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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. IN MEMORIAM. </h2>
<p>In memory of Eric Ericson, I add a chapter of sonnets gathered from his
papers, almost desiring that those only should read them who turn to
the book a second time. How his papers came into my possession, will be
explained afterwards.</p>
<p>Tumultuous rushing o'er the outstretched plains;<br/>
A wildered maze of comets and of suns;<br/>
The blood of changeless God that ever runs<br/>
With quick diastole up the immortal veins;<br/>
A phantom host that moves and works in chains;<br/>
A monstrous fiction which, collapsing, stuns<br/>
The mind to stupor and amaze at once;<br/>
A tragedy which that man best explains<br/>
Who rushes blindly on his wild career<br/>
With trampling hoofs and sound of mailed war,<br/>
Who will not nurse a life to win a tear,<br/>
But is extinguished like a falling star:—<br/>
Such will at times this life appear to me,<br/>
Until I learn to read more perfectly.<br/>
<br/>
HOM. IL. v. 403.<br/>
<br/>
If thou art tempted by a thought of ill,<br/>
Crave not too soon for victory, nor deem<br/>
Thou art a coward if thy safety seem<br/>
To spring too little from a righteous will:<br/>
For there is nightmare on thee, nor until<br/>
Thy soul hath caught the morning's early gleam<br/>
Seek thou to analyze the monstrous dream<br/>
By painful introversion; rather fill<br/>
Thine eye with forms thou knowest to be truth:<br/>
But see thou cherish higher hope than this;<br/>
A hope hereafter that thou shalt be fit<br/>
Calm-eyed to face distortion, and to sit<br/>
Transparent among other forms of youth<br/>
Who own no impulse save to God and bliss.<br/>
<br/>
And must I ever wake, gray dawn, to know<br/>
Thee standing sadly by me like a ghost?<br/>
I am perplexed with thee, that thou shouldst cost<br/>
This Earth another turning: all aglow<br/>
Thou shouldst have reached me, with a purple show<br/>
Along far-mountain tops: and I would post<br/>
Over the breadth of seas though I were lost<br/>
In the hot phantom-chase for life, if so<br/>
Thou camest ever with this numbing sense<br/>
Of chilly distance and unlovely light;<br/>
Waking this gnawing soul anew to fight<br/>
With its perpetual load: I drive thee hence—<br/>
I have another mountain-range from whence<br/>
Bursteh a sun unutterably bright.<br/>
<br/>
GALILEO.<br/>
<br/>
'And yet it moves!' Ah, Truth, where wert thou then,<br/>
When all for thee they racked each piteous limb?<br/>
Wert though in Heaven, and busy with thy hymn,<br/>
When those poor hands convulsed that held thy pen?<br/>
Art thou a phantom that deceivest men<br/>
To their undoing? or dost thou watch him<br/>
Pale, cold, and silent in his dungeon dim?<br/>
And wilt thou ever speak to him again?<br/>
'It moves, it moves! Alas, my flesh was weak;<br/>
That was a hideous dream! I'll cry aloud<br/>
How the green bulk wheels sunward day by day!<br/>
Ah me! ah me! perchance my heart was proud<br/>
That I alone should know that word to speak;<br/>
And now, sweet Truth, shine upon these, I pray.'<br/>
<br/>
If thou wouldst live the Truth in very deed,<br/>
Thou hast thy joy, but thou hast more of pain.<br/>
Others will live in peace, and thou be fain<br/>
To bargain with despair, and in thy need<br/>
To make thy meal upon the scantiest weed.<br/>
These palaces, for thee they stand in vain;<br/>
Thine is a ruinous hut; and oft the rain<br/>
Shall drench thee in the midnight; yea the speed<br/>
Of earth outstrip thee pilgrim, while thy feet<br/>
Move slowly up the heights. Yet will there come<br/>
Through the time-rents about thy moving cell,<br/>
An arrow for despair, and oft the hum<br/>
Of far-off populous realms where spirits dwell.<br/>
<br/>
TO * * * *<br/>
<br/>
Speak, Prophet of the Lord! We may not start<br/>
To find thee with us in thine ancient dress,<br/>
Haggard and pale from some bleak wilderness,<br/>
Empty of all save God and thy loud heart:<br/>
Nor with like rugged message quick to dart<br/>
Into the hideous fiction mean and base:<br/>
But yet, O prophet man, we need not less,<br/>
But more of earnest; though it is thy part<br/>
To deal in other words, if thou wouldst smite<br/>
The living Mammon, seated, not as then<br/>
In bestial quiescence grimly dight,<br/>
But thrice as much an idol-god as when<br/>
He stared at his own feet from morn to night. <SPAN href="#note-8" name="noteref-8"><small>8</small></SPAN><br/>
<br/>
THE WATCHER.<br/>
<br/>
From out a windy cleft there comes a gaze<br/>
Of eyes unearthly which go to and fro<br/>
Upon the people's tumult, for below<br/>
The nations smite each other: no amaze<br/>
Troubles their liquid rolling, or affrays<br/>
Their deep-set contemplation: steadily glow<br/>
Those ever holier eye-balls, for they grow<br/>
Liker unto the eyes of one that prays.<br/>
And if those clasped hands tremble, comes a power<br/>
As of the might of worlds, and they are holden<br/>
Blessing above us in the sunrise golden;<br/>
And they will be uplifted till that hour<br/>
Of terrible rolling which shall rise and shake<br/>
This conscious nightmare from us and we wake.<br/>
<br/>
THE BELOVED DISCIPLE.<br/>
<br/>
I<br/>
<br/>
One do I see and twelve; but second there<br/>
Methinks I know thee, thou beloved one;<br/>
Not from thy nobler port, for there are none<br/>
More quiet-featured; some there are who bear<br/>
Their message on their brows, while others wear<br/>
A look of large commission, nor will shun<br/>
The fiery trial, so their work is done:<br/>
But thou hast parted with thine eyes in prayer—<br/>
Unearthly are they both; and so thy lips<br/>
Seem like the porches of the spirit land;<br/>
For thou hast laid a mighty treasure by,<br/>
Unlocked by Him in Nature, and thine eye<br/>
Burns with a vision and apocalypse<br/>
Thy own sweet soul can hardly understand.<br/>
<br/>
II<br/>
<br/>
A Boanerges too! Upon my heart<br/>
It lay a heavy hour: features like thine<br/>
Should glow with other message than the shine<br/>
Of the earth-burrowing levin, and the start<br/>
That cleaveth horrid gulfs. Awful and swart<br/>
A moment stoodest thou, but less divine—<br/>
Brawny and clad in ruin!—till with mine<br/>
Thy heart made answering signals, and apart<br/>
Beamed forth thy two rapt eye-balls doubly clear,<br/>
And twice as strong because thou didst thy duty,<br/>
And though affianced to immortal Beauty,<br/>
Hiddest not weakly underneath her veil<br/>
The pest of Sin and Death which maketh pale:<br/>
Henceforward be thy spirit doubly dear. <SPAN href="#note-9" name="noteref-9"><small>9</small></SPAN><br/>
<br/>
THE LILY OF THE VALLEY.<br/>
<br/>
There is not any weed but hath its shower,<br/>
There is not any pool but hath its star;<br/>
And black and muddy though the waters are,<br/>
We may not miss the glory of a flower,<br/>
And winter moons will give them magic power<br/>
To spin in cylinders of diamond spar;<br/>
And everything hath beauty near and far,<br/>
And keepeth close and waiteth on its hour.<br/>
And I when I encounter on my road<br/>
A human soul that looketh black and grim,<br/>
Shall I more ceremonious be than God?<br/>
Shall I refuse to watch one hour with him<br/>
Who once beside our deepest woe did bud<br/>
A patient watching flower about the brim.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis not the violent hands alone that bring<br/>
The curse, the ravage, and the downward doom<br/>
Although to these full oft the yawning tomb<br/>
Owes deadly surfeit; but a keener sting,<br/>
A more immortal agony, will cling<br/>
To the half-fashioned sin which would assume<br/>
Fair Virtue's garb. The eye that sows the gloom<br/>
With quiet seeds of Death henceforth to spring<br/>
What time the sun of passion burning fierce<br/>
Breaks through the kindly cloud of circumstance;<br/>
The bitter word, and the unkindly glance,<br/>
The crust and canker coming with the years,<br/>
Are liker Death than arrows, and the lance<br/>
Which through the living heart at once doth pierce.<br/>
<br/>
SPOKEN OF SEVERAL PHILOSOPHERS.<br/>
<br/>
I pray you, all ye men, who put your trust<br/>
In moulds and systems and well-tackled gear,<br/>
Holding that Nature lives from year to year<br/>
In one continual round because she must—<br/>
Set me not down, I pray you, in the dust<br/>
Of all these centuries, like a pot of beer,<br/>
A pewter-pot disconsolately clear,<br/>
Which holds a potful, as is right and just.<br/>
I will grow clamorous—by the rood, I will,<br/>
If thus ye use me like a pewter pot.<br/>
Good friend, thou art a toper and a sot—<br/>
I will not be the lead to hold thy swill,<br/>
Nor any lead: I will arise and spill<br/>
Thy silly beverage, spill it piping hot.<br/>
<br/>
Nature, to him no message dost thou bear,<br/>
Who in thy beauty findeth not the power<br/>
To gird himself more strongly for the hour<br/>
Of night and darkness. Oh, what colours rare<br/>
The woods, the valleys, and the mountains wear<br/>
To him who knows thy secret, and in shower<br/>
And fog, and ice-cloud, hath a secret bower<br/>
Where he may rest until the heavens are fair!<br/>
Not with the rest of slumber, but the trance<br/>
Of onward movement steady and serene,<br/>
Where oft in struggle and in contest keen<br/>
His eyes will opened be, and all the dance<br/>
Of life break on him, and a wide expanse<br/>
Roll upward through the void, sunny and green.<br/>
<br/>
TO JUNE.<br/>
<br/>
Ah, truant, thou art here again, I see!<br/>
For in a season of such wretched weather<br/>
I thought that thou hadst left us altogether,<br/>
Although I could not choose but fancy thee<br/>
Skulking about the hill-tops, whence the glee<br/>
Of thy blue laughter peeped at times, or rather<br/>
Thy bashful awkwardness, as doubtful whether<br/>
Thou shouldst be seen in such a company<br/>
Of ugly runaways, unshapely heaps<br/>
Of ruffian vapour, broken from restraint<br/>
Of their slim prison in the ocean deeps.<br/>
But yet I may not, chide: fall to thy books,<br/>
Fall to immediately without complaint—<br/>
There they are lying, hills and vales and brooks.<br/>
<br/>
WRITTEN ABOUT THE LONGEST DAY.<br/>
<br/>
Summer, sweet Summer, many-fingered Summer!<br/>
We hold thee very dear, as well we may:<br/>
It is the kernel of the year to-day—<br/>
All hail to thee! Thou art a welcome corner!<br/>
If every insect were a fairy drummer,<br/>
And I a fifer that could deftly play,<br/>
We'd give the old Earth such a roundelay<br/>
That she would cast all thought of labour from her<br/>
Ah! what is this upon my window-pane?<br/>
Some sulky drooping cloud comes pouting up,<br/>
Stamping its glittering feet along the plain!<br/>
Well, I will let that idle fancy drop.<br/>
Oh, how the spouts are bubbling with the rain!<br/>
And all the earth shines like a silver cup!<br/>
<br/>
ON A MIDGE.<br/>
<br/>
Whence do ye come, ye creature? Each of you<br/>
Is perfect as an angel; wings and eyes<br/>
Stupendous in their beauty—gorgeous dyes<br/>
In feathery fields of purple and of blue!<br/>
Would God I saw a moment as ye do!<br/>
I would become a molecule in size,<br/>
Rest with you, hum with you, or slanting rise<br/>
Along your one dear sunbeam, could I view<br/>
The pearly secret which each tiny fly,<br/>
Each tiny fly that hums and bobs and stirs,<br/>
Hides in its little breast eternally<br/>
From you, ye prickly grim philosophers,<br/>
With all your theories that sound so high:<br/>
Hark to the buzz a moment, my good sirs!<br/>
<br/>
ON A WATERFALL.<br/>
<br/>
Here stands a giant stone from whose far top<br/>
Comes down the sounding water. Let me gaze<br/>
Till every sense of man and human ways<br/>
Is wrecked and quenched for ever, and I drop<br/>
Into the whirl of time, and without stop<br/>
Pass downward thus! Again my eyes I raise<br/>
To thee, dark rock; and through the mist and haze<br/>
My strength returns when I behold thy prop<br/>
Gleam stern and steady through the wavering wrack<br/>
Surely thy strength is human, and like me<br/>
Thou bearest loads of thunder on thy back!<br/>
And, lo, a smile upon thy visage black—<br/>
A breezy tuft of grass which I can see<br/>
Waving serenely from a sunlit crack!<br/>
<br/>
Above my head the great pine-branches tower<br/>
Backwards and forwards each to the other bends,<br/>
Beckoning the tempest-cloud which hither wends<br/>
Like a slow-laboured thought, heavy with power;<br/>
Hark to the patter of the coming shower!<br/>
Let me be silent while the Almighty sends<br/>
His thunder-word along; but when it ends<br/>
I will arise and fashion from the hour<br/>
Words of stupendous import, fit to guard<br/>
High thoughts and purposes, which I may wave,<br/>
When the temptation cometh close and hard,<br/>
Like fiery brands betwixt me and the grave<br/>
Of meaner things—to which I am a slave<br/>
If evermore I keep not watch and ward.<br/>
<br/>
I do remember how when very young,<br/>
I saw the great sea first, and heard its swell<br/>
As I drew nearer, caught within the spell<br/>
Of its vast size and its mysterious tongue.<br/>
How the floor trembled, and the dark boat swung<br/>
With a man in it, and a great wave fell<br/>
Within a stone's cast! Words may never tell<br/>
The passion of the moment, when I flung<br/>
All childish records by, and felt arise<br/>
A thing that died no more! An awful power<br/>
I claimed with trembling hands and eager eyes,<br/>
Mine, mine for ever, an immortal dower.—<br/>
The noise of waters soundeth to this hour,<br/>
When I look seaward through the quiet skies.<br/>
<br/>
ON THE SOURCE OF THE ARVE.<br/>
<br/>
Hear'st thou the dash of water loud and hoarse<br/>
With its perpetual tidings upward climb,<br/>
Struggling against the wind? Oh, how sublime!<br/>
For not in vain from its portentous source,<br/>
Thy heart, wild stream, hath yearned for its full force,<br/>
But from thine ice-toothed caverns dark as time<br/>
At last thou issuest, dancing to the rhyme<br/>
Of thy outvolleying freedom! Lo, thy course<br/>
Lies straight before thee as the arrow flies,<br/>
Right to the ocean-plains. Away, away!<br/>
Thy parent waits thee, and her sunset dyes<br/>
Are ruffled for thy coming, and the gray<br/>
Of all her glittering borders flashes high<br/>
Against the glittering rocks: oh, haste, and fly!<br/></p>
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<h2> PART III.—HIS MANHOOD. </h2>
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