<h3><SPAN name="THE_FAUN" name="THE_FAUN"></SPAN>THE FAUN. <span class="smaller">A FRAGMENT.</span></h3>
<p>I will go out to grass with that old King,
<br/>For I am weary of clothes and cooks.
<br/>I long to lie along the banks of brooks,
<br/>And watch the boughs above me sway and swing.
<br/>Come, I will pluck off custom's livery,
<br/>Nor longer be a lackey to old Time.
<br/>Time shall serve me, and at my feet shall fling
<br/>The spoil of listless minutes. I shall climb
<br/>The wild trees for my food, and run
<br/>Through dale and upland as a fox runs free,
<br/>Laugh for cool joy and sleep i' the warm sun,
<br/>And men will call me mad, like that old King.
<br/>
<br/>For I am woodland-natured, and have made
<br/>Dryads my bedfellows,
<br/>And I have played
<br/>With the sleek Naiads in the splash of pools
<br/>And made a mock of gowned and trousered fools.
<br/>Helen, none knows
<br/>Better than thou how like a Faun I strayed.
<br/>And I am half Faun now, and my heart goes
<br/>Out to the forest and the crack of twigs,
<br/>The drip of wet leaves and the low soft laughter
<br/>Of brooks that chuckle o'er old mossy jests
<br/>And say them over to themselves, the nests
<br/>Of squirrels and the holes the chipmunk digs,
<br/>Where through the branches the slant rays
<br/>Dapple with sunlight the leaf-matted ground,
<br/>And the wind comes with blown vesture rustling after,
<br/>And through the woven lattice of crisp sound
<br/>A bird's song lightens like a maiden's face.
<br/>
<br/>O wildwood Helen, let them strive and fret,
<br/>Those goggled men with their dissecting-knives!
<br/>
<br/>Let them in charnel-houses pass their lives
<br/>And seek in death life's secret! And let
<br/>Those hard-faced worldlings prematurely old
<br/>Gnaw their thin lips with vain desire to get
<br/>Portia's fair fame or Lesbia's carcanet,
<br/>Or crown of Caesar or Catullus,
<br/>Apicius' lampreys or Crassus' gold!
<br/>For these consider many things—but yet
<br/>By land nor sea
<br/>They shall not find the way to Arcady,
<br/>The old home of the awful heart-dear Mother,
<br/>Whereto child-dreams and long rememberings lull us,
<br/>Far from the cares that overlay and smother
<br/>The memories of old woodland out-door mirth
<br/>In the dim first life-burst centuries ago,
<br/>The sense of the freedom and nearness of Earth—
<br/>Nay, this they shall not know;
<br/>For who goes thither,
<br/>Leaves all the cark and clutch of his soul behind,
<br/>The doves defiled and the serpents shrined,
<br/>The hates that wax and the hopes that wither;
<br/>Nor does he journey, seeking where it be,
<br/>But wakes and finds himself in Arcady.
<br/>
<br/>Hist! there's a stir in the brush.
<br/>Was it a face through the leaves?
<br/>Back of the laurels a skurry and rush
<br/>Hillward, then silence except for the thrush
<br/>That throws one song from the dark of the bush
<br/>And is gone; and I plunge in the wood, and the swift soul cleaves
<br/>Through the swirl and the flow of the leaves,
<br/>As a swimmer stands with his white limbs bare to the sun
<br/>For the space that a breath is held, and drops in the sea;
<br/>And the undulant woodland folds round me, intimate, fluctuant, free,
<br/>Like the clasp and the cling of waters, and the reach and the effort is done,—
<br/>There is only the glory of living, exultant to be.
<br/>
<br/>O goodly damp smell of the ground!
<br/>O rough sweet bark of the trees!
<br/>O clear sharp cracklings of sound!
<br/>O life that's a-thrill and a-bound
<br/>With the vigor of boyhood and morning, and the noontide's rapture of ease!
<br/>Was there ever a weary heart in the world?
<br/>A lag in the body's urge or a flag of the spirit's wings?
<br/>Did a man's heart ever break
<br/>For a lost hope's sake?
<br/>For here there is lilt in the quiet and calm in the quiver of things.
<br/>Ay, this old oak, gray-grown and knurled,
<br/>Solemn and sturdy and big,
<br/>Is as young of heart, as alert and elate in his rest,
<br/>As the nuthatch there that clings to the tip of the twig
<br/>And scolds at the wind that it buffets too rudely its nest.
<br/>
<br/>Oh, what is it breathes in the air?
<br/>Oh, what is it touches my cheek?
<br/>There's a sense of a presence that lurks in the branches.
<br/>But where?
<br/>Is it far, is it far to seek?</p>
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