NEAR BETHLEHEM AND OTHER POEMS BY J. EDGAR SMITH NEAR BETHLEHEM AND OTHER POEMS BY J? EDGAR SMITH 'Printed for Private Distribution by ALFRED HOLMEAD Washington, D. C. 1922 P53537 t*» Fred B Woodw»r »t II 1930 Jfaar VstitUtpm From c CAe Christian Register, Boston, JXCass. 'December 22, 1921. Near Bethlehem, Beneath Orion's glittering belt, to watch Their folded flocks, three shepherds stood. And, to , Beguile the time, they told how mighty gods Had walked on earth. Cleon, from Arcady, A votary of Pan, piped a tune That trilled the tender notes of mating birds; That buzzed the drone of humming bees; that made The wintry air bear nectared memories Of orchards blushing into springtime bloom, And dance with the rippling mirth of laughing nymphs. But when the Achaean idyl died away The man from Sidon, Hiram, wailed a dirge Lamenting fair Adonis; and they wept. Then Joel, son of Benjamin, sang To his harp's resounding strings the ancient psalms That match the gem-strewn empyrean: The heavens declare the glory of God; And the firmament showeth His handiwork. Day unto day uttereth speech, And night unto night display eth knowledge. They have no voice; but, shining, speak; Their line is gone thro' all the earth And their song to the ends of the world. But Thou! O, Lord! Whither shall I go from Thy Spirit ? Or, where shall I flee from Thy Presence? If I ascend into heaven, Thou art there! If I make my bed in hell, behold, Thou art there! Tho' I take the wings of the morning And dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, Even there shall Thy hand lead me, And Thy right hand shall hold me! Nor shall the darkness ever cover me, For the night shall shine as the day! Lift up your heads, 0, ye gates; And be ye lifted up, ye everlasting doors; And the King of Glory shall come in! These psalms, to prophet, priest, and king, had been Freedom in Babylon; living waters Good to the desert parched soul. That morn, Near Bethlehem, while Joel sang, the gates, The everlasting doors, did lift for them; And, from the firmament there flooded in, In tidal melodies, etheric waves Of gorgeous splendor, wedded light and sound. The morning stars together sang; The ringing, crystal spheres responsive choired; The whole creation vibrant rang; And lilting, winged angels bright, In opalescent loveliness attired, Came trooping down O'er Bethlehem Town, Before the wondering shepherds' sight. A chanting army, on they came; Each wore a jewelled diadem Which leapt and quivered living flame In every perfect precious gem; Reflecting choral ebbs and flows, Of contrapuntal angel tones, In all the varied hues and glows Of topaz, sapphire, diamond stones, Thro' violet and blue and gold and rose. Ah! blessed shepherds! humble men! with awe And wonderment to you the harmony Of Heaven did unfold! You heard the chant: Gather ye, gather ye! Sons of God! Come ye from farthest, from nighest! The heavens declare His glory there! Glory to God in the highest! Who was, and is, and is to be; Unseen and yet all-seeing; In whom we live and move; 'tis He In whom we have our being. He is the Life, the Light of Men Amid the darkness shining; And brings His peace, good-will again, Himself, in man, enshrining. Now, be ye lifted up, ye gates! And lift! O, everlasting door! He comes, Whom all creation waits, The King of Glory evermore! Glory to God in the highest, And to men be peace, good-will! Reverb'rant thro' the gulfs of space, Projectant all the length of time, The noble anthem rolled Its happy might Of peace and light, In cadences of ringing rhyme, And complementary colors bright That shone and told The mysteries of love and grace. And out and on the rhythm rushed In floods of light and bursts of song, That glowed and swelled and throbbed and flushed Till Chaos, swept by it along, Reluctantly respondent, hushed Its blatant, wild cacophonies, And primal night Felt strange delight In hyacinthine harmonies; For hither, God-ward, drawn, It took the Iris-hues of dawn! Fear not! a mighty angel said to them, The awe-oppressed herds. Good tidings do We bring! We are but messengers of Him Whose Son, in Bethlehem, is born today. The King of Glory, wrapped in swaddling-clothes Is lying in a manger. Seek for Him. For, though He be a Savior, Prince of Peace, He is a babe. The shepherds bowed to earth Amazed, entranced. That morn a touch of holy awe Thrilled thro' all flesh To wake afresh Its urging to the higher law. But what the shepherds heard and saw Passed others by. For there, near Bethlehem, Three men, on camels, followed an etheric star; And that, in all the brilliant sky, Alone was seen by them. And tho' they'd traveled from afar. Were rich, and great, and wise, The Magi's scroll-worn eyes Saw in the skies Only the Star that did adorn The firmament that glorious morn. Now, when the shepherds roused again, They saw the wintry stars above; they heard The bleating flocks below. And, from afar, A cock did crow, as tho' he saw the day. Come! said Joel, let us seek the Babe! Then, down the hillside, past their folded flocks They went. Above them glowed the nebulae, And Sirius sparkled, as of old. At last, Thro' cluttered lanes they found a stable, close Beside an inn, whence sounds of lowing kine And crowing fowl were heard. A light shone thro' The open door. And there they saw the Babe, In swaddling clothes, and lying in a manger. Ah! fragrant was the bed of hay Whereon His Mother Mary lay. And deeply sweet The look of gentle love She raised to meet The tenderness above From Joseph beaming. Again the shepherds' wondering sight Beheld the glow of heavenly light That, mildly streaming, Came from the Child. They took their dusty sandals off, They kneeled beside the manger-trough Where Magi were Who reverently piled Gold, frankincense, and myrrh, In richest offering. And, then, the shepherds told what they had seen Till Mary's eyes grew moist, and Joseph's hand Shook as he smoothed her brow. The Magi, struck With wonder, worshipped once again. But, as The sun arose, they bowed to it, and cried: O, Sun! We, who adore the Mighty Ormuzd, Came to give presents to a King. And we have seen The Prince of Light! And they, the wise, departed eastward. But The shepherds, gazing after them, about Their wonted tasks, did lead their flocks beside Stile waters. WHEN LYDIA WALKS When Lydia walks, it's my surmise The lady moves to charm my eyes; When Lydia talks, her rhythmic tone I hear as meant for me alone — Perhaps the facts are otherwise ! Tis said she needs the exercise; Tis said — but folks tell many lies. This fact remains, this truth is known: When Lydia walks Above her bend the dappled skies; About her flit bright butterflies; And song-birds blend, more tuneful grown, Their choral music with her own; All Nature takes a lovelier guise When Lydia walks. STELLA Across my night you fleet — a star! A rosebud scent upon the air! A lilt of music from afar! — And fade too soon for one so fair! TO A LADY Portrait Marked "Unknown" Altho' I'm late two hundred years or so; Altho' I may not learn your gentle name; Nor time, nor anonymity your fame Shall dim, dear Lady of the Long-Ago. Abides the love that makes this canvas show Your beauty, charm and poise, for aye the same; Tho' you and he who painted pass, its flame Kindles in later eyes a kindred glow, As hopeless! For the Fates decreed that you, Fair flower of a noble, ancient race, Should bloom in fragrant loveliness alone — Forever to yourself, to love, too true — Masking, in eternal cultured calm of face A heart to be adored — afar, unknown! TO L. There will be tears when you have passed away, And the smothered sobs of many a gasping prayer; Slow, solemn whisperings will haunt the air As shuffling feet drag out that mournful day. No rites will lack, that hand or heart can pay, To you who made the world seem flower-fair; No one who knew you will invite despair Nor from your guidance wholly go astray. Your deeds and thoughts, so nobly sweet and true, Your faith, that steadfast held its Polar Star, As blessed candles will return to you And rise as sacred incense near and far; And God. who made you good and lovely too, Will perfect what He only seems to mar. 8 IMMURED For him — who, jail'd within a castle keep, Beholds the silken cavalcade go by, In gorgeous pomp and gracious majesty, To clatter o'er the bridge and climb the steep Thro' flower'd pastures; who does not gladly peep, Tho' barr'd, at golden sun and dappl'd sky; But, bitter, turns away his darken'd eye, Most truly mur'd in melancholy deep — Contempt! You, rather, when, in proud array, The Knights of Poesy sweep grandly on, Should look and call — tho' not as free as they To curb in jewel-deckt caparison, A restive Pegasus: "Ride ye, to-day? Tomorrow, bring a draft from Helicon!" TO HARLEQUIN You follow, Harlequin, where Columbine With silver slipper makes the heartsease bleed; You wince, but will not thorny warnings heed When you her hair with roses intertwine. Her melting lips, to you than mellow wine More tempting, yet will give the kiss you plead; She. timidly denying, grants, indeed, And, lusciously reluctant, seems divine. Ah! doomed to lose by winning! you, too soon, Will learn you act a farce arranged by Fate; That, chains will link you to the fancied boon She must impose, although she hesitate; That both will watch the golden honeymoon Wane in the Boreal, flickering marriage-state. MARSYAS REDIVIVUS The tuneless Marsyas, untaught by woe, Free-verses loudly in the imagist; He daubs, in tottering cubes, the world a-twist; Reeling with autotoxic vertigo. The slough he punts — he cannot sail or row — Refracts crude colors to the futurist Who thinks its mud, its mottled scum, its mist, Far lovelier than the archipelago, The gemmed JEgeanl But, if Apollo came Would He compete once more, or wake the lyre? Or say in winged words of pointed flame: "O, Marsyas, once dead! My growing ire Disdains to flay again; but do not claim Your ambiguity is Delphic fire!" PHYLLIS Phyllis, quite like the emerald rare, Proclaims her worth by flaws; And rich and green and free from care, Phyllis, quite like the emerald rare, Attracting notice everywhere, Appraisal seeks — and draws. Phyllis, quite like the emerald rare, Proclaims her worth by flaws. 10 FRAGMENT OF WAR POEM "It is into the woods we go, my sons! It is into the Bois we go! Tis there we'll check and turn the Huns, In the wildwood of Belleau! And yonder's a town that we must take!" Said brave old Sergeant Daish. "Go get it, and hold for the old Corps' sake— 'Tis the town of fair Boureches!" Then into that hell they went pell-mell, The men of the Corps Marine; Tho' shot and shell from the enemy fell, And tore their ranks between — On, on they press'd! And firm they stood— 'Stout hearts and eyes so keen. They took Bouresches! France nam'd the wood, "Le Bois de la Brigade Marine!" They were heroes who turned the tide that day, They were men at their manly best; For the Devil-Dogs fought in the Leatherneck way- And the Germans can tell you the rest! t They fought— and some stay with Sergeant Daish, He of the quip and the yarn, In the quiet graveyard near Bouresches, In the Valley of the Marne! 11 THE UNHARMED STATUE OF PAN IN A GARDEN AT CHATEAU THIERRY That pagan Pan's sardonic grin Exhibits well the mood he's in; As from his sculptured pipelets flow In unheard measures, fast or slow, The subtle cadences of sin. He scatheless pipes above the din; He cares not who may lose or win; He is, while blood is shedding so, That pagan, Pan! Around him shards and bullets spin; He laughs to see men slay their kin; And faster, wilder, does he blow To see a Goethe fall and show "Gemacht in Deutschland" stamped within. — That pagan Pan! MISSA SOLIS Before the altar opalescent, The waning moon and Venus crescent, Conjunctive, like a censer sway; Through orient incense evanescent, Above earth's chalice iridescent, The golden wafer strikes its ray; The Sun is lifted, it is day! 12 MY MARGARET My Margaret! my Muse! my Grace! Minerva holds her wonted place Within thy form, my lovely girl, My lustrous, perfect, only pearl, And smiles on me thro' thy dear face! When thou art by there's nothing base That dare oppose my measured pace, Or set my ordered thoughts awhirl, My Margaret! Thou art a slender, jeweled vase All dainty perfumes to encase — Yet 'round thee twine, in many a curl, The vines whose grapes may set atwirl The dancing of a nobler race, My Margaret! HOLY WEEK The sun is warm, the breezes blow, The flowers form, the grasses grow, The robins sing and everything Is bright in these first days of spring! It's spring outside, it's spring withim It's joy's high tide when love may win; It's Holy Week when ladies seek Gaily to seem demure and meek. They chatter, clatter, round and round, In shops and churches they are found; They look for bargains in each place; A heavenly hat — a cheaper Grace. 13 SONG Let me but kiss that gentle hand, I ask no further favor; My heart of yours makes small demand, Yet lives upon love's savor. The rose, by southern breezes fanned, Can yield no sweeter flavor Than you, my dear, who understand And give the love I pray for! Vows are but words and fade away, They readily are broken; Your heart will truly love repay Although it be unspoken. Caresses are but youthful play — They may not love betoken — But love, true love, will always stay Where once it is awoken! THE DAYS OF LONG AGO The days of columbine and mignonette, The rosy, purple skies of long ago, In vivid memory, we live them yet, The days of columbine and mignonette. As we grow old, how quickly we forget The dull, drab, recent years! But still we know The days of Columbine and Mignonette, The rosy, purple skies of long ago. 14 DISPENSED I need not go to church to-day; I heard the cardinal sing matins In such a clear, impressive way I need not go to church to-day. Few priests their services can say As well as he— not Greeks or Latins— I need not go to church to-day, I heard the cardinal sing matins! At break of day, he sang his song, That cardinal of happy heart; He lilted daintily and long, At break of day he sang his song. He drove away all thought of wrong, He made me choose the better part, At break of day he sang his song That cardinal of happy heart. 15 MY CAMEO Because I saw your noble, saintly face Lift Heavenward, I had your portrait made In onyx-stone; for that would never fade. Because your dignity and gentle grace Are shown so well therein, I'm prone to place My picture-jewel where it is displayed Too freely. Pride? Ah! Yes! Perhaps a shade Of ostentation may my love debase. These busy vices, though, do not explain Why fairer images of you appear Engraven on my heart; nor why, in vain, My eager arms reach out to clasp you, Dear, When, in my dreams, I am a child again And see my ever-lovely mother near! 16 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS IIH 015 873 856 9 •