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<h1> THE WILD KNIGHT </h1>
<h3> <i>AND OTHER POEMS</i> </h3>
<h2> By Gilbert Chesterton </h2>
<h3> 1900 </h3>
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<br/>
<h2> NOTE </h2>
<p>My thanks are due to the Editors of the <i>Outlook</i> and the <i>Speaker</i>
for the kind permission they have given me to reprint a considerable
number of the following poems. They have been selected and arranged rather
with a view to unity of spirit than to unity of time or value; many of
them being juvenile.</p>
<hr />
<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> BY THE BABE UNBORN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE WORLD'S LOVER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE SKELETON </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> A CHORD OF COLOUR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE HAPPY MAN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE UNPARDONABLE SIN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> A NOVELTY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> ULTIMATE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE DONKEY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE BEATIFIC VISION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE HOPE OF THE STREETS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> ECCLESIASTES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE SONG OF THE CHILDREN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE FISH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> GOLD LEAVES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> THOU SHALT NOT KILL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> A CERTAIN EVENING </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> A MAN AND HIS IMAGE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> THE MARINER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> THE TRIUMPH OF MAN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> CYCLOPEAN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> JOSEPH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> MODERN ELFLAND </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> ETERNITIES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> A CHRISTMAS CAROL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> ALONE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> KING'S CROSS STATION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> THE HUMAN TREE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> TO THEM THAT MOURN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> THE OUTLAW </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> BEHIND </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> THE END OF FEAR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034"> THE HOLY OF HOLIES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035"> THE MIRROR OF MADMEN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036"> E.C.B. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037"> THE DESECRATERS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0038"> AN ALLIANCE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE ANCIENT OF DAYS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE LAST MASQUERADE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0041"> THE EARTH'S SHAME </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0042"> VANITY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE LAMP POST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0044"> THE PESSIMIST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0045"> A FAIRY TALE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0046"> A PORTRAIT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0047"> FEMINA CONTRA MUNDUM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0048"> TO A CERTAIN NATION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0049"> THE PRAISE OF DUST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0050"> THE BALLAD OF THE BATTLE OF GIBEON </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0051"> THE BALLAD OF GOD-MAKERS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0052"> AT NIGHT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0053"> THE WOOD-CUTTER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0054"> ART COLOURS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0055"> THE TWO WOMEN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0056"> THE WILD KNIGHT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0057"> THE WILD KNIGHT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0058"> GOOD NEWS </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
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<p><br/></p>
<p><i>Another tattered rhymster in the ring,<br/>
With but the old plea to the sneering schools,<br/>
That on him too, some secret night in spring<br/>
Came the old frenzy of a hundred fools<br/>
<br/>
To make some thing: the old want dark and deep,<br/>
The thirst of men, the hunger of the stars,<br/>
Since first it tinged even the Eternal's sleep,<br/>
With monstrous dreams of trees and towns and mars.<br/>
<br/>
When all He made for the first time He saw,<br/>
Scattering stars as misers shake their pelf.<br/>
Then in the last strange wrath broke His own law,<br/>
And made a graven image of Himself.</i><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BY THE BABE UNBORN </h2>
<p>If trees were tall and grasses short,<br/>
As in some crazy tale,<br/>
If here and there a sea were blue<br/>
Beyond the breaking pale,<br/>
<br/>
If a fixed fire hung in the air<br/>
To warm me one day through,<br/>
If deep green hair grew on great hills,<br/>
I know what I should do.<br/>
<br/>
In dark I lie: dreaming that there<br/>
Are great eyes cold or kind,<br/>
And twisted streets and silent doors,<br/>
And living men behind.<br/>
<br/>
Let storm-clouds come: better an hour,<br/>
And leave to weep and fight,<br/>
Than all the ages I have ruled<br/>
The empires of the night.<br/>
<br/>
I think that if they gave me leave<br/>
Within that world to stand,<br/>
I would be good through all the day<br/>
I spent in fairyland.<br/>
<br/>
They should not hear a word from me<br/>
Of selfishness or scorn,<br/>
If only I could find the door,<br/>
If only I were born.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE WORLD'S LOVER </h2>
<p>My eyes are full of lonely mirth:<br/>
Reeling with want and worn with scars,<br/>
For pride of every stone on earth,<br/>
I shake my spear at all the stars.<br/>
<br/>
A live bat beats my crest above,<br/>
Lean foxes nose where I have trod,<br/>
And on my naked face the love<br/>
Which is the loneliness of God.<br/>
<br/>
Outlawed: since that great day gone by—<br/>
When before prince and pope and queen<br/>
I stood and spoke a blasphemy—<br/>
'Behold the summer leaves are green.'<br/>
<br/>
They cursed me: what was that to me<br/>
Who in that summer darkness furled,<br/>
With but an owl and snail to see,<br/>
Had blessed and conquered all the world?<br/>
<br/>
They bound me to the scourging-stake,<br/>
They laid their whips of thorn on me;<br/>
I wept to see the green rods break,<br/>
Though blood be beautiful to see.<br/>
<br/>
Beneath the gallows' foot abhorred<br/>
The crowds cry 'Crucify!' and 'Kill!'<br/>
Higher the priests sing, 'Praise the Lord,<br/>
The warlock dies'; and higher still<br/>
<br/>
Shall heaven and earth hear one cry sent<br/>
Even from the hideous gibbet height,<br/>
'Praise to the Lord Omnipotent,<br/>
The vultures have a feast to-night.'<br/></p>
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<h2> THE SKELETON </h2>
<p>Chattering finch and water-fly<br/>
Are not merrier than I;<br/>
Here among the flowers I lie<br/>
Laughing everlastingly.<br/>
No: I may not tell the best;<br/>
Surely, friends, I might have guessed<br/>
Death was but the good King's jest,<br/>
It was hid so carefully.<br/></p>
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<h2> A CHORD OF COLOUR </h2>
<p>My Lady clad herself in grey,<br/>
That caught and clung about her throat;<br/>
Then all the long grey winter day<br/>
On me a living splendour smote;<br/>
And why grey palmers holy are,<br/>
And why grey minsters great in story,<br/>
And grey skies ring the morning star,<br/>
And grey hairs are a crown of glory.<br/>
<br/>
My Lady clad herself in green,<br/>
Like meadows where the wind-waves pass;<br/>
Then round my spirit spread, I ween,<br/>
A splendour of forgotten grass.<br/>
Then all that dropped of stem or sod,<br/>
Hoarded as emeralds might be,<br/>
I bowed to every bush, and trod<br/>
Amid the live grass fearfully.<br/>
<br/>
My Lady clad herself in blue,<br/>
Then on me, like the seer long gone,<br/>
The likeness of a sapphire grew,<br/>
The throne of him that sat thereon.<br/>
Then knew I why the Fashioner<br/>
Splashed reckless blue on sky and sea;<br/>
And ere 'twas good enough for her,<br/>
He tried it on Eternity.<br/>
<br/>
Beneath the gnarled old Knowledge-tree<br/>
Sat, like an owl, the evil sage:<br/>
'The World's a bubble,' solemnly<br/>
He read, and turned a second page.<br/>
'A bubble, then, old crow,' I cried,<br/>
'God keep you in your weary wit!<br/>
'A bubble—have you ever spied<br/>
'The colours I have seen on it?'<br/></p>
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<h2> THE HAPPY MAN </h2>
<p>To teach the grey earth like a child,<br/>
To bid the heavens repent,<br/>
I only ask from Fate the gift<br/>
Of one man well content.<br/>
<br/>
Him will I find: though when in vain<br/>
I search the feast and mart,<br/>
The fading flowers of liberty,<br/>
The painted masks of art.<br/>
<br/>
I only find him at the last,<br/>
On one old hill where nod<br/>
Golgotha's ghastly trinity—<br/>
Three persons and one god.<br/></p>
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<h2> THE UNPARDONABLE SIN </h2>
<p>I do not cry, beloved, neither curse.<br/>
Silence and strength, these two at least are good.<br/>
He gave me sun and stars and ought He could,<br/>
But not a woman's love; for that is hers.<br/>
<br/>
He sealed her heart from sage and questioner—<br/>
Yea, with seven seals, as he has sealed the grave.<br/>
And if she give it to a drunken slave,<br/>
The Day of Judgment shall not challenge her.<br/>
<br/>
Only this much: if one, deserving well,<br/>
Touching your thin young hands and making suit,<br/>
Feel not himself a crawling thing, a brute,<br/>
Buried and bricked in a forgotten hell;<br/>
<br/>
Prophet and poet be he over sod,<br/>
Prince among angels in the highest place,<br/>
God help me, I will smite him on the face,<br/>
Before the glory of the face of God.<br/></p>
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<h2> A NOVELTY </h2>
<p>Why should I care for the Ages<br/>
Because they are old and grey?<br/>
To me, like sudden laughter,<br/>
The stars are fresh and gay;<br/>
The world is a daring fancy,<br/>
And finished yesterday.<br/>
<br/>
Why should I bow to the Ages<br/>
Because they were drear and dry?<br/>
Slow trees and ripening meadows<br/>
For me go roaring by,<br/>
A living charge, a struggle<br/>
To escalade the sky.<br/>
<br/>
The eternal suns and systems,<br/>
Solid and silent all,<br/>
To me are stars of an instant,<br/>
Only the fires that fall<br/>
From God's good rocket, rising<br/>
On this night of carnival.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ULTIMATE </h2>
<p>The vision of a haloed host<br/>
That weep around an empty throne;<br/>
And, aureoles dark and angels dead,<br/>
Man with his own life stands alone.<br/>
<br/>
'I am,' he says his bankrupt creed:<br/>
'I am,' and is again a clod:<br/>
The sparrow starts, the grasses stir,<br/>
For he has said the name of God.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE DONKEY </h2>
<p>When fishes flew and forests walked<br/>
And figs grew upon thorn,<br/>
Some moment when the moon was blood<br/>
Then surely I was born;<br/>
<br/>
With monstrous head and sickening cry<br/>
And ears like errant wings,<br/>
The devil's walking parody<br/>
On all four-footed things.<br/>
<br/>
The tattered outlaw of the earth,<br/>
Of ancient crooked will;<br/>
Starve, scourge, deride me: I am dumb,<br/>
I keep my secret still.<br/>
<br/>
Fools! For I also had my hour;<br/>
One far fierce hour and sweet:<br/>
There was a shout about my ears,<br/>
And palms before my feet.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE BEATIFIC VISION </h2>
<p>Through what fierce incarnations, furled<br/>
In fire and darkness, did I go,<br/>
Ere I was worthy in the world<br/>
To see a dandelion grow?<br/>
<br/>
Well, if in any woes or wars<br/>
I bought my naked right to be,<br/>
Grew worthy of the grass, nor gave<br/>
The wren, my brother, shame for me.<br/>
<br/>
But what shall God not ask of him<br/>
In the last time when all is told,<br/>
Who saw her stand beside the hearth,<br/>
The firelight garbing her in gold?<br/></p>
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<h2> THE HOPE OF THE STREETS </h2>
<p>The still sweet meadows shimmered: and I stood<br/>
And cursed them, bloom of hedge and bird of tree,<br/>
And bright and high beyond the hunch-backed wood<br/>
The thunder and the splendour of the sea.<br/>
<br/>
Give back the Babylon where I was born,<br/>
The lips that gape give back, the hands that grope,<br/>
And noise and blood and suffocating scorn<br/>
An eddy of fierce faces—and a hope<br/>
<br/>
That 'mid those myriad heads one head find place,<br/>
With brown hair curled like breakers of the sea,<br/>
And two eyes set so strangely in the face<br/>
That all things else are nothing suddenly.<br/></p>
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<h2> ECCLESIASTES </h2>
<p>There is one sin: to call a green leaf grey,<br/>
Whereat the sun in heaven shuddereth.<br/>
There is one blasphemy: for death to pray,<br/>
For God alone knoweth the praise of death.<br/>
<br/>
There is one creed: 'neath no world-terror's wing<br/>
Apples forget to grow on apple-trees.<br/>
There is one thing is needful—everything—<br/>
The rest is vanity of vanities.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE SONG OF THE CHILDREN </h2>
<p>The World is ours till sunset,<br/>
Holly and fire and snow;<br/>
And the name of our dead brother<br/>
Who loved us long ago.<br/>
<br/>
The grown folk mighty and cunning,<br/>
They write his name in gold;<br/>
But we can tell a little<br/>
Of the million tales he told.<br/>
<br/>
He taught them laws and watchwords,<br/>
To preach and struggle and pray;<br/>
But he taught us deep in the hayfield<br/>
The games that the angels play.<br/>
<br/>
Had he stayed here for ever,<br/>
Their world would be wise as ours—<br/>
And the king be cutting capers,<br/>
And the priest be picking flowers.<br/>
<br/>
But the dark day came: they gathered:<br/>
On their faces we could see<br/>
They had taken and slain our brother,<br/>
And hanged him on a tree.<br/></p>
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<h2> THE FISH </h2>
<p>Dark the sea was: but I saw him,<br/>
One great head with goggle eyes,<br/>
Like a diabolic cherub<br/>
Flying in those fallen skies.<br/>
<br/>
I have heard the hoarse deniers,<br/>
I have known the wordy wars;<br/>
I have seen a man, by shouting,<br/>
Seek to orphan all the stars.<br/>
<br/>
I have seen a fool half-fashioned<br/>
Borrow from the heavens a tongue,<br/>
So to curse them more at leisure—<br/>
—And I trod him not as dung.<br/>
<br/>
For I saw that finny goblin<br/>
Hidden in the abyss untrod;<br/>
And I knew there can be laughter<br/>
On the secret face of God.<br/>
<br/>
Blow the trumpets, crown the sages,<br/>
Bring the age by reason fed!<br/>
(He that sitteth in the heavens,<br/>
'He shall laugh'—the prophet said.)<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> GOLD LEAVES </h2>
<p>Lo! I am come to autumn,<br/>
When all the leaves are gold;<br/>
Grey hairs and golden leaves cry out<br/>
The year and I are old.<br/>
<br/>
In youth I sought the prince of men,<br/>
Captain in cosmic wars,<br/>
Our Titan, even the weeds would show<br/>
Defiant, to the stars.<br/>
<br/>
But now a great thing in the street<br/>
Seems any human nod,<br/>
Where shift in strange democracy<br/>
The million masks of God.<br/>
<br/>
In youth I sought the golden flower<br/>
Hidden in wood or wold,<br/>
But I am come to autumn,<br/>
When all the leaves are gold.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THOU SHALT NOT KILL </h2>
<p>I had grown weary of him; of his breath<br/>
And hands and features I was sick to death.<br/>
Each day I heard the same dull voice and tread;<br/>
I did not hate him: but I wished him dead.<br/>
And he must with his blank face fill my life—<br/>
Then my brain blackened; and I snatched a knife.<br/>
<br/>
But ere I struck, my soul's grey deserts through<br/>
A voice cried, 'Know at least what thing you do.'<br/>
'This is a common man: knowest thou, O soul,<br/>
What this thing is? somewhere where seasons roll<br/>
There is some living thing for whom this man<br/>
Is as seven heavens girt into a span,<br/>
For some one soul you take the world away—<br/>
Now know you well your deed and purpose. Slay!'<br/>
<br/>
Then I cast down the knife upon the ground<br/>
And saw that mean man for one moment crowned.<br/>
I turned and laughed: for there was no one by—<br/>
The man that I had sought to slay was I.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> A CERTAIN EVENING </h2>
<p>That night the whole world mingled,<br/>
The souls were babes at play,<br/>
And angel danced with devil.<br/>
And God cried, 'Holiday!'<br/>
<br/>
The sea had climbed the mountain peaks,<br/>
And shouted to the stars<br/>
To come to play: and down they came<br/>
Splashing in happy wars.<br/>
<br/>
The pine grew apples for a whim,<br/>
The cart-horse built a nest;<br/>
The oxen flew, the flowers sang,<br/>
The sun rose in the west.<br/>
<br/>
And 'neath the load of many worlds,<br/>
The lowest life God made<br/>
Lifted his huge and heavy limbs<br/>
And into heaven strayed.<br/>
<br/>
To where the highest life God made<br/>
Before His presence stands;<br/>
But God himself cried, 'Holiday!'<br/>
And she gave me both her hands.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> A MAN AND HIS IMAGE </h2>
<p>All day the nations climb and crawl and pray<br/>
In one long pilgrimage to one white shrine,<br/>
Where sleeps a saint whose pardon, like his peace,<br/>
Is wide as death, as common, as divine.<br/>
<br/>
His statue in an aureole fills the shrine,<br/>
The reckless nightingale, the roaming fawn,<br/>
Share the broad blessing of his lifted hands,<br/>
Under the canopy, above the lawn.<br/>
<br/>
But one strange night, a night of gale and flood,<br/>
A sound came louder than the wild wind's tone;<br/>
The grave-gates shook and opened: and one stood<br/>
Blue in the moonlight, rotten to the bone.<br/>
<br/>
Then on the statue, graven with holy smiles,<br/>
There came another smile—tremendous—one<br/>
Of an Egyptian god. 'Why should you rise?<br/>
'Do I not guard your secret from the sun?<br/>
<br/>
The nations come; they kneel among the flowers<br/>
Sprung from your blood, blossoms of May and June,<br/>
Which do not poison them—is it not strange?<br/>
Speak!' And the dead man shuddered in the moon.<br/>
<br/>
Shall I not cry the truth?'—the dead man cowered—<br/>
Is it not sad, with life so tame and cold,<br/>
What earth should fade into the sun's white fires<br/>
With the best jest in all its tales untold?<br/>
<br/>
'If I should cry that in this shrine lie hid<br/>
Stories that Satan from his mouth would spew;<br/>
Wild tales that men in hell tell hoarsely—speak!<br/>
Saint and Deliverer! Should I slander you?'<br/>
<br/>
Slowly the cowering corse reared up its head,<br/>
'Nay, I am vile ... but when for all to see,<br/>
You stand there, pure and painless—death of life!<br/>
Let the stars fall—I say you slander me!<br/>
<br/>
'You make me perfect, public, colourless;<br/>
You make my virtues sit at ease—you lie!<br/>
For mine were never easy—lost or saved,<br/>
I had a soul—I was. And where am I?<br/>
<br/>
Where is my good? the little real hoard,<br/>
The secret tears, the sudden chivalries;<br/>
The tragic love, the futile triumph—where?<br/>
Thief, dog, and son of devils—where are these?<br/>
<br/>
I will lift up my head: in leprous loves<br/>
Lost, and the soul's dishonourable scars—<br/>
By God I was a better man than This<br/>
That stands and slanders me to all the stars.<br/>
<br/>
'Come down!' And with an awful cry, the corse<br/>
Sprang on the sacred tomb of many tales,<br/>
And stone and bone, locked in a loathsome strife,<br/>
Swayed to the singing of the nightingales.<br/>
<br/>
Then one was thrown: and where the statue stood<br/>
Under the canopy, above the lawn,<br/>
The corse stood; grey and lean, with lifted hands<br/>
Raised in tremendous welcome to the dawn.<br/>
<br/>
'Now let all nations climb and crawl and pray;<br/>
Though I be basest of my old red clan,<br/>
They shall not scale, with cries or sacrifice,<br/>
The stature of the spirit of a man.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MARINER </h2>
<p>The violet scent is sacred<br/>
Like dreams of angels bright;<br/>
The hawthorn smells of passion<br/>
Told in a moonless night.<br/>
<br/>
But the smell is in my nostrils,<br/>
Through blossoms red or gold,<br/>
Of my own green flower unfading,<br/>
A bitter smell and bold.<br/>
<br/>
The lily smells of pardon,<br/>
The rose of mirth; but mine<br/>
Smells shrewd of death and honour,<br/>
And the doom of Adam's line.<br/>
<br/>
The heavy scent of wine-shops<br/>
Floats as I pass them by,<br/>
But never a cup I quaff from,<br/>
And never a house have I.<br/>
<br/>
Till dropped down forty fathoms,<br/>
I lie eternally;<br/>
And drink from God's own goblet<br/>
The green wine of the sea.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE TRIUMPH OF MAN </h2>
<p>I plod and peer amid mean sounds and shapes,<br/>
I hunt for dusty gain and dreary praise,<br/>
And slowly pass the dismal grinning days,<br/>
Monkeying each other like a line of apes.<br/>
<br/>
What care? There was one hour amid all these<br/>
When I had stripped off like a tawdry glove<br/>
My starriest hopes and wants, for very love<br/>
Of time and desolate eternities.<br/>
<br/>
Yea, for one great hour's triumph, not in me<br/>
Nor any hope of mine did I rejoice,<br/>
But in a meadow game of girls and boys<br/>
Some sunset in the centuries to be.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CYCLOPEAN </h2>
<p>A mountainous and mystic brute<br/>
No rein can curb, no arrow shoot,<br/>
Upon whose domed deformed back<br/>
I sweep the planets scorching track.<br/>
<br/>
Old is the elf, and wise, men say,<br/>
His hair grows green as ours grows grey;<br/>
He mocks the stars with myriad hands.<br/>
High as that swinging forest stands.<br/>
<br/>
But though in pigmy wanderings dull<br/>
I scour the deserts of his skull,<br/>
I never find the face, eyes, teeth.<br/>
Lowering or laughing underneath.<br/>
<br/>
I met my foe in an empty dell,<br/>
His face in the sun was naked hell.<br/>
I thought, 'One silent, bloody blow.<br/>
No priest would curse, no crowd would know.'<br/>
<br/>
Then cowered: a daisy, half concealed,<br/>
Watched for the fame of that poor field;<br/>
And in that flower and suddenly<br/>
Earth opened its one eye on me.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> JOSEPH </h2>
<p>If the stars fell; night's nameless dreams<br/>
Of bliss and blasphemy came true,<br/>
If skies were green and snow were gold,<br/>
And you loved me as I love you;<br/>
<br/>
O long light hands and curled brown hair,<br/>
And eyes where sits a naked soul;<br/>
Dare I even then draw near and burn<br/>
My fingers in the aureole?<br/>
<br/>
Yes, in the one wise foolish hour<br/>
God gives this strange strength to a man.<br/>
He can demand, though not deserve,<br/>
Where ask he cannot, seize he can.<br/>
<br/>
But once the blood's wild wedding o'er,<br/>
Were not dread his, half dark desire,<br/>
To see the Christ-child in the cot,<br/>
The Virgin Mary by the fire?<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MODERN ELFLAND </h2>
<p>I Cut a staff in a churchyard copse,<br/>
I clad myself in ragged things,<br/>
I set a feather in my cap<br/>
That fell out of an angel's wings.<br/>
<br/>
I filled my wallet with white stones,<br/>
I took three foxgloves in my hand,<br/>
I slung my shoes across my back,<br/>
And so I went to fairyland.<br/>
<br/>
But Lo, within that ancient place<br/>
Science had reared her iron crown,<br/>
And the great cloud of steam went up<br/>
That telleth where she takes a town.<br/>
<br/>
But cowled with smoke and starred with lamps<br/>
That strange land's light was still its own;<br/>
The word that witched the woods and hills<br/>
Spoke in the iron and the stone.<br/>
<br/>
Not Nature's hand had ever curved<br/>
That mute unearthly porter's spine.<br/>
Like sleeping dragon's sudden eyes<br/>
The signals leered along the line.<br/>
<br/>
The chimneys thronging crooked or straight<br/>
Were fingers signalling the sky;<br/>
The dog that strayed across the street<br/>
Seemed four-legged by monstrosity.<br/>
<br/>
'In vain,' I cried, 'though you too touch<br/>
The new time's desecrating hand,<br/>
Through all the noises of a town<br/>
I hear the heart of fairyland.'<br/>
<br/>
I read the name above a door,<br/>
Then through my spirit pealed and passed:<br/>
'This is the town of thine own home,<br/>
And thou hast looked on it at last.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ETERNITIES </h2>
<p>I cannot count the pebbles in the brook.<br/>
Well hath He spoken: 'Swear not by thy head,<br/>
Thou knowest not the hairs,' though He, we read,<br/>
Writes that wild number in his own strange book.<br/>
<br/>
I cannot count the sands or search the seas,<br/>
Death cometh, and I leave so much untrod.<br/>
Grant my immortal aureole, O my God,<br/>
And I will name the leaves upon the trees.<br/>
<br/>
In heaven I shall stand on gold and glass,<br/>
Still brooding earth's arithmetic to spell;<br/>
Or see the fading of the fires of hell<br/>
Ere I have thanked my God for all the grass.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A CHRISTMAS CAROL </h2>
<p>The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap,<br/>
His hair was like a light.<br/>
(O weary, weary were the world,<br/>
But here is all aright.)<br/>
<br/>
The Christ-child lay on Mary's breast,<br/>
His hair was like a star.<br/>
(O stern and cunning are the kings,<br/>
But here the true hearts are.)<br/>
<br/>
The Christ-child lay on Mary's heart,<br/>
His hair was like a fire.<br/>
(O weary, weary is the world,<br/>
But here the world's desire.)<br/>
<br/>
The Christ-child stood at Mary's knee,<br/>
His hair was like a crown,<br/>
And all the flowers looked up at him.<br/>
And all the stars looked down.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ALONE </h2>
<p>Blessings there are of cradle and of clan,<br/>
Blessings that fall of priests' and princes' hands;<br/>
But never blessing full of lives and lands,<br/>
Broad as the blessing of a lonely man.<br/>
<br/>
Though that old king fell from his primal throne,<br/>
And ate among the cattle, yet this pride<br/>
Had found him in the deepest grass, and cried<br/>
An 'Ecce Homo' with the trumpets blown.<br/>
<br/>
And no mad tyrant, with almighty ban,<br/>
Who in strong madness dreams himself divine,<br/>
But hears through fumes of flattery and of wine<br/>
The thunder of this blessing name him man.<br/>
<br/>
Let all earth rot past saints' and seraphs' plea,<br/>
Yet shall a Voice cry through its last lost war,<br/>
'This is the world, this red wreck of a star,<br/>
That a man blessed beneath an alder-tree.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> KING'S CROSS STATION </h2>
<p>This circled cosmos whereof man is god<br/>
Has suns and stars of green and gold and red,<br/>
And cloudlands of great smoke, that range o'er range<br/>
Far floating, hide its iron heavens o'erhead.<br/>
<br/>
God! shall we ever honour what we are,<br/>
And see one moment ere the age expire,<br/>
The vision of man shouting and erect,<br/>
Whirled by the shrieking steeds of flood and fire?<br/>
<br/>
Or must Fate act the same grey farce again,<br/>
And wait, till one, amid Time's wrecks and scars,<br/>
Speaks to a ruin here, 'What poet-race<br/>
Shot such cyclopean arches at the stars?'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE HUMAN TREE </h2>
<p>Many have Earth's lovers been,<br/>
Tried in seas and wars, I ween;<br/>
Yet the mightiest have I seen:<br/>
Yea, the best saw I.<br/>
One that in a field alone<br/>
Stood up stiller than a stone<br/>
Lest a moth should fly.<br/>
<br/>
Birds had nested in his hair,<br/>
On his shoon were mosses rare.<br/>
Insect empires flourished there,<br/>
Worms in ancient wars;<br/>
But his eyes burn like a glass,<br/>
Hearing a great sea of grass<br/>
Roar towards the stars.<br/>
<br/>
From, them to the human tree<br/>
Rose a cry continually,<br/>
'Thou art still, our Father, we<br/>
Fain would have thee nod.<br/>
Make the skies as blood below thee,<br/>
Though thou slay us, we shall know thee.<br/>
Answer us, O God!<br/>
<br/>
'Show thine ancient flame and thunder,<br/>
Split the stillness once asunder,<br/>
Lest we whisper, lest we wonder<br/>
Art thou there at all?'<br/>
But I saw him there alone,<br/>
Standing stiller than a stone<br/>
Lest a moth should fall.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TO THEM THAT MOURN </h2>
<p>(W.E.G., May 1898)<br/>
<br/>
Lift up your heads: in life, in death,<br/>
God knoweth his head was high.<br/>
Quit we the coward's broken breath<br/>
Who watched a strong man die.<br/>
<br/>
If we must say, 'No more his peer<br/>
Cometh; the flag is furled.'<br/>
Stand not too near him, lest he hear<br/>
That slander on the world.<br/>
<br/>
The good green earth he loved and trod<br/>
Is still, with many a scar,<br/>
Writ in the chronicles of God,<br/>
A giant-bearing star.<br/>
<br/>
He fell: but Britain's banner swings<br/>
Above his sunken crown.<br/>
Black death shall have his toll of kings<br/>
Before that cross goes down.<br/>
<br/>
Once more shall move with mighty things<br/>
His house of ancient tale,<br/>
Where kings whose hands were kissed of kings<br/>
Went in: and came out pale.<br/>
<br/>
O young ones of a darker day,<br/>
In art's wan colours clad,<br/>
Whose very love and hate are grey—<br/>
Whose very sin is sad.<br/>
<br/>
Pass on: one agony long-drawn<br/>
Was merrier than your mirth,<br/>
When hand-in-hand came death and dawn,<br/>
And spring was on the earth.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE OUTLAW </h2>
<p>Priest, is any song-bird stricken?<br/>
Is one leaf less on the tree?<br/>
Is this wine less red and royal<br/>
That the hangman waits for me?<br/>
<br/>
He upon your cross that hangeth,<br/>
It is writ of priestly pen,<br/>
On the night they built his gibbet,<br/>
Drank red wine among his men.<br/>
<br/>
Quaff, like a brave man, as he did,<br/>
Wine and death as heaven pours—<br/>
This is my fate: O ye rulers,<br/>
O ye pontiffs, what is yours?<br/>
<br/>
To wait trembling, lest yon loathly<br/>
Gallows-shape whereon I die,<br/>
In strange temples yet unbuilded,<br/>
Blaze upon an altar high.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BEHIND </h2>
<p>I saw an old man like a child,<br/>
His blue eyes bright, his white hair wild,<br/>
Who turned for ever, and might not stop,<br/>
Round and round like an urchin's top.<br/>
<br/>
'Fool,' I cried, 'while you spin round,<br/>
'Others grow wise, are praised, are crowned.'<br/>
Ever the same round road he trod,<br/>
'This is better: I seek for God.'<br/>
<br/>
'We see the whole world, left and right,<br/>
Yet at the blind back hides from sight<br/>
The unseen Master that drives us forth<br/>
To East and West, to South and North.<br/>
<br/>
'Over my shoulder for eighty years<br/>
I have looked for the gleam of the sphere of spheres.'<br/>
'In all your turning, what have you found?'<br/>
'At least, I know why the world goes round.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE END OF FEAR </h2>
<p>Though the whole heaven be one-eyed with the moon,<br/>
Though the dead landscape seem a thing possessed,<br/>
Yet I go singing through that land oppressed<br/>
As one that singeth through the flowers of June.<br/>
<br/>
No more, with forest-fingers crawling free<br/>
O'er dark flint wall that seems a wall of eyes,<br/>
Shall evil break my soul with mysteries<br/>
Of some world-poison maddening bush and tree.<br/>
<br/>
No more shall leering ghosts of pimp and king<br/>
With bloody secrets veiled before me stand.<br/>
Last night I held all evil in my hand<br/>
Closed: and behold it was a little thing.<br/>
<br/>
I broke the infernal gates and looked on him<br/>
Who fronts the strong creation with a curse;<br/>
Even the god of a lost universe,<br/>
Smiling above his hideous cherubim.<br/>
<br/>
And pierced far down in his soul's crypt unriven<br/>
The last black crooked sympathy and shame,<br/>
And hailed him with that ringing rainbow name<br/>
Erased upon the oldest book in heaven.<br/>
<br/>
Like emptied idiot masks, sin's loves and wars<br/>
Stare at me now: for in the night I broke<br/>
The bubble of a great world's jest, and woke<br/>
Laughing with laughter such as shakes the stars.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE HOLY OF HOLIES </h2>
<p>'Elder father, though thine eyes<br/>
Shine with hoary mysteries,<br/>
Canst thou tell what in the heart<br/>
Of a cowslip blossom lies?<br/>
<br/>
'Smaller than all lives that be,<br/>
Secret as the deepest sea,<br/>
Stands a little house of seeds,<br/>
Like an elfin's granary,<br/>
<br/>
'Speller of the stones and weeds,<br/>
Skilled in Nature's crafts and creeds,<br/>
Tell me what is in the heart<br/>
Of the smallest of the seeds.'<br/>
<br/>
'God Almighty, and with Him<br/>
Cherubim and Seraphim,<br/>
Filling all eternity—<br/>
Adonai Elohim.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MIRROR OF MADMEN </h2>
<p>I dreamed a dream of heaven, white as frost,<br/>
The splendid stillness of a living host;<br/>
Vast choirs of upturned faces, line o'er line.<br/>
Then my blood froze; for every face was mine.<br/>
<br/>
Spirits with sunset plumage throng and pass,<br/>
Glassed darkly in the sea of gold and glass.<br/>
But still on every side, in every spot,<br/>
I saw a million selves, who saw me not.<br/>
<br/>
I fled to quiet wastes, where on a stone,<br/>
Perchance, I found a saint, who sat alone;<br/>
I came behind: he turned with slow, sweet grace,<br/>
And faced me with my happy, hateful face.<br/>
<br/>
I cowered like one that in a tower doth bide,<br/>
Shut in by mirrors upon every side;<br/>
Then I saw, islanded in skies alone<br/>
And silent, one that sat upon a throne.<br/>
<br/>
His robe was bordered with rich rose and gold,<br/>
Green, purple, silver out of sunsets old;<br/>
But o'er his face a great cloud edged with fire,<br/>
Because it covereth the world's desire.<br/>
<br/>
But as I gazed, a silent worshipper,<br/>
Methought the cloud began to faintly stir;<br/>
Then I fell flat, and screamed with grovelling head,<br/>
'If thou hast any lightning, strike me dead!<br/>
<br/>
'But spare a brow where the clean sunlight fell,<br/>
The crown of a new sin that sickens hell.<br/>
Let me not look aloft and see mine own<br/>
Feature and form upon the Judgment-throne.'<br/>
<br/>
Then my dream snapped: and with a heart that leapt<br/>
I saw across the tavern where I slept,<br/>
The sight of all my life most full of grace,<br/>
A gin-damned drunkard's wan half-witted face.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> E.C.B. </h2>
<p>Before the grass grew over me,<br/>
I knew one good man through and through,<br/>
And knew a soul and body joined<br/>
Are stronger than the heavens are blue.<br/>
<br/>
A wisdom worthy of thy joy,<br/>
O great heart, read I as I ran;<br/>
Now, though men smite me on the face,<br/>
I cannot curse the face of man.<br/>
<br/>
I loved the man I saw yestreen<br/>
Hanged with his babe's blood on his palms.<br/>
I loved the man I saw to-day<br/>
Who knocked not when he came with alms.<br/>
<br/>
Hush!—for thy sake I even faced<br/>
The knowledge that is worse than hell;<br/>
And loved the man I saw but now<br/>
Hanging head downwards in the well.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE DESECRATERS </h2>
<p>Witness all: that unrepenting,<br/>
Feathers flying, music high,<br/>
I go down to death unshaken<br/>
By your mean philosophy.<br/>
<br/>
For your wages, take my body,<br/>
That at least to you I leave;<br/>
Set the sulky plumes upon it,<br/>
Bid the grinning mummers grieve.<br/>
<br/>
Stand in silence: steep your raiment<br/>
In the night that hath no star;<br/>
Don the mortal dress of devils,<br/>
Blacker than their spirits are.<br/>
<br/>
Since ye may not, of your mercy,<br/>
Ere I lie on such a hearse,<br/>
Hurl me to the living jackals<br/>
God hath built for sepulchres.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN ALLIANCE </h2>
<p>This is the weird of a world-old folk,<br/>
That not till the last link breaks,<br/>
Not till the night is blackest,<br/>
The blood of Hengist wakes.<br/>
When the sun is black in heaven,<br/>
The moon as blood above,<br/>
And the earth is full of hatred,<br/>
This people tells its love.<br/>
<br/>
In change, eclipse, and peril,<br/>
Under the whole world's scorn,<br/>
By blood and death and darkness<br/>
The Saxon peace is sworn;<br/>
That all our fruit be gathered,<br/>
And all our race take hands,<br/>
And the sea be a Saxon river<br/>
That runs through Saxon lands.<br/>
<br/>
Lo! not in vain we bore him;<br/>
Behold it! not in vain,<br/>
Four centuries' dooms of torture<br/>
Choked in the throat of Spain,<br/>
Ere priest or tyrant triumph—<br/>
We know how well—we know—<br/>
Bone of that bone can whiten,<br/>
Blood of that blood can flow.<br/>
<br/>
Deep grows the hate of kindred,<br/>
Its roots take hold on hell;<br/>
No peace or praise can heal it,<br/>
But a stranger heals it well.<br/>
Seas shall be red as sunsets,<br/>
And kings' bones float as foam,<br/>
And heaven be dark with vultures,<br/>
The night our son comes home.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ANCIENT OF DAYS </h2>
<p>A child sits in a sunny place,<br/>
Too happy for a smile,<br/>
And plays through one long holiday<br/>
With balls to roll and pile;<br/>
A painted wind-mill by his side<br/>
Runs like a merry tune,<br/>
But the sails are the four great winds of heaven,<br/>
And the balls are the sun and moon.<br/>
<br/>
A staring doll's-house shows to him<br/>
Green floors and starry rafter,<br/>
And many-coloured graven dolls<br/>
Live for his lonely laughter.<br/>
The dolls have crowns and aureoles,<br/>
Helmets and horns and wings.<br/>
For they are the saints and seraphim,<br/>
The prophets and the kings.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LAST MASQUERADE </h2>
<p>A wan new garment of young green<br/>
Touched, as you turned your soft brown hair<br/>
And in me surged the strangest prayer<br/>
Ever in lover's heart hath been.<br/>
<br/>
That I who saw your youth's bright page,<br/>
A rainbow change from robe to robe,<br/>
Might see you on this earthly globe,<br/>
Crowned with the silver crown of age.<br/>
<br/>
Your dear hair powdered in strange guise,<br/>
Your dear face touched with colours pale:<br/>
And gazing through the mask and veil<br/>
The mirth of your immortal eyes.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE EARTH'S SHAME </h2>
<p>Name not his deed: in shuddering and in haste<br/>
We dragged him darkly o'er the windy fell:<br/>
That night there was a gibbet in the waste,<br/>
And a new sin in hell.<br/>
<br/>
Be his deed hid from commonwealths and kings,<br/>
By all men born be one true tale forgot;<br/>
But three things, braver than all earthly things,<br/>
Faced him and feared him not.<br/>
<br/>
Above his head and sunken secret face<br/>
Nested the sparrow's young and dropped not dead.<br/>
From the red blood and slime of that lost place<br/>
Grew daisies white, not red.<br/>
<br/>
And from high heaven looking upon him,<br/>
Slowly upon the face of God did come<br/>
A smile the cherubim and seraphim<br/>
Hid all their faces from.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VANITY </h2>
<p>A wan sky greener than the lawn,<br/>
A wan lawn paler than the sky.<br/>
She gave a flower into my hand,<br/>
And all the hours of eve went by.<br/>
<br/>
Who knows what round the corner waits<br/>
To smite? If shipwreck, snare, or slur<br/>
Shall leave me with a head to lift,<br/>
Worthy of him that spoke with her.<br/>
<br/>
A wan sky greener than the lawn,<br/>
A wan lawn paler than the sky.<br/>
She gave a flower into my hand,<br/>
And all the days of life went by.<br/>
<br/>
Live ill or well, this thing is mine,<br/>
From all I guard it, ill or well.<br/>
One tawdry, tattered, faded flower<br/>
To show the jealous kings in hell.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LAMP POST </h2>
<p>Laugh your best, O blazoned forests,<br/>
Me ye shall not shift or shame<br/>
With your beauty: here among you<br/>
Man hath set his spear of flame.<br/>
<br/>
Lamp to lamp we send the signal,<br/>
For our lord goes forth to war;<br/>
Since a voice, ere stars were builded,<br/>
Bade him colonise a star.<br/>
<br/>
Laugh ye, cruel as the morning,<br/>
Deck your heads with fruit and flower,<br/>
Though our souls be sick with pity,<br/>
Yet our hands are hard with power.<br/>
<br/>
We have read your evil stories,<br/>
We have heard the tiny yell<br/>
Through the voiceless conflagration<br/>
Of your green and shining hell.<br/>
<br/>
And when men, with fires and shouting,<br/>
Break your old tyrannic pales;<br/>
And where ruled a single spider<br/>
Laugh and weep a million tales.<br/>
<br/>
This shall be your best of boasting:<br/>
That some poet, poor of spine.<br/>
Full and sated with our wisdom,<br/>
Full and fiery with our wine,<br/>
<br/>
Shall steal out and make a treaty<br/>
With the grasses and the showers,<br/>
Rail against the grey town-mother,<br/>
Fawn upon the scornful flowers;<br/>
<br/>
Rest his head among the roses,<br/>
Where a quiet song-bird sounds,<br/>
And no sword made sharp for traitors,<br/>
Hack him into meat for hounds.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PESSIMIST </h2>
<p>You that have snarled through the ages, take your answer and go—<br/>
I know your hoary question, the riddle that all men know.<br/>
You have weighed the stars in a balance, and grasped the skies in a span:<br/>
Take, if you must have answer, the word of a common man.<br/>
<br/>
Deep in my life lies buried one love unhealed, unshriven,<br/>
One hunger still shall haunt me—yea, in the streets of heaven;<br/>
This is the burden, babbler, this is the curse shall cling,<br/>
This is the thing I bring you; this is the pleasant thing.<br/>
<br/>
'Gainst you and all your sages, no joy of mine shall strive,<br/>
This one dead self shall shatter the men you call alive.<br/>
My grief I send to smite you, no pleasure, no belief,<br/>
Lord of the battered grievance, what do you know of grief?<br/>
<br/>
I only know the praises to heaven that one man gave,<br/>
That he came on earth for an instant, to stand beside a grave,<br/>
The peace of a field of battle, where flowers are born of blood.<br/>
I only know one evil that makes the whole world good.<br/>
<br/>
Beneath this single sorrow the globe of moon and sphere<br/>
Turns to a single jewel, so bright and brittle and dear<br/>
That I dread lest God should drop it, to be dashed into stars below.<br/>
<br/>
You that have snarled through the ages, take your answer and go.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A FAIRY TALE </h2>
<p>All things grew upwards, foul and fair:<br/>
The great trees fought and beat the air<br/>
With monstrous wings that would have flown;<br/>
But the old earth clung to her own,<br/>
Holding them back from heavenly wars,<br/>
Though every flower sprang at the stars.<br/>
<br/>
But he broke free: while all things ceased,<br/>
Some hour increasing, he increased.<br/>
The town beneath him seemed a map,<br/>
Above the church he cocked his cap,<br/>
Above the cross his feather flew<br/>
Above the birds and still he grew.<br/>
<br/>
The trees turned grass; the clouds were riven;<br/>
His feet were mountains lost in heaven;<br/>
Through strange new skies he rose alone,<br/>
The earth fell from him like a stone,<br/>
And his own limbs beneath him far<br/>
Seemed tapering down to touch a star.<br/>
<br/>
He reared his head, shaggy and grim,<br/>
Staring among the cherubim;<br/>
The seven celestial floors he rent,<br/>
One crystal dome still o'er him bent:<br/>
Above his head, more clear than hope,<br/>
All heaven was a microscope.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A PORTRAIT </h2>
<p>Fair faces crowd on Christmas night<br/>
Like seven suns a-row,<br/>
But all beyond is the wolfish wind<br/>
And the crafty feet of the snow.<br/>
<br/>
But through the rout one figure goes<br/>
With quick and quiet tread;<br/>
Her robe is plain, her form is frail—<br/>
Wait if she turn her head.<br/>
<br/>
I say no word of line or hue,<br/>
But if that face you see,<br/>
Your soul shall know the smile of faith's<br/>
Awful frivolity.<br/>
<br/>
Know that in this grotesque old masque<br/>
Too loud we cannot sing,<br/>
Or dance too wild, or speak too wide<br/>
To praise a hidden thing.<br/>
<br/>
That though the jest be old as night,<br/>
Still shaketh sun and sphere<br/>
An everlasting laughter<br/>
Too loud for us to hear.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FEMINA CONTRA MUNDUM </h2>
<p>The sun was black with judgment, and the moon<br/>
Blood: but between<br/>
I saw a man stand, saying, 'To me at least<br/>
The grass is green.<br/>
<br/>
'There was no star that I forgot to fear<br/>
With love and wonder.<br/>
The birds have loved me'; but no answer came—<br/>
Only the thunder.<br/>
<br/>
Once more the man stood, saying, 'A cottage door,<br/>
Wherethrough I gazed<br/>
That instant as I turned—yea, I am vile;<br/>
Yet my eyes blazed.<br/>
<br/>
'For I had weighed the mountains in a balance,<br/>
And the skies in a scale,<br/>
I come to sell the stars—old lamps for new—<br/>
Old stars for sale.'<br/>
<br/>
Then a calm voice fell all the thunder through,<br/>
A tone less rough:<br/>
'Thou hast begun to love one of my works<br/>
Almost enough.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TO A CERTAIN NATION </h2>
<p>We will not let thee be, for thou art ours.<br/>
We thank thee still, though thou forget these things,<br/>
For that hour's sake when thou didst wake all powers<br/>
With a great cry that God was sick of kings.<br/>
<br/>
Leave thee there grovelling at their rusted greaves,<br/>
These hulking cowards on a painted stage,<br/>
Who, with imperial pomp and laurel leaves,<br/>
Show their Marengo—one man in a cage.<br/>
<br/>
These, for whom stands no type or title given<br/>
In all the squalid tales of gore and pelf;<br/>
Though cowed by crashing thunders from all heaven.<br/>
Cain never said, 'My brother slew himself.'<br/>
<br/>
Tear you the truth out of your drivelling spy,<br/>
The maniac whom you set to swing death's scythe.<br/>
Nay; torture not the torturer—let him lie:<br/>
What need of racks to teach a worm to writhe?<br/>
<br/>
Bear with us, O our sister, not in pride,<br/>
Nor any scorn we see thee spoiled of knaves,<br/>
But only shame to hear, where Danton died,<br/>
Thy foul dead kings all laughing in their graves.<br/>
<br/>
Thou hast a right to rule thyself; to be<br/>
The thing thou wilt; to grin, to fawn, to creep:<br/>
To crown these clumsy liars; ay, and we<br/>
Who knew thee once, we have a right to weep.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PRAISE OF DUST </h2>
<p>'What of vile dust?' the preacher said.<br/>
Methought the whole world woke,<br/>
The dead stone lived beneath my foot,<br/>
And my whole body spoke.<br/>
<br/>
'You, that play tyrant to the dust,<br/>
And stamp its wrinkled face,<br/>
This patient star that flings you not<br/>
Far into homeless space.<br/>
<br/>
'Come down out of your dusty shrine<br/>
The living dust to see,<br/>
The flowers that at your sermon's end<br/>
Stand blazing silently.<br/>
<br/>
'Rich white and blood-red blossom; stones,<br/>
Lichens like fire encrust;<br/>
A gleam of blue, a glare of gold,<br/>
The vision of the dust.<br/>
<br/>
'Pass them all by: till, as you come<br/>
Where, at a city's edge,<br/>
Under a tree—I know it well—<br/>
Under a lattice ledge,<br/>
<br/>
'The sunshine falls on one brown head.<br/>
You, too, O cold of clay,<br/>
Eater of stones, may haply hear<br/>
The trumpets of that day<br/>
<br/>
'When God to all his paladins<br/>
By his own splendour swore<br/>
To make a fairer face than heaven,<br/>
Of dust and nothing more.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE BALLAD OF THE BATTLE OF GIBEON </h2>
<p>Five kings rule o'er the Amorite,<br/>
Mighty as fear and old as night;<br/>
Swathed with unguent and gold and jewel,<br/>
Waxed they merry and fat and cruel.<br/>
Zedek of Salem, a terror and glory,<br/>
Whose face was hid while his robes were gory;<br/>
And Hoham of Hebron, whose loathly face is<br/>
Heavy and dark o'er the ruin of races;<br/>
And Piram of Jarmuth, drunk with strange wine,<br/>
Who dreamed he had fashioned all stars that shine;<br/>
And Debir of Eglon wild, without pity,<br/>
Who raged like a plague in the midst of his city;<br/>
And Japhia of Lachish, a fire that flameth,<br/>
Who did in the daylight what no man nameth.<br/>
<br/>
These five kings said one to another,<br/>
'King unto king o'er the world is brother,<br/>
Seeing that now, for a sign and a wonder,<br/>
A red eclipse and a tongue of thunder,<br/>
A shape and a finger of desolation,<br/>
Is come against us a kingless nation.<br/>
Gibeon hath failed us: it were not good<br/>
That a man remember where Gibeon stood.'<br/>
Then Gibeon sent to our captain, crying,<br/>
'Son of Nun, let a shaft be flying,<br/>
For unclean birds are gathering greedily;<br/>
Slack not thy hand, but come thou speedily.<br/>
Yea, we are lost save thou maintain'st us,<br/>
For the kings of the mountains are gathered against us.'<br/>
<br/>
Then to our people spake the Deliverer,<br/>
'Gibeon is high, yet a host may shiver her;<br/>
Gibeon hath sent to me crying for pity,<br/>
For the lords of the cities encompass the city<br/>
With chariot and banner and bowman and lancer,<br/>
And I swear by the living God I will answer.<br/>
Gird you, O Israel, quiver and javelin,<br/>
Shield and sword for the road we travel in;<br/>
Verily, as I have promised, pay I<br/>
Life unto Gibeon, death unto Ai.'<br/>
<br/>
Sudden and still as a bolt shot right<br/>
Up on the city we went by night.<br/>
Never a bird of the air could say,<br/>
'This was the children of Israel's way.'<br/>
<br/>
Only the hosts sprang up from sleeping,<br/>
Saw from the heights a dark stream sweeping;<br/>
Sprang up straight as a great shout stung them,<br/>
And heard the Deliverer's war-cry among them,<br/>
Heard under cupola, turret, and steeple<br/>
The awful cry of the kingless people.<br/>
<br/>
Started the weak of them, shouted the strong of them,<br/>
Crashed we a thunderbolt into the throng of them,<br/>
Blindly with heads bent, and shields forced before us,<br/>
We heard the dense roar of the strife closing o'er us.<br/>
And drunk with the crash of the song that it sung them,<br/>
We drove the great spear-blade in God's name among them.<br/>
<br/>
Redder and redder the sword-flash fell.<br/>
Our eyes and our nostrils were hotter than hell;<br/>
Till full all the crest of the spear-surge shocking us,<br/>
Hoham of Hebron cried out mocking us,<br/>
'Nay, what need of the war-sword's plying,<br/>
Out of the desert the dust comes flying.<br/>
A little red dust, if the wind be blowing—<br/>
Who shall reck of its coming or going?'<br/>
Back the Deliverer spake as a clarion,<br/>
'Mock at thy slaves, thou eater of carrion!<br/>
Laughest thou at us, in thy kingly clowning,<br/>
We, that laughed upon Ramases frowning.<br/>
We that stood up proud, unpardoned,<br/>
When his face was dark and his heart was hardened?<br/>
Pharaoh we knew and his steeds, not faster<br/>
Than the word of the Lord in thine ear, O master.<br/>
<br/>
Sheer through the turban his wantons wove him,<br/>
Clean to the skull the Deliverer clove him;<br/>
And the two hosts reeled at the sign appalling,<br/>
As the great king fell like a great house falling.<br/>
<br/>
Loudly we shouted, and living and dying.<br/>
Bore them all backward with strength and strong crying;<br/>
And Caleb struck Zedek hard at the throat,<br/>
And Japhia of Lachish Zebulon smote.<br/>
The war-swords and axes were clashing and groaning,<br/>
The fallen were fighting and foaming and moaning;<br/>
The war-spears were breaking, the war-horns were braying,<br/>
Ere the hands of the slayers were sated with slaying.<br/>
And deep in the grasses grown gory and sodden,<br/>
The treaders of all men were trampled and trodden;<br/>
And over them, routed and reeled like cattle,<br/>
High over the turn of the tide of the battle,<br/>
High over noises that deafen and cover us,<br/>
Rang the Deliverer's voice out over us.<br/>
<br/>
'Stand thou still, thou sun upon Gibeon,<br/>
Stand thou, moon, in the valley of Ajalon!<br/>
Shout thou, people, a cry like thunder,<br/>
For the kings of the earth are broken asunder.<br/>
Now we have said as the thunder says it,<br/>
Something is stronger than strength and slays it.<br/>
Now we have written for all time later,<br/>
Five kings are great, yet a law is greater.<br/>
Stare, O sun! in thine own great glory,<br/>
This is the turn of the whole world's story.<br/>
Stand thou still, thou sun upon Gibeon,<br/>
Stand thou, moon, in the valley of Ajalon!<br/>
<br/>
'Smite! amid spear-blades blazing and breaking.<br/>
More than we know of is rising and making.<br/>
Stab with the javelin, crash with the car!<br/>
Cry! for we know not the thing that we are.<br/>
Stand, O sun! that in horrible patience<br/>
Smiled on the smoke and the slaughter of nations.<br/>
Thou shalt grow sad for a little crying,<br/>
Thou shalt be darkened for one man's dying—<br/>
Stand thou still, thou sun upon Gibeon,<br/>
Stand thou, moon, in the valley of Ajalon!'<br/>
<br/>
After the battle was broken and spent<br/>
Up to the hill the Deliverer went,<br/>
Flung up his arms to the storm-clouds flying,<br/>
And cried unto Israel, mightily crying,<br/>
'Come up, O warriors! come up, O brothers!<br/>
Tribesmen and herdsmen, maidens and mothers;<br/>
The bondman's son and the bondman's daughter,<br/>
The hewer of wood and the drawer of water,<br/>
He that carries and he that brings,<br/>
And set your foot on the neck of kings.'<br/>
<br/>
This is the story of Gibeon fight—<br/>
Where we smote the lords of the Amorite;<br/>
Where the banners of princes with slaughter were sodden.<br/>
And the beards of seers in the rank grass trodden;<br/>
Where the trees were wrecked by the wreck of cars,<br/>
And the reek of the red field blotted the stars;<br/>
Where the dead heads dropped from the swords that sever,<br/>
Because His mercy endureth for ever.<br/></p>
<p>'VULGARISED'<br/>
<br/>
All round they murmur, 'O profane,<br/>
Keep thy heart's secret hid as gold';<br/>
But I, by God, would sooner be<br/>
Some knight in shattering wars of old,<br/>
<br/>
In brown outlandish arms to ride,<br/>
And shout my love to every star<br/>
With lungs to make a poor maid's name<br/>
Deafen the iron ears of war.<br/>
<br/>
Here, where these subtle cowards crowd,<br/>
To stand and so to speak of love,<br/>
That the four corners of the world<br/>
Should hear it and take heed thereof.<br/>
<br/>
That to this shrine obscure there be<br/>
One witness before all men given,<br/>
As naked as the hanging Christ,<br/>
As shameless as the sun in heaven.<br/>
<br/>
These whimperers—have they spared to us<br/>
One dripping woe, one reeking sin?<br/>
These thieves that shatter their own graves<br/>
To prove the soul is dead within.<br/>
<br/>
They talk; by God, is it not time<br/>
Some of Love's chosen broke the girth,<br/>
And told the good all men have known<br/>
Since the first morning of the earth?<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE BALLAD OF GOD-MAKERS </h2>
<p>A bird flew out at the break of day<br/>
From the nest where it had curled,<br/>
And ere the eve the bird had set<br/>
Fear on the kings of the world.<br/>
<br/>
The first tree it lit upon<br/>
Was green with leaves unshed;<br/>
The second tree it lit upon<br/>
Was red with apples red;<br/>
<br/>
The third tree it lit upon<br/>
Was barren and was brown,<br/>
Save for a dead man nailed thereon<br/>
On a hill above a town.<br/>
<br/>
That right the kings of the earth were gay<br/>
And filled the cup and can;<br/>
Last night the kings of the earth were chill<br/>
For dread of a naked man.<br/>
<br/>
'If he speak two more words,' they said,<br/>
'The slave is more than the free;<br/>
If he speak three more words,' they said,<br/>
'The stars are under the sea.'<br/>
<br/>
Said the King of the East to the King of the West,<br/>
I wot his frown was set,<br/>
'Lo; let us slay him and make him as dung,<br/>
It is well that the world forget.'<br/>
<br/>
Said the King of the West to the King of the East,<br/>
I wot his smile was dread,<br/>
'Nay, let us slay him and make him a god,<br/>
It is well that our god be dead.'<br/>
<br/>
They set the young man on a hill,<br/>
They nailed him to a rod;<br/>
And there in darkness and in blood<br/>
They made themselves a god.<br/>
<br/>
And the mightiest word was left unsaid,<br/>
And the world had never a mark,<br/>
And the strongest man of the sons of men<br/>
Went dumb into the dark.<br/>
<br/>
Then hymns and harps of praise they brought,<br/>
Incense and gold and myrrh,<br/>
And they thronged above the seraphim,<br/>
The poor dead carpenter.<br/>
<br/>
'Thou art the prince of all,' they sang,<br/>
'Ocean and earth and air.'<br/>
Then the bird flew on to the cruel cross,<br/>
And hid in the dead man's hair.<br/>
<br/>
'Thou art the sun of the world,' they cried,<br/>
'Speak if our prayers be heard.'<br/>
And the brown bird stirred in the dead man's hair,<br/>
And it seemed that the dead man stirred.<br/>
<br/>
Then a shriek went up like the world's last cry<br/>
From all nations under heaven,<br/>
And a master fell before a slave<br/>
And begged to be forgiven.<br/>
<br/>
They cowered, for dread in his wakened eyes<br/>
The ancient wrath to see;<br/>
And the bird flew out of the dead Christ's hair,<br/>
And lit on a lemon-tree.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AT NIGHT </h2>
<p>How many million stars there be,<br/>
That only God hath numberéd;<br/>
But this one only chosen for me<br/>
In time before her face was fled.<br/>
Shall not one mortal man alive<br/>
Hold up his head?<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WOOD-CUTTER </h2>
<p>We came behind him by the wall,<br/>
My brethren drew their brands,<br/>
And they had strength to strike him down—<br/>
And I to bind his hands.<br/>
<br/>
Only once, to a lantern gleam,<br/>
He turned his face from the wall,<br/>
And it was as the accusing angel's face<br/>
On the day when the stars shall fall.<br/>
<br/>
I grasped the axe with shaking hands,<br/>
I stared at the grass I trod;<br/>
For I feared to see the whole bare heavens<br/>
Filled with the face of God.<br/>
<br/>
I struck: the serpentine slow blood<br/>
In four arms soaked the moss—<br/>
Before me, by the living Christ,<br/>
The blood ran in a cross.<br/>
<br/>
Therefore I toil in forests here<br/>
And pile the wood in stacks,<br/>
And take no fee from the shivering folk<br/>
Till I have cleansed the axe.<br/>
<br/>
But for a curse God cleared my sight,<br/>
And where each tree doth grow<br/>
I see a life with awful eyes,<br/>
And I must lay it low.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ART COLOURS </h2>
<p>On must we go: we search dead leaves,<br/>
We chase the sunset's saddest flames,<br/>
The nameless hues that o'er and o'er<br/>
In lawless wedding lost their names.<br/>
<br/>
God of the daybreak! Better be<br/>
Black savages; and grin to gird<br/>
Our limbs in gaudy rags of red,<br/>
The laughing-stock of brute and bird;<br/>
<br/>
And feel again the fierce old feast,<br/>
Blue for seven heavens that had sufficed,<br/>
A gold like shining hoards, a red<br/>
Like roses from the blood of Christ.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE TWO WOMEN </h2>
<p>Lo! very fair is she who knows the ways<br/>
Of joy: in pleasure's mocking wisdom old,<br/>
The eyes that might be cold to flattery, kind;<br/>
The hair that might be grey with knowledge, gold.<br/>
<br/>
But thou art more than these things, O my queen,<br/>
For thou art clad in ancient wars and tears.<br/>
And looking forth, framed in the crown of thorns,<br/>
I saw the youngest face in all the spheres.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WILD KNIGHT </h2>
<p>The wasting thistle whitens on my crest,<br/>
The barren grasses blow upon my spear,<br/>
A green, pale pennon: blazon of wild faith<br/>
And love of fruitless things: yea, of my love,<br/>
Among the golden loves of all the knights,<br/>
Alone: most hopeless, sweet, and blasphemous,<br/>
The love of God:<br/>
I hear the crumbling creeds<br/>
Like cliffs washed down by water, change, and pass;<br/>
I hear a noise of words, age after age,<br/>
A new cold wind that blows across the plains,<br/>
And all the shrines stand empty; and to me<br/>
All these are nothing: priests and schools may doubt<br/>
Who never have believed; but I have loved.<br/>
Ah friends, I know it passing well, the love<br/>
Wherewith I love; it shall not bring to me<br/>
Return or hire or any pleasant thing—<br/>
Ay, I have tried it: Ay, I know its roots.<br/>
Earthquake and plague have burst on it in vain<br/>
And rolled back shattered—<br/>
Babbling neophytes!<br/>
Blind, startled fools—think you I know it not?<br/>
Think you to teach me? Know I not His ways?<br/>
Strange-visaged blunders, mystic cruelties.<br/>
All! all! I know Him, for I love Him. Go!<br/>
<br/>
So, with the wan waste grasses on my spear,<br/>
I ride for ever, seeking after God.<br/>
My hair grows whiter than my thistle plume,<br/>
And all my limbs are loose; but in my eyes<br/>
The star of an unconquerable praise:<br/>
For in my soul one hope for ever sings,<br/>
That at the next white corner of a road<br/>
My eyes may look on Him....<br/>
Hush—I shall know<br/>
The place when it is found: a twisted path<br/>
Under a twisted pear-tree—this I saw<br/>
In the first dream I had ere I was born,<br/>
Wherein He spoke....<br/>
But the grey clouds come down<br/>
In hail upon the icy plains: I ride,<br/>
Burning for ever in consuming fire.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WILD KNIGHT </h2>
<p><i>A dark manor-house shuttered and unlighted, outlined against a pale<br/>
sunset: in front a large, but neglected, garden. To the right, in the<br/>
foreground, the porch of a chapel, with coloured windows lighted. Hymns<br/>
within.</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Above the porch a grotesque carved bracket, supporting a lantern.<br/>
Astride of it sits CAPTAIN REDFEATHER, a flagon in his hand</i>.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I have drunk to all I know of,<br/>
To every leaf on the tree,<br/>
To the highest bird of the heavens,<br/>
To the lowest fish of the sea.<br/>
What toast, what toast remaineth,<br/>
Drunk down in the same good wine,<br/>
By the tippler's cup in the tavern,<br/>
And the priest's cup at the shrine?<br/>
<br/>
[<i>A Priest comes out, stick in hand, and looks right and left.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
VOICES WITHIN.<br/>
<br/>
The brawler ...<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST.<br/>
<br/>
He has vanished<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
To the stars.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>The Priest looks up.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST [<i>angrily</i>].<br/>
<br/>
What would you there, sir?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Give you all a toast.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Lifts his flagon. More priests come out.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
I see my life behind me: bad enough—<br/>
Drink, duels, madness, beggary, and pride,<br/>
The life of the unfit: yet ere I drop<br/>
On Nature's rubbish heap, I weigh it all,<br/>
And give you all a toast—<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Reels to his feet and stands.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
The health of God!<br/>
<br/>
[<i>They all recoil from him.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Let's give the Devil of the Heavens His due!<br/>
He that made grass so green, and wine so red,<br/>
Is not so black as you have painted him.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Drinks.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST.<br/>
<br/>
Blaspheming profligate!<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>hurls the flagon among them.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Howl! ye dumb dogs,<br/>
I named your King—let me have one great shout,<br/>
Flutter the seraphim like startled birds;<br/>
Make God recall the good days of His youth<br/>
Ere saints had saddened Him: when He came back<br/>
Conqueror of Chaos in a six days' war,<br/>
With all the sons of God shouting for joy ...<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST.<br/>
<br/>
And you—what is your right, and who are you,<br/>
To praise God?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
A lost soul. In earth or heaven<br/>
What has a better right?<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST.<br/>
<br/>
Go, pagan, go!<br/>
Drink, dice, and dance: take no more thought than blind<br/>
Beasts of the field....<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Or ... lilies of the field,<br/>
To quote a pagan sage. I go my way.<br/>
<br/>
PRIEST [<i>solemnly</i>].<br/>
<br/>
And when Death comes....<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
He shall not find me dead.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Puts on his plumed hat. The priests go out.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
These frozen fools....<br/>
<br/>
[<i>The Lady Olive comes out of the chapel. He sees her.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Oh, they were right enough.<br/>
Where shall I hide my carrion from the sun?<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Buries his face. His hat drops to the ground.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>looking up.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Captain, are you from church? I saw you not.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
No, I am here.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Lays his hand on a gargoyle.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
I, too, am a grotesque,<br/>
And dance with all the devils on the roof.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>with a strange smile.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
For Satan, also, I have often prayed.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>roughly</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Satan may worry women if he will,<br/>
For he was but an angel ere he fell,<br/>
But I—before I fell—I was a man.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
He too, my Master, was a man: too strong<br/>
To fear a strong man's sins: 'tis written He<br/>
Descended into hell.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Write, then, that I<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Leaps to the ground before her.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Descended into heaven....<br/>
You are ill?<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
No, well....<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
You speak the truth—you are the Truth—<br/>
Lady, say once again then, 'I am <i>well</i>.'<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
I—ah! God give me grace—I am nigh dead.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>quietly.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Lord Orm?<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
Yes—yes.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Is in your father's house—<br/>
Having the title-deeds—would drive you forth.<br/>
Homeless, and with your father sick to death,<br/>
Into this winter, save on a condition<br/>
Named....<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
And unnameable. Even so; Lord Orm—<br/>
Ah! do you know him?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Ay, I saw him once.<br/>
The sun shone on his face, that smiled and smiled,<br/>
A sight not wholesome to the eyes of man.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
Captain, I tell you God once fell asleep.<br/>
And in that hour the world went as it would;<br/>
Dogs brought forth cats, and poison grew in grapes,<br/>
And Orm was born....<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Why, curse him! can he not<br/>
Be kicked or paid?<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>feverishly</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Hush! He is just behind<br/>
There in the house—see how the great house glares,<br/>
Glares like an ogre's mask—the whole dead house<br/>
Possessed with bestial meaning....<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Screams</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Ah! the face!<br/>
The whole great grinning house—his face! his face!<br/>
His face!<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>in a voice of thunder, pointing away from the house</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Look there—look there!<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
What is it? What?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I think it was a bird.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
What thought you, truly?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I think a mighty thought is drawing near.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Enter THE WILD KNIGHT.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT.<br/>
<br/>
That house....<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Points.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
Ah Christ! [<i>Shudders.</i>] I had forgotten it.<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>still pointing</i>].<br/>
<br/>
That house! the house at last, the house of God,<br/>
Wherein God makes an evening feast for me.<br/>
The house at last: I know the twisted path<br/>
Under the twisted pear-tree: this I saw<br/>
In the first dream I had ere I was born.<br/>
It is the house of God. He welcomes me.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Strides forward.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
<i>That</i> house. God's blood!<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>hysterically</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Is not this hell's own wit?<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT.<br/>
<br/>
God grows impatient, and His wine is poured,<br/>
His bread is broken.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Rushes forward.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>leaps between</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Stand away, great fool,<br/>
There is a devil there!<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>draws his sword, and waves it as he rushes</i>].<br/>
<br/>
God's house!—God's house!<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>plucks out his own sword</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Better my hand than his.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>The blades clash.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
God alone knows<br/>
What That within might do to you, poor fool,<br/>
I can but kill you.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>They fight. OLIVE tries to part them.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Olive, stand away!<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
I will not stand away!<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Steps between the swords.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Stranger, a word,<br/>
Yes—you are right—God is within that house.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Olive!<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
But He is all too beautiful<br/>
For us who only know of stars and flowers.<br/>
The thing within is all too pure and fair,<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Shudders.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Too awful in its ancient innocence,<br/>
For men to look upon it and not die;<br/>
Ourselves would fade into those still white fires<br/>
Of peace and mercy.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Struggles with her voice.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
There ... enough ... the law—<br/>
No flesh shall look upon the Lord and live.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>sticking his sword in the ground</i>].<br/>
<br/>
You are the bravest lady in the world.<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>dazed</i>].<br/>
<br/>
May I not go within?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Keep you the law—<br/>
No flesh shall look upon the Lord and live.<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>sadly</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Then I will go and lay me in the flowers,<br/>
For He may haply, as in ancient time,<br/>
Walk in the garden in the cool of day.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>He goes out.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
[OLIVE <i>reels.</i> REDFEATHER <i>catches her.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
You are the strongest woman upon earth.<br/>
The weakest woman than the strongest man<br/>
Is stronger in her hour: this is the law.<br/>
When the hour passes—then may we be strong.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>wildly.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
The House ... the Face.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>fiercely</i>].<br/>
<br/>
I love you. Look at me!<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>turns her face to him.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
I hear six birds sing in that little tree,<br/>
Say, is the old earth laughing at my fears?<br/>
I think I love you also....<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
What I am<br/>
You know. But I will never curse a man,<br/>
Even in a mirror.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>smiling at him</i>].<br/>
<br/>
And the Devil's dance?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
The Devil plotted since the world was young<br/>
With alchemies of fire and witches' oils<br/>
And magic. But he never made a man.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
No; not a man.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Not even my Lord Orm.<br/>
Look at the house now—<br/>
<br/>
[<i>She starts and looks.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Honest brick and tiles.<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE.<br/>
<br/>
You have a strange strength in this hour.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
This hour<br/>
I see with mortal eye as in one flash<br/>
The whole divine democracy of things,<br/>
And dare the stars to scorn a scavenge-heap.<br/>
Olive, I tell you every soul is great.<br/>
Weave we green crowns—how noble and how high;<br/>
Fling we white flowers—how radiant and how pure<br/>
Is he, whoe'er he be, who next shall cross<br/>
This scrap of grass....<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Enter LORD ORM. </i>]<br/>
<br/>
OLIVE [<i>screams</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Ah!<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>pointing to the chapel</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Olive, go and pray<br/>
for a man soon to die. Good-day, my Lord.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>She goes in.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Good-day.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I am a friend to Lady Olive.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Sir, you are fortunate.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Most fortunate<br/>
In finding, sword on thigh and ready, one<br/>
Who is a villain and a gentleman.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM [<i>picks up the flagon</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Empty, I see.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Oh sir, you never drink.<br/>
You dread to lose yourself before the stars—<br/>
Do you not dread to sleep?<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM [<i>violently</i>].<br/>
<br/>
What would you here?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Receive from you the title-deeds you hold.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
You entertain me.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
With a bout at foils?<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
I will not fight.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I know you better, then.<br/>
I have seen men grow mangier than the beasts,<br/>
Eat bread with blood upon their fingers, grin<br/>
While women burned: but one last law they served.<br/>
When I say 'Coward,' is the law awake?<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Hear me, then, too: I have seen robbers rule,<br/>
And thieves go clad in gold—age after age—<br/>
Because, though sordid, ragged, rude, and mean,<br/>
They saw, like gods, no law above their heads.<br/>
But when they fell—then for this cause they fell,<br/>
This last mean cobweb of the fairy tales<br/>
Of good and ill: that they must stand and fight<br/>
When a man bade, though they had chose to stand<br/>
And fight not. I am stronger than the world.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Folds his arms.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>lifts his hand</i>].<br/>
<br/>
If in your body be the blood of man,<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Strikes him.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Now let it rush to the face—<br/>
God! Have you sunk<br/>
Lower than anger?<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
How I triumph now.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>stamps wildly]</i>.<br/>
<br/>
Damned, whimpering dog! vile, snivelling, sick poltroon!<br/>
Are you alive?<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Evil, be thou my good;<br/>
Let the sun blacken and the moon be blood:<br/>
I have said the words.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>studying him</i>].<br/>
<br/>
And if I struck you dead,<br/>
You would turn to daisies!<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
And you do not strike.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>dreamily</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Indeed, poor soul, such magic would be kind<br/>
And full of pity as a fairy-tale:<br/>
One touch of this bright wand [<i>Lifts his sword</i>]<br/>
and down would drop<br/>
The dark abortive blunder that is you.<br/>
And you would change, forgiven, into flowers.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
And yet—and yet you do not strike me dead.<br/>
I do not draw: the sword is in your hand—<br/>
Drive the blade through me where I stand.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Lord Orm,<br/>
You asked the Lady Olive (I can speak<br/>
As to a toad to you, my lord)—you asked<br/>
Olive to be your paramour: and she—<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Refused.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
And yet her father was at stake,<br/>
And she is soft and kind. Now look at me,<br/>
Ragged and ruined, soaked in bestial sins:<br/>
My lord, I too have my virginity—<br/>
Turn the thing round, my lord, and topside down,<br/>
You cannot spell it. Be the fact enough,<br/>
I use no sword upon a swordless man.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
For her?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
I too have my virginity.<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Now look on me: I am the lord of earth,<br/>
For I have broken the last bond of man.<br/>
I stand erect, crowned with the stars—and why?<br/>
Because I stand a coward—because you<br/>
Have mercy—on a coward. Do I win?<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER.<br/>
<br/>
Though there you stand with moving mouth and eyes,<br/>
I think, my lord, you are not possible—<br/>
God keep you from my dreams.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Goes out.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM.<br/>
<br/>
Alone and free.<br/>
Since first in flowery meads a child I ran,<br/>
My one long thirst—to be alone and free.<br/>
Free of all laws, creeds, codes, and common tests,<br/>
Shameless, anarchic, infinite.<br/>
Why, then,<br/>
I might have done in that dark liberty—<br/>
If I should say 'a good deed,' men would laugh,<br/>
But here are none to laugh.<br/>
The godless world<br/>
Be thanked there is no God to spy on me,<br/>
Catch me and crown me with a vulgar crown<br/>
For what I do: if I should once believe<br/>
The horror of that ancient Eavesdropper<br/>
Behind the starry arras of the skies,<br/>
I should—well, well, enough of menaces—<br/>
should not do the thing I come to do.<br/>
What do I come to do? Let me but try<br/>
To spell it to my soul.<br/>
Suppose a man<br/>
Perfectly free and utterly alone,<br/>
Free of all love of law, equally free<br/>
Of all the love of mutiny it breeds,<br/>
Free of the love of heaven, and also free<br/>
Of all the love of hell it drives us to;<br/>
Not merely void of rules, unconscious of them;<br/>
So strong that naught alive could do him hurt,<br/>
So wise that he knew all things, and so great<br/>
That none knew what he was or what he did—<br/>
A lawless giant.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>A pause: then in a low voice.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Would he not be good?<br/>
Hate is the weakness of a thwarted thing,<br/>
Pride is the weakness of a thing unpraised.<br/>
But he, this man....<br/>
He would be like a child<br/>
Girt with the tomes of some vast library,<br/>
Who reads romance after romance, and smiles<br/>
When every tale ends well: impersonal<br/>
As God he grows—melted in suns and stars;<br/>
So would this boundless man, whom none could spy,<br/>
Taunt him with virtue, censure him with vice,<br/>
Rejoice in all men's joys; with golden pen<br/>
Write all the live romances of the earth<br/>
To a triumphant close....<br/>
Alone and free—<br/>
In this grey, cool, clean garden, washed with winds,<br/>
What do I come to do among the grass,<br/>
The daisies, and the dews? An awful thing,<br/>
To prove I am that man.<br/>
That while these saints<br/>
Taunt me with trembling, dare me to revenge,<br/>
I breathe an upper air of ancient good<br/>
And strong eternal laughter; send my sun<br/>
And rain upon the evil and the just,<br/>
Turn my left cheek unto the smiter. He<br/>
That told me, sword in hand, that I had fallen<br/>
Lower than anger, knew not I had risen<br/>
Higher than pride....<br/>
Enough, the deeds are mine.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Takes out the title-deeds.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
I come to write the end of a romance.<br/>
A good romance: the characters—Lord Orm.<br/>
Type of the starvéd heart and storéd brain,<br/>
Who strives to hate and cannot; fronting him—<br/>
Redfeather, rake in process of reform,<br/>
At root a poet: I have hopes of him:<br/>
He can love virtue, for he still loves vice.<br/>
He is not all burnt out. He beats me there<br/>
(How I beat him in owning it!); in love<br/>
He is still young, and has the joy of shame.<br/>
And for the Lady Olive—who shall speak?<br/>
A man may weigh the courage of a man,<br/>
But if there be a bottomless abyss<br/>
It is a woman's valour: such as I<br/>
Can only bow the knee and hide the face<br/>
(Thank God there is no God to spy on me<br/>
And bring his curséd crowns).<br/>
No, there is none:<br/>
The old incurable hunger of the world<br/>
Surges in wolfish wars, age after age.<br/>
There was no God before me: none sees where,<br/>
Between the brute-womb and the deaf, dead grave,<br/>
Unhoping, unrecorded, unrepaid,<br/>
I make with smoke, fire, and burnt-offering<br/>
This sacrifice to Chaos. [<i>Lights the papers.</i>] None behold<br/>
Me write in fire the end of the romance.<br/>
Burn! I am God, and crown myself with stars.<br/>
Upon creation day: before was night<br/>
And chaos of a blind and cruel world.<br/>
I am the first God; I will trample hell,<br/>
Fight, conquer, make the story of the stars,<br/>
Like this poor story, end like a romance:<br/>
<br/>
[<i>The paper burns.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
Before was brainless night: but I am God<br/>
In this black world I rend. Let there be light!<br/>
<br/>
[<i>The paper blazes up, illuminating the garden.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
I, God ...<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>rushes forward</i>].<br/>
<br/>
God's Light! God's Voice; yes, it is He<br/>
Walking in Eden in the cool of the day!<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM [<i>screams</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Tricked! Caught!<br/>
Damned screeching rat in a hole!<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Stabs him again and again with his sword; stamps on his face.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
THE WILD KNIGHT [<i>faintly</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Earth grows too beautiful around me: shapes<br/>
And colours fearfully wax fair and clear,<br/>
For I have heard, as thro' a door ajar,<br/>
Scraps of the huge soliloquy of God<br/>
That moveth as a mask the lips of man,<br/>
If man be very silent: they were right,<br/>
No flesh shall look upon the Lord and live.<br/>
<br/>
[<i>Dies.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
LORD ORM [<i>staggers back laughing</i>].<br/>
<br/>
Saved, saved, my secret.<br/>
<br/>
REDFEATHER [<i>rushing in, sword in hand</i>].<br/>
<br/>
The drawn sword at last!<br/>
Guard, son of hell!<br/>
<br/>
[<i>They fight. ORM falls. OLIVE comes in.</i>]<br/>
<br/>
He too can die. Keep back!<br/>
Olive, keep back from him! I did not fear<br/>
Him living, and he fell before my sword;<br/>
But dead I fear him. All is ended now;<br/>
A man's whole life tied in a bundle there,<br/>
And no good deed. I fear him. Come away.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> GOOD NEWS </h2>
<p>Between a meadow and a cloud that sped<br/>
In rain and twilight, in desire and fear.<br/>
I heard a secret—hearken in your ear,<br/>
'Behold the daisy has a ring of red.'<br/>
<br/>
That hour, with half of blessing, half of ban,<br/>
A great voice went through heaven, and earth and hell,<br/>
Crying, 'We are tricked, my great ones, is it well?<br/>
Now is the secret stolen by a man.'<br/>
<br/>
Then waxed I like the wind because of this,<br/>
And ran, like gospel and apocalypse,<br/>
From door to door, with new anarchic lips,<br/>
Crying the very blasphemy of bliss.<br/>
<br/>
In the last wreck of Nature, dark and dread,<br/>
Shall in eclipse's hideous hieroglyph,<br/>
One wild form reel on the last rocking cliff,<br/>
And shout, 'The daisy has a ring of red.'<br/></p>
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