LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Chap. ■ Copyright No, Shelf_-..S:SL.C5 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. CITHARA MEA CITHARA MEA Poems REV. P AUTHOR OF " GEOFFREY AUSTIN, STUDENT "THE TRIUMPH OF FAILURE" " MY NEW CURATE," ETC. 'Oaia, TTOTva 6ewv, Saia, S , a Kara yav Xpvcreav Trrepvya (pepeis. O holy, venerable goddess, holy, who frailest thy golden pinion along the earth. — Eurip. Bacch. 370 Exurge, psalterium et cithara ; e.xurgam diluculo. — Ps. cvii. 2 BOSTON MARLIER, CALLANAN, & COMPANY 1900 80117 3(>14() I_ibi-«*if y of Congress Two Copies REceiytD AUG 18 ]900 Copyright entry SECOND COPY. Delivered to ORDER DIVISION, SEP 21 1900 Copyright, I'JUU ' By Rev. P, A. Sheehan All rights reserved JUaAjM/ ^ Printed at Boston, U. S. A. CONTENTS The Hidden : Page I. I poured the healing waters on the head . . 3 II. We know Thou 'rt round about us ; that tliis air 4 III. We hear the wild complaints of querulous winds 5 IV. And I behold Thee; but, oh ! it is so dark . 6 V. Who was the sad, despairful scribe who wrote ? 7 VI. On the vast beach of Time are careless strown 8 VII. I heard a sound of weeping in the night . . g VIII. For, what is space but one vast, black abyss ? 10 IX. I called unto my sleeping gods, and said . . 11 X. I ploughed through wastes of faded palimp- sests 12 XI. And yet such dreams but vex the ethereal sense 13 XII. And, lo! the tiny camera tries to cast ... 14 XIII. What then, O Pilgrim of the uight, O Soul ! 15 XIV. An empty catafalque ; the tapers burned . . 16 XV. Then a great silence fell, and all was still . 17 V Contents The Revealed: Page I. Now, I've proclaimed a war with lusty death 21 II. I've thed of 'J'itans heaping thought on thought 22 III. At last, I looked into my soul, and cried . . 23 IV. Beyond the vault of logic, and the flight . . 24 V. Yet, Faith must lead thee where the Fancy fails 25 VI. There poise thee on thy steady wing, my soul 26 VII. Thou too ambitious one, return ! return!. . 27 VIII. Then, where 's the mighty Heaven which Dante feigned? 28 IX. I saw a spirit floating above God .... 29 X. And yet we look upon Him, as of old ... 30 XI. Where a wan water stares unto the sky . . 31 XII. I placed my Poet against your scientist . . 32 XIII. And I, as one blindfolded from his birth . . 33 XIV. And one, in muffled tones, as in a mist . . 34 XV. And I alone, as in a theatre vast .... 35 A Matin-Song 39 The Dreaded Dawn 43 A Vesperal 49 The Soul-Bell 55 Apotheosis 59 vi Contents A Nocturne : Page I. Tearless, but with awe-stricken eyes she stood 65 II, Then sleep fled far; for as the rushing tide . 66 III. And did I know that form and that face ? . 66 IV. How long ago ? Ah, well, just hark ! and count 67 V. Now I was reverent, for I pitied her ... 68 VI. But if to-day 1 was so calm and reverent . . 68 VII. And if thy raised forefinger threatens fate . 69 VIII. And yet "If thou didst know" what sad por- tent 70 IX. Curious, but unconcerned, I '11 daily watch . 70 X. I wonder shall this dawn-lit vision rise . . 71 XI. I fear these words would mar the tranquil bliss 72 XII. Then whither shall I turn from this dark Fate? 72 Questionings 77 What Ary Scheffer painted 83 The Dumb shall speak 91 The Magician, Death 95 The Soul's Farewell loi Myths and Legends: Sentan the Culdee in Gachla — the Druidess 131 vii Contents Miscellanea : Page Hymn to Spring 157 In the Mart 163 The Lascars 171 Spirit-Voices 177 My Rose 1S3 Be hushed, ye Bells ! 187 Tristesse 191 vSwallows of Allah 195 Cosette 201 Thalassal O Thalassa ! 205 Above the Bridge 211 Valete Camoenas 215 A Prophecy 219 Sonnets : A Thunderstorm at Bingen 225 At the Rhine-Falls (Schaffhausen) .... 226 An Organ-Recital (Lucerne) 227 The Mer-de-Glace 22S The " Vox Humana" 229 To S. M. S 230 The Lamp of the Sanctuary 231 The Sonnet 232 Thirza 235 VIU THE HIDDEN CITHARA MEA THE HIDDEN I I POURED the healing waters on the head Of a young child, who shuddered 'neath the weight And stress of life ; and then I saw the dead Stare upwards from their tabernacles desolate. I do not like this insolence of Death ; They have no right to mock at us, who bear Life's burden, and the heaving of hot breath, — They who have cast the burden and the care. But, oh, dear God ! what is it all? This dream That in our slumbers shifts and alternates Scene after scene on canvases that teem With figures wrought by all the cunning fates, 3 Cithara Mea Who, from the awful silences of skies, The still more awful silences of graves, Weave in their shadowy looms our destinies, Untroubled by the tranquil Will that saves The dreamers of the sunset and the dark. Oh for one flash of Thy resplendent Face ! Oh for one whisper of Thy voice to mark Assurance of Thy presence and Thy grace ! II We know Thou 'rt round about us ; that this air With all Thy thought-waves heaves and pal- pitates ; That Thy most sacred presence, and most fair, Beholds the evolution of our fates. But our vain senses vex us with their cry. Importunate 'gainst whims of blinded chance, And the wide wings of reason ache to fly. Unhappy from their dread exorbitance — The dread dissatisfaction Thou hast wrought Into the folds of brain, — the sheathed soul; For all the calm and gentle gods of thought Struggle for freedom from the base control 4 The Hidden Of time, and sense, and space (with its vast walls That echo not the spirit's yearnings infinite), Wardens of iron in God's lordly halls, Who check the daring Titan's aerial flight, And cry : Thus far, no farther shalt thou come ! Within the Shechinah, — the presence cloud ! Only the High-Priest, Faith, sightless, dumb. Shall lift the veil ; unwrap the secret shroud. Ill We hear the wild complaints of querulous winds, Seeking Thee o'er the mountain and the mere, — We watch the ponderous thunder wave that grinds The earth in questings, impotent and drear. We see the childlike helplessness of earth, Its leaves and buds that grope in vain for Thee, — For Thee, the Father of an abandoned birth, Wondering and weak for its own mystery. And the stripped, naked forests of the fall Lift vainly to the sky their leprous arms, Lazarlike, pitiful, till Thy spring recall The spirit dead 'neath winter's wizard charms. 5 Cithara Mea But mostly, he, thy manchild, cries to Thee, He needs Thee in the storm and the shower ; He clamors for Thy keys of mystery, And frets for the subsidence of Thy power. Where art Thou hidden? Whence Thy dread eclipse? Thy children are grown covetous of Thee ; They clamor for Thy full apocalypse, Thy sail of light athwart our sullen sea. IV And I behold Thee ; but, oh ! it is so dark, I seem as one of blessed sense bereft ; What touches Thy strong right hand I remark, I see not what encompasses Thy left. Thine awful eyebrows shadow all my path, Questioning and challenging the sons of men, As Thou would'st reap of life an aftermath. Harvesting Death to sow life's seeds again. I walk among the shadows, and am hid In Thy vast gloom of glory cast apace ; I lift mine weary eyes as Love doth bid, And lo ! am lost in hiddenness of Thy Face. 6 The Hidden AV'hy wilt Thou always blind us with Thy noon? Or make us stagger against walls of night? Why not the pale, meek lustre of the moon? Or pensiveness empurpled of twilight ? Lead us, and light us, O Thou Lord of Light ! Lo ! in the valleys how we pause and grope ; Shall we not see Thee from th' embattled height, Where Faith hath fields of freedom, Love hath scope ? Who was the sad, despairful scribe who wrote — A cry, a struggle, silence — this man's life? A cry at birth, a struggle for a mote. And then night's silence swooping on the strife. A gleam of pallid sunshine ; and a mist Of green; and then the winter chalice full Of dead leaves, stained with autumn's amethyst ; A few babe-flow'ret faces — then a skull. A form to make the soul of artist dream ; A canker hidden in the soft rose-leaf; Eyes that are irised with the fair dawn's gleam, Then fade to ashes of a sunset grief. 7 Cithara Mea Fair marble cities, washed by fawning tides ; Challenging Heaven with domes and minarets ; Gray, shattered ruins, where the ichneumon hides. And Death frames dice from ivoried castanets; A nebule breathed from the fire-lipped Sun ; A bubble rainbowed with a moment's grace ; And then another planet's brief course run — A cinder on the hearths of boundless space. VI On the vast beach of Time are careless strown Fragments untenanted by life or power ; Shells from the Ocean, gathered here and l)lown By whirlwinds of fate, — a ghastly dower. Here is the skull of Raffaelle, — a brown shell. And brittle from the fretting of time's tides ; And here 's the fragile and deserted cell. The rainbow-tinted shrine of annelides. Here dwelt the mind of magic that inwrought Pictures to hang within the walls of heaven ; And here the gentle hermit-soul that brought Pearls of price from ooze and black sea-leaven. The Hidden Which is the greater-canvas-square that gleams With forms that flash Uke angel's wings across The artist soul, when in a night of dreams He clasps the vision — then wakens to his loss, Or, the voluted palace of the worm, With all its curved arcades as finely drawn As sea-sprung palace, fair in front and form, And flushed by the red cressets of the dawn? VII I heard a sound of weeping in the night ; I saw a form clasp to its naked breast Something that shuddered in the cold starlight. Another soul by weight of life opprest. I saw a priest before Thy altar stand, In the black midnight, pierced by one red star, I tried to hear — to hear and understand : He called Thee near — he called Thee as afar. I saw a nun stare at her whitewashed wall ; There were some blood-stains on a Form that hung Insensible ; tho' bitter tears did fall It heeded not the anguish whence they 'd sprung. 9 Cithara Mea And out on the far water wastes that heaved Their waihng hands to irresponsive skies, I heard, as tho' I dreamed, and were deceived. Their waters close o'er man's despairing cries. Mother and mariner, sacred mm and priest, Called, and Thou heard'st not. Oh, the silence barred 'Gainst all but happiest souls by death released Beyond those black abysses, feebly starred ! VIII For, what is space but one vast, black abyss, Darkened by tortured giants, blindly hurled. Pierced here and there by some sun taper's hiss That casts a pallid gleam on its slave-world ? I cannot see Thee there ; for space is hell, — Hell, with its million mills that tortured roll ; And Time 's the warder with his clanging bell. And suns the lamps that light man's dreadful dole. I cannot see Thee in the dark and cold, — Darkness of Erebus ; cold that fiercely burns, In the black interstellar spaces rolled. Ploughed by each cursed Enceladus that turns The Hidden His writhing bulk towards th' avenging gods, His wan face lighted by a pallid beam, Flung from the summits of the high abodes Whence thunders issue, and the lightnings gleam, — Thunders, unmuffled in the sleeping void ; Lightnings that drown themselves in seas of night ; And Thou, who reignest over worlds destroyed. Art cloaked and hooded in relentless light. IX I called unto my sleeping gods, and said : Awake ! arise ! this is no time for rest ! The aching heavens travail above our head. And these, our brothers, in the fital quest, Strain every nerve and fibre of the soul To bridge the gulf that spans the mighty chasm ; Leap down the valleys, climb the mountain thole. With heaving breasts and many a dread heart- spasm. To find beyond the line of mountain crests The depths of Chaos, unsurveyed, unspanned, Beyond the billows of the cloudlets' breasts Only the shadow of a ghostly hand, II Cithara Mea That seems to beckon, seems to warn back From dread destruction, watching for their trail, Centred in hidden fires, in red cloud-wrack, And all the dread Eterne's countervail. Awake ! arise ! this is no time for rest ! I shouted to my sleeping gods ; they turned Their sleepy eyes to the far mountain crest, Whence gods avenging questing spirits spurned. X I ploughed through wastes of faded palimpsests. Black with the wounds of mighty winds that strove, With shattered wrestling arms and bleeding breasts. To drag from earth and heaven their treasure trove, — The secret of their force ; the central power That moves the wheels of being and enclasps With tireless energy the star, the flower, And counts the endless aeons that elapse 'Twixt birth and death of all the quenchless orbs That wheel through spaces startled with their flash. That dies into the darkness, and absorbs Into the speechless silences the crash 12 The Hidden Of thundering worlds : Is it all blind Force? Some mad Cyclopean fury, that delights To trample worlds in its maniac course, Break sun-stars into blazing aerolites, Then rest o'er all the Chaos it has made, Let flux and reflux stem the madd'ning tide, And over Death and Ruin be displayed The crimson standard of the Crucified. XI And yet such dreams but vex the ethereal sense, Pollute the sweeter atmosphere of thought, And chide the languid soul's incompetence To reach and challenge all that it has sought. For, straining to the finer harmonies. That float above the discords of the mind. It leans its ear to catch the far-off cries. That hover o'er the wailings of the wind. Unlocks its eyes to catch the first faint ray That creeps above the far horizon's rim. And strikes the hills and seas to perfect day. And draws from soaring birds their matin hymn. 13 Cithara Mea And the dumb statue soul essays to speak, To sing with Nature unto Nature's God ; Alas ! how shall a stammering utterance seek T' interpret Him? shall star be sung by clod? And the diameter of Being be crossed By some ephemera that beats his wings His little hour across the tempest-tossed, And swollen seas of his imaginings ? XII And, lo ! the tiny camera tries to cast On the stelled canvas of the purple night, Across the yawnings of a space crevassed. And ravined through the glaciers of light, Its mock presentment of the mysterious Will That interpenetrates the universe ; Sows suns like sands ; and then grows silent till The spheres their tremulous litanies rehearse, And orb to orb exultantly replies. And hymns the vast volition that outspreads Its wings from pole to pole of farthest skies, And all the stellar mazes lightly treads, 14 The Hidden And yet is so elusive that the eye, Covetous and capacious, of the soul, Searching the void abysses of the sky, Fails to enfold that comprehensive whole, That soars beyond the atmosphere of thought, And hides in blinding light its majesty; Stoops to a sordid atom, and is sought By Heaven's tumultuous galaxy. XIII What then, O Pilgrim of the night, O Soul ! Avails thy scallop shell, thy sandalled feet ; Telhng thy beads of dumb despair and dole, Stung by the summer sun, the winter's sleet? Thine eyes are dimmed with gazing from afar, In grays of twilight, duns of arctic skies. Where glitter, as in caves the bright felspar, Solemn and silent the Night's childlike eyes. Dumb are the stars ; and dumb the grassy graves ; Silent the gods of thine ethereal thought ; For thou art whipped as with a felon's staves. When thy pride tells thee — He, whom thou hast sought, 15 Cithara Mea Thy God, Thy King, Thy Father — is thyself! Unconscious deity — all too conscious worm ! Nay, lift thee on thy pedestals of pelf, Be calm as God ; and let thy grace affirm Thy dignity, O man ! and let the nations say. These be thy Gods, O Israel ! come, adore ! Lo ! the bruised idols strew the world's way, And mocking laughter peals from shore to shore. XIV An empty catafalque ; the tapers burned In the night gloom of the cathedral aisle ; Thither the tear-stained yearning faces turned Of a vast multitude of men, the while Their veiled sisters sobbed behind the screen. 'T was night without ; and the strong rain did plash On window and on roof; and oft between The lightning's gleams the thunder's drums did crash. The preacher bowed his face upon his hands. He durst not look upon that weeping crowd ; And there where the dismantled altar stands, A figure paused, and wailing cried aloud : 1 6 The Hidden Preacher ! O preacher ! give to us a sign ! For thou hast watched and wept from the fair dawn ; Where has the Presence fled? the Form Divine? Whither has our God, our King, withdrawn? No answer came from out that muffled shape ; But Death clanked up the dark and silent aisle, And cried : Through me alone shall ye escape The blindness of your prison domicile. XV Then a great silence fell, and all was still, Still as a winter's night, when light grows dim, And all the star-lyres vibrate to fulfil Vesperal praises to the Elohim. The rain had ceased ; the preacher never spoke, And all awaited voices from the vast. Speechless, o'erhanging silences whence broke Ghosts of the present, spectres of the past. They glowered through the windowed dusk, and shook Their threat'ning shrouded hands, enmailed by Death, W^hilst he, with hour-glass and his scythed crook, Sucked out of dying Time its one last breath, 2 17 Cithara Mea And scattered on the floor the ghding sands, From shattered glass, that hid in crannied space ; Then swept, as sweeps the wave on winter strands Preacher and people from that mournful place. And gathered from the cataclysms passed, And swollen with tears of human misery, Down the far-stricken gulfs by death crevassed Thundered the cataracts of eternity ! THE REVEALED 19 THE REVEALED NOW, I 've proclaimed a war with lusty death — I say he 's not the master of our fote : I claim for pulsing life, for rhythmic breath, The orbit of a universe, disconsolate. If but the dim perspective of the tomb Narrows in its groove our destinies ; If but October grays, December's gloom Lean down and brood from God's penurious skies. I hold that Life is Life ; that Life is Will, — A finite emanation from the Infinite ; That holds the Harp of Time, and every thrill Wafts upwards to the sympathetic sight Of Him, who, throned afar, holds deathless watch O'er all His plastic hands have deftly made, And reaches through His myriad realms to catch The worship of a race He has betrayed, 2 I Cithara Mea If night treads out our short and palHd day, If the grave holds in its rapacious maw Victims of Heaven's fallacious display — Disproof that Light is Light — that Light is Law. II I 've tired of Titans heaping thought on thought, Projecting their own shadows on the clouds, — Vast Brocken-spectres with their colors caught From funereal mutes and coffin shrouds. O man ! thou little mime upon the deck Of this lone ship upon the wastes of space, How hast thou laboured for th' impending wreck. And cast thy foolish antics in the face Of the great spirits, who watching from afar Would lead thee safe within the harbor lights. Over the surges of the harbor bar. Beyond the pallid days, the starless nights. Into the opal depths of the great Sea, That murmurs round the central throne of Him Whose eyes have lighted from eternity The world of His wond'ring Cherubim. 22 The Revealed O Titans ! cease sand-building on the shores, Where ceaseless wash the mordant waves of Time ! O mimes ! beneath your masks and buskins roars The sea that swings to one discordant chime ! ! Ill At last, I looked into my soul, and cried : — Thou, thou at least, canst tell me nought but truth ; Thou oracle of God, through thee doth surge the tide Of everlasting thought, for bene, for ruth — Pythia, that sittest in the inner shrine, Votaries around thee, and a voice within ; I have no gift to move thee, nor incline Thy utterance to desires that are akin To those of disembodied souls that lave Their tresses in the lakes of love that swim, Shadowed, unstirred by golden clouds that clave Around the feet of brooding seraphim. Yet, shalt thou speak, O soul of mine, that sprang, Minerva-like, from out the brain of God ! Knowest thou not thy Father midst the clang And turbulence that stirs this earthly clod? 23 CIthara Mea Thou, who hast conquered the immensities, Hast winged the thickest airs of farthest space, Still for a moment thy rapt ecstasies, Show me thy God, thy Father, face to face ! IV Beyond the vault of logic, and the flight Of Fancy, that with eagle pinions sweeps From orb to orb of yonder quiv'ring night, From peak to peak of yon celestial steeps, Go forth, my soul. As on the desert isle Hovers the soul of science, and the lips Of men are silent, as the shades defile. And sweep in triumph o'er the sun's eclipse, So hover thou ! and hood thy burning eyes Of all thy restless thoughts ; let eye of faith, Swift and intuitive, watch the clouded skies For the one flash of face of Him, who saith : I am Who am ; darkness is round My throne ; My footstool is enwreathed in the clouds ; In the vast halls of Heaven I sit alone ; The myriad-winged cherubim enshrouds 24 The Revealed My Majesty. How shall one poor, broken wing Touch the high altitudes of the Holy Mount? How shall the wavering jet of faith upspring To fill its tulip-chalice at His fount? V Vet, Faith must lead thee where the Fancy fails ; Lo ! the clouds part around His sandalled feet. Higher, my soul ! behold, the folded veils Draw back in mercy from the mercy-seat ! God's vesture curves and floats around His throne, As float ensanguined clouds at eventide ; His Heaven is thickly peopled ; yet alone In their majestic solitude abide The Holy Ones. No angel wing hath swept The golden dust of all the centuries. Or tears the lonely y^ons have bewept, And sunk into the silence of eternities, There where His footstool stretches thro' the cloud ; Yet, the vast silences of God are stirred By all the pauseless waves that cry aloud In anthems that afar are feebly heard, 25 Cithara Mea Although the orbed heaven reels and quakes Under the thunders that are ever rolled From shrill-voiced sjiirits o'er the quivering lakes Of spaces populous, or of worlds unsouled. VI There poise thee on thy steady wing, my soul ! Fear not nor waver in thy lofty flight ; Let no unreasoned dread thy nerves control In this thy leap towards the Infinite. Cast thine eyes upwards to where the radiant zone Cinctures with studded stars the breast of God, Holds He His sceptred Hand before His throne? Rules He the lightnings with His shepherd's rod ? Here is no room for senses' subsidence ; Thine eagle glance must face the Royal Sun ; Higher, my soul, above the starlit trance Look thou, nor waver till thy task be done. Dread not the deep-bowed faces all around, The quivering tones of the too tremulous choirs. Wrapt in thine own deep silence and profound, Mark where the last reluctant cloud expires, 26 The Revealed And shows the Face of the All- Perfect One ! How doth it shine from out the bhnding maze ? How blend into one mighty monotone Argent of moons, and gold of summer days ! VII Thou too ambitious one, return ! return ! Imperfect the All-Perfect canst thou see? Why will the silvered moth forever burn In the swift raptures of one agony? It is not safe to poise thee on the wings Of faith beyond the starlit pinnacles, Where thy great compeer, Intellect, upsprings To challenge the unsleeping sentinels, That guard the light-paved avenues of Heaven, Swing 'neath their feet the everlasting wheel, And tell in thunder-crash, in swift-winged levin - Thou canst not penetrate — He must reveal. Come back to thy Dodona grove, my soul ! Be lonely ; let no vaulting dreams aspire ! Earth holds thee, as the fragile strings control The sacrificial bird on funeral pyre. 27 Cithara Mea Here may'st thou see God's Face amid the gloom Envisaged ; may'st hear the gentle sigh Whispered, as whisper 'mid the dusk's perfume Sobs of the night-jar's dolorous litany. VIII Then, where 's the mighty Heaven which Dante feigned ? Where are the fields of Light, where Beatrice led (Sceptred and laurelled for his song unstained, Cypressed, for he saw the unblessed dead.) Her great grave poet, with the eyelids drooped Beneath the weight of myrtle and of bays, And the long aisles of night, wherein he stooped. And strained for the reluctant, halcyon days? And where the Patmos vision, sun-enshrined. And dappled with the moons of gleaming pearls, The sea of light, where poet-saint combined Waves of the chrysoprase, and crests of beryls ? Or that high rapture, whence he called to God, Tenter of Tarsus, from the Kedar tents Of the vast Pagan world, that hymned abroad Elysium, and its fleshed habiliments? 28 The Revealed Are these but vague, but artful symbolisms, To cheat a credulous, but ambitious race. Which calls for God for ever from th' abysms Of all His silent, irresponsive space? IX I saw a spirit floating above God, The old Judaic sprite of fear and scorn. Dread of the serpent's tooth, and emerod. Contempt, and proud uplifting of the horn, When the Unseen drew back his smiting hands, And gloved them at the voice of prayer or hymn, And the lost race upraised o'er Arab sands A man-made idol for their Elohim. I know that Spirit flaps his hooked wings Into God's face to-day, as yesterday ; I know men's blind desire forever rings : Show us the Father ; this is what we pray ! And yet did God but yield to their desire. Their everlasting lust for hidden things ; Did He reveal Him on His wheels of Fire, And show of Life and Death the secret springs, 29 Cithara Mea They would but scorn Him for His gentleness, As scorned all blatant Jewry devil-driven ; Seek to unthrone Him for divine largess, Unvving His Angels, and unhinge His Heaven ! X And yet we look upon Him, as of old The scaled and soildd fisher-folk did look With blank unconscious stare and visage bold Upon the face of Christ ; whilst angels shook Their vast outspreading pinions o'er His head. And down from the empyrean floats the Dove, Hovers with gleaming breast and wings outspread In all the raptures of the Triune Love. 'T was but a glimpse ; but as the wind uplifts The fleecy haze, and shows the Holy Mount, Where Time forever sleeps on snowy drifts. And all the seas exhaust th' eternal fount ; So the far flash of heaven revealed the light That broke in meteor gleamings from the breast Of God ; lest the effulgence blind the sight Of eyes, white-filmed from the holy Quest, 30 The Revealed Then all was gray again ; and here was Man, And all the joy Transfiguration wrought Pales from its sudden splendor, and grows wan, And faith assumes what the far vision brought. XI Where a wan water stares unto the sky From a fringed socket of empurpled hills, Unflecked by wing of bird, starred cope, or shadowy Dream-picture, that from azure deeps distils, And where a black rock, that has shook aside The amorous curls of a tangled vine. Frowns to its shadow in the sleeping tide, And the deep silence pants for the Divine, A prophet sate, long-bearded and gray-browed, Sate and awaited one prophetic sign ; Over the glassy depths, deep bayed and bowed, Eyry of eagle, and the lion's shrine. Lo ! a faint coruscation on the cloud, And just a ripple on the water's face, And just a whisper's echo, not so loud As to disturb the trout's unconscious grace ! 31 Cithara Mea The seer arose, and with a trumpet tongue As when the thunder giant stalks abroad, He woke the World- Lyre with stars o'erstrung : " I 've seen the Face — I 've heard the Voice of God ! " XII I placed my Poet against your scientist ; I placed my Prophet- King against your Poet. There was one Thabor in the years of Christ ; To-day a Thabor is to all who know it. So says the pallid priest, with tear-dimmed eyes, Wondering at the white Circle of the Host, Trembling to touch It, whilst the vast surmise Wanders o'er Heaven, as a happy ghost Who, on its birthday in eternity. Brushes the fields of air with winged feet, Pauses and speculates. Can this be I — Soul of my Soul — thy blessedness complete ? So says the dreaming nun, in cell and choir, Watching the silent gate for word or sign ; Or the white blood-stained Figure to inspire For earth's desires some Heaven's anodyne. 32 The Revealed And who shall say beneath that thorn-crowned head God's eyes flash not from out their film's eclipse ? And who shall say, beneath the mystic Bread Gleams not, to Faith, Christ's white apocalypse? XIII And I, as one blindfolded from his birth, Stumble and stray around my Father's house, Call with up-pleading hands to heaven and earth That light my aching sight might yet espouse. And, lo ! I hear, behind the arras stirred By faintest breathing, sounds of gliding feet, And just the echo of a laughing word, And just a surmise that the spirits sweet, Who have disrobed them of the vesture vile Of this dread body, mock me in their love, And whisper, " See, he stumbleth yet awhile, He seeketh shadows, like a blinded dove, " He seeth not the Father smiling there, And just eluding his complaining hands ; He beats with querulous pain the silent air ; Could sve but reach him, and unloose his bands, 3 33 Cithara Mea And breathe upon his mouth and on his face A gentle air, as when the Spirit moves ; And show how black abyss and sunlit space Are tremulous with the souls of all he loves." XIV And one, in muffled tones, as in a mist Of Alpine vapor, when deep calls to deep, Whispered, The Time, the Time, for God His tryst ! Let us awake him, for his senses sleep, Smooth out the wrinkles of far fields of space. Marshal the stricken suns till they unite Upon the Tree of Life, as clusters grace The orange groves beneath the pale moonlight ; And tell him. Here 's God's light-throne, but 'tis muffled. And it is night unto the Face of God ; Here is the sea of heaven, unflecked, unruffled ; Open thine eyes to vistas yet untrod ! And one broke in. Let all the harps of heaven Blend in one burst of virile symphony. As when earth's mighty forests tempest-riven Unloose their stops in frenzied agony. 34 The Revealed And let the far star-sentinels combine Shrill harmony and the flame-plumed spheral song, Till earth's and the skied denizens' marshalled line Long-buried praises from dead worlds prolong. XV And I alone, as in a theatre vast And empty, at the painted drop-scene stared ; And, as a frightened child doth upward cast His eyes at some unbodied spectre scared, Thought, Is this all, or shall the curtain lift? And shall I take my chance of what I see ? Far sunlit spaces through a dreary rift — And through a chink of death, the eternal Sea ! Shall I say. Yes ! O Spirits, strain the cords. And let the scene curl upwards to the sky. And let the crash of all your heaven-strung chords Break on my poppied senses, till they cry, Peace, and be still ! and give me back my earth ! Ah, yes ! my saints, untouched be your lyres ; Till death of life breaks into sudden birth, And dream of death in waking day expires. 35 Cithara Mea And hush the Winding light of heaven's spheres, I am content to bear the transient cost. For all the Vision that bowed heaven reveres, Leave me the moon-like meekness of my Host ! 36 A MATIN-SONG 37 A MATIN-SONG SEA ! and oh, tranquil Sea ! Belted with gleaming pearls, Warden of treasures and gold, Is it true, O pitiless Sea, That 'neath where thy wave hath rolled Thou holdest forever in fee, In the strength of eddying swirls, Gold of men, and their might. Blanched in the green twilight, Where no power of pity imperils Thy power that is infinite ? Waves ! and oh, swelling waves ! Who hath lifted ye up. And flung ye to waste on the shore, As wine from a wassail cup ? Why spend ye your strength in vain To-day, as ever of yore ? Scooped from the dusky caves. Have ye no purpose, or pain Of forethought, to lavish and lower Your crested strength in the rain That weepeth, and is no more? 39 Cithara Mea Sands ! and oh, shining sands ! Dimpled with rainbow shells, Smooth, and shining, and firm, As if never the ocean swells, In the strength and stress of the storm, Leaguered by high commands From the god" of the air who indwells, Had never shivered their strength On your patient face ; will ye keep Forever the same, through the length Of leagues by the lips of the deep ? Ship ! and oh, phantom Ship ! Thy tall spars netting the sky. Plunging at every dip And decline of the turbulent seas ; Fling back to us the Key, That ever from lip to lip Intones thy far destiny. Silent and sad to the breeze Answer thy canvassed shrouds ; Thine, too, are the mysteries Of the stars and clouds ! 40 THE DREADED DAWN 41 THE DREADED DAWN ISMENE ! we walked the sands together, And I was winter, and you were May ; But our love of the sea broke Time asunder, Made summer for both that happy day. Ismene ! your hand was gathered in mine, As the heart of a rose in its withered leaves ; And your finger petals twined and closed, As your memory twines around him that grieves. Ismene ! your gray eyes wandered afar O'er the tumbling billows that heaved and broke, And then sought mine ; but I feared to look. Lest the soul that I dreaded had there awoke. Ismene ! a child thou wert then, and a child I prayed you 'd remain through the clust'ring years ; Alas ! for time knows but growth and change. And they come with the terrors of list'ning fears. 43 Cithara Mea Ismene ! you lifted a shell to the shell Of the soft pink ears that had heard but the notes That slip from the skies, as a loosened lock Slips over thy neck, and the salt wind floats. Ismene ! you said, Hark, hark to the waves And the echoing sounds from the far-off shore ! I wonder do angels play with shells. Do they start at the leap of the sea's long roar? Ismene ! I thanked my God at the word, Tho' I dreaded to meet thy soft gray eye, And I said in my heart, She is still but a child, We may linger and love as in days gone by. Ismene ! the hooded eve came down, And a shadow fell betwixt you and me, For your brow grew troubled, and you looked afar O'er the purple wastes of the twilight sea. Ismene ! you said. Let us go ; and you drew The trembling petals of your white hand From mine, that closed, as the Hand of God Drew up His curtains o'er sea and land. 44 The Dreaded Dawn Ismene ! I said, Behold the Night, The hermit Night, and his sanctities Of star and wave ; then I ventured to look In the fathomless depths of Ismene's eyes. Ismene ! I hoped that thy child-soul gazed Through eyes that were soft as the eyes of a fawn, Alas ! 't was a woman's soul looked at me — I was face to face with the dreaded dawn ! 45 A VESPERAL 47 A VESPERAL OUT of the shadowy East Looms the shadow of Night ; God draws up o'er the cage Of earth, with its man and beast, His arras of curtained hght ; And, as a bird in his rage At the dark, sings long and loud. Lifting his head on high — Higher in dreams than the cloud — Sings loud and long as a lark. Who seeks the silence of skies. Lest the gross sounds of earth Should pierce his illumined dark. Or echo in feeble cries His rapture's jubilant birth. So man, in the curtained gloom Of night, apprehends the vast Sweep of the harmonies ; Spacious and solemn they float From the soul of man to the sky, 4 49 Cithara Mea Upwards and onwards cast ; From the star to the list'ning soul ; Who shall interpret that cry? Does it die in the dim remote ? Or far as the spheres unroll, Does it echo forever and aye, — A plaint in the infinite void, As of a spirit decoyed From its native heaven astray? A challenge from pole to pole For a new life's assay? When o'er the Arab sands Moved the shadowy cloud, Hung over Israel's ark. It was but a mist, till the dark Drew o'er the earth a shroud As Night's black empire demands. And the smoke flashed into flame Of ruddy splendor and heat. And bent in the wind and bowed Its light and its heat afar. And the thoughts of men in the day Are smoke and mist till the dusk Breathes on the pillared cloud ; And, lo ! the columnar flame Out of the darkness wakes 5° A Vesperal Light, and heat, and the musk Of perfumed, perfected thought. Hail ! then, to thee, O Night ! Thou alone canst evolve Fury and flame and light From the vast suns that revolve At thy beck ; and thou, too, alone Canst change the gray monotone Of vaporous misty dreams To the godlike flame of thought. When man in his madness deems The rapture and rage beseems His soul from the heavens far-brought. THE SOUL-BELL 53 THE SOUL-BELL NIGHT, and its noon, and a far to-morrow, Gray with the fears Of a Future that leans to a Past to borrow Its meed of tears. White are the drifts outside ; and hither. Around her bed. White comes the face, that asks. Oh, whither Fares forth my dead ? White is the taper clasped in her fingers ! Her lips are white ; Recall Thy judgment, O God ! that lingers This weary night ! Hark ! from the ivy across the river Moaneth the bell ; Death ! fling thy arrow back to its quiver ; There ! it is well ! Still as the marble and cold she seemeth. Looking afar; Round the wide orb of her future gleameth Her Life's lone star. 55 Cithara Mea Frail, how the garment of Life still holds her From the far flight Through the trail of the stars, whose eyes enfold her Beyond the night. Hark ! how again the soul-bell splinters The granite gloom. Thick with the murk of a thousand winters, And a halting doom. Come, O ye Spirits, that float and hover Above the soul ! Is there no gleam of bliss to cover Gray death and dole ? There, once again, like a bolt from heaven, (Why always three?) Thunders the soul-bell till earth is riven 'Twixt you and me. A flash of crimson ; in some far bourn A star hath bled ; Earth and the sky have met to mourn Ismene, dead ! 56 APOTHEOSIS 57 APOTHEOSIS GOD took her in the dawn of life, And righdy, for what right have we To gainsay God's economy Through all our fretfulness and strife ? He holds in fief what he has made, And star and flower, and bird and blade Bend to His beck. If therefore He Some matin hour looks round His choirs, And thinks, with all their pomp displayed, Cherubic love, seraphic fires, — He misses one sweet face and shy ; Or, in the unisoned gold lyres Caught in angelic hands, one string, Cut from a human heart to try A note than heaven's more ravishing, Would vibrate 'neath His loving hand. And sing and soar at His command. What right have we, here lingering. To quench in question such demand ? 59 Cithara Mea Or if my Lady bent her head, Star-crowned and silver-crescented, And saw a lily's golden spear Sheathed in scabbard velveted ; And thinks that "wonder" should be here, In my own garden; 'tis too fair For that brown earth, and that broad stare Of foolish vagrants ; what know they Of beauty, but to watch decay Print his brown fingers, withering? And if my Lady's gardener comes With silver shears and reverent head And cuts the juicy stem, or plucks The fair thing by its fibre strings, Plants it anew beneath the flux And flow of amber-colored springs. That leap where'er my Lady's feet Prints a columbar paraclete ; Have you or I the right to fling Salt tears in peevish questioning? Ah, no ! but if God leaves the dreams, — The happy gift of Memory, — Of stringed harp and perfumed flower, Strung on the branches near the stream Or planted at my Lady's feet, Fairest in all her Eden bovver, 60 Apoth eosis That lines the crystal-paven street, And if God leans an ear to catch ^olian melodies, passing sweet, From that sweet harp whose tones attach Mute wond'ring angels' sympathy ; Though harp and flower are lost to us, Of that sweet soul so covetous, We shall not grudge to Paradise Our loved ones' apotheosis ! 6i A NOCTURNE 63 A NOCTURNE " Quid sil fiihiriuH cras,fitge quarere." TEARLESS, but with awe-stricken eyes she stood Beside me in the ling'ring of the night, Just when the dusk was challenging the light, And questioning its rights o'er field and flood ; Her trembling lips vermilioned were with blood. But the soft gates of speech did ope despite The warning fingers tinted red and white, As if they 'd clasped the nails of Holy Rood. But the lips bit as if in sudden pain. Then twice ensanguined uttered this one word : " If thou didst know ; " and placing once again The white mute finger on the trembling chord Of speech, the vision vanished in the fane Of forms invisible, and words unheard. 5 65 Cithara Mea II Then sleep fled far ; for as the rushing tide Of fretful water, that is rudely flung In silvern drops from every steeled rung, Makes the vast wheel revolve ; and ev'ry stride Sets in imperious motion, side by side, The pliant mechanism, lightly hung ; So the great stream of thought, so quickly sprung. Set all conjectures wand'ring far and wide. " If thou didst know " — what rapt mysteriousness Is veiled behind this dark and sibyl speech ? What thread of fate? What promise of duress? What hand from out the mists of time to reach, And frame and mould in fretful hiddenness The lessons that these dusk-drawn visions teach ? Ill And did I know that form and that face ? Or recognise those veiled lineaments? Ah, yes ! a chain of dim, far-off events Drew from the past the wonder and the grace, That breathed round her like a crystal case, And made those spiritual environments An atmosphere beyond all touch and sense. Beyond all limits of our time and space. 66 A Nocturne For she would speak as one who fain were mute, And she would look as seeing things afar, And the soul-soilings that so oft imbrute, She touched as with the pencil of a star ; And all earth's Protean lies she did confute. And harness slaves to Faith's triumphal car. IV How long ago ? Ah, well, just hark ! and count The beads of years that since our youth have rolled ; And yet, 't is not as beadsman's rosary told, I number the sad days since she did mount A spirit to the spirit's happy fount Of life, whose light doth all great things enfold. 'Twas but to-day the black reluctant mould. Flung on the virginal tablets that surmount Her grave, did crumble ; and hither at my feet The rude discourteous spade did idly fling A red-brown fragment and a wisp of hair. Spared by the unconscious chemists that com- plete The work of death ; 't was all that his dread sting Had left of all was perfect, and most fair. 67 Cithara Mea V Now I was reverent, for I pitied her, Antl this her relic which I gently raised, While the rough sexton greatly was amazed That such a piteous shell should move or stir Aught but contempt ; to me 't was harbinger Of dest'nies fulfilled, and high upraised, — A mute memento of a soul, that, dazed By its too daring thoughts, would far prefer The unconscious simply-spoken symbolism Of all her faith and lowly love did teach. Such are the souls that spring from the abysm Of Time, and stretch towards the farthest reach. Where life's dim stainings touch God's faultless prism, Transmuted beyond the power of human speech, VI But if to-day I was so calm and reverent, And only wondered at this awful birth, Wrought by the subtle alchemists of earth, Why did she come with such dread looks intent, And rouse me from lethargic wonderment Into a paroxysm of doubt and dearth Of faith ; me, whom the widest girth Of God's great universe can scarce content? 68 A Nocturne " If thou didst know ! " Spare me, thou spectral saint ! Wrap up thy secrets in the mist and cloud, Or visit those weak souls that fail and faint At every rustling of the spirit's shroud ; No feeble suppliance for some hidden taint Shall plead my soul, by midnight terrors cowed. VII And if thy raised forefinger threatens fate. Wrought in the dark conspirings of the years, In pestles filled with all the floods of tears, That drop like gouts of blood from love or hate ; It shall not move me from the high estate. Where in the sympathy of lost compeers, — My mountain poets, my far-sighted seers, — I look at life ; nor sunken nor elate, I place my back against the walls of time, And bid the vengeful years come swiftly on. On with the music march, the funeral chime. With blackest spectres of the life that 's gone Down the dim valleys, laced with serpent slime Where neither sun nor stars nor moon hath ever shone. 69 Cithara Mea VIII And yet " If thou didst know," what sad portent Is hid beneath these words of simplest guise? For if I reason, " 'T is madness to be wise, Yet wisdom from above is often lent, With all the forethought of a wise intent. So when the sheeted spectral years shall rise, Holding in trembling hands my destinies, I may prepare for peace and anguish blent," Ev^en then I sink in doubt. That pregnant hint. Does it forecast my future weal or woe? Is it the sunshine's gold, or purple tint, Flung from the frowning clouds that slowly go Athwart my path ? Storms rave or sunbeams glint ; 1 set my face 'gainst all the winds that blow. IX Curious, but unconcerned, I '11 daily watch The long, slow ribbon of my life unrolled. Each hour employ some mystery to unfold. Some prophecy to unravel, or to catch The sounds that follow th' uplifted latch In some dark haunted chambers, where untold Lie secrets of the gods, bestial, unsouled, Beyond Time's alchemy, or Death's despatch. 70 A Nocturne Calm as the mystics by the sacred stream, Wrapt in the high empyrean of pure thought, A silent witness of that wizard's dream The cunning of the fictile mind has wrought To cheat our lying senses — this I '11 deem A foil for Fate, and all that Fate has brought. X I wonder shall this dawn-lit vision rise, Those future halcyon moments to perplex? I wonder shall these dark suggestions vex The calm, untroubled seas of sightless eyes. Such as the poets in their large surmise Gave to their gods, to watch the high convex Of heaven's broad azure, troubled with the flecks And floes that from immensity arise ? For mark you, though the human eye can grasp And measure the wide orbits of the spheres, And though the insatiable soul can clasp, And hold commune with spirits as compeers ; One fretful mote makes myriad worlds collapse, One doubt may break the crystal vase of tears. 71 Cithara Mea XI I fear these words would mar the tranquil bliss, That hovers like an angel 'bove th' Orient ; I think no sage on highest thought intent Could seal his ears unto the strident hiss, That leaps from lips of such dark threats as this ; For how to wrap oneself in deep content From rifted discord of an instrument, Is the one secret human lore may miss. A gadfly drove a goddess to despair : And the far-seeing God lay chained and prone, His wisdom vanquished, his forethought laid bare, And the wild winds of earth caught up his moan. And echoed down the centuries, gaunt and sere, Its bliss, its bane, for which no tears atone. XII Then whither shall I turn from this dark Fate? For human foresight 's but a feeble guess, A blind leap into gulfs of nothingness. From which the cry of rescue comes too late. Nor can your pythoness in frenzy sate The all too urgent questionings of distress. The knockings of a soul in dire duress, To lay the ever-haunting ghost prostrate. 72 A Nocturne Surely my soul is not imprisoned here, Against the frowning walls of destiny To beat its wings in bursts of wild despair, And clamor to its God to set it free ? Come back ! come back ! O spectral saint ! to share My madness or to solve thy mystery. 73 QUESTIONINGS 75 QUESTIONINGS MARVELLOUS are thy laws, O Nature ! where dost hide thy pent-up heart, Leaping with wild life in every part, And streaming without one intermittent pause, Through the fine filaments of capillaries In man, and flower, and grass and veined leaf? Whence comes thy winter's systole of grief. When shrinking and ashamed of thy nakedness, And blanched by terrors of thy dire distress, Thou sinkest like a suppliant to thy knees. And prayest some hidden God to clothe and warm thee, And give thee spring's bright veilings, summer's livery ? Wondrous are thy ways, O Nature ! what vast searching mind Encompasses thee, as the moist Southern wind 77 Cithara Mea Wraps round thy myriad children with its warmth, When the unfeathered ice-wind fiercely storm'th? What finger draws thy organ mysteries, And frets the palpitating keys Into a hurricane of sound, or a faint breath. That seems the voice of soul that listeneth For one ferewell from the dumb lips it left? And what dread hand pushed from behind the arras Of space illimitable, doth tease and harass Into unbending discipline thy child. Who starts and wonders, yet would fain embarrass The secret friend, whose mercy eyes and mild Close not nor turn from soul or form defiled? Majestic are thy works, O Nature ! where doth dwell thy mighty soul? What vast voluted caverns doth enroll The subtle spirit that forever lurks, Vap'rous, like an essence that 's distilled From a vast limbec odorously filled Of spices by a cunning alchemist ? What nicely-mortised sympathies enlist Thy labors like a chained and fettered slave In the black midnight of a wizard's cave ? 78 Questionings What dream I? Slave? Nay, monarch of the spheres, Whose feet the thunder's black battalions trod, Whose hand hath grasped the forked lightning's spears — Breath of the universe ! Nature's king ! Our God ! 79 WHAT ARY SCHEFFER PAINTED 8i WHAT ARY SCHEFFER PAINTED St. Aug. Conf. Lib. ix., cap. x., 3. ''' I ^ WAS at Ostia-Tiber and springtime : X through the green mist that hung on the trees Brown birds shook their love songs in rapture ; and earth, but for the moan of her seas, Was silent with joy ; it was evening ; a glory still hung in the west. Where the curls of his fires marked the place where the sun-god had reeled to his rest. And she sat beside me, my mother, whose face I still trembled to see — I knew that its olive was furrowed with lines through her anguish for me ; I knew that the wide eyes were sad from the watch in the night, and the tear. That blurred the soft beauty of stars, when the hand that was lingering here S3 Cithara Mea On my knee, firmly clasped in my own, was lifted to God in tlie night. And the pulses of stars and her pulses of pain, were both bare to His sight. II Well, there in the fragrance of twilight, I hooded my reason ; he slept ; And I drew forth from my Fancy, my dove with her pinions of pearl, that kept Folded close (for this falcon she feared since the Pasch and the baptismal tryst. When I threw off the purple of Plato, and put on the fool-garments of Christ). And I bade her go out into spaces, where never a sun-shaft had sped. Nor the arrows of stars ; where the light and the roar of the furnaces red, Whence the Godhead had smitten His suns, never reached but to pause and to die. Stricken down by the darkness, the silence, that circle our space as a sky ; And there she should pause ; and eyes closed, wings folded, should answer me this : Jf a silence so great could encompass a soul yet unraised to the bliss What Ary Scheffer Painted Of a heaven made perfect with vision of beauty, so radiant, so full, That the dream of it weakens us here ; but a soul that yet clings to this dull, Cold earth, is environed with nerves that tremble, and tingle, and shrink — If a dim sea of silence were round, into which every whisper should sink ; Hushed, the roar of the rapid suns, hushed the trailing of tresses bright, Which the daring comets loosen, and leave in their lawless flight. Hushed the sibilance harsh of the waves when their white teeth bite the sand ; Hushed the crash of the siroc ; the seismic terror that tears the land ; Hushed the moaning of storms in the pines ; hushed the lonely horrors of Alps Where the avalanche roars and leaps on the sum- mits of hoary scalps ; Hushed the soft susurrus of prayer ; hushed the cooing of doves at rest ; And the tender cry to the mother from the depths of a downy nest ; Hushed the opening of buds to the sun ; hushed the floating of fragrance rare. Poured out from the hearts of flowers on the breath of the summer air ; 85 Cithara Mea Hushed the faUing of dews on the sea; hushed the waving of pahns in the deep ; Hushed the pulsings of Hght in the sky; hushed the breathing of babes in their sleep ; And all things held their breath ; and the beat- ings of Time should cease ; Could we call such silence, rest for that soul? could we call it peace? Ill But lo ! as I spoke, pinions broken, eyes filmed, lay dead at my feet My dove ; but the falcon unhooded, with a tumult of cries, with a fleet, Swift flight as of meteors autumnal, that glide from the depths of the signs, Flashed out from the known to the unknown, from things seen to the hidden designs, That lie deep in the bosom of God, like fire in a cloud — and from thence Leaped down the abysses, was lost in the realms of the ideal where sense Faints away and the language of man is a bab- bling of brooks to the sky, The TO €v — the to ttSv — time, space, the soul, the dead, and the quick who die ; Ephemerse all, men and motes, a cycle of shades, \vhich a breath 86 What Ary Scheffer Painted Doth make and unmake, which leap from nothing to Hfe, to death, As a mist on the mirror of time, where the face of the God-head is glassed — The Eternal — the Selfsame — Who is — who knoweth no future, no past. Ah ! Manes, thou fool ! who wouldst seek two Gods, and two fountains of being. Find me One ! He eludeth thy grasp, dumbs thy voice, maketh foolish thy seeing ; Go, plumb the abysses and find him ; rend na- ture, and say if you can. That '' He sleeps in the mineral, dreams in the animal, wakens in man ! " And I reeled from the din of my thoughts ; to the whirl of conjectures cried : " Cease ! " And with gall on my lips aloud to the night : " Is this rest? is this peace? " IV And the sailor boy sang in his boat, sang clear with a promise of life. The vesper hymn Lucis Creator, — but on me in the night and the strife A stream, thick and turbid, and luscious, rolled out from the caverns of the past, Not of Lethe, would God that it were ! but of memories vicious and vast, 87 Cithara Mea Of dreams that make welcome the dawn, of vis- ions that haunt me and mock My senses with odors as sweet as an echo tf music, — the shock Of sounds that make drunk with deUght, soft touches that torture and thrill, Pluck my robe, fan my face with a breath of balm, that if breathed would kill ; And I laid my head low on the sill, filled the hyacinth bells with my tears, Cried to Christ to relieve me from memories of death, from a future of fears, From a torture of thought that thrills, from the vengeance of vice, — the increase Of pain in knowledge — the evil exchange for pride of the gift of peace ; But a hand soft as light stole around me, and a whisper so low and sweet, I 'd have crept to the ground but she held me, I 'd have crept and clasped her feet : " Whilst abyss calleth out to abyss ; whilst deep moaneth back unto deep, Hearest thou not the soft voice of the spouse, ' His Beloved what giveth He? Sleep ! ' " Ah ! but who 's His Beloved ? I cried in my pain ; then she drew back my head, Kissed my cheek, but was silent ; God spoke ; two Sabbaths, and she was dead ! THE DUMB SHALL SPEAK 89 THE DUMB SHALL SPEAK I SLEPT, and saw all Nature fronting God — A fair, white statue, speechless, lifeless, cold ; A dumb enigma to a race that trod Beneath it, ever guessing at the mould And mind that framed it ; and the plastic hand That wrought its loveliness ; and th' archetype From whose ethereal essence it was planned, What time the fruitage of the hours was ripe. And shall it ever see ? And shall those lips Blush to red rubies in the crystal vase. When silence breaks beneath the black eclipse Of lips unhallowed, or some wanton gaze? And from the unplumbed deeps the answer came : " No ! but one day in one deep, holy kiss, A child of God shall press those eyes to flame ; And one day in the pangs of frenzied bliss Shall lean upon her mouth, and she will wake ; And through her eyes of flame shall all men see. And through her lustrous lips shall all men take Measure and message of life's mystery." 91 THE MAGICIAN, DEATH 93 THE MAGICIAN, DEATH I FOR I do hate thee, O thou spectre Death ! Pale moonbeams flit between thy naked ribs. There is a hollow darkness o'er thy hips, And elfin lights gleam from unlustrous eyes, WTiat canst thou give me ? The brown earth and worms, And darkness, and the gloom of narrow graves. " Borne on my mother's breast." Thou mockest me ! I shall be far as farthest focal sun From the warm earth and waving grass and leaf. I want the earth and warmth of breathing men. And eyes that speak, and hands that clasp, and lips That thrill me with a voice and touch of light. And Hft me out of depths of dull despair Into a heaven of hope and happiness. I do not want your cold and stately saints. Sculptured, and niched, and cold in marble shrouds, 95 Cithara Mea Nor your angelic far off symphonies, That have no motion, light, or breathed form. Leave me my earth, O thou dread spectre Death ! And keep your heaven for cold and icy saints. For I do hate thee, thou dread messenger ! And the white moon that shines between thy bars. And makes locked lines and circles on my bed. II Come nearer, nearer, thou dread phantom, Deatl»! Thou art not quite so hideous as I deemed. Is it a mist of moonbeams that awakes Soft lines of light, that wrap thee round, and drape The crags and nodes of thy bleak nudity? And yet a light breaks through, and swiftly makes Facets of crystal, glimmering, and flames That glint and gleam in dusky realms of light. Lo ! and thou smilest. And the vista'ed past Of the drear time I 've given to the earth Vapors and fades into a memory. And the dark future, black with bitter fears. Leaps into sudden lamps of hope and joy. Voices of men grow hoarse and bitter harsh ; And a dim echo steals upon mine ears Of far off slumb'rous notes that dream and dwell 96 The Magician, Death On the discordant chords of my weak soul, And wake responses that in turn grow pale, And vanishing in Memory's hidden cells. Recall some long-lost melody of heaven. Come nearer, thou magician, nearer still. I cannot touch thee, spirit as thou art. But through the glass of thy transparency I see a heaven leaning on the earth, A weary earth uplift itself to heaven. Ill Nearer, and nearer still, thou Angel Death ! Why, thou art beautiful, as poet's dreams. Or the fair forms that sweep into the light Where glow the furnaces of genius. Thy rounded shape doth palpitate with life, And from thy wings new-budded breathes the scent Of Paradisial fields, Elysian plains, Peopled with spirits fairer than the dawn. Oh ! earth, dull clod, brown, odorless, effete, I hate thee, and thy creeping parasites. Lift me, O Death ! unloose these weary bands, Unlock this prison house and set me free ; And thou and I will steal from the dark realm, Glide through the stately avenues of stars, 7 97 Cithara Mea And spurn the enwreathed cloudlets to emerge In the pavilion palaces of God. O Death ! my sister, lift thy lustrous eyes, And open wide the impearled ivory gate. Lo ! the enchanted islands of the blest ! Lo ! the broad azures of eternity ! Bend down thine ears. In their voluted shells Murmur the wavelets of th' eternal sea. Kiss me, my sister ! seal those burning lids, (Gently I pray thee for I am growing faint) Till the most High doth break thy signet ring, Softly unfolding to my wondering eyes — Lest the too sudden joy should paralyze. The unimpassioned blisses He has stored, — The unimagined marvels He has made. 98 THE SOUL'S FAREWELL 99 LofC. THE SOUL'S FAREWELL THEY whispered : " 'T is over ; he 's dead ; " and I heard a faint sigh, \Vhere I hovered the shadows among, and the dead form nigh, I saw them draw down the white veils o'er the pitiful eyes ; Close the mouth ; and I gazed without fear or a gasp of surprise At that which was I — which was now in the silence and cold A Shape, but a beautiful Shape, in the perfected mould That God gave to men ; and that men in their pride, feign to be The face and the figure of Him who is formless to see. And I thought. Was this I? did I live in that prison of death? Did I look through those eyes? did I trouble those lips with my breath ? lOI Cithara Mea And where did Death knock? and where was the breach through whose mouth The Spirit escaped ! as escapes the bound brook when the South Breathes soft on the ice-floes, unloosing the grip of their locks, And sends them imprisoned to wanton round red, patient rocks? And where did I dwell? in what organ or cham- ber divine Did I lavish the gifts of the Giver, or pour the red wine Of thought till the frail tabernacle did tremble and throb In the reanimation, found voice in the psalm or the sob? And where, when the spirit had spoken, did she fly on the wings Of desire to the heart of creation — the fountain of things? And how did she move, or was moved, by the phantoms around? Or reach to the orbit of life, and in fancy was found In realms where she was an alien where angels had trod — Then a voice whispered near me : " No aliens in the realms of God ! " I02 The Soul's Farewell And I looked and behold ! there grew out from the mirror of life Fair faces and forms I had known in the king- dom of strife. But their faces were red with the dawn, and their eyes greatly shone, Like the foreheads fire-tongued which the Spirit had breathed upon. And the flames of their hair were blown back from their brows far behind, And their garments drew out and were floated on waves of the wind ; And their voices vibrated like sounds that are heard from afar. As when in night's tremulous silence star speaketh to star. And they said : When in fancy thou fledst across the wide zone, That is drawn between spirit and matter, didst believe thee alone? Or when once again thou didst enter that palace of sighs, And dream of the dawn that is hidden in folds of the skies. Didst thou think in that puissance of pride, which God leaveth to man, Lest the truth of his littleness snap the frail strength of life's span, 103 Cithara Mea That the marvels of sun-stars, blind worlds that heave them afar, As the chargers blood-maddened that plunge in the lightning of war, Were made but for thee and thy race? that omnipotence vast Were plastic and fictile for thee ; and thy life dream that 's past? Lo ! knowledge begins where Death ends the phantasm of life ; Lo ! there the vast peace of his kingdoms un- jarred by man's strife. Look down where the tapers of thoughtful minds wave to and fro. Look up where the sun shines resplendent in Truth's happy glow. And thine earth is a pinpoint in space, and the thews of men's might ^Vax weak as the gossamer spun from the fire- flies at night. And yet thou art sad. Well, go back to thy prison and see, Wouldst thou take up again the tent fallen, and make it for thee In the desert the place of thy baitings, and for- ever to rest. When the wild winds hiss through it, unfeeling, unshackled, unblest. 104 The Soul's Farewell Then once more I stooped down, and watched closely the tent where I 'd dwelt, It was cold as the tent of the ice-floes the spring- time doth melt. Beneath the closed eyes there was darkness that streamed on the face, Where the sculptor already had smoothed the lines I used trace. And the pitiful hands lay unheaving and crossed on the breast ; Where clustered a handful of lilies, and a sob un- repressed Broke out from the lips of a formless unknown, and a grief-buried head Lay still and forlorn as the symbols of death that encompassed the dead. And memory threw a pale shade on the race I had run, And the moonlight was sickly and pallid ; and gray was the sun. I saw but the weeping of winters ; the soughs of the wind Broke sad as the dread misereres when chancels are blind, And the liglit hidden under the altar. Will the Christ never rise ? Will the dawn never roll back the stone that sepulchres the skies? 105 Cithara Mea And the twilights of summer pearl-tinted, whose loneliness mars The mournful meekness of flowers, the sad face of the stars. Oh ! life, thou wert lonely and drear, though my God was anear, And my days were sepulchred in sadness, and love insincere. And yet, O companion ! O comrade ! in fray and in fight, 'Tis dishonor to leave thee alone to the night, to the night Of the grave where Death's servants disrobe thee, for thy God is afar, Pale bride thou art left to the handmaids of Death to unmake and to mar. But a sister soul spoke, and her voice with emo- tion was tossed Like the lights of the seekers that seek in the quagmires the lost : The vase He hath made He hath broken ; He will build it anew From dust fragments His mercy hath hid 'neath the grass and the dew. Oh, thou spirit, rejoice ! thou art free as a bird that uncaged 1 06 The Soul's Farewell Breaks madly to freedom with raptures, unguessed at, ungauged. Thy dream it is over ! thou 'rt awake and the ghosts of the night Fade dim in the red of the dawn, in the gold of the light. It was death in the night : it is life in the fairness of day. Nay, linger not now near thy moulding and vest- ure of clay. Thy place is beyond where the star cycles ever have trod ; And thy sisters await thee, fair soul, in the realms of God. Say Farewell ! once again ; the kind earth will perform the rest. Till the day when the dead shall come forth at the Master's behest. Then I stooped and I pressed my hot lips to the cheeks and the brow, Cold as marble, and stiff as the clay that is cut by the plough ; And I shuddered as shudders the soul when it touches the flesh, Mark the babe how it screams 'neath the bands that the spirit enmesh ! 107 Cithara Mea Then Farewell ! and my earth was a star ; and I wandered apace Through the streets where the suns are gold-dust in the light of God's face. SENTAN THE CULDEE 109 SENTAN THE CULDEE t # HIS is the vision of a man of God, -*- Long efe the times grezv saddest, and the din Of hutnan voices silenced in the depths The diapason deep of God, most high. Not where the lilies nod, the roses flame, And gods go glimmering through leafy aisles, And sons of men grow wanton in the chase, Or mad with lust of battle and of blood ; Not even where my saintly brethren dwell By streams half-haunted by the Pagan Gods, Half consecrate by Christian rite and prayer, — ]My saints, whose daily orisons arise, And curve, like incense, round the feet of God — Not there I dwell, but on this beetling crag. Whose forehead touches heaven's vestibule, Whose feet are planted in the seething sea; Here, on this sullen rock, storm-shaken. And sea-lashed when the tempest waxes strong, Do I, the Culdee, Sentan, wear my days, III Cithara Mea And dream my nights, in violence with God, If haply one sad vision of my youth, One dark experience shall but move aside. From the dim waving curtains of my mind. And leave me God's best gift, His peace, once more. Wilt hearken, for the burden of my grief Lifts from my weary shoulders, when I tell. Once and again, my sin and my remorse ? II Where a dark river broadens to the sea, Dreaming, and mirroring in inky depths Uncolored forms of leaves and trees and sky, There stretches inwards many weary miles A gray moor, never lighted by the sun. But made more desolate in summer-time, When a wan light creeps swiftly over crags, And darkens them, and makes the lonely hern Blink, and slirill out for his beloved gloom. There the black hills, cut into blacker teeth That bite the sky, and foam with whitened mist. Make a dark rampart from the outer world, And bid all sweetness and all light away. There was our laura. There the beloved cells. Where for the weary frame was no repose ; 112 Sentan the Culdee No space, no warmth, no shelter from the sun. The dews did wet us in the summer nights, The rains did pierce us in the winter day. Yet there was peace, and love, and God's high grace ; At morn, God's Blessed Bread, and in the eve The Holy Word that sank into our hearts. Sweetened our lips, made music in our ears. Yet who would dream it? speak it? there, e'en there, Playing with bodies that were shadowless, \\'ith souls that shared angelic purity. The tempter came and won. ^Vas it worth while, When in the world outside such easy prey Fell to his hands, to trouble us poor monks, Whose feet already walked the pearly floors That pave the many mansions of our God ? And yet he came, and laid a bitter siege, And burst the bulwarks and the battlements, Built by the midnight prayer, the burning scourge, Around the treasure-chamber of my God, And swept my soul, as easy as that wind Wafts its full-bosomed burden o'er the sea, Down to that realm of never-ending night. Whose mighty gates, annealed with storm and fire. Swing slowly inwards for each hapless soul, Never swing outwards for a soul redeemed. 8 113 Cithara Mea III It happened thus. In the scriptorium I labored — nay, it was not labor lost, For labor lost its painful self in love. The hours flew by on golden-tipped wings, And dropped their gold and pearls on my palette, Until I made the leading letters shine Like jewels blazing amidst dusky hair ; And all men stared, and in their wonder cried Pictor Angelicus ! For me alone Such glory could not last, for were it thus Heaven had no guerdon, half so fair, so sweet, As work in exile, and the love of men. But one day dreaming o'er a faultless blue. That rivalled heaven on its sunniest day. And thinking would I blend it with my gold, Or would the gentler silver suit it best, A roll was placed before me to inscribe. I looked the letters over wond'ringly. Thought I had never seen such workmanship ; Studied each line and circle, painted bird, Symbol uncouth, and pyramid, and square ; Serpents that leaped athwart the creamy page, Apis, an ibis, and the mystic signs Of Isis and Osiris ; then at once I passed from symbols unto symbolized, 114 Sentan the Culdee From words to meanings — all the hidden lore Of Egypt, and of India, and of Greece, Slept in this vellum, till I dreamed and dreamed, And let my fancy wander libertine To questionings of God and all His works, — The great Eternal's essence and His form ; And thence to man, as sprung from God, and thence To life, its source, its issues, and its end. Was this black world, and man, its parasite, Spun through blind space, by demon whims or chance. Flashed for a moment in a lurid light, That marked its seams and wrinkled ugliness, Then plunged in night more merciful again? Or did it flame a pure star in the sky, Thronged with a radiant galaxy of souls. Held by its angel 'fore the face of God, Who, wond'ring at the magic of His work. Loved His own beauteous essence all the more, For all the wondrous beauties He had made ! Vexed with such subtleties of thought as these, I rifled all the cabinets of God, And in a lethargy of ecstasy, Probed every secret cell of my own soul, Dived into hidden crypts, and even there, Unheeding the dread sacrilege and sin, 115 Cithara Mea I sought for fragments of a life divine Flowing in torrents from the throne of God. 'T was wrong ! 't was wrong ! I should have left such lore To saintly scholar, or to learned saint. IV Sheathing its radiance with enfolded wings, A form of blinding light before me stood, Looked at me, beckoned ; I arose and went. Down through dim, hollow spaces, where the light Flickers and fades — through ever dark'ning realms, Caverned and gloomy — into darkest night Where e'en the angelic figure paled away Into dim spectral mists of waving wings And shadowed outstretched arms — we flashed and came To a great gate, annealed with storm and fire. He smote it with his flaming sword, and, lo ! The gates swung slowly inward, and revealed The realm of darkness, and of night and death, The kingdom of the lost — sad souls that pine For one dim ray, shot from that burning sun. Which they, in happier days, stared at too free, And gained in lieu the murkiness of hell. ii6 Sentan the Culdee And all the princes proud stood up to greet ; And : " You are wounded even worse than we, You have become like us, and your fell pride Is brought so low, even so low as ours." And as they rose from ebon thrones, and looked, And spoke in voices muffled and distressed, Dim flames would flicker, like a falling star. From hands, and brows, and lips, and eyes, and hair. Then falter into blackness once again. As a black brand, half-eaten by the fire, Flames into yellow brightness at a breath. Then curdles into sparks that leap and die, So from the sooty darkness of the damned. Whene'er they spoke or looked, or passed a sign, A flame would reach unto the loathsome air. Then die in midnight murkiness again. And there was neither anger nor revenge. Nor that tumultuous passion, that will speak In hissing tones, through clenched teeth and lips, Nor eyebrows lifted in dumb, silent scorn. But, oh ! the sadness of those brilliant eyes. The mute despair, the silent agony. As one should say : " The weary years shall roll Their slow and solemn burden round the sun. And suns shall fade, and spheres be crushed and rolled, 117 Cithara Mea As a monk's parchment shrivels in the fire, But never may we see the Hght again — The living light that beats around the Throne, And spreads throughout the universe of space. And kindles suns, and streams through stellar voids, To touch pale planets into lustrous moons. New forms shall rise to fill the vacant thrones, 'J'hat stare at God — bid Him create again ; And we, the demigods of lofty skies, Sporting, like children, round the feet of God, Lie here, forgotten and unknown, save when Some novel torture is devised for us, To make our hell more keener, and our lot More doleful than these wretched hybrids here, Half brute, half angel, who forswore their God, E'en when He 'd bent Him down from His high place, And linked His lofty nature unto theirs." But when they saw upon my outstretched palm. Which I, to deprecate their wrath and hate, Turned towards them with humble suppliancy, The lines where holy oils were faintly traced, And a great light broke in upon their minds, That I, even I, was yet in truth a priest, A great hope shone from out their sunken eyes. As lights that, flashed along a rocky coast, Warn, and bear hope to shipwrecked mariners. ii8 Sentan the Culdee And, lo ! they led me to an altar-throne, Built out of blackest ebony, and draped In blackest dyes, like dreary catafalque. The priestly robes were black, amice and alb, And I was clad with form, and rite, and prayer. By black and naked acolytes of hell. The Mass was one that I used love to say — Introit of Sedulius, saint and bard ; For 't would appear, the hope traditional That Mass in hell will quench its burning fires. Leans upon Mary's Mass — no other rite Hath such celestial force and potency. The rite progressed. And now the white host lay Like a pale planet on a sable sky. With just a dim and mystic aureole Where the round edge did lean upon the stone. The mills of hell stood still — the ceaseless round Of woes, and weeping, and the mournful chant Of lost souls heaved in unavailing toil. A million eyes did burn from out the gloom, And starred the sulphurous and sooty air, And all the princes of the nether courts Rose from their thrones in stateliest attitudes. 119 Cithara Mea VI I took the host into my trembling hands, Blessed it, and with white and tremulous lips I tried to speak the dread and sacred words. But, lo ! my parched tongue clave unto my mouth, I could not speak, nor cry, nor utter word. As if a ghostly nightmare haunted me. A whimpering trembled through the halls of hell. Once more I tried, and prayed in thought, and leaned My arms upon the altar. Deep I drew My breath. I heard the panting of their breasts. And felt the flashing of expectant eyes. In vain ! My memory failed ; not one weak word That veils our God beneath His humblest guise. Would leave my lips. And then a stifled groan Rolled through the vaults and architraves of hc-11. A third time I essayed. All hell stood still. I heard the beating of their hearts — the breath Deep-drawn, and felt the heat of burning eyes Of princes and archangels fanning me. I drew a long deep sigh, and pursed my lips. No ! not a word came forth, but the white host Crumbled to dust beneath my palsied hands. The chalice burst, and all the ruddy wine Streamed on the floor, and flashed in ruby flames, J20 Sentan the Culdee And ran through all the channels of the place, And washed the thrones on which the princes sate. And God ! great God ! grant me that ne'er again, Here or hereafter, shall I hear that wail. That long, deep, mournful, painful, passioned wail. That broke from heart and lip, and curving round Swept like a tempest of untold despair Through roofs and vaults, and architraves of hell, And pulsing through the interminable depths It moaned and sobbed, and swelled, and paused and died. Yet the proud princes never uttered word, But leaning forward on their trembling hands Faces that blanched beneath such dread reverse, And crowned with aureoles of sulphurous flame, I heard their tears hiss on the burning floors ; And I too wept, and woke to find my tears Had blurred and blotted all my labored work, And — Abbot Ailbe stood, and gazed at me. VII " Sentan, my child, Satan hath tempted thee, Like wheat hath sifted thee, and kept the grain. And left thee this poor chaff", for poor it is" — He pointed to the roll of Porphyry — 121 Cithara Mea " I know it well, lore with but little truth, Opium dreams, and Orient reveries, And all the twilight visions of the East, The truth foreshadowing, but not the truth : For we may doubt whether the angry lies That hiss their fierce denial towards God, Blaspheme His name, and contravene His word, May yet not bear one half the ruth and dole Borne to sad souls that do not keep the watch, By those pale spectres of philosophy, Specious yet false, content with half-beliefs. That woo the fancy from the stern, cold truths, Forged in the fiery workshops of the Lord, But chilled by frozen contact with the world. I know not, Sentan, whence those bitter tears, Whether they fall as crystals from thy heart. Broken by grief, or opened by mistrust ; But for thy soul's sake, and to humble him, Who in his craft hath deeply humbled thee. Leave thou this work, thy stylus, and thy brush. And all the wonders which thy hand has made, ]\Laking thee, too, perhaps, high-borne and vain ; Leave thou this laura and thy brethren dear. And me, who love thee, though I banish thee ; And where a high rock beetles o'er the sea. Its shadow dark'ning at the mid-day hour That grave of sainted Declan — there abide ! 122 Sentan the Culdee Thy bed — the heather, salted by sea-winds ; Thy books — the open manuscripts of God ; Thy food — vvhate'er the sea-fowl bring to thee. Once and again, thou mayst near approach The cells, where dwell the brethren of Ardmor, To shrive thee, and receive the Paschal guest. But thou shalt shun all intercourse with men, And love the silent solitudes of God. Perchance in some far off and distant time, When thou, through fires of discipline and prayer. The dim mists cleansed from thy half-blinded eyes, Hast, in the sacred silence of the seas, Pondered the dread exorbitance of God : Thou mayst go forth to see the blinding face Of Him, to whom the stars are blackened slags. And angels' faces blurred and stained with sin. Take then, O brother, take this kiss of peace From him who loves thee, though he smiteth thee. Thou knowest, I know, we shall not meet again." VIII And hence, upon this sullen rock, storm-shaken, And buffeted by every wind that blows. Do I, the Culdee, Sentan, wear my days, 123 Cithara Mea And dream my nights, in violence with God. Here is my couch — this purple bed of heath, Tyrian in color, spiced and perfumed ; My canopy, the colored clouds that roll And shake their folds from zenith unto sea, And dye the wavelets saffron, red, and gold. And the sweet gentle creatures of the deep. Sea-pie and sanderling, mallard-teal and gull. Come to me, chirping, in pretence of song. As if to break the spell of solitude. And when a bark comes curtseying o'er the deep. Mariners bare their heads, and dip their flags, Not unto me, Sentan, the sinful man. But unto sainted Declan, him who sleeps Where that Phoenician tower and obelisk Sweeps with the sun from early morn to dusk — And all the maimed, the halted, and the blind. And they whose flesh is coated with the sin. The sin and sorrow of dread leprosy. Come to me, shall I say? like Him of old. Whose hands dropped mercy, and whose sacred lips Shed balm and fragrance on the sinful heart. I bid them go, and wash in Declan's well ; They go, and they are strengthened and made whole, Praise be to Declan, and his Most High God. And am I tempted? Sometimes in the eves 124 Sentan the Culdee Dreams of the scriptorium torture me, For I have seen such wondrous coloring, Such depths and shades and lights of sky and sea, (God, the great Artist, ever humbles me) That I would give half of my years in heaven To catch the lights that dye the purple e'en, And touch my vellum into another sky. IX Yet, had I not the holy word of God, The rapt prophetic vision of Isai The rhythmic sorrow of the erring king, The tender tale of that thrice holy youth Who loved, and was beloved of the Lord, I should not be untaught — unlessoned. For Nature, in her wild or gentle moods, Reflex or echo of the realms enskied, Preaches God's verities unceasingly. The patient rocks that front the sun and storm. And never chide the chafing waves beneath. Tell me of Him, who, throned above the stars. Looks calmly on, unfretted by the sin. The ceaseless madness of humanity ; And those unreasoning waters here around. That shrink from earth, or if they do approach. Swing their vast bulk against this stubborn rock, 125 Cithara Mea What are they but the voices and the types — The ceaseless pulsings of a restless race ? But, oh ! at night, when 'thwart the velvet pall A silver ribbon touches pole and pole. And I behold the myriad suns that flash Their splendors into space, and with one voice Volley their thunders, as they wheel and stretch Long lines of light across the trembling sky — Then as if some great spirit from on high. Should twist his fingers in my hair, and lift This poor, frail frame into the empyrean, I float and swim in pulsing seas of light ; From gloom to glory, and from blackened space Into the blinding splendors of some star, And thence again into a night of gloom. And thence into a radiance so serene — A pale and tremulous ocean whose waves Wash gently upwards, and then gently break In murmured meekness at the throne of God. And then I pause, and rapt from out myself, Absorbed and lost in some deep tranquil dream. All, all is merged in one great, blissful thought — I am in God, and God o'ershadows me ! And then, once more, the jaded spirit flags In its too lofty flight, and with closed wings, Once more is prisoned in its earthly cage, 126 Sentan the Culdee And once again is fronted with its sin, And once again looks through its fleshy bars At that sad picture, framed in rings of death — Black rocks, gray shingle, and the sullen sea. So spake the man of God, the gray Culdee, Long ere these leaden days, from which the sun Of Gods sweet Face hath 7'anished into night, And in the depths His voice hath died away. 127 GACHLA — THE DRUIDESS 129 GACHLA — THE DRUIDESS yj RELIC of an old-time rune, -" Told o'er the turf and fagot blaze, Or in the harvest fields at noon. In the far off, the halcyon days. Pride, and a Pagan, and the Christ, Harper and priests in kingly hall; A youth and maid in tourncy-tryst, A blinded girl, and that is all. Forth from the Druid tents the challenge went : " To all the aliens who believe in Christ, White-stoled, white-livered, shuddering sheep that bleat Their piteous psalms unto a heedless sky, But in the clash of arms, the front of fight. Freeze the upleaping blood, nor feel the pangs Of fierce delight, when lances leap and swords Make summer lightning on ensanguined clouds — 131 Cithara Mea This challenge. And because your beardless priests Were hardly fit for tourney, where the arms Are swift and sudden play with razored words, That leap from sheath and scabbard of high thought, This challenge comes not from our bearded sires, Heirs and custodians of the secret lore. That makes man's benison, and his power ; But our dear child, child of our oaks and streams. Begot of our great Father, Sun, and Lord of Light, Gachla, will meet the princeliest of your line, And with fair words, without or fraud or guile, Will prove the honor of her sire, the Sun, The grave dishonor and the uncourtly gift Of grace unto a felon-god — your gibbet-king." Now, Patrick, of all living men most meek, Was wroth and sore at such defiant words ; More wroth and sore, in sooth, because he knew The poverty of thought, the vesture foul. The beggar's gaberdine of reasoning, That wrapt such vain and proud philosophy. He walked alone by silent streams, and thought. Shall 1 give honor to these Pagan priests, 132 Gachla — the Druidess By the obeisance of humility, Or shall I send them scorn for their scorn? Alas ! that the hot fires should still subsist To forge the barbs of bitter hate and scorn ! Then he was 'ware of a soft hand that stole Into his palm, and a soft voice that spake : " O Father, let me go to champion Christ. Let the contempt of these proud. Pagan priests Be met with scorn ! such piteous scorn that I, Eustace, the least of all Christ's little ones, Should go and enter these dread Druid lists, And harness to the conquering car of Christ Those who reject His wisdom and His love." The gray saint looked into the youthful eyes. Shining with trust and lustrous with desire ; The gray saint ran his thin and withered hand Through the ripe clusters of the gold that hung In rings around the temples of the boy. The gray saint said : " Ay, go, for so God wills ; Go forth, and fear not knife, nor lance, nor sword, Nor spell of darkness, nor the woven charm, Nor terror of the night, nor thunder crash, Raised by the wiles of these grave Pagan seers. Nought shall molest thee, though the trump of doom Should clang and clash upon thy smitten ears ; Cithara Mea And all the sprites of darkness should arise, Encompass thee with death, and stifle thee With the uprisen smoke and stench of hell. But one thing shalt thou fear — the subtle spells, And the dark charms of this proud Druid girl. For, vanquished as she shall be, she will try Soft assonance of voice, soft pleading dalliance. Heed not the curve of arm, the colored lip. The snaky hair, the piteous eloquence Of eyes that pray thee, ' Let me conquer thee.' But if the weakness of our common flesh. That bears its treason to the worms and death, Should bid thee yield, and sink beneath her wiles. Thou knowest the sign, the mystic sign that flings Dread consternation 'mongst the nether powers. Forget it not ; but humble these proud hosts. Come back victorious unto me and Christ." The great Sun spun throughout the empty sky, And from his chariot-wheels did leap the flames That burned a pathway for the fiery god. He looked through skies and seas, and space, and dwelt On the fair form and the uplifted head Of one who was a queen unto her race. Her raven hair gleamed purple in the glow 134 Gachla — the Druidess That made the rubies in her armlets burn ; And her dark eyes shone kistrous from the eaves Of darker brows, now bent in silent scorn On Eustace, child and athlete unto Christ. The great oaks threw their serpent branches wide, And dappled all the faces of the priests — Grim priests, that stood immovable and still, As the white icicles of beards that fell Like the long sweep of frozen cataracts. And through the gloom and silence that did chill The heart of Eustace, gleamed some fair sweet buds. The white flower-faces of the little maids. Who held the long train of their sombre queen, And wondered, wide-eyed, at the venturous youth. And gave him pity for his dolorous fate. And farther back, amongst the midnight shades. Glinted a spear-top or a helmet crest Of silent warriors, who ringed with steel The sad death-circle of the Druid rites. For here was placed a rough-hewn dolmen stone, Shouldered by rough-hewn props of syenite; And here the dial, that marked the fatal hour, And here the cup that held the victim's blood. And Eustace saw and shuddered, and the girl Smiled, and adjusting serpent necklet, said : 135 Cithara Mea "Who art thou?" and the great anguine inn rocked, And swayed around the milk-white of her neck ; And the gold serpents that entwined her wrists Drew their cold coils together; and the spleen And acid of their venomed eyes did spit, And seemed to soil the vesture virginal, And the pure sweetness of the Christian child. " Eustace," he said, " the least of all the lambs That find their shelter in the fold of Christ." " Eustace ! " she cried, " Eustace ! " she lisped again. Lifting red lips to hiss her angry scorn. And the light Latin tripped along her tongue. Amid the roar of Gaelic gutturals. As chirp of sea-lark o'er the smoking sea, Above the thunders of the shoaling surge. " Why did your gray-beard priest send here a girl To tilt and tourney with a Druidess? Go back, child, to your cradle and your nurse. And tell your whimpering and droning priests That Gachla, child and priestess of the Sun, Disdains to shield the honor of her God From such small measurement of disrepute As beardless boy or trembling girl can mete." Then Eustace, stung by all her taunts, or driven By the white paraclete that held his soul, 136 Gachla — the Druidess Made answer calmly : " Worthy cause doth need But little championing, 'T is the doubt and dread That clamors for assurance or for proof. In the high forehead and the regal front Of (lay there shineth one particular star, AVhich needs no purchased eloquence to prove That there it is ; and thence come warmth and light Unto all things that see, and touch, and feel. And so we reason, work was never wrought Except by cunning hand and dext'rous sleight ; And never hand was guided but by mind ; And the vast mind that rules the world is God ! " So they crossed swords ; and so was Gachla 'ware That from the lips of sucklings and of babes Might issue hoary wisdom and high truth. And she recoiled and cautious grew, and then, Veiling her anger under velvet words. Like wary advocates, began to plead : — " By your own words I judge you — by the plea That all our worship and our reverence Are due to the vast central mind that holds In lease the lives of men, and tree, and shrub, And all that lives and breathes beneath the moon. Life giveth life ; and life is but the heat, The inmost fire that pierceth all the earth, And floweth in balmy streamlets that divide 137 Cithara Mea Through veins and wrinkled ducts of trees and men. In the deep earth it hides ; it sleeps in clouds, And wakens in a thousand flaming messengers Of wrath and ruin to a trembling world. It is a child and servant on our hearths, An angry Titan in its yellow rage. And 't is a demigod that springs from brain And loin of him, our father, and our king, Source of all light and heat, our God, the Sun." And Eustace, reassured, made answer thus : — " You greatly err in mingling soul and sense. Matter and mind, the artist and his art. The torch is not its bearer, and the swords Of light and heat that leap from out the sheath — The fiery sheath and scabbard of the sun — Are but the weapons and the tools of Him Who swings the orb^d furnace by a thread And rings His fingers with His satellites. Lo, how He veils the splendors with His mists. And blunts the vivid arrows of the heat, And gently from the crucible distils The balm of warmth to all the chilly earth. Have not your fathers told you how 't was wrought ? How a great darkness folded all the skies, Gachla — the Druidess And a Voice pierced it, and the Voice was Light. And riven clouds rolled backwards from the Throne, And the great Sun upleap^d at the Voice, And wheeled his fiery circuit through the skies. That was the light of sense ; and then arose Man, shaped in mind, and moulded like to God. And in his soul there shone another light. Which made Him arbiter and king of all, And drew His trembling subjects to His feet. That was the light of reason. Last there came The Light supernal, that enlighteneth Whoso cometh into this nether star; And that was Christ, whose burning love for men Hath borne of His high Godhead the eclipse, Until the day when sun and gleaming stars Shall hide their borrowed light, and all the skies, And all the furthermost domains of space, And all the high empyrean of heaven, Shall glow and pulsate in the living light. That streams from the unveiled face of Him, Lord of all Life and Light to all His world." He ceased ; the iron circle closer drew. And a strange light shone from the starred eyes Of all the Pagan children who had heard This new evangel of the Light and God. But when the angry Druidess beheld 139 Cithara Mea The soft dews gleaming in the violets Of eyes that erevvhile withered at the sight Of blood and violence, she drew back and called The slaves of all her witchcraft and her wiles. A dusk came down, and all the feathered trees Shivered and drew together with a moan. That seemed to breathe from out the earth, and creep In trembling leaf, and chilled blood of men. And all the trembling pageant drew away, And the child-faces paled into the gloom ; And even the mailed warriors evanished. The youth and maiden stood alone, while deep Called unto deep of darkness and of death. Then a pale dawn drew round the Druid girl. Like marish phosphorescence 'gainst the night ; Her eyes gleamed out in globes of yellow light, And a dim nebule trembled in her hair. Like demilune of goddess, or the nimbus starred, That breaks from the soaked brimstone of the lost. She shook her snaky tresses, and they fell. And coiled and crept around her naked feet. And the great serpent armlets loosed their folds, And stretched in lengthened coils upon her breast ; And the anguifieiim burst, and from its shell Slid the black reptile, and embraced her neck 140 Gachla — the Druidess In burnished folds, whilst the moist, poisoned mouth Sought hers in slimy lust, and the forked tongue Flickering and red licked all the silvery flame That lit the moonlike pallor of her face. The darkness deepened, and the painful moan Of the black forests rose, and shrilled aloud. And all the tortured earth shrivelled and sank Under the glance importunate and stern Of the red eye that glared from out the mists, And burned the midnight murkiness of heaven. Then a deep thunder boomed along the earth In sound-waves, ever-widening, that rolled As roll exultant drums, when lightning spits Impartial terrors on the quiv'ring earth. And the deep booming grew articulate, As lips unlocked unto a sudden speech. And through the hell of darkness sang the choir Of the dread priestess, and the shamed Sun : — THE HYMN OF DARKNESS Om! O wheel, who settest thy faces 'gainst the stars. Whose golden hooves crush out the silvern bars That lean athwart the lines of night and day, Avenge us of this new God, Christ, we pray, Om! 141 Cithara Mea Om! Lord of all liglit, whose swift and golden glance Breaks in prismatic light earth's starry trance, Reveal thy face, and show thy dreaded wrath On this poor, piteous worm who thwarts thy path, Om! Om! O thou, whose burning plumage stretches far, Flaming with eyes, and every eye a star, Lean down and shrivel in thy lambent fire This moth who braveth death and thy dread ire, Om! Om! Thou drinkest from the deep, and thy red lip. Froths from the foam-flake, where thy mouth doth sip, Descend and taste the chalice of his blood. We sprinkle o'er thy oaks and thwart thy flood, Om! Om! Let them take back to th' Orient their dead God, There where our fathers' burning feet had trod ; No dead god ; but thee, our living god, we praise. Thee, through the tranced nights, the quenchless days, Om! 142 Gachla — the Druidess And sudden, unseen hands reached forth and placed The fearless youth on the dread altar-stone, And the white priests drew slowly round and spoke Their incantations, and the spells of gods Brought from the ancient Babylon, and sung For centuries round the golden god who gazed At his twelve acolytes that dumbly stood On the green sward in far and famed Moy-Slecht. And, as their wrath grew with the spoken spell, And chid their hands, reluctant and upraised, A swift knife flashed like to the forked tongue That licks and lights the thunder-blackened cloud. And the youth closed his eyes, and thought of Him Whose breast was pierced by the blind soldier's lance, When the same thunders pealed, and lightnings flashed Around the deicides of Golgotha. And, lo ! the heavens cleared, the dark clouds rolled In silent files adown the resplendent west ; The lance-heads gleamed against the forest oaks ; The gentle eyes of all the maidens shone With all the light of a too sudden joy H5 Cithara Mea That leaps upon the leaden feet of pain. And Gachla looked upon the Christian youth And smiled, and with more treacherous wiles she said : " Eustace, thou 'rt brave ; come, and be one with us ; Thou hast purloined from archives of our gods The central secret of our creed and race, — How to be brave in pain, serene in death. Thine eye untroubled, and thy pulse unstirred Amid the terrors of the dark, the threats Of unseen gods, and all the dark estate Of the great powers that rule the sky and sea." But the brave youth, repeating back her smile. Unmoved by her false praise, as by her power. Looked in her glowing eyes, and calmly said : " I have not stolen the secret of your gods : Your gods are demons, crushed beneath the heel Of the great Woman, from whose womb there sprang Light unto saints, and lightning to the lost. Far in the early dawn he played a child Before His Father's throne in the empyrean ; The Spirit looked on Him with love and smiled. And the vast seas of space were round them, and th' abyss Unruffled by this vagrant ship, called time. 144 Gachla — the Druidess And the Son's place was in a farthest cloud, And His tent stretched along a silent shore, Tideless and waveless, for there was no time. But like a cedar was He lifted up, And like a cypress by the Syrian sea. And then Time came ; and 'thwart the speech- less Light Fluttered fair forms, who envied Him, and fell. Then fairer forms more faithful, who became Servitors willing to the youthful King. But, one day playing in the fields of Heaven, He looked and saw the Father's lightnings strike One tiny world in the far seas of space. And He beheld two forms, whose altered shape Were like, and yet most unlike, unto God's ; But they were stricken sore, and sore ashamed ; And their thrice regal foreheads bent them low. And watched the dry earth drink their bittei tears. Then the young God was smit with sudden pain. And yearned for the loneliness of that race. For, mark you, great souls tire of changeless joy. And the eternal sweets of peace and love Cloy on the loftier appetites that embrace Pain, and the bitter sweets of sadness blent In one rude chalice, wreathed with the rue, And tinctured with the myrrh of human tears. lo 145 CIthara Mea He looked upon His Father's face; 'twas dark, And yet His frowning forehead answered : ' Go ! ' And the young God stooped to this nether earth, And hid Himself behind the lov'liest veil, — The heart of a most pure and holy maid. And then He walked amongst men. They knew him not. Words from His gentle lips did oft distil Comfort and balm unto grief-stricken hearts ; And His most holy fingers touched the sick, The leprous, without scorn or shrinking dread The crumbling and polluted flesh doth raise. And all men loved Him and all women wept Over their babes and lisped His sanctity. But the fierce bearded priests held far aloof, And knew not this was the great promised King Whom all the seers and Pr.^jices of the race Had yearned to see ; but the far doom of God Must not be set aside by human hands. They took that gentle Son and with rude gibes And ruder buffets they exalted Him On a high throne of suffering and of scorn. They wreathed His forehead with contumely. Made the cold iron fester through His hands, And flung the burden of His tortured frame On feet that the fierce iron gauntlets stung. And then they drew apart and mocked Him — 146 Gachla — the Druidess They whose very leprosy He had cured, They whose very madness He had healed, They whose very palsied limbs He smote Unto fresh life and smoothed suppleness — They mocked at him, the wounded One, and said, * Vah ! thou magician, use Thy secret arts, And save Thyself as Thou didst erstwhile save The fools that trusted in Thy feigned power.' And then a piteous cry of woe did break From out the wilderness of grief that lay On His great heart, thus riven and bereft. And in that cry which pierced the thunder-cloud. That hung o'er all that charnel-house of skulls, His soul went forth. And the loud thunder crashed, And lightnings flickered o'er the stricken crowd. And they did beat their breasts and whimpering cry : 'This was a just man whom our envy smote.' But the dumb earth travailed and tore its breast. And rocked and swung like tempest-driven sea, And broke the prison bars of graves that kept In durance all the souls of all the blest. And the great sheeted ghosts did walk abroad, And haunt the homes of all the deicides. Who struck their breasts and cried most mourn- fully, 147 Cithara Mea ' True, we have sinned, and this the Christ is just.' But the pale body shone amidst the gloom Of Golgotha ; and the red rain did weep On his meek mother and one contrite one — " But here while Eustace told in mournful rhyme This sad death-story of his God the King, A sound of fury broke upon his words, The gathered rage of all the Pagan host. Who cried, " The cowards, the lily-livered stags, Who took high favors and requited them. With rudest treachery and ungenerous meed Of wounds and blood to him, the kind, the good ! Would Heaven that we were on that high place Of skulls ; these treacherous churls should swing beside Their victim, and their coward blood should shrink Into the sewers of their city doomed To desolation for their dastard crime." But all the little Pagan maids did weep, And their loud sobs did echo through the gloom, For all the suffrance of the gentle Christ. And Eustace saw the tawny tiger-lights In Gachla's eyes fade into happy moons Of mystery and mournfulness as she drew near, And flung the serpent fascination of her smile Over the guileless youth. She stretched her arms, 148 Gachla — the Druidess White as the pure and fragile canaban, That floats round black bog and sullen mere ; Her lips did tremble as with ill-borne pain, And her sweet voice shook out a treacherous threne, Such as our women wail above their dead : " Oh, Eustace, thou hast conquered us to Christ ; Thy gentle tale has wrung our stubborn hearts, And nailed them to the feet of Him who died. Oh, Eustace, come and teach us more of Christ, Teach our rude kerns swiftly to unlearn The fierce and angry art of dealing death. Unman them if thou wilt, and let them weep At sight of gaping wounds and pallid death. Come turn our shields to ploughshares, let the hilt Of blazing swords be buried in the deep. And let the children of the Gael forget Their vast inheritance of love and hate. Let all be smothered and submerged in love. Such love as welcomes thee to liveried pomp. And all the graces of our royal home." But as the youth, now flattered by her words. And thinking of his triumph with lawless pride, — How he had won the Pagan unto Christ, — Looked in her face, he saw her wondrous eyes Bend towards him veiled behind a silver mist Of tears that swam as soft as April skies. 149 Cithara Mea And the dread lights, that baleful shone erstwhile, Took on the tender grays that shade the holms, Where all the weary trees drop down their dead, Yellow and blanched by the drooping thought And musing sadness of the year's decline. And Gachla stretched towards him her bare arms Piteous ; and one shred of hair broke loose And brushed the golden temples of the boy. He felt his soul swoon in some dread delight, And all his being was slowly drawn abroad By some most gentle but imperious force ; And down the horrid gulfs of sin and death His poppied senses dragged his shrinking soul : And God drew back his hand, stung with the pride Of the young victor athlete. At that hour Vesperal, calm, as day kneels to the night, Patrick, the weary saint, stood by the stream Where the boy knelt, and drew a forced assent. The aged brow was troubled, and the eyes Filled with that aching light that seeks to pierce Beyond the quivering curtains of the light. And a great sorrow brimmed the crystal cup Of the strong heart that beat but for the Christ. And, lifting up his tremulous voice, he cried : " Where art thou, Eustace ? Where art thou, O my child ? " ISO Gachla — the Druidess And, as the boy drew down the breaking gulf, Piloted by the starry gleams that shone From Gachla's tear-brimmed eyes, and strongly rowed By the white arms of the Druidic girl, He heard a far-off voice above the wastes. And his own name was called from out the night. And all his senses woke, and the dread spell Was broken, and the glamour of the face And form of Gachla yielded to the voice : And Eustace struggled, but her beauty hung Around him like a net ; and he, enmeshed, Flung out his piteous arms unto the skies. And drew in the thick air the Sacred Sign, Dreaded by sepulchred and unsceptred gods. " Quickly, bring hither lights, ye base-born slaves ! Our god hath taken umbrage at our ways, And cloaked himself in hoodie ts of the night, Or leaped adown the crenellated hills, And hid him in the lap of mother-sea. Quick, for the sooty night is thick and black. She rose so sudden from her smutty couch, She hath forgot her circlet of the stars. And her tiara of the demilune." Then great fear fell on all, for the fierce sun Was sifting his red beams through thickest leaves, Cithara Mea And painting with long pencils of his rays The bald, bare brows of turrets and of trees. But the bewildered and the wandering eyes Stared into nothing, as a dreaming poet Feels all the weight of consecrated brow Pressing the light from too-encumbered eyes, That grope through space, and lose their search- ing light Swallowed and soaked in the absorbent gloom, That reigns o'er all the mysteries of space. And priests and maids and churls did pity her, Even when again, raging 'gainst the wall Of blackness that stood still before her eyes, Palpable, impenetrable, locking out her soul Forevermore from commerce with her kind. The fierce Druidic priestess smote her hands, And cried imperiously to priests and churls : " What aileth ye? Hath this too sudden pall. And cloak of darkness of the witch(§d night, Emparalyzed your rebel hands, and tied Into too willing knots your palsied feet? Go thither, and let the fragrant pine-knot flare. And let the earth-drawn light illume the night. And fling into her face the crescent glow Of stars of earth, where heaven's stars have failed." Then a deep murmur smote her list'ning fears. Bade them leap back upon her soul, and there 152 Gachla— -the Druidess Kindle dark dread, where panic was unknown. And straight, the aged priest arose and said : " Gachla, my child, thou peerless and unpaired. For who was ever like thee since the dawn Of thy young reason kindled the white light That trembled in thy cheek, and in thine eyes? Some Christian wiles surround thee, and the gods Of this young Christian seer have blinded thee ; For thy great god and ours doth still hold sway Over the heavens whose empurpled head Anticipates in grief his near decay. His dying fingers tease thy lustrous hair. Flush and make roseate thy forehead's snows." So his voice echoed ; and all held back their breath, As at some sudden crisis in their lives, To see what blindly weaving Fates could do Unto their stricken priestess and their queen. " Father," she said ; *' Father," she murmured low. Summoning her scattered and dissolved strength, And fusing into calmness all the fires That burned molten, like quench'd thunderbolts ; " Lead me from hence ; " and placing, like a child, One piteous hand in his outstretch(^d palm, And shading with the other th' extinguished lights Of her great eyes that once could star the night With their too lustrous beauty, she went forth, 153 Cithara Mea As a young soul that, disembodied, Tests with its sinking nerves the aerial bridge That spans in space the two eternities ; So went she forth, her blind face to the sun, Her white feet testing for the creviced chasm, Her right hand curved to eaves for darkened eyes, And then stretched, calling, calling to the night, To push its dread obstructions from her path. And all her little maidens followed her. Now looked at her, and now looked back in fear At the young Christian athlete, who, amazed At his own weakness and the strength of Christ, Passed silent through the statued, mail-clad ranks, And conquering, yet conquered, by his pride, Sought the great Saint, and kissed his sandalled feet, And told with sobs that shook, with words that burned. The story of the tourney and the tryst. So rims the rude, archaic tale, Tohi in the ingle-nooks at night, Wherever breathes the sea-borne Gael, Whose legends leak into the light; And tell of deeds, fearsotne and dark, Of spells laroi/ght out by demon hands. When through the world was borne the ark Of faith to rest on western sands. 154 HYMN TO SPRING ^55 HYMN TO SPRING O EARTH, awake from thy slumbers ! She Cometh to thee o'er the hills. From the chambers of the south wmd, From glad reaches of the sea. She hath breathed on brown mosses, And, lo ! a star shines there ; She had touched the gnarled branches — They are pearled and gemmed with buds. And where black boles strike deeply, A coronal of purple flowers, Shy, and sweet, and incense-breathing. Leaps to the laugh of the south wind. Shakes the warm dew from their cheeks. And sets birds and men dreaming Of days gone by, and of childhood. Shy, and sweet, and love-enchanted. O Earth, awake from thy slumbers ! Spring Cometh to thee. II Hearken, O Earth ! to thy Psalmist, Spring singeth to thee ! 157 Cithara Mea From the tawny throats of bird-minstrels, Muffled and shielded from cold, Lest one faintest chord should cipher, Or one sweetest melody falter In her psalms and wood-litanies ; From the gurgle and murmur of streamlets, That spring into laughter and song Through the broken shackles of ice-floes. And the curved domes of the snows ; From the clapping of hands in the woodlands, And the buds leaning o'er to each other To whisper the glad gratulations. Or echo the glad hallelujahs : In symphonies soft and majestic. In cadenced and resonant anthems, And wild and unmeasured voluntaries. Listen, O Earth ! to thy Psalmist : Spring singeth to thee ! Ill Arise, O Earth, for thy Priestess, Spring, cometh to thee! She hath put on the mitre of gladness. And her vestments are weighted with flowers, — God's golden embroidery. Where "her sandalled feet touch the meadows, 158 Hymn to Spring A print of gold and of saffron Lies beneath the grasses embedded. Crocus, and hly, and violet, The shy, sweet children of darkness, Peep through the brown moist ridges ; Careless, but living and breathing. The bells of the lilac tremble ; And up from the steaming grasses, The hyacinth poureth his incense At the feet of his priestess and queen. And she, with her solemn worship Of prayer, and of praise, and the burning Of perfumed woods, and the spices That breathe on the tremulous air. Grows strong, as her King in the heavens Widens the arch of his circuit, And pours the life from his bosom, Till the shy, meek maiden of springtime, The gentle Sibyl and psalmist. Waxes ruddy and brown in the sunshine. And from priestess of birds and of streams. Grows to the stature of strength and of scorn, Dishevelled, and splashed with the blood of the wine-press, — The flame-haired Moenad, The wild-eyed Bacchante, Of summer and fruit and song. 159 IN THE MART II i6i IN THE MART WHO art thou? " for he idly strolled Into the idle market-place, Where everything was weighed with gold, And greed looked out from every face. n " Thou art a stranger here ! what wares Bringest thou in to the world's mart? " He saw their faces were grooved with cares ; That a lump of gold was every heart. in Weary he turned aside ; and they said : " Now, thou art a fool, for we beckoned thee, To show thy merchandise here outspread, To buy and to sell in equity." IV " Alas ! " he said, " I have but a song, — A song for birds and clouds and skies ; For the nimble shapes that leap and throng The mirrored lakes of the children's eyes. 163 Cithara Mea " I have nought you would vahie : they 're idle words, Unless they sink in a certain soil. What would you, gray beards, with trill of birds? With songs of streams, O ye sons of toil? " VI " Nay, pipe us a song," they said ; " we 're tired, And would listen and lean for thy idle word; And, mark you, we hold your minstrelsy hired, You '11 be paid in gold, for the notes we 've heard." VII Then he took his pipe and chaunted low A melody soft as the soft spring winds. When the lambs do leap, and the violets blow, And the ice no longer the prattle binds VIII Of the brook in the meadow, where every curve Shadows a lakelet, deep and clear, And the minnows hide, and the troutlets swerve, And the long, lithe eels in the sands appear. 164 In the Mart IX But the mart was weary, and wearily said ; " Pipe us a song of the years gone by ; Thy notes are dull as the ring of lead, Pipe us the songs that are silvery." Then he sang of the days long, long ago, The brave old years of chivalry, When men were men, not slaves bent low O'er the dust of the golden alchemy. XI But they stopped their ears, and angrily cried : " Let the dead ghosts sleep in their winding- sheets, Pipe us a song of the years untried, Let us know how the pulse of the future beats." xu Then he sang of the years that are speeding on. From the dim, gray future, that looms ahead. Like the sheeted rains that weep and are gone, Whipped by the wings of the storm outspread. 165 Cithara Mea XIII And he saw but gloom, and the red, red rain Dripped from the clouds, and the thunder crashed, — The thunder of war, — it had come again. To sweep the floors where the Godhead threshed xrv The wheat from the chaff; for men grew old And wrinkled and blear-eyed with their lust, Their manhood wasted in search for gold. Their honor trailed in the yellow dust. XV But the merchants shouted aloud, " Get hence ! Thou croaking seer, we '11 have none of thee ; The bells of a fool be thy recompense, To ring with thy dismal threnody ! " XVI Then the poet stept out from the world's mart, And his soul leapt up to the clear blue sky. And his lips rang out the song of his heart. And the sweet birds challenged his minstrelsy. i66 In the Mart XVII And down the valleys, shy and low, Hiding their sweets, as a child that hides The sweets of her face, and the amber glow Of her hair, where the glint of the sunbeams bides, XVIII He piped, and the reeds in the river-bed Rustled and sang as he passed by, And the wild rose lifted her fragrant head. And breathed him love for his melody. And all sweet things of earth and air Followed the singer, piping sweet. And he shook from his soul the dust and care Caught from the soil of the teeming street. And once he stood on the mountain crest Where ever the trill of the birds was hushed ; But the lordly eagle had built his nest, And the peaks by the prisoning ice were crushed. 167 Cithara Mea XXI And a cloud swooped down, and clothed him In the white pure robes of God's elect, And his tongue was silent ; his eyes grew dim Though he stood, 'fore the face of God, erect. XXII And a voice from the cloud — a spirit- voice — Breathed in accents of joy and grace Heaven's lofty sanction for call and choice. And the cloud drew back, and, lo ! — God's Face ! XXIII But the merchants slept in the dusty mart, And their lids were red from the poppied gold, And a lump of earth was each silent heart, And for this, their souls they had pawned and sold. [68 THE LASCARS 169 THE LASCARS THEY cried : " O Captain, let us leave These foggy shores, and leaden skies, Where the wild, moaning waves upheave Their hands against the pale moonrise. II " Why tarry we ? Beyond the bar The broad sea beckons, pointing south. And, lo ! above, the mariner's star Gleams ruddy at the harbor's mouth. Ill " How breathe the spiced breezes where The purple skies lean down to kiss The purple waves : where fires uptear, And soothe again to deeper bliss ! IV " And the moist cheeks of men are fanned By palms that lift their open hands, And dreaming wavelets, iris-spanned, Murmur and swoon on silver sands ! 171 Cithara Mea V "The tropic children, nude and dun, Plunge 'mid the coralled pink sea-flowers, Swarth with the umber of the sun, And laughing with the laughing hours. VI " We see our adobe huts arise, Plumage of birds in golden thatch, The welcome in our children's eyes, The quick uplifting of the latch ; VII " And the dark, lovelit eyes that shine From dusk to dawn, from dawn to dusk, — Lamps that illume our sea-girt shrine — Our fragrant shores, our isles of musk. VIII " And here in icebound seas we grieve, Resent the lot which Fate has cast ; O Captain ! let 's the anchor heave. And clothe with clouds the shiv'ring mast." IX Ah ! well, they woke the anchor's sleep, In its far bed of ooze and slime ; They woke the echoes of the deep, Shrilling aloud the mariner's rhyme. 172 The Lascars They clothed the complaining mast With white clouds of the flapping sail, And down the harbor bight they passed, And whistled for the sleeping gale. Their proud bark spurned the teasing wave. Lit with the ruddy mariner's star ; And then — leaped down its gulfing grave, Smote by the iron harbor bar, — XII The ribbed and wrinkled harbor bar. Where moaned the muffled traitor wave. And where the ruddy, torch-like star Lighted the lascars to their grave. XIII Ah me ! why did they choose to leave The fog-girt shores : the skies of lead ? Answer, ye moaning waves, that heave Your hands above the silent dead ! 173 SPIRIT-VOICES 175 SPIRIT-VOICES RED sunset on the Ligurian mere ! The brown sails flap against the mast, From mariners' lips a throb of prayer, Trembling in thanks for perils passed. How sweetly the rough voices ring O'er sunlit wave and glassy prow ! How fresh the evening breezes spring From where on yonder Ethiop brow Of queenly Night tiaras flame, A coronal of starry gleams, As if the pallid sky became A broken sea of golden streams. A gray mist on the Ligurian mere ! And from the bosom of the mist The whisper of a breathed prayer For hands unclasped and lips unkissed. 12 177 Cithara Mea The sailors creep adown the sea, With open eyes that stare in fear ; They dread the mist and mystery, They cry for cape and headland clear. But hark ! from out the curtained gloom Pierce sounds that thrill and shrill and soar. More welcome than the cannon's boom That grumbles down the sea-washed shore. Hark, Pietro ! Gioacchimo, list ! That is our Maddalena's voice ; It shakes the curtains of the mist ; And thou, grim Salvador, rejoice ! That is thy child's contralto clear, Gurgling like nested nightingale ; Now, brothers, smooth the folds of care, Sing out, we furl the hanging sail. Ave Maria ! Holy Maid ! If brown hands clasp the sailor's neck, If curls nestle, tossed and frayed. Ere yet the mariners leap the deck, 'T was thy sweet Name, called from the mist. Thy Face that starred the curtained gloom. Drew to this safe and sacred tryst From out the shadow of the tomb. 178 Spirit- Voices And so, across the sea of years, Its future curtained, wave from wave, We creep to catch with strained ears A voice to cheer — a sign to save. And, lo ! where Life's great tidal voice Lisps to the far eternal shore, Trembles from sister lips — Rejoice ! Thy voyage, O sailor soul, is o'er ! Ave Maria ! Holy Maid ! To thy sweet Name we furl the sail, And ship the oar, — no more afraid Of traitor fog or treacherous gale. 179 MY ROSE MY ROSE A JUNE SONG OROSE ! my Rose ! O passionate heart of the Rose ! Why am I tempted to crush thee, O Rose sur- passingly sweet? Thy breath is of Sharon's vales, thy petals dreamily close. With the blush of a child when she bows in love at her Father's feet. And thy beauty leads me afar, O Rose ! pale, perfumed Rose ! To lands where the Sungod rules, and smites with a breath of desire The cheeks of maidens — the flowers, that lean for a moment's repose On the lap of the leaves that flash, but drink not the flame of his fire. And, oh ! for the languor of peace, my Rose ! my beautiful Rose ! For a fretless, passionless heart, and the shade of a feathered palm ; 183 CIthara Mea For the cool, dim aisles where ever a zephyr of Eden blows ; And the silvery bells of the fountain break on the convent calm. But what dost thou here, my Rose, my pale and languishing Rose? Thy petals are soiled with slime from these al- chemists' forges of ours ; And shrunk with the shrieks that arise from the fierce and passionate throes Of men and machines that in darkness beat out the desolate hours. And thus am I tempted to crush thee, O Rose, my beautiful Rose ! Thou art here but an exiled waif; I will kill thee, and thou shalt go To thy home ; 't is a crime, but who will blame, if for thee I choose For the shrieks, the songs of the birds ; for the slime, white vases of snow. 184 BE HUSHED, YE BELLS! 185 BE HUSHED, YE BELLS! THE bells break out upon the air, And hurt us with their throbbing pain Of memories that, gaunt and sere. Come thronging to the wild refrain, That chides them with affected joy, — Gray ghosts that in the cabinets Have stared at the gay Hours' employ With stonied face of dead regrets. Hush, O ye bells ! Silence is sweet ! She lets us idly think and dream ; And surely dreaming is most meet For souls that, on the slumb'rous stream Of Time, float down the enchanted wave That dies on the enchanted sea. Whose farthest crested ripples lave The cloud-shores of eternity. 187 Cithara Mea Go back, grim spectres of the past ! Relax your sightless, stony stare ; Call back your memories that o'ercast Our sunshine with a cloud of care. Leave us our present heritage, — The leafy promise of our hope ; Even the bare, unsunned presage Of eyes that stare and hands that grope. Only draw down your heaviest veil. And cloak your past of horrid shapes ; But shake the folds from which the pale And plumt^d Dove of Hope escapes. And let her sail adown the wave, And let her sleep with plumage furled, — Be hushed, ye bells ! We pilgrims crave The peace that sleeps on yonder world. TRISTESSE 189 TRISTESSE I I ASKED — 't was foolish asking — why the sea Moans to the midnight ; and along the sands, As 't were to dramatize her threnody, Falls, and flings wildly forward her white hands. The answer came : 'T is not the midnight sea That moans ; the sound of sorrow is in thee. II I asked — 't was foolish asking — what outspreads This veil of gloom athwart the silent lea, Save where the osiers whisper in their beds Waving faint pennants, as the breezes flee. The answer came : The twilight loneliness Shadows and echoes but thine own distress. Ill I asked — 't was foolish asking — why this eve. Ablaze with joyous fires from sea to sea. Vocal with songs of birds that never grieve, Should yet wear nought but sadness unto me. The answer came : Chide not sweet Nature's face. Thou that dost lack the secret of her grace ! 191 Cithara Mea IV I asked — 't was foolish asking — why this child Stares, with such solemn sadness in his eyes, As if he scanned the desert, lone and wild, Of the gray life that far before him lies. The answer came : There 's nought of sadness there, Thou seest but shadows of thine own despair ! V And then I asked — 't was foolish — my own soul. What is the secret of thy dire distress? Whence are the sombre clouds that round thee roll? Untouched by faintest ray of life's largess? The answer came : Ask not, but star the gloom ; Let Love, as flowers the dusk, thy night perfume. 192 SWALLOWS OF ALLAH 13 193 SWALLOWS OF ALLAH ^ SWALLOWS of Allah ! unfurl your white wings, Come to us, strangers, o'er the friendless sea, Welcomed by Islam and its chivalry. For bene of all your hallowed minist'rings. Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! hither wing your flight Over the barren and mysterious sea ; Where have ye nested ? Whither did ye flee ? Leaving gray shadows and the winter's night. Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! whilst ye dwelt afar Behind the billows of the broken sea. Your names made songs for Moslem minstrelsy Over the long chibouque and samovar, Swallows of Allah ! 1 The name given by the Turkish soldiers to the French Sis- ters of Charity, Cithara Mea Swallows of Allah ! the dusk of Arab eyes Deepened when strained across the steel- rimmed sea For one white feather 'gainst its ebony! The pennant of response to prayers and sighs, Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! bearded men have wept, Waiting your advent from the silent sea. Maidens have pierced the minaret's mystery. To watch the realms of the Frankish sept, Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! now the royal sun Crests the high cliffs that overhang the sea ; The snows are melted, and the shadows flee, The white flowers star the meadows one by one, Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! bulbuls sing at night. We hear your voices from the siren sea ; The crescent shines above the silvered lea. And all is music in the pale moonlight, Swallows of Allah ! 196 Swallows of Allah Swallows of Allah from the high mosque's tower, Waking the dreams of the too slumbrous sea, Peals the muezzin's voice of victory, — The advent of your mercy and your power, Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah, keep your faithful tryst, Here by the shallows of the tideless sea, The Moslem shall not fail in courtesy ; We have our Prophet — keep your gentle Christ, Swallows of Allah ! Swallows of Allah ! beat with buoyant wings The slumbers of the too reluctant sea ; Come to us ! Come to us ! lo ! we cry for ye ! The largess of your woman's minist'rings. Swallows of Allah ! 197 COSETTE 199 COSETTE ACROSS the gray sands of Dinan, Cosette ! Comest thou, bird of sea and song, Cosette ! Thy hair-cloud streaming far behind. Vexed by the teasing, amorous wind. Light in thy laughing eyes, and kind, Cosette ! Where art thou now? On what far brink, Cosette ! Of life's wild waves, that swell and sink? Cosette ! Dead is the spring of nimble feet, Dull are thine eyes' glad fires, and fleet. And silvered age thy youth must greet, Cosette ! Back, Fancy ! and let Memory paint Cosette ! Hers are the lines most true, tho' faint, Cosette ! Cithara Mea Child wert thou then ! Child art thou now ! Life's dawn upon thy shining brow ; Woman and wise ? God disallow ! Cosette ! Across the gray sands of Dinan, Cosette ! The white waves crooning to my song, Cosette ! Here where the sands and surges meet, I see the print of dimpled feet, Wet with my tears, so bitter sweet, Cosette ! Nay ! let me see thee as afar, Cosette ! Above the floor of yonder star, Cosette ! When we shall meet in halls of heaven. Beyond those peaks with sorrow riven. Let me behold my child of seven, Cosette ! 302 THALASSA! O THALASSA 203 THALASSA! O THALASSA ! CAN you see the spine of yonder crest Curved o'er the hillside lea? Well, there the sun halts as he creeps to rest ; And beyond is the sea. And beyond is the sea ! Have you seen the sea? Never ! Dear Lord, you were never born, — Never seen the sea, and its mystery, And the gates of the Night and the Morn ! Ay, I have seen it, and memory (For I was not always blind) Paints on my darkened eyes the sea ; Here hath my God been kind. Here hath my God been kind, for a wish Sumjnons the magic view, And my ears lean down to the thunder and swish, And the scream of the wild sea-mew. Over the breakers that curl and toss Their manes as they sweep along, Till the foam of their crests is a silken floss Green valleys among ; 205 Cithara Mea Green valleys among the white gull flits, And his strong gray pinion dips, And rocked on the breakers the diver sits, The spume of the sea on his lips. Do I dream, or is that the music of life That bids me look up and rejoice ? For Nature's at best is a silent strife. Yet she needs a voice. She needs a voice, else why does she draw The bolts of the caverned wind. And let him sweep on, without leash or law, Trailing her seas behind ? Hark ! to the thunder that shakes the ground, Where the speckled sand-larks flee ; Were I dead, my heart would leap at the sound And the scents of the sea. And the scents of the sea, borne inland afar Over the gorse and the heath. My soul would leap through the gates ajar, And the gray, grim portals of death. Can you see aught yet ? " Nought yet ! " Look afar, For the sea is alive and strong ; " Nought but the spray of one bright star Its peers among. 206 Thalassa ! O Thalassa ! Its peers among, and set in the curve Where the sun sinks to rest ; And a long, long line with never a swerve From the East to the West." You must be deceived, for the sounds and the scents Of the great baptismal wave, Poured from the Godhead's affluence, My senses lave. My senses lave. If mine eyes are blind, My veins are filled as with wine, My hair is teased by the salt sea wind. And my lips are kissed with his brine. Look again and long, for I feel as a friend Hath his hand locked in mine ; Look long, where the shadows gather and blend At the day's decline. "At the day's decline, vast meadows are green, White swallows over them flee ; " Child, O my Child, thine eyes are keen ! Meadows ? Why, that 's the sea. 207 ABOVE THE BRIDGE 14 209 ABOVE THE BRIDGE IN low melodious laughter, as a child's, The brook leaps out from the green clust'ring ferns, Tosses to eddying whirlpools, that foam In silver rings, which circle round and round ; And some, caught in the current's arms, are rolled On to the ferns' crippled hands, and some Float upon tranquil levels ; the lanced leaves Of ash-trees bend them downward, as to seek In fruitless yearnings the cool, healthful wave. One hidden bird, tempted by silence, breaks Into a rapture of sweet sounds and sighs. As if an Oread, left from ancient times. When all the gods had perished, and the groves Were widowed of their haunting deities, Tired and despairing of her loveless hills. That mocked at her for all her vanished mates. Should swoop to the dim twilight of the grove. Call and re-call to woodland and to stream The Orphic echoes that of old did break From mountain wall in shivered resonance ; And borne by winds of music, harps of air, Sang down the Olympian valleys, and were lost In the vast music of the mystic sea. 21 I VALETE CAMCENiE 213 VALETE CAMCEN^ I TRAVAILED for souls of men, and, behold ! They gibbered and gibed at me. I piped in the market-place for gold ; They danced to my minstrelsy. For the meed of a preacher is ever a laugh. And the fingers fretting the dial. To measure the moments, that light as chaff Are flung from the dance and the viol. From the North, from the South, from the West, they trend, — The shades of my phantom choir ; And one sings " Master," and one says " Friend ; " And many, sullenly, " Liar ! " There is corn for the kine ; there is grist for the mill, And a coin for the scribe ; But how shall he value it ? Just as you will, — A helot's wage, or a bribe. But " the shallows murmur, and deeps are dumb." Lift the plume from thy crest ; Take this for thy motto — Then say, O come ! O Soul ! be thou silent and rest ! 2^5 A PROPHECY 217 A PROPHECY O IRELAND, dark-hooded in sea-fog and mist And thy feet lapped around by the pitiless sea, And thy harpstrings, broken and trailed in the wind, And thy fangless watch- hound, looking afar ; The white of thy forehead is smitten with signs. Not the seals of the quick, as thy father Phoenicians bore, But dark cicatrized with the time wounds and pain. Which fester, but gleam with a light and a hope, Who speaketh of thee ? Flotsam and waif on Time's dreary sea, In faded gold the mariners read afar Thy name, and think of old-time legendaries. But deem thee unworthy to pick up or save ; Derelict of Ocean ; its tumultuous throngs Shuttles that weave betwixt the old and new, Weaving the warp and woof of mighty empires. Thou alone untouched, as plague-stricken, Who careth for thee? 219 Cithara Mea Gray, dead hands point from out thy well-filled graves, Stately thy turrets, that tremble not, nor break ; Though lichened crosses lean with weight of years And stretch them listless through the dust-strewn grass ; And thou a leaf from the black-lettered past Of vanished chivalry, swiftly vanished faiths ? But, for it hurts the eye to study thee. The soul to watch thy illustrations dread. Men turn from thee. Wizards in thy valleys, ghosts in thy lofty towers. Gray keeps o'erhanging lonely, inky lakes ; Spirits clank up the green and granite stairs That lead from seawash to enchanted moat. Art thou enchanted ? Smitten into stone By some fell wizard in a far-off time ? And the puissant word that melts or wakes From gloomy trance and staring impotence. Who '11 speak to thee? Are thy transgressions wreathed round thy head? Do they come up, and fall upon thy neck? Hath God poured out his fury like to fire? And set thee in dark places, like the dead? 220 A Prophecy Wounded to death, like some poor, timorous thing, Seekest thou sepulchres of slime and dust? To hide thy head, and nurse thy mortal hurt, And let thy memory pass from living men, Who shudder at thee. And yet one child of thine will prophesy, Not smitten with a pythoness's rage. But watching the unrolling of the scroll. That Time, God's child, is stealing from God's hand ; Thou, the Elect, for thou hast passed through fire ; Thou, the encrowned, for thou hast tasted woe, Thou shalt yet speak, and all the world will hear ; And all, with foreheads drooped and downcast eyes, Shall haste to thy beck, O Sibyl of the Seas, And worship thee ! 221 SONNETS 223 A THUNDERSTORM AT BINGEN THE dying sun had sucked his last red beam From the drunk vine, whose long, dishevelled tress Leaned as in maudlin madness to caress The childlike waves of the great, haunted stream ; Then through the sudden darkness tore the scream And snarl of thunder ; and the choking stress Made of the midnight all a wilderness, Lit by the torches of the lightning's gleam. And, lo ! o'er slumbering village rose the crest Of shattered keeps that in the magic flash Assumed the might and mien of ancient power; And from their walls by leaguering hosts oppressed, The mailed and vanquished knights did leap and dash Into the Lethe of the storm and hour. IS 225 AT THE RHINEFALLS (SCHAFFHAUSEN) O STATELY river winding to the sea, Deep-bayed and solemn for the centuries, That gaze upon thee with their dreaming eyes From shattered keep and empty hostelry ; Here in thy riot of lusty infancy, Heedless and unrebuked by the wise, Who cast the dark gray shadow of surmise Of what a turbid future stores for thee. Ay ! leap and dance and curvet o'er these stones. That dare to thwart thy progress and thy pride ; Stately and slow and solemn shalt thou move, Thy high song lowered to the dread monotones Of war's loud clangor, or the rippling tide Of music breathed from harps of Wine and Love. 226 AN ORGAN-RECITAL (LUCERNE) I HAVE beheld Nature and Art at war ; For on this summer eve the thunder pealed Where the Pilatus threatening raised his steeled And crested helmet o'er the smoking bar, 'I'hat wreathed its rival column from afar, And in its snowy crevices revealed Its glowing emulation field on field. Of thick mists, lighted by the lightning's star. And here the mighty building rocked and heaved Under the organ's thunders that awoke Beneath the fingers of the silent one. And the rain hissed as we had fain believed. And the pines crashed beneath the lightning's stroke, And the fear-stricken hunters shriek and run. 227 THE MER-DE-GLACE HITHER God brought His rebel seas to try How high His wrath could lash them, unrelieved By sinking spaces or by lowering sky ; But they, by loftiest altitudes deceived, Leaped to his lash as if they fain believed They too could sweep his skies, and there decry His mandate when the smoking altars heaved And sullen waters left the hill-tops dry. But he, resenting such Titanic pride. Transfixed them in columnar ice and stone, Leaving vast valleys in their solitude. There till the scythes of the last lava-tide Shall level all things, all proud things dethrone. The spirits of those Stylites dream and brood. 228 THE "VOX HUMANA" WE tired of surging cataracts of sound, That brolce from loosened stop and fretted keys, And poured their cadences without surcease, And made the mountain thunders peal around. When, 'mid the hissing of the rain deluge drowned, Lo ! from the depths of Alpine crevices Came the faint cry of horror and distress Of lonely chamois-hunter tempest-bound. O great interpreter ! Nature hast thou shamed. We woke amid the horrors of thy Erebus To that one cry that ever touches us. In the vast organ-music she has framed, Her noblest stops for us are idly stirred, Until she wakes the one great human chord. 229 TO S. M. S. I NEVER knew thee, child ; but this I knew : Thou earnest from starred spaces to this world With all thy spirit faculties unfurled, And thy great sponsor, music, promptly drew From his large repertory, faultless, true, A welcome from thy father, poet-herald Of May, and pink May-blossoms lightly curled To hold the chaliced sweetness of the dew. And thou, the heiress of his wealth of song, Poured all thy gold in streams of liquid light. Doubly refined by all thy faith and love. Lest thou shouldst cheat the vast expectant throng Of one fine slender note, one music mite, Singing thou soarest to the choirs above. 230 THE LAMP OF THE SANCTUARY LORD ! Thou hast kindled all Thy lamps to- night For me, the lowliest parasite on earth ; Thy voice gave utterance, I1iy will gave birth To all these streaming galaxies of light. If Thy creative word can thus delight One who forever travails from the dearth Of love and knowledge, midst the boundless girth That wraps Thee formless in the infinite. Let me be generous with Thee, dear Lord ! Let me enkindle one bright lamp for Thee ; Light for the Light, the true Incarnate Word, A feeble flame for burning ecstasy. Seest thou, blind to star and glowing sun. This lamp that burns before thine exiled One ? 231 THE SONNET I PUT my trembling bird with dowa-drooped wing Within a golden cage that hung before The Muse's temple ; closed the clanging door, And stept aside, silent, and wondering Whether the captive minstrel soul would sing, She whose aspiring fancy fain would soar To the far Pisgah heights whose altars bore Traces of the lordliest poets' ministering. And, lo ! the rough-hewn prison bars did glow Into a golden lyre serenely strung, And o'er their quivering chords did sweetly flow The wavelets of an echo, swiftly sprung From the imprisoned rage, the frenzied glow, For here hath Milton, here hath Petrarch sung. 232 THIRZA 233 THIRZA Midnight. At the gate of the King^s gardens. TO thy gardens of spice, O my Father, my King ! I will come in the dawning of day imto thee. I will peer through the lattice and trellis of leaves, I will wound all my feet with the spears of the thorns, And my hands with the swords of the cactus' white spines ; I will whisper thy name to the cheek of the rose, The shy foolish roses that blush with delight, Or a pain of unrest when a breeze flutters by. I will call thee and startle the sleeping of birds, And bend the long thread of the fountain of pearls. Shall I find thee asleep and the seal on thine eyes. Where the blue veins entangle in ivoried lids? Shall I find thee awake and a dawn of surprise Just lighting the amber wine-lakes of thine eyes? Wilt thou rise to bid welcome and hail to my soul ? Wilt thou pity my weakness and bind the bruised feet, And stain thy white fingers with rubies of blood? 235 Cithara Mea Wilt thou call on thy heralds and servitors here, The black and rude Ethiops, who bend at thy beck, And name thee their king? Thou hast purchased their souls. Wilt thou bid them bow down to their mistress and queen ? Wilt thou take my white hand — it is whiter than thine. For thine shall be stained with my rubies of blood, — And down the dim aisles, interlaced with the vines, — The vines that are curled like thy hair, and the tint Of whose grapes is so like the dark wine of thine eyes — Shall we walk in the dawn, in the day, in the night. Where no time shall diminish the strength of our Love? VOICES OF THE NIGHT Get thee back ! get thee back ! Forsworn and perjured One ! Get thee back ! get thee back ! To thy lord, to thy God, the Sun ! 236 Thirza Did we not see thee at noontide of night Stabbing its sable with spears of the light, Kindled at feet of Astarte, the Queen ? Lest the flame of his face, of his garments the sheen Should be lost in the mourning of midnight, withdrawn From dusk of the twilight to dusk of the dawn. Thou couldst not endure that the darkness should mourn The death of thy God, as he passed to the bourne. Sepulchred to white resurrection of day. Get thee back ! get thee back ! to thy vestal display. I know ye not, ye voices of the night ! I only know ye do not speak for him, Who hath espoused me in his royal love, That draws me as on wheels of cherubim. From my mother's kisses hath he weaned me, Lo ! his ring on my third finger gleaming ! From my father's house hath he enticed me, Lo ! his white pearls on my bosom streaming ! Were he sleeping my footfall would awaken ; Were he dead my lightest words that flilter On the threshold of my lips would arrest him, 237 ^ Cithara Mea Call his soul back from the shadows to exalt her, Who giveth redness to his mouth for her welcome, And light unto his eyes for her gladness, Who chaseth back the shadows that encompass. And sweeteneth the myrrh chalice of his sadness. VOICES OF THE NIGHT Get thee back ! get thee back ! Why trespassest thou on his sleep? Get thee back ! get thee back ! Lest the fires of his wrath should upleap ! Where on the tapestried walls were writ Scrolls of the abominations that flit In the brown air of Sheol — the red creeping things. And the idols that stare with their dumb up- liftings, Have we not seen thee to kneel and bend low, Secretly dropping the fragrance to flow Up from the censers of worshippers pale, 'Fore the face of the God ? 'Fore the spirits that wail O'er the lost souls of men, and the dread of their fate. We saw thee in tears ; we saw thee prostrate ! 238 Thirza THIRZA I know not why you utter these reproaches ; I shall not answer your thrice bitter words ; My secret, the King's secret, to myself ! He alone shall waken my soul's chords. Should he rise in anger dire, to smite me, Lift his hands before his burning face. Call his angels from his garden to expel me, I should neither weep nor clamor for his grace. Only I should pass amongst the shadows Of my desolation made more desolate, In the deserts of the world, and their darkness. Hiding nought, but mindful of his hate. Where is he, the fairest son of morning? Have ye hidden him? O ! look on my distress ! Are ye spirits? have ye human hearts to pity One who fainteth for the sweets of his caress ? VOICES OF THE NIGHT Get thee back ! get thee back ! Thou vestal of death ! Get thee back ! get thee back ! From the flame of his breath ! Didst thou not weep for Thammuz in the porch Facing the north where the ice winds scorch ? Thy head covered and thy hair dishevelled, 239 Cithara Mea Where the soft fingers of thy god had revelled? Thy god has passed the river in the night, His wounds have reddened all the waters bright, Passed like a weed unto the open sea ; Evil hath f^iUen on thy god and thee. Like to the fiery flakes that slow descend. For thee no potent god, no pitying friend ! THIRZA Afy God hath never passed into the bosom Of night, or Ocean's sterile wastes outspread, He is hidden in the copses, in the arbors. The palm-tree cools the night air o'er his head. There is one pallid rose beneath his forehead, The curl of the vine laps round his feet. What know ye of Astarte or Adonis, Their names stain the sweetness of his retreat? All the frankincense of Araby I would burn, All the purple of sea-cities I would bring, To bathe in sweetest fragrance his forehead. To drape in richest royalty my King. VOICES OF THE NIGHT Get thee back ! get thee back ! Sibyl and Pythoness ! Get thee back ! get thee back ! From the King's duress. 240 Thirza Hast thou not taken his silver and gold, By cunning of thy plastic fingers rolled Into lewd idols of thy dark despair, That mock thee with their silent eyes, and stare At thy most foolish worship, and the stress Of thy most foolish weepings and distress? Ay ! make of the King's gold a shining plate, The envy of thy Lord, the Sun, to sate. Here hast thou no place with the crowned King, Crowned for thy shame, sceptred with dishonoring. THIRZA Again you upbraid me, voices of the night ! Yon starry trance of the dark heavens bent. By its mute worship and its quivering lamps, Seems in some dreadful silence to assent ; And from the twilight of the garden trees Comes not a murmured whisper unto me. Sleep, or forgetfulness, or death is there ; Farewell, my King ! a long farewell to thee ! Bend not, ye silent grasses, 'neath my feet : Hopeful I came ; despairing I depart ; Break forth, thou Rose of blood again, and draw The fountains of my wrecked and broken heart. Before me is the desert, and behind Maledictions on the night air float ; i6 241 Cithara Mea I touch a wall of blackness, and my soul Sinks to the gloomy horror of that moat, Where lie of earth and heaven rejected souls, And the dread knell of Orcus ever tolls. THE BF. LOVED 1)1 the desert. Just before the dawit. What form is sheathed in the paling darkness? What accents make the lids of night to shake ? AVhat virgin's soul has donned the pilgrim's sandals ? Hath wounded all her beauty for his sake? THIRZA Nay, Ignotus ! no pilgrim, but an outcast, Disinherited, dishonored, I must roam Through the wilderness of sin and of sorrow, To find 'mongst heaven's exiled ones my home. THE BELOVED Why not seek then the King in his pavilions? He hath mercy on all who greatly need ; He hath comfort for the stricken and the sinner ; He hath ears open wide to all who plead. THIRZA All the night have I waited at his portals ; I have cried, but my prayers have sunk like lead In the pathless waste of ocean highways ; He was silent as the graves that grasp their dead. 242 Thirza THE BELOVED All the night he hath sought thee in the shadows, His heart hath wept aloud for thy voice ; He hath stepped from his high throne to greet thee, To hail thee Queen, and Empress of his choice. THIRZA Like the first faint stirring in the forest When the restless breezes wake the bird ; Like the first outpourings of gladness When the footfalls of the dawn are heard. Like the first fresh Hail ! unto the heavens From the Ocean that has mourned all night, Comes thy voice o'er the seas of my sorrows. To herald the oncoming of the Light. Lo ! the hearthstones of the eastern mountains Smoke redly from th' enkindled day ; Lo ! thy form grows dim against the background. Where the ghosts of the night fade away. Break away, ye ling'ring mists of morning. Fold your tents and glide o'er yonder hills. Let me hear the voice of my Beloved, Silver-toned as of a thousand rills. Oh, ye spirits, draw aside the curtains ! Stars of night, descend into the sea ! Let me see the face of my Beloved, 243 Cithara Mea In what places is he hid from me ? And thou ! O Herald of the morning, Precursor and prophet of my Lord, Linger not, I pray thee ; lead me to him. My soul hangs trembling on thy word. THE BELOVED Wouldst thou know him amongst the earth's children ? Were his beauty marred and spoiled by men ? Thorn-crowned, sceptre-stricken, gyved and fet- tered, When thou seest, thou 'It reject him once again ! TIIIRZA Why thus recall my hidden sin so cruelly? Doth not love retrieve the burning shame? Shall my love unreturned be unremembered ? I have borne all the burden and the blame. 'T is not the ruddy, but the livid face I follow ; Here I pillow the thorn-crowned Head ; I would shame the silent saint of Magdala, When she woke and saw her vision 'mongst the dead. Ah ! I fear my Lord hath never sent thee ; He would come to me and stretch forth His hands ; 244 Th irza He would draw me to His bosom as His lost one ; Love is all the retribution He demands. O artist of the dawn ! brush from thy palette The gleaming of thy silvers and thy golds ; Drawdown, starry night ! once more thy curtains, Let me hide my burning face in their folds. THE BELOVED Thirza ! THIRZA Who called? THE BELOVED Thirza, dost thou not know The face of thy Beloved 'gainst the Eastern glow ? THIRZA Call me once more ! Hush, every clamorous bird ! Hush, O my beating heart, for this one word ! THE BELOVED Thirza ! THIRZA Once more ! Be silent, O ye restless stars ! The shadow of a whisper from my love debars ! IHE BELOVED Thirza ! 245 Cithara Mea THIRZA Once more ! It cannot be. He was asleep There where the HUes to the night winds weep ; And yet the secret thrill bids me rejoice, Like light's first murmur from the quickening voice. THE BELOVED Thirza ! TIIIRZA Rabboni ! 246 AUG 181900 Deacidified using the Bookkeeper proc Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: May 2009 PreservationTechnologii A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVE 111 Thomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, PA 16066 (724) 779-2111 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 529 691 2