that we'd no business there
A-topperen the French for disagreen;
However, that's not my affair -
We were at
Valencieen.
Such snocks and slats, since war began
Never knew raw recruit or veteran:
Stone-deaf therence went many a man
Who served=
at
Valencieen.
Into the streets, ath'art the sky,
A hundred thousand balls and bombs were fleen;=
And harmless townsfolk fell to die
Each hour =
at
Valencieen!
And, sweaten wi' the bombardiers,
A shell was slent to shards anighst my ears:
--'Twas nigh the end of hopes and fears
For me at
Valencieen!
They bore my wownded frame to camp,
And shut my gapen skull, and washed en clean,<= o:p>
And jined en wi' a zilver clamp
Thik night=
at
Valencieen.
"We've fetched en back to quick from dead;
But never more on earth while rose is red
Will drum rouse Corpel!" Doctor said
O' me at
Valencieen.
'Twer true. No voice o'
friend or foe
Can reach me now, or any liven been;
And little have I power to know
Since then=
at
Valencieen!
I never hear the zummer hums
O' bees; and don' know when the cuckoo comes;<= o:p>
But night and day I hear the bombs
We threw at
Valencieen . . .
As for the Duke o' Yark in war,
There be some volk whose judgment o' en is mea=
n;
But this I say--a was not far
From great=
at
Valencieen.
O' wild wet nights, when all seems sad,
My wownds come back, as though new wownds I'd =
had;
But yet--at times I'm sort o' glad
I fout at
Valencieen.
Well: Heaven wi' its j=
asper
halls
Is now the on'y Town I care to be in . . .
Good Lord, if Nick should bomb the walls
As we did
Valencieen!
1878-1897.
(August 1813)
WITH THOUGHTS OF SERGEANT M- (PENSIONER), WHO =
DIED
185-.
"Why, Sergeant, stray on the Ivel Way,
As though at home there were spectres rife?
From first to last 'twas a proud career!
And your sunny years with a gracious wife
Have brought you a daughter dear.
"I watched her to-day; a more comely maid=
,
As she danced in her muslin bowed with blue,
Round a Hintock maypole never gayed."
- "Aye, aye; I watched her this day, too,=
As it happens," the Sergeant said.
"My daughter is now," he again began=
,
"Of just such an age as one I knew
When we of the Line and Forlorn-hope van,
On an August morning--a chosen few -
Stormed San Sebastian.
"She's a score less three; so about was S=
HE -
The maiden I wronged in Peninsular days . . .<= o:p>
You may prate of your prowess in lusty times,<= o:p>
But as years gnaw inward you blink your bays,<= o:p>
And see too well your crimes!
"We'd stormed it at night, by the
vlanker-light
Of burning towers, and the mortar's boom:
We'd topped the breach; but had failed to stay=
,
For our files were misled by the baffling gloo=
m;
And we said we'd storm by day.
"So, out of the trenches, with features s=
et,
On that hot, still morning, in measured pace,<= o:p>
Our column climbed; climbed higher yet,
Past the fauss'bray, scarp, up the curtain-fac=
e,
And along the parapet.
"From the battened hornwork the cannoneer=
s
Hove crashing balls of iron fire;
On the shaking gap mount the volunteers
In files, and as they mount expire
Amid curses, groans, and cheers.
"Five hours did we storm, five hours re-f=
orm,
As Death cooled those hot blood pricked on;
Till our cause was helped by a woe within:
They swayed from the summit we'd leapt upon,
And madly we entered in.
"On end for plunder, 'mid rain and thunde=
r
That burst with the lull of our cannonade,
We vamped the streets in the stifling air -
Our hunger unsoothed, our thirst unstayed -
And ransacked the buildings there.
"Down the stony steps of the house-fronts
white
We rolled rich puncheons of Spanish grape,
Till at length, with the fire of the wine alig=
ht,
I saw at a doorway a fair fresh shape -
A woman, a sylph, or sprite.
"Afeard she fled, and with heated head
I pursued to the chamber she called her own;
- When might is right no qualms deter,
And having her helpless and alone
I wreaked my will on her.
"She raised her beseeching eyes to me,
And I heard the words of prayer she sent
In her own soft language . . . Seemingly
I copied those eyes for my punishment
In begetting the girl you see!
"So, to-day I stand with a God-set brand<= o:p>
Like Cain's, when he wandered from kindred's k=
en .
. .
I served through the war that made Europe free=
;
I wived me in peace-year. But, hid from men,
I bear that mark on me.
"And I nightly stray on the Ivel Way
As though at home there were spectres rife;
I delight me not in my proud career;
And 'tis coals of fire that a gracious wife
Should have brought me a daughter dear!"
(As sung by MR. CHARLES CHARRINGTON in the pla=
y of
"The Three
Wayfarers")
=
O my trade it is the rarest one,
Simple shepherds all -
My trade i=
s a sight
to see;
For my customers I tie, and take 'em up on hig=
h,
And waft 'em to a far countree!
My tools are but common ones,
=
Simple shepherds all -
My tools a=
re no
sight to see:
A little hempen string, and a post whereon to
swing,
Are implements enough for me!
To-morrow is my working day,
Simple shepherds all -
To-morrow =
is a
working day for me:
For the farmer's sheep is slain, and the lad w=
ho
did it ta'en,
And on his soul may God ha' mer-cy!
Printed in "The Three Strangers," 18=
83.
(17-)
The sun had wheeled from Grey's to Dammer's Cr=
est,
And still I mused on that Thing imminent:
At length I sought the High-street to the West=
.
The level flare raked pane and pediment
And my wrecked face, and shaped my nearing fri=
end
Like one of those the Furnace held unshent.
"I've news concerning her," he
said. "Attend.
They fly to-night at the late moon's first gle=
am:
Watch with thy steel: two righteous thrusts will end
Her shameless visions and his passioned dream.=
I'll watch with thee, to testify thy wrong -
To aid, maybe.--Law consecrates the scheme.&qu=
ot;
I started, and we paced the flags along
Till I replied: "Since it has come to this
I'll do it!&n=
bsp;
But alone. I can be
strong."
Three hours past Curfew, when the Froom's mild
hiss
Reigned sole, undulled by whirr of merchandize=
,
From Pummery-Tout to where the Gibbet is,
I crossed my pleasaunce hard by Glyd'path Rise=
,
And stood beneath the wall. Eleven strokes went,
And to the door they came, contrariwise,
And met in clasp so close I had but bent
My lifted blade upon them to have let
Their two souls loose upon the firmament.
But something held my arm. "A moment yet
As pray-time ere you wantons die!" I said=
;
And then they saw me. Swift her gaze was set
With eye and cry of love illimited
Upon her Heart-king. Never upon me
Had she thrown look of love so thorough-sped! =
. .
.
At once she flung her faint form shieldingly
On his, against the vengeance of my vows;
The which o'erruling, her shape shielded he.
Blanked by such love, I stood as in a drowse,<= o:p>
And the slow moon edged from the upland nigh,<= o:p>
My sad thoughts moving thuswise: "I may house
And I may husband her, yet what am I
But licensed tyrant to this bonded pair?
Says Charity, Do as ye would be done by."=
. .
.
Hurling my iron to the bushes there,
I bade them stay. And, as if brain and breast
Were passive, they walked with me to the stair=
.
Inside the house none watched; and on we prest=
Before a mirror, in whose gleam I read
Her beauty, his,--and mine own mien unblest;
Till at her room I turned. "Madam," I said,
"Have you the wherewithal for this? Pray speak.
Love fills no cupboard. You'll need daily bread."
"We've nothing, sire," said she;
"and nothing seek.
'Twere base in me to rob my lord unware;
Our hands will earn a pittance week by week.&q=
uot;
And next I saw she'd piled her raiment rare
Within the garde-robes, and her household purs=
e,
Her jewels, and least lace of personal wear;
And stood in homespun. Now grown wholly hers,
I handed her the gold, her jewels all,
And him the choicest of her robes diverse.
"I'll take you to the doorway in the wall=
,
And then adieu," I to them. "Friends, withdraw."
They did so; and she went--beyond recall.
And as I paused beneath the arch I saw
Their moonlit figures--slow, as in surprise -<= o:p>
Descend the slope, and vanish on the haw.
"'Fool,' some will say," I thought.<=
span
style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'> "But who is wise,
Save God alone, to weigh my reasons why?"=
- "Hast thou struck home?" came with=
the
boughs' night-sighs.
It was my friend. "I have struck well. They fly,
But carry wounds that none can cicatrize."=
;
- "Not mortal?" said he. "Lingering--worse," said=
I.
(1813)
Scene:
The Master-tradesmen's Parlour at the Old Ship Inn,
Casterbridge.=
Evening.
"Old Norbert with the flat blue cap--
A German said to be -
Why let your pipe die on your lap,
Your eyes blink absently?" -
- "Ah! . . . Well, I had thought till my
cheek was wet
Of my mother--her voice and mien
When she used to sing and pirouette,
And touse the tambourine
"To the march that yon street-fiddler pli=
es:
She told me 'twas the same
She'd heard from the trumpets, when the Allies=
Her city overcame.
"My father was one of the German Hussars,=
My mother of Leipzig; but he,
Long quartered here, fetched her at close of t=
he
wars,
And a Wessex lad reared me.
"And as I grew up, again and again
She'd tell, after trilling that air,
Of her youth, and the battles on Leipzig plain=
And of all that was suffered there! . . .
"--'Twas a time of alarms. Three Chiefs-at-arms
Combined them to crush One,
And by numbers' might, for in equal fight
He stood the matched of none.
"Carl Schwarzenberg was of the plot,
And Blucher, prompt and prow,
And Jean the Crown-Prince Bernadotte:
Buonaparte was the foe.
"City and plain had felt his reign
From the North to the Middle Sea,
And he'd now sat down in the noble town
Of the King of Saxony.
"October's deep dew its wet gossamer thre=
w
Upon Leipzig's lawns, leaf-strewn,
Where lately each fair avenue
Wrought shade for summer noon.
"To westward two dull rivers crept
Through miles of marsh and slough,
Whereover a streak of whiteness swept -
The Bridge of Lindenau.
"Hard by, in the City, the One, care-toss=
ed,
Gloomed over his shrunken power;
And without the walls the hemming host
Waxed denser every hour.
"He had speech that night on the morrow's
designs
With his chiefs by the bivouac fire,
While the belt of flames from the enemy's line=
s
Flared nigher him yet and nigher.
"Three sky-lights then from the girdling
trine
Told, 'Ready!' As they=
rose
Their flashes seemed his Judgment-Sign
For bleeding Europe's woes.
"'Twas seen how the French watch-fires th=
at
night
Glowed still and steadily;
And the Three rejoiced, for they read in the s=
ight
That the One disdained to flee . . .
"--Five hundred guns began the affray
On next day morn at nine;
Such mad and mangling cannon-play
Had never torn human line.
"Around the town three battles beat,
Contracting like a gin;
As nearer marched the million feet
Of columns closing in.
"The first battle nighed on the low South=
ern
side;
The second by the Western way;
The nearing of the third on the North was hear=
d:
--The
French held all at bay.
"Against the first band did the Emperor s=
tand;
Against the second stood Ney;
Marmont against the third gave the order-word:=
--Thus raged it throughout the day.
"Fifty thousand sturdy souls on those
trampled plains and knolls,
Who met the dawn hopefully,
And were lotted their shares in a quarrel not
theirs,
Dropt then in their agony.
"'O,' the old folks said, 'ye Preachers
stern!
O so-called Christian time!
When will men's swords to ploughshares turn?
When come the promised prime?' . . .
"--The clash of horse and man which that =
day
began,
Closed not as evening wore;
And the morrow's armies, rear and van,
Still mustered more and more.
"From the City towers the Confederate Pow=
ers
Were eyed in glittering lines,
And up from the vast a murmuring passed
As from a wood of pines.
"''Tis well to cover a feeble skill
By numbers!' scoffed He;
'But give me a third of their strength, I'd fi=
ll
Half Hell with their soldiery!'
"All that day raged the war they waged,
And again dumb night held reign,
Save that ever upspread from the dark deathbed=
A miles-wide pant of pain.
"Hard had striven brave Ney, the true
Bertrand,
Victor, and Augereau,
Bold Poniatowski, and Lauriston,
To stay their overthrow;
"But, as in the dream of one sick to deat=
h
There comes a narrowing room
That pens him, body and limbs and breath,
To wait a hideous doom,
"So to Napoleon, in the hush
That held the town and towers
Through these dire nights, a creeping crush
Seemed inborne with the hours.
"One road to the rearward, and but one,
Did fitful Chance allow;
'Twas where the Pleiss' and Elster run -
The Bridge of Lindenau.
"The nineteenth dawned. Down street and Platz
The wasted French sank back,
Stretching long lines across the Flats
And on the bridge-way track;
"When there surged on the sky an earthen
wave,
And stones, and men, as though
Some rebel churchyard crew updrave
Their sepulchres from below.
"To Heaven is blown Bridge Lindenau;
Wrecked regiments reel therefrom;
And rank and file in masses plough
The sullen Elster-Strom.
"A gulf was Lindenau; and dead
Were fifties, hundreds, tens;
And every current rippled red
With Marshal's blood and men's.
"The smart Macdonald swam therein,
And barely won the verge;
Bold Poniatowski plunged him in
Never to re-emerge.
"Then stayed the strife. The remnants wound
Their Rhineward way pell-mell;
And thus did Leipzig City sound
An Empire's passing bell;
"While in cavalcade, with band and blade,=
Came Marshals, Princes, Kings;
And the town was theirs . . . Ay, as simple ma=
id,
My mother saw these things!
"And whenever those notes in the street
begin,
I recall her, and that far scene,
And her acting of how the Allies marched in,
And her touse of the tambourine!"
"Si le marechal Grouchy avait ete rejoint=
par
l'officier que Napoleon
lui avait expedie la veille a dix heures du so=
ir,
toute question eut
disparu.
Mais cet officier n'etait point parvenu a sa destination,
ainsi que le marechal n'a cesse de l'affirmer
toute sa vie, et il
faut l'en croire, car autrement il n'aurait eu
aucune raison pour
hesiter.
Cet officier avait-il ete pris? avait-il passe a l'ennemi?
C'est ce qu'on a toujours ignore."
- THIERS:&nbs=
p;
Histoire de l'Empire.
"Waterloo."
Good Father! . . . 'Twas an eve in middle June=
,
And war was waged anew
By great Napoleon, who for years had strewn
Men's bones all Europe through.
Three nights ere this, with columned corps he'd
crossed
The Sambre at Charleroi,
To move on Brussels, where the English host
Dallied in Parc and Bois.
The yestertide we'd heard the gloomy gun
Growl through the long-sunned day
From Quatre-Bras and Ligny; till the dun
Twilight suppressed the fray;
Albeit therein--as lated tongues bespoke -
Brunswick's high heart was drained,
And Prussia's Line and Landwehr, though unbrok=
e,
Stood cornered and constrained.
And at next noon-time Grouchy slowly passed
With thirty thousand men:
We hoped thenceforth no army, small or vast,
Would trouble us again.
My hut lay deeply in a vale recessed,
And never a soul seemed nigh
When, reassured at length, we went to rest -
My children, wife, and I.
But what was this that broke our humble ease?<= o:p>
What noise, above the rain,
Above the dripping of the poplar trees
That smote along the pane?
- A call of mastery, bidding me arise,
Compelled me to the door,
At which a horseman stood in martial guise -
Splashed--sweating from every pore.
Had I seen Grouchy? Yes? Which track took he?
Could I lead thither on? -
Fulfilment would ensure gold pieces three,
Perchance more gifts anon.
"I bear the Emperor's mandate," then=
he
said,
"Charging the Marshal straight
To strike between the double host ahead
Ere they co-operate,
"Engaging Blucher till the Emperor put
Lord Wellington to flight,
And next the Prussians. This to set afoot
Is my emprise to-night."
I joined him in the mist; but, pausing, sought=
To estimate his say.
Grouchy had made for Wavre; and yet, on though=
t,
I did not lead that way.
I mused:
"If Grouchy thus instructed be,
The clash comes sheer hereon;
My farm is stript. While, as for pieces three,
Money the French have none.
"Grouchy unwarned, moreo'er, the English =
win,
And mine is left to me -
They buy, not borrow."--Hence did I begin=
To lead him treacherously.
By Joidoigne, near to east, as we ondrew,
Dawn pierced the humid air;
And eastward faced I with him, though I knew
Never marched Grouchy there.
Near Ottignies we passed, across the Dyle
(Lim'lette left far aside),
And thence direct toward Pervez and Noville
Through green grain, till he cried:
"I doubt thy conduct, man! no track is he=
re -
I doubt thy gaged word!"
Thereat he scowled on me, and pranced me near,=
And pricked me with his sword.
"Nay, Captain, hold! We skirt, not trace the course
Of Grouchy," said I then:
"As we go, yonder went he, with his force=
Of thirty thousand men."
- At length noon nighed; when west, from
Saint-John's-Mound,
A hoarse artillery boomed,
And from Saint-Lambert's upland, chapel-crowne=
d,
The Prussian squadrons loomed.
Then to the wayless wet gray ground he leapt;<= o:p>
"My mission fails!" he cried;
"Too late for Grouchy now to intercept,
For, peasant, you have lied!"
He turned to pistol me. I sprang, and drew
The sabre from his flank,
And 'twixt his nape and shoulder, ere he knew,=
I struck, and dead he sank.
I hid him deep in nodding rye and oat -
His shroud green stalks and loam;
His requiem the corn-blade's husky note -
And then I hastened home, . . .
- Two armies writhe in coils of red and blue,<= o:p>
And brass and iron clang
From Goumont, past the front of Waterloo,
To Pap'lotte and Smohain.
The Guard Imperial wavered on the height;
The Emperor's face grew glum;
"I sent," he said, "to Grouchy
yesternight,
And yet he does not come!"
'Twas then, Good Father, that the French espie=
d,
Streaking the summer land,
The men of Blucher. But the Emperor cried,
"Grouchy is now at hand!"
And meanwhile Vand'leur, Vivian, Maitland, Kem=
pt,
Met d'Erlon, Friant, Ney;
But Grouchy--mis-sent, blamed, yet blame-exemp=
t -
Grouchy was far away.
By even, slain or struck, Michel the strong,
Bold Travers, Dnop, Delord,
Smart Guyot, Reil-le, l'Heriter, Friant,
Scattered that champaign o'er.
Fallen likewise wronged Duhesme, and skilled L=
obau
Did that red sunset see;
Colbert, Legros, Blancard! . . . And of the fo=
e
Picton and Ponsonby;
With Gordon, Canning, Blackman, Ompteda,
L'Estrange, Delancey, Packe,
Grose, D'Oyly, Stables, Morice, Howard, Hay,
Von Schwerin, Watzdorf, Boek,
Smith, Phelips, Fuller, Lind, and Battersby,
And hosts of ranksmen round . . .
Memorials linger yet to speak to thee
Of those that bit the ground!
The Guards' last column yielded; dykes of dead=
Lay between vale and ridge,
As, thinned yet closing, faint yet fierce, they
sped
In packs to Genappe Bridge.
Safe was my stock; my capple cow unslain;
Intact eac=
h cock
and hen;
But Grouchy far at Wavre all day had lain,
And thirty thousand men.
O Saints, had I but lost my earing corn
And saved the cause once prized!
O Saints, why such false witness had I borne
When late I'd sympathized! . . .
So now, being old, my children eye askance
My slowly dwindling store,
And crave my mite; till, worn with tarriance,<= o:p>
I care for life no more.
To Almighty God henceforth I stand confessed,<= o:p>
And Virgin-Saint Marie;
O Michael, John, and Holy Ones in rest,
Entreat the Lord for me!
(1803)
See "The Trumpet-Major"
IN MEMORY OF ONE OF THE WRITER'S FAMILY WHO WA=
S A
VOLUNTEER DURING
THE WAR WITH NAPOLEON
In a ferny=
byway
Near the g=
reat
South-Wessex Highway,
A homestead raised its breakfast-smoke aloft;
The dew-damps still lay steamless, for the sun=
had
made no sky-way,
And twilig=
ht
cloaked the croft.
'Twas hard=
to
realize on
This snug =
side
the mute horizon
That beyond it hostile armaments might steer,
Save from seeing in the porchway a fair woman =
weep
with eyes on
A harnessed
Volunteer.
In haste h=
e'd
flown there
To his com=
ely
wife alone there,
While marching south hard by, to still her fears,
For she soon would be a mother, and few messen=
gers
were known there
In these
campaigning years.
'Twas time=
to be
Good-bying,
Since the
assembly-hour was nighing
In royal George's town at six that morn;
And betwixt its wharves and this retreat were =
ten
good miles of
hieing
Ere ring of bugle-horn.
"I've=
laid
in food, Dear,
And broach=
ed the
spiced and brewed, Dear;
And if our July hope should antedate,
Let the char-wench mount and gallop by the
halterpath and wood, Dear,
And fetch
assistance straight.
"As f=
or
Buonaparte, forget him;
He's not l=
ike to
land! But let him,
Those strike with aim who strike for wives and sons!
And the war-boats built to float him; 'twere b=
ut
wanted to upset him
A slat from
Nelson's guns!
"But,=
to
assure thee,
And of cre=
eping
fears to cure thee,
If he SHOULD be rumoured anchoring in the Road,
Drive with the nurse to Kingsbere; and let not=
hing
thence allure thee
Till we've=
him
safe-bestowed.
"Now,=
to
turn to marching matters:-
I've my
knapsack, firelock, spatters,
Crossbelts, priming-horn, stock, bay'net, blackball, clay,
Pouch, magazine, flints, flint-box that at eve=
ry
quick-step clatters;
. . . My heart, Dear; that must stay!"
--With breathings
broken
Farewell w=
as
kissed unspoken,
And they parted there as morning stroked the panes;
And the Volunteer went on, and turned, and twi=
rled
his glove for
token,
And took the coastward lanes.
When above=
He'th
Hills he found him,
He saw, on
gazing round him,
The Barrow-Beacon burning--burning low,
As if, perhaps, uplighted ever since he'd home=
ward
bound him;
And it
meant: Expect the Foe!
Leaving the
byway,
And follow=
ing
swift the highway,
Car and chariot met he, faring fast inland;
"He's anchored, Soldier!" shouted
some: "God save thee, ma=
rching
thy
way,
Th'lt front him on the strand!"
He slowed;=
he
stopped; he paltered
Awhile with
self, and faltered,
"Why courting misadventure shoreward roam?
To Molly, surely! Seek the woods with her till times=
have
altered;
Charity fa=
vours
home.
Else, my d=
enying
He would c=
ome
she'll read as lying -
Think the Barrow-Beacon must have met my eyes--
That my words were not unwareness, but deceit =
of
her, while trying
My life to
jeopardize.
"At h=
ome is
stocked provision,
And to-nig=
ht,
without suspicion,
We might bear it with us to a covert near;
Such sin, to save a childing wife, would earn =
it
Christ's remission,
Though none forgive it here!"
While thus=
he,
thinking,
A little b=
ird,
quick drinking
Among the crowfoot tufts the river bore,
Was tangled in their stringy arms, and flutter=
ed,
well-nigh sinking,
Near him, upon the moor.
He stepped=
in,
reached, and seized it,
And, preen=
ing,
had released it
But that a thought of Holy Writ occurred,
And Signs Divine ere battle, till it seemed him
Heaven had pleased it
As guide to send the bird.
"O Lo=
rd,
direct me! . . .
Doth Duty =
now
expect me
To march a-coast, or guard my weak ones near?
Give this bird a flight according, that I then=
ce
know to elect me
The southward or the rear."
He loosed =
his
clasp; when, rising,
The bird--=
as if
surmising -
Bore due to southward, crossing by the Froom,
And Durnover Great-Field and Fort, the soldier
clear advising -
Prompted h=
e wist
by Whom.
Then on he
panted
By grim Ma=
i-Don,
and slanted
Up the steep Ridge-way, hearkening betwixt whiles;
Till, nearing coast and harbour, he beheld the
shore-line planted
With Foot and Horse for miles.
Mistrustin=
g not
the omen,
He gained =
the
beach, where Yeomen,
Militia, Fencibles, and Pikemen bold,
With Regulars in thousands, were enmassed to m=
eet
the Foemen,
Whose fleet had not yet shoaled.
Captain and
Colonel,
Sere Gener=
als,
Ensigns vernal,
Were there; of neighbour-natives, M=
ichel,
Smith,
Meggs, Bingham, Gambier, Cunningham, roused by=
the
hued nocturnal
Swoop on their land and kith.
But Buonap=
arte
still tarried;
His projec=
t had
miscarried;
At the last hour, equipped for victory,
The fleet had paused; his subtle combinations =
had
been parried
By British strategy.
Homeward
returning
Anon, no b=
eacons
burning,
No alarms, the Volunteer, in modest bliss,
Te Deum sang with wife and friends: "We praise Thee, Lord,
discerning
That Thou =
hast
helped in this!"
'Twas a death-bed summons, and forth I went
By the way of the Western Wall, so drear
On that winter night, and sought a gate -
The home, =
by
Fate,
Of one I had long held dear.
And there, as I paused by her tenement,
And the trees shed on me their rime and hoar,<= o:p>
I thought of the man who had left her lone -
Him who ma=
de her
his own
When I loved her, long before.
The rooms within had the piteous shine
That home-things wear when there's aught amiss=
;
From the stairway floated the rise and fall
Of an infa=
nt's
call,
Whose birth had brought her to this.
Her life was the price she would pay for that
whine -
For a child by the man she did not love.
"But let that rest for ever," I said=
,
And bent my
tread
To the chamber up above.
She took my hand in her thin white own,
And smiled her thanks--though nigh too weak -<= o:p>
And made them a sign to leave us there
Then falte=
red,
ere
She could bring herself to speak.
"'Twas to see you before I go--he'll cond=
one
Such a natural thing now my time's not much--<= o:p>
When Death is so near it hustles hence
All passio=
ned
sense
Between woman and man as such!
"My husband is absent. As heretofore
The City detains him. But, in truth,
He has not been kind . . . I will speak no bla=
me,
But--the c=
hild
is lame;
O, I pray she may reach his ruth!
"Forgive past days--I can say no more -
Maybe if we'd wedded you'd now repine! . . .
But I treated you ill. I was punished. Farewell!
--Truth shall I =
tell?
Would the child were yours and mine!
"As a wife I was true. But, such my unease
That, could I insert a deed back in Time,
I'd make her yours, to secure your care;
And the sc=
andal
bear,
And the penalty for the crime!"
- When I had left, and the swinging trees
Rang above me, as lauding her candid say,
Another was I. Her words were enough:
Came smoot=
h,
came rough,
I felt I could live my day.
Next night she died; and her obsequies
In the Field of Tombs, by the Via renowned,
Had her husband's heed. His tendance spent,
I often we=
nt
And pondered by her mound.
All that year and the next year whiled,
And I still went thitherward in the gloam;
But the Town forgot her and her nook,
And her hu=
sband
took
Another Love to his home.
And the rumour flew that the lame lone child
Whom she wished for its safety child of mine,<= o:p>
Was treated ill when offspring came
Of the new=
-made
dame,
And marked a more vigorous line.
A smarter grief within me wrought
Than even at loss of her so dear;
Dead the being whose soul my soul suffused,
Her child
ill-used,
I helpless to interfere!
One eve as I stood at my spot of thought
In the white-stoned Garth, brooding thus her
wrong,
Her husband neared; and to shun his view
By her hal=
lowed
mew
I went from the tombs among
To the Cirque of the Gladiators which faced -<= o:p>
That haggard mark of Imperial Rome,
Whose Pagan echoes mock the chime
Of our Chr=
istian
time:
It was void, and I inward clomb.
Scarce night the sun's gold touch displaced
From the vast Rotund and the neighbouring dead=
When her husband followed; bowed; half-passed,=
With lip u=
pcast;
Then, halting, sullenly said:
"It is noised that you visit my first wif=
e's
tomb.
Now, I gave her an honoured name to bear
While living, when dead. So I've claim to ask
By what ri=
ght
you task
My patience by vigiling there?
"There's decency even in death, I assume;=
Preserve it, sir, and keep away;
For the mother of my first-born you
Show mind =
undue!
--Sir, I've nothing more to say."
A desperate stroke discerned I then -
God pardon--or pardon not--the lie;
She had sighed that she wished (lest the child
should pine
Of slights)
'twere mine,
So I said: "But t=
he
father I.
"That you thought it yours is the way of =
men;
But I won her troth long ere your day:
You learnt how, in dying, she summoned me?
'Twas in f=
ealty.
--Sir, I've nothing more to say,
"Save that, if you'll hand me my little m=
aid,
I'll take her, and rear her, and spare you toi=
l.
Think it more than a friendly act none can;
I'm a lone=
ly
man,
While you've a large pot to boil.
"If not, and you'll put it to ball or bla=
de -
To-night, to-morrow night, anywhen -
I'll meet you here . . . But think of it,
And in sea=
son
fit
Let me hear from you again."
- Well, I went away, hoping; but nought I hear=
d
Of my stroke for the child, till there greeted=
me
A little voice that one day came
To my
window-frame
And babbled innocently:
"My father who's not my own, sends word
I'm to stay here, sir, where I belong!"
Next a writing came: "Since the child was the frui=
t
Of your la=
wless
suit,
Pray take her, to right a wrong."
And I did.&nb=
sp;
And I gave the child my love,
And the child loved me, and estranged us none.=
But compunctions loomed; for I'd harmed the de=
ad
By what I'=
d said
For the good of the living one.
- Yet though, God wot, I am sinner enough,
And unworthy the woman who drew me so,
Perhaps this wrong for her darling's good
She forgiv=
es, or
would,
If only she could know!
To Jenny came a gentle youth
From inland leazes lone,
His love was fresh as apple-blooth
By Parrett, Yeo, or Tone.
And duly he entreated her
To be his tender minister,
And call him aye her own.
Fair Jenny's life had hardly been
A life of modesty;
At Casterbridge experience keen
Of many loves had she
From scarcely sixteen years above;
Among them sundry troopers of
The King's-Own Cavalry.
But each with charger, sword, and gun,
Had bluffed the Biscay wave;
And Jenny prized her gentle one
For all the love he gave.
She vowed to be, if they were wed,
His honest wife in heart and head
From bride-ale hour to grave.
Wedded they were. Her husband's trust
In Jenny knew no bound,
And Jenny kept her pure and just,
Till even malice found
No sin or sign of ill to be
In one who walked so decently
The duteous helpmate's round.
Two sons were born, and bloomed to men,
And roamed, and were as not:
Alone was Jenny left again
As ere her mind had sought
A solace in domestic joys,
And ere the vanished pair of boys
Were sent to sun her cot.
She numbered near on sixty years,
And passed as elderly,
When, in the street, with flush of fears,
One day discovered she,
From shine of swords and thump of drum.
Her early loves from war had come,
The King's-Own Cavalry.
She turned aside, and bowed her head
Anigh Saint Peter's door;
"Alas for chastened thoughts!" she s=
aid;
"I'm faded now, and hoar,
And yet those notes--they thrill me through,
And those gay forms move me anew
As in the years of yore!" . . .
'Twas Christmas, and the Phoenix Inn
Was lit with tapers tall,
For thirty of the trooper men
Had vowed to give a ball
As "Theirs" had done ('twas handed d=
own)
When lying in the selfsame town
Ere Buonaparte's fall.
That night the throbbing "Soldier's
Joy,"
The measured tread and sway
Of "Fancy-Lad" and "Maiden
Coy,"
Reached Jenny as she lay
Beside her spouse; till springtide blood
Seemed scouring through her like a flood
That whisked the years away.
She rose, and rayed, and decked her head
Where the bleached hairs ran thin;
Upon her cap two bows of red
She fixed with hasty pin;
Unheard descending to the street,
She trod the flags with tune-led feet,
And stood before the Inn.
Save for the dancers', not a sound
Disturbed the icy air;
No watchman on his midnight round
Or traveller was there;
But over All-Saints', high and bright,
Pulsed to the music Sirius white,
The Wain by Bullstake Square.
She knocked, but found her further stride
Checked by a sergeant tall:
"Gay Granny, whence come you?" he cr=
ied;
"This is a private ball."
- "No one has more right here than me!
Ere you were born, man," answered she,
"I knew the regiment all!"
"Take not the lady's visit ill!"
Upspoke the steward free;
"We lack sufficient partners still,
So, prithee let her be!"
They seized and whirled her 'mid the maze,
And Jenny felt as in the days
Of her immodesty.
Hour chased each hour, and night advanced;
She sped as shod with wings;
Each time and every time she danced -
Reels, jigs, poussettes, and flings:
They cheered her as she soared and swooped,
(She'd learnt ere art in dancing drooped
From hops to slothful swings).
The favourite Quick-step "Speed the
Plough" -
(Cross hands, cast off, and wheel)--
"The Triumph," "Sylph,"
"The Row-dow-dow,"
Famed "Major Malley's Reel,"
"The Duke of York's," "The Fairy
Dance,"
"The Bridge of Lodi" (brought from
France),
She beat out, toe and heel.
The "Fall of Paris" clanged its clos=
e,
And Peter's chime told four,
When Jenny, bosom-beating, rose
To seek her silent door.
They tiptoed in escorting her,
Lest stroke of heel or clink of spur
Should break her goodman's snore.
The fire that late had burnt fell slack
When lone at last stood she;
Her nine-and-fifty years came back;
She sank upon her knee
Beside the durn, and like a dart
A something arrowed through her heart
In shoots of agony.
Their footsteps died as she leant there,
Lit by the morning star
Hanging above the moorland, where
The aged elm-rows are;
And, as o'ernight, from Pummery Ridge
To Maembury Ring and Standfast Bridge
No life stirred, near or far.
Though inner mischief worked amain,
She reached her husband's side;
Where, toil-weary, as he had lain
Beneath the patchwork pied
When yestereve she'd forthward crept,
And as unwitting, still he slept
Who did in her confide.
A tear sprang as she turned and viewed
His features free from guile;
She kissed him long, as when, just wooed,
She chose his domicile.
She felt she could have given her life
To be the single-hearted wife
That she had been erstwhile.
Time wore to six. Her husband rose
And struck the steel and stone;
He glanced at Jenny, whose repose
Seemed deeper than his own.
With dumb dismay, on closer sight,
He gathered sense that in the night,
Or morn, her soul had flown.
When told that some too mighty strain
For one so many-yeared
Had burst her bosom's master-vein,
His doubts remained unstirred.
His Jenny had not left his side
Betwixt the eve and morning-tide:
--The
King's said not a word.
Well! times are not as times were then,
Nor fair ones half so free;
And truly they were martial men,
The King's-Own Cavalry.
And when they went from Casterbridge
And vanished over Mellstock Ridge,
=
'Twas saddest morn to see.
(KHYBER PASS, 1842)
A TRADITION OF J. B. L-, T. G. B-, AND J. L-.<= o:p>
Three captains went to Indian wars,
And only one returned:
Their mate of yore, he singly wore
The laurels all had earned.
At home he sought the ancient aisle
Wherein, untrumped of fame,
The three had sat in pupilage,
And each had carved his name.
The names, rough-hewn, of equal size,
Stood on the panel still;
Unequal since.--"'Twas theirs to aim,
Mine was it to fulfil!"
- "Who saves his life shall lose it,
friends!"
Outspake the preacher then,
Unweeting he his listener, who
Looked at the names again.
That he had come and they'd been stayed,
'Twas but the chance of war:
Another chance, and they'd sat here,
And he had lain afar.
Yet saw he something in the lives
Of those who'd ceased to live
That sphered them with a majesty
Which living failed to give.
Transcendent triumph in return
No longer lit his brain;
Transcendence rayed the distant urn
Where slept the fallen twain.
A SIGN-SEEKER<=
span
style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size:16.0pt;line-height:115%;mso-fa=
reast-font-family:
Calibri'>
I mark the months in liveries dank and dry,
The noontides many-shaped and hued;
I see the nightfall shades subtrude,
And hear the monotonous hours clang negligently
by.
I view the evening bonfires of the sun
On hills where morning rains have hissed;
The eyeless countenance of the mist
Pallidly rising when the summer droughts are d=
one.
I have seen the lightning-blade, the leaping s=
tar,
The cauldrons of the sea in storm,
Have felt the earthquake's lifting arm,
And trodden where abysmal fires and snow-cones
are.
I learn to prophesy the hid eclipse,
The coming of eccentric orbs;
To mete the dust the sky absorbs,
To weigh the sun, and fix the hour each planet
dips.
I witness fellow earth-men surge and strive;
Assemblies meet, and throb, and part;
Death's soothing finger, sorrow's smart;
- All the vast various moils that mean a world
alive.
But that I fain would wot of shuns my sense -<= o:p>
Those sights of which old prophets tell,
Those signs the general word so well,
Vouchsafed to their unheed, denied my long
suspense.
In graveyard green, behind his monument
To glimpse a phantom parent, friend,
Wearing his smile, and "Not the end!"
Outbreathing softly: that were blest enlightenment;
Or, if a dead Love's lips, whom dreams reveal<= o:p>
When midnight imps of King Decay
Delve sly to solve me back to clay,
Should leave some print to prove her spirit-ki=
sses
real;
Or, when Earth's Frail lie bleeding of her Str=
ong,
If some Recorder, as in Writ,
Near to the weary scene should flit
And drop one plume as pledge that Heaven inscr=
olls
the wrong.
- There are who, rapt to heights of tranced tr=
ust,
These tokens claim to feel and see,
Read radiant hints of times to be -
Of heart to heart returning after dust to dust=
.
Such scope is granted not to lives like mine .=
. .
I have lain in dead men's beds, have walked
The tombs of those with whom I'd talked,
Called many a gone and goodly one to shape a s=
ign,
And panted for response. But none replies;
No warnings loom, nor whisperings
To open out my limitings,
And Nescience mutely muses: When a man falls he lies.
(17-)
"Alive?"--And I leapt in my wonder,<= o:p>
Was faint of my joyance,
And grasses and grove shone in garments
Of glory to me.
"She lives, in a plenteous well-being,
To-day as aforehand;
The dead bore the name--though a rare one -
The name that bore she."
She lived . . . I, afar in the city
Of frenzy-led factions,
Had squandered green years and maturer
In bowing the knee
To Baals illusive and specious,
Till chance had there voiced me
That one I loved vainly in nonage
Had ceased her to be.
The passion the planets had scowled on,
And change had let dwindle,
Her death-rumour smartly relifted
To full apogee.
I mounted a steed in the dawning
With acheful remembrance,
And made for the ancient West Highway
To far Exonb'ry.
Passing heaths, and the House of Long Sieging,=
I neared the thin steeple
That tops the fair fane of Poore's olden
Episcopal see;
And, changing anew my onbearer,
I traversed the downland
Whereon the bleak hill-graves of Chieftains
Bulge barren of tree;
And still sadly onward I followed
That Highway the Icen,
Which trails its pale riband down Wessex
O'er lynchet and lea.
Along through the Stour-bordered Forum,
Where Legions had wayfared,
And where the slow river upglasses
Its green canopy,
And by Weatherbury Castle, and thencefrom
Through Casterbridge held I
Still on, to entomb her my vision
Saw stretched pallidly.
No highwayman's trot blew the night-wind
To me so life-weary,
But only the creak of the gibbets
Or waggoners' jee.
Triple-ramparted Maidon gloomed grayly
Above me from southward,
And north the hill-fortress of Eggar,
And square Pummerie.
The Nine-Pillared Cromlech, the Bride-streams,=
The Axe, and the Otter
I passed, to the gate of the city
Where Exe scents the sea;
Till, spent, in the graveacre pausing,
I learnt 'twas not my Love
To whom Mother Church had just murmured
A last lullaby.
- "Then, where dwells the Canon's kinswom=
an,
My friend of aforetime?"--
('Twas hard to repress my heart-heavings
And new ecstasy.)
"She
wedded."--"Ah!"--"Wedded beneath her -
She keeps the stage-hostel
Ten miles hence, beside the great Highway -
The famed Lions-Three.
"Her spouse was her lackey--no option
'Twixt wedlock and worse things;
A lapse over-sad for a lady
Of her pedigree!"
I shuddered, said nothing, and wandered
To shades of green laurel:
Too ghastly had grown those first tidings
So brightsome of blee!
For, on my ride hither, I'd halted
Awhile at the Lions,
And her--her whose name had once opened
My heart as a key--
I'd looked on, unknowing, and witnessed
Her jests with the tapsters,
Her liquor-fired face, her thick accents
In naming her fee.
"O God, why this seeming derision!"<= o:p>
I cried in my anguish:
"O once Loved, O fair Unforgotten -
That Thing--meant it thee!
"Inurned and at peace, lost but sainted,<= o:p>
Were grief I could compass;
Depraved--'tis for Christ's poor dependent
A cruel decree!"
I backed on the Highway; but passed not
The hostel. Within the=
re
Too mocking to Love's re-expression
Was Time's repartee!
Uptracking where Legions had wayfared,
By cromlechs unstoried,
And lynchets, and sepultured Chieftains,
In self-colloquy,
A feeling stirred in me and strengthened
That SHE was not my Love,
But she of the garth, who lay rapt in
Her long reverie.
And thence till to-day I persuade me
That this was the true one;
That Death stole intact her young dearness
And innocency.
Frail-witted, illuded they call me;
I may be. 'Tis better<= o:p>
To dream than to own the debasement
Of sweet Cicely.
Moreover I rate it unseemly
To hold that kind Heaven
Could work such device--to her ruin
And my misery.
So, lest I disturb my choice vision,
I shun the West Highway,
Even now, when the knaps ring with rhythms
From blackbird and bee;
And feel that with slumber half-conscious
She rests in the church-hay,
Her spirit unsoiled as in youth-time
When lovers were we.
Upon a noon I pilgrimed through
A pasture, mile by mile,
Unto the place where I last saw
My dead Love's living smile.
And sorrowing I lay me down
Upon the heated sod:
It seemed as if my body pressed
The very ground she trod.
I lay, and thought; and in a trance
She came and stood me by--
The same, even to the marvellous ray
That used to light her eye.
"You draw me, and I come to you,
My faithful one," she said,
In voice that had the moving tone
It bore ere breath had fled.
She said:&nbs=
p;
"'Tis seven years since I died:
Few now remember me;
My husband clasps another bride;
My children's love has she.
"My brethren, sisters, and my friends
Care not to meet my sprite:
Who prized me most I did not know
Till I passed down from sight."
I said:
"My days are lonely here;
I need thy smile alway:
I'll use this night my ball or blade,
And join thee ere the day."
A tremor stirred her tender lips,
Which parted to dissuade:
"That cannot be, O friend," she crie=
d;
"Think, I am but a Shade!
"A Shade but in its mindful ones
Has immortality;
By living, me you keep alive,
By dying you slay me.
"In you resides my single power
Of sweet continuance here;
On your fidelity I count
Through many a coming year."
- I started through me at her plight,
So suddenly confessed:
Dismissing late distaste for life,
I craved its bleak unrest.
"I will not die, my One of all! -
To lengthen out thy days
I'll guard me from minutest harms
That may invest my ways!"
She smiled and went. Since then she comes
Oft when her birth-moon climbs,
Or at the seasons' ingresses
Or anniversary times;
But grows my grief. When I surcease,
Through whom alone lives she,
Ceases my Love, her words, her ways,
Never again to be!
I longed to love a full-boughed beech
And be as high as he:
I stretched an arm within his reach,
And signalled unity.
But with his drip he forced a breach,
And tried to poison me.
I gave the grasp of partnership
To one of other race--
A plane:
he barked him strip by strip
From upper bough to base;
And me therewith; for gone my grip,
My arms could not enlace.
In new affection next I strove
To coll an ash I saw,
And he in trust received my love;
Till with my soft green claw
I cramped and bound him as I wove . . .
Such was my love: ha-h=
a!
By this I gained his strength and height
Without his rivalry.
But in my triumph I lost sight
Of afterhaps. Soon he,=
Being bark-bound, flagged, snapped, fell outri=
ght,
=
And in his fall felled me!
As evening shaped I found me on a moor
Which sight could scarce sustain:
The black lean land, of featureless contour,
Was like a tract in pain.
"This scene, like my own life," I sa=
id,
"is one
Where many glooms abide;
Toned by its fortune to a deadly dun -
Lightless on every side.
I glanced aloft and halted, pleasure-caught
To see the contrast there:
The ray-lit clouds gleamed glory; and I though=
t,
"There's solace everywhere!"
Then bitter self-reproaches as I stood
I dealt me silently
As one perverse--misrepresenting Good
In graceless mutiny.
Against the horizon's dim-discerned wheel
A form rose, strange of mould:
That he was hideous, hopeless, I could feel
Rather than could behold.
"'Tis a dead spot, where even the light l=
ies
spent
To darkness!" croaked the Thing.
"Not if you look aloft!" said I, int=
ent
On my new reasoning.
"Yea--but await awhile!" =
he
cried. "Ho-ho! -
Look now aloft and see!"
I looked.&nbs=
p;
There, too, sat night:
Heaven's radiant show
Had gone. Then chuckle=
d he.
When, soul in soul reflected,
We breathed an aethered air,
When we neglected
All things elsewhere,
And left the friendly friendless
To keep our love aglow,
We deemed it endless . . .
--We
did not know!
When, by mad passion goaded,
We planned to hie away,
But, unforeboded,
The storm-shafts gray
So heavily down-pattered
That none could forthward go,
Our lives seemed shattered . . .
--We
did not know!
When I found you, helpless lying,
And you waived my deep misprise,
And swore me, dying,
In phantom-guise
To wing to me when grieving,
And touch away my woe,
We kissed, believing . . .
--We
did not know!
But though, your powers outreckoning,
You hold you dead and dumb,
Or scorn my beckoning,
And will not come;
And I say, "'Twere mood ungainly
To store her memory so:"
I say it vainly -
I feel and know!
William Dewy, Tranter Reuben, Farmer Ledlow la=
te
at plough,
Robert's kin, and John's, and Ned's,
And the Squire, and Lady Susan, lie in Mellsto=
ck
churchyard now!
"Gone," I call them, gone for good, =
that
group of local hearts and
heads;
Yet at mothy curfew-tide,
And at midnight when the noon-heat breathes it
back from walls and
leads,
They've a way of whispering to me--fellow-wight
who yet abide -
In the muted, measured note
Of a ripple under archways, or a lone cave's
stillicide:
"We have triumphed: this achievement turns the bane to
antidote,
Unsuccesses to success,
- Many thought-worn eves and morrows to a morr=
ow
free of thought.
"No more need we corn and clothing, feel =
of
old terrestrial stress;
Chill detraction stirs no sigh;
Fear of death has even bygone us: death gave all that we possess.&qu=
ot;
W. D.--"Ye mid burn the wold bass-viol th=
at I
set such vallie by."
Squire.--"You may hold the manse in fee,
You may wed my spouse, my children's memory of=
me
may decry."
Lady.--"You may have my rich brocades, my
laces; take each household
key;
Ransack coffer, desk, bureau;
Quiz the few poor treasures hid there, con the
letters kept by me."
Far.--"Ye mid zell my favourite heifer, ye
mid let the charlock grow,
Foul the grinterns, give up thrift."
Wife.--"If ye break my best blue china,
children, I shan't care or
ho."
All. --"We've no wish to hear the tidings,
how the people's fortunes
shift;
What your daily doings are;
Who are wedded, born, divided; if your lives b=
eat
slow or swift.
"Curious not the least are we if our inte=
nts
you make or mar,
If you quire to our old tune,
If the City stage still passes, if the weirs s=
till
roar afar."
- Thus, with very gods' composure, freed those
crosses late and soon
Which, in life, the Trine allow
(Why, none witteth), and ignoring all that haps
beneath the moon,
William Dewy, Tranter Reuben, Farmer Ledlow la=
te
at plough,
Robert's kin, and John's, and Ned's,
And the Squire, and Lady Susan, murmur mildly =
to
me now.
Show thee as I thought thee
When I early sought thee,
Omen-scouting,
All undoubting
Love alone had wrought thee -
Wrought thee for my pleasure,
Planned thee as a measure
For expounding
And resounding
Glad things that men treasure.
O for but a moment
Of that old endowment -
Light to gaily
See thy daily
Irised embowment!
But such re-adorning
Time forbids with scorning -
Makes me see things
Cease to be things
They were in my morning.
Fad'st thou, glow-forsaken,
Darkness-overtaken!
Thy first sweetness,
Radiance, meetness,
None shall re-awaken.
Why not sempiternal
Thou and I?&n=
bsp;
Our vernal
Brightness keeping,
Time outleaping;
Passed the hodiernal!
THOUGHTS OF PHENA AT NEWS OF HER DEATH
Not a line=
of
her writing have I,
Not a thread of her hair,
No mark of her late time as dame in her dwelli=
ng,
whereby
=
I may picture her
there;
And in vain do I urge my unsight
To conceiv=
e my
lost prize
At her close, whom I knew when her dreams were
upbrimming with light,
And with
laughter her eyes.
What scenes
spread around her last days,
Sad, shining, or dim?
Did her gifts and compassions enray and enarch=
her
sweet ways
With an au=
reate
nimb?
Or did life-light decline from her years,
And mischa=
nces
control
Her full day-star; unease, or regret, or
forebodings, or fears
&=
nbsp;
Disennoble her s=
oul?
Thus I do =
but
the phantom retain
Of the maiden of yore
As my relic; yet haply the best of her--fined =
in
my brain
It maybe t=
he
more
That no line of her writing have I,
Nor a thre=
ad of
her hair,
No mark of her late time as dame in her dwelli=
ng,
whereby
I may pict=
ure
her there.
March 1890.
To M. H.
We passed where flag and flower
Signalled a jocund throng;
We said: "Go to, =
the
hour
Is apt!"--and joined the song;
And, kindling, laughed at life and care,
Although we knew no laugh lay there.
We walked where shy birds stood
Watching us, wonder-dumb;
Their friendship met our mood;
We cried: "We'll =
often
come:
We'll come morn, noon, eve, everywhen!"
- We doubted we should come again.
We joyed to see strange sheens
Leap from quaint leaves in shade;
A secret light of greens
They'd for their pleasure made.
We said:
"We'll set such sorts as these!"
- We knew with night the wish would cease.
"So sweet the place," we =
said,
"Its tacit tales so dear,
Our thoughts, when breath has sped,
Will meet and mingle here!" . . .
"Words!" mused we. "Passed the mortal door,
Our thoughts will reach this nook no more.&quo=
t;
See "THE WOODLANDERS"
Pale beech and pine-tree blue,
Set in one clay,
Bough to bough cannot you
Bide out your day?
When the rains skim and skip,
Why mar sweet comradeship,
Blighting with poison-drip
Neighbourly spray?
Heart-halt and spirit-lame,
City-opprest,
Unto this wood I came
As to a nest;
Dreaming that sylvan peace
Offered the harrowed ease--
Nature a soft release
From men's unrest.
But, having entered in,
Great growths and small
Show them to men akin -
Combatants all!
Sycamore shoulders oak,
Bines the slim sapling yoke,
Ivy-spun halters choke
Elms stout and tall.
Touches from ash, O wych,
Sting you like scorn!
You, too, brave hollies, twitch
Sidelong from thorn.
Even the rank poplars bear
Illy a rival's air,
Cankering in black despair
If overborne.
Since, then, no grace I find
Taught me of trees,
Turn I back to my kind,
Worthy as these.
There at least smiles abound,
There discourse trills around,
There, now and then, are found
Life-loyalties.
1887:
1896.
TO A LADY OFFENDED BY A BOOK OF THE WRITER'S<=
/a>
Now that my page upcloses, doomed, maybe,
Never to press thy cosy cushions more,
Or wake thy ready Yeas as heretofore,
Or stir thy gentle vows of faith in me:
Knowing thy natural receptivity,
I figure that, as flambeaux banish eve,
My sombre image, warped by insidious heave
Of those less forthright, must lose place in t=
hee.
So be it.&nbs=
p;
I have borne such. Let=
thy
dreams
Of me and mine diminish day by day,
And yield their space to shine of smugger thin=
gs;
Till I shape to thee but in fitful gleams,
And then in far and feeble visitings,
And then surcease. Truth will be truth alway.
TO AN ORPHAN CHILD - A WHIMSEY
Ah, child, thou art but half thy darling mothe=
r's;
Hers couldst thou wholly be,
My light in thee would outglow all in others;<= o:p>
She would relive to me.
But niggard Nature's trick of birth
Bars, lest she overjoy,
Renewal of the loved on earth
Save with =
alloy.
The Dame has no regard, alas, my maiden,
For love and loss like mine -
No sympathy with mind-sight memory-laden;
Only with fickle eyne.
To her mechanic artistry
My dreams are all unknown,
And why I wish that thou couldst be
But One's =
alone!
When I look forth at dawning, pool,
Field, flo=
ck,
and lonely tree,
All seem t=
o gaze
at me
Like chastened children sitting silent in a
school;
Their faces dulled, constrained, and worn,
As though =
the
master's ways
Through th=
e long
teaching days
Their first terrestrial zest had chilled and
overborne.
And on them stirs, in lippings mere
(As if once
clear in call,
But now sc=
arce
breathed at all) -
"We wonder, ever wonder, why we find us h=
ere!
"Has some Vast Imbecility,
Mighty to =
build
and blend,
But impote=
nt to
tend,
Framed us in jest, and left us now to hazardry=
?
"Or come we of an Automaton
Unconsciou=
s of
our pains? . . .
Or are we =
live
remains
Of Godhead dying downwards, brain and eye now
gone?
"Or is it that some high Plan betides,
As yet not
understood,
Of Evil st=
ormed
by Good,
We the Forlorn Hope over which Achievement
strides?"
Thus things around. No
answerer I . . .
Meanwhile =
the
winds, and rains,
And Earth'=
s old
glooms and pains
Are still the same, and gladdest Life Death
neighbours nigh.
(AT A CATHEDRAL SERVICE)
That from this bright believing band
An outcast I should be,
That faiths by which my comrades stand
Seem fantasies to me,
And mirage-mists their Shining Land,
Is a drear destiny.
Why thus my soul should be consigned
To infelicity,
Why always I must feel as blind
To sights my brethren see,
Why joys they've found I cannot find,
Abides a mystery.
Since heart of mine knows not that ease
Which they know; since it be
That He who breathes All's Well to these
Breathes no All's-Well to me,
My lack might move their sympathies
And Christian charity!
I am like a gazer who should mark
An inland company
Standing upfingered, with, "Hark! hark!
The glorious distant sea!"
And feel, "Alas, 'tis but yon dark
And wind-swept pine to me!"
Yet I would bear my shortcomings
With meet tranquillity,
But for the charge that blessed things
I'd liefer have unbe.
O, doth a bird deprived of wings
Go earth-bound wilfully!
* * *
Enough.
As yet disquiet clings
About us. Rest shall w=
e.
When we as strangers sought
Their catering care,
Veiled smiles bespoke their thought
Of what we were.
They warmed as they opined
Us more than friends -
That we had all resigned
For love's dear ends.
And that swift sympathy
With living love
Which quicks the world--maybe
The spheres above,
Made them our ministers,
Moved them to say,
"Ah, God, that bliss like theirs
Would flush our day!"
And we were left alone
As Love's own pair;
Yet never the love-light shone
Between us there!
But that which chilled the breath
Of afternoon,
And palsied unto death
The pane-fly's tune.
The kiss their zeal foretold,
And now deemed come,
Came not:&nbs=
p;
within his hold
Love lingered-numb.
Why cast he on our port
A bloom not ours?
Why shaped us for his sport
In after-hours?
As we seemed we were not
That day afar,
And now we seem not what
We aching are.
O severing sea and land,
O laws of men,
Ere death, once let us stand
As we stood then!
(AN INCIDENT OF FROOM VALLEY)
"Thy husband--poor, poor Heart!--is dead-=
-
Dead, out by Moreford Rise;
A bull escaped the barton-shed,
Gored him, and there he lies!"
- "Ha, ha--go away! 'Tis a tale, methink,
Thou joker Kit!" laughed she.
"I've known thee many a year, Kit Twink,<= o:p>
And ever hast thou fooled me!"
- "But, Mistress Damon--I can swear
Thy goodman John is dead!
And soon th'lt hear their feet who bear
His body to his bed."
So unwontedly sad was the merry man's face -
That face which had long deceived -
That she gazed and gazed; and then could trace=
The truth there; and she believed.
She laid a hand on the dresser-ledge,
And scanned far Egdon-side;
And stood; and you heard the wind-swept sedge<= o:p>
And the rippling Froom; till she cried:
"O my chamber's untidied, unmade my bed
Though the day has begun to wear!
'What a slovenly hussif!' it will be said,
When they all go up my stair!"
She disappeared; and the joker stood
Depressed by his neighbour's doom,
And amazed that a wife struck to widowhood
Thought first of her unkempt room.
But a fortnight thence she could take no food,=
And she pined in a slow decay;
While Kit soon lost his mournful mood
And laughed in his ancient way.
1894.
IN A EWELEAZE NEAR WEATHERBURY
The years have gathered grayly
Since I danced upon this leaze
With one who kindled gaily
Love's fitful ecstasies!
But despite the term as teacher,
I remain what I was then
In each essential feature
Of the fantasies of men.
Yet I note the little chisel
Of never-napping Time,
Defacing ghast and grizzel
The blazon of my prime.
When at night he thinks me sleeping,
I feel him boring sly
Within my bones, and heaping
Quaintest pains for by-and-by.
Still, I'd go the world with Beauty,
I would laugh with her and sing,
I would shun divinest duty
To resume her worshipping.
But she'd scorn my brave endeavour,
She would not balm the breeze
By murmuring "Thine for ever!"
As she did upon this leaze.
1890.
THE FIRE AT TRANTER SWEATLEY'S
They had long met o' Zundays--her true love and
she -
And at junketings, maypoles, and flings;
But she bode wi' a thirtover uncle, and he
Swore by noon and by night that her goodman sh=
ould
be
Naibour Sweatley--a gaffer oft weak at the kne=
e
From taking o' sommat more cheerful than tea -=
Who tranted, and moved people's things.
She cried, "O pray pity me!" Nought would he hear;
Then with wild rainy eyes she obeyed.
She chid when her Love was for clinking off wi'
her.
The pa'son was told, as the season drew near
To throw over pu'pit the names of the peair
As fitting one flesh to be made.
The wedding-day dawned and the morning drew on=
;
The couple stood bridegroom and bride;
The evening was passed, and when midnight had =
gone
The folks horned out, "God save the
King," and anon
The two home-along gloomily hied.
The lover Tim Tankens mourned heart-sick and d=
rear
To be thus of his darling deprived:
He roamed in the dark ath'art field, mound, and
mere,
And, a'most without knowing it, found himself =
near
The house of the tranter, and now of his Dear,=
Where the lantern-light showed 'em arrived.
The bride sought her cham'er so calm and so pa=
le
That a Northern had thought her resigned;
But to eyes that had seen her in tide-times of
weal,
Like the white cloud o' smoke, the red
battle-field's vail,
That look spak' of havoc behind.
The bridegroom yet laitered a beaker to drain,=
Then reeled to the linhay for more,
When the candle-snoff kindled some chaff from =
his
grain -
Flames spread, and red vlankers, wi' might and=
wi'
main,
And round beams, thatch, and chimley-tun roar.
Young Tim away yond, rafted up by the light,
Through brimble and underwood tears,
Till he comes to the orchet, when crooping
thereright
In the lewth of a codlin-tree, bivering wi'
fright,
Wi' on'y her night-rail to screen her from sig=
ht,
His lonesome young Barbree appears.
Her cwold little figure half-naked he views
Played about by the frolicsome breeze,
Her light-tripping totties, her ten little too=
es,
All bare and besprinkled wi' Fall's chilly dew=
s,
While her great gallied eyes, through her hair
hanging loose,
Sheened as stars through a tardle o' trees.
She eyed en; and, as when a weir-hatch is draw=
n,
Her tears, penned by terror afore,
With a rushing of sobs in a shower were strawn=
,
Till her power to pour 'em seemed wasted and g=
one
From the heft o' misfortune she bore.
"O Tim, my OWN Tim I must call 'ee--I wil=
l!
All the world ha' turned round on me so!
Can you help her who loved 'ee, though acting =
so
ill?
Can you pity her misery--feel for her still?
When worse than her body so quivering and chil=
l
Is her heart in its winter o' woe!
"I think I mid almost ha' borne it,"=
she
said,
"Had my griefs one by one come to hand;
But O, to be slave to thik husbird for bread,<= o:p>
And then, upon top o' that, driven to wed,
And then, upon top o' that, burnt out o' bed,<= o:p>
Is more than my nater can stand!"
Tim's soul like a lion 'ithin en outsprung -
(Tim had a great soul when his feelings were
wrung)--
"Feel for 'ee, dear Barbree?" he cried;
And his warm working-jacket about her he flung=
,
Made a back, horsed her up, till behind him she
clung
Like a chiel on a gipsy, her figure uphung
By the sleeves that around her he tied.
Over piggeries, and mixens, and apples, and ha=
y,
They lumpered straight into the night;
And finding bylong where a halter-path lay,
At dawn reached Tim's house, on'y seen on their
way
By a naibour or two who were up wi' the day;
But they gathered no clue to the sight.
Then tender Tim Tankens he searched here and t=
here
For some garment to clothe her fair skin;
But though he had breeches and waistcoats to
spare,
He had nothing quite seemly for Barbree to wea=
r,
Who, half shrammed to death, stood and cried o=
n a
chair
At the caddle she found herself in.
There was one thing to do, and that one thing =
he
did,
He lent her some clouts of his own,
And she took 'em perforce; and while in 'em she
slid,
Tim turned to the winder, as modesty bid,
Thinking, "O that the picter my duty keeps
hid
To the sight o' my eyes mid be shown!"
In the tallet he stowed her; there huddied she
lay,
Shortening sleeves, legs, and tails to her limbs;
But most o' the time in a mortal bad way,
Well knowing that there'd be the divel to pay<= o:p>
If 'twere found that, instead o' the elements'
prey,
She was living in lodgings at Tim's.
"Where's the tranter?" said men and
boys; "where can er be?"
"Where's the tranter?" said Barbree alone.
"Where on e'th is the tranter?" said
everybod-y:
They sifted the dust of his perished roof-tree=
,
And all they could find was a bone.
Then the uncle cried, "Lord, pray have me=
rcy
on me!"
And in terror began to repent.
But before 'twas complete, and till sure she w=
as
free,
Barbree drew up her loft-ladder, tight turned =
her
key -
Tim bringing up breakfast and dinner and tea -=
Till the news of her hiding got vent.
Then followed the custom-kept rout, shout, and
flare
Of a skimmington-ride through the naibourhood,=
ere
Folk had proof o' wold Sweatley's decay.
Whereupon decent people all stood in a stare,<= o:p>
Saying Tim and his lodger should risk it, and
pair:
So he took her to church. An' some laughing lads there
Cried to Tim, "After Sweatley!" She said, "I declare
I stand as a maiden to-day!"
Written 1866; printed 1875.
FOR A. W. B.
She sought the Studios, beckoning to her side<= o:p>
An arch-designer, for she planned to build.
He was of wise contrivance, deeply skilled
In every intervolve of high and wide -
Well fit to be her guide.
"What=
ever
it be,"
Responded =
he,
With cold, clear voice, and cold, clear view,<= o:p>
"In true accord with prudent fashionings<= o:p>
For such vicissitudes as living brings,
And thwarting not the law of stable things,
That will I do."
"Shape me," she said, "high hal=
ls
with tracery
And open ogive-work, that scent and hue
Of buds, and travelling bees, may come in thro=
ugh,
The note of birds, and singings of the sea,
For these are much to me."
"An idle whim!"
Broke forth from him
Whom nought could warm to gallantries:
"Cede all these buds and birds, the zephy=
r's
call,
And scents, and hues, and things that falter a=
ll,
And choose as best the close and surly wall,
For winters freeze."
"Then frame," she cried, "wide
fronts of crystal glass,
That I may show my laughter and my light -
Light like the sun's by day, the stars' by nig=
ht -
Till rival heart-queens, envying, wail, 'Alas,=
Her glory!' as they pass."
"O maid misled!"
He sternly said,
Whose facile foresight pierced her dire;
"Where shall abide the soul when, sick of
glee,
It shrinks, and hides, and prays no eye may se=
e?
Those house them best who house for secrecy,
For you will tire."
"A little chamber, then, with swan and do=
ve
Ranged thickly, and engrailed with rare device=
Of reds and purples, for a Paradise
Wherein my Love may greet me, I my Love,
When he shall know thereof?"
"This, too, is ill,"
He answered still,
The man who swayed her like a shade.
"An hour will come when sight of such swe=
et
nook
Would bring a bitterness too sharp to brook,
When brighter eyes have won away his look;
For you will fade."
Then said she faintly: "O, contrive some way -
Some narrow winding turret, quite mine own,
To reach a loft where I may grieve alone!
It is a slight thing; hence do not, I pray,
This last dear fancy slay!"
"Such winding ways
Fit not your days,"
Said he, the man of measuring eye;
"I must even fashion as my rule declares,=
To wit:
Give space (since life ends unawares)
To hale a coffined corpse adown the stairs;
For you will die."
1867.
There were two youths of equal age,
Wit, station, strength, and parentage;
They studied at the selfsame schools,
And shaped their thoughts by common rules.
One pondered on the life of man,
His hopes, his ending, and began
To rate the Market's sordid war
As something scarce worth living for.
"I'll brace to higher aims," said he=
,
"I'll further Truth and Purity;
Thereby to mend the mortal lot
And sweeten sorrow. Thrive I not,
"Winning their hearts, my kind will give<= o:p>
Enough that I may lowly live,
And house my Love in some dim dell,
For pleasing them and theirs so well."
Idly attired, with features wan,
In secret swift he laboured on:
Such press of power had brought much gold
Applied to things of meaner mould.
Sometimes he wished his aims had been
To gather gains like other men;
Then thanked his God he'd traced his track
Too far for wish to drag him back.
He looked from his loft one day
To where his slighted garden lay;
Nettles and hemlock hid each lawn,
And every flower was starved and gone.
He fainted in his heart, whereon
He rose, and sought his plighted one,
Resolved to loose her bond withal,
Lest she should perish in his fall.
He met her with a careless air,
As though he'd ceased to find her fair,
And said:&nbs=
p;
"True love is dust to me;
I cannot kiss: I tire of thee!"
(That she might scorn him was he fain,
To put her sooner out of pain;
For incensed love breathes quick and dies,
When famished love a-lingering lies.)
Once done, his soul was so betossed,
It found no more the force it lost:
Hope was his only drink and food,
And hope extinct, decay ensued.
And, living long so closely penned,
He had not kept a single friend;
He dwindled thin as phantoms be,
And drooped to death in poverty . . .
Meantime his schoolmate had gone out
To join the fortune-finding rout;
He liked the winnings of the mart,
But wearied of the working part.
He turned to seek a privy lair,
Neglecting note of garb and hair,
And day by day reclined and thought
How he might live by doing nought.
"I plan a valued scheme," he said
To some.
"But lend me of your bread,
And when the vast result looms nigh,
In profit you shall stand as I."
Yet they took counsel to restrain
Their kindness till they saw the gain;
And, since his substance now had run,
He rose to do what might be done.
He went unto his Love by night,
And said:&nbs=
p;
"My Love, I faint in fight:
Deserving as thou dost a crown,
My cares shall never drag thee down."
(He had descried a maid whose line
Would hand her on much corn and wine,
And held her far in worth above
One who could only pray and love.)
But this Fair read him; whence he failed
To do the deed so blithely hailed;
He saw his projects wholly marred,
And gloom and want oppressed him hard;
Till, living to so mean an end,
Whereby he'd lost his every friend,
He perished in a pauper sty,
His mate the dying pauper nigh.
And moralists, reflecting, said,
As "dust to dust" in burial read
Was echoed from each coffin-lid,
"These men were like in all they did.&quo=
t;
1866.
Spoken by Miss ADA REHAN at the Lyceum Theatre,
July 23, 1890, at a
performance on behalf of Lady Jeune's Holiday =
Fund
for City Children.
Before we part to alien thoughts and aims,
Permit the one brief word the occasion claims:=
- When mumming and grave projects are allied,<= o:p>
Perhaps an Epilogue is justified.
Our under-purpose has, in truth, to-day
Commanded most our musings; least the play:
A purpose futile but for your good-will
Swiftly responsive to the cry of ill:
A purpose all too limited!--to aid
Frail human flowerets, sicklied by the shade,<= o:p>
In winning some short spell of upland breeze,<= o:p>
Or strengthening sunlight on the level leas.
Who has not marked, where the full cheek should
be,
Incipient lines of lank flaccidity,
Lymphatic pallor where the pink should glow,
And where the throb of transport, pulses low? =
-
Most tragical of shapes from Pole to Line,
O wondering child, unwitting Time's design,
Why should Art add to Nature's quandary,
And worsen ill by thus immuring thee?
- That races do despite unto their own,
That Might supernal do indeed condone
Wrongs individual for the general ease,
Instance the proof in victims such as these.
Launched into thoroughfares too thronged befor=
e,
Mothered by those whose protest is "No
more!"
Vitalized without option: who shall say
That did Life hang on choosing--Yea or Nay -
They had not scorned it with such penalty,
And nothingness implored of Destiny?
And yet behind the horizon smile serene
The down, the cornland, and the stretching gre=
en -
Space--the child's heaven: scenes which at least ensure
Some palliative for ill they cannot cure.
Dear friends--now moved by this poor show of o=
urs
To make your own long joy in buds and bowers
For one brief while the joy of infant eyes,
Changing their urban murk to paradise -
You have our thanks!--may your reward include<= o:p>
More than our thanks, far more: their gratitude.
I look into my glass,
And view my wasting skin,
And say, "Would God it came to pass
My heart had shrunk as thin!"
For then, I, undistrest
By hearts grown cold to me,
Could lonely wait my endless rest
With equanimity.
But Time, to make me grieve;
Part steals, lets part abide;
And shakes this fragile frame at eve
With throbbings of noontide.