ine Turnpike Tavern The Turnpike Tavern AND OTHER VERSE BY JAMES PLAISTED WEBBER ''ToM .... A certain roadside in thy mtntoryy EXETER, NEW HAMPSHIRE I9II ACKNOWLEDGMENT Five of these poems, 'Long Shore, May Eve, The Cape Light, The Harbour Buoy, and Junetide, have appeared in The Youth's Companion. Thanks are due the publishers for permission to reprint. THE TURNPIKE TAVERN THE TURNPIKE TAVERN Tts roof -tree is fallen ; Its doors, all unhung ; The bell 'neath the gateway Has never a tongue ; On the well-beaten wheel-track Wild briers encroach, Where long, long ago, Rolled the Royal Mail coach ; But the crack of the whip. And the blast of the horn Have long died away Into silence forlorn. By the well in the courtyard In twain lies the sweep ; Mine host and his bar-maid Have long been asleep. And Jock no more hearkens The clatter of hoofs, The rumble of wheels — Nor his master's reproofs ; And the creak of the sign-board, Askew on its post. With its rust-begnawed hinge, Seems the sigh of a ghost. 'LONG SHORE 'T^HE beach mists smoke in the morning sun, "*• And the sea 's as blue as blue can be — A ship the lighthouse island rounds, And the voices of sailors cheerily ring Over the waves to me. Right merrily rattle the anchor chains Ere to'gallant sails are furled ; From the " davy " drops the captain's gig, And the bearded sailors step ashore As from another world. And I wonder, a-watching the sailors come Home from the deep blue sea, If their voices ring as cheerily, If the cables rattle as merrily. If their lives seem full of mystery To them as they do to me. MAY EVE ' I ^HE twilight mist sweeps from the sea, around the hills, And in the hollow, o'er the meadow, violet-pied. In undulating beats, the cry of whippoorwills Rings underneath the crescent moon of later May. Alone, with that sad cry from out that veil, I seem to hear the very spirit of the dusk, Like to a hooded prophetess, adown the gale. Chant mournfully of days agone, of days to be. TE DEUM LAUDAMUS "^JoT simply surpliced choristers who chant Gregorians in the oak-stalled Gothic choir, The Ear Attentive hears, but strife of brothels, Cries of starved children, piteous wail on wail, A wretched woman sobbing in the dark. DOONE VALLEY \ X 7here purple heathered moorland hills arise In Devonshire, this sunny afternoon, Bageworthy Water skirts 'neath summer skies The track once footed by the lawless Doone : While I, o'er seas, to seek that lonely vale. Their ruined cots, their bleak domains, forbid, Turn the poetic page of Blackmore's tale, And bless again his dream of '♦ girt Jan Ridd." EPITAPHS FROM A CLOISTER VERGER A HUMOROUS guide to storied urns, A garrulous, cheerful elf, I know at length just how it feels To lie in one myself. BEADSMAN I held the post my father held, His father held ere he did ; Now I have gone the gate they went. My son shall serve as we did. Had I been bishop of this see (Which lack was not my fault), In the cathedral's self I 'd lie. Not in this cloister vault. RESTORER Through misdirected zeal, I brought To ultimate disaster. What frantic, Puritanic rage But hid with paint and plaster. CHOIRMASTER As man and boy I sang His praise For three score years and ten, And many generations taught Of singing lads and men. CANON PRECENTOR My life was punctual as the clock The major third of which At matins and at evensong Was my reciting pitch. ORGAN-BLOWER 'T was not for Sundays that I longed, Full choral services the while, But blessed Fridays, when they sang In their capella style. CHORISTER I sought to bring by heavenly words, Whose sense I scarce could ween, Nearer to God the souls of men Than chaplain did or dean. f VISION • "jV^Y little lad came in from play last eve, His face like Stephen's and his tongue aflame All day he 'd played within the school-house close, Alone, for Easter holidays were come ; Alone, till suddenly amid the glow Of sunset when the blazoned window flared, He saw an angel from the chapel fly, Soar upward unto God and disappear. Believe ? O wherefore should I doubt that He Who said, "The pure in heart, they shall see God," Hath shown my little lad so innocent And full of faith at least His messenger ? A NIGHT OF MARCH '^Jo moon ; but all the blue-black sky of night Is harnessed with trappings as of gold ; And, now, as 't were the chinking of chain-mail, I heard the wind sweep through the leafless wold. What host would'st thou encounter. Night of March, With sportive joust, or leaguer serious? — Thou heed'st my challenge not, but ridest on, Majestically stern, imperious. THE ROSE VENDER TTT'hat hast thou to do with roses, ^ ^ Thou, so gaunt and old, Beetle-browed, with eyes sinister, Mouth that 's over bold ? Purple heather I have purchased Of a Highland lass, Edelweiss of Alpine laddie At the Brenner Pass. Switzer lad and Scottish lassie With their flowers agree ; But thou man of evil visage, What 's a rose to thee ? 10 '•AND STILL FROM YEAR TO YEAR I WATCHED HER AGE" A ND Still from year to year I watched her age, Turning with hand too slow the lab'rous wheel, Or clicking through the violet even-end The needle with its never-ending yam ; Line upon line was added to that brow. As day by day the sea-tide leaves its toll Upon the sandy shore ; and day by day More knotted grew those hands that oft for me Had toiled far into night. Dear Mother, mine, Think you, I ne'er did note thy growing years, Nor reverenced them, because I never spoke The word that bared the heart ? O, now accept My homage full in fee for all thy tears. Thy labors, and thy prayers poured forth for me. THE BELL AT P£RE LA CHAISE ' I ^HE knell of the passing bell ^ At the gate of Pere la Chaise, Tolling a sad farewell, The knell of the passing bell. As dead passed 'mid dead to dwell, Still rings in mine ear for days — That knell of the passing bell At the gate of P^re la Chaise. 12 THE CAPE LIGHT "\1I7'hen twilight falls, I ope my eye ; The watches four begin. And with the darkness comes to-night The fog-wrack sweeping in. The stars that bloom in fields of sky, The moon that rides full blown. My dear companions of the dark, Leave me to-night alone. Drawn by my light from out the dark, Not knowing what they seek, The wild birds wheeling round my lamp, Brush with their wings my cheek. The tide from out the river's mouth That empties at my base, Meets mad the open sea to-night ; Its salt spray smites my face. I cannot see abaft, afore. To port, or starboard side. The ship that groping up the gloom, I trust somehow to guide ; Yea, guide her, though I see her not, Nor hear if they have cheered : ** Two points off port — the harbor-light 1 The cape, be praised, is cleared." 13 "DEAR LAD, WHOSE HEART IS OVER SEAS " T^ EAR lad, whose heart is over seas, Upon the Salisbury downs, Or in some Devon hedgerow lane. Or Warwickshire's quaint towns, Look here upon this poppy pressed, Its petals crimson yet ; *T was culled from a cathedral close In happy Somerset ; And here 's a tiny buttercup At Ludlow plucked one noon ; And here a spray of heather blue From banks of Bonnie Doon. Yea ! " take the flower and turn the hour," Whose spirit wanders down Some hedgerow lane 'twixt poppy fields, Or mediaeval town. 14 MIRAGE "C^ROM ocean mist and summer skies, As 'neath a necromancer's sway, With turrets, domes, and minarets. Full fair a score of leagues away, Behold the elfin city rise ! Across the waves peals on the breeze The clang as of cathedral bells, The boom as of the salvo gun. The tumult as of citadels For heroes home from over seas. Amid the shifting sheen and mist Gay flags and splendid banners wave ; And brands and helmets flash and shine From passing armies of the brave, Down streets bewailed with amethyst. Then veers the flaw ; the mist wracks flee ; The fairy fabric rends apart ; And into ocean, into air. Melt turrets, domes, and crowded mart ; Dies down the wind the jubilee. IS THE HARBOUR BUOY 'TpHE red-capped spar-buoy dips and bobs In the teeth of the swirling tides ; With wrench and pull, At ebb and full, It tugs, and tugging, sobs : •* It 's oh ! to see the ships stand out, The bellying topsails flap ; The bell to hear, And the sailors' cheer, And the boatswain's pipe and shout. "Yet never a point to north or south, And never to east or west. With might and main. The* I tug my chain. To swerve from the harbour's mouth ! " And then the Storm-Wind shrieks like grief ; The rust-gnawed iron yields ; And the buoy floats free — But on the lee A ship breaks on the reef. i6 THE AUCTION ' I ^HEY are selling my priceless treasure, Selling my golden youth, And Father Time, With the auctioneer's rhyme. Cries, " Going, going, gone ! " Gone to the highest bidder, Sold to Eternity ! " As I stand in the throng And list to that song Of " Going, going, gone ! " Listen with naught to proffer, Gold, nor labor, nor love, Which may move his ruth To spare my youth, Which is going, going, gone. "SOLITARY LIETH THE CITY" "\ T rHEN I behold her cargoes outward bound, But fail to see her argosies return, And note the lessening of her olden store, No Spring replenishing the Autumn past, I wonder what will be her latter end : — No gorgeous ruin as of capitals, Persepolis or ancient Nineveh, But like the dust that heaps their buried forms. The shifting sand shall hide her utter shame. i8 QUATRAIN "D ACK Steals the slow returning tide Over the marsh afar, Making the rank unseemly flats The mirror for a star. 19 A-VOYAGING Ohip a-standing out to sea, Whither may your journey be ? To the land of far Cathay ; Or to nearer Paraguay ? Will you see the Cross ride high Underneath a Southern sky ; Or be whirled in mad typhoon Past the Mountains of the Moon ; Then repair for sea again In some sunny port of Spain ? Ship a-standing out to sea, Would that I could go with thee I Wander idly up and down Many a quaint, old, foreign town ; But when night shuts down at last, Find me home, all safe and fast ! 20 JUNETIDE ' I ^HE mead with buttercups o'erflows, ^ A field of cloth of gold, While in my dooryard wither'd globes Of dandelions, late so bold, Are shattered by each breeze that blows. A week ago the lilacs bloomed ; The orioles from maples call, A-showering music down the lane ; While elm-tree seeds like snowflakes fall And ev'ry chestnut bough is plumed. The heart is filled on days like these With joy and eke with pain, For all around us something speaks Of beauty coming with each rain, Of beauty passing with each breeze. A SONG OF CHILDHOOD CiNG a song of childhood, On the brook afloat, Skimming down the river In a golden boat ; Shouldering the willow, Poling off the shoal. Gliding past the meadow To the distant goal. Now we leave the brooklet. Strike the river wide. Hurrying to the ocean O'er the swirling tide, Past the humming cities. Past the wharves and slips, Onward to the ocean With the gallant ships. Sing a song of childhood, Now the day is done ; Westward o'er the water Sinks the golden sun ; Sing a song of childhood. Sing the by-gone day. Meadow-brook and homeland Far, so far away. 22 THE ORPHAN 5 ' I ^ WAS early spring with you, lad, **■ When he fared on his way ; Your summer 's yet to come, lad. Whose year is at the May ; And you must travel long, lad, — Perchance to autumn cold — Ere you shall clasp again, lad. The hand you clasped of old. 23 DEC 15 1911 One copy del. to Cat. Div. DEC J5 i^n ijajORy OP ® 0«"930 a 793 7"" * J ^