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<h1> MAUD, AND OTHER POEMS. </h1>
<h2> By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L., Poet Laureate. </h2>
<h4>
A New Edition
</h4>
<h5>
London:
</h5>
<h5>
Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street.
</h5>
<h3> 1859. </h3>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> MAUD </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE BROOK; AN IDYL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE LETTERS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> ODE ON THE DEATH OF THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE DAISY, WRITTEN AT EDINBURGH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> TO THE REV. F. D. MAURICE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> WILL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE </SPAN></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MAUD </h2>
<p>I.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
I hate the dreadful hollow behind the little wood,<br/>
Its lips in the field above are dabbled with blood-red heath,<br/>
The red-ribb'd ledges drip with a silent horror of blood,<br/>
And Echo there, whatever is ask'd her, answers 'Death.'<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
For there in the ghastly pit long since a body was found,<br/>
His who had given me life—O father! O God! was it well?—<br/>
Mangled, and flatten'd, and crush'd, and dinted into the ground:<br/>
There yet lies the rock that fell with him when he fell.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Did he fling himself down? who knows? for a vast speculation had fail'd,<br/>
And ever he mutter'd and madden'd, and ever wann'd with despair,<br/>
And out he walk'd when the wind like a broken worldling wail'd,<br/>
And the flying gold of the ruin'd woodlands drove thro' the air.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I remember the time, for the roots of my hair were stirr'd<br/>
By a shuffled step, by a dead weight trail'd, by a whisper'd fright,<br/>
And my pulses closed their gates with a shock on my heart as I heard<br/>
The shrill-edged shriek of a mother divide the shuddering night.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Villainy somewhere! whose? One says, we are villains all.<br/>
Not he: his honest fame should at least by me be maintained:<br/>
But that old man, now lord of the broad estate and the Hall,<br/>
Dropt off gorged from a scheme that had left us flaccid and drain'd.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
Why do they prate of the blessings of Peace? we have made them a curse,<br/>
Pickpockets, each hand lusting for all that is not its own;<br/>
And lust of gain, in the spirit of Cain, is it better or worse<br/>
Than the heart of the citizen hissing in war on his own hearthstone?<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
But these are the days of advance, the works of the men of mind,<br/>
When who but a fool would have faith in a tradesman's ware or his word?<br/>
Is it peace or war? Civil war, as I think, and that of a kind<br/>
The viler, as underhand, not openly bearing the sword.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Sooner or later I too may passively take the print<br/>
Of the golden age— why not? I have neither hope nor trust;<br/>
May make my heart as a millstone, set my face as a flint,<br/>
Cheat and be cheated, and die: who knows? we are ashes and dust.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Peace sitting under her olive, and slurring the days gone by,<br/>
When the poor are hovell'd and hustled together, each sex, like swine,<br/>
When only the ledger lives, and when only not all men lie;<br/>
Peace in her vineyard—yes!?-but a company forges the wine.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
And the vitriol madness flushes up in the ruffian's head,<br/>
Till the filthy by-lane rings to the yell of the trampled wife,<br/>
While chalk and alum and plaster are sold to the poor for bread,<br/>
And the spirit of murder works in the very means of life.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
And Sleep must lie down arm'd, for the villainous centre-bits<br/>
Grind on the wakeful ear in the hush of the moonless nights,<br/>
While another is cheating the sick of a few last gasps, as he sits<br/>
To pestle a poison'd poison behind his crimson lights.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
When a Mammonite mother kills her babe for a burial fee,<br/>
And Timour-Mammon grins on a pile of children's bones,<br/>
Is it peace or war? better, war! loud war by land and by sea,<br/>
War with a thousand battles, and shaking a hundred thrones.<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
For I trust if an enemy's fleet came yonder round by the hill,<br/>
And the rushing battle-bolt sang from the three-decker out of the foam,<br/>
That the smoothfaced snubnosed rogue would leap from his counter and till,<br/>
And strike, if he could, were it but with his cheating yardwand, home.———<br/>
<br/>
14.<br/>
What! am I raging alone as my father raged in his mood?<br/>
Must <i>I</i> too creep to the hollow and dash myself down and die<br/>
Rather than hold by the law that I made, nevermore to brood<br/>
On a horror of shatter'd limbs and a wretched swindler's lie?<br/>
<br/>
15.<br/>
Would there be sorrow for <i>me?</i> there was <i>love</i> in the passionate shriek,<br/>
Love for the silent thing that had made false haste to the grave—<br/>
Wrapt in a cloak, as I saw him, and thought he would rise and speak<br/>
And rave at the lie and the liar, ah God, as he used to rave.<br/>
<br/>
16.<br/>
I am sick of the Hall and the hill, I am sick of the moor and the main.<br/>
Why should I stay? can a sweeter chance ever come to me here?<br/>
O, having the nerves of motion as well as the nerves of pain,<br/>
Were it not wise if I fled from the place and the pit and the fear?<br/>
<br/>
17.<br/>
There are workmen up at the Hall: they are coming back from abroad;<br/>
The dark old place will be gilt by the touch of a millionnaire:<br/>
I have heard, I know not whence, of the singular beauty of Maud;<br/>
I play*d with the girl when a child; she promised then to be fair.<br/>
<br/>
18.<br/>
Maud with her venturous climbings and tumbles and childish escapes,<br/>
Maud the delight of the village, the ringing joy of the Hall,<br/>
Maud with her sweet purse-mouth when my father dangled the grapes,<br/>
Maud the beloved of my mother, the moon-faced darling of all,—<br/>
<br/>
19.<br/>
What is she now? My dreams are bad. She may bring me a curse.<br/>
No, there is fatter game on the moor; she will let me alone.<br/>
Thanks, for the fiend best knows whether woman or man be the worse.<br/>
I will bury myself in my books, and the Devil may pipe to his own.<br/></p>
<p>II.<br/>
<br/>
Long have I sigh'd for a calm: God grant I may find it at last!<br/>
It will never be broken by Maud, she has neither savour nor salt,<br/>
But a cold and clear-cut face, as I found when her carriage past,<br/>
Perfectly beautiful: let it be granted her: where is the fault?<br/>
All that I saw (for her eyes were downcast, not to be seen)<br/>
Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null,<br/>
Dead perfection, no more; nothing more, if it had not been<br/>
For a chance of travel, a paleness, an hour's defect of the rose,<br/>
Or an underlip, you may call it a little too ripe, too full,<br/>
Or the least little delicate aquiline curve in a sensitive nose,<br/>
From which I escaped heart-free, with the least little touch of spleen.<br/></p>
<p>III.<br/>
<br/>
Cold and clear-cut face, why come you so cruelly meek,<br/>
Breaking a slumber in which all spleenful folly was drown'd,<br/>
Pale with the golden beam of an eyelash dead on the cheek,<br/>
Passionless, pale, cold face, star-sweet on a gloom profound;<br/>
Womanlike, taking revenge too deep for a transient wrong<br/>
Done but in thought to your beauty, and ever as pale as before<br/>
Growing and fading and growing upon me without a sound.<br/>
Luminous, gemlike, ghostlike, deathlike, half the night long<br/>
Growing and fading and growing, till I could bear it no more.<br/>
But arose, and all by myself in my own dark garden ground,<br/>
Listening now to the tide in its broad-flung shipwrecking roar,<br/>
Now to the scream of a madden'd beach dragg'd down by the wave,<br/>
Walk'd in a wintry wind by a ghastly glimmer, and found<br/>
The shining daffodil dead, and Orion low in his grave.<br/></p>
<p>IV.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
A million emeralds break from the ruby-budded lime<br/>
In the little grove where I sit—ah, wherefore cannot I be<br/>
Like things of the season gay, like the bountiful season bland,<br/>
When the far-off sail is blown by the breeze of a softer clime,<br/>
Half-lost in the liquid azure bloom of a crescent of sea.<br/>
The silent sapphire-spangled marriage ring of the land?<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Below me, there, is the village, and looks how quiet and small!<br/>
And yet bubbles o'er like a city, with gossip, scandal, and spite;<br/>
And Jack on his ale-house bench has as many lies as a Czar;<br/>
And here on the landward side, by a red rock, glimmers the Hall;<br/>
And up in the high Hall-garden I see her pass like a light;<br/>
But sorrow seize me if ever that light be my leading star!<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
When have I bow'd to her father, the wrinkled head of the race?<br/>
I met her to-day with her brother, but not to her brother I bow'd;<br/>
I bow'd to his lady-sister as she rode by on the moor;<br/>
But the fire of a foolish pride flash'd over her beautiful face.<br/>
O child, you wrong your beauty, believe it, in being so proud;<br/>
Your father has wealth well-gotten, and I am nameless and poor.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I keep but a man and a maid, ever ready to slander and steal;<br/>
I know it, and smile a hard-set smile, like a stoic, or like<br/>
A wiser epicurean, and let the world have its way:<br/>
For nature is one with rapine, a harm no preacher can heal;<br/>
The Mayfly is torn by the swallow, the sparrow spear'd by the shrike,<br/>
And the whole little wood where I sit is a world of plunder and prey.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
We are puppets, Man in his pride, and Beauty fair in her flower;<br/>
Do we move ourselves, or are moved by an unseen hand at a game<br/>
That pushes us off from the board, and others ever succeed?<br/>
Ah yet, we cannot be kind to each other here for an hour;<br/>
We whisper, and hint, and chuckle, and grin at a brother's shame;<br/>
However we brave it out, we men are a little breed.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
A monstrous eft was of old the Lord and Master of Earth,<br/>
For him did his high sun flame, and his river billowing ran,<br/>
And he felt himself in his force to be Nature's crowning race.<br/>
As nine months go to the shaping an infant ripe for his birth,<br/>
So many a million of ages have gone to the making of man:<br/>
He now is first, but is he the last? is he not too base?<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
The man of science himself is fonder of glory, and vain,<br/>
An eye well-practised in nature, a spirit bounded and poor;<br/>
The passionate heart of the poet is whirl'd into folly and vice.<br/>
I would not marvel at either, but keep a temperate brain;<br/>
For not to desire or admire, if a man could learn it, were more<br/>
Than to walk all day like the sultan of old in a garden of spice.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
For the drift of the Maker is dark, an Isis hid by the veil.<br/>
Who knows the ways of the world, how God will bring them about?<br/>
Our planet is one, the suns are many, the world is wide.<br/>
Shall I weep if a Poland fall? shall I shriek if a Hungary fail?<br/>
Or an infant civilisation be ruled with rod or with knout?<br/>
I have not made the world, and He that made it will guide.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Be mine a philosopher's life in the quiet woodland ways,<br/>
Where if I cannot be gay let a passionless peace be my lot,<br/>
Far-off from the clamour of liars belied in the hubbub of lies;<br/>
From the long-neck'd geese of the world that are ever hissing dispraise<br/>
Because their natures are little, and, whether he heed it or not,<br/>
Where each man walks with his head in a cloud of poisonous flies.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
And most of all would I flee from the cruel madness of love,<br/>
The honey of poison-flowers and all the measureless ill.<br/>
Ah Maud, you milkwhite fawn, you are all unmeet for a wife.<br/>
Your mother is mute in her grave as her image in marble above;<br/>
Your father is ever in London, you wander about at your will;<br/>
You have but fed on the roses, and lain in the lilies of life.<br/></p>
<p>V.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
A voice by the cedar tree,<br/>
In the meadow under the Hall!<br/>
She is singing an air that is known to me,<br/>
A passionate ballad gallant and gay,<br/>
A martial song like a trumpet's call!<br/>
Singing alone in the morning of life,<br/>
In the happy morning of life and of May,<br/>
Singing of men that in battle array,<br/>
Ready in heart and ready in hand,<br/>
March with banner and bugle and fife<br/>
To the death, for their native land.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Maud with her exquisite face.<br/>
And wild voice pealing up to the sunny sky,<br/>
And feet like sunny gems on an English green,<br/>
Maud in the light of her youth and her grace,<br/>
Singing of Death, and of Honour that cannot die,<br/>
Till I well could weep for a time so sordid and mean,<br/>
And myself so languid and base.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Silence, beautiful voice!<br/>
Be still, for you only trouble the mind<br/>
With a joy in which I cannot rejoice,<br/>
A glory I shall not find.<br/>
Still! I will hear you no more,<br/>
For your sweetness hardly leaves me a choice<br/>
But to move to the meadow and fall before<br/>
Her feet on the meadow grass, and adore,<br/>
Not her, who is neither courtly nor kind,<br/>
Not her, not her, but a voice.<br/></p>
<p>VI.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Morning arises stormy and pale,<br/>
No sun, but a wannish glare<br/>
In fold upon fold of hueless cloud,<br/>
And the budded peaks of the wood are bow'd<br/>
Caught and cuff'd by the gale:<br/>
I had fancied it would be fair.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Whom but Maud should I meet<br/>
Last night, when the sunset burn'd<br/>
On the blossom'd gable-ends<br/>
At the head of the village street,<br/>
Whom but Maud should I meet?<br/>
And she touch'd my hand with a smile so sweet<br/>
She made me divine amends<br/>
For a courtesy not return'd.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
And thus a delicate spark<br/>
Of glowing and growing light<br/>
Thro' the livelong hours of the dark<br/>
Kept itself warm in the heart of my dreams,<br/>
Ready to burst in a colour'd flame;<br/>
Till at last when the morning came<br/>
In a cloud, it faded, and seems<br/>
But an ashen-gray delight.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
What if with her sunny hair,<br/>
And smile as sunny as cold,<br/>
She meant to weave me a snare<br/>
Of some coquettish deceit,<br/>
Cleopatra-like as of old<br/>
To entangle me when we met,<br/>
To have her lion roll in a silken net<br/>
And fawn at a victor's feet.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Ah, what shall I be at fifty<br/>
Should Nature keep me alive,<br/>
If I find the world so bitter<br/>
When I am but twenty-five?<br/>
Yet, if she were not a cheat,<br/>
If Maud were all that she seem'd,<br/>
And her smile were all that I dream'd,<br/>
Then the world were not so bitter<br/>
But a smile could make it sweet.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
What if tho' her eye seem'd full<br/>
Of a kind intent to me,<br/>
What if that dandy-despot, he,<br/>
That jewell'd mass of millinery,<br/>
That oil'd and curl'd Assyrian Bull<br/>
Smelling of musk and of insolence,<br/>
Her brother, from whom I keep aloof,<br/>
Who wants the finer politic sense<br/>
To mask, tho' but in his own behoof,<br/>
With a glassy smile his brutal scorn—<br/>
What if he had told her yestermorn<br/>
How prettily for his own sweet sake<br/>
A face of tenderness might be feign'd,<br/>
And a moist mirage in desert eyes,<br/>
That so, when the rotten hustings shake<br/>
In another month to his brazen lies,<br/>
A wretched vote may be gain'd.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
For a raven ever croaks, at my side,<br/>
Keep watch and ward, keep watch and ward,<br/>
Or thou wilt prove their tool.<br/>
Yea too, myself from myself I guard,<br/>
For often a man's own angry pride<br/>
Is cap and bells for a fool.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Perhaps the smile and tender tone<br/>
Came out of her pitying womanhood,<br/>
For am I not, am I not, here alone<br/>
So many a summer since she died,<br/>
My mother, who was so gentle and good?<br/>
Living alone in an empty house,<br/>
Here half-hid in the gleaming wood,<br/>
Where I hear the dead at midday moan,<br/>
And the shrieking rush of the wainscot mouse,<br/>
And my own sad name in corners cried,<br/>
When the shiver of dancing leaves is thrown<br/>
About its echoing chambers wide,<br/>
Till a morbid hate and horror have grown<br/>
Of a world in which I have hardly mixt,<br/>
And a morbid eating lichen fixt<br/>
On a heart half-turn'd to stone.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
O heart of stone, are you flesh, and caught<br/>
By that you swore to withstand?<br/>
For what was it else within me wrought<br/>
But, I fear, the new strong wine of love,<br/>
That made my tongue so stammer and trip<br/>
When I saw the treasured splendour, her hand,<br/>
Come sliding out of her sacred glove,<br/>
And the sunlight broke from her lip?<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
I have play'd with her when a child;<br/>
She remembers it now we meet.<br/>
Ah well, well, well, I may be beguiled<br/>
By some coquettish deceit.<br/>
Yet, if she were not a cheat,<br/>
If Maud were all that she seem'd,<br/>
And her smile had all that I dream'd,<br/>
Then the world were not so bitter<br/>
But a smile could make it sweet.<br/></p>
<p>VII.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Did I hear it half in a doze<br/>
Long since, I know not where?<br/>
Did I dream it an hour ago,<br/>
When asleep in this arm-chair?<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Men were drinking together,<br/>
Drinking and talking of me;<br/>
'Well, if it prove a girl, the boy<br/>
Will have plenty: so let it be.'<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Is it an echo of something<br/>
Read with a boy's delight,<br/>
Viziers nodding together<br/>
In some Arabian night?<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Strange, that I hear two men,<br/>
Somewhere, talking of me;<br/>
'Well, if it prove a girl, my boy<br/>
Will have plenty: so let it be.'<br/></p>
<p>VIII.<br/>
<br/>
She came to the village church,<br/>
And sat by a pillar alone;<br/>
An angel watching an urn<br/>
Wept over her, carved in stone;<br/>
And once, but once, she lifted her eyes,<br/>
And suddenly, sweetly, strangely blush'd<br/>
To find they were met by my own;<br/>
And suddenly, sweetly, my heart beat stronger<br/>
And thicker, until I heard no longer<br/>
The snowy-banded, dilettante,<br/>
Delicate-handed priest intone;<br/>
And thought, is it pride, and mused and sigh'd<br/>
'No surely, now it cannot be pride.'<br/></p>
<p>IX.<br/>
<br/>
I was walking a mile,<br/>
More than a mile from the shore,<br/>
The sun look'd out with a smile<br/>
Betwixt the cloud and the moor,<br/>
And riding at set of day<br/>
Over the dark moor land,<br/>
Rapidly riding far away,<br/>
She waved to me with her hand.<br/>
There were two at her side,<br/>
Something flash' d in the sun,<br/>
Down by the hill I saw them ride,<br/>
In a moment they were gone:<br/>
Like a sudden spark<br/>
Struck vainly in the night,<br/>
And back returns the dark<br/>
With no more hope of light.<br/></p>
<p>X.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Sick, am I sick of a jealous dread?<br/>
Was not one of the two at her side<br/>
This new-made lord, whose splendour plucks<br/>
The slavish hat from the villager's head?<br/>
Whose old grand-father has lately died,<br/>
Gone to a blacker pit, for whom<br/>
Grimy nakedness dragging his trucks<br/>
And laying his trams in a poison'd gloom<br/>
Wrought, till he crept from a gutted mine<br/>
Master of half a servile shire,<br/>
And left his coal all turn'd into gold<br/>
To a grandson, first of his noble line,<br/>
Rich in the grace all women desire,<br/>
Strong in the power that all men adore,<br/>
And simper and set their voices lower,<br/>
And soften as if to a girl, and hold<br/>
Awe-stricken breaths at a work divine,<br/>
Seeing his gewgaw castle shine,<br/>
New as his title, built last year,<br/>
There amid perky larches and pine,<br/>
And over the sullen-purple moor<br/>
(Look at it) pricking a cockney ear.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
What, has he found my jewel out?<br/>
For one of the two that rode at her side<br/>
Bound for the Hall, I am sure was he:<br/>
Bound for the Hall, and I think for a bride.<br/>
Blithe would her brother's acceptance be.<br/>
Maud could be gracious too, no doubt,<br/>
To a lord, a captain, a padded shape,<br/>
A bought commission, a waxen face,<br/>
A rabbit mouth that is ever agape—<br/>
Bought? what is it he cannot buy?<br/>
And therefore splenetic, personal, base,<br/>
A wounded thing with a rancourous cry,<br/>
At war with myself and a wretched race,<br/>
Sick, sick to the heart of life, am I.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Last week came one to the county town,<br/>
To preach our poor little army down,<br/>
And play the game of the despot kings,<br/>
Tho' the state has done it and thrice as well:<br/>
This broad-brim'd hawker of holy things,<br/>
Whose ear is cramm'd with his cotton, and rings<br/>
Even in dreams to the chink of his pence,<br/>
This huckster put down war! can he tell<br/>
Whether war be a cause or a consequence?<br/>
Put down the passions that make earth Hell!<br/>
Down with ambition, avarice, pride,<br/>
Jealousy, down! cut off from the mind<br/>
The bitter springs of anger and fear;<br/>
Down too, down at your own fireside,<br/>
With the evil tongue and the evil ear,<br/>
For each is at war with mankind.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I wish I could hear again<br/>
The chivalrous battle-song<br/>
That she warbled alone in her joy!<br/>
I might persuade myself then<br/>
She would not do herself this great wrong<br/>
To take a wanton dissolute boy<br/>
For a man and leader of men.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Ah God, for a man with heart, head, hand,<br/>
Like some of the simple great ones gone<br/>
For ever and ever by,<br/>
One still strong man in a blatant land,<br/>
Whatever they call him, what care I,<br/>
Aristocrat, democrat, autocrat—one<br/>
Who can rule and dare not lie.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
And ah for a man to arise in me,<br/>
That the man I am may cease to be!<br/></p>
<p>XI.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
O let the solid ground<br/>
Not fail beneath my feet<br/>
Before my life has found<br/>
What some have found so sweet;<br/>
Then let come what come may,<br/>
What matter if I go mad,<br/>
I shall have had my day.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Let the sweet heavens endure,<br/>
Not close and darken above me<br/>
Before I am quite quite sure<br/>
That there is one to love me;<br/>
Then let come what come may<br/>
To a life that has been so sad,<br/>
I shall have had my day.<br/></p>
<p>XII.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Birds in the high Hall-garden<br/>
When twilight was falling,<br/>
Maud, Maud, Maud, Maud,<br/>
They were crying and calling.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Where was Maud? in our wood;<br/>
And I, who else, was with her,<br/>
Gathering woodland lilies,<br/>
Myriads blow together.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Birds in our wood sang<br/>
Ringing thro' the vallies,<br/>
Maud is here, here, here<br/>
In among the lilies.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I kiss'd her slender hand,<br/>
She took the kiss sedately;<br/>
Maud is not seventeen,<br/>
But she is tall and stately.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
I to cry out on pride<br/>
Who have won her favour!<br/>
Maud were sure of Heaven<br/>
If lowliness could save her.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
I know the way she went<br/>
Home with her maiden posy,<br/>
For her feet have touch'd the meadows<br/>
And left the daisies rosy.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
Birds in the high Hall-garden<br/>
Were crying and calling to her,<br/>
Where is Maud, Maud, Maud,<br/>
One is come to woo her.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Look, a horse at the door,<br/>
And little King Charles is snarling,<br/>
Go back, my lord, across the moor,<br/>
You are not her darling.<br/></p>
<p>XIII.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Scorn'd, to be scorn'd by one that I scorn,<br/>
Is that a matter to make me fret?<br/>
That a calamity hard to be borne?<br/>
Well, he may live to hate me yet.<br/>
Fool that I am to be vext with his pride!<br/>
I past him, I was crossing his lands;<br/>
He stood on the path a little aside;<br/>
His face, as I grant, in spite of spite,<br/>
Has a broad-blown comeliness, red and white,<br/>
And six feet two, as I think, he stands;<br/>
But his essences turn'd the live air sick,<br/>
And barbarous opulence jewel-thick<br/>
Sunn'd itself on his breast and his hands.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Who shall call me ungentle, unfair,<br/>
I long'd so heartily then and there<br/>
To give him the grasp of fellowship;<br/>
But while I past he was humming an air,<br/>
Stopt, and then with a riding whip<br/>
Leisurely tapping a glossy boot,<br/>
And curving a contumelious lip,<br/>
Gorgonised me from head to foot<br/>
With a stony British stare.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Why sits he here in his father's chair?<br/>
That old man never comes to his place:<br/>
Shall I believe him ashamed to be seen?<br/>
For only once, in the village street,<br/>
Last year, I caught a glimpse of his face,<br/>
A gray old wolf and a lean.<br/>
Scarcely, now, would I call him a cheat;<br/>
For then, perhaps, as a child of deceit,<br/>
She might by a true descent be untrue;<br/>
And Maud is as true as Maud is sweet:<br/>
Tho' I fancy her sweetness only due<br/>
To the sweeter blood by the other side;<br/>
Her mother has been a thing complete,<br/>
However she came to be so allied.<br/>
And fair without, faithful within,<br/>
Maud to him is nothing akin:<br/>
Some peculiar mystic grace<br/>
Made her only the child of her mother,<br/>
And heap'd the whole inherited sin<br/>
On that huge scapegoat of the race,<br/>
All, all upon the brother.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Peace, angry spirit, and let him be!<br/>
Has not his sister smiled on me?<br/></p>
<p>XIV.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Maud has a garden of roses<br/>
And lilies fair on a lawn:<br/>
There she walks in her state<br/>
And tends upon bed and bower<br/>
And thither I climb'd at dawn<br/>
And stood by her garden-gate;<br/>
A lion ramps at the top,<br/>
He is claspt by a passion-flower.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Maud's own little oak-room<br/>
(Which Maud, like a precious stone<br/>
Set in the heart of the carven gloom,<br/>
Lights with herself, when alone<br/>
She sits by her music and books,<br/>
And her brother lingers late<br/>
With a roystering company) looks<br/>
Upon Maud's own garden gate:<br/>
And I thought as I stood, if a hand, as white<br/>
As ocean-foam in the moon, were laid<br/>
On the hasp of the window, and my Delight<br/>
Had a sudden desire, like a glorious ghost, to glide,<br/>
Like a beam of the seventh Heaven, down to my side,<br/>
There were but a step to be made.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
The fancy flatter'd my mind,<br/>
And again seem'd overbold;<br/>
Now I thought that she cared for me,<br/>
Now I thought she was kind<br/>
Only because she was cold.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I heard no sound where I stood<br/>
But the rivulet on from the lawn<br/>
Running down to my own dark wood;<br/>
Or the voice of the long sea-wave as it swell'd<br/>
Now and then in the dim-gray dawn;<br/>
But I look'd, and round, all round the house I beheld<br/>
The death-white curtain drawn;<br/>
Felt a horror over me creep,<br/>
Prickle my skin and catch my breath,<br/>
Knew that the death-white curtain meant but sleep,<br/>
Yet I shudder'd and thought like a fool of the sleep of death.<br/></p>
<p>XV.<br/>
<br/>
So dark a mind within me dwells,<br/>
And I make myself such evil cheer,<br/>
That if I be dear to some one else,<br/>
Then some one else may have much to fear;<br/>
But if I be dear to some one else,<br/>
Then I should be to myself more dear.<br/>
Shall I not take care of all that I think,<br/>
Yea ev'n of wretched meat and drink,<br/>
If I be dear,<br/>
If I be dear to some one else.<br/></p>
<p>XVI.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
This lump of earth has left his estate<br/>
The lighter by the loss of his weight;<br/>
And so that he find what he went to seek,<br/>
And fulsome Pleasure clog him, and drown<br/>
His heart in the gross mud-honey of town,<br/>
He may stay for a year who has gone for a week:<br/>
But this is the day when I must speak,<br/>
And I see my Oread coming down,<br/>
O this is the day!<br/>
O beautiful creature, what am I<br/>
That I dare to look her way;<br/>
Think I may hold dominion sweet,<br/>
Lord of the pulse that is lord of her breast,<br/>
And dream of her beauty with tender dread,<br/>
From the delicate Arab arch of her feet<br/>
To the grace that, bright and light as the crest<br/>
Of a peacock, sits on her shining head,<br/>
And she knows it not: O, if she knew it,<br/>
To know her beauty might half undo it.<br/>
I know it the one bright thing to save<br/>
My yet young life in the wilds of Time,<br/>
Perhaps from madness, perhaps from crime,<br/>
Perhaps from a selfish grave.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
What, if she be fasten'd to this fool lord,<br/>
Dare I bid her abide by her word?<br/>
Should I love her so well if she<br/>
Had given her word to a thing so low?<br/>
Shall I love her as well if she<br/>
Can break her word were it even for me?<br/>
I trust that it is not so.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Catch not my breath, O clamorous heart,<br/>
Let not my tongue be a thrall to my eye,<br/>
For I must tell her before we part,<br/>
I must tell her, or die.<br/></p>
<p>XVII.<br/>
<br/>
Go not, happy day,<br/>
From the shining fields,<br/>
Go not, happy day.<br/>
Till the maiden yields.<br/>
Rosy is the West,<br/>
Rosy is the South,<br/>
Roses are her cheeks,<br/>
And a rose her mouth.<br/>
When the happy Yes<br/>
Falters from her lips,<br/>
Pass and blush the news<br/>
O'er the blowing ships.<br/>
Over blowing seas,<br/>
Over seas at rest,<br/>
Pass the happy news,<br/>
Blush it thro' the West;<br/>
Till the red man dance<br/>
By his red cedar tree,<br/>
And the red man's babe<br/>
Leap, beyond the sea.<br/>
Blush from West to East,<br/>
Blush from East to West,<br/>
Till the West is East,<br/>
Blush it thro' the West.<br/>
Rosy is the West,<br/>
Rosy is the South,<br/>
Roses are her cheeks.<br/>
And a rose her mouth.<br/></p>
<p>XVIII.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
I have led her home, my love, my only friend.<br/>
There is none like her, none.<br/>
And never yet so warmly ran my blood<br/>
And sweetly, on and on<br/>
Calming itself to the long-wish'd-for end,<br/>
Full to the banks, close on the promised good.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
None like her, none.<br/>
Just now the dry-tongued laurels' pattering talk<br/>
Seem'd her light foot along the garden walk,<br/>
And shook my heart to think she comes once more;<br/>
But even then I heard her close the door,<br/>
The gates of Heaven are closed, and she is gone.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
There is none like her, none.<br/>
Nor will be when our summers have deceased.<br/>
O, art thou sighing for Lebanon<br/>
In the long breeze that streams to thy delicious East,<br/>
Sighing for Lebanon,<br/>
Dark cedar, tho' thy limbs have here increased,<br/>
Upon a pastoral slope as fair,<br/>
And looking to the South, and fed<br/>
With honey'd rain and delicate air,<br/>
And haunted by the starry head<br/>
Of her whose gentle will has changed my fate,<br/>
And made my life a perfumed altar-flame;<br/>
And over whom thy darkness must have spread<br/>
With such delight as theirs of old, thy great<br/>
Forefathers of the thornless garden, there<br/>
Shadowing the snow-limb'd Eve from whom she came.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Here will I lie, while these long branches sway,<br/>
And you fair stars that crown a happy day<br/>
Go in and out as if at merry play,<br/>
Who am no more so all forlorn,<br/>
As when it seem'd far better to be born<br/>
To labour and the mattock-harden'd hand,<br/>
Than nursed at ease and brought to understand<br/>
A sad astrology, the boundless plan<br/>
That makes you tyrants in your iron skies,<br/>
Innumerable, pitiless, passionless eyes,<br/>
Cold fires, yet with power to burn and brand<br/>
His nothingness into man.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
But now shine on, and what care I,<br/>
Who in this stormy gulf have found a pearl<br/>
The countercharm of space and hollow sky,<br/>
And do accept my madness, and would die<br/>
To save from some slight shame one simple girl.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
Would die; for sullen-seeming Death may give<br/>
More life to Love than is or ever was<br/>
In our low world, where yet 'tis sweet to live.<br/>
Let no one ask me how it came to pass;<br/>
It seems that I am happy, that to me<br/>
A livelier emerald twinkles in the grass,<br/>
A purer sapphire melts into the sea.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
Not die; but live a life of truest breath,<br/>
And teach true life to fight with mortal wrongs.<br/>
O, why should Love, like men in drinking-songs,<br/>
Spice his fair banquet with the dust of death?<br/>
Make answer, Maud my bliss,<br/>
Maud made my Maud by that long lover's kiss,<br/>
Life of my life, wilt thou not answer this?<br/>
'The dusky strand of Death inwoven here<br/>
With dear Love's tie, makes Love himself more dear.'<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Is that enchanted moan only the swell<br/>
Of the long waves that roll in yonder bay?<br/>
And hark the clock within, the silver knell<br/>
Of twelve sweet hours that past in bridal white,<br/>
And died to live, long as my pulses play;<br/>
But now by this my love has closed her sight<br/>
And given false death her hand, and stol'n away<br/>
To dreamful wastes where footless fancies dwell<br/>
Among the fragments of the golden day.<br/>
May nothing there her maiden grace affright!<br/>
Dear heart, I feel with thee the drowsy spell.<br/>
My bride to be, my evermore delight,<br/>
My own heart's heart and ownest own farewell;<br/>
It is but for a little space I go:<br/>
And ye meanwhile far over moor and fell<br/>
Beat to the noiseless music of the night!<br/>
Has our whole earth gone nearer to the glow<br/>
Of your soft splendours that you look so bright?<br/>
I have climb'd nearer out of lonely Hell.<br/>
Beat, happy stars, timing with things below,<br/>
Beat with my heart more blest than heart can tell,<br/>
Blest, but for some dark undercurrent woe<br/>
That seems to draw—but it shall not be so:<br/>
Let all be well, be well.<br/></p>
<p>XIX.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Her brother is coming back to-night,<br/>
Breaking up my dream of delight.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
My dream? do I dream of bliss?<br/>
I have walk'd awake with Truth.<br/>
O when did a morning shine<br/>
So rich in atonement as this<br/>
For my dark-dawning youth,<br/>
Darkened watching a mother decline<br/>
And that dead man at her heart and mine<br/>
For who was left to watch her but I?<br/>
Yet so did I let my freshness die.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
I trust that I did not talk<br/>
To gentle Maud in our walk<br/>
(For often in lonely wanderings<br/>
I have cursed him even to lifeless things)<br/>
But I trust that I did not talk,<br/>
Not touch on her father's sin:<br/>
I am sure I did but speak<br/>
Of my mother's faded cheek<br/>
When it slowly grew so thin,<br/>
That I felt she was slowly dying<br/>
Vext with lawyers and harass'd with debt:<br/>
For how often I caught her with eyes all wet,<br/>
Shaking her head at her son and sighing<br/>
A world of trouble within!<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
And Maud too, Maud was moved<br/>
To speak of the mother she loved<br/>
As one scarce less forlorn,<br/>
Dying abroad and it seems apart<br/>
From him who had ceased to share her heart,<br/>
And ever mourning over the feud,<br/>
The household Fury sprinkled with blood<br/>
By which our houses are torn:<br/>
How strange was what she said,<br/>
When only Maud and the brother<br/>
Hung over her dying bed—<br/>
That Maud's dark father and mine<br/>
Had bound us one to the other,<br/>
Betrothed us over their wine,<br/>
On the day when Maud was born;<br/>
Seal'd her mine from her first sweet breath.<br/>
Mine, mine by a right, from birth till death,<br/>
Mine, mine—our fathers have sworn.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
But the true blood spilt had in it a heat<br/>
To dissolve the precious seal on a bond,<br/>
That, if left uncancell'd, had been so sweet:<br/>
And none of us thought of a something beyond,<br/>
A desire that awoke in the heart of the child,<br/>
As it were a duty done to the tomb,<br/>
To be friends for her sake, to be reconciled;<br/>
And I was cursing them and my doom,<br/>
And letting a dangerous thought run wild<br/>
While often abroad in the fragrant gloom<br/>
Of foreign churches—I see her there,<br/>
Bright English lily, breathing a prayer<br/>
To be friends, to be reconciled!<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
But then what a flint is he!<br/>
Abroad, at Florence, at Rome,<br/>
I find whenever she touch'd on me<br/>
This brother had laugh'd her down,<br/>
And at last, when each came home,<br/>
He had darken'd into a frown,<br/>
Chid her, and forbid her to speak<br/>
To me, her friend of the years before;<br/>
And this was what had reddened her cheek<br/>
When I bow'd to her on the moor.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
Yet Maud, altho' not blind<br/>
To the faults of his heart and mind,<br/>
I see she cannot but love him,<br/>
And says he is rough but kind,<br/>
And wishes me to approve him,<br/>
And tells me, when she lay<br/>
Sick once, with a fear of worse,<br/>
That he left his wine and horses and play,<br/>
Sat with her, read to her, night and day,<br/>
And tended her like a nurse.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Kind? but the deathbed desire<br/>
Spurn'd by this heir of the liar—<br/>
Rough but kind? yet I know<br/>
He has plotted against me in this,<br/>
That he plots against me still.<br/>
Kind to Maud? that were not amiss.<br/>
Well, rough but kind; why, let it be so:<br/>
For shall not Maud have her will?<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
For, Maud, so tender and true.<br/>
As long as my life endures<br/>
I feel I shall owe you a debt,<br/>
That I never can hope to pay;<br/>
And if ever I should forget<br/>
That I owe this debt to you<br/>
And for your sweet sake to yours;<br/>
O then, what then shall I say?—<br/>
If ever I <i>should</i> forget.<br/>
May God make me more wretched<br/>
Than ever I have been yet!<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
So now I have sworn to bury<br/>
All this dead body of hate,<br/>
I feel so free and so clear<br/>
By the loss of that dead weight,<br/>
That I should grow light-headed, I fear.<br/>
Fantastically merry;<br/>
But that her brother comes, like a blight<br/>
On my fresh hope, to the Hall to-night.<br/></p>
<p>XX.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Strange, that I felt so gay,<br/>
Strange, that I tried to-day<br/>
To beguile her melancholy;<br/>
The Sultan, as we name him,—<br/>
She did not wish to blame him—<br/>
But he vext her and perplext her<br/>
With his worldly talk and folly:<br/>
Was it gentle to reprove her<br/>
For stealing out of view<br/>
From a little lazy lover<br/>
Who but claims her as his due?<br/>
Or for chilling his caresses<br/>
By the coldness of her manners,<br/>
Nay, the plainness of her dresses?<br/>
Now I know her but in two,<br/>
Nor can pronounce upon it<br/>
If one should ask me whether<br/>
The habit, hat, and feather.<br/>
Or the frock and gipsy bonnet<br/>
Be the neater and completer;<br/>
For nothing can be sweeter<br/>
Than maiden Maud in either.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
But to morrow, if we live,<br/>
Our ponderous squire will give<br/>
A grand political dinner<br/>
To half the squirelings near;<br/>
And Maud will wear her jewels,<br/>
And the bird of prey will hover,<br/>
And the titmouse hope to win her<br/>
With his chirrup at her ear.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
A grand political dinner<br/>
To the men of many acres,<br/>
A gathering of the Tory,<br/>
A dinner and then a dance<br/>
For the maids and marriage-makers,<br/>
And every eye but mine will glance<br/>
At Maud in all her glory.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
For I am not invited,<br/>
But, with the Sultan's pardon,<br/>
I am all as well delighted,<br/>
For I know her own rose-garden,<br/>
And mean to linger in it<br/>
Till the dancing will be over;<br/>
And then, oh then, come out to me<br/>
For a minute, but for a minute,<br/>
Come out to your own true lover.<br/>
That your true lover may see<br/>
Your glory also, and render<br/>
All homage to his own darling,<br/>
Queen Maud in all her splendour.<br/></p>
<p>XXI.<br/>
<br/>
Rivulet crossing my ground,<br/>
And bringing me down from the Hall<br/>
This garden-rose that I found,<br/>
Forgetful of Maud and me,<br/>
And lost in trouble and moving round<br/>
Here at the head of a tinkling fall,<br/>
And trying to pass to the sea;<br/>
Rivulet, born at the Hall,<br/>
My Maud has sent it by thee<br/>
(If I read her sweet will right)<br/>
On a blushing mission to me,<br/>
Saying in odour and colour, 'Ah, be<br/>
Among the roses to-night.'<br/></p>
<p>XXII.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Come into the garden, Maud,<br/>
For the black bat, night, has flown,<br/>
Come into the garden, Maud,<br/>
I am here at the gate alone;<br/>
And the woodbine spices are wafted abroad,<br/>
And the musk of the roses blown.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
For a breeze of morning moves,<br/>
And the planet of Love is on high,<br/>
Beginning to faint in the light that she loves<br/>
On a bed of daffodil sky,<br/>
To faint in the light of the sun she loves.<br/>
To faint in his light, and to die.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
All night have the roses heard<br/>
The flute, violin, bassoon;<br/>
All night has the casement jessamine stirr'd<br/>
To the dangers dancing in tune;<br/>
Till a silence fell with the waking bird,<br/>
And a hush with the setting moon.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
I said to the lily, 'There is but one<br/>
With whom she has heart to be gay.<br/>
When will the dancers leave her alone?<br/>
She is weary of dance and play.'<br/>
Now half to the setting moon are gone,<br/>
And half to the rising day;<br/>
Low on the sand and loud on the stone<br/>
The last wheel echoes away.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
I said to the rose, 'The brief night goes<br/>
In babble and revel and wine.<br/>
young lord-lover, what sighs are those,<br/>
For one that will never be thine?<br/>
But mine, but mine,' so I sware to the rose,<br/>
'For ever and ever, mine.'<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
And the soul of the rose went into my blood,<br/>
As the music clash'd in the hall;<br/>
And long by the garden lake I stood.<br/>
For I heard your rivulet fall<br/>
From the lake to the meadow and on to the wood,<br/>
Our wood, that is dearer than all;<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
From the meadow your walks have left so sweet<br/>
That whenever a March-wind sighs<br/>
He sets the jewel-print of your feet<br/>
In violets blue as your eyes,<br/>
To the woody hollows in which we meet<br/>
And the valleys of Paradise.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
The slender acacia would not shake<br/>
One long milk-bloom on the tree;<br/>
The white lake-blossom fell into the lake,<br/>
As the pimpernel dozed on the lea;<br/>
But the rose was awake all night for your sake,<br/>
Knowing your promise to me;<br/>
The lilies and roses were all awake.<br/>
They sigh'd for the dawn and thee.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Queen rose of the rosebud garden of girls,<br/>
Come hither, the dances are done,<br/>
In gloss of satin and glimmer of pearls,<br/>
Queen lily and rose in one;<br/>
Shine out, little head, sunning over with curls,<br/>
To the flowers, and be their sun.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
There has fallen a splendid tear<br/>
From the passion-flower at the gate.<br/>
She is coming, my dove, my dear;<br/>
She is coming, my life, my fate;<br/>
The red rose cries, *She is near, she is near;'<br/>
And the white rose weeps, 'She is late;'<br/>
The larkspur listens, 'I hear, I hear;'<br/>
And the lily whispers, 'I wait.'<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
She is coming, my own, my sweet;<br/>
Were it ever so airy a tread.<br/>
My heart would hear her and beat,<br/>
Were it earth in an earthy bed;<br/>
My dust would hear her and beat,<br/>
Had I lain for a century dead;<br/>
Would start and tremble under her feet,<br/>
And blossom in purple and red.<br/></p>
<p>MAUD<br/>
PART II.<br/>
<br/>
I.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
'The fault was mine, the fault was mine'—<br/>
Why am I sitting here so stunn'd and still,<br/>
Plucking the harmless wild-flower on the hill?—<br/>
It is this guilty hand!—<br/>
And there rises ever a passionate cry<br/>
From underneath in the darkening land—<br/>
What is it, that has been done?<br/>
O dawn of Eden bright over earth and sky,<br/>
The fires of Hell brake out of thy rising sun,<br/>
The fires of Hell and of Hate;<br/>
For she, sweet soul, had hardly spoken a word,<br/>
When her brother ran in his rage to the gate,<br/>
He came with the babe-faced lord;<br/>
Heap'd on her terms of disgrace,<br/>
And while she wept, and I strove to be cool,<br/>
He fiercely gave me the lie,<br/>
Till I with as fierce an anger spoke,<br/>
And he struck me, madman, over the face,<br/>
Struck me before the languid fool,<br/>
Who was gaping and grinning by:<br/>
Struck for himself an evil stroke;<br/>
Wrought for his house an irredeemable woe;<br/>
For front to front in an hour we stood,<br/>
And a million horrible bellowing echoes broke<br/>
From the red-ribb'd hollow behind the wood,<br/>
And thunder'd up into Heaven the Christless code,<br/>
That must have life for a blow.<br/>
Ever and ever afresh they seem'd to grow.<br/>
Was it he lay there with a fading eye?<br/>
'The fault was mine,' he whisper'd, 'fly!'<br/>
Then glided out of the joyous wood<br/>
The ghastly Wraith of one that I know;<br/>
And there rang on a sudden a passionate cry,<br/>
A cry for a brother's blood:<br/>
It will ring in my heart and my ears, till I die, till I die.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Is it gone? my pulses beat—<br/>
What was it? a lying trick of the brain?<br/>
Yet I thought I saw her stand,<br/>
A shadow there at my feet,<br/>
High over the shadowy land.<br/>
It is gone; and the heavens fall in a gentle rain,<br/>
When they should burst and drown with deluging storms<br/>
The feeble vassals of wine and anger and lust,<br/>
The little hearts that know not how to forgive:<br/>
Arise, my God, and strike, for we hold Thee just,<br/>
Strike dead the whole weak race of venomous worms,<br/>
That sting each other here in the dust;<br/>
We are not worthy to live.<br/></p>
<p>II.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
See what a lovely shell,<br/>
Small and pure as a pearl,<br/>
Lying close to my foot,<br/>
Frail, but a work divine,<br/>
Made so fairily well<br/>
With delicate spire and whorl,<br/>
How exquisitely minute,<br/>
A miracle of design!<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
What is it? a learned man<br/>
Could give it a clumsy name.<br/>
Let him name it who can,<br/>
The beauty would be the same.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
The tiny cell is forlorn,<br/>
Void of the little living will<br/>
That made it stir on the shore.<br/>
Did he stand at the diamond door<br/>
Of his house in a rainbow frill?<br/>
Did he push, when he was uncurl'd,<br/>
A golden foot or a fairy horn<br/>
Thro' his dim water-world?<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Slight, to be crush' d with a tap<br/>
Of my finger-nail on the sand,<br/>
Small, but a work divine,<br/>
Frail, but of force to withstand,<br/>
Year upon year, the shock<br/>
Of cataract seas that snap<br/>
The three-decker's oaken spine<br/>
Athwart the ledges of rock,<br/>
Here on the Breton strand!<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Breton, not Briton; here<br/>
Like a shipwreck'd man on a coast<br/>
Of ancient fable and fear—<br/>
Plagued with a flitting to and fro,<br/>
A disease, a hard mechanic ghost<br/>
That never came from on high<br/>
Nor ever arose from below,<br/>
But only moves with the moving eye,<br/>
Flying along the land and the main—<br/>
Why should it look like Maud?<br/>
Am I to be overawed<br/>
By what I cannot but know<br/>
Is a juggle born of the brain?<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
Back from the Breton coast,<br/>
Sick of a nameless fear,<br/>
Back to the dark sea-line<br/>
Looking, thinking of all I have lost;<br/>
An old song vexes my ear;<br/>
But that of Lamech is mine.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
For years, a measureless ill,<br/>
For years, for ever, to part—<br/>
But she, she would love me still;<br/>
And as long, God, as she<br/>
Have a grain of love for me,<br/>
So long, no doubt, no doubt,<br/>
Shall I nurse in my dark heart,<br/>
However weary, a spark of will<br/>
Not to be trampled out.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Strange, that the mind, when fraught<br/>
With a passion so intense<br/>
One would think that it well<br/>
Might drown all life in the eye,—<br/>
That it should, by being so overwrought,<br/>
Suddenly strike on a sharper sense<br/>
For a shell, or a flower, little things<br/>
Which else would have been past by!<br/>
And now I remember, I,<br/>
When he lay dying there,<br/>
I noticed one of his many rings<br/>
(For he had many, poor worm) and thought<br/>
It is his mother's hair.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Who knows if he be dead?<br/>
Whether I need have fled?<br/>
Am I guilty of blood?<br/>
However this may be,<br/>
Comfort her, comfort her, all things good,<br/>
While I am over the sea!<br/>
Let me and my passionate love go by,<br/>
But speak to her all things holy and high,<br/>
Whatever happen to me!<br/>
Me and my harmful love, go by;<br/>
But come to her waking, find her asleep,<br/>
Powers of the height. Powers of the deep,<br/>
And comfort her tho' I die.<br/></p>
<p>III.<br/>
<br/>
Courage, poor heart of stone!<br/>
I will not ask thee why<br/>
Thou canst not understand<br/>
That thou art left for ever alone:<br/>
Courage, poor stupid heart of stone.—<br/>
Or if I ask thee why,<br/>
Care not thou to reply:<br/>
She is but dead, and the time is at hand<br/>
When thou shalt more than die.<br/></p>
<p>IV.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
O that 'twere possible<br/>
After long grief and pain<br/>
To find the arms of my true love<br/>
Round me once again!<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
When I was wont to meet her<br/>
In the silent woody places<br/>
By the home that gave me birth,<br/>
We stood tranced in long embraces<br/>
Mixt with kisses sweeter sweeter<br/>
Than any thing on earth.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
A shadow flits before me,<br/>
Not thou, but like to thee;<br/>
Ah Christ, that it were possible<br/>
For one short hour to see<br/>
The souls we loved, that they might tell us<br/>
What and where they be.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
It leads me forth at evening,<br/>
It lightly winds and steals<br/>
In a cold white robe before me,<br/>
When all my spirit reels<br/>
At the shouts, the leagues of lights,<br/>
And the roaring of the wheels.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Half the night I waste in sighs,<br/>
Half in dreams I sorrow after<br/>
The delight of early skies;<br/>
In a wakeful doze I sorrow<br/>
For the hand, the lips, the eyes,<br/>
For the meeting of the morrow,<br/>
The delight of happy laughter,<br/>
The delight of low replies.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
'Tis a morning pure and sweet,<br/>
And a dewy splendour falls<br/>
On the little flower that clings<br/>
To the turrets and the walls;<br/>
'Tis a morning pure and sweet,<br/>
And the light and shadow fleet;<br/>
She is walking in the meadow,<br/>
And the woodland echo rings;<br/>
In a moment we shall meet;<br/>
She is singing in the meadow,<br/>
And the rivulet at her feet<br/>
Ripples on in light and shadow<br/>
To the ballad that she sings.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
Do I hear her sing as of old,<br/>
My bird with the shining head,<br/>
My own dove with the tender eye?<br/>
But there rings on a sudden a passionate cry,<br/>
There is some one dying or dead,<br/>
And a sullen thunder is roll'd;<br/>
For a tumult shakes the city,<br/>
And I wake, my dream is fled;<br/>
In the shuddering dawn, behold,<br/>
Without knowledge, without pity,<br/>
By the curtains of my bed<br/>
That abiding phantom cold.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Get thee hence, nor come again,<br/>
Mix not memory with doubt,<br/>
Pass, thou deathlike type of pain,<br/>
Pass and cease to move about,<br/>
'Tis the blot upon the brain<br/>
That <i>will</i> show itself without.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Then I rise, the eavedrops fall,<br/>
And the yellow vapours choke<br/>
The great city sounding wide;<br/>
The day comes, a dull red ball<br/>
Wrapt in drifts of lurid smoke<br/>
On the misty river-tide.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
Thro' the hubbub of the market<br/>
I steal, a wasted frame,<br/>
It crosses here, it crosses there,<br/>
Thro' all that crowd confused and loud,<br/>
The shadow still the same;<br/>
And on my heavy eyelids<br/>
My anguish hangs like shame.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
Alas for her that met me,<br/>
That heard me softly call,<br/>
Came glimmering thro' the laurels<br/>
At the quiet evenfall,<br/>
In the garden by the turrets<br/>
Of the old manorial hall.<br/>
<br/>
12.<br/>
Would the happy spirit descend,<br/>
From the realms of light and song,<br/>
In the chamber or the street,<br/>
As she looks among the blest,<br/>
Should I fear to greet my friend<br/>
Or to say 'forgive the wrong,'<br/>
Or to ask her, 'take me, sweet,<br/>
To the regions of thy rest? '<br/>
<br/>
13.<br/>
But the broad light glares and beats,<br/>
And the shadow flits and fleets<br/>
And will not let me be;<br/>
And I loathe the squares and streets,<br/>
And the faces that one meets,<br/>
Hearts with no love for me:<br/>
Always I long to creep<br/>
Into some still cavern deep,<br/>
There to weep, and weep, and weep<br/>
My whole soul out to thee.<br/></p>
<p>V.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
Dead, long dead,<br/>
Long dead!<br/>
And my heart is a handful of dust,<br/>
And the wheels go over my head,<br/>
And my bones are shaken with pain,<br/>
For into a shallow grave they are thrust,<br/>
Only a yard beneath the street,<br/>
And the hoofs of the horses beat, beat,<br/>
The hoofs of the horses beat,<br/>
Beat into my scalp and my brain,<br/>
With never an end to the stream of passing feet,<br/>
Driving, hurrying, marrying, burying,<br/>
Clamour and rumble, and ringing and clatter,<br/>
And here beneath it is all as bad,<br/>
For I thought the dead had peace, but it is not so;<br/>
To have no peace in the grave, is that not sad?<br/>
But up and down and to and fro,<br/>
Ever about me the dead men go;<br/>
And then to hear a dead man chatter<br/>
Is enough to drive one mad.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Wretchedest age, since Time began,<br/>
They cannot even bury a man;<br/>
And tho' we paid our tithes in the days that are gone,<br/>
Not a bell was rung, not a prayer was read;<br/>
It is that which makes us loud in the world of the dead;<br/>
There is none that does his work, not one;<br/>
A touch of their office might have sufficed,<br/>
But the churchmen fain would kill their church,<br/>
As the churches have kill'd their Christ.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
See, there is one of us sobbing,<br/>
No limit to his distress;<br/>
And another, a lord of all things, praying<br/>
To his own great self, as I guess;<br/>
And another, a statesman there, betraying<br/>
His party-secret, fool, to the press;<br/>
And yonder a vile physician, blabbing<br/>
The case of his patient— all for what?<br/>
To tickle the maggot born in an empty head,<br/>
And wheedle a world that loves him not.<br/>
For it is but a world of the dead.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Nothing but idiot gabble!<br/>
For the prophecy given of old<br/>
And then not understood,<br/>
Has come to pass as foretold;<br/>
Not let any man think for the public good,<br/>
But babble, merely for babble.<br/>
For I never whisper'd a private affair<br/>
Within the hearing of cat or mouse,<br/>
No, not to myself in the closet alone,<br/>
But I heard it shouted at once from the top of the house;<br/>
Everything came to be known:<br/>
Who told <i>him</i> we were there?<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Not that gray old wolf, for he came not back<br/>
From the wilderness, full of wolves, where he used to lie;<br/>
He has gather'd the bones for his o'ergrown whelp to crack;<br/>
Crack them now for yourself, and howl, and die.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
Prophet, curse me the blabbing lip,<br/>
And curse me the British vermin, the rat;<br/>
I know not whether he came in the Hanover ship,<br/>
But I know that he lies and listens mute<br/>
In an ancient mansion's crannies and holes:<br/>
Arsenic, arsenic, sure, would do it.<br/>
Except that now we poison our babes, poor souls!<br/>
It is all used up for that.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
Tell him now: she is standing here at my head;<br/>
Not beautiful now, not even kind;<br/>
He may take her now; for she never speaks her mind,<br/>
But is ever the one thing silent here.<br/>
She is not of us, as I divine;<br/>
She comes from another stiller world of the dead,<br/>
Stiller, not fairer than mine.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
But I know where a garden grows,<br/>
Fairer than aught in the world beside,<br/>
All made up of the lily and rose<br/>
That blow by night, when the season is good,<br/>
To the sound of dancing music and flutes:<br/>
It is only flowers, they had no fruits,<br/>
And I almost fear they are not roses, but blood;<br/>
For the keeper was one, so full of pride,<br/>
He linkt a dead man there to a spectral bride;<br/>
For he, if he had not been a Sultan of brutes,<br/>
Would he have that hole in his side?<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
But what will the old man say?<br/>
He laid a cruel snare in a pit<br/>
To catch a friend of mine one stormy day;<br/>
Yet now I could even weep to think of it;<br/>
For what will the old man say<br/>
When he comes to the second corpse in the pit?<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
Friend, to be struck by the public foe,<br/>
Then to strike him and lay him low,<br/>
That were a public merit, far,<br/>
Whatever the Quaker holds, from sin;<br/>
But the red life spilt for a private blow—<br/>
I swear to you, lawful and lawless war<br/>
Are scarcely even akin.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
O me, why have they not buried me deep enough?<br/>
Is it kind to have made me a grave so rough,<br/>
Me, that was never a quiet sleeper?<br/>
Maybe still I am but half-dead;<br/>
Then I cannot be wholly dumb;<br/>
I will cry to the steps above my head,<br/>
And somebody, surely, some kind heart will come<br/>
To bury me, bury me<br/>
Deeper, ever so little deeper.<br/></p>
<p>VI.<br/>
<br/>
1.<br/>
My life has crept so long on a broken wing<br/>
Thro' cells of madness, haunts of horror and fear,<br/>
That I come to be grateful at last for a little thing:<br/>
My mood is changed, for it fell at a time of year<br/>
When the face of night is fair on the dewy downs,<br/>
And the shining daffodil dies, and the Charioteer<br/>
And starry Gemini hang like glorious crowns<br/>
Over Orion's grave low down in the west,<br/>
That like a silent lightning under the stars<br/>
She seem'd to divide in a dream from a band of the blest,<br/>
And spoke of a hope for the world in the coming wars—<br/>
'And in that hope, dear soul, let trouble have rest.<br/>
Knowing I tarry for thee,' and pointed to Mars<br/>
As he glow'd like a ruddy shield on the Lion's breast.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
And it was but a dream, yet it yielded a dear delight<br/>
To have look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes so fair,<br/>
That had been in a weary world my one thing bright;<br/>
And it was but a dream, yet it lightened my despair<br/>
When I thought that a war would arise in defence of the right,<br/>
That an iron tyranny now should bend or cease,<br/>
The, glory of manhood stand on his ancient height,<br/>
Nor Britain's one sole God be the millionnaire:<br/>
No more shall commerce be all in all, and Peace<br/>
Pipe on her pastoral hillock a languid note,<br/>
And watch her harvest ripen, her herd increase,<br/>
Nor the cannon-bullet rust on a slothful shore,<br/>
And the cobweb woven across the cannon's throat<br/>
Shall shake its threaded tears in the wind no more.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
And as months ran on and rumour of battle grew,<br/>
'It is time, it is time, O passionate heart,' said I<br/>
(For I cleaved to a cause that I felt to be pure and true),<br/>
'It is time, O passionate heart and morbid eye,<br/>
That old hysterical mock-disease should die.'<br/>
And I stood on a giant deck and mix'd my breath<br/>
With a loyal people shouting a battle cry,<br/>
Till I saw the dreary phantom arise and fly<br/>
Far into the North, and battle, and seas of death.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Let it go or stay, so I wake to the higher aims<br/>
Of a land that has lost for a little her lust of gold,<br/>
And love of a peace that was full of wrongs and shames,<br/>
Horrible, hateful, monstrous, not to be told;<br/>
And hail once more to the banner of battle unroll'd!<br/>
Tho' many a light shall darken, and many shall weep<br/>
For those that are crush'd in the clash of jarring claims,<br/>
Yet God's just wrath shall be wreak'd on a giant liar;<br/>
And many a darkness into the light shall leap,<br/>
And shine in the sudden making of splendid names,<br/>
And noble thought be freer under the sun,<br/>
And the heart of a people beat with one desire;<br/>
For the peace, that I deem'd no peace, is over and done,<br/>
And now by the side of the Black and the Baltic deep,<br/>
And deathful-grinning mouths of the fortress, flames<br/>
The blood-red blossom of war with a heart of fire.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Let it flame or fade, and the war roll down like a wind,<br/>
We have proved we have hearts in a cause, we are noble still,<br/>
And myself have awaked, as it seems, to the better mind;<br/>
It is better to fight for the good, than to rail at the ill;<br/>
I have felt with my native land, I am one with my kind,<br/>
I embrace the purpose of God, and the doom assign'd.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE BROOK; AN IDYL. </h2>
<p>'Here, by this brook, we parted; I to the East<br/>
And he for Italy—too late—too late:<br/>
One whom the strong sons of the world despise;<br/>
For lucky rhymes to him were scrip and share,<br/>
And mellow metres more than cent for cent;<br/>
Nor could he understand how money breeds,<br/>
Thought it a dead thing; yet himself could make<br/>
The thing that is not as the thing that is.<br/>
O had he lived! In our schoolbooks we say,<br/>
Of those that held their heads above the crowd,<br/>
They flourish'd then or then; but life in him<br/>
Could scarce be said to flourish, only touched<br/>
On such a time as goes before the leaf,<br/>
When all the wood stands in a mist of green,<br/>
And nothing perfect: yet the brook he loved,<br/>
For which, in branding summers of Bengal,<br/>
Or ev'n the sweet half-English Neilgherry air,<br/>
I panted, seems, as I re-listen to it,<br/>
Prattling the primrose fancies of the boy,<br/>
To me that loved him; for "O brook," he says,<br/>
"O babbling brook," says Edmund in his rhyme,<br/>
"Whence come you?" and the brook, why not? replies.<br/>
<br/>
I come from haunts of coot and hern,<br/>
I make a sudden sally<br/>
And sparkle out among the fern,<br/>
To bicker down a valley.<br/>
<br/>
By thirty hills I hurry down,<br/>
Or slip between the ridges,<br/>
By twenty thorps, a little town,<br/>
And half a hundred bridges.<br/>
<br/>
Till last by Philip's farm I flow<br/>
To join the brimming river,<br/>
For men may come and men may go,<br/>
But I go on for ever.<br/>
<br/>
'Poor lad, he died at Florence, quite worn out,<br/>
Travelling to Naples. There is Darnley bridge.<br/>
It has more ivy; there the river; and there<br/>
Stands Philip's farm where brook and river meet.<br/>
<br/>
I chatter over stony ways,<br/>
In little sharps and trebles,<br/>
I bubble into eddying bays,<br/>
I babble on the pebbles.<br/>
<br/>
With many a curve my banks I fret<br/>
By many a field and fallow.<br/>
And many a fairy foreland set<br/>
With willow-weed and mallow.<br/>
<br/>
I chatter, chatter, as I flow<br/>
To join the brimming river,<br/>
For men may come and men may go,<br/>
But I go on for ever.<br/>
<br/>
'But Philip chatter'd more than brook or bird;<br/>
Old Philip; all about the fields you caught<br/>
His weary daylong chirping, like the dry<br/>
High-elbow'd grigs that leap in summer grass.<br/>
<br/>
I wind about, and in and out,<br/>
With here a blossom sailing,<br/>
And here and there a lusty trout,<br/>
And here and there a grayling,<br/>
<br/>
And here and there a foamy flake<br/>
Upon me, as I travel<br/>
With many a silvery waterbreak<br/>
Above the golden gravel,<br/>
<br/>
And draw them all along, and flow<br/>
To join the brimming river,<br/>
For men may come and men may go,<br/>
But I go on for ever.<br/>
<br/>
'O darling Katie Willows, his one child!<br/>
A maiden of our century, yet most meek;<br/>
A daughter of our meadows, yet not coarse;<br/>
Straight, but as lissome as a hazel wand;<br/>
Her eyes a bashful azure, and her hair<br/>
In gloss and hue the chestnut, when the shell<br/>
Divides threefold to show the fruit within.<br/>
<br/>
'Sweet Katie, once I did her a good turn,<br/>
Her and her far-off cousin and betrothed,<br/>
James Willows, of one name and heart with her.<br/>
For here I came, twenty years back—the week<br/>
Before I parted with poor Edmund; crost<br/>
By that old bridge which, half in ruins then,<br/>
Still makes a hoary eyebrow for the gleam<br/>
Beyond it, where the waters marry—crost,<br/>
Whistling a random bar of Bonny Doon,<br/>
And push'd at Philip's garden-gate. The gate,<br/>
Half-parted from a weak and scolding hinge,<br/>
Stuck; and he clamour'd from a casement, "run"<br/>
To Katie somewhere in the walks below,<br/>
"Run, Katie!" Katie never ran: she moved<br/>
To meet me, winding under woodbine bowers,<br/>
A little fluttered, with her eyelids down,<br/>
Fresh apple-blossom, blushing for a boon.<br/>
<br/>
'What was it? less of sentiment than sense<br/>
Had Katie; not illiterate; nor of those<br/>
Who dabbling in the fount of fictive tears,<br/>
And nursed by mealy-mouth'd philanthropies,<br/>
Divorce the Feeling from her mate the Deed.<br/>
<br/>
'She told me. She and James had quarrell'd. Why?<br/>
What cause of quarrel? None, she said, no cause;<br/>
James had no cause: but when I prest the cause,<br/>
I learnt that James had flickering jealousies<br/>
Which anger'd her. Who anger'd James? I said.<br/>
But Katie snatch'd her eyes at once from mine,<br/>
And sketching with her slender pointed foot<br/>
Some figure like a wizard's pentagram<br/>
On garden gravel, let my query pass<br/>
Unclaim'd, in flushing silence, till I ask'd<br/>
If James were coming. "Coming every day,"<br/>
She answered, "ever longing to explain,<br/>
But evermore her father came across<br/>
With some long-winded tale, and broke him short;<br/>
And James departed vext with him and her."<br/>
How could I help her? "Would I—was it wrong?"<br/>
(Claspt hands and that petitionary grace<br/>
Of sweet seventeen subdued me ere she spoke)<br/>
"O would I take her father for one hour,<br/>
For one half-hour, and let him talk to me!"<br/>
And even while she spoke, I saw where James<br/>
Made toward us, like a wader in the surf,<br/>
Beyond the brook, waist-deep in meadow-sweet.<br/>
<br/>
'O Katie, what I suffered for your sake!<br/>
For in I went, and call'd old Philip out<br/>
To show the farm: full willingly he rose:<br/>
He led me thro' the short sweet-smelling lanes<br/>
Of his wheat-suburb, babbling as he went.<br/>
He praised his land, his horses, his machines;<br/>
He praised his ploughs, his cows, his hogs, his dogs;<br/>
He praised his hens, his geese, his guinea-hens;<br/>
His pigeons, who in session on their roofs<br/>
Approved him, bowing at their own deserts:<br/>
Then from the plaintive mother's teat he took<br/>
Her blind and shuddering puppies, naming each.<br/>
And naming those, his friends, for whom they were:<br/>
Then crost the common into Darnley chase<br/>
To show Sir Arthur's deer. In copse and fern<br/>
Twinkled the innumerable ear and tail.<br/>
Then, seated on a serpent-rooted beech,<br/>
He pointed out a pasturing colt, and said:<br/>
'That was the four-year-old I sold the Squire.'<br/>
And there he told a long long-winded tale<br/>
Of how the Squire had seen the colt at grass,<br/>
And how it was the thing his daughter wish'd,<br/>
And how he sent the bailiff to the farm<br/>
To learn the price, and what the price he ask'd,<br/>
And how the bailiff swore that he was mad,<br/>
But he stood firm; and so the matter hung;<br/>
He gave them line: and five days after that<br/>
He met the bailiff at the Golden Fleece,<br/>
Who then and there had offer'd something more,<br/>
But he stood firm; and so the matter hung;<br/>
He knew the man; the colt would fetch its price;<br/>
He gave them line: and how by chance at last<br/>
(It might be May or April, he forgot,<br/>
The last of April or the first of May)<br/>
He found the bailiff riding by the farm,<br/>
And, talking from the point, he drew him in,<br/>
And there he mellow'd all his heart with ale,<br/>
Until they closed a bargain, hand in hand.<br/>
<br/>
'Then, while I breathed in sight of haven, he,<br/>
Poor fellow, could he help it? Recommenced,<br/>
And ran thro' all the coltish chronicle,<br/>
Wild Will, Black Bess, Tantivy, Tallyho,<br/>
Reform, White Rose, Bellerophon, the Jilt,<br/>
Arbaces, and Phenomenon, and the rest,<br/>
Till, not to die a listener, I arose,<br/>
And with me Philip, talking still; and so<br/>
We turn'd our foreheads from the falling sun,<br/>
And following our own shadows thrice as long<br/>
As when they follow'd us from Philip's door,<br/>
Arrived, and found the sun of sweet content<br/>
Re-risen in Katie's eyes, and all things well.<br/>
<br/>
I steal by lawns and grassy plots,<br/>
I slide by hazel covers;<br/>
I move the sweet forget-me-nots<br/>
That grow for happy lovers.<br/>
<br/>
I slip, I slide, I gloom, I glance.<br/>
Among my skimming swallows;<br/>
I make the netted sunbeam dance<br/>
Against my sandy shallows.<br/>
<br/>
I murmur under moon and stars<br/>
In brambly wildernesses;<br/>
I linger by my shingly bars;<br/>
I loiter round my cresses;<br/>
<br/>
And out again I curve and flow<br/>
To join the brimming river,<br/>
For men may come and men may go,<br/>
But I go on for ever.<br/>
<br/>
Yes, men may come and go; and these are gone,<br/>
All gone. My dearest brother, Edmund, sleeps,<br/>
Not by the well-known stream and rustic spire,<br/>
But unfamiliar Arno, and the dome<br/>
Of Brunelleschi; sleeps in peace: and he,<br/>
Poor Philip, of all his lavish waste of words<br/>
Remains the lean P. W. on his tomb:<br/>
I scraped the lichen from it: Katie walks<br/>
By the long wash of Australasian seas<br/>
Far off, and holds her head to other stars,<br/>
And breathes in converse seasons. All are gone.'<br/>
<br/>
So Lawrence Aylmer, seated on a style<br/>
In the long hedge, and rolling in his mind<br/>
Old waifs of rhyme, and bowing o'er the brook<br/>
A tonsured head in middle age forlorn,<br/>
Mused, and was mute. On a sudden a low breath<br/>
Of tender air made tremble in the hedge<br/>
The fragile bindweed-bells and briony rings;<br/>
And he look'd up. There stood a maiden near,<br/>
Waiting to pass. In much amaze he stared<br/>
On eyes a bashful azure, and on hair<br/>
In gloss and hue the chestnut, when the shell<br/>
Divides threefold to show the fruit within:<br/>
Then, wondering, ask'd her 'Are you from the farm?'<br/>
'Yes' answer'd she. 'Pray stay a little: pardon me;<br/>
What do they call you?' 'Katie.' 'That were strange.<br/>
What surname? 'Willows.' 'No!' 'That is my name.'<br/>
'Indeed!' and here he look'd so self-perplext,<br/>
That Katie laugh'd, and laughing blush'd, till he<br/>
Laugh'd also, but as one before he wakes,<br/>
Who feels a glimmering strangeness in his dream.<br/>
Then looking at her; 'Too happy, fresh and fair,<br/>
Too fresh and fair in our sad world's best bloom,<br/>
To be the ghost of one who bore your name<br/>
About these meadows, twenty years ago.'<br/>
'Have you not heard?' said Katie, 'we came back.<br/>
We bought the farm we tenanted before.<br/>
Am I so like her? so they said on board.<br/>
Sir, if you knew her in her English days,<br/>
My mother, as it seems you did, the days<br/>
That most she loves to talk of, come with me.<br/>
My brother James is in the harvest-field:<br/>
But she—you will be welcome—O, come in!'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LETTERS. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
Still on the tower stood the vane,<br/>
A black yew gloom'd the stagnant air,<br/>
I peer'd athwart the chancel pane<br/>
And saw the altar cold and bare.<br/>
A clog of lead was round my feet,<br/>
A band of pain across my brow;<br/>
'Cold altar, Heaven and earth shall meet<br/>
Before you hear my marriage vow.'<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
I turn'd and humm'd a bitter song<br/>
That mock'd the wholesome human heart,<br/>
And then we met in wrath and wrong,<br/>
We met, but only meant to part.<br/>
Full cold my greeting was and dry;<br/>
She faintly smiled, she hardly moved;<br/>
I saw with half-unconscious eye<br/>
She wore the colours I approved.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
She took the little ivory chest,<br/>
With half a sigh she turn'd the key,<br/>
Then raised her head with lips comprest,<br/>
And gave my letters back to me.<br/>
And gave the trinkets and the rings,<br/>
My gifts, when gifts of mine could please;<br/>
As looks a father on the things<br/>
Of his dead son, I look'd on these.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
She told me all her friends had said;<br/>
I raged against the public liar;<br/>
She talk'd as if her love were dead,<br/>
But in my words were seeds of fire.<br/>
'No more of love; your sex is known:<br/>
I never will be twice deceived.<br/>
Henceforth I trust the man alone,<br/>
The woman cannot be believed.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
'Thro' slander, meanest spawn of Hell<br/>
(And women's slander is the worst),<br/>
And you, whom once I loved so well,<br/>
Thro' you, my life will be accurst.'<br/>
I spoke with heart, and heat and force,<br/>
I shook her breast with vague alarms—<br/>
Like torrents from a mountain source<br/>
We rush'd into each other's arms.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
We parted: sweetly gleam'd the stars,<br/>
And sweet the vapour-braided blue,<br/>
Low breezes fann'd the belfry bars,<br/>
As homeward by the church I drew.<br/>
The very graves appear'd to smile,<br/>
So fresh they rose in shadow'd swells;<br/>
'Dark porch,' I said, 'and silent aisle<br/>
There comes a sound of marriage bells.'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ODE ON THE DEATH OF THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
Bury the Great Duke<br/>
With an empire's lamentation,<br/>
Let us bury the Great Duke<br/>
To the noise of the mourning of a mighty nation,<br/>
Mourning when their leaders fall,<br/>
Warriors carry the warrior's pall,<br/>
And sorrow darkens hamlet and hall.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
Where shall we lay the man whom we deplore?<br/>
Here, in streaming London's central roar.<br/>
Let the sound of those he wrought for,<br/>
And the feet of those he fought for,<br/>
Echo round his bones for evermore.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Lead out the pageant: sad and slow,<br/>
As fits an universal woe,<br/>
Let the long long procession go,<br/>
And let the sorrowing crowd about it grow,<br/>
And let the mournful martial music blow;<br/>
The last great Englishman is low.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Mourn, for to us he seems the last.<br/>
Remembering all his greatness in the Past.<br/>
No more in soldier fashion will he greet<br/>
With lifted hand the gazer in the street.<br/>
O friends, our chief state-oracle is mute:<br/>
Mourn for the man of long-enduring blood,<br/>
The statesman-warrior, moderate, resolute,<br/>
Whole in himself, a common good.<br/>
Mourn for the man of amplest influence,<br/>
Yet clearest of ambitious crime,<br/>
Our greatest yet with least pretence,<br/>
Great in council and great in war,<br/>
Foremost captain of his time,<br/>
Rich in saving common-sense,<br/>
And, as the greatest only are,<br/>
In his simplicity sublime.<br/>
O good gray head which all men knew,<br/>
O voice from which their omens all men drew,<br/>
O iron nerve to true occasion true,<br/>
O fall'n at length that tower of strength<br/>
Which stood four-square to all the winds that blew!<br/>
Such was he whom we deplore.<br/>
The long self-sacrifice of life is o'er.<br/>
The great World-victor's victor will be seen no more.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
All is over and done:<br/>
Render thanks to the Giver,<br/>
England, for thy son.<br/>
Let the bell be toll'd.<br/>
Render thanks to the Giver,<br/>
And render him to the mould.<br/>
Under the cross of gold<br/>
That shines over city and river,<br/>
There he shall rest for ever<br/>
Among the wise and the bold.<br/>
Let the bell be toll'd:<br/>
And a reverent people behold<br/>
The towering car, the sable steeds:<br/>
Bright let it be with its blazon'd deeds,<br/>
Dark in its funeral fold.<br/>
Let the bell be toll'd:<br/>
And a deeper knell in the heart be knoll'd;<br/>
And the sound of the sorrowing anthem roll'd<br/>
Thro' the dome of the golden cross;<br/>
And the volleying cannon thunder his loss;<br/>
He knew their voices of old.<br/>
For many a time in many a clime<br/>
His captain's-ear has heard them boom<br/>
Bellowing victory, bellowing doom;<br/>
When he with those deep voices wrought,<br/>
Guarding realms and kings from shame;<br/>
With those deep voices our dead captain taught<br/>
The tyrant, and asserts his claim<br/>
In that dread sound to the great name,<br/>
Which he has won so pure of blame,<br/>
In praise and in dispraise the same,<br/>
A man of well-attemper'd frame,<br/>
O civic muse, to such a name,<br/>
To such a name for ages long,<br/>
To such a name,<br/>
Preserve a broad approach of fame,<br/>
And ever-ringing avenues of song.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
Who is he that cometh, like an honour'd guest,<br/>
With banner and with music, with soldier and with priest,<br/>
With a nation weeping, and breaking on my rest?<br/>
Mighty seaman, this is he<br/>
Was great by land as thou by sea.<br/>
Thine island loves thee well, thou famous man,<br/>
The greatest sailor since our world began.<br/>
Now, to the roll of muffled drums,<br/>
To thee the greatest soldier comes;<br/>
For this is he<br/>
Was great by land as thou by sea;<br/>
His foes were thine; he kept us free;<br/>
O give him welcome, this is he,<br/>
Worthy of our gorgeous rites,<br/>
And worthy to be laid by thee;<br/>
For this is England's greatest son,<br/>
He that gain'd a hundred fights,<br/>
Nor ever lost an English gun;<br/>
This is he that far away<br/>
Against the myriads of Assaye<br/>
Clash'd with his fiery few and won;<br/>
And underneath another sun,<br/>
Warring on a later day,<br/>
Round affrighted Lisbon drew<br/>
The treble works, the vast designs<br/>
Of his labour'd rampart-lines,<br/>
Where he greatly stood at bay,<br/>
Whence he issued forth anew,<br/>
And ever great and greater grew,<br/>
Beating from the wasted vines<br/>
Back to France her banded swarms,<br/>
Back to France with countless blows,<br/>
Till o'er the hills her eagles flew<br/>
Past the Pyrenean pines,<br/>
Follow'd up in valley and glen<br/>
With blare of bugle, clamour of men,<br/>
Roll of cannon and dash of arms,<br/>
And England pouring on her foes.<br/>
Such a war had such a close.<br/>
Again their ravening eagle rose<br/>
In anger, wheel'd on Europe-shadowing wings,<br/>
And barking for the thrones of kings;<br/>
Till one that sought but Duty's iron crown<br/>
On that loud sabbath shook the spoiler down;<br/>
A day of onsets of despair!<br/>
Dash'd on every rocky square<br/>
Their surging charges foam'd themselves away;<br/>
Last, the Prussian trumpet blew;<br/>
Thro' the long-tormented air<br/>
Heaven flash'd a sudden jubilant ray,<br/>
And down we swept and charged and overthrew.<br/>
So great a soldier taught us there,<br/>
What long-enduring hearts could do<br/>
In that world's-earthquake, Waterloo!<br/>
Mighty seaman, tender and true,<br/>
And pure as he from taint of craven guile,<br/>
O saviour of the silver-coasted isle,<br/>
O shaker of the Baltic and the Nile,<br/>
If aught of things that here befall<br/>
Touch a spirit among things divine,<br/>
If love of country move thee there at all,<br/>
Be glad, because his bones are laid by thine!<br/>
And thro' the centuries let a people's voice<br/>
In full acclaim,<br/>
A people's voice,<br/>
The proof and echo of all human fame,<br/>
A people's voice, when they rejoice<br/>
At civic revel and pomp and game,<br/>
Attest their great commander's claim<br/>
With honour, honour, honour, honour to him,<br/>
Eternal honour to his name.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
A people's voice! we are a people yet.<br/>
Tho' all men else their nobler dreams forget<br/>
Confused by brainless mobs and lawless Powers;<br/>
Thank Him who isled us here, and roughly set<br/>
His Saxon in blown seas and storming showers,<br/>
We have a voice, with which to pay the debt<br/>
Of boundless love and reverence and regret<br/>
To those great men who fought, and kept it ours.<br/>
And keep it ours, O God, from brute control;<br/>
O Statesmen, guard us, guard the eye, the soul<br/>
Of Europe, keep our noble England whole,<br/>
And save the one true seed of freedom sown<br/>
Betwixt a people and their ancient throne,<br/>
That sober freedom out of which there springs<br/>
Our loyal passion for our temperate kings;<br/>
For, saving that, ye help to save mankind<br/>
Till public wrong be crumbled into dust,<br/>
And drill the raw world for the march of mind,<br/>
Till crowds at length be sane and crowns be just.<br/>
But wink no more in slothful overtrust.<br/>
Remember him who led your hosts;<br/>
He bad you guard the sacred coasts.<br/>
Your cannons moulder on the seaward wall;<br/>
His voice is silent in your council-hall<br/>
For ever; and whatever tempests lour<br/>
For ever silent; even if they broke<br/>
In thunder, silent; yet remember all<br/>
He spoke among you, and the Man who spoke;<br/>
Who never sold the truth to serve the hour,<br/>
Nor palter'd with Eternal God for power;<br/>
Who let the turbid streams of rumour flow<br/>
Thro' either babbling world of high and low;<br/>
Whose life was work, whose language rife<br/>
With rugged maxims hewn from life;<br/>
Who never spoke against a foe;<br/>
Whose eighty winters freeze with one rebuke<br/>
All great self-seekers trampling on the right:<br/>
Truth-teller was our England's Alfred named;<br/>
Truth-lover was our English Duke;<br/>
Whatever record leap to light<br/>
He never shall be shamed.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
Lo, the leader in these glorious wars<br/>
Now to glorious burial slowly borne,<br/>
Followed by the brave of other lands,<br/>
He, on whom from both her open hands<br/>
Lavish Honour showered all her stars,<br/>
And affluent Fortune emptied all her horn.<br/>
Yea, let all good things await<br/>
Him who cares not to be great,<br/>
But as he saves or serves the state.<br/>
Not once or twice in our rough island-story,<br/>
The path of duty was the way to glory:<br/>
He that walks it, only thirsting<br/>
For the right, and learns to deaden<br/>
Love of self, before his journey closes,<br/>
He shall find the stubborn thistle bursting<br/>
Into glossy purples, which outredden<br/>
All voluptuous garden-roses.<br/>
Not once or twice in our fair island-story,<br/>
The path of duty was the way to glory:<br/>
He, that ever following her commands,<br/>
On with toil of heart and knees and hands,<br/>
Thro' the long gorge to the far light has won<br/>
His path upward, and prevail'd,<br/>
Shall find the toppling crags of Duty scaled<br/>
Are close upon the shining table-lands<br/>
To which our God Himself is moon and sun.<br/>
Such was he: his work is done.<br/>
But while the races of mankind endure,<br/>
Let his great example stand<br/>
Colossal, seen of every land,<br/>
And keep the soldier firm, the statesman pure;<br/>
Till in all lands and thro' all human story<br/>
The path of duty be the way to glory:<br/>
And let the land whose hearths he saved from shame<br/>
For many and many an age proclaim<br/>
At civic revel and pomp and game,<br/>
And when the long-illumined cities flame,<br/>
Their ever-loyal iron leader's fame,<br/>
With honour, honour, honour, honour to him.<br/>
Eternal honour to his name.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
Peace, his triumph will be sung<br/>
By some yet unmoulded tongue<br/>
Far on in summers that we shall not see:<br/>
Peace, it is a day of pain<br/>
For one about whose patriarchal knee<br/>
Late the little children clung:<br/>
O peace, it is a day of pain<br/>
For one, upon whose hand and heart and brain<br/>
Once the weight and fate of Europe hung.<br/>
Ours the pain, be his the gain!<br/>
More than is of man's degree<br/>
Must be with us, watching here<br/>
At this, our great solemnity.<br/>
Whom we see not we revere,<br/>
We revere, and we refrain<br/>
From talk of battles loud and vain,<br/>
And brawling memories all too free<br/>
For such a wise humility<br/>
As befits a solemn fane:<br/>
We revere, and while we hear<br/>
The tides of Music's golden sea<br/>
Setting toward eternity,<br/>
Uplifted high in heart and hope are we,<br/>
Until we doubt not that for one so true<br/>
There must be other nobler work to do<br/>
Than when he fought at Waterloo,<br/>
And Victor he must ever be.<br/>
For tho' the Giant Ages heave the hill<br/>
And break the shore, and evermore<br/>
Make and break, and work their will;<br/>
Tho' world on world in myriad myriads roll<br/>
Round us, each with different powers,<br/>
And other forms of life than ours,<br/>
What know we greater than the soul?<br/>
On God and Godlike men we build our trust.<br/>
Hush, the Dead March wails in the people's ears:<br/>
The dark crowd moves, and there are sobs and tears:<br/>
The black earth yawns: the mortal disappears;<br/>
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust;<br/>
He is gone who seem'd so great.—<br/>
Gone; but nothing can bereave him<br/>
Of the force he made his own<br/>
Being here, and we believe him<br/>
Something far advanced in State,<br/>
And that he wears a truer crown<br/>
Than any wreath that man can weave him.<br/>
But speak no more of his renown,<br/>
Lay your earthly fancies down,<br/>
And in the vast cathedral leave him.<br/>
God accept him, Christ receive him.<br/>
<br/>
1862.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE DAISY, WRITTEN AT EDINBURGH. </h2>
<p>O LOVE, what hours were thine and mine,<br/>
In lands of palm and southern pine;<br/>
In lands of palm, of orange-blossom,<br/>
Of olive, aloe, and maize and vine.<br/>
<br/>
What Roman strength Turbia show'd<br/>
In ruin, by the mountain road;<br/>
How like a gem, beneath, the city<br/>
Of little Monaco, basking, glow'd.<br/>
<br/>
How richly down the rocky dell<br/>
The torrent vineyard streaming fell<br/>
To meet the sun and sunny waters,<br/>
That only heaved with a summer swell.<br/>
<br/>
What slender campanili grew<br/>
By bays, the peacock's neck in hue;<br/>
Where, here and there, on sandy beaches<br/>
A milky-bell'd amaryllis blew.<br/>
<br/>
How young Columbus seem'd to rove,<br/>
Yet present in his natal grove,<br/>
Now watching high on mountain cornice,<br/>
And steering, now, from a purple cove,<br/>
<br/>
Now pacing mute by ocean's rim;<br/>
Till, in a narrow street and dim,<br/>
I stay'd the wheels at Cogoletto,<br/>
And drank, and loyally drank to him.<br/>
<br/>
Nor knew we well what pleased us most,<br/>
Not the clipt palm of which they boast;<br/>
But distant colour, happy hamlet,<br/>
A moulder'd citadel on the coast,<br/>
<br/>
Or tower, or high hill-convent, seen<br/>
A light amid its olives green;<br/>
Or olive-hoary cape in ocean;<br/>
Or rosy blossom in hot ravine,<br/>
<br/>
Where oleanders flush'd the bed<br/>
Of silent torrents, gravel-spread;<br/>
And, crossing, oft we saw the glisten<br/>
Of ice, far up on a mountain head.<br/>
<br/>
We loved that hall, tho' white and cold,<br/>
Those niched shapes of noble mould,<br/>
A princely people's awful princes,<br/>
The grave, severe Genovese of old.<br/>
<br/>
At Florence too what golden hours,<br/>
In those long galleries, were ours;<br/>
What drives about the fresh Cascin?,<br/>
Or walks in Boboli's ducal bowers.<br/>
<br/>
In bright vignettes, and each complete,<br/>
Of tower or duomo, sunny-sweet,<br/>
Or palace, how the city glitter'd,<br/>
Thro' cypress avenues, at our feet.<br/>
<br/>
But when we crost the Lombard plain<br/>
Remember what a plague of rain;<br/>
Of rain at Reggio, rain at Parma;<br/>
At Lodi, rain, Piacenza, rain.<br/>
<br/>
And stern and sad (so rare the smiles<br/>
Of sunlight) look'd the Lombard piles;<br/>
Porch-pillars on the lion resting,<br/>
And sombre, old, colonnaded aisles.<br/>
<br/>
O Milan, O the chanting quires,<br/>
The giant windows' blazon'd fires,<br/>
The height, the space, the gloom, the glory!<br/>
A mount of marble, a hundred spires!<br/>
<br/>
I climb'd the roofs at break of day;<br/>
Sun-smitten Alps before me lay.<br/>
I stood among the silent statues,<br/>
And statued pinnacles, mute as they.<br/>
<br/>
How faintly-flush'd, how phantom-fair,<br/>
Was Monte Rosa, hanging there<br/>
A thousand shadowy-pencill'd valleys<br/>
And snowy dells in a golden air.<br/>
<br/>
Remember how we came at last<br/>
To Como; shower and storm and blast<br/>
Had blown the lake beyond his limit,<br/>
And all was flooded; and how we past<br/>
<br/>
From Como, when the light was gray,<br/>
And in my head, for half the day,<br/>
The rich Virgilian rustic measure<br/>
Of Lari Maxume, all the way.<br/>
<br/>
Like ballad-burthen music, kept,<br/>
As on The Lariano crept<br/>
To that fair port below the castle<br/>
Of Queen Theodolind, where we slept;<br/>
<br/>
Or hardly slept, but watch'd awake<br/>
A cypress in the moonlight shake.<br/>
The moonlight touching o'er a terrace<br/>
One tall Agav? above the lake.<br/>
<br/>
What more? we took our last adieu,<br/>
And up the snowy Splugen drew,<br/>
But ere we reach'd the highest summit<br/>
I pluck'd a daisy, I gave it you.<br/>
<br/>
It told of England then to me,<br/>
And now it tells of Italy.<br/>
O love, we two shall go no longer<br/>
To lands of summer across the sea;<br/>
<br/>
So dear a life your arms enfold<br/>
Whose crying is a cry for gold:<br/>
Yet here to-night in this dark city,<br/>
When ill and weary, alone and cold,<br/>
<br/>
I found, tho' crush'd to hard and dry,<br/>
This nurseling of another sky<br/>
Still in the little book you lent me.<br/>
And where you tenderly laid it by:<br/>
<br/>
And I forgot the clouded Forth,<br/>
The gloom that saddens Heaven and Earth,<br/>
The bitter east, the misty summer<br/>
And gray metropolis of the North.<br/>
<br/>
Perchance, to lull the throbs of pain,<br/>
Perchance, to charm a vacant brain,<br/>
Perchance, to dream you still beside me,<br/>
My fancy fled to the South again.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TO THE REV. F. D. MAURICE. </h2>
<p>Come, when no graver cares employ,<br/>
God-father, come and see your boy:<br/>
Your presence will be sun in winter,<br/>
Making the little one leap for joy.<br/>
<br/>
For, being of that honest few,<br/>
Who give the Fiend himself his due,<br/>
Should eighty-thousand college-councils<br/>
Thunder 'Anathema,' friend, at you;<br/>
<br/>
Should all our churchmen foam in spite<br/>
At you, so careful of the right,<br/>
Yet one lay-hearth would give you welcome<br/>
(Take it and come) to the Isle of Wight;<br/>
<br/>
Where, far from noise and smoke of town,<br/>
I watch the twilight falling brown<br/>
All round a careless-order'd garden<br/>
Close to the ridge of a noble down.<br/>
<br/>
You'll have no scandal while you dine,<br/>
But honest talk and wholesome wine.<br/>
And only hear the magpie gossip<br/>
Garrulous under a roof of pine:<br/>
<br/>
For groves of pine on either hand,<br/>
To break the blast of winter, stand;<br/>
And further on, the hoary Channel<br/>
Tumbles a breaker on chalk and sand;<br/>
<br/>
Where, if below the milky steep<br/>
Some ship of battle slowly creep,<br/>
And on thro' zones of light and shadow<br/>
Glimmer away to the lonely deep,<br/>
<br/>
We might discuss the Northern sin<br/>
Which made a selfish war begin;<br/>
Dispute the claims, arrange the chances;<br/>
Emperor, Ottoman, which shall win:<br/>
<br/>
Or whether war's avenging rod<br/>
Shall lash all Europe into blood;<br/>
Till you should turn to dearer matters,<br/>
Dear to the man that is dear to God;<br/>
<br/>
How best to help the slender store,<br/>
How mend the dwellings, of the poor;<br/>
How gain in life, as life advances,<br/>
Valour and charity more and more.<br/>
<br/>
Come, Maurice, come: the lawn as yet<br/>
Is hoar with rime, or spongy-wet;<br/>
But when the wreath of March has blossom'd,<br/>
Crocus, anemone, violet,<br/>
<br/>
Or later, pay one visit here,<br/>
For those are few we hold as dear;<br/>
Nor pay but one, but come for many,<br/>
Many and many a happy year.<br/>
<br/>
January, 1854.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> WILL. </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
O well for him whose will is strong!<br/>
He suffers, but he will not suffer long;<br/>
He suffers, but he cannot suffer wrong:<br/>
For him nor moves the loud world's random mock,<br/>
Nor all Calamity's hugest waves confound,<br/>
Who seems a promontory of rock,<br/>
That, compass'd round with turbulent sound,<br/>
In middle ocean meets the surging shock,<br/>
Tempest-buffeted, citadel-crown'd.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
But ill for him who, bettering not with time,<br/>
Corrupts the strength of heaven-descended Will,<br/>
And ever weaker grows thro' acted crime,<br/>
Or seeming-genial venial fault,<br/>
Recurring and suggesting still!<br/>
He seems as one whose footsteps halt,<br/>
Toiling in immeasurable sand,<br/>
And o'er a weary sultry land,<br/>
Far beneath a blazing vault,<br/>
Sown in a wrinkle of the monstrous hill,<br/>
The city sparkles like a grain of salt.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE </h2>
<p>1.<br/>
Half a league, half a league,<br/>
Half a league onward,<br/>
All in the valley of Death<br/>
Rode the six hundred.<br/>
"Forward, the Light Brigade!<br/>
"Charge for the guns!" he said:<br/>
Into the valley of Death<br/>
Rode the six hundred.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
"Forward, the Light Brigade!"<br/>
Was there a man dismay'd?<br/>
Not tho' the soldier knew<br/>
Some one had blunder' d:<br/>
Their's not to make reply,<br/>
Their's not to reason why,<br/>
Their's but to do and die,<br/>
Into the valley of Death<br/>
Rode the six hundred.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
Cannon to right of them,<br/>
Cannon to left of them,<br/>
Cannon in front of them<br/>
Volley'd and thunder'd;<br/>
Storm'd at with shot and shell,<br/>
Boldly they rode and well,<br/>
Into the jaws of Death,<br/>
Into the mouth of Hell<br/>
Rode the six hundred.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
Flash'd all their sabres bare,<br/>
Flash'd as they turn'd in air,<br/>
Sabring the gunners there,<br/>
Charging an army, while<br/>
All the world wonder'd:<br/>
Plunged in the battery-smoke<br/>
Right thro' the line they broke;<br/>
Cossack and Russian<br/>
Reel'd from the sabre-stroke<br/>
Shatter'd and sunder'd.<br/>
Then they rode back, but not<br/>
Not the six hundred.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
Cannon to right of them,<br/>
Cannon to left of them,<br/>
Cannon behind them<br/>
Volley'd and thunder'd;<br/>
Storm'd at with shot and shell,<br/>
While horse and hero fell,<br/>
They that had fought so well<br/>
Came thro' the jaws of Death<br/>
Back from the mouth of Hell,<br/>
All that was left of them,<br/>
Left of six hundred.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
When can their glory fade?<br/>
O the wild charge they made!<br/>
All the world wonder'd.<br/>
Honour the charge they made!<br/>
Honour the Light Brigade,<br/>
Noble six hundred!<br/></p>
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