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		<title><![CDATA[Sonett-Forum - Bridges, Robert  ]]></title>
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			<title><![CDATA[The Growth of Love (69)]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=17289</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 2007 18:50:25 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
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			<description><![CDATA[<span style="font-weight: bold;" class="mycode_b">The Growth of Love </span><br />
<br />
<br />
1<br />
<br />
THEY that in play can do the thing they would,<br />
Having an instinct throned in reason's place,<br />
--And every perfect action hath the grace<br />
Of indolence or thoughtless hardihood--<br />
These are the best: yet be there workmen good<br />
Who lose in earnestness control of face,<br />
Or reckon means, and rapt in effort base<br />
Reach to their end by steps well understood. <br />
Me whom thou sawest of late strive with the pains<br />
Of one who spends his strength to rule his nerve,<br />
--Even as a painter breathlessly who stains<br />
His scarcely moving hand lest it should swerve--<br />
Behold me, now that I have cast my chains,<br />
Master of the art which for thy sake I serve.<br />
<br />
<br />
2<br />
<br />
FOR thou art mine: and now I am ashamed<br />
To have uséd means to win so pure acquist,<br />
And of my trembling fear that might have misst<br />
Thro' very care the gold at which I aim'd;<br />
And am as happy but to hear thee named,<br />
As are those gentle souls by angels kisst<br />
In pictures seen leaving their marble cist<br />
To go before the throne of grace unblamed. <br />
Nor surer am I water hath the skill<br />
To quench my thirst, or that my strength is freed<br />
In delicate ordination as I will,<br />
Than that to be myself is all I need<br />
For thee to be most mine: so I stand still,<br />
And save to taste my joy no more take heed. <br />
<br />
<br />
3<br />
<br />
THE whole world now is but the minister<br />
Of thee to me: I see no other scheme<br />
But universal love, from timeless dream<br />
Waking to thee his joy's interpreter.<br />
I walk around and in the fields confer<br />
Of love at large with tree and flower and stream,<br />
And list the lark descant upon my theme,<br />
Heaven's musical accepted worshipper. <br />
Thy smile outfaceth ill: and that old feud<br />
'Twixt things and me is quash'd in our new truce;<br />
And nature now dearly with thee endued<br />
No more in shame ponders her old excuse,<br />
But quite forgets her frowns and antics rude,<br />
So kindly hath she grown to her new use. <br />
<br />
<br />
4<br />
<br />
THE very names of things belov'd are dear,<br />
And sounds will gather beauty from their sense,<br />
As many a face thro' love's long residence<br />
Groweth to fair instead of plain and sere:<br />
But when I say thy name it hath no peer,<br />
And I suppose fortune determined thence<br />
Her dower, that such beauty's excellence<br />
Should have a perfect title for the ear. <br />
Thus may I think the adopting Muses chose<br />
Their sons by name, knowing none would be heard<br />
Or writ so oft in all the world as those,--<br />
Dan Chaucer, mighty Shakespeare, then for third<br />
The classic Milton, and to us arose<br />
Shelley with liquid music in the world. <br />
<br />
<br />
5<br />
<br />
THE poets were good teachers, for they taught<br />
Earth had this joy; but that 'twould ever be<br />
That fortune should be perfected in me,<br />
My heart of hope dared not engage the thought.<br />
So I stood low, and now but to be caught<br />
By any self-styled lords of the age with thee<br />
Vexes my modesty, lest they should see<br />
I hold them owls and peacocks, things of nought. <br />
And when we sit alone, and as I please<br />
I taste thy love's full smile, and can enstate<br />
The pleasure of my kingly heart at ease,<br />
My thought swims like a ship, that with the weight<br />
Of her rich burden sleeps on the infinite seas<br />
Becalm'd, and cannot stir her golden freight. <br />
<br />
<br />
6<br />
<br />
WHILE yet we wait for spring, and from the dry<br />
And blackening east that so embitters March,<br />
Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch,<br />
And driven dust and withering snowflake fly;<br />
Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky<br />
The sun is warm and beckons to the larch,<br />
And where the covert hazels interarch<br />
Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie. <br />
Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid<br />
A million buds but stay their blossoming;<br />
And trustful birds have built their nests amid<br />
The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing<br />
Till one soft shower from the south shall bid,<br />
And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring. <br />
<br />
<br />
7<br />
<br />
IN thee my spring of life hath bid the while<br />
A rose unfold beyond the summer's best,<br />
The mystery of joy made manifest<br />
In love's self-answering and awakening smile;<br />
Whereby the lips in wonder reconcile<br />
Passion with peace, and show desire at rest,--<br />
A grace of silence by the Greek unguesst,<br />
That bloom'd to immortalize the Tuscan style <br />
When first the angel-song that faith hath ken'd<br />
Fancy pourtray'd, above recorded oath<br />
Of Israel's God, or light of poem pen'd;<br />
The very countenance of plighted troth<br />
'Twixt heaven and earth, where in one moment blend<br />
The hope of one and happiness of both. <br />
<br />
<br />
8<br />
<br />
FOR beauty being the best of all we know<br />
Sums up the unsearchable and secret aims<br />
Of nature, and on joys whose earthly names<br />
Were never told can form and sense bestow;<br />
And man hath sped his instinct to outgo<br />
The step of science; and against her shames<br />
Imagination stakes out heavenly claims,<br />
Building a tower above the head of woe. <br />
Nor is there fairer work for beauty found<br />
Than that she win in nature her release<br />
From all the woes that in the world abound:<br />
Nay with his sorrow may his love increase,<br />
If from man's greater need beauty redound,<br />
And claim his tears for homage of his peace. <br />
<br />
<br />
9<br />
<br />
THUS to thy beauty doth my fond heart look,<br />
That late dismay'd her faithless faith forbore;<br />
And wins again her love lost in the lore<br />
Of schools and script of many a learned book:<br />
For thou what ruthless death untimely took<br />
Shalt now in better brotherhood restore,<br />
And save my batter'd ship that far from shore<br />
High on the dismal deep in tempest shook. <br />
So in despite of sorrow lately learn'd<br />
I still hold true to truth since thou art true,<br />
Nor wail the woe which thou to joy hast turn'd<br />
Nor come the heavenly sun and bathing blue<br />
To my life's need more splendid and unearn'd<br />
Than hath thy gift outmatch'd desire and due. <br />
<br />
<br />
10<br />
<br />
WINTER was not unkind because uncouth;<br />
His prison'd time made me a closer guest,<br />
And gave thy graciousness a warmer zest,<br />
Biting all else with keen and angry tooth<br />
And bravelier the triumphant blood of youth<br />
Mantling thy cheek its happy home possest,<br />
And sterner sport by day put strength to test,<br />
And custom's feast at night gave tongue to truth <br />
Or say hath flaunting summer a device<br />
To match our midnight revelry, that rang<br />
With steel and flame along the snow-girt ice?<br />
Or when we hark't to nightingales that sang<br />
On dewy eves in spring, did they entice<br />
To gentler love than winter's icy fang? <br />
<br />
<br />
11<br />
<br />
THERE 'S many a would-be poet at this hour,<br />
Rhymes of a love that he hath never woo'd,<br />
And o'er his lamplit desk in solitude<br />
Deems that he sitteth in the Muses' bower:<br />
And some the flames of earthly love devour,<br />
Who have taken no kiss of Nature, nor renew'd<br />
In the world's wilderness with heavenly food<br />
The sickly body of their perishing power. <br />
So none of all our company, I boast,<br />
But now would mock my penning, could they see<br />
How down the right it maps a jagged coast;<br />
Seeing they hold the manlier praise to be<br />
Strong hand and will, and the heart best when most<br />
'Tis sober, simple, true, and fancy-free. <br />
<br />
<br />
12<br />
<br />
How could I quarrel or blame you, most dear,<br />
Who all thy virtues gavest and kept back none;<br />
Kindness and gentleness, truth without peer,<br />
And beauty that my fancy fed upon?<br />
Now not my life's contrition for my fault<br />
Can blot that day, nor work me recompence,<br />
Tho' I might worthily thy worth exalt,<br />
Making thee long amends for short offence. <br />
For surely nowhere, love, if not in thee<br />
Are grace and truth and beauty to be found;<br />
And all my praise of these can only be<br />
A praise of thee, howe'er by thee disown'd:<br />
While still thou must be mine tho' far removed,<br />
And I for one offence no more beloved. <br />
<br />
<br />
13<br />
<br />
Now since to me altho' by thee refused<br />
The world is left, I shall find pleasure still;<br />
The art that most I have loved but little used<br />
Will yield a world of fancies at my will:<br />
And tho' where'er thou goest it is from me,<br />
I where I go thee in my heart must bear;<br />
And what thou wert that wilt thou ever be,<br />
My choice, my best, my loved, and only fair. <br />
Farewell, yet think not such farewell a change<br />
From tenderness, tho' once to meet or part<br />
But on short absence so could sense derange<br />
That tears have graced the greeting of my heart;<br />
They were proud drops and had my leave to fall,<br />
Not on thy pity for my pain to call. <br />
<br />
<br />
14<br />
<br />
WHEN sometimes in an ancient house where state<br />
From noble ancestry is handed on,<br />
We see but desolation thro' the gate,<br />
And richest heirlooms all to ruin gone;<br />
Because maybe some fancied shame or fear,<br />
Bred of disease or melancholy fate,<br />
Hath driven the owner from his rightful sphere<br />
To wander nameless save to pity or hate: <br />
What is the wreck of all he hath in fief<br />
When he that hath is wrecking? nought is fine<br />
Unto the sick, nor doth it burden grief<br />
That the house perish when the soul doth pine.<br />
Thus I my state despise, slain by a sting<br />
So slight 'twould not have hurt a meaner thing. <br />
<br />
<br />
15<br />
<br />
WHO builds a ship must first lay down the keel<br />
Of health, whereto the ribs of mirth are wed:<br />
And knit, with beams and knees of strength, a bed<br />
For decks of purity, her floor and ceil.<br />
Upon her masts, Adventure, Pride, and Zeal,<br />
To fortune's wind the sails of purpose spread:<br />
And at the prow make figured maidenhead<br />
O'erride the seas and answer to the wheel. <br />
And let him deep in memory's hold have stor'd<br />
Water of Helicon: and let him fit<br />
The needle that doth true with heaven accord:<br />
Then bid her crew, love, diligence and wit<br />
With justice, courage, temperance come aboard,<br />
And at her helm the master reason sit. <br />
<br />
<br />
16<br />
<br />
THIS world is unto God a work of art,<br />
Of which the unaccomplish'd heavenly plan<br />
Is hid in life within the creature's heart,<br />
And for perfection looketh unto man.<br />
Ah me! those thousand ages: with what slow<br />
Pains and persistence were his idols made,<br />
Destroy'd and made, ere ever he could know<br />
The mighty mother must be so obey'd. <br />
For lack of knowledge and thro' little skill<br />
His childish mimicry outwent his aim;<br />
His effort shaped the genius of his will;<br />
Till thro' distinction and revolt he came,<br />
True to his simple terms of good and ill,<br />
Seeking the face of Beauty without blame. <br />
<br />
<br />
17<br />
<br />
SAY who be these light-bearded, sunburnt faces<br />
In negligent and travel-stain'd array,<br />
That in the city of Dante come to-day,<br />
Haughtily visiting her holy places?<br />
O these be noble men that hide their graces,<br />
True England's blood, her ancient glory's stay,<br />
By tales of fame diverted on their way<br />
Home from the rule of oriental races. <br />
Life-trifling lions these, of gentle eyes<br />
And motion delicate, but swift to fire<br />
For honour, passionate where duty lies,<br />
Most loved and loving: and they quickly tire<br />
Of Florence, that she one day more denies<br />
The embrace of wife and son, of sister or sire. <br />
<br />
<br />
18<br />
<br />
WHERE San Miniato's convent from the sun<br />
At forenoon overlooks the city of flowers<br />
I sat, and gazing on her domes and towers<br />
Call'd up her famous children one by one:<br />
And three who all the rest had far outdone,<br />
Mild Giotto first, who stole the morning hours,<br />
I saw, and god-like Buonarroti's powers,<br />
And Dante, gravest poet, her much-wrong'd son. <br />
Is all this glory, I said, another's praise?<br />
Are these heroic triumphs things of old,<br />
And do I dead upon the living gaze?<br />
Or rather doth the mind, that can behold<br />
The wondrous beauty of the works and days,<br />
Create the image that her thoughts enfold? <br />
<br />
<br />
19<br />
<br />
REJOICE, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,<br />
Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright;<br />
And that your names, remember'd day and night,<br />
Live on the lips of those that love you well.<br />
'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of hell,<br />
Each with the special grace of your delight:<br />
Ye are the world's creators, and thro' might<br />
Of everlasting love ye did excel. <br />
Now ye are starry names, above the storm<br />
And war of Time and nature's endless wrong<br />
Ye flit, in pictured truth and peaceful form,<br />
Wing'd with bright music and melodious song,--<br />
The flaming flowers of heaven, making May-dance<br />
In dear Imagination's rich pleasance. <br />
<br />
<br />
20<br />
<br />
The world still goeth about to shew and hide,<br />
Befool'd of all opinion, fond of fame:<br />
But he that can do well taketh no pride,<br />
And see'th his error, undisturb'd by shame:<br />
So poor's the best that longest life can do,<br />
The most so little, diligently done;<br />
So mighty is the beauty that doth woo,<br />
So vast the joy that love from love hath won. <br />
God's love to win is easy, for He loveth<br />
Desire's fair attitude, nor strictly weighs<br />
The broken thing, but all alike approveth<br />
Which love hath aim'd at Him: that is heaven's praise:<br />
And if we look for any praise on earth,<br />
'Tis in man's love: all else is nothing worth. <br />
<br />
<br />
21<br />
<br />
O FLESH and blood, comrade to tragic pain<br />
And clownish merriment whose sense could wake<br />
Sermons in stones, and count death but an ache,<br />
All things as vanity, yet nothing vain:<br />
The world, set in thy heart, thy passionate strain<br />
Reveal'd anew; but thou for man didst make<br />
Nature twice natural, only to shake<br />
Her kingdom with the creatures of thy brain. <br />
Lo, Shakespeare, since thy time nature is loth<br />
To yield to art her fair supremacy;<br />
In conquering one thou hast so enrichèd both.<br />
What shall I say? for God--whose wise decree<br />
Confirmeth all He did by all He doth--<br />
Doubled His whole creation making thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
22<br />
<br />
I WOULD be a bird, and straight on wings I arise,<br />
And carry purpose up to the ends of the air<br />
In calm and storm my sails I feather, and where<br />
By freezing cliffs the unransom'd wreckage lies:<br />
Or, strutting on hot meridian banks, surprise<br />
The silence: over plains in the moonlight bare<br />
I chase my shadow, and perch where no bird dare<br />
In treetops torn by fiercest winds of the skies. <br />
Poor simple birds, foolish birds! then I cry,<br />
Ye pretty pictures of delight, unstir'd<br />
By the only joy of knowing that ye fly;<br />
Ye are not what ye are, but rather, sum'd in a word,<br />
The alphabet of a god's idea, and I<br />
Who master it, I am the only bird. <br />
<br />
<br />
23<br />
<br />
O WEARY pilgrims, chanting of your woe,<br />
That turn your eyes to all the peaks that shine,<br />
Hailing in each the citadel divine<br />
The which ye thought to have enter'd long ago;<br />
Until at length your feeble steps and slow<br />
Falter upon the threshold of the shrine,<br />
And your hearts overhurden'd doubt in fine<br />
Whether it be Jerusalem or no: <br />
Dishearten'd pilgrims, I am one of you;<br />
For, having worshipp'd many a barren face,<br />
I scarce now greet the goal I journey'd to:<br />
I stand a pagan in the holy place;<br />
Beneath the lamp of truth I am found untrue,<br />
And question with the God that I embrace. <br />
<br />
<br />
24<br />
<br />
SPRING hath her own bright days of calm and peace;<br />
Her melting air, at every breath we draw,<br />
Floods heart with love to praise God's gracious law:<br />
But suddenly--so short is pleasure's lease--<br />
The cold returns, the buds from growing cease,<br />
And nature's conquer'd face is full of awe;<br />
As now the trait'rous north with icy flaw<br />
Freezes the dew upon the sick lamb's fleece, <br />
And 'neath the mock sun searching everywhere<br />
Rattles the crispèd leaves with shivering din:<br />
So that the birds are silent with despair<br />
Within the thickets; nor their armour thin<br />
Will gaudy flies adventure in the air,<br />
Nor any lizard sun his spotted skin. <br />
<br />
<br />
25<br />
<br />
NOTHING is joy without thee: I can find<br />
No rapture in the first relays of spring,<br />
In songs of birds, in young buds opening,<br />
Nothing inspiriting and nothing kind;<br />
For lack of thee, who once wert throned behind<br />
All beauty, like a strength where graces cling,--<br />
The jewel and heart of light, which everything<br />
Wrestled in rivalry to hold enshrined. <br />
Ah! since thou'rt fled, and I in each fair sight<br />
The sweet occasion of my joy deplore,<br />
Where shall I seek thee best, or whom invite<br />
Within thy sacred temples and adore?<br />
Who shall fill thought and truth with old delight,<br />
And lead my soul in life as heretofore? <br />
<br />
<br />
26<br />
<br />
THE work is done, and from the fingers fall<br />
The bloodwarm tools that brought the labour thro':<br />
The tasking eye that overrunneth all<br />
Rests, and affirms there is no more to do.<br />
Now the third joy of making, the sweet flower<br />
Of blessed work, bloometh in godlike spirit;<br />
Which whoso plucketh holdeth for an hour<br />
The shrivelling vanity of mortal merit. <br />
And thou, my perfect work, thou'rt of to-day;<br />
To-morrow a poor and alien thing wilt be,<br />
True only should the swift life stand at stay:<br />
Therefore farewell, nor look to bide with me.<br />
Go find thy friends, if there be one to love thee:<br />
Casting thee forth, my child, I rise above thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
27<br />
<br />
THE fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan,<br />
Or else what grisly beast of scaly chine<br />
That champ'd the ocean-wrack and swash'd the brine,<br />
Before the new and milder days of man,<br />
Had never rib nor bray nor swindging fan<br />
Like his iron swimmer of the Clyde or Tyne,<br />
Late-born of golden seed to breed a line<br />
Of offspring swifter and more huge of plan. <br />
Straight is her going, for upon the sun<br />
When once she hath look'd, her path and place are plain;<br />
With tireless speed she smiteth one by one<br />
The shuddering seas and foams along the main;<br />
And her eased breath, when her wild race is run,<br />
Roars thro' her nostrils like a hurricane. <br />
<br />
<br />
28<br />
<br />
A THOUSAND times hath in my heart's behoof<br />
My tongue been set his passion to impart;<br />
A thousand times hath my too coward heart<br />
My mouth reclosed and fix'd it to the roof;<br />
Then with such cunning hath it held aloof,<br />
A thousand times kept silence with such art<br />
That words could do no more: yet on thy part<br />
Hath silence given a thousand times reproof. <br />
I should be bolder, seeing I commend<br />
Love, that my dilatory purpose primes,<br />
But fear lest with my fears my hope should end:<br />
Nay, I would truth deny and burn my rhymes,<br />
Renew my sorrows rather than offend,<br />
A thousand times, and yet a thousand times. <br />
<br />
<br />
29<br />
<br />
I TRAVEL to thee with the sun's first rays,<br />
That lift the dark west and unwrap the night;<br />
I dwell beside thee when he walks the height,<br />
And fondly toward thee at his setting gaze.<br />
I wait upon thy coming, but always--<br />
Dancing to meet my thoughts if they invite--<br />
Thou hast outrun their longing with delight,<br />
And in my solitude dost mock my praise. <br />
Now doth my drop of time transcend the whole:<br />
I see no fame in Khufu's pyramid,<br />
No history where loveless Nile doth roll.<br />
--This is eternal life, which doth forbid<br />
Mortal detraction to the exalted soul,<br />
And from her inward eye all fate hath hid. <br />
<br />
<br />
30<br />
<br />
My lady pleases me and I please her;<br />
This know we both, and I besides know well<br />
Wherefore I love her, and I love to tell<br />
My love, as all my loving songs aver.<br />
But what on her part could the passion stir,<br />
Tho' 'tis more difficult for love to spell,<br />
Yet can I dare divine how this befel,<br />
Nor will her lips deny it if I err. <br />
She loves me first because I love her, then<br />
Loves me for knowing why she should be loved,<br />
And that I love to praise her, loves again.<br />
So from her beauty both our loves are moved,<br />
And by her beauty are sustain'd; nor when<br />
The earth falls from the sun is this disproved. <br />
<br />
<br />
31<br />
<br />
IN all things beautiful, I cannot see<br />
Her sit or stand, but love is stir'd anew:<br />
'Tis joy to watch the folds fall as they do,<br />
And all that comes is past expectancy.<br />
If she be silent, silence let it be;<br />
He who would bid her speak might sit and sue<br />
The deep-brow'd Phidian Jove to be untrue<br />
To his two thousand years' solemnity. <br />
Ah, but her launchèd passion, when she sings,<br />
Wins on the hearing like a shapen prow<br />
Borne by the mastery of its urgent wings:<br />
Or if she deign her wisdom, she doth show<br />
She hath the intelligence of heavenly things,<br />
Unsullied by man's mortal overthrow. <br />
<br />
<br />
32<br />
<br />
THUS to be humbled: 'tis that ranging pride<br />
No refuge hath; that in his castle strong<br />
Brave reason sits beleaguer'd, who so long<br />
Kept field, but now must starve where he doth hide;<br />
That industry, who once the foe defied,<br />
Lies slaughter'd in the trenches; that the throng<br />
Of idle fancies pipe their foolish song,<br />
Where late the puissant captains fought and died. <br />
Thus to be humbled: 'tis to be undone;<br />
A forest fell'd; a city razed to ground;<br />
A cloak unsewn, unwoven and unspun<br />
Till not a thread remains that can be wound.<br />
And yet, O lover, thee, the ruin'd one,<br />
Love who hath humbled thus hath also crown'd. <br />
<br />
<br />
33<br />
<br />
I CARE not if I live, tho' life and breath<br />
Have never been to me so dear and sweet.<br />
I care not if I die, for I could meet--<br />
Being so happy--happily my death.<br />
I care not if I love; to-day she saith<br />
She loveth, and love's history is complete.<br />
Nor care I if she love me; at her feet<br />
My spirit bows entranced and worshippeth. <br />
I have no care for what was most my care,<br />
But all around me see fresh beauty born,<br />
And common sights grown lovelier than they were:<br />
I dream of love, and in the light of morn<br />
Tremble, beholding all things very fair<br />
And strong with strength that puts my strength to scorn. <br />
<br />
<br />
34<br />
<br />
O my goddess divine sometimes I say<br />
Now let this word for ever and all suffice;<br />
Thou art insatiable, and yet not twice<br />
Can even thy lover give his soul away:<br />
And for my acts, that at thy feet I lay;<br />
For never any other, by device<br />
Of wisdom, love or beauty, could entice<br />
My homage to the measure of this day. <br />
I have no more to give thee: lo, I have sold<br />
My life, have emptied out my heart, and spent<br />
Whate'er I had; till like a beggar, bold<br />
With nought to lose, I laugh and am content.<br />
A beggar kisses thee; nay, love, behold,<br />
I fear not: thou too art in beggarment. <br />
<br />
<br />
35<br />
<br />
ALL earthly beauty hath one cause and proof,<br />
To lead the pilgrim soul to beauty above:<br />
Yet lieth the greater bliss so far aloof,<br />
That few there be are wean'd from earthly love.<br />
Joy's ladder it is, reaching from home to home,<br />
The best of all the work that all was good;<br />
Whereof 'twas writ the angels aye upclomb,<br />
Down sped, and at the top the Lord God stood. <br />
But I my time abuse, my eyes by day<br />
Center'd on thee, by night my heart on fire--<br />
Letting my number'd moments run away--<br />
Nor e'en 'twixt night and day to heaven aspire:<br />
So true it is that what the eye seeth not<br />
But slow is loved, and loved is soon forgot. <br />
<br />
<br />
36<br />
<br />
O MY life's mischief, once my love's delight,<br />
That drew'st a mortgage on my heart's estate,<br />
Whose baneful clause is never out of date,<br />
Nor can avenging time restore my right:<br />
Whom first to lose sounded that note of spite,<br />
Whereto my doleful days were tuned by fate:<br />
That art the well-loved cause of all my hate,<br />
The sun whose wandering makes my hopeless night: <br />
Thou being in all my lacking all I lack,<br />
It is thy goodness turns my grace to crime,<br />
Thy fleetness from my goal which holds me back;<br />
Wherefore my feet go out of step with time,<br />
My very grasp of life is old and slack,<br />
And even my passion falters in my rhyme. <br />
<br />
<br />
37<br />
<br />
AT times with hurried hoofs and scattering dust<br />
I race by field or highway, and my horse<br />
Spare not, but urge direct in headlong course<br />
Unto some fair far hill that gain I must:<br />
But near arrived the vision soon mistrust,<br />
Rein in, and stand as one who sees the source<br />
Of strong illusion, shaming thought to force<br />
From off his mind the soil of passion's gust. <br />
My brow I bare then, and with slacken'd speed<br />
Can view the country pleasant on all sides,<br />
And to kind salutation give good heed:<br />
I ride as one who for his pleasure rides,<br />
And stroke the neck of my delighted steed,<br />
And seek what cheer the village inn provides. <br />
<br />
<br />
38<br />
<br />
AN idle June day on the sunny Thames,<br />
Floating or rowing as our fancy led,<br />
Now in the high beams basking as we sped,<br />
Now in green shade gliding by mirror'd stems;<br />
By lock and weir and isle, and many a spot<br />
Of memoried pleasure, glad with strength and skill,<br />
Friendship, good wine, and mirth, that serve not ill <br />
The heavenly Muse, tho' she requite them not: <br />
I would have life--thou saidst--all as this day,<br />
Simple enjoyment calm in its excess,<br />
With not a grief to cloud, and not a ray<br />
Of passion overhot my peace to oppress;<br />
With no ambition to reproach delay,<br />
Nor rapture to disturb its happiness. <br />
<br />
<br />
39<br />
<br />
A MAN that sees by chance his picture, made<br />
As once a child he was, handling some toy,<br />
Will gaze to find his spirit within the boy,<br />
Yet hath no secret with the soul pourtray'd:<br />
He cannot think the simple thought which play'd<br />
Upon those features then so frank and coy;<br />
'Tis his, yet oh! not his: and o'er the joy<br />
His fatherly pity bends in tears dismay'd. <br />
Proud of his prime maybe he stand at best,<br />
And lightly wear his strength, or aim it high,<br />
In knowledge, skill and courage self-possest:--<br />
Yet in the pictured face a charm doth lie,<br />
The one thing lost more worth than all the rest,<br />
Which seeing, he fears to say This child was I. <br />
<br />
<br />
40<br />
<br />
TEARS of love, tears of joy and tears of care,<br />
Comforting tears that fell uncomforted,<br />
Tears o'er the new-born, tears beside the dead,<br />
Tears of hope, pride and pity, trust and prayer,<br />
Tears of contrition; all tears whatsoe'er<br />
Of tenderness or kindness had she shed<br />
Who here is pictured, ere upon her head<br />
The fine gold might be turn'd to silver there. <br />
The smile that charm'd the father hath given place<br />
Unto the furrow'd care wrought by the son;<br />
But virtue hath transform'd all change to grace:<br />
So that I praise the artist, who hath done<br />
A portrait, for my worship, of the face<br />
Won by the heart my father's heart that won. <br />
<br />
<br />
41<br />
<br />
IF I could but forget and not recall<br />
So well my time of pleasure and of play,<br />
When ancient nature was all new and gay,<br />
Light as the fashion that doth last enthrall,--<br />
Ah mighty nature, when my heart was small,<br />
Nor dream'd what fearful searchings underlay<br />
The flowers and leafy ecstasy of May,<br />
The breathing summer sloth, the scented fall: <br />
Could I forget, then were the fight not hard,<br />
Press'd in the mêlée of accursed things,<br />
Having such help in love and such reward:<br />
But that 'tis I who once--'tis this that stings--<br />
Once dwelt within the gate that angels guard,<br />
Where yet I'd be had I but heavenly wings. <br />
<br />
<br />
42<br />
<br />
WHEN I see childhood on the threshold seize<br />
The prize of life from age and likelihood,<br />
I mourn time's change that will not be withstood,<br />
Thinking how Christ said Be like one of these.<br />
For in the forest among many trees<br />
Scarce one in all is found that hath made good<br />
The virgin pattern of its slender wood,<br />
That courtesied in joy to every breeze; <br />
But scath'd, but knotted trunks that raise on high<br />
Their arms in stiff contortion, strain'd and bare<br />
Whose patriarchal crowns in sorrow sigh.<br />
So, little children, ye--nay nay, ye ne'er<br />
From me shall learn how sure the change and nigh,<br />
When ye shall share our strength and mourn to share. <br />
<br />
<br />
43<br />
<br />
WHEN parch'd with thirst, astray on sultry sand<br />
The traveller faints, upon his closing ear<br />
Steals a fantastic music: he may hear<br />
The babbling fountain of his native land.<br />
Before his eyes the vision seems to stand,<br />
Where at its terraced brink the maids appear,<br />
Who fill their deep urns at its waters clear,<br />
And not refuse the help of lover's hand. <br />
O cruel jest--he cries, as some one flings<br />
The sparkling drops in sport or shew of ire--<br />
O shameless, O contempt of holy things.<br />
But never of their wanton play they tire,<br />
As not athirst they sit beside the springs,<br />
While he must quench in death his lost desire. <br />
<br />
<br />
44<br />
<br />
The image of thy love, rising on dark<br />
And desperate days over my sullen sea,<br />
Wakens again fresh hope and peace in me,<br />
Gleaming above upon my groaning bark.<br />
Whate'er my sorrow be, I then may hark<br />
A loving voice: whate'er my terror be,<br />
This heavenly comfort still I win from thee,<br />
To shine my lodestar that wert once my mark. <br />
Prodigal nature makes us but to taste<br />
One perfect joy, which given she niggard grows;<br />
And lest her precious gift should run to waste,<br />
Adds to its loss a thousand lesser woes:<br />
So to the memory of the gift that graced<br />
Her hand, her graceless hand more grace bestows. <br />
<br />
<br />
45<br />
<br />
IN this neglected, ruin'd edifice<br />
Of works unperfected and broken schemes,<br />
Where is the promise of my early dreams,<br />
The smile of beauty and the pearl of price?<br />
No charm is left now that could once entice<br />
Wind-wavering fortune from her golden streams,<br />
And full in flight decrepit purpose seems,<br />
Trailing the banner of his old device. <br />
Within the house a frore and numbing air<br />
Has chill'd endeavour: sickly memories reign<br />
In every room, and ghosts are on the stair:<br />
And hope behind the dusty window-pane<br />
Watches the days go by, and bow'd with care<br />
Forecasts her last reproach and mortal stain. <br />
<br />
<br />
46<br />
<br />
ONCE I would say, before thy vision came,<br />
My joy, my life, my love, and with some kind<br />
Of knowledge speak, and think I knew my mind<br />
Of heaven and hope, and each word hit its aim.<br />
Whate'er their sounds be, now all mean the same,<br />
Denoting each the fair that none can find;<br />
Or if I say them, 'tis as one long blind<br />
Forgets the sights that he was used to name. <br />
Now if men speak of love, 'tis not my love;<br />
Nor are their hopes nor joys mine, nor their life<br />
Of praise the life that I think honour of:<br />
Nay tho' they turn from house and child and wife<br />
And self, and in the thought of heaven above<br />
Hold, as do I, all mortal things at strife. <br />
<br />
<br />
47<br />
<br />
SINCE then 'tis only pity looking back,<br />
Fear looking forward, and the busy mind<br />
Will in one woeful moment more upwind<br />
Than lifelong years unroll of bitter or black;<br />
What is man's privilege, his hoarding knack<br />
Of memory with foreboding so combined,<br />
Whereby he comes to dream he hath of kind<br />
The perpetuity which all things lack? <br />
Which but to hope is doubtful joy, to have<br />
Being a continuance of what, alas,<br />
We mourn, and scarcely hear with to the grave;<br />
Or something so unknown that it o'erpass<br />
The thought of comfort, and the sense that gave<br />
Cannot consider it thro' any glass. <br />
<br />
<br />
48<br />
<br />
COME gentle sleep, I woo thee: come and take<br />
Not now the child into thine arms, from fright<br />
Composed by drowsy tune and shaded light,<br />
Whom ignorant of thee thou didst nurse and make;<br />
Nor now the boy, who scorn'd thee for the sake<br />
Of growing knowledge or mysterious night,<br />
Tho' with fatigue thou didst his limbs invite,<br />
And heavily weigh the eyes that would not wake; <br />
No, nor the man severe, who from his best<br />
Failing, alert fled to thee, that his breath,<br />
Blood, force and fire should come at morn redrest;<br />
But me; from whom thy comfort tarrieth,<br />
For all my wakeful prayer sent without rest<br />
To thee, O shew and shadow of my death. <br />
<br />
<br />
49<br />
<br />
THE spirit's eager sense for sad or gay<br />
Filleth with what he will our vessel full:<br />
Be joy his bent, he waiteth not joy's day<br />
But like a child at any toy will pull:<br />
If sorrow, he will weep for fancy's sake,<br />
And spoil heaven's plenty with forbidden care.<br />
What fortune most denies we slave to take;<br />
Nor can fate load us more than we can bear. <br />
Since pleasure with the having disappeareth,<br />
He who hath least in hand hath most at heart,<br />
While he keep hope: as he who alway feareth<br />
A grief that never comes hath yet the smart;<br />
And heavier far is our self-wrought distress,<br />
For when God sendeth sorrow, it doth bless. <br />
<br />
<br />
50<br />
<br />
THE world comes not to an end: her city-hives<br />
Swarm with the tokens of a changeless trade,<br />
With rolling wheel, driver and flagging jade,<br />
Rich men and beggars, children, priests and wives.<br />
New homes on old are set, as lives on lives;<br />
Invention with invention overlaid:<br />
But still or tool or toy or book or blade<br />
Shaped for the hand, that holds and toils and strives. <br />
The men to-day toil as their fathers taught,<br />
With little better'd means; for works depend<br />
On works and overlap, and thought on thought:<br />
And thro' all change the smiles of hope amend<br />
The weariest face, the same love changed in nought:<br />
In this thing too the world comes not to an end. <br />
<br />
<br />
51<br />
<br />
O My uncared-for songs, what are ye worth,<br />
That in my secret book with so much care<br />
I write you, this one here and that one there,<br />
Marking the time and order of your birth?<br />
How, with a fancy so unkind to mirth,<br />
A sense so hard, a style so worn and bare,<br />
Look ye for any welcome anywhere<br />
From any shelf or heart-home on the earth? <br />
Should others ask you this, say then I yearn'd<br />
To write you such as once, when I was young,<br />
Finding I should have loved and thereto turn'd.<br />
'Twere something yet to live again among<br />
The gentle youth beloved, and where I learn'd<br />
My art, be there remember'd for my song. <br />
<br />
<br />
52<br />
<br />
WHO takes the census of the living dead,<br />
Ere the day come when memory shall o'ercrowd<br />
The kingdom of their fame, and for that proud<br />
And airy people find no room nor stead?<br />
Ere hoarding Time, that ever thrusteth back<br />
The fairest treasures of his ancient store,<br />
Better with best confound, so he may pack<br />
His greedy gatherings closer, more and more? <br />
Let the true Muse rewrite her sullied page,<br />
And purge her story of the men of hate,<br />
That they go dirgeless down to Satan's rage<br />
With all else foul, deform'd and miscreate:<br />
She hath full toil to keep the names of love<br />
Honour'd on earth, as they are bright above. <br />
<br />
<br />
53<br />
<br />
I HEARD great Hector sounding war's alarms,<br />
Where thro' the listless ghosts chiding he strode,<br />
As tho' the Greeks besieged his last abode,<br />
And he his Troy's hope still, her king-at-arms.<br />
But on those gentle meads, which Lethe charms<br />
With weary oblivion, his passion glow'd<br />
Like the cold night-worm's candle, and only show'd<br />
Such mimic flame as neither heats nor harms. <br />
'Twas plain to read, even by those shadows quaint,<br />
How rude catastrophe had dim'd his day,<br />
And blighted all his cheer with stern complaint:<br />
To arms! to arms! what more the voice would say<br />
Was swallow'd in the valleys, and grew faint<br />
Upon the thin air, as he pass'd away. <br />
<br />
<br />
54<br />
<br />
SINCE not the enamour'd sun with glance more fond<br />
Kisses the foliage of his sacred tree,<br />
Than doth my waking thought arise on thee,<br />
Loving none near thee, like thee nor beyond;<br />
Nay, since I am sworn thy slave, and in the bond<br />
Is writ my promise of eternity<br />
Since to such high hope thou'st encouraged me,<br />
That if thou look but from me I despond; <br />
Since thou'rt my all in all, O think of this:<br />
Think of the dedication of my youth:<br />
Think of my loyalty, my joy, my bliss:<br />
Think of my sorrow, my despair and ruth,<br />
My sheer annihilation if I miss:<br />
Think--if thou shouldst be false--think of thy truth. <br />
<br />
<br />
55<br />
<br />
THESE meagre rhymes, which a returning mood<br />
Sometimes o'errateth, I as oft despise;<br />
And knowing them illnatured, stiff and rude,<br />
See them as others with contemptuous eyes.<br />
Nay, and I wonder less at God's respect<br />
For man, a minim jot in time and space,<br />
Than at the soaring faith of His elect,<br />
That gift of gifts, the comfort of His grace. <br />
O truth unsearchable, O heavenly love,<br />
Most infinitely tender, so to touch<br />
The work that we can meanly reckon of:<br />
Surely--I say--we are favour'd overmuch.<br />
But of this wonder, what doth most amaze<br />
Is that we know our love is held for praise. <br />
<br />
<br />
56<br />
<br />
BEAUTY sat with me all the summer day,<br />
Awaiting the sure triumph of her eye;<br />
Nor mark'd I till we parted, how, hard by,<br />
Love in her train stood ready for his prey.<br />
She, as too proud to join herself the fray,<br />
Trusting too much to her divine ally,<br />
When she saw victory tarry, chid him--"Why<br />
Dost thou not at one stroke this rebel slay?" <br />
Then generous Love, who holds my heart in fee,<br />
Told of our ancient truce: so from the fight<br />
We straight withdrew our forces, all the three.<br />
Baffled but not dishearten'd she took flight<br />
Scheming new tactics: Love came home with me,<br />
And prompts my measured verses as I write. <br />
<br />
<br />
57<br />
<br />
IN autumn moonlight, when the white air wan<br />
Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence,<br />
'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon<br />
In melancholy and godlike indolence:<br />
When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime<br />
To fond pretence of immortality,<br />
Vieweth all moments from the birth of time,<br />
All things whate'er have been or yet shall be. <br />
And like the garden, where the year is spent,<br />
The ruin of old life is full of yearning,<br />
Mingling poetic rapture of lament<br />
With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning;<br />
Only in visions of the white air wan<br />
By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon. <br />
<br />
<br />
58<br />
<br />
WHEN first I saw thee, dearest, if I say<br />
The spells that conjure back the hour and place,<br />
And evermore I look upon thy face,<br />
As in the spring of years long pass'd away;<br />
No fading of thy beauty's rich array,<br />
No detriment of age on thee I trace,<br />
But time's defeat written in spoils of grace,<br />
From rivals robb'd, whom thou didst pity and slay. <br />
So hath thy growth been, thus thy faith is true,<br />
Unchanged in change, still to my growing sense,<br />
To life's desire the same, and nothing new:<br />
But as thou wert in dream and prescience<br />
At love's arising, now thou stand'st to view<br />
In the broad noon of his magnificence. <br />
<br />
<br />
59<br />
<br />
'TWAS on the very day winter took leave<br />
Of those fair fields I love, when to the skies<br />
The fragrant Earth was smiling in surprise<br />
At that her heaven-descended, quick reprieve,<br />
I wander'd forth my sorrow to relieve<br />
Yet walk'd amid sweet pleasure in such wise<br />
As Adam went alone in Paradise,<br />
Before God of His pity fashion'd Eve. <br />
And out of tune with all the joy around<br />
I laid me down beneath a flowering tree,<br />
And o'er my senses crept a sleep profound;<br />
In which it seem'd that thou wert given to me,<br />
Rending my body, where with hurried sound<br />
I feel my heart beat, when I think of thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
60<br />
<br />
LOVE that I know, love I am wise in, love,<br />
My strength, my pride, my grace, my skill untaught,<br />
My faith here upon earth, my hope above,<br />
My contemplation and perpetual thought:<br />
The pleasure of my fancy, my heart's fire,<br />
My joy, my peace, my praise, my happy theme,<br />
The aim of all my doing, my desire<br />
Of being, my life by day, by night my dream: <br />
Love, my sweet melancholy, my distress,<br />
My pain, my doubt, my trouble, my despair,<br />
My only folly and unhappiness,<br />
And in my careless moments still my care:<br />
O love, sweet love, earthly love, love difvine,<br />
Say'st thou to-day, O love, that thou art mine? <br />
<br />
<br />
61<br />
<br />
THE dark and serious angel, who so long<br />
Vex'd his immortal strength in charge of me,<br />
Hath smiled for joy and fled in liberty<br />
To take his pastime with the peerless throng.<br />
Oft had I done his noble keeping wrong,<br />
Wounding his heart to wonder what might be<br />
God's purpose in a soul of such degree;<br />
And there he had left me but for mandate strong. <br />
But seeing thee with me now, his task at close<br />
He knoweth, and wherefore he was bid to stay,<br />
And work confusion of so many foes:<br />
The thanks that he doth look for, here I pay,<br />
Yet fear some heavenly envy, as he goes<br />
Unto what great reward I cannot say. <br />
<br />
<br />
62<br />
<br />
I WILL be what God made me, nor protest<br />
Against the bent of genius in my time,<br />
That science of my friends robs all the best,<br />
While I love beauty, and was born to rhyme.<br />
Be they our mighty men, and let me dwell<br />
In shadow among the mighty shades of old,<br />
With love's forsaken palace for my cell;<br />
Whence I look forth and all the world behold, <br />
And say, These better days, in best things worse,<br />
This bastardy of time's magnificence,<br />
Will mend in fashion and throw off the curse,<br />
To crown new love with higher excellence.<br />
Curs'd tho' I be to live my life alone,<br />
My toil is for man's joy, his joy my own. <br />
<br />
<br />
63<br />
<br />
I LIVE on hope and that I think do all<br />
Who come into this world, and since I see<br />
Myself in swim with such good company,<br />
I take my comfort whatsoe'er befall.<br />
I abide and abide, as if more stout and tall<br />
My spirit would grow by waiting like a tree<br />
And, clear of others' toil, it pleaseth me<br />
In dreams their quick ambition to forestall <br />
And if thro' careless eagerness I slide<br />
To some accomplishment, I give my voice<br />
Still to desire, and in desire abide.<br />
I have no stake abroad; if I rejoice<br />
In what is done or doing, I confide<br />
Neither to friend nor foe my secret choice. <br />
<br />
<br />
64<br />
<br />
YE blessed saints, that now in heaven enjoy<br />
The purchase of those tears, the world's disdain,<br />
Doth Love still with his war your peace annoy,<br />
Or hath Death freed you from his ancient pain?<br />
Have ye no springtide, and no burst of May<br />
In flowers and leafy trees, when solemn night<br />
Pants with love-music, and the holy day<br />
Breaks on the ear with songs of heavenly light? <br />
What make ye and what strive for? keep ye thought<br />
Of us, or in new excellence divine<br />
Is old forgot? or do ye count for nought<br />
What the Greek did and what the Florentine?<br />
We keep your memories well : O in your store<br />
Live not our best joys treasured evermore? <br />
<br />
<br />
65<br />
<br />
AH heavenly joy But who hath ever heard,<br />
Who hath seen joy, or who shall ever find<br />
Joy's language? There is neither speech nor word<br />
Nought but itself to teach it to mankind.<br />
Scarce in our twenty thousand painful days<br />
We may touch something: but there lives--beyond<br />
The best of art, or nature's kindest phase--<br />
The hope whereof our spirit is fain and fond: <br />
The cause of beauty given to man's desires<br />
Writ in the expectancy of starry skies,<br />
The faith which gloweth in our fleeting fires,<br />
The aim of all the good that here we prize;<br />
Which but to love, pursue and pray for well<br />
Maketh earth heaven, and to forget it, hell. <br />
<br />
<br />
66<br />
<br />
MY wearied heart, whenever, after all,<br />
Its loves and yearnings shall be told complete,<br />
When gentle death shall bid it cease to beat,<br />
And from all dear illusions disenthrall:<br />
However then thou shalt appear to call<br />
My fearful heart, since down at others' feet<br />
It bade me kneel so oft, I'll not retreat<br />
From thee, nor fear before thy feet to fall. <br />
And I shall say, "Receive this loving heart<br />
Which err'd in sorrow only; and in sin<br />
Took no delight; but being forced apart<br />
From thee, without thee hoping thee to win,<br />
Most prized what most thou madest as thou art<br />
On earth, till heaven were open to enter in." <br />
<br />
<br />
67<br />
<br />
DREARY was winter, wet with changeful sting<br />
Of clinging snowfall and fast-flying frost;<br />
And bitterer northwinds then withheld the spring,<br />
That dallied with her promise till 'twas lost.<br />
A sunless and half-hearted summer drown'd<br />
The flowers in needful and unwelcom'd rain;<br />
And Autumn with a sad smile fled uncrown'd<br />
From fruitless orchards and unripen'd grain. <br />
But could the skies of this most desolate year<br />
In its last month learn with our love to glow,<br />
Men yet should rank its cloudless atmosphere<br />
Above the sunsets of five years ago:<br />
Of my great praise too part should be its own,<br />
Now reckon'd peerless for thy love alone <br />
<br />
<br />
68<br />
<br />
AWAY now, lovely Muse, roam and be free:<br />
Our commerce ends for aye, thy task is done:<br />
Tho' to win thee I left all else unwon,<br />
Thou, whom I most have won, art not for me.<br />
My first desire, thou too forgone must be,<br />
Thou too, O much lamented now, tho' none<br />
Will turn to pity thy forsaken son,<br />
Nor thy divine sisters will weep for thee. <br />
None will weep for thee : thou return, O Muse,<br />
To thy Sicilian fields I once have been<br />
On thy loved hills, and where thou first didst use<br />
Thy sweetly balanced rhyme, O thankless queen,<br />
Have pluck'd and wreath'd thy flowers; but do thou choose<br />
Some happier brow to wear thy garlands green. <br />
<br />
<br />
69<br />
<br />
ETERNAL Father, who didst all create,<br />
In whom we live, and to whose bosom move,<br />
To all men be Thy name known, which is Love,<br />
Till its loud praises sound at heaven's high gate.<br />
Perfect Thy kingdom in our passing state,<br />
That here on earth Thou may'st as well approve<br />
Our service, as Thou ownest theirs above,<br />
Whose joy we echo and in pain await. <br />
Grant body and soul each day their daily bread<br />
And should in spite of grace fresh woe begin,<br />
Even as our anger soon is past and dead<br />
Be Thy remembrance mortal of our sin:<br />
By Thee in paths of peace Thy sheep be led,<br />
And in the vale of terror comforted.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font-weight: bold;" class="mycode_b">The Growth of Love </span><br />
<br />
<br />
1<br />
<br />
THEY that in play can do the thing they would,<br />
Having an instinct throned in reason's place,<br />
--And every perfect action hath the grace<br />
Of indolence or thoughtless hardihood--<br />
These are the best: yet be there workmen good<br />
Who lose in earnestness control of face,<br />
Or reckon means, and rapt in effort base<br />
Reach to their end by steps well understood. <br />
Me whom thou sawest of late strive with the pains<br />
Of one who spends his strength to rule his nerve,<br />
--Even as a painter breathlessly who stains<br />
His scarcely moving hand lest it should swerve--<br />
Behold me, now that I have cast my chains,<br />
Master of the art which for thy sake I serve.<br />
<br />
<br />
2<br />
<br />
FOR thou art mine: and now I am ashamed<br />
To have uséd means to win so pure acquist,<br />
And of my trembling fear that might have misst<br />
Thro' very care the gold at which I aim'd;<br />
And am as happy but to hear thee named,<br />
As are those gentle souls by angels kisst<br />
In pictures seen leaving their marble cist<br />
To go before the throne of grace unblamed. <br />
Nor surer am I water hath the skill<br />
To quench my thirst, or that my strength is freed<br />
In delicate ordination as I will,<br />
Than that to be myself is all I need<br />
For thee to be most mine: so I stand still,<br />
And save to taste my joy no more take heed. <br />
<br />
<br />
3<br />
<br />
THE whole world now is but the minister<br />
Of thee to me: I see no other scheme<br />
But universal love, from timeless dream<br />
Waking to thee his joy's interpreter.<br />
I walk around and in the fields confer<br />
Of love at large with tree and flower and stream,<br />
And list the lark descant upon my theme,<br />
Heaven's musical accepted worshipper. <br />
Thy smile outfaceth ill: and that old feud<br />
'Twixt things and me is quash'd in our new truce;<br />
And nature now dearly with thee endued<br />
No more in shame ponders her old excuse,<br />
But quite forgets her frowns and antics rude,<br />
So kindly hath she grown to her new use. <br />
<br />
<br />
4<br />
<br />
THE very names of things belov'd are dear,<br />
And sounds will gather beauty from their sense,<br />
As many a face thro' love's long residence<br />
Groweth to fair instead of plain and sere:<br />
But when I say thy name it hath no peer,<br />
And I suppose fortune determined thence<br />
Her dower, that such beauty's excellence<br />
Should have a perfect title for the ear. <br />
Thus may I think the adopting Muses chose<br />
Their sons by name, knowing none would be heard<br />
Or writ so oft in all the world as those,--<br />
Dan Chaucer, mighty Shakespeare, then for third<br />
The classic Milton, and to us arose<br />
Shelley with liquid music in the world. <br />
<br />
<br />
5<br />
<br />
THE poets were good teachers, for they taught<br />
Earth had this joy; but that 'twould ever be<br />
That fortune should be perfected in me,<br />
My heart of hope dared not engage the thought.<br />
So I stood low, and now but to be caught<br />
By any self-styled lords of the age with thee<br />
Vexes my modesty, lest they should see<br />
I hold them owls and peacocks, things of nought. <br />
And when we sit alone, and as I please<br />
I taste thy love's full smile, and can enstate<br />
The pleasure of my kingly heart at ease,<br />
My thought swims like a ship, that with the weight<br />
Of her rich burden sleeps on the infinite seas<br />
Becalm'd, and cannot stir her golden freight. <br />
<br />
<br />
6<br />
<br />
WHILE yet we wait for spring, and from the dry<br />
And blackening east that so embitters March,<br />
Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch,<br />
And driven dust and withering snowflake fly;<br />
Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky<br />
The sun is warm and beckons to the larch,<br />
And where the covert hazels interarch<br />
Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie. <br />
Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid<br />
A million buds but stay their blossoming;<br />
And trustful birds have built their nests amid<br />
The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing<br />
Till one soft shower from the south shall bid,<br />
And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring. <br />
<br />
<br />
7<br />
<br />
IN thee my spring of life hath bid the while<br />
A rose unfold beyond the summer's best,<br />
The mystery of joy made manifest<br />
In love's self-answering and awakening smile;<br />
Whereby the lips in wonder reconcile<br />
Passion with peace, and show desire at rest,--<br />
A grace of silence by the Greek unguesst,<br />
That bloom'd to immortalize the Tuscan style <br />
When first the angel-song that faith hath ken'd<br />
Fancy pourtray'd, above recorded oath<br />
Of Israel's God, or light of poem pen'd;<br />
The very countenance of plighted troth<br />
'Twixt heaven and earth, where in one moment blend<br />
The hope of one and happiness of both. <br />
<br />
<br />
8<br />
<br />
FOR beauty being the best of all we know<br />
Sums up the unsearchable and secret aims<br />
Of nature, and on joys whose earthly names<br />
Were never told can form and sense bestow;<br />
And man hath sped his instinct to outgo<br />
The step of science; and against her shames<br />
Imagination stakes out heavenly claims,<br />
Building a tower above the head of woe. <br />
Nor is there fairer work for beauty found<br />
Than that she win in nature her release<br />
From all the woes that in the world abound:<br />
Nay with his sorrow may his love increase,<br />
If from man's greater need beauty redound,<br />
And claim his tears for homage of his peace. <br />
<br />
<br />
9<br />
<br />
THUS to thy beauty doth my fond heart look,<br />
That late dismay'd her faithless faith forbore;<br />
And wins again her love lost in the lore<br />
Of schools and script of many a learned book:<br />
For thou what ruthless death untimely took<br />
Shalt now in better brotherhood restore,<br />
And save my batter'd ship that far from shore<br />
High on the dismal deep in tempest shook. <br />
So in despite of sorrow lately learn'd<br />
I still hold true to truth since thou art true,<br />
Nor wail the woe which thou to joy hast turn'd<br />
Nor come the heavenly sun and bathing blue<br />
To my life's need more splendid and unearn'd<br />
Than hath thy gift outmatch'd desire and due. <br />
<br />
<br />
10<br />
<br />
WINTER was not unkind because uncouth;<br />
His prison'd time made me a closer guest,<br />
And gave thy graciousness a warmer zest,<br />
Biting all else with keen and angry tooth<br />
And bravelier the triumphant blood of youth<br />
Mantling thy cheek its happy home possest,<br />
And sterner sport by day put strength to test,<br />
And custom's feast at night gave tongue to truth <br />
Or say hath flaunting summer a device<br />
To match our midnight revelry, that rang<br />
With steel and flame along the snow-girt ice?<br />
Or when we hark't to nightingales that sang<br />
On dewy eves in spring, did they entice<br />
To gentler love than winter's icy fang? <br />
<br />
<br />
11<br />
<br />
THERE 'S many a would-be poet at this hour,<br />
Rhymes of a love that he hath never woo'd,<br />
And o'er his lamplit desk in solitude<br />
Deems that he sitteth in the Muses' bower:<br />
And some the flames of earthly love devour,<br />
Who have taken no kiss of Nature, nor renew'd<br />
In the world's wilderness with heavenly food<br />
The sickly body of their perishing power. <br />
So none of all our company, I boast,<br />
But now would mock my penning, could they see<br />
How down the right it maps a jagged coast;<br />
Seeing they hold the manlier praise to be<br />
Strong hand and will, and the heart best when most<br />
'Tis sober, simple, true, and fancy-free. <br />
<br />
<br />
12<br />
<br />
How could I quarrel or blame you, most dear,<br />
Who all thy virtues gavest and kept back none;<br />
Kindness and gentleness, truth without peer,<br />
And beauty that my fancy fed upon?<br />
Now not my life's contrition for my fault<br />
Can blot that day, nor work me recompence,<br />
Tho' I might worthily thy worth exalt,<br />
Making thee long amends for short offence. <br />
For surely nowhere, love, if not in thee<br />
Are grace and truth and beauty to be found;<br />
And all my praise of these can only be<br />
A praise of thee, howe'er by thee disown'd:<br />
While still thou must be mine tho' far removed,<br />
And I for one offence no more beloved. <br />
<br />
<br />
13<br />
<br />
Now since to me altho' by thee refused<br />
The world is left, I shall find pleasure still;<br />
The art that most I have loved but little used<br />
Will yield a world of fancies at my will:<br />
And tho' where'er thou goest it is from me,<br />
I where I go thee in my heart must bear;<br />
And what thou wert that wilt thou ever be,<br />
My choice, my best, my loved, and only fair. <br />
Farewell, yet think not such farewell a change<br />
From tenderness, tho' once to meet or part<br />
But on short absence so could sense derange<br />
That tears have graced the greeting of my heart;<br />
They were proud drops and had my leave to fall,<br />
Not on thy pity for my pain to call. <br />
<br />
<br />
14<br />
<br />
WHEN sometimes in an ancient house where state<br />
From noble ancestry is handed on,<br />
We see but desolation thro' the gate,<br />
And richest heirlooms all to ruin gone;<br />
Because maybe some fancied shame or fear,<br />
Bred of disease or melancholy fate,<br />
Hath driven the owner from his rightful sphere<br />
To wander nameless save to pity or hate: <br />
What is the wreck of all he hath in fief<br />
When he that hath is wrecking? nought is fine<br />
Unto the sick, nor doth it burden grief<br />
That the house perish when the soul doth pine.<br />
Thus I my state despise, slain by a sting<br />
So slight 'twould not have hurt a meaner thing. <br />
<br />
<br />
15<br />
<br />
WHO builds a ship must first lay down the keel<br />
Of health, whereto the ribs of mirth are wed:<br />
And knit, with beams and knees of strength, a bed<br />
For decks of purity, her floor and ceil.<br />
Upon her masts, Adventure, Pride, and Zeal,<br />
To fortune's wind the sails of purpose spread:<br />
And at the prow make figured maidenhead<br />
O'erride the seas and answer to the wheel. <br />
And let him deep in memory's hold have stor'd<br />
Water of Helicon: and let him fit<br />
The needle that doth true with heaven accord:<br />
Then bid her crew, love, diligence and wit<br />
With justice, courage, temperance come aboard,<br />
And at her helm the master reason sit. <br />
<br />
<br />
16<br />
<br />
THIS world is unto God a work of art,<br />
Of which the unaccomplish'd heavenly plan<br />
Is hid in life within the creature's heart,<br />
And for perfection looketh unto man.<br />
Ah me! those thousand ages: with what slow<br />
Pains and persistence were his idols made,<br />
Destroy'd and made, ere ever he could know<br />
The mighty mother must be so obey'd. <br />
For lack of knowledge and thro' little skill<br />
His childish mimicry outwent his aim;<br />
His effort shaped the genius of his will;<br />
Till thro' distinction and revolt he came,<br />
True to his simple terms of good and ill,<br />
Seeking the face of Beauty without blame. <br />
<br />
<br />
17<br />
<br />
SAY who be these light-bearded, sunburnt faces<br />
In negligent and travel-stain'd array,<br />
That in the city of Dante come to-day,<br />
Haughtily visiting her holy places?<br />
O these be noble men that hide their graces,<br />
True England's blood, her ancient glory's stay,<br />
By tales of fame diverted on their way<br />
Home from the rule of oriental races. <br />
Life-trifling lions these, of gentle eyes<br />
And motion delicate, but swift to fire<br />
For honour, passionate where duty lies,<br />
Most loved and loving: and they quickly tire<br />
Of Florence, that she one day more denies<br />
The embrace of wife and son, of sister or sire. <br />
<br />
<br />
18<br />
<br />
WHERE San Miniato's convent from the sun<br />
At forenoon overlooks the city of flowers<br />
I sat, and gazing on her domes and towers<br />
Call'd up her famous children one by one:<br />
And three who all the rest had far outdone,<br />
Mild Giotto first, who stole the morning hours,<br />
I saw, and god-like Buonarroti's powers,<br />
And Dante, gravest poet, her much-wrong'd son. <br />
Is all this glory, I said, another's praise?<br />
Are these heroic triumphs things of old,<br />
And do I dead upon the living gaze?<br />
Or rather doth the mind, that can behold<br />
The wondrous beauty of the works and days,<br />
Create the image that her thoughts enfold? <br />
<br />
<br />
19<br />
<br />
REJOICE, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,<br />
Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright;<br />
And that your names, remember'd day and night,<br />
Live on the lips of those that love you well.<br />
'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of hell,<br />
Each with the special grace of your delight:<br />
Ye are the world's creators, and thro' might<br />
Of everlasting love ye did excel. <br />
Now ye are starry names, above the storm<br />
And war of Time and nature's endless wrong<br />
Ye flit, in pictured truth and peaceful form,<br />
Wing'd with bright music and melodious song,--<br />
The flaming flowers of heaven, making May-dance<br />
In dear Imagination's rich pleasance. <br />
<br />
<br />
20<br />
<br />
The world still goeth about to shew and hide,<br />
Befool'd of all opinion, fond of fame:<br />
But he that can do well taketh no pride,<br />
And see'th his error, undisturb'd by shame:<br />
So poor's the best that longest life can do,<br />
The most so little, diligently done;<br />
So mighty is the beauty that doth woo,<br />
So vast the joy that love from love hath won. <br />
God's love to win is easy, for He loveth<br />
Desire's fair attitude, nor strictly weighs<br />
The broken thing, but all alike approveth<br />
Which love hath aim'd at Him: that is heaven's praise:<br />
And if we look for any praise on earth,<br />
'Tis in man's love: all else is nothing worth. <br />
<br />
<br />
21<br />
<br />
O FLESH and blood, comrade to tragic pain<br />
And clownish merriment whose sense could wake<br />
Sermons in stones, and count death but an ache,<br />
All things as vanity, yet nothing vain:<br />
The world, set in thy heart, thy passionate strain<br />
Reveal'd anew; but thou for man didst make<br />
Nature twice natural, only to shake<br />
Her kingdom with the creatures of thy brain. <br />
Lo, Shakespeare, since thy time nature is loth<br />
To yield to art her fair supremacy;<br />
In conquering one thou hast so enrichèd both.<br />
What shall I say? for God--whose wise decree<br />
Confirmeth all He did by all He doth--<br />
Doubled His whole creation making thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
22<br />
<br />
I WOULD be a bird, and straight on wings I arise,<br />
And carry purpose up to the ends of the air<br />
In calm and storm my sails I feather, and where<br />
By freezing cliffs the unransom'd wreckage lies:<br />
Or, strutting on hot meridian banks, surprise<br />
The silence: over plains in the moonlight bare<br />
I chase my shadow, and perch where no bird dare<br />
In treetops torn by fiercest winds of the skies. <br />
Poor simple birds, foolish birds! then I cry,<br />
Ye pretty pictures of delight, unstir'd<br />
By the only joy of knowing that ye fly;<br />
Ye are not what ye are, but rather, sum'd in a word,<br />
The alphabet of a god's idea, and I<br />
Who master it, I am the only bird. <br />
<br />
<br />
23<br />
<br />
O WEARY pilgrims, chanting of your woe,<br />
That turn your eyes to all the peaks that shine,<br />
Hailing in each the citadel divine<br />
The which ye thought to have enter'd long ago;<br />
Until at length your feeble steps and slow<br />
Falter upon the threshold of the shrine,<br />
And your hearts overhurden'd doubt in fine<br />
Whether it be Jerusalem or no: <br />
Dishearten'd pilgrims, I am one of you;<br />
For, having worshipp'd many a barren face,<br />
I scarce now greet the goal I journey'd to:<br />
I stand a pagan in the holy place;<br />
Beneath the lamp of truth I am found untrue,<br />
And question with the God that I embrace. <br />
<br />
<br />
24<br />
<br />
SPRING hath her own bright days of calm and peace;<br />
Her melting air, at every breath we draw,<br />
Floods heart with love to praise God's gracious law:<br />
But suddenly--so short is pleasure's lease--<br />
The cold returns, the buds from growing cease,<br />
And nature's conquer'd face is full of awe;<br />
As now the trait'rous north with icy flaw<br />
Freezes the dew upon the sick lamb's fleece, <br />
And 'neath the mock sun searching everywhere<br />
Rattles the crispèd leaves with shivering din:<br />
So that the birds are silent with despair<br />
Within the thickets; nor their armour thin<br />
Will gaudy flies adventure in the air,<br />
Nor any lizard sun his spotted skin. <br />
<br />
<br />
25<br />
<br />
NOTHING is joy without thee: I can find<br />
No rapture in the first relays of spring,<br />
In songs of birds, in young buds opening,<br />
Nothing inspiriting and nothing kind;<br />
For lack of thee, who once wert throned behind<br />
All beauty, like a strength where graces cling,--<br />
The jewel and heart of light, which everything<br />
Wrestled in rivalry to hold enshrined. <br />
Ah! since thou'rt fled, and I in each fair sight<br />
The sweet occasion of my joy deplore,<br />
Where shall I seek thee best, or whom invite<br />
Within thy sacred temples and adore?<br />
Who shall fill thought and truth with old delight,<br />
And lead my soul in life as heretofore? <br />
<br />
<br />
26<br />
<br />
THE work is done, and from the fingers fall<br />
The bloodwarm tools that brought the labour thro':<br />
The tasking eye that overrunneth all<br />
Rests, and affirms there is no more to do.<br />
Now the third joy of making, the sweet flower<br />
Of blessed work, bloometh in godlike spirit;<br />
Which whoso plucketh holdeth for an hour<br />
The shrivelling vanity of mortal merit. <br />
And thou, my perfect work, thou'rt of to-day;<br />
To-morrow a poor and alien thing wilt be,<br />
True only should the swift life stand at stay:<br />
Therefore farewell, nor look to bide with me.<br />
Go find thy friends, if there be one to love thee:<br />
Casting thee forth, my child, I rise above thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
27<br />
<br />
THE fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan,<br />
Or else what grisly beast of scaly chine<br />
That champ'd the ocean-wrack and swash'd the brine,<br />
Before the new and milder days of man,<br />
Had never rib nor bray nor swindging fan<br />
Like his iron swimmer of the Clyde or Tyne,<br />
Late-born of golden seed to breed a line<br />
Of offspring swifter and more huge of plan. <br />
Straight is her going, for upon the sun<br />
When once she hath look'd, her path and place are plain;<br />
With tireless speed she smiteth one by one<br />
The shuddering seas and foams along the main;<br />
And her eased breath, when her wild race is run,<br />
Roars thro' her nostrils like a hurricane. <br />
<br />
<br />
28<br />
<br />
A THOUSAND times hath in my heart's behoof<br />
My tongue been set his passion to impart;<br />
A thousand times hath my too coward heart<br />
My mouth reclosed and fix'd it to the roof;<br />
Then with such cunning hath it held aloof,<br />
A thousand times kept silence with such art<br />
That words could do no more: yet on thy part<br />
Hath silence given a thousand times reproof. <br />
I should be bolder, seeing I commend<br />
Love, that my dilatory purpose primes,<br />
But fear lest with my fears my hope should end:<br />
Nay, I would truth deny and burn my rhymes,<br />
Renew my sorrows rather than offend,<br />
A thousand times, and yet a thousand times. <br />
<br />
<br />
29<br />
<br />
I TRAVEL to thee with the sun's first rays,<br />
That lift the dark west and unwrap the night;<br />
I dwell beside thee when he walks the height,<br />
And fondly toward thee at his setting gaze.<br />
I wait upon thy coming, but always--<br />
Dancing to meet my thoughts if they invite--<br />
Thou hast outrun their longing with delight,<br />
And in my solitude dost mock my praise. <br />
Now doth my drop of time transcend the whole:<br />
I see no fame in Khufu's pyramid,<br />
No history where loveless Nile doth roll.<br />
--This is eternal life, which doth forbid<br />
Mortal detraction to the exalted soul,<br />
And from her inward eye all fate hath hid. <br />
<br />
<br />
30<br />
<br />
My lady pleases me and I please her;<br />
This know we both, and I besides know well<br />
Wherefore I love her, and I love to tell<br />
My love, as all my loving songs aver.<br />
But what on her part could the passion stir,<br />
Tho' 'tis more difficult for love to spell,<br />
Yet can I dare divine how this befel,<br />
Nor will her lips deny it if I err. <br />
She loves me first because I love her, then<br />
Loves me for knowing why she should be loved,<br />
And that I love to praise her, loves again.<br />
So from her beauty both our loves are moved,<br />
And by her beauty are sustain'd; nor when<br />
The earth falls from the sun is this disproved. <br />
<br />
<br />
31<br />
<br />
IN all things beautiful, I cannot see<br />
Her sit or stand, but love is stir'd anew:<br />
'Tis joy to watch the folds fall as they do,<br />
And all that comes is past expectancy.<br />
If she be silent, silence let it be;<br />
He who would bid her speak might sit and sue<br />
The deep-brow'd Phidian Jove to be untrue<br />
To his two thousand years' solemnity. <br />
Ah, but her launchèd passion, when she sings,<br />
Wins on the hearing like a shapen prow<br />
Borne by the mastery of its urgent wings:<br />
Or if she deign her wisdom, she doth show<br />
She hath the intelligence of heavenly things,<br />
Unsullied by man's mortal overthrow. <br />
<br />
<br />
32<br />
<br />
THUS to be humbled: 'tis that ranging pride<br />
No refuge hath; that in his castle strong<br />
Brave reason sits beleaguer'd, who so long<br />
Kept field, but now must starve where he doth hide;<br />
That industry, who once the foe defied,<br />
Lies slaughter'd in the trenches; that the throng<br />
Of idle fancies pipe their foolish song,<br />
Where late the puissant captains fought and died. <br />
Thus to be humbled: 'tis to be undone;<br />
A forest fell'd; a city razed to ground;<br />
A cloak unsewn, unwoven and unspun<br />
Till not a thread remains that can be wound.<br />
And yet, O lover, thee, the ruin'd one,<br />
Love who hath humbled thus hath also crown'd. <br />
<br />
<br />
33<br />
<br />
I CARE not if I live, tho' life and breath<br />
Have never been to me so dear and sweet.<br />
I care not if I die, for I could meet--<br />
Being so happy--happily my death.<br />
I care not if I love; to-day she saith<br />
She loveth, and love's history is complete.<br />
Nor care I if she love me; at her feet<br />
My spirit bows entranced and worshippeth. <br />
I have no care for what was most my care,<br />
But all around me see fresh beauty born,<br />
And common sights grown lovelier than they were:<br />
I dream of love, and in the light of morn<br />
Tremble, beholding all things very fair<br />
And strong with strength that puts my strength to scorn. <br />
<br />
<br />
34<br />
<br />
O my goddess divine sometimes I say<br />
Now let this word for ever and all suffice;<br />
Thou art insatiable, and yet not twice<br />
Can even thy lover give his soul away:<br />
And for my acts, that at thy feet I lay;<br />
For never any other, by device<br />
Of wisdom, love or beauty, could entice<br />
My homage to the measure of this day. <br />
I have no more to give thee: lo, I have sold<br />
My life, have emptied out my heart, and spent<br />
Whate'er I had; till like a beggar, bold<br />
With nought to lose, I laugh and am content.<br />
A beggar kisses thee; nay, love, behold,<br />
I fear not: thou too art in beggarment. <br />
<br />
<br />
35<br />
<br />
ALL earthly beauty hath one cause and proof,<br />
To lead the pilgrim soul to beauty above:<br />
Yet lieth the greater bliss so far aloof,<br />
That few there be are wean'd from earthly love.<br />
Joy's ladder it is, reaching from home to home,<br />
The best of all the work that all was good;<br />
Whereof 'twas writ the angels aye upclomb,<br />
Down sped, and at the top the Lord God stood. <br />
But I my time abuse, my eyes by day<br />
Center'd on thee, by night my heart on fire--<br />
Letting my number'd moments run away--<br />
Nor e'en 'twixt night and day to heaven aspire:<br />
So true it is that what the eye seeth not<br />
But slow is loved, and loved is soon forgot. <br />
<br />
<br />
36<br />
<br />
O MY life's mischief, once my love's delight,<br />
That drew'st a mortgage on my heart's estate,<br />
Whose baneful clause is never out of date,<br />
Nor can avenging time restore my right:<br />
Whom first to lose sounded that note of spite,<br />
Whereto my doleful days were tuned by fate:<br />
That art the well-loved cause of all my hate,<br />
The sun whose wandering makes my hopeless night: <br />
Thou being in all my lacking all I lack,<br />
It is thy goodness turns my grace to crime,<br />
Thy fleetness from my goal which holds me back;<br />
Wherefore my feet go out of step with time,<br />
My very grasp of life is old and slack,<br />
And even my passion falters in my rhyme. <br />
<br />
<br />
37<br />
<br />
AT times with hurried hoofs and scattering dust<br />
I race by field or highway, and my horse<br />
Spare not, but urge direct in headlong course<br />
Unto some fair far hill that gain I must:<br />
But near arrived the vision soon mistrust,<br />
Rein in, and stand as one who sees the source<br />
Of strong illusion, shaming thought to force<br />
From off his mind the soil of passion's gust. <br />
My brow I bare then, and with slacken'd speed<br />
Can view the country pleasant on all sides,<br />
And to kind salutation give good heed:<br />
I ride as one who for his pleasure rides,<br />
And stroke the neck of my delighted steed,<br />
And seek what cheer the village inn provides. <br />
<br />
<br />
38<br />
<br />
AN idle June day on the sunny Thames,<br />
Floating or rowing as our fancy led,<br />
Now in the high beams basking as we sped,<br />
Now in green shade gliding by mirror'd stems;<br />
By lock and weir and isle, and many a spot<br />
Of memoried pleasure, glad with strength and skill,<br />
Friendship, good wine, and mirth, that serve not ill <br />
The heavenly Muse, tho' she requite them not: <br />
I would have life--thou saidst--all as this day,<br />
Simple enjoyment calm in its excess,<br />
With not a grief to cloud, and not a ray<br />
Of passion overhot my peace to oppress;<br />
With no ambition to reproach delay,<br />
Nor rapture to disturb its happiness. <br />
<br />
<br />
39<br />
<br />
A MAN that sees by chance his picture, made<br />
As once a child he was, handling some toy,<br />
Will gaze to find his spirit within the boy,<br />
Yet hath no secret with the soul pourtray'd:<br />
He cannot think the simple thought which play'd<br />
Upon those features then so frank and coy;<br />
'Tis his, yet oh! not his: and o'er the joy<br />
His fatherly pity bends in tears dismay'd. <br />
Proud of his prime maybe he stand at best,<br />
And lightly wear his strength, or aim it high,<br />
In knowledge, skill and courage self-possest:--<br />
Yet in the pictured face a charm doth lie,<br />
The one thing lost more worth than all the rest,<br />
Which seeing, he fears to say This child was I. <br />
<br />
<br />
40<br />
<br />
TEARS of love, tears of joy and tears of care,<br />
Comforting tears that fell uncomforted,<br />
Tears o'er the new-born, tears beside the dead,<br />
Tears of hope, pride and pity, trust and prayer,<br />
Tears of contrition; all tears whatsoe'er<br />
Of tenderness or kindness had she shed<br />
Who here is pictured, ere upon her head<br />
The fine gold might be turn'd to silver there. <br />
The smile that charm'd the father hath given place<br />
Unto the furrow'd care wrought by the son;<br />
But virtue hath transform'd all change to grace:<br />
So that I praise the artist, who hath done<br />
A portrait, for my worship, of the face<br />
Won by the heart my father's heart that won. <br />
<br />
<br />
41<br />
<br />
IF I could but forget and not recall<br />
So well my time of pleasure and of play,<br />
When ancient nature was all new and gay,<br />
Light as the fashion that doth last enthrall,--<br />
Ah mighty nature, when my heart was small,<br />
Nor dream'd what fearful searchings underlay<br />
The flowers and leafy ecstasy of May,<br />
The breathing summer sloth, the scented fall: <br />
Could I forget, then were the fight not hard,<br />
Press'd in the mêlée of accursed things,<br />
Having such help in love and such reward:<br />
But that 'tis I who once--'tis this that stings--<br />
Once dwelt within the gate that angels guard,<br />
Where yet I'd be had I but heavenly wings. <br />
<br />
<br />
42<br />
<br />
WHEN I see childhood on the threshold seize<br />
The prize of life from age and likelihood,<br />
I mourn time's change that will not be withstood,<br />
Thinking how Christ said Be like one of these.<br />
For in the forest among many trees<br />
Scarce one in all is found that hath made good<br />
The virgin pattern of its slender wood,<br />
That courtesied in joy to every breeze; <br />
But scath'd, but knotted trunks that raise on high<br />
Their arms in stiff contortion, strain'd and bare<br />
Whose patriarchal crowns in sorrow sigh.<br />
So, little children, ye--nay nay, ye ne'er<br />
From me shall learn how sure the change and nigh,<br />
When ye shall share our strength and mourn to share. <br />
<br />
<br />
43<br />
<br />
WHEN parch'd with thirst, astray on sultry sand<br />
The traveller faints, upon his closing ear<br />
Steals a fantastic music: he may hear<br />
The babbling fountain of his native land.<br />
Before his eyes the vision seems to stand,<br />
Where at its terraced brink the maids appear,<br />
Who fill their deep urns at its waters clear,<br />
And not refuse the help of lover's hand. <br />
O cruel jest--he cries, as some one flings<br />
The sparkling drops in sport or shew of ire--<br />
O shameless, O contempt of holy things.<br />
But never of their wanton play they tire,<br />
As not athirst they sit beside the springs,<br />
While he must quench in death his lost desire. <br />
<br />
<br />
44<br />
<br />
The image of thy love, rising on dark<br />
And desperate days over my sullen sea,<br />
Wakens again fresh hope and peace in me,<br />
Gleaming above upon my groaning bark.<br />
Whate'er my sorrow be, I then may hark<br />
A loving voice: whate'er my terror be,<br />
This heavenly comfort still I win from thee,<br />
To shine my lodestar that wert once my mark. <br />
Prodigal nature makes us but to taste<br />
One perfect joy, which given she niggard grows;<br />
And lest her precious gift should run to waste,<br />
Adds to its loss a thousand lesser woes:<br />
So to the memory of the gift that graced<br />
Her hand, her graceless hand more grace bestows. <br />
<br />
<br />
45<br />
<br />
IN this neglected, ruin'd edifice<br />
Of works unperfected and broken schemes,<br />
Where is the promise of my early dreams,<br />
The smile of beauty and the pearl of price?<br />
No charm is left now that could once entice<br />
Wind-wavering fortune from her golden streams,<br />
And full in flight decrepit purpose seems,<br />
Trailing the banner of his old device. <br />
Within the house a frore and numbing air<br />
Has chill'd endeavour: sickly memories reign<br />
In every room, and ghosts are on the stair:<br />
And hope behind the dusty window-pane<br />
Watches the days go by, and bow'd with care<br />
Forecasts her last reproach and mortal stain. <br />
<br />
<br />
46<br />
<br />
ONCE I would say, before thy vision came,<br />
My joy, my life, my love, and with some kind<br />
Of knowledge speak, and think I knew my mind<br />
Of heaven and hope, and each word hit its aim.<br />
Whate'er their sounds be, now all mean the same,<br />
Denoting each the fair that none can find;<br />
Or if I say them, 'tis as one long blind<br />
Forgets the sights that he was used to name. <br />
Now if men speak of love, 'tis not my love;<br />
Nor are their hopes nor joys mine, nor their life<br />
Of praise the life that I think honour of:<br />
Nay tho' they turn from house and child and wife<br />
And self, and in the thought of heaven above<br />
Hold, as do I, all mortal things at strife. <br />
<br />
<br />
47<br />
<br />
SINCE then 'tis only pity looking back,<br />
Fear looking forward, and the busy mind<br />
Will in one woeful moment more upwind<br />
Than lifelong years unroll of bitter or black;<br />
What is man's privilege, his hoarding knack<br />
Of memory with foreboding so combined,<br />
Whereby he comes to dream he hath of kind<br />
The perpetuity which all things lack? <br />
Which but to hope is doubtful joy, to have<br />
Being a continuance of what, alas,<br />
We mourn, and scarcely hear with to the grave;<br />
Or something so unknown that it o'erpass<br />
The thought of comfort, and the sense that gave<br />
Cannot consider it thro' any glass. <br />
<br />
<br />
48<br />
<br />
COME gentle sleep, I woo thee: come and take<br />
Not now the child into thine arms, from fright<br />
Composed by drowsy tune and shaded light,<br />
Whom ignorant of thee thou didst nurse and make;<br />
Nor now the boy, who scorn'd thee for the sake<br />
Of growing knowledge or mysterious night,<br />
Tho' with fatigue thou didst his limbs invite,<br />
And heavily weigh the eyes that would not wake; <br />
No, nor the man severe, who from his best<br />
Failing, alert fled to thee, that his breath,<br />
Blood, force and fire should come at morn redrest;<br />
But me; from whom thy comfort tarrieth,<br />
For all my wakeful prayer sent without rest<br />
To thee, O shew and shadow of my death. <br />
<br />
<br />
49<br />
<br />
THE spirit's eager sense for sad or gay<br />
Filleth with what he will our vessel full:<br />
Be joy his bent, he waiteth not joy's day<br />
But like a child at any toy will pull:<br />
If sorrow, he will weep for fancy's sake,<br />
And spoil heaven's plenty with forbidden care.<br />
What fortune most denies we slave to take;<br />
Nor can fate load us more than we can bear. <br />
Since pleasure with the having disappeareth,<br />
He who hath least in hand hath most at heart,<br />
While he keep hope: as he who alway feareth<br />
A grief that never comes hath yet the smart;<br />
And heavier far is our self-wrought distress,<br />
For when God sendeth sorrow, it doth bless. <br />
<br />
<br />
50<br />
<br />
THE world comes not to an end: her city-hives<br />
Swarm with the tokens of a changeless trade,<br />
With rolling wheel, driver and flagging jade,<br />
Rich men and beggars, children, priests and wives.<br />
New homes on old are set, as lives on lives;<br />
Invention with invention overlaid:<br />
But still or tool or toy or book or blade<br />
Shaped for the hand, that holds and toils and strives. <br />
The men to-day toil as their fathers taught,<br />
With little better'd means; for works depend<br />
On works and overlap, and thought on thought:<br />
And thro' all change the smiles of hope amend<br />
The weariest face, the same love changed in nought:<br />
In this thing too the world comes not to an end. <br />
<br />
<br />
51<br />
<br />
O My uncared-for songs, what are ye worth,<br />
That in my secret book with so much care<br />
I write you, this one here and that one there,<br />
Marking the time and order of your birth?<br />
How, with a fancy so unkind to mirth,<br />
A sense so hard, a style so worn and bare,<br />
Look ye for any welcome anywhere<br />
From any shelf or heart-home on the earth? <br />
Should others ask you this, say then I yearn'd<br />
To write you such as once, when I was young,<br />
Finding I should have loved and thereto turn'd.<br />
'Twere something yet to live again among<br />
The gentle youth beloved, and where I learn'd<br />
My art, be there remember'd for my song. <br />
<br />
<br />
52<br />
<br />
WHO takes the census of the living dead,<br />
Ere the day come when memory shall o'ercrowd<br />
The kingdom of their fame, and for that proud<br />
And airy people find no room nor stead?<br />
Ere hoarding Time, that ever thrusteth back<br />
The fairest treasures of his ancient store,<br />
Better with best confound, so he may pack<br />
His greedy gatherings closer, more and more? <br />
Let the true Muse rewrite her sullied page,<br />
And purge her story of the men of hate,<br />
That they go dirgeless down to Satan's rage<br />
With all else foul, deform'd and miscreate:<br />
She hath full toil to keep the names of love<br />
Honour'd on earth, as they are bright above. <br />
<br />
<br />
53<br />
<br />
I HEARD great Hector sounding war's alarms,<br />
Where thro' the listless ghosts chiding he strode,<br />
As tho' the Greeks besieged his last abode,<br />
And he his Troy's hope still, her king-at-arms.<br />
But on those gentle meads, which Lethe charms<br />
With weary oblivion, his passion glow'd<br />
Like the cold night-worm's candle, and only show'd<br />
Such mimic flame as neither heats nor harms. <br />
'Twas plain to read, even by those shadows quaint,<br />
How rude catastrophe had dim'd his day,<br />
And blighted all his cheer with stern complaint:<br />
To arms! to arms! what more the voice would say<br />
Was swallow'd in the valleys, and grew faint<br />
Upon the thin air, as he pass'd away. <br />
<br />
<br />
54<br />
<br />
SINCE not the enamour'd sun with glance more fond<br />
Kisses the foliage of his sacred tree,<br />
Than doth my waking thought arise on thee,<br />
Loving none near thee, like thee nor beyond;<br />
Nay, since I am sworn thy slave, and in the bond<br />
Is writ my promise of eternity<br />
Since to such high hope thou'st encouraged me,<br />
That if thou look but from me I despond; <br />
Since thou'rt my all in all, O think of this:<br />
Think of the dedication of my youth:<br />
Think of my loyalty, my joy, my bliss:<br />
Think of my sorrow, my despair and ruth,<br />
My sheer annihilation if I miss:<br />
Think--if thou shouldst be false--think of thy truth. <br />
<br />
<br />
55<br />
<br />
THESE meagre rhymes, which a returning mood<br />
Sometimes o'errateth, I as oft despise;<br />
And knowing them illnatured, stiff and rude,<br />
See them as others with contemptuous eyes.<br />
Nay, and I wonder less at God's respect<br />
For man, a minim jot in time and space,<br />
Than at the soaring faith of His elect,<br />
That gift of gifts, the comfort of His grace. <br />
O truth unsearchable, O heavenly love,<br />
Most infinitely tender, so to touch<br />
The work that we can meanly reckon of:<br />
Surely--I say--we are favour'd overmuch.<br />
But of this wonder, what doth most amaze<br />
Is that we know our love is held for praise. <br />
<br />
<br />
56<br />
<br />
BEAUTY sat with me all the summer day,<br />
Awaiting the sure triumph of her eye;<br />
Nor mark'd I till we parted, how, hard by,<br />
Love in her train stood ready for his prey.<br />
She, as too proud to join herself the fray,<br />
Trusting too much to her divine ally,<br />
When she saw victory tarry, chid him--"Why<br />
Dost thou not at one stroke this rebel slay?" <br />
Then generous Love, who holds my heart in fee,<br />
Told of our ancient truce: so from the fight<br />
We straight withdrew our forces, all the three.<br />
Baffled but not dishearten'd she took flight<br />
Scheming new tactics: Love came home with me,<br />
And prompts my measured verses as I write. <br />
<br />
<br />
57<br />
<br />
IN autumn moonlight, when the white air wan<br />
Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence,<br />
'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon<br />
In melancholy and godlike indolence:<br />
When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime<br />
To fond pretence of immortality,<br />
Vieweth all moments from the birth of time,<br />
All things whate'er have been or yet shall be. <br />
And like the garden, where the year is spent,<br />
The ruin of old life is full of yearning,<br />
Mingling poetic rapture of lament<br />
With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning;<br />
Only in visions of the white air wan<br />
By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon. <br />
<br />
<br />
58<br />
<br />
WHEN first I saw thee, dearest, if I say<br />
The spells that conjure back the hour and place,<br />
And evermore I look upon thy face,<br />
As in the spring of years long pass'd away;<br />
No fading of thy beauty's rich array,<br />
No detriment of age on thee I trace,<br />
But time's defeat written in spoils of grace,<br />
From rivals robb'd, whom thou didst pity and slay. <br />
So hath thy growth been, thus thy faith is true,<br />
Unchanged in change, still to my growing sense,<br />
To life's desire the same, and nothing new:<br />
But as thou wert in dream and prescience<br />
At love's arising, now thou stand'st to view<br />
In the broad noon of his magnificence. <br />
<br />
<br />
59<br />
<br />
'TWAS on the very day winter took leave<br />
Of those fair fields I love, when to the skies<br />
The fragrant Earth was smiling in surprise<br />
At that her heaven-descended, quick reprieve,<br />
I wander'd forth my sorrow to relieve<br />
Yet walk'd amid sweet pleasure in such wise<br />
As Adam went alone in Paradise,<br />
Before God of His pity fashion'd Eve. <br />
And out of tune with all the joy around<br />
I laid me down beneath a flowering tree,<br />
And o'er my senses crept a sleep profound;<br />
In which it seem'd that thou wert given to me,<br />
Rending my body, where with hurried sound<br />
I feel my heart beat, when I think of thee. <br />
<br />
<br />
60<br />
<br />
LOVE that I know, love I am wise in, love,<br />
My strength, my pride, my grace, my skill untaught,<br />
My faith here upon earth, my hope above,<br />
My contemplation and perpetual thought:<br />
The pleasure of my fancy, my heart's fire,<br />
My joy, my peace, my praise, my happy theme,<br />
The aim of all my doing, my desire<br />
Of being, my life by day, by night my dream: <br />
Love, my sweet melancholy, my distress,<br />
My pain, my doubt, my trouble, my despair,<br />
My only folly and unhappiness,<br />
And in my careless moments still my care:<br />
O love, sweet love, earthly love, love difvine,<br />
Say'st thou to-day, O love, that thou art mine? <br />
<br />
<br />
61<br />
<br />
THE dark and serious angel, who so long<br />
Vex'd his immortal strength in charge of me,<br />
Hath smiled for joy and fled in liberty<br />
To take his pastime with the peerless throng.<br />
Oft had I done his noble keeping wrong,<br />
Wounding his heart to wonder what might be<br />
God's purpose in a soul of such degree;<br />
And there he had left me but for mandate strong. <br />
But seeing thee with me now, his task at close<br />
He knoweth, and wherefore he was bid to stay,<br />
And work confusion of so many foes:<br />
The thanks that he doth look for, here I pay,<br />
Yet fear some heavenly envy, as he goes<br />
Unto what great reward I cannot say. <br />
<br />
<br />
62<br />
<br />
I WILL be what God made me, nor protest<br />
Against the bent of genius in my time,<br />
That science of my friends robs all the best,<br />
While I love beauty, and was born to rhyme.<br />
Be they our mighty men, and let me dwell<br />
In shadow among the mighty shades of old,<br />
With love's forsaken palace for my cell;<br />
Whence I look forth and all the world behold, <br />
And say, These better days, in best things worse,<br />
This bastardy of time's magnificence,<br />
Will mend in fashion and throw off the curse,<br />
To crown new love with higher excellence.<br />
Curs'd tho' I be to live my life alone,<br />
My toil is for man's joy, his joy my own. <br />
<br />
<br />
63<br />
<br />
I LIVE on hope and that I think do all<br />
Who come into this world, and since I see<br />
Myself in swim with such good company,<br />
I take my comfort whatsoe'er befall.<br />
I abide and abide, as if more stout and tall<br />
My spirit would grow by waiting like a tree<br />
And, clear of others' toil, it pleaseth me<br />
In dreams their quick ambition to forestall <br />
And if thro' careless eagerness I slide<br />
To some accomplishment, I give my voice<br />
Still to desire, and in desire abide.<br />
I have no stake abroad; if I rejoice<br />
In what is done or doing, I confide<br />
Neither to friend nor foe my secret choice. <br />
<br />
<br />
64<br />
<br />
YE blessed saints, that now in heaven enjoy<br />
The purchase of those tears, the world's disdain,<br />
Doth Love still with his war your peace annoy,<br />
Or hath Death freed you from his ancient pain?<br />
Have ye no springtide, and no burst of May<br />
In flowers and leafy trees, when solemn night<br />
Pants with love-music, and the holy day<br />
Breaks on the ear with songs of heavenly light? <br />
What make ye and what strive for? keep ye thought<br />
Of us, or in new excellence divine<br />
Is old forgot? or do ye count for nought<br />
What the Greek did and what the Florentine?<br />
We keep your memories well : O in your store<br />
Live not our best joys treasured evermore? <br />
<br />
<br />
65<br />
<br />
AH heavenly joy But who hath ever heard,<br />
Who hath seen joy, or who shall ever find<br />
Joy's language? There is neither speech nor word<br />
Nought but itself to teach it to mankind.<br />
Scarce in our twenty thousand painful days<br />
We may touch something: but there lives--beyond<br />
The best of art, or nature's kindest phase--<br />
The hope whereof our spirit is fain and fond: <br />
The cause of beauty given to man's desires<br />
Writ in the expectancy of starry skies,<br />
The faith which gloweth in our fleeting fires,<br />
The aim of all the good that here we prize;<br />
Which but to love, pursue and pray for well<br />
Maketh earth heaven, and to forget it, hell. <br />
<br />
<br />
66<br />
<br />
MY wearied heart, whenever, after all,<br />
Its loves and yearnings shall be told complete,<br />
When gentle death shall bid it cease to beat,<br />
And from all dear illusions disenthrall:<br />
However then thou shalt appear to call<br />
My fearful heart, since down at others' feet<br />
It bade me kneel so oft, I'll not retreat<br />
From thee, nor fear before thy feet to fall. <br />
And I shall say, "Receive this loving heart<br />
Which err'd in sorrow only; and in sin<br />
Took no delight; but being forced apart<br />
From thee, without thee hoping thee to win,<br />
Most prized what most thou madest as thou art<br />
On earth, till heaven were open to enter in." <br />
<br />
<br />
67<br />
<br />
DREARY was winter, wet with changeful sting<br />
Of clinging snowfall and fast-flying frost;<br />
And bitterer northwinds then withheld the spring,<br />
That dallied with her promise till 'twas lost.<br />
A sunless and half-hearted summer drown'd<br />
The flowers in needful and unwelcom'd rain;<br />
And Autumn with a sad smile fled uncrown'd<br />
From fruitless orchards and unripen'd grain. <br />
But could the skies of this most desolate year<br />
In its last month learn with our love to glow,<br />
Men yet should rank its cloudless atmosphere<br />
Above the sunsets of five years ago:<br />
Of my great praise too part should be its own,<br />
Now reckon'd peerless for thy love alone <br />
<br />
<br />
68<br />
<br />
AWAY now, lovely Muse, roam and be free:<br />
Our commerce ends for aye, thy task is done:<br />
Tho' to win thee I left all else unwon,<br />
Thou, whom I most have won, art not for me.<br />
My first desire, thou too forgone must be,<br />
Thou too, O much lamented now, tho' none<br />
Will turn to pity thy forsaken son,<br />
Nor thy divine sisters will weep for thee. <br />
None will weep for thee : thou return, O Muse,<br />
To thy Sicilian fields I once have been<br />
On thy loved hills, and where thou first didst use<br />
Thy sweetly balanced rhyme, O thankless queen,<br />
Have pluck'd and wreath'd thy flowers; but do thou choose<br />
Some happier brow to wear thy garlands green. <br />
<br />
<br />
69<br />
<br />
ETERNAL Father, who didst all create,<br />
In whom we live, and to whose bosom move,<br />
To all men be Thy name known, which is Love,<br />
Till its loud praises sound at heaven's high gate.<br />
Perfect Thy kingdom in our passing state,<br />
That here on earth Thou may'st as well approve<br />
Our service, as Thou ownest theirs above,<br />
Whose joy we echo and in pain await. <br />
Grant body and soul each day their daily bread<br />
And should in spite of grace fresh woe begin,<br />
Even as our anger soon is past and dead<br />
Be Thy remembrance mortal of our sin:<br />
By Thee in paths of peace Thy sheep be led,<br />
And in the vale of terror comforted.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[To the United States of America]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16446</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:19:27 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16446</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[To the United States of America<br />
 <br />
<br />
Brothers in blood! They who this wrong began <br />
To wreck our commonwealth, will rue the day <br />
When first they challenged freemen to the fray, <br />
And with the Briton dared the American. <br />
Now are we pledged to win the Rights of man; <br />
Labor and Justice now shall have their way, <br />
And in a League of Peace--God grant we may-- <br />
Transform the earth, not patch up the old plan. <br />
<br />
Sure is our hope since he who led your nation <br />
Spake for mankind, and ye arose in awe <br />
Of that high call to work the world's salvation; <br />
Clearing your minds of all estranging blindness <br />
In the vision of Beauty and the Spirit's law, <br />
Freedom and Honor and sweet Loving kindness.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[To the United States of America<br />
 <br />
<br />
Brothers in blood! They who this wrong began <br />
To wreck our commonwealth, will rue the day <br />
When first they challenged freemen to the fray, <br />
And with the Briton dared the American. <br />
Now are we pledged to win the Rights of man; <br />
Labor and Justice now shall have their way, <br />
And in a League of Peace--God grant we may-- <br />
Transform the earth, not patch up the old plan. <br />
<br />
Sure is our hope since he who led your nation <br />
Spake for mankind, and ye arose in awe <br />
Of that high call to work the world's salvation; <br />
Clearing your minds of all estranging blindness <br />
In the vision of Beauty and the Spirit's law, <br />
Freedom and Honor and sweet Loving kindness.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[In autumn moonlight, when the white air wan]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16445</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:16:42 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16445</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[In autumn moonlight, when the white air wan <br />
Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence, <br />
'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon <br />
In melancholy and godlike indolence: <br />
When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime <br />
To fond pretence of immortality, <br />
Vieweth all moments from the birth of time, <br />
All things whate'er have been or yet shall be. <br />
And like the garden, where the year is spent, <br />
The ruin of old life is full of yearning, <br />
Mingling poetic rapture of lament <br />
With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning; <br />
Only in visions of the white air wan <br />
By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[In autumn moonlight, when the white air wan <br />
Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence, <br />
'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon <br />
In melancholy and godlike indolence: <br />
When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime <br />
To fond pretence of immortality, <br />
Vieweth all moments from the birth of time, <br />
All things whate'er have been or yet shall be. <br />
And like the garden, where the year is spent, <br />
The ruin of old life is full of yearning, <br />
Mingling poetic rapture of lament <br />
With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning; <br />
Only in visions of the white air wan <br />
By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[While yet we wait for spring, and from the dry]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16444</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:15:18 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16444</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[While yet we wait for spring, and from the dry <br />
And blackening east that so embitters March, <br />
Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch, <br />
And driven dust and withering snowflake fly; <br />
Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky <br />
The sun is warm and beckons to the larch, <br />
And where the covert hazels interarch <br />
Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie. <br />
Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid <br />
A million buds but stay their blossoming; <br />
And trustful birds have built their nests amid <br />
The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing <br />
Till one soft shower from the south shall bid, <br />
And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[While yet we wait for spring, and from the dry <br />
And blackening east that so embitters March, <br />
Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch, <br />
And driven dust and withering snowflake fly; <br />
Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky <br />
The sun is warm and beckons to the larch, <br />
And where the covert hazels interarch <br />
Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie. <br />
Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid <br />
A million buds but stay their blossoming; <br />
And trustful birds have built their nests amid <br />
The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing <br />
Till one soft shower from the south shall bid, <br />
And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[To Thos. Floyd]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16443</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:14:31 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16443</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[To Thos. Floyd<br />
<br />
How fares it, friend, since I by Fate annoy'd <br />
Left the old home in need of livelier play <br />
For body and mind? How fare, this many a day, <br />
The stubborn thews and ageless heart of Floyd? <br />
If not too well with country sport employ'd, <br />
Visit my flock, the breezy hill that they <br />
Choose for their fold; and see, for thence you may, <br />
From rising walls all roofless yet and void, <br />
The lovely city, thronging tower and spire, <br />
The mind of the wide landscape, dreaming deep, <br />
Grey-silvery in the vale; a shrine where keep <br />
Memorian hopes their pale celestial fire: <br />
Like man's immortal conscience of desire, <br />
The spirit that watcheth in me ev'n in my sleep.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[To Thos. Floyd<br />
<br />
How fares it, friend, since I by Fate annoy'd <br />
Left the old home in need of livelier play <br />
For body and mind? How fare, this many a day, <br />
The stubborn thews and ageless heart of Floyd? <br />
If not too well with country sport employ'd, <br />
Visit my flock, the breezy hill that they <br />
Choose for their fold; and see, for thence you may, <br />
From rising walls all roofless yet and void, <br />
The lovely city, thronging tower and spire, <br />
The mind of the wide landscape, dreaming deep, <br />
Grey-silvery in the vale; a shrine where keep <br />
Memorian hopes their pale celestial fire: <br />
Like man's immortal conscience of desire, <br />
The spirit that watcheth in me ev'n in my sleep.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[To Joseph Joachim]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16442</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:12:34 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16442</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[To Joseph Joachim<br />
<br />
Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear <br />
Who hid her spirit of rapture from the Greek, <br />
Whereby our art excelleth the antique, <br />
Perfecting formal beauty to the ear; <br />
Thou that hast been in England many a year <br />
The interpreter who left us nought to seek, <br />
Making Beethoven's inmost passion speak, <br />
Bringing the soul of great Sebastian near. <br />
Their music liveth ever, and 'tis just <br />
That thou, good Joachim, so high thy skill, <br />
Rank (as thou shalt upon the heavenly hill) <br />
Laurel'd with them, for thy ennobling trust <br />
Remember'd when thy loving hand is still <br />
And every ear that heard thee stopt with dust.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[To Joseph Joachim<br />
<br />
Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear <br />
Who hid her spirit of rapture from the Greek, <br />
Whereby our art excelleth the antique, <br />
Perfecting formal beauty to the ear; <br />
Thou that hast been in England many a year <br />
The interpreter who left us nought to seek, <br />
Making Beethoven's inmost passion speak, <br />
Bringing the soul of great Sebastian near. <br />
Their music liveth ever, and 'tis just <br />
That thou, good Joachim, so high thy skill, <br />
Rank (as thou shalt upon the heavenly hill) <br />
Laurel'd with them, for thy ennobling trust <br />
Remember'd when thy loving hand is still <br />
And every ear that heard thee stopt with dust.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[To the President of Magdalen College, Oxford]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16441</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:11:52 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16441</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[To the President of Magdalen College, Oxford<br />
<br />
Since now from woodland mist and flooded clay <br />
I am fled beside the steep Devonian shore, <br />
Nor stand for welcome at your gothic door, <br />
'Neath the fair tower of Magdalen and May, <br />
Such tribute, Warren, as fond poets pay <br />
For generous esteem, I write, not more <br />
Enhearten'd than my need is, reckoning o'er <br />
My life-long wanderings on the heavenly way: <br />
But well-befriended we become good friends, <br />
Well-honour'd honourable; and all attain <br />
Somewhat by fathering what fortune sends. <br />
I bid your presidency a long reign, <br />
True friend; and may your praise to greater ends <br />
Aid better men than I, nor me in vain.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[To the President of Magdalen College, Oxford<br />
<br />
Since now from woodland mist and flooded clay <br />
I am fled beside the steep Devonian shore, <br />
Nor stand for welcome at your gothic door, <br />
'Neath the fair tower of Magdalen and May, <br />
Such tribute, Warren, as fond poets pay <br />
For generous esteem, I write, not more <br />
Enhearten'd than my need is, reckoning o'er <br />
My life-long wanderings on the heavenly way: <br />
But well-befriended we become good friends, <br />
Well-honour'd honourable; and all attain <br />
Somewhat by fathering what fortune sends. <br />
I bid your presidency a long reign, <br />
True friend; and may your praise to greater ends <br />
Aid better men than I, nor me in vain.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Melancholia]]></title>
			<link>https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16440</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 12:10:59 +0200</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://sonett.fontane-place.de/member.php?action=profile&uid=1">ZaunköniG</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sonett.fontane-place.de/showthread.php?tid=16440</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Melancholia<br />
<br />
The sickness of desire, that in dark days <br />
Looks on the imagination of despair, <br />
Forgetteth man, and stinteth God his praise; <br />
Nor but in sleep findeth a cure for care. <br />
Incertainty that once gave scope to dream <br />
Of laughing enterprise and glory untold, <br />
Is now a blackness that no stars redeem, <br />
A wall of terror in a night of cold. <br />
Fool! thou that hast impossibly desired <br />
And now impatiently despairest, see <br />
How nought is changed: Joy's wisdom is attired <br />
Splended for others' eyes if not for thee: <br />
Not love or beauty or youth from earth is fled: <br />
If they delite thee not, 'tis thou art dead.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Melancholia<br />
<br />
The sickness of desire, that in dark days <br />
Looks on the imagination of despair, <br />
Forgetteth man, and stinteth God his praise; <br />
Nor but in sleep findeth a cure for care. <br />
Incertainty that once gave scope to dream <br />
Of laughing enterprise and glory untold, <br />
Is now a blackness that no stars redeem, <br />
A wall of terror in a night of cold. <br />
Fool! thou that hast impossibly desired <br />
And now impatiently despairest, see <br />
How nought is changed: Joy's wisdom is attired <br />
Splended for others' eyes if not for thee: <br />
Not love or beauty or youth from earth is fled: <br />
If they delite thee not, 'tis thou art dead.]]></content:encoded>
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