<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>A READING OF LIFE<br/> <span class="GutSmall">WITH OTHER POEMS</span></h1>
<p style="text-align: center">BY GEORGE MEREDITH</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">WESTMINSTER</span><br/>
ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO <span class="smcap">Ltd</span><br/>
<span class="GutSmall">2 WHITEHALL GARDENS</span><br/>
<span class="GutSmall">1901</span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><SPAN name="pagevi"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p. vi</span><span class="smcap">Butler &
Tanner</span>,<br/>
<span class="smcap">The Selwood Printing Works</span>,<br/>
<span class="smcap">Frome</span>, <span class="smcap">and
London</span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="pagevii"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p. vii</span>CONTENTS</h2>
<table>
<tr>
<td><p> </p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">A Reading of Life</span></p>
</td>
<td><p> </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">The Vital
Choice</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page1">1</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">With the
Huntress</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page3">3</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">With the
Persuader</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page8">8</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">The Test of
Manhood</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page28">28</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Cageing of Ares</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page45">45</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Night-Walk</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page55">55</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Hueless Love</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page60">60</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Song in the Songless</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page63">63</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Union in Disseverance</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page64">64</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Burden of Strength</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page65">65</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Main Regret</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page66">66</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Alternation</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page68">68</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><SPAN name="pageviii"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
viii</span><span class="smcap">Hawarden</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page69">69</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">At the Close</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page70">70</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Forest History</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page71">71</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">A Garden Idyl</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page81">81</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Foresight and Patience</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page88">88</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">Fragments of the Iliad in English
Hexameters Verse</span>—</p>
</td>
<td><p> </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">The Invective of
Achilles</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page109">109</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p style="text-align: center">,, ,, ,, ,,</p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page112">112</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">Marshalling of the
Achaians</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page114">114</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">Agamemnon in the
Fight</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page117">117</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">Paris and
Diomedes</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page119">119</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">Hypnos on
Ida</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page121">121</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">Clash in Arms of the
Achaians and Trojans</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page122">122</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">The Horses of
Achilles</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page123">123</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">The Mares of the
Camargue</span>—</p>
</td>
<td><p> </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p> <span class="smcap">From the
</span><span class="smcap"><i>Mirèio</i></span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page126">126</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><SPAN name="page1"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A READING OF LIFE</h2>
<h3>THE VITAL CHOICE</h3>
<h4>I</h4>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Or</span> shall we run with
Artemis<br/>
Or yield the breast to Aphrodite?<br/>
Both are mighty;<br/>
Both give bliss;<br/>
Each can torture if divided;<br/>
Each claims worship undivided,<br/>
In her wake would have us wallow.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="page2"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>II</h4>
<p class="poetry">Youth must offer on bent knees<br/>
Homage unto one or other;<br/>
Earth, the mother,<br/>
This decrees;<br/>
And unto the pallid Scyther<br/>
Either points us shun we either<br/>
Shun or too devoutly follow.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page3"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WITH THE HUNTRESS</h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Through</span> the
water-eye of night,<br/>
Midway between eve and dawn,<br/>
See the chase, the rout, the flight<br/>
In deep forest; oread, faun,<br/>
Goat-foot, antlers laid on neck;<br/>
Ravenous all the line for speed.<br/>
See yon wavy sparkle beck<br/>
Sign of the Virgin Lady’s lead.<br/>
Down her course a serpent star<br/>
Coils and shatters at her heels;<br/>
Peals the horn exulting, peals<br/>
Plaintive, is it near or far.<br/>
<SPAN name="page4"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Huntress,
arrowy to pursue,<br/>
In and out of woody glen,<br/>
Under cliffs that tear the blue,<br/>
Over torrent, over fen,<br/>
She and forest, where she skims<br/>
Feathery, darken and relume:<br/>
Those are her white-lightning limbs<br/>
Cleaving loads of leafy gloom.<br/>
Mountains hear her and call back,<br/>
Shrewd with night: a frosty wail<br/>
Distant: her the emerald vale<br/>
Folds, and wonders in her track.<br/>
Now her retinue is lean,<br/>
Many rearward; streams the chase<br/>
Eager forth of covert; seen<br/>
One hot tide the rapturous race.<br/>
Quiver-charged and crescent-crowned,<br/>
Up on a flash the lighted mound<br/>
Leaps she, bow to shoulder, shaft<br/>
<SPAN name="page5"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Strung to
barb with archer’s craft,<br/>
Legs like plaited lyre-chords, feet<br/>
Songs to see, past pitch of sweet.<br/>
Fearful swiftness they outrun,<br/>
Shaggy wildness, grey or dun,<br/>
Challenge, charge of tusks elude:<br/>
Theirs the dance to tame the rude;<br/>
Beast, and beast in manhood tame,<br/>
Follow we their silver flame.<br/>
Pride of flesh from bondage free,<br/>
Reaping vigour of its waste,<br/>
Marks her servitors, and she<br/>
Sanctifies the unembraced.<br/>
Nought of perilous she reeks;<br/>
Valour clothes her open breast;<br/>
Sweet beyond the thrill of sex;<br/>
Hallowed by the sex confessed.<br/>
Huntress arrowy to pursue,<br/>
Colder she than sunless dew,<br/>
<SPAN name="page6"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>She, that
breath of upper air;<br/>
Ay, but never lyrist sang,<br/>
Draught of Bacchus never sprang<br/>
Blood the bliss of Gods to share,<br/>
High o’er sweep of eagle wings,<br/>
Like the run with her, when rings<br/>
Clear her rally, and her dart,<br/>
In the forest’s cavern heart,<br/>
Tells of her victorious aim.<br/>
Then is pause and chatter, cheer,<br/>
Laughter at some satyr lame,<br/>
Looks upon the fallen deer,<br/>
Measuring his noble crest;<br/>
Here a favourite in her train,<br/>
Foremost mid her nymphs, caressed;<br/>
All applauded. Shall she reign<br/>
Worshipped? O to be with her there!<br/>
She, that breath of nimble air,<br/>
Lifts the breast to giant power.<br/>
<SPAN name="page7"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Maid and
man, and man and maid,<br/>
Who each other would devour<br/>
Elsewhere, by the chase betrayed,<br/>
There are comrades, led by her,<br/>
Maid-preserver, man-maker.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page8"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WITH THE PERSUADER</h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Who</span> murmurs, hither,
hither: who<br/>
Where nought is audible so fills the ear?<br/>
Where nought is visible can make appear<br/>
A veil with eyes that waver through,<br/>
Like twilight’s pledge of blessed night to come,<br/>
Or day most golden? All unseen and dumb,<br/>
She breathes, she moves, inviting flees,<br/>
Is lost, and leaves the thrilled desire<br/>
To clasp and strike a slackened lyre,<br/>
Till over smiles of hyacinth seas,<br/>
Flame in a crystal vessel sails<br/>
Beneath a dome of jewelled spray,<br/>
<SPAN name="page9"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>For land
that drops the rosy day<br/>
On nights of throbbing nightingales.</p>
<p class="poetry">Landward did the wonder flit,<br/>
Or heart’s desire of her, all earth in it.<br/>
We saw the heavens fling down their rose;<br/>
On rapturous waves we saw her glide;<br/>
The pearly sea-shell half enclose;<br/>
The shoal of sea-nymphs flush the tide;<br/>
And we, afire to kiss her feet, no more<br/>
Behold than tracks along a startled shore,<br/>
With brightened edges of dark leaves that feign<br/>
An ambush hoped, as heartless night remain.</p>
<p class="poetry">More closely, warmly: hither, hither! she,<br/>
The very she called forth by ripened blood<br/>
For its next breath of being, murmurs; she,<br/>
Allurement; she, fulfilment; she,<br/>
The stream within us urged to flood;<br/>
<SPAN name="page10"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
10</span>Man’s cry, earth’s answer, heaven’s
consent; O she,<br/>
Maid, woman and divinity;<br/>
Our over-earthly, inner-earthly mate<br/>
Unmated; she, our hunger and our fruit<br/>
Untasted; she our written fate<br/>
Unread; Life’s flowering, Life’s root:<br/>
Unread, divined; unseen, beheld;<br/>
The evanescent, ever-present she,<br/>
Great Nature’s stern necessity<br/>
In radiance clothed, to softness quelled;<br/>
With a sword’s edge of sweetness keen to take<br/>
Our breath for bliss, our hearts for fulness break.</p>
<p class="poetry">The murmur hushes down, the veil is rent.<br/>
Man’s cry, earth’s answer, heaven’s consent,<br/>
Her form is given to pardoned sight,<br/>
And lets our mortal eyes receive<br/>
The sovereign loveliness of celestial white;<br/>
Adored by them who solitarily pace,<br/>
<SPAN name="page11"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>In dusk of
the underworld’s perpetual eve,<br/>
The paths among the meadow asphodel,<br/>
Remembering. Never there her face<br/>
Is planetary; reddens to shore sea-shell<br/>
Around such whiteness the enamoured air<br/>
Of noon that clothes her, never there.<br/>
Daughter of light, the joyful light,<br/>
She stands unveiled to nuptial sight,<br/>
Sweet in her disregard of aid<br/>
Divine to conquer or persuade.<br/>
A fountain jets from moss; a flower<br/>
Bends gently where her sunset tresses shower.<br/>
By guerdon of her brilliance may be seen<br/>
With eyelids unabashed the passion’s Queen.</p>
<p class="poetry">Shorn of attendant Graces she can use<br/>
Her natural snares to make her will supreme.<br/>
A simple nymph it is, inclined to muse<br/>
Before the leader foot shall dip in stream:<br/>
<SPAN name="page12"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>One arm at
curve along a rounded thigh;<br/>
Her firm new breasts each pointing its own way<br/>
A knee half bent to shade its fellow shy,<br/>
Where innocence, not nature, signals nay.<br/>
The bud of fresh virginity awaits<br/>
The wooer, and all roseate will she burst:<br/>
She touches on the hour of happy mates;<br/>
Still is she unaware she wakens thirst.</p>
<p class="poetry">And while commanding blissful sight believe<br/>
It holds her as a body strained to breast,<br/>
Down on the underworld’s perpetual eve<br/>
She plunges the possessor dispossessed;<br/>
And bids believe that image, heaving warm,<br/>
Is lost to float like torch-smoke after flame;<br/>
The phantom any breeze blows out of form;<br/>
A thirst’s delusion, a defeated aim.</p>
<p class="poetry">The rapture shed the torture weaves;<br/>
<SPAN name="page13"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The direst
blow on human heart she deals:<br/>
The pain to know the seen deceives;<br/>
Nought true but what insufferably feels.<br/>
And stabs of her delicious note,<br/>
That is as heavenly light to hearing, heard<br/>
Through shelter leaves, the laughter from her throat,<br/>
We answer as the midnight’s morning’s bird.</p>
<p class="poetry">She laughs, she wakens gleeful cries;<br/>
In her delicious laughter part revealed;<br/>
Yet mother is she more of moans and sighs,<br/>
For longings unappeased and wounds unhealed.<br/>
Yet would she bless, it is her task to bless:<br/>
Yon folded couples, passing under shade,<br/>
Are her rich harvest; bidden caress, caress,<br/>
Consume the fruit in bloom; not disobeyed.<br/>
We dolorous complainers had a dream,<br/>
Wrought on the vacant air from inner fire,<br/>
<SPAN name="page14"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>We saw
stand bare of her celestial beam<br/>
The glorious Goddess, and we dared desire.</p>
<p class="poetry">Thereat are shown reproachful eyes, and lips<br/>
Of upward curl to meanings half obscure;<br/>
And glancing where a wood-nymph lightly skips<br/>
She nods: at once that creature wears her lure.<br/>
Blush of our being between birth and death:<br/>
Sob of our ripened blood for its next breath:<br/>
Her wily semblance nought of her denies;<br/>
Seems it the Goddess runs, the Goddess hies,<br/>
The generous Goddess yields. And she can arm<br/>
Her dwarfed and twisted with her secret charm;<br/>
Benevolent as Earth to feed her own.<br/>
Fully shall they be fed, if they beseech.<br/>
But scorn she has for them that walk alone;<br/>
Blanched men, starved women, whom no arts can pleach.<br/>
The men as chief of criminals she disdains,<br/>
<SPAN name="page15"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And holds
the reason in perceptive thought.<br/>
More pitiable, like rivers lacking rains,<br/>
Kissing cold stones, the women shrink for drought.<br/>
Those faceless discords, out of nature strayed,<br/>
Rank of the putrefaction ere decayed,<br/>
In impious singles bear the thorny wreaths:<br/>
Their lives are where harmonious Pleasure breathes<br/>
For couples crowned with flowers that burn in dew.<br/>
Comes there a tremor of night’s forest horn<br/>
Across her garden from the insaner crew,<br/>
She darkens to malignity of scorn.<br/>
A shiver courses through her garden-grounds:<br/>
Grunt of the tusky boar, the baying hounds,<br/>
The hunter’s shouts, are heard afar, and bring<br/>
Dead on her heart her crimsoned flower of Spring.<br/>
These, the irreverent of Life’s design,<br/>
Division between natural and divine<br/>
Would cast; these vaunting barrenness for best,<br/>
<SPAN name="page16"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>In veins
of gathered strength Life’s tide arrest;<br/>
And these because the roses flood their cheeks,<br/>
Vow them in nature wise as when Love speaks.<br/>
With them is war; and well the Goddess knows<br/>
What undermines the race who mount the rose;<br/>
How the ripe moment, lodged in slumberous hours,<br/>
Enkindled by persuasion overpowers:<br/>
Why weak as are her frailer trailing weeds,<br/>
The strong when Beauty gleams o’er Nature’s needs,<br/>
And timely guile unguarded finds them lie.<br/>
They who her sway withstand a sea defy,<br/>
At every point of juncture must be proof;<br/>
Nor look for mercy from the incessant surge<br/>
Her forces mixed of craft and passion urge<br/>
For the one whelming wave to spring aloof.<br/>
She, tenderness, is pitiless to them<br/>
Resisting in her godhead nature’s truth.<br/>
No flower their face shall be, but writhen stem;<br/>
<SPAN name="page17"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Their
youth a frost, their age the dirge for youth.<br/>
These miserably disinclined,<br/>
The lamentably unembraced,<br/>
Insult the Pleasures Earth designed<br/>
To people and beflower the waste.<br/>
Wherefore the Pleasures pass them by:<br/>
For death they live, in life they die.</p>
<p class="poetry">Her head the Goddess from them turns,<br/>
As from grey mounds of ashes in bronze urns.<br/>
She views her quivering couples unconsoled,<br/>
And of her beauty mirror they become,<br/>
Like orchard blossoms, apple, pear and plum,<br/>
Free of the cloud, beneath the flood of gold.<br/>
Crowned with wreaths that burn in dew,<br/>
Her couples whirl, sun-satiated,<br/>
Athirst for shade, they sigh, they wed,<br/>
They play the music made of two:<br/>
Oldest of earth, earth’s youngest till earth’s
end:<br/>
<SPAN name="page18"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Cunninger
than the numbered strings,<br/>
For melodies, for harmonies,<br/>
For mastered discords, and the things<br/>
Not vocable, whose mysteries<br/>
Are inmost Love’s, Life’s reach of Life extend.</p>
<p class="poetry">Is it an anguish overflowing shame<br/>
And the tongue’s pudency confides to her,<br/>
With eyes of embers, breath of incense myrrh,<br/>
The woman’s marrow in some dear youth’s name,<br/>
Then is the Goddess tenderness<br/>
Maternal, and she has a sister’s tones<br/>
Benign to soothe intemperate distress,<br/>
Divide despair from hope, and sighs from moans.<br/>
Her gentleness imparts exhaling ease<br/>
To those of her milk-bearer votaries<br/>
As warm of bosom-earth as she; of the source<br/>
Direct; erratic but in heart’s excess;<br/>
<SPAN name="page19"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Being
mortal and ill-matched for Love’s great force;<br/>
Like green leaves caught with flames by his impress.<br/>
And pray they under skies less overcast,<br/>
That swiftly may her star of eve descend,<br/>
Her lustrous morning star fly not too fast,<br/>
To lengthen blissful night will she befriend.</p>
<p class="poetry">Unfailing her reply to woman’s voice<br/>
In supplication instant. Is it man’s,<br/>
She hears, approves his words, her garden scans,<br/>
And him: the flowers are various, he has choice.<br/>
Perchance his wound is deep; she listens long;<br/>
Enjoys what music fills the plaintive song;<br/>
And marks how he, who would be hawk at poise<br/>
Above the bird, his plaintive song enjoys.</p>
<p class="poetry">She reads him when his humbled manhood weeps<br/>
To her invoked: distraction is implored.<br/>
<SPAN name="page20"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A smile,
and he is up on godlike leaps<br/>
Above, with his bright Goddess owned the adored.<br/>
His tales of her declare she condescends;<br/>
Can share his fires, not always goads and rends:<br/>
Moreover, quits a throne, and must enclose<br/>
A queenlier gem than woman’s wayside rose.<br/>
She bends, he quickens; she breathes low, he springs<br/>
Enraptured; low she laughs, his woes disperse;<br/>
Aloud she laughs and sweeps his varied strings.<br/>
’Tis taught him how for touch of mournful verse<br/>
Rarely the music made of two ascends,<br/>
And Beauty’s Queen some other way is won.<br/>
Or it may solve the riddle, that she lends<br/>
Herself to all, and yields herself to none,<br/>
Save heavenliest: though claims by men are raised<br/>
In hot assurance under shade of doubt:<br/>
And numerous are the images bepraised<br/>
As Beauty’s Queen, should passion head the rout.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page21"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
21</span>Be sure the ruddy hue is Love’s: to woo<br/>
Love’s Fountain we must mount the ruddy hue.<br/>
That is her garden’s precept, seen where shines<br/>
Her blood-flower, and its unsought neighbour pines.<br/>
Daughter of light, the joyful light,<br/>
She bids her couples face full East,<br/>
Reflecting radiance, even when from her feast<br/>
Their outstretched arms brown deserts disunite,<br/>
The lion-haunted thickets hold apart.<br/>
In love the ruddy hue declares great heart;<br/>
High confidence in her whose aid is lent<br/>
To lovers lifting the tuned instrument,<br/>
Not one of rippled strings and funeral tone.<br/>
And doth the man pursue a tightened zone,<br/>
Then be it as the Laurel God he runs,<br/>
Confirmed to win, with countenance the Sun’s.</p>
<p class="poetry">Should pity bless the tremulous voice of woe<br/>
<SPAN name="page22"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>He lifts
for pity, limp his offspring show.<br/>
For him requiring woman’s arts to please<br/>
Infantile tastes with babe reluctances,<br/>
No race of giants! In the woman’s veins<br/>
Persuasion ripely runs, through hers the pains.<br/>
Her choice of him, should kind occasion nod,<br/>
Aspiring blends the Titan with the God;<br/>
Yet unto dwarf and mortal, she, submiss<br/>
In her high Lady’s mandate, yields the kiss;<br/>
And is it needed that Love’s daintier brute<br/>
Be snared as hunter, she will tempt pursuit.<br/>
She is great Nature’s ever intimate<br/>
In breast, and doth as ready handmaid wait,<br/>
Until perverted by her senseless male,<br/>
She plays the winding snake, the shrinking snail,<br/>
The flying deer, all tricks of evil fame,<br/>
Elusive to allure, since he grew tame.</p>
<p class="poetry">Hence has the Goddess, Nature’s earliest
Power,<br/>
<SPAN name="page23"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And
greatest and most present, with her dower<br/>
Of the transcendent beauty, gained repute<br/>
For meditated guile. She laughs to hear<br/>
A charge her garden’s labyrinths scarce confute,<br/>
Her garden’s histories tell of to all near.<br/>
Let it be said, But less upon her guile<br/>
Doth she rely for her immortal smile.<br/>
Still let the rumour spread, and terror screens<br/>
To push her conquests by the simplest means.<br/>
While man abjures not lustihead, nor swerves<br/>
From earth’s good labours, Beauty’s Queen he
serves.</p>
<p class="poetry">Her spacious garden and her garden’s
grant<br/>
She offers in reward for handsome cheer:<br/>
Choice of the nymphs whose looks will slant<br/>
The secret down a dewy leer<br/>
Of corner eyelids into haze:<br/>
Many a fair Aphrosyne<br/>
Like flower-bell to honey-bee:<br/>
<SPAN name="page24"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And here
they flicker round the maze<br/>
Bewildering him in heart and head:<br/>
And here they wear the close demure,<br/>
With subtle peeps to reassure:<br/>
Others parade where love has bled,<br/>
And of its crimson weave their mesh:<br/>
Others to snap of fingers leap,<br/>
As bearing breast with love asleep.<br/>
These are her laughters in the flesh.<br/>
Or would she fit a warrior mood,<br/>
She lights her seeming unsubdued,<br/>
And indicates the fortress-key.<br/>
Or is it heart for heart that craves,<br/>
She flecks along a run of waves<br/>
The one to promise deeper sea.</p>
<p class="poetry">Bands of her limpid primitives,<br/>
Or patterned in the curious braid,<br/>
Are the blest man’s; and whatsoever he gives,<br/>
<SPAN name="page25"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>For what
he gives is he repaid.<br/>
Good is it if by him ’tis held<br/>
He wins the fairest ever welled<br/>
From Nature’s founts: she whispers it: Even I<br/>
Not fairer! and forbids him to deny,<br/>
Else little is he lover. Those he clasps,<br/>
Intent as tempest, worshipful as prayer,—<br/>
And be they doves or be they asps,—<br/>
Must seem to him the sovereignty fair;<br/>
Else counts he soon among life’s wholly tamed.<br/>
Him whom from utter savage she reclaimed,<br/>
Half savage must he stay, would he be crowned<br/>
The lover. Else, past ripeness, deathward bound,<br/>
He reasons; and the totterer Earth detests,<br/>
Love shuns, grim logic screws in grasp, is he.<br/>
Doth man divide divine Necessity<br/>
From Joy, between the Queen of Beauty’s breasts<br/>
A sword is driven; for those most glorious twain<br/>
Present her; armed to bless and to constrain.<br/>
<SPAN name="page26"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Of this he
perishes; not she, the throned<br/>
On rocks that spout their springs to the sacred mounts.<br/>
A loftier Reason out of deeper founts<br/>
Earth’s chosen Goddess bears: by none disowned<br/>
While red blood runs to swell the pulse, she boasts,<br/>
And Beauty, like her star, descends the sky;<br/>
Earth’s answer, heaven’s consent unto man’s
cry,<br/>
Uplifted by the innumerable hosts.</p>
<p class="poetry">Quickened of Nature’s eye and ear,<br/>
When the wild sap at high tide smites<br/>
Within us; or benignly clear<br/>
To vision; or as the iris lights<br/>
On fluctuant waters; she is ours<br/>
Till set of man: the dreamed, the seen;<br/>
Flushing the world with odorous flowers:<br/>
A soft compulsion on terrene<br/>
<SPAN name="page27"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>By
heavenly: and the world is hers<br/>
While hunger after Beauty spurs.</p>
<p class="poetry">So is it sung in any space<br/>
She fills, with laugh at shallow laws<br/>
Forbidding love’s devised embrace,<br/>
The music Beauty from it draws.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page28"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE TEST OF MANHOOD</h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Like</span> a flood river
whirled at rocky banks,<br/>
An army issues out of wilderness,<br/>
With battle plucking round its ragged flanks;<br/>
Obstruction in the van; insane excess<br/>
Oft at the heart; yet hard the onward stress<br/>
Unto more spacious, where move ordered ranks,<br/>
And rise hushed temples built of shapely stone,<br/>
The work of hands not pledged to grind or slay.<br/>
They gave our earth a dress of flesh on bone;<br/>
A tongue to speak with answering heaven gave they.<br/>
<SPAN name="page29"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Then was
the gracious birth of man’s new day;<br/>
Divided from the haunted night it shone.</p>
<p class="poetry">That quiet dawn was Reverence; whereof
sprang<br/>
Ethereal Beauty in full morningtide.<br/>
Another sun had risen to clasp his bride:<br/>
It was another earth unto him sang.</p>
<p class="poetry">Came Reverence from the Huntress on her
heights?<br/>
From the Persuader came it, in those vales<br/>
Whereunto she melodiously invites,<br/>
Her troops of eager servitors regales?<br/>
Not far those two great Powers of Nature speed<br/>
Disciple steps on earth when sole they lead;<br/>
Nor either points for us the way of flame.<br/>
From him predestined mightier it came;<br/>
His task to hold them both in breast, and yield<br/>
Their dues to each, and of their war be field.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page30"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
30</span>The foes that in repulsion never ceased,<br/>
Must he, who once has been the goodly beast<br/>
Of one or other, at whose beck he ran,<br/>
Constrain to make him serviceable man;<br/>
Offending neither, nor the natural claim<br/>
Each pressed, denying, for his true man’s name.</p>
<p class="poetry">Ah, what a sweat of anguish in that strife<br/>
To hold them fast conjoined within him still;<br/>
Submissive to his will<br/>
Along the road of life!<br/>
And marvel not he wavered if at whiles<br/>
The forward step met frowns, the backward smiles.<br/>
For Pleasure witched him her sweet cup to drain;<br/>
Repentance offered ecstasy in pain.<br/>
Delicious licence called it Nature’s cry;<br/>
Ascetic rigours crushed the fleshly sigh;<br/>
A tread on shingle timed his lame advance<br/>
<SPAN name="page31"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Flung as
the die of Bacchanalian Chance,<br/>
He of the troubled marching army leaned<br/>
On godhead visible, on godhead screened;<br/>
The radiant roseate, the curtained white;<br/>
Yet sharp his battle strained through day, through night.</p>
<p class="poetry">He drank of fictions, till celestial aid<br/>
Might seem accorded when he fawned and prayed;<br/>
Sagely the generous Giver circumspect,<br/>
To choose for grants the egregious, his elect;<br/>
And ever that imagined succour slew<br/>
The soul of brotherhood whence Reverence drew.</p>
<p class="poetry">In fellowship religion has its founts:<br/>
The solitary his own God reveres:<br/>
Ascend no sacred Mounts<br/>
Our hungers or our fears.<br/>
<SPAN name="page32"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>As only
for the numbers Nature’s care<br/>
Is shown, and she the personal nothing heeds,<br/>
So to Divinity the spring of prayer<br/>
From brotherhood the one way upward leads.<br/>
Like the sustaining air<br/>
Are both for flowers and weeds.<br/>
But he who claims in spirit to be flower,<br/>
Will find them both an air that doth devour.</p>
<p class="poetry">Whereby he smelt his treason, who implored<br/>
External gifts bestowed but on the sword;<br/>
Beheld himself, with less and less disguise,<br/>
Through those blood-cataracts which dimmed his eyes,<br/>
His army’s foe, condemned to strive and fail;<br/>
See a black adversary’s ghost prevail;<br/>
Never, though triumphs hailed him, hope to win<br/>
While still the conflict tore his breast within.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page33"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
33</span>Out of that agony, misread for those<br/>
Imprisoned Powers warring unappeased,<br/>
The ghost of his black adversary rose,<br/>
To smother light, shut heaven, show earth diseased.<br/>
And long with him was wrestling ere emerged<br/>
A mind to read in him the reflex shade<br/>
Of its fierce torment; this way, that way urged;<br/>
By craven compromises hourly swayed.</p>
<p class="poetry">Crouched as a nestling, still its wings
untried,<br/>
The man’s mind opened under weight of cloud.<br/>
To penetrate the dark was it endowed;<br/>
Stood day before a vision shooting wide.<br/>
Whereat the spectral enemy lost form;<br/>
The traversed wilderness exposed its track.<br/>
He felt the far advance in looking back;<br/>
Thence trust in his foot forward through the storm.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page34"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
34</span>Under the low-browed tempest’s eye of ire,<br/>
That ere it lightened smote a coward heart,<br/>
Earth nerved her chastened son to hail athwart<br/>
All ventures perilous his shrouded Sire;<br/>
A stranger still, religiously divined;<br/>
Not yet with understanding read aright.<br/>
But when the mind, the cherishable mind,<br/>
The multitude’s grave shepherd, took full flight,<br/>
Himself as mirror raised among his kind,<br/>
He saw, and first of brotherhood had sight:<br/>
Knew that his force to fly, his will to see,<br/>
His heart enlarged beyond its ribbed domain,<br/>
Had come of many a grip in mastery,<br/>
Which held conjoined the hostile rival twain,<br/>
And of his bosom made him lord, to keep<br/>
The starry roof of his unruffled frame<br/>
Awake to earth, to heaven, and plumb the deep<br/>
Below, above, aye with a wistful aim.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page35"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
35</span>The mastering mind in him, by tempests blown,<br/>
By traitor inmates baited, upward burned;<br/>
Perforce of growth, the Master mind discerned,<br/>
The Great Unseen, nowise the Dark Unknown.<br/>
To whom unwittingly did he aspire<br/>
In wilderness, where bitter was his need:<br/>
To whom in blindness, as an earthy seed<br/>
For light and air, he struck through crimson mire.<br/>
But not ere he upheld a forehead lamp,<br/>
And viewed an army, once the seeming doomed,<br/>
All choral in its fruitful garden camp,<br/>
The spiritual the palpable illumed.</p>
<p class="poetry">This gift of penetration and embrace,<br/>
His prize from tidal battles lost or won,<br/>
Reveals the scheme to animate his race:<br/>
How that it is a warfare but begun;<br/>
Unending; with no Power to interpose;<br/>
<SPAN name="page36"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>No prayer,
save for strength to keep his ground,<br/>
Heard of the Highest; never battle’s close,<br/>
The victory complete and victor crowned:<br/>
Nor solace in defeat, save from that sense<br/>
Of strength well spent, which is the strength renewed.<br/>
In manhood must he find his competence;<br/>
In his clear mind the spiritual food:<br/>
God being there while he his fight maintains;<br/>
Throughout his mind the Master Mind being there,<br/>
While he rejects the suicide despair;<br/>
Accepts the spur of explicable pains;<br/>
Obedient to Nature, not her slave:<br/>
Her lord, if to her rigid laws he bows;<br/>
Her dust, if with his conscience he plays knave,<br/>
And bids the Passions on the Pleasures browse:—<br/>
Whence Evil in a world unread before;<br/>
That mystery to simple springs resolved.<br/>
His God the Known, diviner to adore,<br/>
<SPAN name="page37"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Shows
Nature’s savage riddles kindly solved.<br/>
Inconscient, insensitive, she reigns<br/>
In iron laws, though rapturous fair her face.<br/>
Back to the primal brute shall he retrace<br/>
His path, doth he permit to force her chains<br/>
A soft Persuader coursing through his veins,<br/>
An icy Huntress stringing to the chase:<br/>
What one the flash disdains;<br/>
What one so gives it grace.</p>
<p class="poetry">But is he rightly manful in her eyes,<br/>
A splendid bloodless knight to gain the skies,<br/>
A blood-hot son of Earth by all her signs,<br/>
Desireing and desireable he shines;<br/>
As peaches, that have caught the sun’s uprise<br/>
And kissed warm gold till noonday, even as vines.<br/>
Earth fills him with her juices, without fear<br/>
That she will cast him drunken down the steeps.<br/>
All woman is she to this man most dear;<br/>
<SPAN name="page38"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>He sows
for bread, and she in spirit reaps:<br/>
She conscient, she sensitive, in him;<br/>
With him enwound, his brave ambition hers:<br/>
By him humaner made; by his keen spurs<br/>
Pricked to race past the pride in giant limb,<br/>
Her crazy adoration of big thews,<br/>
Proud in her primal sons, when crags they hurled,<br/>
Were thunder spitting lightnings on the world<br/>
In daily deeds, and she their evening Muse.</p>
<p class="poetry">This man, this hero, works not to destroy;<br/>
This godlike—as the rock in ocean stands;—<br/>
He of the myriad eyes, the myriad hands<br/>
Creative; in his edifice has joy.<br/>
How strength may serve for purity is shown<br/>
When he himself can scourge to make it clean.<br/>
Withal his pitch of pride would not disown<br/>
A sober world that walks the balanced mean<br/>
Between its tempters, rarely overthrown:<br/>
<SPAN name="page39"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And such
at times his army’s march has been.</p>
<p class="poetry">Near is he to great Nature in the thought<br/>
Each changing Season intimately saith,<br/>
That nought save apparition knows the death;<br/>
To the God-lighted mind of man ’tis nought.<br/>
She counts not loss a word of any weight;<br/>
It may befal his passions and his greeds<br/>
To lose their treasures, like the vein that bleeds,<br/>
But life gone breathless will she reinstate.</p>
<p class="poetry">Close on the heart of Earth his bosom beats,<br/>
When he the mandate lodged in it obeys,<br/>
Alive to breast a future wrapped in haze,<br/>
Strike camp, and onward, like the wind’s cloud-fleets.<br/>
Unresting she, unresting he, from change<br/>
To change, as rain of cloud, as fruit of rain;<br/>
She feels her blood-tree throbbing in her grain,<br/>
<SPAN name="page40"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Yet
skyward branched, with loftier mark and range.</p>
<p class="poetry">No miracle the sprout of wheat from clod,<br/>
She knows, nor growth of man in grisly brute;<br/>
But he, the flower at head and soil at root,<br/>
Is miracle, guides he the brute to God.<br/>
And that way seems he bound; that way the road,<br/>
With his dark-lantern mind, unled, alone,<br/>
Wearifully through forest-tracts unsown,<br/>
He travels, urged by some internal goad.</p>
<p class="poetry">Dares he behold the thing he is, what thing<br/>
He would become is in his mind its child;<br/>
Astir, demanding birth to light and wing;<br/>
For battle prompt, by pleasure unbeguiled.<br/>
So moves he forth in faith, if he has made<br/>
His mind God’s temple, dedicate to truth.<br/>
Earth’s nourishing delights, no more gainsaid,<br/>
<SPAN name="page41"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>He tastes,
as doth the bridegroom rich in youth.<br/>
Then knows he Love, that beckons and controls;<br/>
The star of sky upon his footway cast;<br/>
Then match in him who holds his tempters fast,<br/>
The body’s love and mind’s, whereof the
soul’s.<br/>
Then Earth her man for woman finds at last,<br/>
To speed the pair unto her goal of goals.</p>
<p class="poetry">Or is’t the widowed’s dream of her
new mate?<br/>
Seen has she virulent days of heat in flood;<br/>
The sly Persuader snaky in his blood;<br/>
With her the barren Huntress alternate;<br/>
His rough refractory off on kicking heels<br/>
To rear; the man dragged rearward, shamed, amazed;<br/>
And as a torrent stream where cattle grazed,<br/>
His tumbled world. What, then, the faith she feels?<br/>
May not his aspect, like her own so fair<br/>
<SPAN name="page42"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
42</span>Reflexively, the central force belie,<br/>
And he, the once wild ocean storming sky,<br/>
Be rebel at the core? What hope is there?</p>
<p class="poetry">’Tis that in each recovery he
preserves,<br/>
Between his upper and his nether wit,<br/>
Sense of his march ahead, more brightly lit;<br/>
He less the shaken thing of lusts and nerves;<br/>
With such a grasp upon his brute as tells<br/>
Of wisdom from that vile relapsing spun.<br/>
A Sun goes down in wasted fire, a Sun<br/>
Resplendent springs, to faith refreshed compels.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page45"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE CAGEING OF ARES</h2>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
v. V. 385</p>
<p style="text-align: center">[<i>Dedicated to the Council at The
Hague</i>.]</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">How</span> big of breast
our Mother Gaea laughed<br/>
At sight of her boy Giants on the leap<br/>
Each over other as they neighboured home,<br/>
Fronting the day’s descent across green slopes,<br/>
And up fired mountain crags their shadows danced.<br/>
Close with them in their fun, she scarce could guess,<br/>
Though these two billowy urchins reeked of craft,<br/>
<SPAN name="page46"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>It
signalled some adventurous master-trick<br/>
To set Olympians buzzing in debate,<br/>
Lest it might be their godhead undermined,<br/>
The Tyranny menaced. Ephialtes high<br/>
On shoulders of his brother Otos waved<br/>
For the bull-bellowings given to grand good news,<br/>
Compact, complexioned in his gleeful roar<br/>
While Otos aped the prisoner’s wrists and knees,<br/>
With doleful sniffs between recurrent howls;<br/>
Till Gaea’s lap receiving them, they stretched,<br/>
And both upon her bosom shaken to speech,<br/>
Burst the hot story out of throats of both,<br/>
Like rocky head-founts, baffling in their glut<br/>
The hurried spout. And as when drifting storm<br/>
Disburdened loses clasp of here and yon<br/>
A peak, a forest mound, a valley’s gleam<br/>
Of grass and the river’s crooks and snaky coils,<br/>
Signification marvellous she caught,<br/>
Through gurglings of triumphant jollity,<br/>
<SPAN name="page47"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Which now
engulphed and now gave eye; at last<br/>
Subsided, and the serious naked deed,<br/>
With mountain-cloud of laughter banked around,<br/>
Stood in her sight confirmed: she could believe<br/>
That these, her sprouts of promise, her most prized,<br/>
These two made up of lion, bear and fox,<br/>
Her sportive, suckling mammoths, her young joy,<br/>
Still by the reckoning infants among men,<br/>
Had done the deed to strike the Titan host<br/>
In envy dumb, in envious heart elate:<br/>
These two combining strength and craft had snared,<br/>
Enmeshed, bound fast with thongs, discreetly caged<br/>
The blood-shedder, the terrible Lord of War;<br/>
Destroyer, ravager, superb in plumes;<br/>
The barren furrower of anointed fields;<br/>
The scarlet heel in towns, foul smoke to sky,<br/>
<SPAN name="page48"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Her hated
enemy, too long her scourge:<br/>
Great Ares. And they gagged his trumpet mouth<br/>
When they had seized on his implacable spear,<br/>
Hugged him to reedy helplessness despite<br/>
His godlike fury startled from amaze.<br/>
For he had eyed them nearing him in play,<br/>
The giant cubs, who gambolled and who snarled,<br/>
Unheeding his fell presence, by the mount<br/>
Ossa, beside a brushwood cavern; there<br/>
On Earth’s original fisticuffs they called<br/>
For ease of sharp dispute: whereat the God,<br/>
Approving, deemed that sometime trained to arms,<br/>
Good servitors of Ares they would be,<br/>
And ply the pointed spear to dominate<br/>
Their rebel restless fellows, villain brood<br/>
Vowed to defy Immortals. So it chanced<br/>
Amusedly he watched them, and as one<br/>
The lusty twain were on him and they had him.<br/>
Breath to us, Powers of air, for laughter loud!<br/>
<SPAN name="page49"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Cock of
Olympus he, superb in plumes!<br/>
Bound like a wheaten sheaf by those two babes!<br/>
Because they knew our Mother Gaea loathed him,<br/>
Knew him the famine, pestilence and waste;<br/>
A desolating fire to blind the sight<br/>
With splendour built of fruitful things in ashes;<br/>
The gory chariot-wheel on cries for justice;<br/>
Her deepest planted and her liveliest voice,<br/>
Heard from the babe as from the broken crone.<br/>
Behold him in his vessel of bronze encased,<br/>
And tumbled down the cave. But rather look—<br/>
Ah, that the woman tattler had not sought,<br/>
Of all the Gods to let her secret fly,<br/>
Hermes, after the thirteen songful months!<br/>
Prompting the Dexterous to work his arts,<br/>
And shatter earth’s delirious holiday,<br/>
Then first, as where the fountain runs a stream,<br/>
Resolving to composure on its throbs.<br/>
But see her in the Seasons through that year;<br/>
<SPAN name="page50"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>That one
glad year and the fair opening month.<br/>
Had never our Great Mother such sweet face!<br/>
War with her, gentle war with her, each day<br/>
Her sons and daughters urged; at eve were flung,<br/>
On the morrow stood to challenge; in their strength<br/>
Renewed, indomitable; whereof they won,<br/>
From hourly wrestlings up to shut of lids,<br/>
Her ready secret: the abounding life<br/>
Returned for valiant labour: she and they<br/>
Defeated and victorious turn by turn;<br/>
By loss enriched, by overthrow restored.<br/>
Exchange of powers of this conflict came;<br/>
Defacement none, nor ever squandered force.<br/>
Is battle nature’s mandate, here it reigned,<br/>
As music unto the hand that smote the strings;<br/>
And she the rosier from their showery brows,<br/>
They fruitful from her ploughed and harrowed breast.<br/>
<SPAN name="page51"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Back to
the primal rational of those<br/>
Who suck the teats of milky earth, and clasp<br/>
Stability in hatred of the insane,<br/>
Man stepped; with wits less fearful to pronounce<br/>
The mortal mind’s concept of earth’s divorced<br/>
Above; those beautiful, those masterful,<br/>
Those lawless. High they sit, and if descend,<br/>
Descend to reap, not sowing. Is it just?<br/>
Earth in her happy children asked that word,<br/>
Whereto within their breast was her reply.<br/>
Those beautiful, those masterful, those lawless,<br/>
Enjoy the life prolonged, outleap the years;<br/>
Yet they (’twas the Great Mother’s voice inspired<br/>
The audacious thought), they, glorious over dust,<br/>
Outleap not her; disrooted from her soar,<br/>
To meet the certain fate of earth’s divorced,<br/>
And clap lame wings across a wintry haze,<br/>
Up to the farthest bourne: immortal still,<br/>
Thenceforth innocuous; lovelier than when ruled<br/>
<SPAN name="page52"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The
Tyranny. This her voice within them told,<br/>
When softly the Great Mother chid her sons<br/>
Not of the giant brood, who did create<br/>
Those lawless Gods, first offspring of our brain<br/>
Set moving by an abject blood, that waked<br/>
To wanton under elements more benign,<br/>
And planted aliens on Olympian heights;—<br/>
Imagination’s cradle poesy<br/>
Become a monstrous pressure upon men;—<br/>
Foes of good Gaea; until dispossessed<br/>
By light from her, born of the love of her,<br/>
Their lordship the illumined brain rejects<br/>
For earth’s beneficent, the sons of Law,<br/>
Her other name. So spake she in their heart,<br/>
Among the wheat-blades proud of stalk; beneath<br/>
Young vine-leaves pushing timid fingers forth,<br/>
Confidently to cling. And when brown corn<br/>
Swayed armied ranks with softened cricket song,<br/>
With gold necks bent for any zephyr’s kiss;<br/>
<SPAN name="page53"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>When
vine-roots daily down a rubble soil<br/>
Drank fire of heaven athirst to swell the grape;<br/>
When swelled the grape, and in it held a ray,<br/>
Rich issue of the embrace of heaven and earth;<br/>
The very eye of passion drowsed by excess,<br/>
And yet a burning lion for the spring;<br/>
Then in that time of general cherishment,<br/>
Sweet breathing balm and flutes by cool wood-side,<br/>
He the harsh rouser of ire being absent, caged,<br/>
Then did good Gaea’s children gratefully<br/>
Lift hymns to Gods they judged, but praised for peace,<br/>
Delightful Peace, that answers Reason’s call<br/>
Harmoniously and images her Law;<br/>
Reflects, and though short-lived as then, revives,<br/>
In memories made present on the brain<br/>
By natural yearnings, all the happy scenes;<br/>
The picture of an earth allied to heaven;<br/>
<SPAN name="page54"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Between
them the known smile behind black masks;<br/>
Rightly their various moods interpreted;<br/>
And frolic because toilful children borne<br/>
With larger comprehension of Earth’s aim<br/>
At loftier, clearer, sweeter, by their aid.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page55"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE NIGHT-WALK</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Awakes</span> for me and
leaps from shroud<br/>
All radiantly the moon’s own night<br/>
Of folded showers in streamer cloud;<br/>
Our shadows down the highway white<br/>
Or deep in woodland woven-boughed,<br/>
With yon and yon a stem alight.</p>
<p class="poetry">I see marauder runagates<br/>
Across us shoot their dusky wink;<br/>
I hear the parliament of chats<br/>
In haws beside the river’s brink;<br/>
<SPAN name="page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And drops
the vole off alder-banks,<br/>
To push his arrow through the stream.<br/>
These busy people had our thanks<br/>
For tickling sight and sound, but theme<br/>
They were not more than breath we drew<br/>
Delighted with our world’s embrace:<br/>
The moss-root smell where beeches grew,<br/>
And watered grass in breezy space;<br/>
The silken heights, of ghostly bloom<br/>
Among their folds, by distance draped.<br/>
’Twas Youth, rapacious to consume,<br/>
That cried to have its chaos shaped:<br/>
Absorbing, little noting, still<br/>
Enriched, and thinking it bestowed;<br/>
With wistful looks on each far hill<br/>
For something hidden, something owed.<br/>
Unto his mantled sister, Day<br/>
Had given the secret things we sought<br/>
And she was grave and saintly gay;<br/>
<SPAN name="page57"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>At times
she fluttered, spoke her thought;<br/>
She flew on it, then folded wings,<br/>
In meditation passing lone,<br/>
To breathe around the secret things,<br/>
Which have no word, and yet are known;<br/>
Of thirst for them are known, as air<br/>
Is health in blood: we gained enough<br/>
By this to feel it honest fare;<br/>
Impalpable, not barren, stuff.</p>
<p class="poetry">A pride of legs in motion kept<br/>
Our spirits to their task meanwhile,<br/>
And what was deepest dreaming slept:<br/>
The posts that named the swallowed mile;<br/>
Beside the straight canal the hut<br/>
Abandoned; near the river’s source<br/>
Its infant chirp; the shortest cut;<br/>
The roadway missed; were our discourse;<br/>
<SPAN name="page58"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>At times
dear poets, whom some view<br/>
Transcendent or subdued evoked<br/>
To speak the memorable, the true,<br/>
The luminous as a moon uncloaked;<br/>
For proof that there, among earth’s dumb,<br/>
A soul had passed and said our best.<br/>
Or it might be we chimed on some<br/>
Historic favourite’s astral crest,<br/>
With part to reverence in its gleam,<br/>
And part to rivalry the shout:<br/>
So royal, unuttered, is youth’s dream<br/>
Of power within to strike without.<br/>
But most the silences were sweet,<br/>
Like mothers’ breasts, to bid it feel<br/>
It lived in such divine conceit<br/>
As envies aught we stamp for real.</p>
<p class="poetry">To either then an untold tale<br/>
Was Life, and author, hero, we.<br/>
<SPAN name="page59"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The
chapters holding peaks to scale,<br/>
Or depths to fathom, made our glee;<br/>
For we were armed of inner fires,<br/>
Unbled in us the ripe desires;<br/>
And passion rolled a quiet sea,<br/>
Whereon was Love the phantom sail.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page60"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE HUELESS LOVE</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Unto</span> that love must
we through fire attain,<br/>
Which those two held as breath of common air;<br/>
The hands of whom were given in bond elsewhere;<br/>
Whom Honour was untroubled to restrain.</p>
<p class="poetry">Midway the road of our life’s term they
met,<br/>
And one another knew without surprise;<br/>
Nor cared that beauty stood in mutual eyes;<br/>
Nor at their tardy meeting nursed regret.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page61"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
61</span>To them it was revealed how they had found<br/>
The kindred nature and the needed mind;<br/>
The mate by long conspiracy designed;<br/>
The flower to plant in sanctuary ground.</p>
<p class="poetry">Avowed in vigilant solicitude<br/>
For either, what most lived within each breast<br/>
They let be seen: yet every human test<br/>
Demanding righteousness approved them good.</p>
<p class="poetry">She leaned on a strong arm, and little
feared<br/>
Abandonment to help if heaved or sank<br/>
Her heart at intervals while Love looked blank,<br/>
Life rosier were she but less revered.</p>
<p class="poetry">An arm that never shook did not obscure<br/>
Her woman’s intuition of the bliss—<br/>
Their tempter’s moment o’er the black
abyss,<br/>
Across the narrow plank—he could abjure.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page62"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
62</span>Then came a day that clipped for him the thread,<br/>
And their first touch of lips, as he lay cold,<br/>
Was all of earthly in their love untold,<br/>
Beyond all earthly known to them who wed.</p>
<p class="poetry">So has there come the gust at South-west
flung<br/>
By sudden volt on eves of freezing mist,<br/>
When sister snowflake sister snowdrop kissed,<br/>
And one passed out, and one the bell-head hung.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page63"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG IN THE SONGLESS</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">They</span> have no song,
the sedges dry,<br/>
And still they sing.<br/>
It is within my breast they sing,<br/>
As I pass by.<br/>
Within my breast they touch a string,<br/>
They wake a sigh.<br/>
There is but sound of sedges dry;<br/>
In me they sing.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page64"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>UNION IN DISSEVERANCE</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Sunset</span> worn to its
last vermilion he;<br/>
She that star overhead in slow descent:<br/>
That white star with the front of angel she;<br/>
He undone in his rays of glory spent</p>
<p class="poetry">Halo, fair as the bow-shot at his rise,<br/>
He casts round her, and knows his hour of rest<br/>
Incomplete, were the light for which he dies,<br/>
Less like joy of the dove that wings to nest.</p>
<p class="poetry">Lustrous momently, near on earth she sinks;<br/>
Life’s full throb over breathless and abased:<br/>
Yet stand they, though impalpable the links,<br/>
One, more one than the bridally embraced.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page65"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE BURDEN OF STRENGTH</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">If</span> that thou hast
the gift of strength, then know<br/>
Thy part is to uplift the trodden low;<br/>
Else in a giant’s grasp until the end<br/>
A hopeless wrestler shall thy soul contend.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page66"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE MAIN REGRET</h2>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">WRITTEN FOR
THE CHARING CROSS ALBUM</span></p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">I</span></h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Seen</span>, too clear and
historic within us, our sins of omission<br/>
Frown when the Autumn days strike us all ruthlessly
bare.<br/>
They of our mortal diseases find never healing physician;<br/>
Errors they of the soul, past the one hope to
repair.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">II</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Sunshine might we have been unto seed under
soil, or have scattered<br/>
Seed to ascendant suns brighter than any that
shone.<br/>
<SPAN name="page67"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Even the
limp-legged beggar a sick desperado has flattered<br/>
Back to a half-sloughed life cheered by the mere
human tone.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page68"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ALTERNATION</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Between</span> the fountain
and the rill<br/>
I passed, and saw the mighty will<br/>
To leap at sky; the careless run,<br/>
As earth would lead her little son.</p>
<p class="poetry">Beneath them throbs an urgent well,<br/>
That here is play, and there is war.<br/>
I know not which had most to tell<br/>
Of whence we spring and what we are.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page69"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>HAWARDEN</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">When</span> comes the
lighted day for men to read<br/>
Life’s meaning, with the work before their hands<br/>
Till this good gift of breath from debt is freed,<br/>
Earth will not hear her children’s wailful bands<br/>
Deplore the chieftain fall’n in sob and dirge;<br/>
Nor they look where is darkness, but on high.<br/>
The sun that dropped down our horizon’s verge,<br/>
Illumes his labours through the travelled sky,<br/>
Now seen in sum, most glorious; and ’tis known<br/>
By what our warrior wrought we hold him fast.<br/>
A splendid image built of man has flown;<br/>
His deeds inspired of God outstep a Past.<br/>
Ours the great privilege to have had one<br/>
Among us who celestial tasks has done.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page70"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AT THE CLOSE</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">To</span> Thee, dear God of
Mercy, both appeal,<br/>
Who straightway sound the call to arms. Thou
know’st;<br/>
And that black spot in each embattled host,<br/>
Spring of the blood-stream, later wilt reveal.<br/>
Now is it red artillery and white steel;<br/>
Till on a day will ring the victor’s boast,<br/>
That ’tis Thy chosen towers uppermost,<br/>
Where Thy rejected grovels under heel.<br/>
So in all times of man’s descent insane<br/>
To brute, did strength and craft combining strike,<br/>
Even as a God of Armies, his fell blow.<br/>
But at the close he entered Thy domain,<br/>
Dear God of Mercy, and if lion-like<br/>
He tore the fall’n, the Eternal was his Foe.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page71"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FOREST HISTORY</h2>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">I</span></h3>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Beneath</span> the vans of
doom did men pass in.<br/>
Heroic who came out; for round them hung<br/>
A wavering phantom’s red volcano tongue,<br/>
With league-long lizard tail and fishy fin:</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">II</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Old Earth’s original Dragon; there
retired<br/>
To his last fastness; overthrown by few.<br/>
Him a laborious thrust of roadway slew.<br/>
Then man to play devorant straight was fired.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page72"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">III</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">More intimate became the forest fear<br/>
While pillared darkness hatched malicious life<br/>
At either elbow, wolf or gnome or knife<br/>
And wary slid the glance from ear to ear.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">IV</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">In chillness, like a clouded lantern-ray,<br/>
The forest’s heart of fog on mossed morass,<br/>
On purple pool and silky cotton-grass,<br/>
Revealed where lured the swallower byway.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">V</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Dead outlook, flattened back with hard
rebound<br/>
Off walls of distance, left each mounted height.<br/>
It seemed a giant hag-fiend, churning spite<br/>
Of humble human being, held the ground.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page73"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">VI</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Through friendless wastes, through treacherous
woodland, slow<br/>
The feet sustained by track of feet pursued<br/>
Pained steps, and found the common brotherhood<br/>
By sign of Heaven indifferent, Nature foe.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">VII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Anon a mason’s work amazed the sight,<br/>
And long-frocked men, called Brothers, there
abode.<br/>
They pointed up, bowed head, and dug and sowed;<br/>
Whereof was shelter, loaf, and warm firelight.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">VIII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">What words they taught were nails to scratch
the head.<br/>
Benignant works explained the chanting brood.<br/>
Their monastery lit black solitude,<br/>
As one might think a star that heavenward led.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page74"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">IX</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Uprose a fairer nest for weary feet,<br/>
Like some gold flower nightly inward curled,<br/>
Where gentle maidens fled a roaring world,<br/>
Or played with it, and had their white retreat.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">X</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Into big books of metal clasps they pored.<br/>
They governed, even as men; they welcomed lays.<br/>
The treasures women are whose aim is praise,<br/>
Was shown in them: the Garden half restored.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XI</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">A deluge billow scoured the land off seas,<br/>
With widened jaws, and slaughter was its foam.<br/>
For food, for clothing, ambush, refuge, home,<br/>
The lesser savage offered bogs and trees.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page75"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Whence reverence round grey-haired story
grew:<br/>
And inmost spots of ancient horror shone<br/>
As temples under beams of trials bygone;<br/>
For in them sang brave times with God in view.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XIII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Till now trim homesteads bordered spaces
green,<br/>
Like night’s first little stars through
clearing showers.<br/>
Was rumoured how a castle’s falcon towers<br/>
The wilderness commanded with fierce mien.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XIV</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Therein a serious Baron stuck his lance;<br/>
For minstrel songs a beauteous Dame would pout.<br/>
Gay knights and sombre, felon or devout,<br/>
Pricked onward, bound for their unsung romance.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page76"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XV</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">It might be that two errant lords across<br/>
The block of each came edged, and at sharp cry<br/>
They charged forthwith, the better man to try.<br/>
One rode his way, one couched on quiet moss.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XVI</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Perchance a lady sweet, whose lord lay
slain,<br/>
The robbers into gruesome durance drew.<br/>
Swift should her hero come, like lightning’s
blue!<br/>
She prayed for him, as crackling drought for rain.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XVII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">As we, that ere the worst her hero haps,<br/>
Of Angels guided, nigh that loathly den:<br/>
A toady cave beside an ague fen,<br/>
Where long forlorn the lone dog whines and yaps.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page77"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XVIII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">By daylight now the forest fear could read<br/>
Itself, and at new wonders chuckling went.<br/>
Straight for the roebuck’s neck the bowman
spent<br/>
A dart that laughed at distance and at speed.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XIX</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Right loud the bugle’s hallali elate<br/>
Rang forth of merry dingles round the tors;<br/>
And deftest hand was he from foreign wars,<br/>
But soon he hailed the home-bred yeoman mate.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XX</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Before the blackbird pecked the turf they
woke;<br/>
At dawn the deer’s wet nostrils blew their
last.<br/>
To forest, haunt of runs and prime repast,<br/>
With paying blows, the yokel strained his yoke.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page78"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XXI</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">The city urchin mooned on forest air,<br/>
On grassy sweeps and flying arrows, thick<br/>
As swallows o’er smooth streams, and sighed
him sick<br/>
For thinking that his dearer home was there.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Familiar, still unseized, the forest sprang<br/>
An old-world echo, like no mortal thing.<br/>
The hunter’s horn might wind a jocund ring,<br/>
But held in ear it had a chilly clang.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXIII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Some shadow lurked aloof of ancient time;<br/>
Some warning haunted any sound prolonged,<br/>
As though the leagues of woodland held them
wronged<br/>
To hear an axe and see a township climb.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page79"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XXIV</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">The forest’s erewhile emperor at eve<br/>
Had voice when lowered heavens drummed for gales.<br/>
At midnight a small people danced the dales,<br/>
So thin that they might dwindle through a sieve</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXV</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Ringed mushrooms told of them, and in their
throats,<br/>
Old wives that gathered herbs and knew too much.<br/>
The pensioned forester beside his crutch,<br/>
Struck showers from embers at those bodeful notes.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXVI</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Came then the one, all ear, all eye, all
heart;<br/>
Devourer, and insensibly devoured;<br/>
In whom the city over forest flowered,<br/>
The forest wreathed the city’s drama-mart.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page80"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="GutSmall">XXVII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">There found he in new form that Dragon old,<br/>
From tangled solitudes expelled; and taught<br/>
How blindly each its antidote besought;<br/>
For either’s breath the needs of either told.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXVIII</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Now deep in woods, with song no sermon’s
drone,<br/>
He showed what charm the human concourse works:<br/>
Amid the press of men, what virtue lurks<br/>
Where bubble sacred wells of wildness lone.</p>
<h3><span class="GutSmall">XXIX</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">Our conquest these: if haply we retain<br/>
The reverence that ne’er will overrun<br/>
Due boundaries of realms from Nature won,<br/>
Nor let the poet’s awe in rapture wane.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page81"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A GARDEN IDYL</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">With</span> sagest craft
Arachne worked<br/>
Her web, and at a corner lurked,<br/>
Awaiting what should plump her soon,<br/>
To case it in the death-cocoon.<br/>
Sagaciously her home she chose<br/>
For visits that would never close;<br/>
Inside my chalet-porch her feast<br/>
Plucked all the winds but chill North-east.</p>
<p class="poetry">The finished structure, bar on bar,<br/>
Had snatched from light to form a star,<br/>
And struck on sight, when quick with dews,<br/>
Like music of the very Muse.<br/>
<SPAN name="page82"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Great
artists pass our single sense;<br/>
We hear in seeing, strung to tense;<br/>
Then haply marvel, groan mayhap,<br/>
To think such beauty means a trap.<br/>
But Nature’s genius, even man’s<br/>
At best, is practical in plans;<br/>
Subservient to the needy thought,<br/>
However rare the weapon wrought.<br/>
As long as Nature holds it good<br/>
To urge her creatures’ quest for food<br/>
Will beauty stamp the just intent<br/>
Of weapons upon service bent.<br/>
For beauty is a flower of roots<br/>
Embedded lower than our boots;<br/>
Out of the primal strata springs,<br/>
And shows for crown of useful things</p>
<p class="poetry">Arachne’s dream of prey to size<br/>
Aspired; so she could nigh despise<br/>
<SPAN name="page83"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The puny
specks the breezes round<br/>
Supplied, and let them shake unwound;<br/>
Assured of her fat fly to come;<br/>
Perhaps a blue, the spider’s plum;<br/>
Who takes the fatal odds in fight,<br/>
And gives repast an appetite,<br/>
By plunging, whizzing, till his wings<br/>
Are webbed, and in the lists he swings,<br/>
A shrouded lump, for her to see<br/>
Her banquet in her victory.</p>
<p class="poetry">This matron of the unnumbered threads,<br/>
One day of dandelions’ heads<br/>
Distributing their gray perruques<br/>
Up every gust, I watched with looks<br/>
Discreet beside the chalet-door;<br/>
And gracefully a light wind bore,<br/>
Direct upon my webster’s wall,<br/>
A monster in the form of ball;<br/>
<SPAN name="page84"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The
mildest captive ever snared,<br/>
That neither struggled nor despaired,<br/>
On half the net invading hung,<br/>
And plain as in her mother tongue,<br/>
While low the weaver cursed her lures,<br/>
Remarked, “You have me; I am yours.”</p>
<p class="poetry">Thrice magnified, in phantom shape,<br/>
Her dream of size she saw, agape.<br/>
Midway the vast round-raying beard<br/>
A desiccated midge appeared;<br/>
Whose body pricked the name of meal,<br/>
Whose hair had growth in earth’s unreal;<br/>
Provocative of dread and wrath,<br/>
Contempt and horror, in one froth,<br/>
Inextricable, insensible,<br/>
His poison presence there would dwell,<br/>
Declaring him her dream fulfilled,<br/>
A catch to compliment the skilled;<br/>
<SPAN name="page85"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And she
reduced to beaky skin,<br/>
Disgraceful among kith and kin</p>
<p class="poetry">Against her corner, humped and aged,<br/>
Arachne wrinkled, past enraged,<br/>
Beyond disgust or hope in guile.<br/>
Ridiculously volatile<br/>
He seemed to her last spark of mind;<br/>
And that in pallid ash declined<br/>
Beneath the blow by knowledge dealt,<br/>
Wherein throughout her frame she felt<br/>
That he, the light wind’s libertine,<br/>
Without a scoff, without a grin,<br/>
And mannered like the courtly few,<br/>
Who merely danced when light winds blew,<br/>
Impervious to beak and claws,<br/>
Tradition’s ruinous Whitebeard was;<br/>
Of whom, as actors in old scenes,<br/>
Had grannam weavers warned their weans,<br/>
<SPAN name="page86"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>With word,
that less than feather-weight,<br/>
He smote the web like bolt of Fate.</p>
<p class="poetry">This muted drama, hour by hour,<br/>
I watched amid a world in flower,<br/>
Ere yet Autumnal threads had laid<br/>
Their gray-blue o’er the grass’s blade,<br/>
And still along the garden-run<br/>
The blindworm stretched him, drunk of sun.<br/>
Arachne crouched unmoved; perchance<br/>
Her visitor performed a dance;<br/>
She puckered thinner; he the same<br/>
As when on that light wind he came.</p>
<p class="poetry">Next day was told what deeds of night<br/>
Were done; the web had vanished quite;<br/>
<SPAN name="page87"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>With it
the strange opposing pair;<br/>
And listless waved on vacant air,<br/>
For her adieu to heart’s content,<br/>
A solitary filament.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page88"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FORESIGHT AND PATIENCE</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Sprung</span> of the father
blood, the mother brain,<br/>
Are they who point our pathway and sustain.<br/>
They rarely meet; one soars, one walks retired.<br/>
When they do meet, it is our earth inspired.</p>
<p class="poetry">To see Life’s formless offspring and
subdue<br/>
Desire of times unripe, we have these two,<br/>
Whose union is right reason: join they hands,<br/>
The world shall know itself and where it stands;<br/>
What cowering angel and what upright beast<br/>
Make man, behold, nor count the low the least,<br/>
Nor less the stars have round it than its flowers.<br/>
When these two meet, a point of time is ours.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page89"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
89</span>As in a land of waterfalls, that flow<br/>
Smooth for the leap on their great voice below,<br/>
Some eddies near the brink borne swift along,<br/>
Will capture hearing with the liquid song,<br/>
So, while the headlong world’s imperious force<br/>
Resounded under, heard I these discourse.</p>
<p class="poetry">First words, where down my woodland walk she
led,<br/>
To her blind sister Patience, Foresight said:</p>
<p class="poetry">—Your faith in me appals, to shake my
own,<br/>
When still I find you in this mire alone.</p>
<p class="poetry">—The few steps taken at a funeral pace<br/>
By men had slain me but for those you trace.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Look I once back, a broken pinion I:<br/>
Black as the rebel angels rained from sky!</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page90"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
90</span>—Needs must you drink of me while here you
live,<br/>
And make me rich in feeling I can give.</p>
<p class="poetry">—A brave To-be is dawn upon my brow:<br/>
Yet must I read my sister for the How.<br/>
My daisy better knows her God of beams<br/>
Than doth an eagle that to mount him seems.<br/>
She hath the secret never fieriest reach<br/>
Of wing shall master till men hear her teach.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Liker the clod flaked by the driving
plough,<br/>
My semblance when I have you not as now.<br/>
The quiet creatures who escape mishap<br/>
Bear likeness to pure growths of the green sap:<br/>
A picture of the settled peace desired<br/>
By cowards shunning strife or strivers tired.<br/>
I listen at their breasts: is there no jar<br/>
<SPAN name="page91"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Of
wrestlings and of stranglings, dead they are,<br/>
And such a picture as the piercing mind<br/>
Ranks beneath vegetation. Not resigned<br/>
Are my true pupils while the world is brute.<br/>
What edict of the stronger keeps me mute,<br/>
Stronger impels the motion of my heart.<br/>
I am not Resignation’s counterpart.<br/>
If that I teach, ’tis little the dry word,<br/>
Content, but how to savour hope deferred.<br/>
We come of earth, and rich of earth may be;<br/>
Soon carrion if very earth are we!<br/>
The coursing veins, the constant breath, the use<br/>
Of sleep, declare that strife allows short truce;<br/>
Unless we clasp decay, accept defeat,<br/>
And pass despised; “a-cold for lack of heat,”<br/>
Like other corpses, but without death’s plea.</p>
<p class="poetry">—My sister calls for battle; is it
she?</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page92"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
92</span>—Rather a world of pressing men in arms,<br/>
Than stagnant, where the sensual piper charms<br/>
Each drowsy malady and coiling vice<br/>
With dreams of ease whereof the soul pays price!<br/>
No home is here for peace while evil breeds,<br/>
While error governs, none; and must the seeds<br/>
You sow, you that for long have reaped disdain,<br/>
Lie barren at the doorway of the brain,<br/>
Let stout contention drive deep furrows, blood<br/>
Moisten, and make new channels of its flood!</p>
<p class="poetry">—My sober little maid, when we meet
first,<br/>
Drinks of me ever with an eager thirst.<br/>
So can I not of her till circumstance<br/>
Drugs cravings. Here we see how men advance<br/>
A doubtful foot, but circle if much stirred,<br/>
Like dead weeds on whipped waters. Shout the word<br/>
<SPAN name="page93"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Prompting
their hungers, and they grandly march,<br/>
As to band-music under Victory’s arch.<br/>
Thus was it, and thus is it; save that then<br/>
The beauty of frank animals had men.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Observe them, and down rearward for a
term,<br/>
Gaze to the primal twistings of the worm.<br/>
Thence look this way, across the fields that show<br/>
Men’s early form of speech for Yes and No.<br/>
My sister a bruised infant’s utterance had;<br/>
And issuing stronger, to mankind ’twas mad.<br/>
I knew my home where I had choice to feel<br/>
The toad beneath a harrow or a heel.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Speak of this Age.</p>
<p class="poetry"> —When
you it shall discern<br/>
Bright as you are, to me the Age will turn.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page94"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
94</span>—For neither of us has it any care;<br/>
Its learning is through Science to despair.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Despair lies down and grovels, grapples
not<br/>
With evil, casts the burden of its lot.<br/>
This Age climbs earth.</p>
<p class="poetry"> —To
challenge heaven.</p>
<p class="poetry"> —Not
less<br/>
The lower deeps. It laughs at Happiness!<br/>
That know I, though the echoes of it wail,<br/>
For one step upward on the crags you scale.<br/>
Brave is the Age wherein the word will rust,<br/>
Which means our soul asleep or body’s lust,<br/>
Until from warmth of many breasts, that beat<br/>
A temperate common music, sunlike heat<br/>
The happiness not predatory sheds!</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page95"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
95</span>—But your fierce Yes and No of butting heads,<br/>
Now rages to outdo a horny Past.<br/>
Shades of a wild Destroyer on the vast<br/>
Are thrown by every novel light upraised.<br/>
The world’s whole round smokes ominously, amazed<br/>
And trembling as its pregnant Ætna swells.<br/>
Combustibles on hot combustibles<br/>
Run piling, for one spark to roll in fire<br/>
The mountain-torrent of infernal ire<br/>
And leave the track of devils where men built.<br/>
Perceptive of a doom, the sinner’s guilt<br/>
Confesses in a cry for help shrill loud,<br/>
If drops the chillness of a passing cloud,<br/>
To conscience, reason, human love; in vain:<br/>
None save they but the souls which them contain.<br/>
No extramural God, the God within<br/>
Alone gives aid to city charged with sin.<br/>
<SPAN name="page96"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A world
that for the spur of fool and knave,<br/>
Sweats in its laboratory, what shall save?<br/>
But men who ply their wits in such a school,<br/>
Must pray the mercy of the knave and fool.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Much have I studied hard Necessity!<br/>
To know her Wisdom’s mother, and that we<br/>
May deem the harshness of her later cries<br/>
In labour a sure goad to prick the wise,<br/>
If men among the warnings which convulse,<br/>
Can gravely dread without the craven’s pulse.<br/>
Long ere the rising of this Age of ours,<br/>
The knave and fool were stamped as monstrous Powers.<br/>
Of human lusts and lassitudes they spring,<br/>
And are as lasting as the parent thing.<br/>
Yet numbering locust hosts, bent they to drill,<br/>
They might o’ermatch and have mankind at will.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page97"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
97</span>Behold such army gathering: ours the spur,<br/>
No scattered foe to face, but Lucifer.<br/>
Not fool or knave is now the enemy<br/>
O’ershadowing men, ’tis Folly, Knavery!<br/>
A sea; nor stays that sea the bastioned beach.<br/>
Now must the brother soul alive in each,<br/>
His traitorous individual devildom<br/>
Hold subject lest the grand destruction come.<br/>
Dimly men see it menacing apace<br/>
To overthrow, perchance uproot the race.<br/>
Within, without, they are a field of tares:<br/>
Fruitfuller for them when the contest squares,<br/>
And wherefore warrior service they must yield,<br/>
Shines visible as life on either field.<br/>
That is my comfort, following shock on shock,<br/>
Which sets faith quaking on their firmest rock.<br/>
Since with his weapons, all the arms of Night,<br/>
Frail men have challenged Lucifer to fight,<br/>
Have matched in hostile ranks, enrolled, erect,<br/>
<SPAN name="page98"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The human
and Satanic intellect,<br/>
Determined for their uses to control<br/>
What forces on the earth and under roll,<br/>
Their granite rock runs igneous; now they stand<br/>
Pledged to the heavens for safety of their land.<br/>
They cannot learn save grossly, gross that are:<br/>
Through fear they learn whose aid is good in war.</p>
<p class="poetry">—My sister, as I read them in my
glass,<br/>
Their field of tares they take for pasture grass.<br/>
How waken them that have not any bent<br/>
Save browsing—the concrete indifferent!<br/>
Friend Lucifer supplies them solid stuff:<br/>
They fear not for the race when full the trough.<br/>
They have much fear of giving up the ghost;<br/>
And these are of mankind the unnumbered host.</p>
<p class="poetry">—If I could see with you, and did not
faint<br/>
In beating wing, the future I would paint.<br/>
<SPAN name="page99"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Those
massed indifferents will learn to quake:<br/>
Now meanwhile is another mass awake,<br/>
Once denser than the grunters of the sty.<br/>
If I could see with you! Could I but fly!</p>
<p class="poetry">—The length of days that you with them
have housed,<br/>
An outcast else, approves their cause espoused.</p>
<p class="poetry">—O true, they have a cause, and woe for
us,<br/>
While still they have a cause too piteous!<br/>
Yet, happy for us when, their cause defined,<br/>
They walk no longer with a stumbler blind,<br/>
And quicken in the virtue of their cause,<br/>
To think me a poor mouther of old saws!<br/>
I wait the issue of a battling Age;<br/>
The toilers with your “troughsters” now engage;<br/>
Instructing them through their acutest sense,<br/>
How close the dangers of indifference!<br/>
<SPAN name="page100"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Already
have my people shown their worth,<br/>
More love they light, which folds the love of Earth.<br/>
That love to love of labour leads: thence love<br/>
Of humankind—earth’s incense flung above.</p>
<p class="poetry">—Admit some other features: Faithless,
mean;<br/>
Encased in matter; vowed to Gods obscene;<br/>
Contemptuous of the impalpable, it swells<br/>
On Doubt; for pastime swallows miracles;<br/>
And if I bid it face what <i>I</i> observe,<br/>
Declares me hoodwinked by my optic nerve!</p>
<p class="poetry">—Oft has your prophet, for reward of
toil,<br/>
Seen nests of seeming cockatrices coil:<br/>
Disowned them as the unholiest of Time,<br/>
Which were his offspring, born of flame on slime.<br/>
Nor him, their sire, have known the filial fry:<br/>
As little as Time’s earliest knew the sky.<br/>
<SPAN name="page101"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
101</span>Perchance among them shoots a lustrous flame<br/>
At intervals, in proof of whom they came.<br/>
To strengthen our foundations is the task<br/>
Of this tough Age; not in your beams to bask,<br/>
Though, lighted by your beams, down mining caves<br/>
The rock it blasts, the hoarded foulness braves.<br/>
My sister sees no round beyond her mood;<br/>
To hawk this Age has dressed her head in hood.<br/>
Out of the course of ancient ruts and grooves,<br/>
It moves: O much for me to say it moves!<br/>
About his Æthiop Highlands Nile is Nile,<br/>
Though not the stream of the paternal smile:<br/>
And where his tide of nourishment he drives,<br/>
An Abyssinian wantonness revives.<br/>
Calm as his lotus-leaf to-day he swims;<br/>
He is the yellow crops, the rounded limbs,<br/>
The Past yet flowing, the fair time that fills;<br/>
Breath of all mouths and grist of many mills.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page102"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
102</span>To-morrow, warning none with tempest-showers,<br/>
He is the vast Insensate who devours<br/>
His golden promise over leagues of seed,<br/>
Then sits in a smooth lake upon the deed.<br/>
The races which on barbarous force begin,<br/>
Inherit onward of their origin,<br/>
And cancelled blessings will the current length<br/>
Reveal till they know need of shaping strength.<br/>
’Tis not in men to recognize the need<br/>
Before they clash in hosts, in hosts they bleed.<br/>
Then may sharp suffering their nature grind;<br/>
Of rabble passions grow the chieftain Mind.<br/>
Yet mark where still broad Nile boasts thousands fed,<br/>
For tens up the safe mountains at his head.<br/>
Few would be fed, not far his course prolong,<br/>
Save for the troublous blood which makes him strong.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page103"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
103</span>—That rings of truth! More do your people
thrive;<br/>
Your Many are more merrily alive<br/>
Than erewhile when I gloried in the page<br/>
Of radiant singer and anointed sage.<br/>
Greece was my lamp: burnt out for lack of oil;<br/>
Rome, Python Rome, prey of its robber spoil!<br/>
All structures built upon a narrow space<br/>
Must fall, from having not your hosts for base.<br/>
O thrice must one be you, to see them shift<br/>
Along their desert flats, here dash, there drift;<br/>
With faith, that of privations and spilt blood,<br/>
Comes Reason armed to clear or bank the flood!<br/>
And thrice must one be you, to wait release<br/>
From duress in the swamp of their increase.<br/>
At which oppressive scene, beyond arrest,<br/>
A darkness not with stars of heaven dressed,<br/>
Philosophers behold; desponding view.<br/>
<SPAN name="page104"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Your
Many nourished, starved my brilliant few;<br/>
Then flinging heels, as charioteers the reins,<br/>
Dive down the fumy Ætna of their brains.<br/>
Belated vessels on a rising sea,<br/>
They seem: they pass!</p>
<p class="poetry"> —But
not Philosophy!</p>
<p class="poetry">—Ay, be we faithful to ourselves:
despise<br/>
Nought but the coward in us! That way lies<br/>
The wisdom making passage through our slough.<br/>
Am I not heard, my head to Earth shall bow;<br/>
Like her, shall wait to see, and seeing wait.<br/>
Philosophy is Life’s one match for Fate.<br/>
That photosphere of our high fountain One,<br/>
Our spirit’s Lord and Reason’s fostering sun,<br/>
Philosophy, shall light us in the shade,<br/>
Warm in the frost, make Good our aim and aid.<br/>
<SPAN name="page105"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
105</span>Companioned by the sweetest, ay renewed,<br/>
Unconquerable, whose aim for aid is Good!<br/>
Advantage to the Many: that we name<br/>
God’s voice; have there the surety in our aim.<br/>
This thought unto my sister do I owe,<br/>
And irony and satire off me throw.<br/>
They crack a childish whip, drive puny herds,<br/>
Where numbers crave their sustenance in words.<br/>
Now let the perils thicken: clearer seen,<br/>
Your Chieftain Mind mounts over them serene.<br/>
Who never yet of scattered lamps was born<br/>
To speed a world, a marching world to warn,<br/>
But sunward from the vivid Many springs,<br/>
Counts conquest but a step, and through disaster sings.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="page109"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FRAGMENTS OF THE ILIAD IN ENGLISH HEXAMETER VERSE</h2>
<h3>THE INVECTIVE OF ACHILLES</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. I. V. 149</p>
<p class="poetry">“<span class="smcap">Heigh</span> me!
brazen of front, thou glutton for plunder, how can one,<br/>
Servant here to thy mandates, heed thee among our Achaians,<br/>
Either the mission hie on or stoutly do fight with the foemen?<br/>
I, not hither I fared on account of the spear-armèd
Trojans,<br/>
Pledged to the combat; they unto me have in nowise a harm
done;<br/>
Never have they, of a truth, come lifting my horses or oxen;<br/>
<SPAN name="page110"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Never in
deep-soiled Phthia, the nurser of heroes, my harvests<br/>
Ravaged, they; for between us is numbered full many a darksome<br/>
Mountain, ay, therewith too the stretch of the windy
sea-waters.<br/>
O hugely shameless! thee did we follow to hearten thee,
justice<br/>
Pluck from the Dardans for him, Menelaos, thee too, thou
dog-eyed!<br/>
Whereof little thy thought is, nought whatever thou reckest.<br/>
Worse, it is thou whose threat ’tis to ravish my prize from
me, portion<br/>
Won with much labour, the which my gift from the sons of
Achaia.<br/>
Never, in sooth, have I known my prize equal thine when
Achaians<br/>
Gave some flourishing populous Trojan town up to pillage.<br/>
Nay, sure, mine were the hands did most in the storm of the
combat,<br/>
<SPAN name="page111"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Yet when
came peradventure share of the booty amongst us,<br/>
Bigger to thee went the prize, while I some small blessèd
thing bore<br/>
Off to the ships, my share of reward for my toil in the
bloodshed!<br/>
So now go I to Phthia, for better by much it beseems me<br/>
Homeward go with my beaked ships now, and I hold not in
prospect,<br/>
I being outraged, thou mayst gather here plunder and
wealth-store.”</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page112"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>V. 225</h3>
<p class="poetry">“Bibber besotted, with scowl of a cur,
having heart of a deer, thou!<br/>
Never to join to thy warriors armed for the press of the
conflict,<br/>
Never for ambush forth with the princeliest sons of Achaia<br/>
Dared thy soul, for to thee that thing would have looked as a
death-stroke.<br/>
Sooth, more easy it seems, down the lengthened array of
Achaians,<br/>
Snatch at the prize of the one whose voice has been lifted
against thee.<br/>
Ravening king of the folk, for that thou hast thy rule over
abjects;<br/>
Else, son of Atreus, now were this outrage on me thy last one.<br/>
Nay, but I tell thee, and I do swear a big oath on it
likewise:<br/>
<SPAN name="page113"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Yea, by
the sceptre here, and it surely bears branches and leaf-buds<br/>
Never again, since first it was lopped from its trunk on the
mountains,<br/>
No more sprouting; for round it all clean has the sharp metal
clipped off<br/>
Leaves and the bark; ay, verify now do the sons of Achaia,<br/>
Guardian hands of the counsels of Zeus, pronouncing the
judgement,<br/>
Hold it aloft; so now unto thee shall the oath have its
portent;<br/>
Loud will the cry for Achilles burst from the sons of Achaia<br/>
Throughout the army, and thou chafe powerless, though in an
anguish,<br/>
How to give succour when vast crops down under man-slaying
Hector<br/>
Tumble expiring; and thou deep in thee shalt tear at thy
heart-strings,<br/>
Rage-wrung, thou, that in nought thou didst honour the flower of
Achaians.”</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page114"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>MARSHALLING OF THE ACHAIANS</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. II V. 455</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Like</span> as a terrible
fire feeds fast on a forest enormous,<br/>
Up on a mountain height, and the blaze of it radiates round
far,<br/>
So on the bright blest arms of the host in their march did the
splendour<br/>
Gleam wide round through the circle of air right up to the
sky-vault.<br/>
They, now, as when swarm thick in the air multitudinous winged
flocks,<br/>
Be it of geese or of cranes or the long-necked troops of the
wild-swans,<br/>
Off that Asian mead, by the flow of the waters of
Kaïstros;<br/>
Hither and yon fly they, and rejoicing in pride of their
pinions,<br/>
<SPAN name="page115"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Clamour,
shaped to their ranks, and the mead all about them resoundeth;<br/>
So those numerous tribes from their ships and their shelterings
poured forth<br/>
On that plain of Scamander, and horrible rumbled beneath them<br/>
Earth to the quick-paced feet of the men and the tramp of the
horse-hooves.<br/>
Stopped they then on the fair-flower’d field of Scamander,
their thousands<br/>
Many as leaves and the blossoms born of the flowerful season.<br/>
Even as countless hot-pressed flies in their multitudes
traverse,<br/>
Clouds of them, under some herdsman’s wonning, where then
are the milk-pails<br/>
Also, full of their milk, in the bountiful season of
spring-time;<br/>
Even so thickly the long-haired sons of Achaia the plain held,<br/>
Prompt for the dash at the Trojan host, with the passion to crush
them.<br/>
<SPAN name="page116"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Those,
likewise, as the goatherds, eyeing their vast flocks of goats,
know<br/>
Easily one from the other when all get mixed o’er the
pasture,<br/>
So did the chieftains rank them here there in their places for
onslaught,<br/>
Hard on the push of the fray; and among them King Agamemnon,<br/>
He, for his eyes and his head, as when Zeus glows glad in his
thunder,<br/>
He with the girdle of Ares, he with the breast of Poseidon.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page117"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AGAMEMNON IN THE FIGHT</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. XI. V. 148</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">These</span>, then, he
left, and away where ranks were now clashing the thickest,<br/>
Onward rushed, and with him rushed all of the bright-greaved
Achaians.<br/>
Foot then footmen slew, that were flying from direful
compulsion,<br/>
Horse at the horsemen (up from off under them mounted the
dust-cloud,<br/>
Up off the plain, raised up cloud-thick by the thundering
horse-hooves)<br/>
Hewed with the sword’s sharp edge; and so meanwhile Lord
Agamemnon<br/>
Followed, chasing and slaughtering aye, on-urgeing the
Argives.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page118"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
118</span>Now, as when fire voracious catches the
unclippèd woodland,<br/>
This way bears it and that the great whirl of the wind, and the
scrubwood<br/>
Stretches uptorn, flung forward alength by the fire’s fury
rageing,<br/>
So beneath Atreides Agamemnon heads of the scattered<br/>
Trojans fell; and in numbers amany the horses, neck-stiffened,<br/>
Rattled their vacant cars down the roadway gaps of the
war-field,<br/>
Missing the blameless charioteers, but, for these, they were
outstretched<br/>
Flat upon earth, far dearer to vultures than to their
home-mates.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page119"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>PARIS AND DIOMEDES</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>;
B. XI V. 378</p>
<p class="poetry"> <span class="smcap">So</span> he, with a clear shout of laughter,<br/>
Forth of his ambush leapt, and he vaunted him, uttering
thiswise:<br/>
“Hit thou art! not in vain flew the shaft; how by rights it
had pierced thee<br/>
Into the undermost gut, therewith to have rived thee of
life-breath!<br/>
Following that had the Trojans plucked a new breath from their
direst,<br/>
They all frighted of thee, as the goats bleat in flight from a
lion.”<br/>
Then unto him untroubled made answer stout Diomedes:<br/>
“Bow-puller, jiber, thy bow for thy glorying, spyer at
virgins!<br/>
<SPAN name="page120"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>If that
thou dared’st face me here out in the open with weapons,<br/>
Nothing then would avail thee thy bow and thy thick shot of
arrows.<br/>
Now thou plumest thee vainly because of a graze of my
footsole;<br/>
Reck I as were that stroke from a woman or some pettish
infant.<br/>
Aye flies blunted the dart of the man that’s emasculate,
noughtworth!<br/>
Otherwise hits, forth flying from me, and but strikes it the
slightest,<br/>
My keen shaft, and it numbers a man of the dead fallen
straightway.<br/>
Torn, troth, then are the cheeks of the wife of that man fallen
slaughtered,<br/>
Orphans his babes, full surely he reddens the earth with his
blood-drops,<br/>
Rotting, round him the birds, more numerous they than the
women.”</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page121"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>HYPNOS ON IDA</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. XIV. V. 283</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">They</span> then to
fountain-abundant Ida, mother of wild beasts,<br/>
Came, and they first left ocean to fare over mainland at
Lektos,<br/>
Where underneath of their feet waved loftiest growths of the
woodland.<br/>
There hung Hypnos fast, ere the vision of Zeus was observant,<br/>
Mounted upon a tall pine-tree, tallest of pines that on Ida<br/>
Lustily spring off soil for the shoot up aloft into aether.<br/>
There did he sit well-cloaked by the wide-branched pine for
concealment,<br/>
That loud bird, in his form like, that perched high up in the
mountains,<br/>
Chalkis is named by the Gods, but of mortals known as
Kymindis.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page122"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CLASH IN ARMS OF THE ACHAIANS AND TROJANS</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. XIV. V. 394</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Not</span> the sea-wave so
bellows abroad when it bursts upon shingle,<br/>
Whipped from the sea’s deeps up by the terrible blast of
the Northwind;<br/>
Nay, nor is ever the roar of the fierce fire’s rush so
arousing,<br/>
Down along mountain-glades, when it surges to kindle a
woodland;<br/>
Nay, nor so tonant thunders the stress of the gale in the
oak-trees’<br/>
Foliage-tresses high, when it rages to raveing its utmost;<br/>
As rose then stupendous the Trojan’s cry and
Achaians’,<br/>
Dread upshouting as one when together they clashed in the
conflict.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page123"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE HORSES OF ACHILLES</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Iliad</span>,
B. XVII. V. 426</p>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">So</span> now the horses of
Aiakides, off wide of the war-ground,<br/>
Wept, since first they were ware of their charioteer overthrown
there,<br/>
Cast down low in the whirl of the dust under man-slaying
Hector.<br/>
Sooth, meanwhile, then did Automedon, brave son of Diores,<br/>
Oft, on the one hand, urge them with flicks of the swift whip,
and oft, too,<br/>
Coax entreatingly, hurriedly; whiles did he angrily threaten.<br/>
Vainly, for these would not to the ships, to the Hellespont
spacious,<br/>
Backward turn, nor be whipped to the battle among the
Achaians.<br/>
Nay, as a pillar remains immovable, fixed on the tombstone,<br/>
<SPAN name="page124"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Haply,
of some dead man or it may be a woman there-under;<br/>
Even like hard stood they there attached to the glorious
war-car,<br/>
Earthward bowed with their heads; and of them so lamenting
incessant<br/>
Ran the hot teardrops downward on to the earth from their
eyelids,<br/>
Mourning their charioteer; all their lustrous manes
dusty-clotted,<br/>
Right side and left of the yoke-ring tossed, to the breadth of
the yoke-bow.<br/>
Now when the issue of Kronos beheld that sorrow, his head
shook<br/>
Pitying them for their grief, these words then he spake in his
bosom;<br/>
“Why, ye hapless, gave we to Peleus you, to a mortal<br/>
Master; ye that are ageless both, ye both of you deathless!<br/>
Was it that ye among men most wretched should come to have
heart-grief?<br/>
<SPAN name="page125"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
125</span>’Tis most true, than the race of these men is
there wretcheder nowhere<br/>
Aught over earth’s range found that is gifted with breath
and has movement.”</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page126"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE MARES OF THE CAMARGUE</h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">From the</span>
<i>Mirèio</i> <span class="smcap">of Mistral</span></p>
<p class="poetry"> A <span class="smcap">hundred</span> mares, all white! their manes<br/>
Like mace-reed of the marshy
plains<br/>
Thick-tufted, wavy, free o’
the shears:<br/>
And when the fiery squadron
rears<br/>
Bursting at speed, each mane
appears<br/>
Even as the white scarf of a
fay<br/>
Floating upon their necks along the heavens away.</p>
<p class="poetry"> <SPAN name="page127"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>O race of
humankind, take shame!<br/>
For never yet a hand could
tame,<br/>
Nor bitter spur that rips the flanks subdue<br/>
The mares of the Camargue. I
have known,<br/>
By treason snared, some captives
shown;<br/>
Expatriate from their native
Rhone,<br/>
Led off, their saline pastures far from view:</p>
<p class="poetry"> And on a
day, with prompt rebound,<br/>
They have flung their riders to
the ground,<br/>
And at a single gallop, scouring free,<br/>
Wide-nostril’d to the wind,
twice ten<br/>
Of long marsh-leagues
devour’d, and then,<br/>
Back to the Vacarés
again,<br/>
After ten years of slavery just to breathe salt sea</p>
<p class="poetry"> <SPAN name="page128"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>For of this
savage race unbent,<br/>
The ocean is the element.<br/>
Of old escaped from Neptune’s car, full sure,<br/>
Still with the white foam
fleck’d are they,<br/>
And when the sea puffs black from
grey,<br/>
And ships part cables, loudly
neigh<br/>
The stallions of Camargue, all joyful in the roar;</p>
<p class="poetry"> And keen as
a whip they lash and crack<br/>
Their tails that drag the dust,
and back<br/>
Scratch up the earth, and feel, entering their flesh, where
he,<br/>
The God, drives deep his trident
teeth,<br/>
Who in one horror, above,
beneath,<br/>
Bids storm and watery deluge
seethe,<br/>
And shatters to their depths the abysses of the sea.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><i>Cant.</i> iv.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<div class="gapshortline"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center">Butler and Tanner, The Selwood
Printing Works, Frome, and London.</p>
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