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<h1>Poems by Alice Meynell</h1>
<p>Contents:</p>
<p>SONNET—MY HEART SHALL BE THY GARDEN<br/>
SONNET—THOUGHTS IN SEPARATION<br/>
TO A POET<br/>
SONG OF THE SPRING TO THE SUMMER<br/>
TO THE BELOVED<br/>
MEDITATION<br/>
TO THE BELOVED DEAD—A LAMENT<br/>
SONNET<br/>
IN AUTUMN<br/>
A LETTER FROM A GIRL TO HER OWN OLD AGE<br/>
SONG<br/>
BUILDERS OF RUINS<br/>
SONNET<br/>
SONG OF THE DAY TO THE NIGHT<br/>
‘SOEUR MONIQUE’<br/>
IN EARLY SPRING<br/>
PARTED<br/>
REGRETS<br/>
SONG<br/>
SONNET—IN FEBRUARY<br/>
SAN LORENZO GIUSTINIANI’S MOTHER<br/>
SONNET—THE LOVE OF NARCISSUS<br/>
TO A LOST MELODY<br/>
SONNET—THE POET TO NATURE<br/>
THE POET TO HIS CHILDHOOD<br/>
SONNET<br/>
AN UNMARKED FESTIVAL<br/>
SONNET—THE NEOPHYTE<br/>
SONNET—SPRING ON THE ALBAN HILLS<br/>
SONG OF THE NIGHT AT DAYBREAK<br/>
SONNET—TO A DAISY<br/>
SONNET—TO ONE POEM IN A SILENT TIME<br/>
FUTURE POETRY<br/>
THE POET SINGS TO HER POET<br/>
A POET’S SONNET<br/>
THE MODERN POET<br/>
AFTER A PARTING<br/>
RENOUNCEMENT<br/>
VENI CREATOR</p>
<h2>DEDICATION</h2>
<p>TO W. M.</p>
<p><i>Most of these verses were written in the author’s early
youth, and were published in a volume called ‘Preludes,’
now out of print. Other poems, representing the same transitory
and early thoughts, which appeared in that volume, are now omitted as
cruder than the rest; and their place is taken by the few verses written
in maturer years</i>.</p>
<h2>SONNET—MY HEART SHALL BE THY GARDEN</h2>
<p>My heart shall be thy garden. Come, my own,<br/>
Into thy garden; thine be happy hours<br/>
Among my fairest thoughts, my tallest flowers,<br/>
From root to crowning petal, thine alone.</p>
<p>Thine is the place from where the seeds are sown<br/>
Up to the sky enclosed, with all its showers.<br/>
But ah, the birds, the birds! Who shall build bowers<br/>
To keep these thine? O friend, the birds have flown.</p>
<p>For as these come and go, and quit our pine<br/>
To follow the sweet season, or, new-comers,<br/>
Sing one song only from our alder-trees.</p>
<p>My heart has thoughts, which, though thine eyes hold mine,<br/>
Flit to the silent world and other summers,<br/>
With wings that dip beyond the silver
seas.</p>
<h2>SONNET—THOUGHTS IN SEPARATION</h2>
<p>We never meet; yet we meet day by day<br/>
Upon those hills of life, dim and immense:<br/>
The good we love, and sleep—our innocence.<br/>
O hills of life, high hills! And higher than they,</p>
<p>Our guardian spirits meet at prayer and play.<br/>
Beyond pain, joy, and hope, and long suspense,<br/>
Above the summits of our souls, far hence,<br/>
An angel meets an angel on the way.</p>
<p>Beyond all good I ever believed of thee<br/>
Or thou of me, these always love and live.<br/>
And though I fail of thy ideal of me,</p>
<p>My angel falls not short. They greet each other.<br/>
Who knows, they may exchange the kiss we give,<br/>
Thou to thy crucifix, I to my mother.</p>
<h2>TO A POET</h2>
<p>Thou who singest through the earth,<br/>
All the earth’s wild creatures fly thee,<br/>
Everywhere thou marrest mirth.<br/>
Dumbly they defy thee.<br/>
There is something they deny thee.</p>
<p>Pines thy fallen nature ever<br/>
For the unfallen Nature sweet.<br/>
But she shuns thy long endeavour,<br/>
Though her flowers and wheat<br/>
Throng and press thy pausing feet.</p>
<p>Though thou tame a bird to love thee,<br/>
Press thy face to grass and flowers,<br/>
All these things reserve above thee<br/>
Secrets in the bowers,<br/>
Secrets in the sun and showers.</p>
<p>Sing thy sorrow, sing thy gladness.<br/>
In thy songs must wind and tree<br/>
Bear the fictions of thy sadness,<br/>
Thy humanity.<br/>
For their truth is not for thee.</p>
<p>Wait, and many a secret nest,<br/>
Many a hoarded winter-store<br/>
Will be hidden on thy breast.<br/>
Things thou longest for<br/>
Will not fear or shun thee more.</p>
<p>Thou shalt intimately lie<br/>
In the roots of flowers that thrust<br/>
Upwards from thee to the sky,<br/>
With no more distrust,<br/>
When they blossom from thy dust.</p>
<p>Silent labours of the rain<br/>
Shall be near thee, reconciled;<br/>
Little lives of leaves and grain,<br/>
All things shy and wild<br/>
Tell thee secrets, quiet child.</p>
<p>Earth, set free from thy fair fancies<br/>
And the art thou shalt resign,<br/>
Will bring forth her rue and pansies<br/>
Unto more divine<br/>
Thoughts than any thoughts of thine.</p>
<p>Nought will fear thee, humbled creature.<br/>
There will lie thy mortal burden<br/>
Pressed unto the heart of Nature,<br/>
Songless in a garden,<br/>
With a long embrace of pardon.</p>
<p>Then the truth all creatures tell,<br/>
And His will whom thou entreatest,<br/>
Shall absorb thee; there shall dwell<br/>
Silence, the completest<br/>
Of thy poems, last, and sweetest.</p>
<h2>SONG OF THE SPRING TO THE SUMMER</h2>
<p>THE POET SINGS TO HER POET</p>
<p>O poet of the time to be,<br/>
My conqueror, I began for thee.<br/>
Enter into thy poet’s pain,<br/>
And take the riches of the rain,<br/>
And make the perfect year for me.</p>
<p>Thou unto whom my lyre shall fall,<br/>
Whene’er thou comest, hear my call.<br/>
O, keep the promise of my lays,<br/>
Take the sweet parable of my days;<br/>
I trust thee with the aim of all.</p>
<p>And if thy thoughts unfold from me,<br/>
Know that I too have hints of thee,<br/>
Dim hopes that come across my mind<br/>
In the rare days of warmer wind,<br/>
And tones of summer in the sea.</p>
<p>And I have set thy paths, I guide<br/>
Thy blossoms on the wild hillside.<br/>
And I, thy bygone poet, share<br/>
The flowers that throng thy feet where<br/>
I led thy feet before I died.</p>
<h2>TO THE BELOVED</h2>
<p>Oh, not more subtly silence strays<br/>
Amongst the winds, between the voices,<br/>
Mingling alike with pensive lays,<br/>
And with the music that rejoices,<br/>
Than thou art present in my days.</p>
<p>My silence, life returns to thee<br/>
In all the pauses of her breath.<br/>
Hush back to rest the melody<br/>
That out of thee awakeneth;<br/>
And thou, wake ever, wake for me.</p>
<p>Full, full is life in hidden places,<br/>
For thou art silence unto me.<br/>
Full, full is thought in endless spaces.<br/>
Full is my life. A silent sea<br/>
Lies round all shores with long embraces.</p>
<p>Thou art like silence all unvexed<br/>
Though wild words part my soul from thee.<br/>
Thou art like silence unperplexed,<br/>
A secret and a mystery<br/>
Between one footfall and the next.</p>
<p>Most dear pause in a mellow lay!<br/>
Thou art inwoven with every air.<br/>
With thee the wildest tempests play,<br/>
And snatches of thee everywhere<br/>
Make little heavens throughout a day.</p>
<p>Darkness and solitude shine, for me.<br/>
For life’s fair outward part are rife<br/>
The silver noises; let them be.<br/>
It is the very soul of life<br/>
Listens for thee, listens for thee.</p>
<p>O pause between the sobs of cares!<br/>
O thought within all thought that is;<br/>
Trance between laughters unawares!<br/>
Thou art the form of melodies,<br/>
And thou the ecstasy of prayers.</p>
<h2>MEDITATION</h2>
<p><i>Rorate Cœli desuper, et nubes pluant Justum</i>.<br/>
<i>Aperiatur Terra, et germinet Salvatorem</i>.</p>
<p>No sudden thing of glory and fear<br/>
Was the Lord’s coming; but the dear<br/>
Slow Nature’s days followed each other<br/>
To form the Saviour from his Mother<br/>
—One of the children of the year.</p>
<p>The earth, the rain, received the trust,<br/>
—The sun and dews, to frame the Just.<br/>
He drew his daily life from these,<br/>
According to his own decrees<br/>
Who makes man from the fertile dust.</p>
<p>Sweet summer and the winter wild,<br/>
These brought him forth, the Undefiled.<br/>
The happy Springs renewed again<br/>
His daily bread, the growing grain,<br/>
The food and raiment of the Child.</p>
<h2>TO THE BELOVED DEAD—A LAMENT</h2>
<p>Beloved, thou art like a tune that idle fingers<br/>
Play on a window-pane.<br/>
The time is there, the form of music lingers;<br/>
But O thou sweetest strain,<br/>
Where is thy soul? Thou liest i’ the wind and rain.</p>
<p>Even as to him who plays that idle air,<br/>
It seems a melody,<br/>
For his own soul is full of it, so, my Fair,<br/>
Dead, thou dost live in me,<br/>
And all this lonely soul is full of thee.</p>
<p>Thou song of songs!—not music as before<br/>
Unto the outward ear;<br/>
My spirit sings thee inly evermore,<br/>
Thy falls with tear on tear.<br/>
I fail for thee, thou art too sweet, too dear.</p>
<p>Thou silent song, thou ever voiceless rhyme,<br/>
Is there no pulse to move thee,<br/>
At windy dawn, with a wild heart beating time,<br/>
And falling tears above thee,<br/>
O music stifled from the ears that love thee?</p>
<p>Oh, for a strain of thee from outer air!<br/>
Soul wearies soul, I find.<br/>
Of thee, thee, thee, I am mournfully aware,<br/>
—Contained in one poor mind,<br/>
Who wert in tune and time to every wind.</p>
<p>Poor grave, poor lost belovéd! but I burn<br/>
For some more vast To be.<br/>
As he that played that secret tune may turn<br/>
And strike it on a lyre triumphantly,<br/>
I wait some future, all a lyre for thee.</p>
<h2>SONNET</h2>
<p>Your own fair youth, you care so little for it,<br/>
Smiling towards Heaven, you would not stay the advances<br/>
Of time and change upon your happiest fancies.<br/>
I keep your golden hour, and will restore it.</p>
<p>If ever, in time to come, you would explore it—<br/>
Your old self whose thoughts went like last year’s
pansies,<br/>
Look unto me; no mirror keeps its glances;<br/>
In my unfailing praises now I store it.</p>
<p>To keep all joys of yours from Time’s estranging,<br/>
I shall be then a treasury where your gay,<br/>
Happy, and pensive past for ever is.</p>
<p>I shall be then a garden charmed from changing,<br/>
In which your June has never passed away.<br/>
Walk there awhile among my memories.</p>
<h2>IN AUTUMN</h2>
<p>The leaves are many under my feet,<br/>
And drift one way.<br/>
Their scent of death is weary and sweet.<br/>
A flight of them is in the grey<br/>
Where sky and forest meet.</p>
<p>The low winds moan for dead sweet years;<br/>
The birds sing all for pain,<br/>
Of a common thing, to weary ears,—<br/>
Only a summer’s fate of rain,<br/>
And a woman’s fate of tears.</p>
<p>I walk to love and life alone<br/>
Over these mournful places,<br/>
Across the summer overthrown,<br/>
The dead joys of these silent faces,<br/>
To claim my own.</p>
<p>I know his heart has beat to bright<br/>
Sweet loves gone by.<br/>
I know the leaves that die to-night<br/>
Once budded to the sky,<br/>
And I shall die from his delight.</p>
<p>O leaves, so quietly ending now,<br/>
You have heard cuckoos sing.<br/>
And I will grow upon my bough<br/>
If only for a Spring,<br/>
And fall when the rain is on my brow.</p>
<p>O tell me, tell me ere you die,<br/>
Is it worth the pain?<br/>
You bloomed so fair, you waved so high;<br/>
Now that the sad days wane,<br/>
Are you repenting where you lie?</p>
<p>I lie amongst you, and I kiss<br/>
Your fragrance mouldering.<br/>
O dead delights, is it such bliss,<br/>
That tuneful Spring?<br/>
Is love so sweet, that comes to this?</p>
<p>O dying blisses of the year,<br/>
I hear the young lambs bleat,<br/>
The clamouring birds i’ the copse I hear,<br/>
I hear the waving wheat,<br/>
Together laid on a dead-leaf bier.</p>
<p>Kiss me again as I kiss you;<br/>
Kiss me again;<br/>
For all your tuneful nights of dew,<br/>
In this your time of rain,<br/>
For all your kisses when Spring was new.</p>
<p>You will not, broken hearts; let be.<br/>
I pass across your death<br/>
To a golden summer you shall not see,<br/>
And in your dying breath<br/>
There is no benison for me.</p>
<p>There is an autumn yet to wane,<br/>
There are leaves yet to fall,<br/>
Which, when I kiss, may kiss again,<br/>
And, pitied, pity me all for all,<br/>
And love me in mist and rain.</p>
<h2>A LETTER FROM A GIRL TO HER OWN OLD AGE</h2>
<p>Listen, and when thy hand this paper presses,<br/>
O time-worn woman, think of her who blesses<br/>
What thy thin fingers touch, with her caresses.</p>
<p>O mother, for the weight of years that break thee!<br/>
O daughter, for slow time must yet awake thee,<br/>
And from the changes of my heart must make thee.</p>
<p>O fainting traveller, morn is grey in heaven.<br/>
Dost thou remember how the clouds were driven?<br/>
And are they calm about the fall of even?</p>
<p>Pause near the ending of thy long migration,<br/>
For this one sudden hour of desolation<br/>
Appeals to one hour of thy meditation.</p>
<p>Suffer, O silent one, that I remind thee<br/>
Of the great hills that stormed the sky behind thee,<br/>
Of the wild winds of power that have resigned thee.</p>
<p>Know that the mournful plain where thou must wander<br/>
Is but a grey and silent world, but ponder<br/>
The misty mountains of the morning yonder.</p>
<p>Listen:- the mountain winds with rain were fretting,<br/>
And sudden gleams the mountain-tops besetting.<br/>
I cannot let thee fade to death, forgetting.</p>
<p>What part of this wild heart of mine I know not<br/>
Will follow with thee where the great winds blow not,<br/>
And where the young flowers of the mountain grow not.</p>
<p>Yet let my letter with thy lost thoughts in it<br/>
Tell what the way was when thou didst begin it,<br/>
And win with thee the goal when thou shalt win it.</p>
<p>Oh, in some hour of thine my thoughts shall guide thee.<br/>
Suddenly, though time, darkness, silence hide thee,<br/>
This wind from thy lost country flits beside thee,—</p>
<p>Telling thee: all thy memories moved the maiden,<br/>
With thy regrets was morning over-shaden,<br/>
With sorrow thou hast left, her life was laden.</p>
<p>But whither shall my thoughts turn to pursue thee<br/>
Life changes, and the years and days renew thee.<br/>
Oh, Nature brings my straying heart unto thee.</p>
<p>Her winds will join us, with their constant kisses<br/>
Upon the evening as the morning tresses,<br/>
Her summers breathe the same unchanging blisses.</p>
<p>And we, so altered in our shifting phases,<br/>
Track one another ’mid the many mazes<br/>
By the eternal child-breath of the daisies.</p>
<p>I have not writ this letter of divining<br/>
To make a glory of thy silent pining,<br/>
A triumph of thy mute and strange declining.</p>
<p>Only one youth, and the bright life was shrouded.<br/>
Only one morning, and the day was clouded.<br/>
And one old age with all regrets is crowded.</p>
<p>Oh, hush; oh, hush! Thy tears my words are steeping.<br/>
Oh, hush, hush, hush! So full, the fount of weeping?<br/>
Poor eyes, so quickly moved, so near to sleeping?</p>
<p>Pardon the girl; such strange desires beset her.<br/>
Poor woman, lay aside the mournful letter<br/>
That breaks thy heart; the one who wrote, forget her.</p>
<p>The one who now thy faded features guesses,<br/>
With filial fingers thy grey hair caresses,<br/>
With morning tears thy mournful twilight blesses.</p>
<h2>SONG</h2>
<p>As the inhastening tide doth roll,<br/>
Dear and desired, along the whole<br/>
Wide shining strand, and floods the caves,<br/>
Your love comes filling with happy waves<br/>
The open sea-shore of my soul.</p>
<p>But inland from the seaward spaces,<br/>
None knows, not even you, the places<br/>
Brimmed, at your coming, out of sight,<br/>
—The little solitudes of delight<br/>
This tide constrains in dim embraces.</p>
<p>You see the happy shore, wave-rimmed,<br/>
But know not of the quiet dimmed<br/>
Rivers your coming floods and fills,<br/>
The little pools ’mid happier hills,<br/>
My silent rivulets, over-brimmed.</p>
<p>What, I have secrets from you? Yes.<br/>
But, visiting Sea, your love doth press<br/>
And reach in further than you know,<br/>
And fills all these; and when you go,<br/>
There’s loneliness in loneliness.</p>
<h2>BUILDERS OF RUINS</h2>
<p>We build with strength the deep tower-wall<br/>
That shall be shattered thus and thus.<br/>
And fair and great are court and hall,<br/>
But <i>how</i> fair—this is not for us,<br/>
Who know the lack that lurks in all.</p>
<p>We know, we know how all too bright<br/>
The hues are that our painting wears,<br/>
And how the marble gleams too white;—<br/>
We speak in unknown tongues, the years<br/>
Interpret everything aright,</p>
<p>And crown with weeds our pride of towers,<br/>
And warm our marble through with sun,<br/>
And break our pavements through with flowers,<br/>
With an Amen when all is done,<br/>
Knowing these perfect things of ours.</p>
<p>O days, we ponder, left alone,<br/>
Like children in their lonely hour,<br/>
And in our secrets keep your own,<br/>
As seeds the colour of the flower.<br/>
To-day they are not all unknown,</p>
<p>The stars that ’twixt the rise and fall,<br/>
Like relic-seers, shall one by one<br/>
Stand musing o’er our empty hall;<br/>
And setting moons shall brood upon<br/>
The frescoes of our inward wall.</p>
<p>And when some midsummer shall be,<br/>
Hither will come some little one<br/>
(Dusty with bloom of flowers is he),<br/>
Sit on a ruin i’ the late long sun,<br/>
And think, one foot upon his knee.</p>
<p>And where they wrought, these lives of ours,<br/>
So many-worded, many-souled,<br/>
A North-west wind will take the towers,<br/>
And dark with colour, sunny and cold,<br/>
Will range alone among the flowers.</p>
<p>And here or there, at our desire,<br/>
The little clamorous owl shall sit<br/>
Through her still time; and we aspire<br/>
To make a law (and know not it)<br/>
Unto the life of a wild briar.</p>
<p>Our purpose is distinct and dear,<br/>
Though from our open eyes ’tis hidden.<br/>
Thou, Time-to-come, shalt make it clear,<br/>
Undoing our work; we are children chidden<br/>
With pity and smiles of many a year.</p>
<p>Who shall allot the praise, and guess<br/>
What part is yours and what is ours?—<br/>
O years that certainly will bless<br/>
Our flowers with fruits, our seeds with flowers,<br/>
With ruin all our perfectness.</p>
<p>Be patient, Time, of our delays,<br/>
Too happy hopes, and wasted fears,<br/>
Our faithful ways, our wilful ways,<br/>
Solace our labours, O our seers<br/>
The seasons, and our bards the days;</p>
<p>And make our pause and silence brim<br/>
With the shrill children’s play, and sweets<br/>
Of those pathetic flowers and dim,<br/>
Of those eternal flowers my Keats<br/>
Dying felt growing over him.</p>
<h2>SONNET</h2>
<p>I touched the heart that loved me as a player<br/>
Touches a lyre; content with my poor skill<br/>
No touch save mine knew my beloved (and still<br/>
I thought at times: Is there no sweet lost air<br/>
Old loves could wake in him, I cannot share?).<br/>
Oh, he alone, alone could so fulfil<br/>
My thoughts in sound to the measure of my will.<br/>
He is gone, and silence takes me unaware.</p>
<p>The songs I knew not he resumes, set free<br/>
From my constraining love, alas for me!<br/>
His part in our tune goes with him; my part<br/>
Is locked in me for ever; I stand as mute<br/>
As one with full strong music in his heart<br/>
Whose fingers stray upon a shattered lute.</p>
<h2>SONG OF THE DAY TO THE NIGHT</h2>
<p>THE POET SINGS TO HIS POET</p>
<p>From dawn to dusk, and from dusk to dawn,<br/>
We two are sundered always, sweet.<br/>
A few stars shake o’er the rocky lawn<br/>
And the cold sea-shore when we meet.<br/>
The twilight comes with thy shadowy feet.</p>
<p>We are not day and night, my Fair,<br/>
But one. It is an hour of hours.<br/>
And thoughts that are not otherwhere<br/>
Are thought here ’mid the blown sea-flowers,<br/>
This meeting and this dusk of ours.</p>
<p>Delight has taken Pain to her heart,<br/>
And there is dusk and stars for these.<br/>
Oh, linger, linger! They would not part;<br/>
And the wild wind comes from over-seas<br/>
With a new song to the olive trees.</p>
<p>And when we meet by the sounding pine<br/>
Sleep draws near to his dreamless brother.<br/>
And when thy sweet eyes answer mine,<br/>
Peace nestles close to her mournful mother,<br/>
And Hope and Weariness kiss each other.</p>
<h2>‘SOEUR MONIQUE’</h2>
<p>A RONDEAU BY COUPERIN</p>
<p>Quiet form of silent nun,<br/>
What has given you to my inward eyes?<br/>
What has marked you, unknown one,<br/>
In the throngs of centuries<br/>
That mine ears do listen through?<br/>
This old master’s melody<br/>
That expresses you,<br/>
This admired simplicity,<br/>
Tender, with a serious wit,<br/>
And two words, the name of it,<br/>
‘Soeur Monique.’</p>
<p>And if sad the music is,<br/>
It is sad with mysteries<br/>
Of a small immortal thing<br/>
That the passing ages sing,—<br/>
Simple music making mirth<br/>
Of the dying and the birth<br/>
Of the people of the earth.</p>
<p>No, not sad; we are beguiled,<br/>
Sad with living as we are;<br/>
Ours the sorrow, outpouring<br/>
Sad self on a selfless thing,<br/>
As our eyes and hearts are mild<br/>
With our sympathy for Spring,<br/>
With a pity sweet and wild<br/>
For the innocent and far,<br/>
With our sadness in a star,<br/>
Or our sadness in a child.</p>
<p>But two words, and this sweet air.<br/>
Soeur Monique,<br/>
Had he more, who set you there?<br/>
Was his music-dream of you<br/>
Of some perfect nun he knew,<br/>
Or of some ideal, as true?</p>
<p>And I see you where you stand<br/>
With your life held in your hand<br/>
As a rosary of days.<br/>
And your thoughts in calm arrays,<br/>
And your innocent prayers are told<br/>
On your rosary of days.<br/>
And the young days and the old<br/>
With their quiet prayers did meet<br/>
When the chaplet was complete.</p>
<p>Did it vex you, the surmise<br/>
Of this wind of words, this storm of cries,<br/>
Though you kept the silence so<br/>
In the storms of long ago,<br/>
And you keep it, like a star?<br/>
—Of the evils triumphing,<br/>
Strong, for all your perfect conquering,<br/>
Silenced conqueror that you are?<br/>
And I wonder at your peace, I wonder.<br/>
Would it trouble you to know,<br/>
Tender soul, the world and sin<br/>
By your calm feet trodden under<br/>
Long ago,<br/>
Living now, mighty to win?<br/>
And your feet are vanished like the snow.</p>
<p>Vanished; but the poet, he<br/>
In whose dream your face appears,<br/>
He who ranges unknown years<br/>
With your music in his heart,<br/>
Speaks to you familiarly<br/>
Where you keep apart,<br/>
And invents you as you were.<br/>
And your picture, O my nun!<br/>
Is a strangely easy one,<br/>
For the holy weed you wear,<br/>
For your hidden eyes and hidden hair,<br/>
And in picturing you I may<br/>
Scarcely go astray.</p>
<p>O the vague reality!<br/>
The mysterious certainty!<br/>
O strange truth of these my guesses<br/>
In the wide thought-wildernesses!<br/>
—Truth of one divined of many flowers;<br/>
Of one raindrop in the showers<br/>
Of the long-ago swift rain;<br/>
Of one tear of many tears<br/>
In some world-renownéd pain;<br/>
Of one daisy ’mid the centuries of sun;<br/>
Of a little living nun<br/>
In the garden of the years.</p>
<p>Yes, I am not far astray;<br/>
But I guess you as might one<br/>
Pausing when young March is grey,<br/>
In a violet-peopled day;<br/>
All his thoughts go out to places that he knew,<br/>
To his child-home in the sun,<br/>
To the fields of his regret,<br/>
To one place i’ the innocent March air,<br/>
By one olive, and invent<br/>
The familiar form and scent<br/>
Safely; a white violet<br/>
Certainly is there.</p>
<p>Soeur Monique, remember me.<br/>
’Tis not in the past alone<br/>
I am picturing you to be;<br/>
But my little friend, my own,<br/>
In my moment, pray for me.<br/>
For another dream is mine,<br/>
And another dream is true,<br/>
Sweeter even,<br/>
Of the little ones that shine<br/>
Lost within the light divine,—<br/>
Of some meekest flower, or you,<br/>
In the fields of Heaven.</p>
<h2>IN EARLY SPRING</h2>
<p>O Spring, I know thee! Seek for sweet surprise<br/>
In the young children’s eyes.<br/>
But I have learnt the years, and know the yet<br/>
Leaf-folded violet.<br/>
Mine ear, awake to silence, can foretell<br/>
The cuckoo’s fitful bell.<br/>
I wander in a grey time that encloses<br/>
June and the wild hedge-roses.<br/>
A year’s procession of the flowers doth pass<br/>
My feet, along the grass.<br/>
And all you sweet birds silent yet, I know<br/>
The notes that stir you so,<br/>
Your songs yet half devised in the dim dear<br/>
Beginnings of the year.<br/>
In these young days you meditate your part;<br/>
I have it all by heart.</p>
<p>I know the secrets of the seeds of flowers<br/>
Hidden and warm with showers,<br/>
And how, in kindling Spring, the cuckoo shall<br/>
Alter his interval.<br/>
But not a flower or song I ponder is<br/>
My own, but memory’s.<br/>
I shall be silent in those days desired<br/>
Before a world inspired.<br/>
O dear brown birds, compose your old song-phrases<br/>
Earth, thy familiar daisies.</p>
<p>The poet mused upon the dusky height,<br/>
Between two stars towards night,<br/>
His purpose in his heart. I watched, a space,<br/>
The meaning of his face:<br/>
There was the secret, fled from earth and skies,<br/>
Hid in his grey young eyes.<br/>
My heart and all the Summer wait his choice,<br/>
And wonder for his voice.<br/>
Who shall foretell his songs, and who aspire<br/>
But to divine his lyre?<br/>
Sweet earth, we know thy dimmest mysteries,<br/>
But he is lord of his.</p>
<h2>PARTED</h2>
<p>Farewell to one now silenced quite,<br/>
Sent out of hearing, out of sight,—<br/>
My friend of friends, whom I shall miss.<br/>
He is not banished, though, for this,—<br/>
Nor he, nor sadness, nor delight.</p>
<p>Though I shall walk with him no more,<br/>
A low voice sounds upon the shore.<br/>
He must not watch my resting-place<br/>
But who shall drive a mournful face<br/>
From the sad winds about my door?</p>
<p>I shall not hear his voice complain,<br/>
But who shall stop the patient rain?<br/>
His tears must not disturb my heart,<br/>
But who shall change the years, and part<br/>
The world from every thought of pain?</p>
<p>Although my life is left so dim,<br/>
The morning crowns the mountain-rim;<br/>
Joy is not gone from summer skies,<br/>
Nor innocence from children’s eyes,<br/>
And all these things are part of him.</p>
<p>He is not banished, for the showers<br/>
Yet wake this green warm earth of ours.<br/>
How can the summer but be sweet?<br/>
I shall not have him at my feet,<br/>
And yet my feet are on the flowers.</p>
<h2>REGRETS</h2>
<p>As, when the seaward ebbing tide doth pour<br/>
Out by the low sand spaces,<br/>
The parting waves slip back to clasp the shore<br/>
With lingering embraces,—</p>
<p>So in the tide of life that carries me<br/>
From where thy true heart dwells,<br/>
Waves of my thoughts and memories turn to thee<br/>
With lessening farewells;</p>
<p>Waving of hands; dreams, when the day forgets;<br/>
A care half lost in cares;<br/>
The saddest of my verses; dim regrets;<br/>
Thy name among my prayers.</p>
<p>I would the day might come, so waited for,<br/>
So patiently besought,<br/>
When I, returning, should fill up once more<br/>
Thy desolated thought;</p>
<p>And fill thy loneliness that lies apart<br/>
In still, persistent pain.<br/>
Shall I content thee, O thou broken heart,<br/>
As the tide comes again,</p>
<p>And brims the little sea-shore lakes, and sets<br/>
Seaweeds afloat, and fills<br/>
The silent pools, rivers and rivulets<br/>
Among the inland hills?</p>
<h2>SONG</h2>
<p>My Fair, no beauty of thine will last<br/>
Save in my love’s eternity.<br/>
Thy smiles, that light thee fitfully,<br/>
Are lost for ever—their moment past—<br/>
Except the few thou givest to me.</p>
<p>Thy sweet words vanish day by day,<br/>
As all breath of mortality;<br/>
Thy laughter, done, must cease to be,<br/>
And all thy dear tones pass away,<br/>
Except the few that sing to me.</p>
<p>Hide then within my heart, oh, hide<br/>
All thou art loth should go from thee.<br/>
Be kinder to thyself and me.<br/>
My cupful from this river’s tide<br/>
Shall never reach the long sad sea.</p>
<h2>SONNET—IN FEBRUARY</h2>
<p>Rich meanings of the prophet-Spring adorn,<br/>
Unseen, this colourless sky of folded showers,<br/>
And folded winds; no blossom in the bowers.<br/>
A poet’s face asleep is this grey morn.</p>
<p>Now in the midst of the old world forlorn<br/>
A mystic child is set in these still hours.<br/>
I keep this time, even before the flowers,<br/>
Sacred to all the young and the unborn;</p>
<p>To all the miles and miles of unsprung wheat,<br/>
And to the Spring waiting beyond the portal,<br/>
And to the future of my own young art,</p>
<p>And, among all these things, to you, my sweet,<br/>
My friend, to your calm face and the immortal<br/>
Child tarrying all your life-time in
your heart.</p>
<h2>SAN LORENZO GIUSTINIANI’S MOTHER</h2>
<p>I had not seen my son’s dear face<br/>
(He chose the cloister by God’s grace)<br/>
Since it had come to full flower-time.<br/>
I hardly guessed at its perfect prime,<br/>
That folded flower of his dear face.</p>
<p>Mine eyes were veiled by mists of tears<br/>
When on a day in many years<br/>
One of his Order came. I thrilled,<br/>
Facing, I thought, that face fulfilled.<br/>
I doubted, for my mists of tears.</p>
<p>His blessing be with me for ever!<br/>
My hope and doubt were hard to sever.<br/>
—That altered face, those holy weeds.<br/>
I filled his wallet and kissed his beads,<br/>
And lost his echoing feet for ever.</p>
<p>If to my son my alms were given<br/>
I know not, and I wait for Heaven.<br/>
He did not plead for child of mine,<br/>
But for another Child divine,<br/>
And unto Him it was surely given.</p>
<p>There is One alone who cannot change;<br/>
Dreams are we, shadows, visions strange;<br/>
And all I give is given to One.<br/>
I might mistake my dearest son,<br/>
But never the Son who cannot change.</p>
<h2>SONNET—THE LOVE OF NARCISSUS</h2>
<p>Like him who met his own eyes in the river,<br/>
The poet trembles at his own long gaze<br/>
That meets him through the changing nights and days<br/>
From out great Nature; all her waters quiver<br/>
With his fair image facing him for ever;<br/>
The music that he listens to betrays<br/>
His own heart to his ears; by trackless ways<br/>
His wild thoughts tend to him in long endeavour.</p>
<p>His dreams are far among the silent hills;<br/>
His vague voice calls him from the darkened plain<br/>
With winds at night; strange recognition thrills<br/>
His lonely heart with piercing love and pain;<br/>
He knows his sweet mirth in the mountain rills,<br/>
His weary tears that touch him with the rain.</p>
<h2>TO A LOST MELODY</h2>
<p>Thou art not dead, O sweet lost melody,<br/>
Sung beyond memory,<br/>
When golden to the winds this world of ours<br/>
Waved wild with boundless flowers;<br/>
Sung in some past when wildernesses were,—<br/>
Not dead, not dead, lost air!<br/>
Yet in the ages long where lurkest thou,<br/>
And what soul knows thee now?<br/>
Wert thou not given to sweeten every wind<br/>
From that o’erburdened mind<br/>
That bore thee through the young world, and that tongue<br/>
By which thou first wert sung?<br/>
Was not the holy choir the endless dome,<br/>
And nature all thy home?<br/>
Did not the warm gale clasp thee to his breast.<br/>
Lulling thy storms to rest?<br/>
And is the June air laden with thee now,<br/>
Passing the summer-bough?<br/>
And is the dawn-wind on a lonely sea<br/>
Balmy with thoughts of thee?<br/>
To rock on daybreak winds dost thou rejoice,<br/>
As first on his strong voice<br/>
Whose radiant morning soul did give thee birth,<br/>
Gave thee to heaven and earth?<br/>
Or did each bird win one dear note of thee<br/>
To pipe eternally?<br/>
Art thou the secret of the small field-flowers<br/>
Nodding thy time for hours,<br/>
—Blown by the happy winds from hill to hill,<br/>
And such a secret still?<br/>
Or wert thou rapt awhile to other spheres<br/>
To gladden tenderer ears?<br/>
Doth music’s soul contain thee, precious air,<br/>
Sleepest thou clasped there,<br/>
Until a time shall come for thee to start<br/>
Into some unborn heart?<br/>
Then wilt thou as the clouds of ages roll,<br/>
Thou migratory soul,<br/>
Amid a different, wilder, wilderness<br/>
—In crowds that throng and press,<br/>
Revive thy blessed cadences forgotten<br/>
In some soul new-begotten?<br/>
Oh, wilt thou ever tire of thy long rest<br/>
On nature’s silent breast?<br/>
And wilt thou leave thy rainbow showers, to bear<br/>
A part in human care?<br/>
—Forsake thy boundless silence to make choice<br/>
Of some pathetic voice?<br/>
—Forsake thy stars, thy suns, thy moons, thy skies<br/>
For man’s desiring sighs?</p>
<h2>SONNET—THE POET TO NATURE</h2>
<p>I have no secrets from thee, lyre sublime,<br/>
My lyre whereof I make my melody.<br/>
I sing one way like the west wind through thee,<br/>
With my whole heart, and hear thy sweet strings chime.</p>
<p>But thou, who soundest in my tune and rhyme,<br/>
Hast tones I wake not, in thy land and sea,<br/>
Loveliness not for me, secrets from me,<br/>
Thoughts for another, and another time.</p>
<p>And as, the west wind passed, the south wind alters<br/>
His intimate sweet things, his hues of noon,<br/>
The voices of his waves, sound of his
pine,</p>
<p>The meanings of his lost heart,—this thought falters<br/>
In my short song—‘Another bard shall tune<br/>
Thee, my one Lyre, to other songs than
mine.’</p>
<h2>THE POET TO HIS CHILDHOOD</h2>
<p>In my thought I see you stand with a path on either hand,<br/>
—Hills that look into the sun, and there a river’d meadow-land.<br/>
And your lost voice with the things that it decreed across me thrills,<br/>
When you thought, and chose the hills.</p>
<p>‘If it prove a life of pain, greater have I judged the gain.<br/>
With a singing soul for music’s sake, I climb and meet the rain,<br/>
And I choose, whilst I am calm, my thought and labouring to be<br/>
Unconsoled by sympathy.’</p>
<p>But how dared you use me so? For you bring my ripe years low<br/>
To your child’s whim and a destiny your child-soul could not know.<br/>
And that small voice legislating I revolt against, with tears.<br/>
But you mark not, through the years.</p>
<p>‘To the mountain leads my way. If the plains are green
to-day,<br/>
These my barren hills are flushing faintly, strangely, in the May,<br/>
With the presence of the Spring amongst the smallest flowers that grow.’<br/>
But the summer in the snow?</p>
<p>Do you know, who are so bold, how in sooth the rule will hold,<br/>
Settled by a wayward child’s ideal at some ten years old?<br/>
—How the human arms you slip from, thoughts and love you stay
not for,<br/>
Will not open to you more?</p>
<p>You were rash then, little child, for the skies with storms are wild,<br/>
And you faced the dim horizon with its whirl of mists, and smiled,<br/>
Climbed a little higher, lonelier, in the solitary sun,<br/>
To feel how the winds came on.</p>
<p>But your sunny silence there, solitude so light to bear,<br/>
Will become a long dumb world up in the colder sadder air,<br/>
And the little mournful lonelinesses in the little hills<br/>
Wider wilderness fulfils.</p>
<p>And if e’er you should come down to the village or the town,<br/>
With the cold rain for your garland, and the wind for your renown,<br/>
You will stand upon the thresholds with a face or dumb desire,<br/>
Nor be known by any fire.</p>
<p>It is memory that shrinks. You were all too brave, methinks,<br/>
Climbing solitudes of flowering cistus and the thin wild pinks,<br/>
Musing, setting to a haunting air in one vague reverie<br/>
All the life that was to be.</p>
<p>With a smile do I complain in the safety of the pain,<br/>
Knowing that my feet can never quit their solitudes again;<br/>
But regret may turn with longing to that one hour’s choice you
had,<br/>
When the silence broodeth sad.</p>
<p>I rebel <i>not</i>, child gone by, but obey you wonderingly,<br/>
For you knew not, young rash speaker, all you spoke, and now will I,<br/>
With the life, and all the loneliness revealed that you thought fit,<br/>
Sing the Amen, knowing it.</p>
<h2>SONNET</h2>
<p>A poet of one mood in all my lays,<br/>
Ranging all life to sing one only love,<br/>
Like a west wind across the world I move,<br/>
Sweeping my harp of floods mine own wild ways.</p>
<p>The countries change, but not the west-wind days<br/>
Which are my songs. My soft skies shine above,<br/>
And on all seas the colours of a dove,<br/>
And on all fields a flash of silver greys.</p>
<p>I make the whole world answer to my art<br/>
And sweet monotonous meanings. In your ears<br/>
I change not ever, bearing, for my part,<br/>
One thought that is the treasure of my years,<br/>
A small cloud full of rain upon my heart<br/>
And in mine arms, clasped, like a child in tears.</p>
<h2>AN UNMARKED FESTIVAL</h2>
<p>There’s a feast undated yet:<br/>
Both our true lives hold it fast,—<br/>
The first day we ever met.<br/>
What a great day came and passed!<br/>
—Unknown then, but known at last.</p>
<p>And we met: You knew not me,<br/>
Mistress of your joys and fears;<br/>
Held my hands that held the key<br/>
Of the treasure of your years,<br/>
Of the fountain of your tears.</p>
<p>For you knew not it was I,<br/>
And I knew not it was you.<br/>
We have learnt, as days went by.<br/>
But a flower struck root and grew<br/>
Underground, and no one knew.</p>
<p>Days of days! Unmarked it rose,<br/>
In whose hours we were to meet;<br/>
And forgotten passed. Who knows,<br/>
Was earth cold or sunny, Sweet,<br/>
At the coming of your feet?</p>
<p>One mere day, we thought; the measure<br/>
Of such days the year fulfils.<br/>
Now, how dearly would we treasure<br/>
Something from its fields, its rills,<br/>
And its memorable hills;</p>
<p>—But one leaf of oak or lime,<br/>
Or one blossom from its bowers<br/>
No one gathered at the time.<br/>
Oh, to keep that day of ours<br/>
By one relic of its flowers!</p>
<h2>SONNET—THE NEOPHYTE</h2>
<p>Who knows what days I answer for to-day:<br/>
Giving the bud I give the flower. I bow<br/>
This yet unfaded and a faded brow;<br/>
Bending these knees and feeble knees, I pray.</p>
<p>Thoughts yet unripe in me I bend one way,<br/>
Give one repose to pain I know not now,<br/>
One leaven to joy that comes, I guess not how.<br/>
I dedicate my fields when Spring is grey.</p>
<p>Oh, rash! (I smile) to pledge my hidden wheat.<br/>
I fold to-day at altars far apart<br/>
Hands trembling with what toils? In their retreat<br/>
I seal my love to-be, my folded art.<br/>
I light the tapers at my head and feet,<br/>
And lay the crucifix on this silent heart.</p>
<h2>SONNET—SPRING ON THE ALBAN HILLS</h2>
<p>O’er the Campagna it is dim warm weather;<br/>
The Spring comes with a full heart silently,<br/>
And many thoughts; a faint flash of the sea<br/>
Divides two mists; straight falls the falling feather.</p>
<p>With wild Spring meanings hill and plain together<br/>
Grow pale, or just flush with a dust of flowers.<br/>
Rome in the ages, dimmed with all her towers,<br/>
Floats in the midst, a little cloud at tether.</p>
<p>I fain would put my hands about thy face,<br/>
Thou with thy thoughts, who art another Spring,<br/>
And draw thee to me like a mournful child.</p>
<p>Thou lookest on me from another place;<br/>
I touch not this day’s secret, nor the thing<br/>
That in the silence makes thy sweet eyes
wild.</p>
<h2>SONG OF THE NIGHT AT DAYBREAK</h2>
<p>All my stars forsake me,<br/>
And the dawn-winds shake me.<br/>
Where shall I betake me?</p>
<p>Whither shall I run<br/>
Till the set of sun,<br/>
Till the day be done?</p>
<p>To the mountain-mine,<br/>
To the boughs o’ the pine,<br/>
To the blind man’s eyne,</p>
<p>To a brow that is<br/>
Bowed upon the knees,<br/>
Sick with memories.</p>
<h2>SONNET—TO A DAISY</h2>
<p>Slight as thou art, thou art enough to hide,<br/>
Like all created things, secrets from me,<br/>
And stand a barrier to eternity.<br/>
And I, how can I praise thee well and wide?</p>
<p>From where I dwell—upon the hither side?<br/>
Thou little veil for so great mystery,<br/>
When shall I penetrate all things and thee,<br/>
And then look back? For this I must abide,</p>
<p>Till thou shalt grow and fold and be unfurled<br/>
Literally between me and the world.<br/>
Then I shall drink from in beneath a
spring,</p>
<p>And from a poet’s side shall read his book.<br/>
O daisy mine, what will it be to look<br/>
From God’s side even of such a
simple thing?</p>
<h2>SONNET—TO ONE POEM IN A SILENT TIME</h2>
<p>Who looked for thee, thou little song of mine?<br/>
This winter of a silent poet’s heart<br/>
Is suddenly sweet with thee, but what thou art,<br/>
Mid-winter flower, I would I could divine.</p>
<p>Art thou a last one, orphan of thy line?<br/>
Did the dead summer’s last warmth foster thee?<br/>
Or is Spring folded up unguessed in me,<br/>
And stirring out of sight,—and thou the sign?</p>
<p>Where shall I look—backwards or to the morrow<br/>
For others of thy fragrance, secret child?<br/>
Who knows if last things or if first
things claim thee?</p>
<p>—Whether thou be the last smile of my sorrow,<br/>
Or else a joy too sweet, a joy too wild?<br/>
How, my December violet, shall I name
thee?</p>
<h2>FUTURE POETRY</h2>
<p>No new delights to our desire<br/>
The singers of the past can yield.<br/>
I lift mine eyes to hill and field,<br/>
And see in them your yet dumb lyre,<br/>
Poets unborn and unrevealed.</p>
<p>Singers to come, what thoughts will start<br/>
To song? what words of yours be sent<br/>
Through man’s soul, and with earth be blent?<br/>
These worlds of nature and the heart<br/>
Await you like an instrument.</p>
<p>Who knows what musical flocks of words<br/>
Upon these pine-tree tops will light,<br/>
And crown these towers in circling flight<br/>
And cross these seas like summer birds,<br/>
And give a voice to the day and night?</p>
<p>Something of you already is ours;<br/>
Some mystic part of you belongs<br/>
To us whose dreams your future throngs,<br/>
Who look on hills, and trees, and flowers,<br/>
Which will mean so much in your songs.</p>
<p>I wonder, like the maid who found,<br/>
And knelt to lift, the lyre supreme<br/>
Of Orpheus from the Thracian stream.<br/>
She dreams on its sealed past profound;<br/>
On a deep future sealed I dream.</p>
<p>She bears it in her wanderings<br/>
Within her arms, and has not pressed<br/>
Her unskilled fingers, but her breast<br/>
Upon those silent sacred strings;<br/>
I, too, clasp mystic strings at rest.</p>
<p>For I, i’ the world of lands and seas,<br/>
The sky of wind and rain and fire,<br/>
And in man’s world of long desire—<br/>
In all that is yet dumb in these—<br/>
Have found a more mysterious lyre.</p>
<h2>THE POET SINGS TO HER POET</h2>
<p>THE MOON TO THE SUN</p>
<p>As the full moon shining there<br/>
To the sun that lighteth her<br/>
Am I unto thee for ever,<br/>
O my secret glory-giver!<br/>
O my light, I am dark but fair,<br/>
Black but fair.</p>
<p>Shine, Earth loves thee! And then shine<br/>
And be loved through thoughts of mine.<br/>
All thy secrets that I treasure<br/>
I translate them at my pleasure.<br/>
I am crowned with glory of thine.<br/>
Thine, not thine.</p>
<p>I make pensive thy delight,<br/>
And thy strong gold silver-white.<br/>
Though all beauty of nine thou makest,<br/>
Yet to earth which thou forsakest<br/>
I have made thee fair all night,<br/>
Day all night.</p>
<h2>A POET’S SONNET</h2>
<p>If I should quit thee, sacrifice, forswear,<br/>
To what, my art, shall I give thee in keeping?<br/>
To the long winds of heaven? Shall these come sweeping<br/>
My songs forgone against my face and hair?</p>
<p>Or shall the mountain streams my lost joys bear,<br/>
My past poetic pain in the rain be weeping?<br/>
No, I shall live a poet waking, sleeping,<br/>
And I shall die a poet unaware.</p>
<p>From me, my art, thou canst not pass away;<br/>
And I, a singer though I cease to sing,<br/>
Shall own thee without joy in thee or
woe.</p>
<p>Through my indifferent words of every day,<br/>
Scattered and all unlinked the rhymes shall ring<br/>
And make my poem; and I shall not know.</p>
<h2>THE MODERN POET</h2>
<p>A SONG OF DERIVATIONS</p>
<p>I come from nothing; but from where<br/>
Come the undying thoughts I bear?<br/>
Down, through long links of death and birth,<br/>
From the past poets of the earth.<br/>
My immortality is there.</p>
<p>I am like the blossom of an hour.<br/>
But long, long vanished sun and shower<br/>
Awoke my breath i’ the young world’s air.<br/>
I track the past back everywhere<br/>
Through seed and flower and seed and flower.</p>
<p>Or I am like a stream that flows<br/>
Full of the cold springs that arose<br/>
In morning lands, in distant hills;<br/>
And down the plain my channel fills<br/>
With melting of forgotten snows.</p>
<p>Voices, I have not heard, possessed<br/>
My own fresh songs; my thoughts are blessed<br/>
With relics of the far unknown.<br/>
And mixed with memories not my own<br/>
The sweet streams throng into my breast.</p>
<p>Before this life began to be,<br/>
The happy songs that wake in me<br/>
Woke long ago and far apart.<br/>
Heavily on this little heart<br/>
Presses this immortality.</p>
<h2>AFTER A PARTING</h2>
<p>Farewell has long been said; I have forgone thee;<br/>
I never name thee even.<br/>
But how shall I learn virtues and yet shun thee?<br/>
For thou art so near Heaven<br/>
That heavenward meditations pause upon thee.</p>
<p>Thou dost beset the path to every shrine;<br/>
My trembling thoughts discern<br/>
Thy goodness in the good for which I pine;<br/>
And if I turn from but one sin, I turn<br/>
Unto a smile of thine.</p>
<p>How shall I thrust thee apart<br/>
Since all my growth tends to thee night and day—<br/>
To thee faith, hope, and art?<br/>
Swift are the currents setting all one way;<br/>
They draw my life, my life, out of my heart.</p>
<h2>RENOUNCEMENT</h2>
<p>I must not think of thee; and, tired yet strong,<br/>
I shun the thought that lurks in all delight—<br/>
The thought of thee—and in the blue Heaven’s
height,<br/>
And in the sweetest passage of a song.</p>
<p>Oh, just beyond the fairest thoughts that throng<br/>
This breast, the thought of thee waits, hidden yet bright;<br/>
But it must never, never come in sight;<br/>
I must stop short of thee the whole day long.</p>
<p>But when sleep comes to close each difficult day,<br/>
When night gives pause to the long watch I keep,<br/>
And all my bonds I needs must loose apart,</p>
<p>Must doff my will as raiment laid away,—<br/>
With the first dream that comes with the first sleep<br/>
I run, I run, I am gathered to thy heart.</p>
<h2>VENI CREATOR</h2>
<p>So humble things Thou hast borne for us, O God,<br/>
Left’st Thou a path of lowliness untrod?<br/>
Yes, one, till now; another Olive-Garden.<br/>
For we endure the tender pain of pardon,—<br/>
One with another we forbear. Give heed,<br/>
Look at the mournful world Thou hast decreed.<br/>
The time has come. At last we hapless men<br/>
Know all our haplessness all through. Come, then,<br/>
Endure undreamed humility: Lord of Heaven,<br/>
Come to our ignorant hearts and be forgiven.</p>
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