,0 a °^ * « . .0 o v- ^ V /^ ^ / ** 33 Grapes 34 A Toad 36 Weeds 37 A Bat 38 Box 39 Dew 41 Fireflies 42 Four Days 43 II. VOICES AND VISIONS. The House on the Hill 49 Fidelitas 57 Adoration 59 If Truly 63 Darkness 64 His Child 65 Self-Deception 67 Chiaroscuro 68 A Bird of Passage 69 A Leave-Taking 70 CONTENTS. ix Page Vesta 71 One Night in Seville 72 Barcarolle 73 Cradle-Song 75 One May Night 77 forgetfulness 78 Souvenir 80 The Meeting 81 d'outre mort 82 From Shadowland 83 Pest 85 Wine 86 To-Morrow 88 Degree 89 The Atonement 90 Tiger to Tigress 91 Jael 93 Violante • . . . 97 Mozart's Requiem 105 Behind History 108 The Statuette no Individuality m Order H3 Conception 114 Fame 115 Criticism 117 Attainment 118 A King 119 x CONTENTS. Pagk Winds 120 The Comet 122 The Iceberg 124 Perspectives 127 The Moon in the City 128 Fire 129 Decay 130 Waste 131 Decoration Day 132 Custer s . 134 Cuba . ' 135 Albert F. Webster, Jr. . 136 To Edwin Booth 138 The Scholar's Sweetheart 139 La Belle Helene 141 Gentleman Jo 144 Pipes and Beer v .... 147 To an Old Street- Lamp 150 A Barnyard Eclogue 153 III. SONNETS. Art 161 Genius . 162 Sleep 163 To 164 The City 165 Kindliness 166 CONTENTS. xi Page Commonplaces 167 City Windows 168 A Thistle .169 Maples 170 A Cobweb 171 An October Day 172 A Willow-Tree 173 Thistledown 174 Fabrics : I. Velvet 175 II. Satin 176 III. Brocade 177 The Old Mirror 178 Earthquake 179 To F. S. S 180 Medusa 181 Antipodes : I. Poe. 182 II. Whittier 183 Cameos : I. Thackeray 184 II. Dickens 185 III. Keats 186 IV. Dumas, Pire 187 V. Hans Christian Andersen 188 VI. Herbert Spencer 189 VII. Gustave Dore 190 VIII. Baudelaire 191 MINORCHORDS. FANTASY AND PASSION, SEA-GULLS. H^HE salt sea-wind is a merry-maker, -*- Rippling the wild bluff 's daisied reach ; The quick surf glides from the arching breaker And foams on the tawny beach. Out where the long reef glooms and glances And tosses sunward its diamond rains, Morn has pierced with her golden lances The dizzy light-house panes. Gladdened by sounds of infinite surges, Heedless what billow or gale may do, The white gulls float where the ocean-verges Blend with a glimmer of blue. I watch how the curtaining vapor settles Dim on their tireless plumes far-borne, Till faint they gleam as a blossom's petals Blown through the spacious morn ! FANTASY AND PASSION. REVERIE. BELOW the headland, with its cedar plumes, A lapse of spacious water twinkles keen ; An ever-shifting play of gleams and glooms, And flashes of clear green. The sumach's garnet pennons, where I lie, Are mingled with the tansy's faded gold ; Fleet hawks are screaming in the light-blue sky And fleet airs rushing cold. The plump peach steals the dying rose's red ; The yellow pippin ripens to its fall ; The dusty grapes, to purple fulness fed, Droop from the garden-wall. And yet where rainbow foliage crowns the swamp, I hear in dreams an April robin sing, And memory, amid this Autumn pomp, Strays with the ghost of Spring ! * AN INTERIOR. AN INTERIOR. (After Willems.) A CHAMBER where the wainscot woods ■**■ Are rich with dark shapes, odd of mold, And where the time -touched arras hangs In blendings of blue, green, and gold. And dimly pictured, gleam the walls, With here bluff huntsmen, all at tryst ; Here mounted knights ; a falcon, here, Wide-winged upon a lady's wrist. But also the quaint chamber holds A living lady, large and fair, In luminous satin whitely clad, With mild pearls in her auburn hair. Near a low table doth she sit, Whose thick stiff cloth, of massive size, Wears in its mossy woof what seem A hundred splendid tangled dyes. There fruits in luscious color glow, All that the daintiest whim could ask, And garnet wine that brightly fills A frail fantastic crystal flask. And crouching at her feet, a hound, Lean, sleek, and pale-gray like a dove, Whines wistfully, and seeks her face With starry eyes that look their love. FANTASY AND PASSION. AN OLD TEA-CUP. "CpRAIL dainty toy that time so gently saves •*- To float imshattered on its wasteful waves, And reach, through storms of ruin and dismay, Hands that uplift thee lovingly to-day, Good thanks for sparing from oblivion dim These painted dames who beam about thy brim ! The lips that .touched thee once have lent an art To murmur memories through my dreaming heart ! I see rich chambers draped with pink and gold, Where sportive cherubs gleam in gilded mold ; Where thick on cabinet and on mantel range Rare gaudy Chinese monsters, grim and strange ; Where lights from massive candelabra fall On satined prince and scarlet cardinal.; Where blooming ladies gayly group, arrayed In fleecy wig, rouge, patch, and stiff brocade ; And where the royal Louis, suave and bland, 'Bows low to kiss one jewel-burdened hand ! . . . Ah, me ! those merry courtiers and their King No more with mirth make Trianon's alleys ring ; His plumes no more the sworded gallant airs In statued shrubbery and on marble stairs ; AFFINITIES. And lovely laughing ladies move no more Down fountained court or sculptured corridor ! And thou, poor cup, art loyal to thy past, And sick of change, the cold iconoclast ! But since no longer those dear hours exist, Pictured patrician, bright legitimist, Then, if benignant aid be not in vain To soothe the longings of thy lonely pain, Oh, learn that shortly thou shalt treasured be By one whose beauty is so sweet to see, Her dazzling charms might thrill with envy pure The shapeless dust that once was Pompadour ! AFFINITIES. OPEEDING across blank wastes of lonely snow ^ From your pale palace, reared with wild device In a wild shadowy land of Arctic ice, O North-wind, bitter North-wind, whither do you blow ? " Southward to find my tender languid love, Who drowses in a clime of tropic haze. Where, through the heavy- odored stagnant nights, Great mellow fervid stars beam out above, And where one sees, through sultry golden days, The mighty Indian temples rear proud heights And the rich-crested palm her green plume raise ! FANTASY AND PASSION And I, the spirit strong to wreck and kill, I, the stern North-wind, terrible to chill, When her warm kisses through these cold lips thrill, I have no will that is not her sweet will ! " ii. Bearing to lavish leaves your cadence low, From far off indolent lands of bloomf ul ease, Of gaudy birds and iridescent seas, O South-wind, fragrant South-wind, whither do you blow ? " Northward to find my cruel white-limbed love, Who dwells where all strange polar glories blaze ; Where, through the scintillant-starred long-lasting nights, Auroral splendors up the dark heaven move, And where one sees, through scant-lit freezing days, Colossal ice-plinths, full of emerald lights, House the huge walrus in their crystal maze ! And I, the spirit whom all soft dreams fill, I, the bland South-wind, that can work no ill, When her cold kisses through these warm lips thrill, My life grows her life, and my will her will ! " TO THE EVENING STAR. TO THE EVENING STAR. A GAIN, pale noiseless prophetess of night, "*• ^ I watch you dawn, your immemorial way, And watch again your calm immaculate light Beam wistful on the dying smile of day ! Star wherewith dusk so chastely is impearled, If that you live for love indeed be true, This yearning sorrowing sinful weary world Hath deep unutterable need of you ! Does Love in truth make your white bloom his own And thrill to blander gleams your luminous breast, Meek silver lily, blossoming all alone In those dim flowerless meadows of the West ? Aloof your glimmering kindred burn and beat, High up in boundless quietudes of space, And gazing on their dark domain, we meet The cold and awful infinite face to face ! But you are rich with radiance more divine, And pulsing as with balmiest pity's birth, And tenderer, like a star not proud to shine, And I, who watch your splendors quivering clear, Dream, ere from heavenly distance you depart, Of some invisible mercy's falling tear, Of some invisible mercy's throbbing heart ! io FANTASY AND PASSION. A HUMMING-BIRD. TT THEN the mild gold stars flower out, * * As the summer^loaming goes, A dim shape quivers about Some sweet rich heart of a rose. If you watch its fluttering poise, From palpitant wings will steal A hum like the eerie noise Of an elfin spinning-wheel ! And then from the shape's vague sheen, Quick lustres of blue will float, That melt in luminous green Round a glimmer of ruby throat ! But fleetly across the gloom This tremulous shape will dart, While searching- for some fresh bloom, To quiver about its heart. Then you, by thoughts of it stirred, Will dreamily question them : " Is it a gem, half bird, Or is it a bird, half gem ?" HE A T-LIGHTNING. TO AN ORIOLE. T TOW falls it, oriole, thou hast corne to fly •*- ■*- In tropic splendor through our Northern sky ? At some glad moment was it nature's choice To dower a scrap of sunset with a voice ? Or did some orange tulip, flaked with black, In some forgotten garden, ages back, Yearning toward Heaven until its wish was heard, Desire unspeakably to be a bird ? HEAT-LIGHTNING. 'TPHE land is bathed in drowsy light, , And breezes move, with drowsy sigh, From out that primrose West where now The long day takes so long to die ! I watch the deepening dusk, I watch, With soul to languid fancies given, Night close the starry flowers on earth And ope the flowerlike stars in heaven ! Not seen with more than transient look If random glances near it stray, Huge in the hueless East there hangs One rounded cloud of stagnant gray. 12 FANTASY AND PASSION. The moments pass ; a rapid bat Traces black zigzags on the sky ; A beetle, bringing us his deep Basso profzmdo, journeys by. Down in the dim swamp, firefly throngs A brilliant soundless revel keep, As though beneath their radiant rain Another Danae slept her sleep ! The mild night grows ; through meadowed ways The globing dew makes odor sweet, And slowly now, in that dark cloud, A pulse of gold begins to beat ! With fitful brightenings, brief to last, The tender flashes come and fly, Each winning forth from vapory depths A dreamy picture, rich of dye. Drenched to its core with gentle fire, The cloud, at every mellowing change, Shows tranquil lakes and lovely vales And massive mountains, range on range ! And standing in the summer gloom, With placid rapture I behold These luminous Andes of the air, These ghostly Switzerlands of gold ! CLOUDS. 13 CLOUDS. WHAT change with happiest thrill my pulse may start, Of all the unnumbered changes that I view In these brief-loitering moods of heaven's deep heart, These tireless pilgrims of the buoyant blue ? Is it when drowsily through halcyon air They float in pillowy fleeces chaste as snow ? Or when against the horizon they loom fair, In towering Alpine, peak and pale plateau ? Is it when shadowy as the vaguest dream Their pearly gossamers film the skies afar ? Or when like isles in quiet seas they gleam, Purple below the tremulous evening star ? Or yet when beauteous dawn, with rosy speed, Sunders their drapery where it darkly falls ? Or when from earth to sunset lands they lead, As stately stairways to imperial halls ? Or when like scales on fabulous dolphins' backs, They fleck with loveliest color evening gray ? Or when they move in grim tempestuous wracks, And through them javelins of hot lightning play ? 14 FANTASY AND PASSION Ah, no ! whatever of joy such changes wake, That change above all others my soul sets, Of when beneath some full-globed moon they make On sapphire calms their ghostly silhouettes ! For then, as through this dubious gloom they stray, Spirits they seem, with garments fluttering white, Whose noiseless feet, in some miraculous way, Walk the great awful emptiness of the night ! A STRAGGLER. T LEFT the throng whose laughter made ■*■ That wide old woodland echo clear, While forth they spread, in breezy shade, Their plethoric hamperfuls of cheer. Along a dark moss-misted plank My way in dreamy mood I took, And crossed, from balmy bank to bank, The impetuous silver of the brook. And wandering on, at last I found A shadowy tranquil gladelike place, Full of mellifluous leafy sound, While midmost of its grassy space A lump of rugged granite gleamed, A tawny-lichened ledge of gray, And up among the boughs there beamed One blue delicious glimpse of day ! A STRAGGLER. 15 In fitful faintness on my ear The picnic's lightsome laughter fell, And softly while I lingered here, Sweet fancy bound me with a spell In some bland clime across the seas Those merry tones I seem to mark, While dame and gallant roamed at ease The pathways of some stately park. And in that glimpse of amethyst air I seemed to watch, with musing eye. Tlie rich blue fragment, fresh and fair, Of some dead summer's morning sky And that rough mass of granite, too, From graceless outlines gently waned, And took the sculptured shape and hue Of dull old marble, deeply stained. And then (most beauteous change of all !) Strown o'er its mottled slab lay low A glove, a lute, a silken shawl, A vellum-bound Boccaccio ! 1 6 FANTASY AND PASSION. WATER-LILIES. UP in the loftier leafage, dense and dim, Of pines that slope to meet the lifeless pool, And with still spicy coverts clothe its rim, The silvery fitful breeze comes fluting cool ; But rarely does it steal to this grave spot, Dank with foul mire and rank with woody rot. From half-sunk logs the sluggish turtles peer, The flabby emerald bull-frogs leap and pause ; The erratic dragon-flies float there and here, With rosy flashes in their wings of gauze ; And now a snake its sinuous way will thread, With flickering tongue and small dark lifted head. But out upon the central pool there blow The lily-legions these dull waters hold, With hollowed petals dropping curves of snow Back from large fragrant stars of mossy gold, All gleaming stainless on the unbroken sheen Of heart-shaped leaves, in blended bronze and green. And as I watch them, in serene array, And muse, while scenting their delicious balm, Of how they burst from soilure and decay In taintlessness of alabaster calm, And blossoming from this grim half-stagnant lake, What sweet pure incongruity they make, I dream of gloomy souls within whose deeps Crawls many a cold uncanny reptile thought ; FANTAISIE DE PRINTEMPS. 17 Where black hate lurks and torpid envy sleeps, And yet wherein some saving grace has wrought Some heavenly touch that all their darkness dowers With the chaste charm of these immaculate flowers ! FANTAISIE DE PRINTEMPS. TN the aisles of the orchard fair blossoms are drifting, ■*- The white petals drop one by one, And the tulip's pale stalk from the garden is lifting A goblet of gems to the sun ! Come ramble awhile through this exquisite weather Of days that are fleet to pass, When the stem of the willow shoots out a green feather, And buttercups burn in the grass ! When, pushing the soil from her bonny pink shoulders, The clover glides forth to the world, And the fresh mosses gleam on the gray rugged boulders, With delicate May-dew impearled ! The brook in the pasture has hidden its pebbles, Full-flooded with April rain, And listen, my love, to the silvery trebles That ring from the blossoming lane ! What vows to their sweethearts the gay robins utter ! No marvel such wooers are heard ! Heigh ho ! how the bosoms that scorn us would flutter, If man could make love like a bird ! 18 FANTASY AND PASSION. ANALOGIES. T LOUNGE against my garden gate ; ■*■ On one side heaven the sun hangs low ; Down one side crawls the exhausted storm That flashed and crashed an hour ago. I lounge and see, with musing eye, Two roses and a butterfly. One is a sumptuous languid rose That bows its heavy lovely head, While each fresh petal's velvet curve Burns with the same deep drowsy red ; Circe, her subtle self (who knows ?) Plotting new sorceries in a rose ! One is a pale pure bloom, with leaves Like satin in their lustres mild, Half-closed, and faintlier flushed than looks The chaste palm of a little child ; Or pink as some late sunsets are, That yearn to feel the evening star ! The butterfly's quick-quivering wings Wear each the blendings of such hues As lurk in some old tapestry's Dim turmoil of golds, crimsons, blues ; Wings where dull smoldering color lies, Lit richly with two peacock-eyes ! ANALOGIES. 19 I watch this satrap of the air, Whose gorgeous rule hath such brief term, This pirate of a floral sea, This beauteous burlesque of a worm, In flower-like plumes, in bird-like power, Kinned equally with bird or flower ! He cannot leave the great red rose ; He flutters near her, loath to part From all the fragrant charm which girds This blood-drop warm from summer's heart ! But on the pale rose, glimmering near, The rain has left one radiant tear ! 20 FANTASY AND PASSION. RARITY. TN dreams I found a wondrous land, ■*■ Radiant with roses on each hand. No grasses, trees, nor shrubs were there, But roses blossoming everywhere ! Great velvet-petalled blooms were these ; Red millions trembled in each breeze ! They swept toward the horizon's verge In many a splendid ample surge ; They spread on all sides one intense Monotony of magnificence ! . . . Then suddenly, where my pathway ran, Loomed the vague presence of a man. And in his clasp, with strange delight, I saw one daisy, glimmering white ! Such daisies bloom, in slender sprays, By throngs among June's meadowed ways. Yet all my soul, at this weird hour, Leaned out to that one simple flower ! For chastely, delicately fair, And better still, supremely rare, It wore a pastoral charm so sweet, This lovely lissome marguerite, That seeing it was like dear repose To me, whose whole heart loathed a rose ! VIOLETS IN WINTER. 21 VIOLETS IN WINTER. TT7HILE now the desolate lands are blank with * * snow, How sweet it is to know Fierce winter dared by fragile foes like you. Fresh beauteous lives that ever win the grace Of bathing each pure face Mysteriously in heaven's own deeps of tender blue ! As the asters breathe of Autumn, so you bring Bland memories of new Spring, And while your faint delicious balm one meets, His spirit steals down blossoming orchard- ways, By warbling brooks he strays, Or moves through calm campagnas of pale marguerites! I know not where, mild flowers, I know not whence Is the dear difference Between your blooms and many a one that blows ! Ah ! delicate personality unknown, Ye are yourselves alone ! What is it makes the star a star, the rose a rose ? But in your chaste hearts Nature surely sets, Exquisite violets, Meekness and lowlihead all traits above, And seems through your soft faces to have smiled Like some young white-souled child, Whose touch is benediction and whose looks are love ! 22 FANTASY AND PASSION. IMMORTELLES. TUST as when summer laughed they linger yet, •^ Here in my chamber while the world is cold, Their pale-gold brittle petals primly set About dry brittle hearts of deeper gold. Is it but fancy that an aching need Lives in the wan inanimate looks they lift, And that Tithonus-like they dumbly plead The awful goddess to revoke her gift ? Yes, if I read their joyless calm aright, Mere immortality can ill repay This sluggish veto on corruption's blight, This dull and charmless challenge to decay ! For surely these are flowers that well might sleep Near Stygian wavres and shiver in the breath • Of long disconsolate breezes when they sweep Out from the dreamy meadowlands of death ! Ah ! where in this white urn they dimly smile, Full oft, I doubt not, each poor bloom has sighed To have been some odorous radiance that erewhile Divinely was a rose, although it died ! TO A TEA-ROSE. 23 TO A TEA-ROSE. "T\EEP-FOLDED flower, for me your race -*-^ Bears what no kindred blooms have borne That gleam in memory's vistas, — A charm, a chastity, a grace The loveliest roses have not worn, Of all your lovely sisters ! Half tinged like some dim-yellow peach, Half'like a shell's pink inward whorl That sighs its sea-home after. Your creamy oval bud lets each Pale outer petal backward curl, Like a young child's lip in laughter ! And yet no mirthful trace we see ; Rather the grave serene repose Of gentlest resignation ; So that you sometimes seem to be (If one might say it of a rose) In pensive meditation ! Ah ! how may earthly words express This placid sadness round you cast, Delicate, vague, unspoken ? As though .... some red progenitress, In some old garden of the past, Had had her young heart broken ! 24 FANTASY AND PASSION. WILD ROSES. ON long serene midsummer days Of ripening fruit and yellowed grain, How sweetly, by dim woodland ways, In tangled hedge or leafy lane, Fair wild-rose thickets, you unfold Those pale pink stars with hearts of gold ! Your sleek patrician sisters dwell On lawns where gleams the shrub's trim bosk, In terraced gardens, tended well, Near pebbled walk and quaint kiosk. In costliest urns their colors rest ; They beam on beauty's fragrant breast ! But you in lowly calm abide, Scarce heeded save by breeze or bee. You know what splendor, pomp and pride Full oft your brilliant sisters see ; What sorrows, too, and bitter fears ; What mad farewells and hopeless tears ! How some are kept in old dear books, That once in bridal wreaths were worn ; How some are kissed, with tender looks, And later tossed aside with scorn ; How some their taintless petals lay On icy foreheads, white as they ! A TUBEROSE. 25 So, while these truths you vaguely guess, Abloom in many a lonesome spot, Shy roadside roses, may you bless The fate that rules your modest lot, Like rustic maids that meekly stand Below the ladies of their land ! A TUBEROSE. CHASTE waxen shape, in whose clear chalice dwell Odors that tell Of moans and tears and chambers gloomed with grief, Wan sister of the tulip's laughing bloom, What primal doom Fashioned the lifeless pallor of your leaf ? As winds down dreamy gardens came to sigh " The year must die," At some old immemorial twilight hour, Did you, the incarnate terror and unrest Of summer's breast, First bathe in chilling dews your ghostly flower ? Or did the moon, through some sweet night long-dead, Her splendor shed On some rich tomb, while silence held its breath, Till one pure sculptured blossom thrilled and grew Strangely to you, Cold child of moonbeams, marble, and white death ! 26 FANTASY AND PASSION. IVY. TLL canst thou bide in alien lands like these, -■- Whose home lies overseas, Among manorial halls, parks wide and fair, Churches antique, and where Long hedges flower in May and one can hark To carollings from old England's lovely lark ! Ill canst thou bide where memories are so brief, Thou that hast bathed thy leaf Deep in the shadowy past, and known strange things Of crumbled queens and kings ; Thou whose green kindred, in years half forgot, Robed the gray battlements of proud Camelot ! Through all thy fibres' intricate expanse Hast thou breathed sweet romance ; Ladies that long are dust thou hast beheld Through dreamy days of eld ; Watched in broad castle-courts the merry light Bathe gaudy banneret and resplendent knight ! And thou hast seen, on ancient lordly lawns, The timorous dappled fawns ; Heard pensive pages with their suave lutes play Some low Provencal lay ; Marked beauteous dames through arrased chambers glide, V; 1th lazy graceful staghounds at their side ! IVY. 25 And thou hast gazed on splendid cavalcades Of nobles, matrons, maids, Winding from castle gates on breezy morns, With golden peals of horns, In velvet and brocade, in plumes and silk, With falcons, and with palfreys white as milk ! Through convent-casements thou hast peered, and there Viewed the meek nun at prayer ; Seen, through rich panes dyed purple, gold, and rose, Monks read old folios ; On abbey- walls heard wild laughs thrill thy vine When the fat tonsured priests quaffed ruby wine ! O ivy, having lived in times like these, Here art thou ill at ease ; For thou art one with ages passed away, We are of yesterday ! Short retrospect, slight ancestry is ours, But thy dark leaves clothe history's haughty towers ! 28 FANTASY AND PASSION. HEMLOCKS. (Tekza Rima.) T KNEW a forest, tranquil and august, ■*- Down whose green deeps my steps would often stray- When leisure met my life as dew meets dust ! Proud spacious chestnuts verged each winding way, And hickories in whose dry boughs winds were shrill, And tremulous white-boled birches. Here, one day, Strolling beside the scarce-held steed of will, I found a beautiful monastic grove Of old primeval hemlocks, living still ! Round it the forest rustled, flashed, and throve, But here was only silence and much gloom, As though some sorcerer in dead days had wove. With solemn charms and muttered words of doom, A cogent spell that said to time " Depart ! " And locked it in the oblivion of a tomb ! Thick was its floor, where scant ferns dared to start, With tawny needles, and an old spring lay Limpid as crystal in its dusky heart ! Vaguely enough can language ever say What sombre and fantastic dreams, for me, Held shadowy revel in my thought that day ! How stern similitudes would dimly be Of painted braves that grouped about their king; Or how, in crimson firelight, I would see THE ACORN. 29 Some ghostly war-dance whose weak cries took wing Weirdly away beyond the grove's dark brink ; Or how I seemed to watch, by that old spring, The timid phantom deer steal up to drink ! THE ACORN. r FIND you nestling in the balmy grass, Here where the knotty oak so stoutly stands, While tremulous breezes with rich fragrance pass, Like ghosts with viewless flowers in viewless hands 1 Frail germ of strength, I scan with eager heed, As from the summer sward I lift you up, The tawny oval of your polished bead Bulging so smoothly from its rugged cup. And now with heart where happy fancies meet, I stoop, and in the yielding meadow make A grave wherefrom, with resurrection sweet, Some future sun shall win you to awake ! And while I plant you thus, I seem to plant Flutings of silver winds in ample boughs That weave a gloom where sunbeams richly slant, Bees murmur, and the lazy cattle browse. And now I seem to plant, below the green Of these fair ungrown boughs, at eve or morn, The first delicious thrilling kiss between Two fond young lovers that are yet unborn ! 30 FANTASY AND PASSION. FERNS. TF trees are Nature's thoughts or dreams, ■*■ And witness how her great heart yearns, Then she has only shown, it seems, Her lightest fantasies in ferns. Those low green boughs, what shapely grace, What slender lissome charm they wear, Delicate, supple, frail as lace, And pliant to each passing air ! Though sweet to see when there or here, Along some-common meadowed way, They throng in feathery jungles, near Some stolid boulder's bulk of gray, Yet ah ! no light their spray so serves As when, where cloistering branches cross, I meet its shadowy silvered curves On spaces of dark moonlit moss ! For here quick fancy finds a bower Where she can watch, in pictured wise, An Oberon squeeze the fatal flower On poor Titania's drowsing eyes ! And nimble fay and pranksome elf Flash vaguely past at every turn, Or, weird and wee, sits Puck himself, With legs akimbo, on a fern ! MOSS. 31 MOSS. STRANGE tapestry, by Nature spun On viewless looms, aloof from sun, And spread through lonely nooks and grots Where shadows reign and leafy rest, — O moss, of all your dwelling-spots, In which one are you loveliest ? Is it when near grim roots that coil Their snaky black through mellow soil ? Or when you wrap, in woodland glooms, The great prone pine-trunks, rotted red ? Or when you dim, on sombre tombs, The requiescats of the dead ? Or is it when your lot is cast In some quaint garden of the past, On some gray crumbled basin's brim, Where mildewed Tritons conch-shells blow, While yonder, through the poplars prim, Looms up the turreted chateau ? Nay, loveliest are you when time weaves Your emerald films on low dark eaves, Above where pink porch-roses peer And woodbines break in fragrant foam, And children laugh . . . and you can hear The beatings of the heart of Home ! 32 FANTASY AND PASSION. LEAVES. O'lr} irep (pvKKwv yeve^j, roi^de Kal avZpStv. TT^EEP among forest-quietudes of green ■*-^ My steps have wandered, and about me now, In soft complexities of shade and sheen, On many a lavish-clad midsummer bough, The innumerous breezy leaves, above, around, Move with melodious and aerial sound. I pause to look, in meditative mood, Where all their murmurous myriads richly throng, And think what touches of similitude, What dark or bright analogies belong (As bonds that Nature's mystic shuttle weaves) Between the lives of men and lives of leaves ! Some in the loftiest places burst their buds, And get the sun's gold kiss while they uncurl ; They front the stars and the proud moon that floods Pure domes of limpid heaven with airy pearl. They see the damask of cool dawns ; they gaze On smiles that light the lips of dying days ! And some in lowlier places must abide, And gain but glimpses, perishably dear, Of altering cloud and meadow glimmering wide, And the large lovely world beyond their sphere ! And some have rare dews thrill each thirsty stem, Or rarelier yet, a bird's wing brushes them ! CLOVER. 33 And some amid their perfect emerald prime Are torn from nurturing boughs at storm's caprice, And some turn old and sere before their time, And flutter down as if in glad release. And all to Autumn's bleak dismantling blast, Even all, inevitably yield at last ! But when I mark how some that once were fair, From edge to edge in flawless gloss arrayed, Must feel the worm's fang gnaw them through, like care, I seem to have dimly guessed why God has made So many tremulous leaves, for their frail parts, Wear, as they throb, the shapes of human hearts ! CLOVER. TT 71 LD rustic cousins of the dainty rose, * * Whose fragrant banquets lure the greedy bees, Haytime's pink prophecies while young June goes, How brightly spread your many-blossoming seas, Rippled whichever way the warm winds please ! Laughterful children feel your tufts of bloom Brush their soft limbs, alert with merry leaps. The iridescent humming-bird's low boom With mellow music thrills your balmy deeps, Where dew that was born yesterday still sleeps ! Here, too, the massive lazy cow, star-eyed, Thrusts down her dark moist nose, and all day long, By your delicious feast unsatisfied, Crops with rough florid tongue your honeyed throng, Lashing off flies with her tail's restless thong. 3 34 FANTASY AND PASSION. Or sometimes from your cool bournes, where it hid, A butterfly soars fluttering, breeze-assailed, Gay as those flowery gondolas that slid Through sculptured Venice in old days, and trailed Brocades and velvets where they softly sailed ! O clover, tended by the shining showers Until your lavish color gladlier beams, Or, through the yellow calms of morning hours, Dappled with interchange of glooms and gleams, Like vague recurrences of differing dreams, Does Nature act in you her frankest part, And are you thoughts that she would simply say, Speaking them right from her full-throbbing heart ? Or were you made some more mysterious way, From damask blushes of young morns in May ? GRAPES. A MID the arbor's amber-tarnished vine, "*- ** Faint-fluttering to the South-wind's languid sigh, Under this drowsy haze of mellow sky, The great grapes droop their dusty globes of wine ! And even amid these bland luxurious hours, They seem like exiles reft of cherished rights, Here in our treacherous North, whose Autumn nights Drop chilly dews upon the dying flowers ! GRAPES. 35 Ripe clusters, while our woods in ruin flame, Do yearnings through your rich blood vaguely thrill For glimmering vineyard, olive-mantled hill, And Italy, which is summers softer name ? Or do you dream of some old ducal board, Blazing with Venice glass and costliest plate, Where princely banqueters caroused in state, And through the frescoed hall the long feast roared ? Or how brocaded dame and plumed grandee Saw your imperial-colored fruit heaped up On radiant salver or in chiselled cup, Where some proud marble gallery faced the sea ! Or yet do your strange yearnings, loath to cease, Go wandering on till dearer visions rise . Of the pale temples and the limpid skies, The storied shores and haunted groves of Greece ? Greece, where the god was yours of such renown, — That sleek-limbed revelling boy, supremely fair, Who, with the ambrosial gold of his wild hair, Would wreathe your purple opulence for a crown ! 36 FANTASY AND PASSION. A TOAD. DLUE dusk, that brings the dewy hours, ■*~^ Brings thee, of graceless form in sooth, Dark stumbler at the roots of flowers, Flaccid, inert, uncouth. Right ill can human wonder guess Thy meaning or thy mission here, Gray lump of mottled clamminess, With that preposterous leer ! But when I meet thy dull bulk where Luxurious roses bend and burn, Or some slim lily lifts to air Its frail and fragrant urn, Of these, among the garden-ways, So grim a watcher dost thou seem, That I, with meditative gaze, Look down on thee and dream Of thick-lipped slaves, with ebon skin, That squat in hideous dumb repose, And guard the drowsy ladies in Their still seraglios ! WEEDS. 37 WEEDS, 1" LEAN across the sagging gate ; -*• In rough neglect the garden lies, Disfeatured and disconsolate Below these halcyon skies. O'er pleasant ways once trimly kept, And blossoming fair at either verge, Weeds in rank opulence have swept Their green annulling surge ! Order's pure wisdom they have crushed, With reckless feet, in rude disdain. Like some gross rabble they have rushed On beauty's bright domain ! But over them, as though in soft Memory of bloom that no more blows, A rose-bush rears one bough aloft, Starred with one stainless rose ! Above these weeds whose ruffian power So coarsely envies what is fair, She bends her lightsome dainty flower With such patrician air, That while I watch this chaste young rose, Some pale scared queen she seems to be, Across whose palace- courtyard flows The dark mob, like a sea ! 3& FANTASY AND PASSION A BAT. TTAPHAZARD hybrid that one sees, Half bird, half reptile, fluttering through Those sultry twilights when the trees Loom breezeless on the dreamy blue ; Strange blundering mongrel of the air, At random war with here and there, Now wheeling wild and swooping now ; In what mad mood did Nature please Her sweet rich harmonies to scare With such dark dissonance as thou ? Shape that unseemliest traits endow, Grotesque, chimeric, cold, impure, With Satan's wings in miniature ! Nay, is it that thou lingerest here As the last-left weak heir of what Survives from many a wrecking year In shadowy fable, trusted not? Does altered time in thee behold One waif from horrors manifold, Ghoul, griffon, dragon, ouph, gnome, sprite, That living shook the world with fear, And dying when the earth was old, In mockery of their crumbled might Foredoomed thy tortuous dismal flight Where once by terror and dismay Thine awful ancestry held sway ? BOX. 39 BOX. THE path from porch to gate I rim, In rounded clusters rising trim. With changeless mien, I lift serene My small bright leaves of dusky green. I droop not under blinding heat, Nor shrink from savage cold and sleet ; When o'er me flow pale shrouds of snow, . My patient verdure thrives below. I cannot lure the dainty bee ; No breeze of summer sighs for me ; In sombre mood I drowse and brood, With memory-haunted quietude. For though I guard a sturdy strength, My life has known unwonted length ; Fair days or dark I mutely mark, The garden's tranquil patriarch. That white-haired lady, frail of form, Who seeks the porch when suns are warm, Has near me smiled, a blithesome child, With tangled ringlets tossing wild. As years went on, with air sedate She met her love at yonder gate. I saw him bring, one night in Spring, The precious gold betrothal-ring ! 40 FANTASY AND PASSION To church along this path she went, A twelvemonth later, well-content. With peerless charm, in sweet alarm, She leaned upon her father's arm. Again to church, when years had fled, In widow's dress, with bended head, I saw her guide at either side Her black-robed children, pensive-eyed. These children now are dames and men, But I to-day am young as then ; And yet each rose that near me blows Laughs lightly at my prim repose. Ah, giddy flowers that briefly live, Your thoughtless whispers I forgive, Since calmly I, as years go by, In damask thousands watch you die ! DE W. 41 DEW. SOFT tears that Nature keeps to show, In human way, her joys and pains, Now shed when summer splendors glow, Or now when gaudy Autumn reigns ! Chaste pearls, whose lustres love to hide In deeps of grassy seas for hours ! Dear secrets that the skies confide To the warm bosoms of the flowers ! Kind almoners, that hold as peers Proud garden or wild woodland maze ! Beautiful nightly souvenirs Of all the perished elves and fays ! Cool benedictions of the dawn ! Eve's lowlier starlight, vague and shy ! Profoundly is my spirit drawn By your sweet spells to question why So many hearts, as flowers might do, Dry lips in thirsting pain must tend, And though they dumbly plead for dew, Must die without it in the end ! 42 FANTASY AND PASSION. FIREFLIES. T S AW, one sultry night, above a swamp, ■*■ The darkness throbbing with their golden pomp 1 And long my dazzled sight did they entrance With the weird chaos of their dizzy dance ! Quicker than yellow leaves, when gales despoil, Quivered the brilliance of their mute turmoil, Within whose light was intricately blent Perpetual rise, perpetual descent, As though their scintillant flickerings had met In the vague meshes of some airy net ! And now mysteriously I seemed to guess, While watching their tumultuous loveliness, What fervor of deep passion strangely thrives In the warm richness of these tropic lives, Whose wings can never tremble but they show These hearts of living fire that beat below ! FOUR DAYS. 43 FOUR DAYS. TVfOW are the moments, brief and rare, -*-^ When Nature warms with subtle bliss, Like some chaste maiden, shy of air, Who gives her lover the first kiss ! The willows o'er the flashing brook Bow lissome, with fresh-mantled stem, Like graceful ladies when they look To find their mirrors praising them ! The orchard-aisles, that blooms array In odorous mimicry of snow, Are thrilled through every happy spray With song's mellifluous overflow ! And all the world, with greens that shine, With breaking buds and wings that flit, Seems one expectancy divine Of something God has promised it ! ii. White fleeces load the deep-blue day ; Long fitful breezes haunt its calm, Like sweet thieves flying in dismay From far Hesperides of balm ! 44 FANTASY AND PASSION The giddy bee, with murmur keen, Reels o'er the garden's brightest reach ; The sly wasp hovers, black and lean, Above the pink luxurious peach. No gaudy currants drape their bough, Erewhile with luscious crimson twined, But here large velvet leaves o'erbrow The yellowing melon's figured rind. And here a pumpkin's lazy gold Has slowly greatened more and more, Till now its heart might almost hold Cinderella's fairy coach-and-four ! This broad wood, in whose blighted ways, Along damp sward, I stroll and muse, To winds of rapid vigor sways, One halcyon tanglement of hues ! Yet I can never walk an hour Where all these hollow grandeurs gleam, And watch the land's great passion-flower Of beauteous anguish, but I dream How lofty lives have played their parts, Feigning in splendor false content ; How gorgeous robes o'er broken hearts Have made despair magnificent ! FOUR DAYS. 45 Or how, at Borgia feasts, long since, Where lavish pomp spread costly signs, Death, the dark slave of priest and prince, Waited in those voluptuous wines ! IV. Last night the air was dense with sleet, And now I mark, with smothered sigh, The pale blank meadows lapse to meet A leaden monotone of sky ! O colorless and glacial gloom ! O earthly torpor, bleak and stern ! Have the blithe charms of bird or bloom Gone forth to nevermore return ? . . . What dreary mood has fancy found ? Steal up, dear love, and break the spell ! Her lightsome footsteps faintly sound . . You come, dear love, and all is well ! For now your blushes look to me Like June's first roses, freshly gay, And in your deep eyes one can see The violets tarrying till May ! II. VOICES AND VISIONS. THE HOUSE ON THE HILL. 49 THE HOUSE ON THE HILL. I HAVE not blamed him ; I shall not blame ; It is best for him, though bitter for me, Whose poor heart holds the past the same As a box of gems with a missing key ! For Philip was born to shine, you know ; I can never help, through my darkest pain, Being glad he should win the world, and so Gain early all that he ought to gain. It used to seem, in the old dead days, A marvel that he should find one trace Of charm in a girl with my plain ways, And timidly unimportant face. His frame for a sculptor might have served ; His hair, over deep-blue eyes and clear, Grew high on the temples ere it curved In rich crisp gold round the shapely ear. And I think there are few things like his smile, Or his laugh's full mellow sweetness, too ; And then, in his own wild self-taught style, He was clever beyond all men I knew. 4 50 FANTASY AND PASSION And often, indeed, throughout each year, He would read his poems to me alone, While I tried to make my whole soul hear, With his strong man's hand in both my own ! And some I would find most grave and grand, And some to my eyes the hot tears sent, And some I would ache to understand, But not know a word of what they meant ! For Phil was to me like a land that keeps High cliffs it dazzles the eye to trace, Though I cared not much for the lofty steeps. While violets blossomed about their base ! • But 'twas pleasure to know him well above The throng of his fellows, I avow ; For woman's pride is to woman's love More closely wedded than leaf to bough ! And so when that summer came at last Which made the old house on the hill look gay, Its silence being a thing of the past And its shadowy chambers blest with day, Why, what seemed likelier to my thought, If I stayed to think, than that my dear Phil, For the graceful gifts his presence brought, Should be welcomed at the house on the hill ? And his welcomers chose, for their fine part, So to scatter favors about his feet, That I grew at length to be sure in heart Of just the nights when we would not meet. THE HOUSE ON THE HILL. 51 He would tell me of their soft household ease And their manners, touched with a fine repose, And of all they had borne across the seas From lands of sun and from lands of snows. And deep was my pleasure to hear him speak Of how warmly all would greet him there, From the proud old dame with the faded cheek To the rosy pet with the reckless hair. But as summer died amid waning wealth, A something in Phil seemed also dead, And now and then I would weep by stealth, For my soul grew dark with a nameless dread ! He was shadowed with gloomy change and cold, That made, while it put the past to scorn, His kiss of now by his kiss of old Seem a wilted rose by a rose just born ! And the change grew worse ; but I played a part, And gave no sign, in my stubborn pride, While doubt knocked loud at the door of my heart, Like a guest that will not be denied ! But at last it was all made plain as day ! . . . Though she who told it me meant the best, How the gold in the sunny air turned gray, How the youth died out from my aching breast ! 'Twas my old friend, Ellen, who spoke and showed The truth, one morn, with her true bold tongue, As we met on the same elm-bordered road Which had led to school when we both were young. 52 FANTASY AND PASSION. "You have keen eyes, Kate, but you will not see, Quick ears, yet you strangely fail to hear ! Your Philip is false as a man may be, 'For all that you hold his love so dear ! " I will speak the truth, though its shock should kill ; God help me, too, if I go amiss ! They greet him well at the house on the hill, Yet ah ! . . . there is something more than this ! " There is one who rules him with fatal sway, Who turns his heart from its loyal place ; A girl with brown hair waving away From a clear-cut pale patrician face. " The babbled lies of the gossip-cliques I meet with loathing, I stand above ; But, Kate, what it all has meant for weeks Heaven only knows if it be not love ! " They were strolling slowly, this very morn, On the lonely roadside where I came, And before my kindling look of scorn He dropt his eyes with a flush of shame. " Oh, Kate, he is faithless through and through ; 'Tis a base mean game that he plays by stealth ; For he turns like a churl away from you, To fawn with a smile at the feet of wealth ! " So Ellen spoke ; and an eager kiss Came warm from her lips against my- own ; But nothing is quite clear, after this, Till I stood in my little room alone. THE HOUSE ON THE HILL. 53 I stood, and all in a moment brief, With a cry my lips could not control, Sank quivering to the floor, and grief Wrung up the sobs from my secret soul ! That night he came, and I met him just' At the old porch-steps, worn wry with years. The air was keen, but I would not trust A light on the traces of my tears. As he took my tremulous hand, I spoke : " Let us walk for a little while "... But here My voice into wretched tremor broke, Though I tried so hard to make it clear. Then he knew that I knew it all at last, And with bowed head murmured, " As you please ; n And down through the garden-paths we past, In silence under the sighing trees. I remember the night so well, so well ! . . . The foliage moved with a sad unrest, And a large deep-crimson crescent fell Through the pale-blue air of the starry West. And heavy and cold as a hand of doom Had the Autumn dewfall come to set Its chill on the chaste tuberose's bloom And the low close copse of the mignonette. And haunting the dark, and seeming thus To hold it in sad mysterious thrall, The voice of the katydid came to us In weird, monotonous, plaintive call. 54 FANTASY AND PASSION He walked with his head bent, still as stone, And now, since I saw he would not speak, I spoke myself, with a quivering tone And a great hot tear on either cheek. " Philip," I said, " 'twas a bitter wrong To have done your soul that for such as I You should trifle with sacred truth so long, And soil white honor, and live a lie ! " Had you frankly warned me when love first died, While you turned in spirit from her to me, Can you doubt what my lips had then replied, Though it dealt me death to set you free ? " Yet I must not chide you for changing, Phil ; I know my worth ; can I fail to know How all along we were mated ill, You that are lofty, I that am low ? . " I shall prize my past, though its light will seem As the flash of a bird's wing seen afar, For old love remembers young love's dream As twilight remembers the morning-star ! " All thought should be dear of its lost repose To the aching frame of the storm-worn ship, And dear all thought to the thirsty rose Of the dew once glittering at its lip ! " And to me shall be dear all thought of yore, As its green to the leaf now gray with frost, As the crown to the brow it girds no more, As the sea to the pearl it loved and lost ! " THE HOUSE ON THE HILL. 55 Now I paused, and now for a little space I watched him tremble and try to speak, And saw, as the moonlight struck his face, The white we see on a dead man's cheek. " Ah, Kate," he murmured, " you cannot guess How this heart of mine, as it hears you, feels To its guilty centre the shock and stress Of the blow your noble pardon deals ! " Having so wronged you, I could but count That a righteous wrath in your look would shine, Nor ever dream that your soul would mount To grasp at a vengeance so divine ! " But, Kate, if shame can the past repair, From this life you were blameless to despise Take all that your just contempt can spare, And let it serve you until it dies ! " And perhaps your love, with its deeps untold, Shall have gained the power, I dream not how, To see the man you knew me of old In the worthless traitor you know me now ! " As he ceased, I thrilled with a yearning thrill, But I said, in words that were cold and slow, " Answer me what I shall ask of you, Phil ; On your honor answer it, — yes or no ! " Which of us two has your heart this night ? Speak truth : is it here or yonder, Phil ? Here, where we stand in the mellow light, Or yonder, — at the house on the hill ? " 56 FANTASY AND PASSION. I questioned thus, though* I did not dare Look once on his white face, vague to see, But with dropt eyes felt, as f waited there, That the world stood still till he answered me ! So, waiting near him, with bended head And with palm to palm held firm and tense, I seemed, while the meagre moments fled, To be living a lifetime of suspense ! And now, with a stifled sob, I sent A prayer to the God who makes or mars, That out from my longing bosom went, Like a bird let forth from its prison-bars ! I prayed that my new hope might not flit As a dream back to dreamland, past recall ; And I prayed . . . but alas ! what profits it To remember now that I prayed at all ? My hand on a sudden he caught and pressed, While he said, in a whisper strange and rough : " Yes, Kate, — God help me ! — I love her best. You ask for truth : I have lied enough." (So the prayer was vain ! So the hope was fled !) Then I sighed, though he did not hear me sigh, And I let him keep my hand as I said, " The truth is better. Good-night, — good-bye." . . It was dark by this, for the moon hung low ; And I heard the katydid's wild clear cry, As it rang from meadowy reaches, grow Like an echoing voice . . . Good-night / good-bye / FIDE LIT AS. 57 FIDELITAS. DOST thou dream I forget thee, O star that hast fled From a heaven where its light lingers yet ? Since we parted with pangs, to thy soul hast thou said That my love would forego and forget ? Do not fear ; it is love that, though prisoned apart From thine own for long ages, would be As the shell flung ashore that yet hides in its heart All the sounds of the songs of the sea ! I shall live out my life, I shall draw daily breath, Shall endure, yet in such wounded wise As the stag that goes wearily, smitten with death, To the pool that it drinks of and dies ! 'Tis in vain that the years, though they labor, shall bring For my anguish Nepenthean wine. As the sword to the scabbard, the plume to the wing, O my love, was thy life, unto mine ! And with infinite sorrow my spirit has seen How a gulf never sounded nor crost, In its blackness of darkness yawns awful between The words " I have loved " — "I have lost." 58 FANTASY AND PASSION. But as bells in the belfries and spires of the past, Shall my dreams of thee changelessly chime, And the rock of my passion shall wear at the last Not a scar from the tempest of time ! When my heart to the bourne of no comfort may turn That can lighten its loss or repair, Shall the star of its longing not lovelier burn In the deepening night of despair ? And for love to the cross of remembrance to cling Is not more in its effort with me Than for leafage to mistily glimmer in Spring On the wreck of a storm-ruined tree ! I shall foster no fear that my soul may forget, While in reaches of innermost thought The immutable marble of deathless regret To an image of thee has been wrought ! And if ever that image doth seem to uprise Through a gloom whose vague fitfulness dims, 'Tis from tears dropping down out of memory's eyes On the lamp that she watches and trims ! ADORATION. 59 ADORATION. T HAVE sought the intensest ways to best adore you, ■*■ I have laid my soul's last treasure at your feet ; Yet I tremble as in thought I bend before you With abasement and abashment and defeat, Knowing well that all the love I ever bore you Is requital weak of worth and incomplete ! As one might seize a lyre, across it sweeping His fleet precipitate hand that has no care, Imperiously upon the strained strings heaping A mightier melody than these can bear, So love has taken my life within his keeping And smitten it with great strokes that scorn to spare ! I am less than that which thrills me and entrances, As a wounded bird is less than they that fly ; As the suppliant surge that arches and advances Than the resolute rock-mass where it comes to die ; As a violet's color than the bland expanses, The unshadowed calms of overcurving sky ! Desiring from my soul to have given you greatly Of my thanks for your great love-gift given to me, I am slight as some poor rivulet flowing straitly Near all the abundant splendors of the sea, And my worship is as nothingness by the stately Magnificence of what it fain would be ! 60 FANTASY AND PASSION. Over my soul, in hours of meditation, Murmurs a voice with monotones that tire : God meant not that from this deep adoration This vehement joy should fill me and should fire, Looking on life in passionate elation From heights that so transcendently aspire ! Full soon, I know it, while they shall strain to free not, From these idolatrous arms you shall be torn ; You are fated from my days to pass and be not, Like all of rare and fair they have ever worn ; I am doomed, although the stealthy doom I see not ; I feast, albeit I die to-morrow morn ! You or your love, it is fated, soon shall falter, And vanish away, since here no sweet thing dwells ; No voice among blithe birds that take for psalter The world at Springtide, carolling what it tells ; No light, no flower, no moon that fails to alter, No song, no mellow minglement of bells ! Yet though you vanish, memory shall cling dust-like To hours -when your first kiss first met my mouth ! Though on loved lands the annulling snow lie crust- like, Can we forget the old winds that blew from South ? Forget the old green of lands where lingers rust-like The dull disfeaturing leprosy of drouth ? And I, in reverent and memorial manner, Shall dream of you divinely and be stirred, As sad Arcadia dreams of how Diana Made silvery limbs and laughter seen or heard ; ADORATION. As some rude crag-tower that wild grasses banner, ams o bird! Dreams of how lit there some great strange white Yet let me at least love fortune while she blesses, Nor vainly cavil at bliss because it flies ; Let me not dim the sun with doubts and guesses, But pluck the flower-like day before it dies ; Catch the fleet hour by back-flung robe or tresses, And plunge a long strong look in her sweet eyes ! But ah ! the vanity of desire, when kneeling We yearn for utterance that no god will teach ! When, at the finite bounded heart's appealing, An infinite boundless love evades its reach ! When the waves of deep ungovernable feeling Dash powerless on the baffling gates of speech ! My fervidest language hath an utter lightness, My deeds devoutest are as deeds undone, Do I mark your marble arm that slopes to slightness, Or see the clear smile at your lips begun ! That opulent smile beneath whose lavish brightness You are like a lily overbrimmed with sun ! Who am I for whom the hand of hope is sending Her freshest olive-spray, her dearest dove ? Who am I that thus, though made for mortal ending, I sit Alcides-like with gods above ? Who am I that dare, however lowly-bending, Be laurelled with the chaplet of your love ? 62 FANTASY AND PASSION. How am I blest that have not met with scorning, Yet walk where worthier feet might well have trod, Being thrilled as earth, at April's earliest warning, Through amplitudes of winter-withered sod, Or shadowy meadows when the feet of morning Are beautiful upon the hills of God ! The illimited love I bear you ever urges My ardent soul through deeps of distance new, While far aloof, where mind in spirit merges, Fresh deeps of distance ever rise to view, Like those dim lines that seem, o'er leagues of surges, Bastions of mist below the vaulted -blue ! O for a hand its ruinous blows to dash on The expansive spirit's narrowing chains and bars ! O for a voice that lordlier phrase might fashion Than this cold human phrase which frets and mars ! O for a heart with room for all its passion, As hollow heaven has room for all her stars ! IF TRULY. 63 IF TRULY. TF truly thou art still the same, ■*- Deep-eyed, soft-speaking as of old ; If nothing strange or sad or cold, Nothing that hints of tears untold, Nothing that one might name or might not name, Meeting thee after these flown years, be seen, To mar the accustomed sweetness of thy mien, Then surely 'tis not mine to chide Harsh fate, being satisfied ! If truly thou art happy, this Alone suffices, love, to me ! If all that I might ever be That other now has grown ; if he Awakes the pure deep thrills of utter bliss I had believed one only could awake ; If he has found the secret that can make Thy days to music glide, — Enough . . . I am satisfied ! 64 FANTASY AND PASSION. DARKNESS. T HAD a dream of a wild-lit place -*■ Where three dark spirits met face to face. One said : "I am darkest ; I had birth In the central blackness of mid-earth." With a sneer one said, below his breath : " I am still more dark, for I am Death." But the third, with voice that bleaker pealed Than freezing wind on a houseless field, Cried, where he stood from the rest apart, 11 I am that darkness which fills man's heart " When it aches and yearns and burns for one It has loved as the meadow' loves the sun ! " Now I gazed on him from earth's mid-reach, And now on the spirit of death ; and each, Though dark with a darkness to affright, Beside that third was a shape of light ! HIS CHILD. 65 HIS CHILD. (A Woman speaks.) AH, how may finite language tell The boundless pain of that farewell ! At last I pleaded, speaking low Between great sobs, " In mercy go ! » He did not speak, but, stooping now, Laid one long kiss against my brow ! Then, when a little space had flown, I stood for evermore alone ! Wounded in spirit, dazed, aghast, I had no future but my past ! Yet time, that heeds not joys or fears, Inexorably shaped its years. But years like weak waves broke above The changeless granite of my love ! The world, that thought this love was dead, Praised the sweet woman he had wed ! I heard its praise ; I gave no sign ; Yet ah ! what agony was mine ! 66 FANTASY AND PASSION. Within my life there came a day When past his home my journey lay. The lawns flowed wide in grassy seas, The house was hid with stately trees ; And in the gateway, sweetly fair, A young child stood, with shining hair. I paused a moment by the gate . . . . I trembled with a deadly hate ! In this frail child I seemed to see My own despair confronting me ! Yet while I watched the child, there stole A lovely change across my soul ! He gazed upon me in surprise ; He thrilled me with his father's eyes ! Then, as I gently drew more near, He gently smiled, and had no fear. And now, all feeling unrepressed, I knelt and caught him to my breast! And blinded with hot tears, I now Laid one long kiss against his brow ! SELF-DECEPTION. 67 SELF-DECEPTION. O CORNING my stubborn love, that can but see *^ Your stubborn scorn, that alters by no breath, I shut my teeth and cry, " It shall not be ! I will not drag this shackle down to death ! " And so I make a wall of absence rise And grow between us, till at length I seem To view my stormy past with stern surprise, Bathed in the drowsy mezzo-tint of dream ! And after lapsing time there comes a day When, proud of this calm strength that fills my breast, I hear the very voice of courage say, " Be bold, and put thy vaunted power to test ! " We meet : through all my blood one thrill is sent, And suddenly, in a moment, where I stand, The illusive faith on which my life has leant Cracks like a rotten staff beneath my hand ! And even as one that has been drugged with wine And left by revellers on some couch to loll, Love, with pale moaning lips, with eyes that shine, Wakes in the shadowy chamber of my soul ! 68 FANTASY AND PASSION. CHIAROSCURO. 'TPHE garden, with its throngs of drowsy roses, ■*■ Below the suave midsummer night reposes, And here kneel I, whom fate supremely blesses, In the dim room, whose lamplit dusk discloses Your two dark stars of eyes, your rippled tresses, Whose fragrant folds the fragrant breeze caresses ! White flower of womanhood, ah ! how completely, How strongly, with invisible bonds, yet sweetly, You bind, as my allegiant love confesses, You bind, you bend, immutably and meetly, This soul- of mine, that all its pride represses, A willing falcon in love's golden jesses ! To me such hours as these I breathe are holy ! I kneel, I tremble, I am very lowly While this dear consecrated night progresses, And faint winds through the lattice-vines float slowly From all high starriest reaches and recesses, Night's heavenly but unseen embassadresses ! A BIRD OF PASSAGE. 69 A : A BIRD OF PASSAGE. S the day's last light is dying, As the night's first breeze is sighins I send you, Love, like a messenger-dove, my thought through the distance flying ! Let it perch on your sill ; or, better, Let it feel your soft hand's fetter, While you search and bring from under its wing, love, hidden away like a letter ! 70 FANTASY AND PASSION A LEAVE-TAKING. r 1 ^HEY stand and see the sunset make A whorl of scarlet in the West, And white before them See meadowfuls of daisies break Wavelike at every wind's behest That wanders o'er them. He is a man of easeful air, Of genial youth, of happy grace In form and vesture : She is a girl with glimmering hair, Deep eyes, and mobile oval face, And gentle gesture. He plucks a grass-blade from the ground, And idly tears it as he speaks, And laughs, and lingers ; She swings a wild-rose she has found, Chaste-colored like her own fair cheeks, Between two fingers. He takes his leave, with proffered palm, With words half serious, half in jest, — A light leave-taking. She answers, careless, courteous, calm : (He does not dream that in her breast The heart is breaking !) VESTA. 71 VESTA. TT^HEN skies are starless yet when day is done, * * When odors of the freshened sward are sweeter, When light is dreamy round the sunken sun, At limit of the grassy lane I meet her. She steals a gracious hand across the gate ; My own its timid touch an instant flatters ; Below the glooming leaves we linger late, And gossip of a thousand airy matters. I gladden that the hay is stored with luck ; I smile to hear the pumpkin-bed is turning ; I mourn the lameness of her speckled duck ; I marvel at the triumphs of her churning. From cow to cabbage and from horse to hen, I treat bucolics with my rustic charmer, At heart the most unpastoral of men, Converted by this dainty little farmer. And yet if one soft syllable I chance, As late below the glooming leaves we linger, The pretty veto sparkles in her glance, And cautions in her brown up-lifted finger. O happy trysts at blossom-time of stars ! O moments when the glad blood thrills and quickens ! O all-inviolable gateway-bars ! O Vesta of the milking-pails and chickens ! 72 FANTASY AND PASSION. ONE NIGHT IN SEVILLE. - TTIGH and yet higher the slow moon arose, ■*- •*• Mounting in majesty full-orbed and fair, Till loftily o'er Seville's pale repose The great Giralda towered in opal air ! With vagueness all the rich-hued roofs were blent ; Scarce might you tell their lilac from their green ; On languorous breezes came the pungent scent Of odorous alamedas, faintly seen. Out from the crowded plaza floated light A peal of mirth or dulcet trill of song, And brightening softly to the brightening night, The shadowy Guadalquivir lapsed along ! The flash of teeth, the gleam of combs, the dark Mantillas, the quaint gear of old and young, The rustle of fans, the cigarillo's spark, The mellow-syllabled Sevillian tongue ! All these in pleasured memory still are fresh, But ah ! that faultless face which came and fled, Beaming amid its drapery's dusky mesh From the dim balcony above my head ! That face which for a fleet while glimmering through The abundant jasmines, thrilled me with surprise ! A drowsy smile, two dimpling cheeks and two Fathomless velvet Andalusian eyes ! BARCAROLLE. 73 A face so marvellous that one rash star, To see of beauty this rare flower and crown, Leaned out in heaven its golden head too far, And dropt, a meteor, over Seville town ! T BARCAROLLE. k HE lake lies with the sheen on it Of day's last look serene on it, And round its rim in the gloaming dim the shades of the low hills lean on it ! No slightest sound the charmful quiet mars ; The hollow heaven is yearning for its stars ! With strange half-proud humility, With sumptuous tranquillity, Thou art lounging, Sweet, at my flattered feet, in stat- uesque immobility, Against thy bosom's chaste superb repose One heavy blood-red velvet-petalled rose ! Thine affluent hair, so billowlike, The bends of thy form, so willowiike, Thy face so clear from the red cachemire folded under its pale cheek pillowlike ; The unrippled lake, the gloom, the calm . . . all dower Memory with one imperishable hour ! 74 FANTASY AND PASSION. While we drift now to leeward, Love, I can feel my life turn theeward, Love, As a blossom will see some great gold bee and bow all its beauty beeward, Love ! From thine eyes' night my perfect day is made ! I seek them, as the ivy seeks the shade ! Look how the pines loom towerwise, Skirting the lake-edge bowerwise ! The stars wait still ere they flock to fill the heavenly meadows flowerwise ! But Hesper in the darkening West burns now, Like some grand diamond on some swart queen's brow ! Ah, Love, with the rich day failing so, With the summer sunset paling so, I would always rest on the lustrous breast of the lake, forever sailing so, And feel, at languorous rapture's utmost goal, Peace lightly sweep the lute-strings of my soul ! Heedless if skies be thunderful, Heedless if time be plunderful, And only sure of the splendor pure in those fathomless eyes and wonderful, My soul would soar beyond all time, as soars The upleaping lark through dawn's white corri- dors ! CRADLE-SONG. 75 CRADLE-SONG. TT7INDILY over the rocking sea and windily over * * the damp dim grasses. Hark how the lowering Autumn night sweeps down on the lonely world ! Sombrely from the silver sunset hurry the storm's cloud-masses ; Out on the black and perilous water, cavernous waves are curled ! Go to sleep, darling ; go to sleep, dear one ; Heed not the tempest gathering o'er thee ! Slumber well, though the night be a drear one, Watched, my babe, by the mother that bore thee ! While in my desolate home I listen, compassed about with the deepening darkness, Memory brings me her woful phantom, haunting the chilly gloom. Oh, but the skies were bleak, that dawn, when he lay in his fearful starkness, Flung by the stern defiant waves where the^dumb gray boulders loom ! 76 FANTASY AND PASSION. Go to sleep, darling ; go to sleep, dear one ; Heed not the tempest gathering o'er thee ! Slumber well, though the night be a drear one, Wild and drear to the mother that bore thee ! in. Cruelly in his dying face was flung the scorn of your moanful surges, Haughty sea, that hast left to love me this poor babe alone ! Hear not the voices, O my Sweet, that are singing thy father's dirges ! Find in the Paradise of thy dreams the angel that he is grown ! Go to sleep, darling ; go to sleep, dear one ; Heed not the tempest gathering o'er thee. Slumber well, though the night be a drear one, Watched by God and the mother that bore thee ! ONE MAY NIGHT. 77 ONE MAY NIGHT. T TOW blandly, Love, this air of evening slips A -*- In from the drowsy violets to your lips ! If I were some great painter, I would draw Your splendor of cool shoulder without flaw : Your arms, like those the boy of Ida kist, Each wavering to its wonder of white wrist ; Your throat, o'er which your face's full flower glows, A stem so stately to so grand a rose ! And while I wrought them, burn beneath a spell That smiles and tears must interblend to tell ! But lift toward me that fragrant mouth : for why Should a mere breeze be deeplier blest than I ? Were not these heavy blue-black tresses made The swart broad molding of your brows to shade, As shaded once the locks of Egypt's queen Brows where the jewelled sparrow blazed in sheen ? For hearts to have, life holds no lovelier thing Within her hands than love and youth and Spring ; Yet gazing on your fresh cheek one should say, Though Winter were at wildest — " It is May ! " 78 FANTASY AND PASSION. FORGETFULNESS. AFTER the long monotonous months, and after' Vague yearnings as of suppliant viewless hands, The first full note of Spring's aerial laughter Was wavering o'er the winter- wearied lands. All earth seemed rich in sweet emancipations For all that frost so bitterly enslaves, And, tended as with unseen ministrations, The sward grew fresh about the village graves ! And while I lingered in the halcyon weather To watch the tranquil churchyard, brightening fast, My friend and his young wife rode by together, — ( Rode by and gave me greeting as they past. They seemed like lovers with the choicest graces Of favoring fortune at their love's control, Yet, -as I looked upon their fleeting faces, A chill of recollection touched my soul ! For only two short Springtides had been numbered Since here among these graves, it then befell, A grave was wrought beneath whose slab now slum- bered The woman whom my friend had loved so well ! A gloom across the brilliant day came stealing, Whose darkness held the spirit from escape. I saw my friend within a dim room, kneeling In haggard anguish by a sheeted shape ! FORGETFULNESS. 79 A chilly breeze across the chamber fluttered, Making the timorous night-light wax and wane, And wearily on the roof above were uttered The low persistent requiems of the rain ! I thought of his great sobs and mien heart broken, His moans of agony and his wild-eyed stare, And how the assuaging words I would have spoken Died at my lips before his deep despair ! " And now," I thought, " what worth his protestations, His tears, his pangs and all the grief he gave, When, tended as with unseen ministrations, The sward grows green round her forgotten grave ?" And yet the brilliant day, divine for tidings Of cheerful change in all its ample glow, Touched me with tender yet with potent eludings, And softly murmured, " It is better so ! " " Ah, yes," I mused, " immeasurably better To win suave healing from the fluctuant years ; To snap the bond of grief's tyrannic fetter ; To let new hopes arch rainbows among tears ! " And now it seemed that Spring, the elate new-comer, Laughed out : ' ; Oh, better all regret were brief! Better the opulence of another summer Than last year's empty nest and shrivelled leaf! " " Yes, better ! " I made mute reiterations, But turned sad eyes to one green turfy wave, Where, tended as with unseen ministrations, The sward grew fresh round that forgotten grave ! So FANTASY AND PASSION. Oh, sweet it is when hope's white arms are wreathing Necks bowed with sorrow, as they droop forlorn ! But ah ! the imperishable pathos breathing About those dead whom we no longer mourn ! SOUVENIR. T~\ARK hickory-boughs against blue shining sea ; -*-^ Sharp-shapen fir-trees pluming sombre rocks ; The cadence of wind-murmurs fresh and free ; The merry sunlight on brown girlish locks ; The sounding of two tender voices low . . . And all so long ago ! A building of sweet castles in the air, Frail as the slim calm cloud o'er distant seas ; Delicious idlesse ; carelessness of care ; ' Fragments of song ; unutterable ease ! Life's music at soft pianissimo .... And all so long ago ! A purple whorl of sunset in the West ; A great gold star through a wide oriel seen ; Two lilied hands upon a placid breast ; A mute pale face, ineffably serene ! A mourner kneeling in impassioned woe . . . And all so long ago ! THE MEETING. 81 THE MEETING. T SAW in dreams a dim bleak heath, ■*■ Where towered a gaunt pine by a rock, And suddenly, from the earth beneath, That rent itself with an angry shock, A shape sprang forth to that wild place, Whose limbs by chains were trenched and marred, And whose sardonic pain-worn face Was grimly scorched and scarred. He waited by the spectral pine ; Aloft he lifted haggard eyes ; A woman's form, of mien divine, Dropt earthward in seraphic wise. Chaste as though bathed in breaking day, And radiant with all saintly charms, She flew toward him till she lay Close-locked in his dark arms ! I heard a far vague voice that said : " On earth these twain had loved so well That now their lives, when both are dead, Burst the great bounds of Heaven and Hell. Alike o'er powers of gloom and light Prevailed their fervid prayers and tears ; They meet on this bleak heath one night In every thousand years ! " 82 FANTASY AND PASSION D'OUTRE MORT. A ND so 'tis over at last ; ■^ *■ The passion and pain are past Death has him and holds him fast ! And now to the chamber dumb Of his death-sleep white and numb, Who of all earth should come To look on him where he lies, With her two cold stars of eyes, And sigh the old common sighs, — Who should stand by his bed, In her sadness so well-bred, With just the right poise of head, But she, this woman he bore, Through life till his life was o'er, Such infinite yearning for ? And now she stands by his bed, Forgetting to try and shed One tear, as she sees him dead. And when those about her fare From the room, with solemn air, She follows, leaving him there. But just as she nears the door, There drops on the shadowed floor A sweet rich rose that she wore. FROM SHADOW LAND. &3 It drops, an'd she does not know, And so lets it lie, and so Goes out as the others go. Now they that next draw near This man, in his sleep austere, Find, shrinking away with fear. That a rose, once bright and bland, Is crushed in his frigid hand . . . And they cannot understand ! . . . FROM SHADOWLAND. WHEN I lay weak and white on my death-bed, I smiled and said : " Oh, soul, thine hour is near ! Be comforted ! " And sweet at last it was to break away From bonds of clay, And leap, a bodiless rapture, into day ! My life has borne, Crowned with it even as with a crown of thorn, « " This woman whom I have loved with love supreme, Yet might not dream Of kissing her pure garment's outmost seam, 84 FANTASY AND PASSION. " This woman, lo ! she is mine, through many a year To hover near, And passionately to worship, to revere ! " So I went viewless on the viewless air Fleetly to where She sat in a green garden, calm and fair. I clasped her with intangible arms like light, In fervid might, And on her sweet proud beauty fed my sight ! I rained quick kisses on her lips and eyes, And loverwise I sank on her deep bosom with deep sighs ! And she, meanwhile, with smooth lids drooping low, Chaster than snow, Sat there superbly calm, and did not know ! My most impetuous kiss — the intense wild stress Of each caress — Alike to her was an utter nothingness ! Cold pangs through all my ghostly being shot ; I loathed my lot, I that possessed and yet possessed-her not ! And now to God on every wind is borne My moan forlorn : " Have pity, O God, and give me back her scorn ! " PEST. 85 PEST. T CAME at midnight to the city's great ■^ Last gate. Below me gleamed its shadowy stately maze Of ways ; Domes, minarets, obelisks, firm-reared to dare Mid-air ; Masses of blended roofs in shadow deep As sleep ; And woven among its thousand streets and sites, Dim lights. But now, as I bore onward to that great Last gate, A dark shape stole toward me", glided fast And past. With wonderment I turned, not trusting quite My sight, When lo ! the shape beneath me on the hill Stood still, And even as I had turned, so turned apace Its face. Wherewith the moon, from out a cloudy lair, Broke fair, 86 FANTASY AND PASSION. And showed me, lit with large eyes burning dull, A skull ! Days after, this news reached me in the West : " The pest " Sweeps Ispahan with its embittered breath Of death ! " Within the temples prayers and maddened cries Arise ; " And by her heaps, forever newly fed, Of dead, " Our city moans for Allah to disperse The curse." WINE. T AM a spirit strong and glad, •*• In gold or purple proudly clad, With eyes of fire and fragrant breath, Lovely, but crueller than death ! Through days my protean soul has hung In lucid clusters, richly strung Through many a spacious green expanse Of beauteous and historic France ! Below blue deeps of laughing skies My soul has laughed, in soft surprise, To hear what merry pleasure stirs The voices of the vintagers ! WINE. 87 But though at many a revel flit The rapid javelins of my wit, Though joy obeys me, though regret May quaff my Lethe and forget, Still do I love by stealth to wind My subtle spells o'er heart and mind, Till sacred secrets, treasured dear, Are babbled in some greedy ear ! And I have loved to pluck aside The mask from malice, envy, pride ; To strip fair flesh from deeds, and show What bony motives grin below ! For when I cheer the kindliest him Who courts me at his goblet's brim ; When I am blandest, warmest, then Most deadly is my hate of men ! Nor is to me that moment sweet W T hen solemn mourners dumbly meet, And dying lips are lifted up To touch my sacramental cup, — But keenlier does the moment please If my drugged lover wakes and sees, Like one who vaguely understands, The red crime crusted on his hands ! 88 FANTASY AND PASSION. TO-MORROW. T SIT and muse beside the faded coals, •*■ While night and silence hold their mystic sway, And while the world, with all its freight of souls, Wheels on through darkness to another day ! Across my spirit ghostly fancies creep . . . Who shall dare prophesy to-morrow's light ? What if uncounted thousands, while they sleep, Are trembling on eternity to-night ? And still they haunt my heart, these dreams forlorn, Vague bats of fear that sunshine would dismay . . . Though myriads of to-morrows have been born, What if the last had perished with to-day ? But no ! the ancient ordinance yet reigns . . . Hours afterward, while seated wakeful here, I dimly see, along my casement-panes, The first pale dubious glimmerings appear. Once more the old fated ways of earth begin . . . Some glad girl somewhere will soon wake and say, While blushing from chaste forehead to sweet chin One lovely rose, — ■' It is my wedding-day ! " And in some prison-cell, perchance even now, Some haggard captive from his sleep is drawn, To hear them, while cold sweat-drops bead his brow, Nailing a scaffold in the ghastly dawn ! DEGREE. 89 DEGREE. TT7HAT if the great earth where our life * ^ Appears so vast and fierce a strife, Where mighty kingdoms rise and sink, Where warriors fight, reformers think, Where statesmen plot, where poets rave, Where science makes the lightning slave, Nay, what if all that meets our sight In starry calms of utmost night, All pale complexities we trace In the awful altitudes of space, All orbs among those baffling heights, The suns of myriad satellites, — What if all these and all they hold Of lands and peoples manifold, Were, to the eyes of one afar, — One mortal as we mortals are, — Like those mere giddy motes that dance Within a sunbeam's lucid lance ? While he, in strange stupendous ways, Lived on through monstrous nights and days, Able, if chance might so allot, To breathe us in and know it not ! 9© FANTASY AND PASSION. THE ATONEMENT. T~\ULL as a withered flower, along the West, •*-^ The sad moon dropt at dawn through brighten- ing air, And gazing on her calm and colorless breast, I marked the shadowy desolations there ! Then while the vanishing night grew more remote, Aided of some new sense, I seemed to hear A voice of strange monotonous murmur float Miraculously down from that far sphere. " Forever," the mysterious voice made moan, " I terribly expiate a mighty crime ; I wander about this ghastly world alone, And shall be wandering till the end of time ! " No animate thing at all my sight beholds, No glimmer of any grass or sign of tree. One monstrous lethargy of stagnation folds The appalling solitudes that compass me ! " Great valleylands in vapory distance die, Clammy with dews, with skull-shaped stones o'er- strewn, And pale against the unchanging arch of sky Tower up these awful mountains of the moon ! TIGER TO TIGRESS. 91 And sometimes, journeying on with low -bowed head, I meet old bones that wondrous things avow Of years before God touched this planet I tread With the woful death-in-life that shrouds it now ! " And often I so abhor this lonely lot That my sick spirit a keen delight would take In seeing some white ghost haunt some dusky spot, Or setting a naked foot on some cold snake ! " But not even such poor boon I dare expect, While ever wandering through this loathsome land, With hair and beard one tangle of red neglect, And thirty pieces of silver in my hand ! " TIGER TO TIGRESS. r I ^HE sultry jungle holds its breath ; ■*- The palsied night is dumb as death ; The golden stars burn large and bland Above this torrid Indian land ; But we, that hunger's pangs distress, Crouch low in deadly watchfulness, With sleek striped shapes of massive size, Great velvet paws and lurid eyes ! Hark ! did you hear that stealthy sound Where yonder monstrous ferns abound ? Some lissome leopard pauses there ; Let him creep nearer if he dare ! . . . 92 FANTASY AND PASSION. And hark, again ! in yonder grove I hear that lazy serpent move ; A mottled thing, whose languid strength Coils round a bough its clammy length ! Soon the late moon that crimsons air Will fall with mellow splendors where The Rajah's distant palace shows Its haughty domes in dark repose. And from this dim lair, by and bye, We shall behold, against pale sky, With mighty gorges robed in gloom, The wild immense Himalayas loom ! At moonrise, through this very spot. You still remember, do you not, How that proud Punjab youth, last night, Sprang past us on his charger white, Perchance to have some fair hand throw A rose from some seraglio ? . . . Well, if to-night he passes, note My hot leap at his horse's throat ! JAEL. 93 JAEL. Then Jael, Heber's wife, took a nail of the tent, and took a hammer in her hand, and went softly unto him, and smote the nail into his tem- ples, and fastened it into the ground: for he was fast asleep and weary. So he died. — Judges, iv. 21. "ORAISE me with shawn and cymbal, chant my -*- fame, Barak and Deborah, till the high Lord hears. From Zaanaim, sounding along the lands, Past Tabor even to Ephraim let the name Of Jael, wife of Heber, echo in song. Lo, I have merited the applauding voice Of prophetess and conqueror ; I have won Justly my loud renown — and purchased it With deep unspeakable heart-pangs of wild pain ! Praise me, and bid the people praise, and call me Deliveress of Israel, having wrought Death to the invincible and tyrannous. Praise me that spared not, pitied not and smote ; Praise me that murdered righteously, that am Glorious among all Hebrew womankind For evermore. Praise me, yet praise aloof, And hither send no curious messengers, Bidding me join your jubilant sacrifice, Your minstrelsy, your clamor of triumph. Close I have drawn the curtains of my tent and shut Heaven's vague supremities and the twilight moon, Palm-gildino-, from mine eves. I would that doors 94 FANTASY AND PASSION. Of massive metal dulled your grateful songs To me, lying prone, veiled with my loosened hair, An agony in my thoughts and loathing life ! Have I not battled against my sin, O God, And battled bravely ? Father, am I not Wrestler with that fierce passion which had coiled About the immaculate column, fold by fold, Of wifehood's beauteous chastity ? Why, then, Having so risen against myself and hurled To the dust my baser part, can I not gain Quiet of soul for recompense ? O Lord, Wherefore should this unholy love live on ? Whence this untamable longing to undo Mine act ? — this grief defiant of mastery ? — This weariness of self-hatred, whence, O Lord? Nay, Father, have I once yielded to my love ? Did not my indignant spirit from the first Cry out against it ? Wakening after dreams Of guilty impetuous worship, night by night While Heber slept have I not stolen unheard To part the tapestries, and gone forth and met The large white stars of Israel, and made, With suppliant arms and tears and back-thrown head, Kneeling, my lamentation ? Verily Thou knowest, O God, I have done this thing ; nay, too, Thou knowest of how the quick pulse ruled my heart When Sisera was near, yet how I have made Face, form, and gesture one cold courtesy Of decorous matronhood severely pure, Acting until the last my virtuous lie, JAEL. 95 Feeling the insolent animal in my veins Gnaw at its bonds with fiery teeth. . . . And when, Wounded and weak, I saw him stand to-day, Bloody from horrible carnage, by the tent, Thou knowest, O God, what yearning thrilled my breast To hide, to save, even die befriending him ; Yet how with sternest afterthought I crushed This eagerness, trampled, scorned it, and became Guileful to bid him enter and fear not. And yet Thou knowest, O Father, when he sank Heavily on yonder couch of leopard-skins And made his moan for water and turned his eyes In pleading up to mine, how pity urged My unwilling hands to kindly offices. And then, and only then, for a little time (Thou knowest, O God, 'twas but a little time !) I served him, love being dominant, and stood To watch him sleep tired sleep, athirst no more. And then, and only then, for a little time, (For a little time, O God, Thou knowest well !) I fed the insatiate hunger of my look With all his marvellous beauty, grace and strength : The brow's white loftiness, the shadowing sweep Of silken eyelash, the dark plenteous beard Just curling about his grand firm-corded throat, The vigorous majesties of girth and build And eminent stature and heroic arms And all that makes the manliness of a man ! For a little time, O God, for a little time ! . . . And then Thou knowest how sharp a serpent-sting, 96 FANTASY AND PASSION. After that one wild wanton moment, pierced My bosom, and how I rose and hid my face, Remembering I was Jael, mother and wife ; While to my ears the imagined mockery Of those who might have spoken it, had they known, Sounded : " Lo, she, the austerely blameless, loves Jabin's dread captain, wronger of- women, base, Impious, a despot in the land !"..'.- Sing on, Barak and Deborah, bless the Kenite's wife, Who thrust the deadly nail in Sisera's brow, Who strove to free not Israel, but herself, Who failed, and feels the unholy love yet live, And who now mourns the irreparable deed, Lying prone in her self-hatred and despair ! O guessing not of her misery and shame, Sing to her praise, flute-throated prophetess, And thou, too, strong son of Abmoam, sing, — While Jael hears, the accursed, the comfortless ! VIOLANTE. 97 VIOLANTE. (Ravenna, a.d. 1500.) The main incident of this poe?n has been suggested by Boccac- cio, though it is said not to be of his invention. He has treated it in a co?nic manner, quite opposite to the one here employed. T EAN closer yet, Fiametta. Catch my hand -*— ' Right firmly and hold it to your smooth cool palm, Not mindful if the fever of it burn Your clinging fingers, nor if spasms of pain Jar it within your clasp. For a little space Bear with me, cava ?/u'a, innocent one, Just sixteen, with the great eyes and rich hair. To-morrow, if you are leaning o'er my bed, I shall be white and wordless, though you raved ! Oh, it is well they have not brought a priest ! Let them not bring one, for I truly fear I should go mad and spit at him, once brought. Fiametta, look you, I am wholly damned, Steeped horribly in red sin past cleansing change, Damned to the inmost core of this poor soul, Streaked thick with guiltiest mirk from brow to heel, Doomed and damned utterly ! Child, it could avail Nothing if I got holiest rites of church At the last hour, being what I am. So, now, Taunt me, I pray you, with no sight of priest ! Nay, only let me lie and brokenly gasp 7 98 FANTASY AND PASSION. In your alarmed ear this strange terrible tale Of my supreme crime . . . Surely at its end The effort will have left me power no more Than just for one fleet farewell. After this, Though a million organs groaned my requiem up To high God through a million censers' fumes, My spirit in anguish would be writhing still ! Lean closer yet, Fiametta . . . close, close, close ! Lean, though you loathe me when I have told you all The appalling truth . . . What maiden more than I Stood eminent for piety's eager zeal In service of all reverent prayerful ways ? While Giulia wasted hours in how to make The red flower glow its loveliest from her curls ; While plump Francesca strained the bodice-cord To lend her opulent bust a prouder curve ; While gay Ninetta babbled of her loves, And flashed from shadowing ambush a full smile On many a passing gallant ; while for these The frivolous mood begot the flippant act, And life went singing lightly, plume in cap, — I always, I, Violante, thought no thought That was not wed with Heavenly services, Ave and fast and patient watch of self, Penance, retirement, prayer, till people said They looked to see the vague aureola rim My tresses, and so crown me thoroughly saint ! Was not I pure, Fiametta ? For you know The unwearied worship that I poured like wine Within my golden chalice of love to God ! V10LANTE. 99 Nor did one pulse of vanity stir my blood When murmured praise for spotlessness divine Met me and broke about me, wave on wave. Nay, to mine ears that in devout dreams heard The choric seraphim, all such praises came Like echo of echo, meriting slight care. For what to me the applausive heed of men, The dross of mortal eulogy and the dust ? Alone desirable was Heaven, alone Adorable the body and blood of Christ, His grace of sheltering help, His peerless fame ! Lean close, lean close, Fiametta . . . Even as oil Under the large serene flame of my faith, Dwelt Guido*s counsel, godlier, as it seemed, For stainless vicarship of God on earth, Than whatsoever man wore priestly guise, In sanctitude of godliest office. Him I 'held in hours confessional, or in hours Of fervent pupilage, for a soul rare-graced By strength and purity to meet the full Bewildering glory of Heaven and falter not, Weak-sighted for no qualms of timid shame. He seemed the firm aerial stair that led In stately spiral up to Heavenly peace, — The voice, wherewith God clothed His living thought, His inexhaustible wisdom. Utter truth, Chastity, eloquence, faith, sympathy, Seemed wedded. to all the man's least word or work, Looked at me from his steadfast limpid eyes, Made visible language of his white wide brow ioo FANTASY AND PASSION. Affirmed its kingly presence and calm power By countless gentle and intangible ways, That were not and still were, mysteriously ! He never gave me one faint flower of praise, Just as he never, by one slight thorn of blame Touched me, until that morning when I knelt Before him in the solemn shadowy void Of the still church. Then, even as one might say, Right in my lap he dropt a marvellous bloom Whose color and odor made me gasp for joy ! Lean closer yet, Fiametta . . . All that night I lay awake and heard the inaudible Darkness going past me as a great throng goes. The ecstatic memory of Guido's words To sweet monotony of low murmuring Shaped itself, and with ever- visitant flow Throbbed through the chamber's dumb tranquillity. For hark you, he had told me I was beloved Of Gabriel, God's best angel, and that he, Even this same spirit of such high holiness, Now yearned to assume what shape would least o'er- whelm With its exceeding splendor these frail eyes, And so make evident, past all dream of doubt, The boundless honor of his angelic love ! * Nay, too, in Guido's vision, as he said, Were named the very place and hour whereat This rare miraculous meeting should be held ! The place — that desolate ruin near the sea, From whose gray vine-twined solitude one views VIOL ANTE. i oi By a glance valleyward our placid town ; The hour — mid-watch on one of these late-past Mild, lordly, and lucid nights of the June moon. And I should await him there and then ; and he Would come (O passionate thought !) — would come to meet Me, the elect, the all-favored, Violante, Judged worthy in soul of high seraphic heed. Yea, worthy as was that Thecla, she who made The assailant beasts cower meekly while she stood Naked in reach of their red rabid mouths. Worthy as was Veronica, who bore On virginal bleeding brows the thorn-crown's weight, In beatific agony Heaven-conferred, And bare on bosom and feet and hands through years The five wounds of Christ's passion. Vanity ! Why, now, Fiametta, did I reek of it, I, the calm mirror of whose guileless heart, No tenderest breath of self-love ever blurred ! Oh, to my thought, until the Archangel kept That bond of gracious deifying tryst, All intermediate hours were shod with lead ! You are mindful yet, sweet sister, how I locked My chamber, nor would open to any call ? You thought me prisoned thus for fast and prayer, For rigor of solemn penance, nor once dreamed 'Twas vanity bade me dwell aloof that day ! Such vanity as had made me hold my face Too sacred for your violative look, Your touch of hands a soilure, and your chance words An insolence . . . Oh, shame ! unspeakable shame ! 102 FANTASY AND PASSION. Noiseless and brave, on the next night, I stole Forth from the dead-still house, and hurrying thence Through many a moonlit street, got past the town And gained the slumberous olive-slopes that led By countless green gradations to the dark Wreck of what once was haughtiest masonry. The immense austere half-crumbled power of stone Loomed vague in the wide wan moonlight. All the sea, Beyond its marge of clear-cut prominent cliff, Beamed like a pearl in luminous amplitude, Save where one blaze of narrowing silver cleft Its blue calm like a great fallen scarf of light. Deep in the shadow of the ruin I plunged, And waited, silent amid silence, then, For what should follow, faithful every way To Guido's charges . . . and at length I saw A glimmer of white robes in the dubious dusk, And heard the long sweet murmur " Violante" And knew the murmurer neared me with slow steps Yet utterly soundless ; and at this I fell Abject, being smitten to the bone with awe ... .... t Well, I have learned what Heaven means, Fiametta, Eaten of it fruitwise, caught its keenest bliss, Had it and held it just for a few fleet hours . . . Now, as the price of this my arrogant gain, (Since I, a mortal, have felt immortal joys) Hell yawns to entomb me in its dread duress ! I know not when, amid the ineffable Delight of that sweet meeting, slumber came VJOLANTE. 103 To o'ermaster and annul my thought ... I slept Dreamlessly at the last, — then suddenly woke. The ruin was bathed in dawn . . . Irose and stood Beset with blithe tumultuous memories, Till at my feet the gleam of a white robe drew Both glad eyes eagerly groundward. One soft cry Burst from my lips as kneeling I thought to see, Clear under lavish light, the Archangel's face . . . And saw instead (lean close, close, close, Fiametta, For the room darkens grimly and swart shapes Of devil and imp seem girding at me now, There, here, and everywhere !) . . . I saw, instead, Guido, abruptly wakened of my cry From slumber . . . Guido, garbed with terrible art ; Guido, the man, — not Gabriel, the divine ! Ah, me ! what incommunicable despair Rushed on me then ! He rose and widely spread Both arms out toward me, but I shrieked and held Before my fallen face two repelling hands, While all the compassing morn seemed sown with cries Of " Lost, lost, lost," from contumelious fiends ; And like the suddenness of a lightning-bolt My infinite vanity and gross conceit, The bold enormity of my utter crime In having dared to esteem myself a soul So exalted, flashed upon me ! O the pang Of that discovery ! O the awful hate Of self ! the levelling overthrow ! the shame ! I think you would have blushed to have called me pure Ever at any time, had you but known 104 FANTASY AND PASSION The curses I flung at Guidb ere I turned And left him grovelling for my pardon, prone Reedwise before the tempest of my wrath ! Then hither I sped, and here through three wild days, Three feverish days of torture, I have lain And known that surely I am accurst beyond All expiatory hope. High up in Heaven, How the chaste eyes of Gabriel must have blazed Their holiest anger down on my vast guilt ! For what was I, a pitiable mean worm, — Mean among loftier creatures, all most mean, — - That I should arrogate to my small poor self Such wonder of gracious privilege, and trust The all-worshipful would worship menial me ? I cannot feel your clasp, Fiametta, now, Nor see your face except by fitful gleams, Dead-pale, with tragic eyes and tremulous mouth. They have won my soul, these fiends, and wait for it . . . The room is populous with them, and I breathe Hot horrid waftures from their gibbering midst, The sulphurous prelude of Hell's denser fumes. Farewell, Fiametta . . . God be good to thee ! Fra Guido, I think, has hope of getting grace, If he try hard, and shirk no pain of shrift. Tell him I said he has not done monstrous wrong Like me, being reverent all the while of him Whose august name he used irreverently. His sin was villaneous brutal base deceit, Lecherous and treacherous, an infamy ! But mine . . . Oh, God, the blasphemous egotism ! Farewell, Fiametta ... I must pay its price ! MOZART S REQUIEM. 105 MOZART'S REQUIEM. A GLOOM had fallen upon great Mozart's life. ^ *- The spirits of wondrous melodies no more Pleaded with his for animate being. Hope Had suddenly fled, and melancholy stretched Wide plumes of shadow above his daily dreams. Fierce bodily pains had clutched him, and death's hand Inexorably pointed to his grave. In these dark hours, a stranger, tall, black-robed, Sombre and pale of face, on a certain morn, Glided across the threshold of his room, Drew nearer, laid a purse of heavy gold Before the astonished maestro, and at last Broke silence with monotonous voice and sad. " I have come," the stranger said, "to ask of you The requiem for one loved, through lapse of years, Beyond man's use, and bitterly mourned when dead. Will Mozart weave its music, and create Some passionate lamentation fit to seem An utterance of unutterable grief ? " • The maestro, drearily smiling, murmured, then : " What time is given me to complete this dirge ? " " One month," was the answer. " Surely I could try," Mused Mozart, " yet success were doubtful hope." Then, even as he had come, these few words said, So noiselessly the stranger went. Amazed, Mozart long pondered in his mind these words, 106 FANTASY AND PASSION. Mysteriously communicate, till fire Warmed his weak pulses, and the immortal rose Within the mortal. Eagerness for the work Possessed him, willing harmonies again Re wandering all the labyrinths of his soul, As suddenly over still enormous wastes Of gale-abandoned forest wake once more The old windy sounds, and lofty branches toss The sleeping starlight from innumerous leaves ! With power and will and fervor he began Fulfilment of his promise ; but the month Had passed not ere a violent malady Seized his frail frame and forced him from the work. And on the very morning that he rose. Reprieved of death for a little longer, came The stranger to demand the requiem. "Nay, give me a second month," the maestro said, " And if God spare me I shall keep my word. Nobly begun. I would not hastily end A work that lifts me to sublimest aims." Whereat the stranger, with inscrutable face, Cold, calm, unsympathetic, from beneath His massive gloomy cloa]< drew forth a purse Less heavy than the last, and slowly said : •"An hundred ducats I have given ; I give For the added labor this half-hundred more ; " And turning pissed from the other's sight. But he, Summoning a servant, bade him stealthily Pursue the whither of this curious' man ; And while the servant sped to ol?ey such hest, In the brain of Mozart ghostly thoughts took shape. MOZART'S REQUIEM. 107 And when the messenger brought back a tale Of how he had followed with good zeal till soon The stranger, at a crossing of two streets, Abruptly had faded from his vigilance, He knew not how — then Mozart's ghostly thoughts Wore positive colors of conviction. Strong Within him was belief that he had seen The presence of no earthly guest. " 1 write," He would often murmur afterward, " the dirge For mine own burial. It is death's command ! " Exaltedly for days he strove to tell, With eloquence of divinest cadences, The infinite agony of some widowed heart Mourning the irreparable. His fine skill Gathered all sorrowful sounds — wild chords or sweet, Thrillingly plaintive peals, low interludes, Ripples of light faint treble soft as tears, And thunderous throbs of bass, to meet and form One vast incomparable solemnity. Genius had grown his vassal, while he toiled, And beckoned him with beauteous hand where flew The guiding glory of her white wings . . . till soon In soft illimited amplitudes of dawn, Glimmering she faded . . . Now a darkness fell Across the maestro's vision, and he lay Incapable evermore, his high task done, Having within its mighty music made The unrivalled requiem of his own grand soul ! io8 FANTASY AND PASSION. BEHIND HISTORY. T AM the Queen they hold so pure. ■*■ They will carve my tomb one day, be sure, With marble praise that shall endure. I hear them bless me, low and loud ; The haughtiest head is bared and bowed If I ride among the pressing crowd. No churl of all my realm would tame His hot hand should he hear my name Called lightly by the lips of blame. Many a life would proudly spill Red loyal drops to work my will, Or save me from one sting of ill. Yet all the adoring care that I Am guarded and am girded by, Is reverence to a living lie ! . . . There served a man amid my train Whom, day by day, with struggling pain, I schooled my spirit to disdain. A vassal base of birth was he ; And yet (ah, God ! that it should be !) His mere brute beauty maddened me. For days, for weeks, I strove and prayed, Loathing the strong strange love that weighed On the white life it dared invade. At last I wearied from my soul Of endless effort to control Desire that never gained a goal. BEHIND HISTORY. 109 I laughed a reckless bitter laugh : Lo, prayer was even as arid chaff, And continence a shattered staff, Since neither might avail to bring Me any peace, or pluck the sting From infinite pangs of coveting. And so it fell, one fatal hour, That passion burst, with sudden power, To poisonous and full-petalled flower. I met him in most secret wise . . . Full presently from his mild eyes Obeisance died and was surprise . . . But after, in a little space, It was with all his lit flushed face As sudden morn in a dull place. And watching him with wild unrest, I saw his great mute joy confest, And leaped toward his willing breast ! . . . Now this was in the early night ; But when the first vague veil-of light Filmed heaven, he past from out my sight, And groping down the palace-stair, In the grey gloom met unaware My masked assassin, crouching there ! . . . I am the Queen they hold so pure : They will carve my tomb one day, be sure, With marble praise that shall endure ! no FANTASY AND PASSION. Y THE STATUETTE. OU see that marble shape, so gay of mien, My lithe Terpsichore with the tambourine ? Last year in Paris, as you may have read, A certain duke was murdered in his bed. Deepest of secrets ! No one knows to-day Whose hand it was that smote him where he lay ! The heir sold all his grandeurs, piece by piece : I bought this statuette out of pure caprice. For just above the poor duke's bed, you see, Hung bracketed this same Terpsichore. And now I fancy that with each pure charm Of dimpled cheek, blown hair, or curving arm, Lies blent a shadowy fear, a faint distress, That vaguely mars the sculptured loveliness. And I, remembering that on one so gay So grim a secret wearily must weigh, Have sometimes dreamed that when the room is mute, And clothed upon with darkness absolute, Those bloodless marble lips will strangely stir, And they that hunt the unpunished murderer, Might hear, if through this dead-black room they came, The low mysterious naming of a name ! . . . INDIVID UALITY. 1 1 1 INDIVIDUALITY. Let it be remembered that, if individual life is short, the life of the human species is not short ; its indefinite duration is practically equiva- lent to endlessness ; and, being combined with indefinite capability of improvement, it offers to the imagination and sympathies a large enough object to satisfy any reasonable demand for grandeur of aspiration. — John Stuart Mill. "O EADING of radiant change, divine advance, -*-^- Through all humanity's immense expanse, At end of unknown ages vast in length, With keen prophetic look I seemed to see The miracle man's future fate would be, His lordly knowledge and transcendent strength ! I watched the race whence I myself had sprung In vaguely distant days, while time was young, Now walk the astonished earth with godlike ease. Nature, once ruling them, now owned their power, And Science, pointing toward her proudest tower, Dropped humbly at their feet her golden keys ! I watched all varied tribes beneath the sun Gather with lovely grandeur into one, And serve the nobler patriotism aright ; I saw the august unnavigable air Wide-sown with buoyant barges everywhere, Majestic shapes by day, new stars by night ! H2 FANTASY AND PASSION. Sly statecraft, greeds malign, hates lurid-eyed, Crawled lamely into secret lairs and died. Blessing the wearied world with sweet release; Dark broods of savage evils, near and far, Cowered low at wisdom's gaze, and scowling war Wreathed her black guns with dewy blooms of peace ! I marked how some large purpose was fulfilled That power supernal had sublimely willed ; I marked, in thrilling vision, while I read, How the full flower of manhood backward bore . From the white splendor of its dazzling core The last rich petal, and was perfected! But through this dream of marvels that should be, One strange sardonic thought came haunting me With the mute pathos of weak yearning tears : In all such halcyon times what joy or pain For him whose dust inertly shall have lain A nothingness through millions of slow years ? What message in this lofty cheerless creed Aids personality's commandant need ? What comfort in this cold imperious plan, Where all men, whether ill or nobly wrought Lie crushed beneath one awful Juggernaut, The universal commonweal of man ! The love, hate, hope, fear, passion that is I, The throbbing self that loathes to wholly die, Disdains a future where it holds no place, As one with lot beside the Euphrates cast Might carelessly disdain that stately past When Babylon's domes dared heaven, in mighty grace ! ORDER. 113 ORDER. LIKE skeletons rise the bare trees, gaunt and stark ; The poignant air is calm ; no breezes roam ; Millions of stars pierce the blue winter dark, And fill with throbbing radiance its deep dome. I throw my head far backward till there stay No gleams of earth in what my vision meets, And through night's luminous blooms I seem to stray, As through a summer meadow of marguerites ! At the grand order of this intricate maze, Its boundless balance, its miraculous art, I thrill with wonder that no words can phrase . . . Yet a strange thought strikes discord through my heart ! What if some portion of this awful plan Grew suddenly weak and faltered in its place, And one long mighty ominous shudder ran Through all the immense black altitudes of space ? And satellite planets from their own suns fled, To plunge amid cold voids of skies unknown, With all the peoples upon their bosoms dead, And all their haughtiest cities overthrown ? H4 FANTASY AND PASSION And system told to system its wild fears, Till each in fiery disarray was riven, And terrible crashes of colliding spheres Roared ruin through the infinitudes of heaven ! Dizzied and shocked at my own ghastly dream, Again toward earth I turn my dazzled sight, And watch how -tranquilly the dim lands gleam, Touched by the grave quietus of the night ! Filled with new thoughts, on heaven once more I gaze, And hear, while peace restores me to her spell, Invisible sentinels down starry ways Pass the deep resonant watchword, "All is well/" CONCEPTION. " In its ultimate essence nothing can be known." Herbert Spencer. T CLOMB a great height in a dream ; ■*■ To lordlier reaches I attained, Till even the uttermost I gained, Serene, supreme. There fell from off mine eyes, at this, The dimming scales of sense. I saw Matter, unleashed from every law, That which it is. FAME. 115 And real at last and face to face, Marvels that no man could forget, The mighty mysteries I met Of Time and Space. Or yet I followed, course by course, Like one that deals with tangled skeins, The intricate interblending veins That flow from Force. Till now the shadow across me came Of something soon to burst in light ; A hope, a wonderment, a fright I dared not name ! And then, as though some signal nod Bade that the utmost be revealed, I reeled with awe, and, while I reeled, Thought this thought : God! FAME. I" SAW in dreams a long and wavering way A That wound and wound toward the walls of day. Like a great snake on a wide moor it lay. At either road-edge there were men who kneeled, Some with bowed countenances half revealed, Some crying drearly, some whose lips were sealed. n6 FANTASY AND PASSION. Ill might you say whatjpresence or what thing They waited, in their watchful cowering, As suppliants wait the advent of a king. And now there moved a murmur through them all, For a vast shape, fantastically tall, Came gliding on, with pace majestical. In shadowy and indeterminate wise Fluttered the mistlike draperies of its guise ; Its face was vaguely stern, with scornful eyes. In either hand it carried bounteous bays, Wrought greenly into wreaths of braided sprays, As were the old chaplets of the dead Greek days. And wheresoe'er that journeying spirit came, They caught his vaporous robe, they wailed his name, While many a faded face was touched with flame. But rarely, very rarely, he bent down, Mixed with a languid smile his august frown, And dropt on some low brow a glimmering crown. Then, just as my strange dream was like to cease, His face drew near, and on its haughty peace I read unbounded tyranny of caprice ! CRITICISM. 117 CRITICISM. " pRUDE, pompous, turgid," the reviewers said. v -' / " Sham passion and sham power to turn one sick ! Pin-wheels of verse that sputtered as we read — Rockets of rhyme that showed the falling stick." A would-be murderer cannot always kill ; Some missiles leave some shields without a dint. That book was loved, against the critics' will, By those who do not put their love in print. But while, assaulted of this buzzing band, The poet quivered at their little stings, White doves of sympathy o'er all the land Went flying with his fame beneath their wings ! And every fresh year brought him love that cheers, As Caspian waves bring amber to their shore ; And it befell that after many years, Being now no longer young, he wrote once more. " Cold, classic, polished," the reviewers said. " A book you scarce can love, howe'er you praise. We missed the old careless grandeur as we read — The power and passion of his younger days ! " Ii8 FANTASY AND PASSION. ATTAINMENT. T SHAKE the dusty film inaction weaves •*- Round this old volume, shelved in closet-glooms. And while I slowly turn its yellowing leaves, I seem as one within a place of tombs ! For all the book, unread so long, so long, Breathes deeply of forgotten dreams . . . and lo ! From out its pages drops the little song I made in callow boyhood, years ago ! It seems to-day so slight and weak indeed, That little song which once I toiled to make, And yet the trivial stanzas, while I read, Low sweet memorial echoings awake ! Surely, stray waif, you do me grieyous wrong, — Me, having won a fame to shine and last ! 'Twere wise if I should burn you, little song, Poor fragile faded violet of the past ! But ah ! to feel the old fervors I have felt In days ere Art bowed humbly to my kiss, When spurned, although adoring still, I knelt, Yet paid no worship worthier than was this ! O dearer far than song's divinest might The aspiring voice that falters while it sings ! And lovelier than all lordliness of flight The wingless impotence that yearns for wings ! A KING. A KING. {A certain mood of a certain mind, contemplating death.) I T is more than being great At the random rule of fate, To lie as he lies here, Very awful and austere. 'Tis more than being wise To repose with placid eyes, And know not of the wild world that it cries, cries, cries ! Look ye now, and answer true If it be as well with you, That fret and sweat and sin For the flesh ye weary in, As with him that bates his breath And what empty words it saith, To attain the life diviner, which is death, death, death ! What of pleasure shall he miss, With that sovereign ease of his ? What of pain shall reach his ken, With that marble scorn of men ? Though ye praised him in a psalm, Though ye smote him of your palm, Shall ye call him from this haughty sleep and calm, calm, calm ? 120 FANTASY AND PASSION. Lo, his dumb face turns ye dumb If to look on him ye come, Who hath found in cold eclipse A superb Apocalypse ! Who has had the last bad thing The deciduous days may bring, Who is crowned as none but Death could crown him, king, king, king ! WINDS. O INVISIBLE lives, that aimlessly With mutable voices fare Mysteriously and tamelessly Through the altitudes of air, When I welcome lofty dreams of you, Amid hours of calms or storms, I discern evanescent gleams of you As divine phantasmal forms ! Where dim skies vaguely illuminate Some remote unearthly reach, You despond, rejoice or ruminate, You are low or loud of speech. With murmurs that rise altisonant, Or with dreary moans, you meet ; With imperious uproars dissonant, Or melodies wildly sweet ! Here grouped in superb frigidity, The blasts of the North repose, Proud spirits of stern intrepidity, Whose wings with clangors unclose. WINDS. 121 In their saturnine eyes crepuscular Cold hatreds bitterly glow ; In the girth of their dark arms muscular Lie shipwreck, ruin and woe ! Here crouch like implacable savages Those gales of the East that bear, With reckless calamitous ravages, The weight of the world's despair. Grim sisters, gloomily cowering, They sing, in their cruel scorn, Of ocean- waves vastly towering, And trees by the roots uptorn ! Here, clothed in raiments ethereal, The West winds roam and recline, Diaphanous girls, with aerial Embraces that intertwine. Their shapes have the fragile slenderness Of wheat, with its changeful lights, And their eyes hold the mellow tenderness Of moons amid harvest-nights ! But near them, in easy reach of them, The winds of the warm South float, Voluptuous beauties, with each of them A wine-red rose at her throat ! The folds of their tresses are pillowing Large blooms of delicious balms, And they sing of the long seas billowing On shores that are plumed with palms ! 122 FANTASY AND PASSION. Thus, haughty in dread immobility, Or lurid in arrogant might, Exultant in soft volatility, Or languid in drowsy delight, Sublimely, serenely or dismally, Weird throngs, you glimmer and go, Where spaciously loom and abysmally The realms that my visions know ! THE COMET. ONG ages, with slow change of regions and races -*-" ' Through all the proud breadths of this planet- sown sky, Have fled since God fashioned, to roam its great spaces, This fiery grandeur and speed that is I. He dowered my frame with a vigor that urges Its obdurate heart in unwearying flight ; He robed me with vapor whose luminous verges Trail wide on the dark awful hollows of night ! But ever before me, in dubious distance, Among dread dominions that stellar throngs fill, Through breathless inanimate voids whose existence Looks one solemn nothingness frigid and still, A spirit flies on where the gloom spreads immensely, Her garments like mine in pale splendor outflung, Unseen save by perishing gleams yet intensely Adored of my soul since creation was young ! THE COMET. 123 m One loath to be loved, irresponsive, unheeding ; One swayed by deep fervor and eager appeal ; One ever with fugitive brilliance receding, One following always with radiant zeal, For aeons untold we have ceaselessly darted Where vacancy's torpors of blackness lie mute, Together, yet millions of mighty leagues parted, A terrible flight, an appalling pursuit ! Past intricate systems that view me in wonder And put with their brightness my own beams to scorn ; Through tracts where the volleying asteroids thunder ; Past nebulous orbs that are yet to be born. By suns that in richest of colors throb vivid, Or blaze with twin glory, star thrilling to star ; By ruins of old worlds burnt sickly and livid, Her misty magnificence guides me afar ! Some globes, ever flaming in hot conflagration, Give forth deadly blasts from their lurid red hells ; O'er some broods the curse of severe desolation, Of stagnant repose where no living thing dwells ; In some there are monsters whom nature has given Strange horrors of outline terrific to see ; Some hang like vast tears dropping always through heaven, From pole unto pole shoreless volumes of sea ! In some I behold haughty palaces tower ; In some are low caverns of rough-shapen clay ; Some bear noble cities of opulent power ; Some bear cities rotting in slothful decay ; 124 FANTASY AND PASSION. In some there are creatures crime-soiled beyond telling ; In others, where life wins its loftiest goal, With stately tranquillity mortals are dwelling, Like gods in their beauty, and stainless of soul ! But while through celestial infinitudes fleeting, Along these weird courses enormous in scope, Of golden attainment and rapturous meeting I dare not to question — I dare but to hope ! The drift of God's purpose, obscure past all seeing, What voice of what prophet hath spoken or sung ? And so in blind passion I chase this wild being, Adored of my soul since creation was young ! THE ICEBERG. TT 7 HERE the keen wan peaks, in frigid pride un- * v bending, Jut up against the abysmal blue of night ; When the red aurora, at the world's wild ending, Opens in heaven its awful fan of light, A part of all the inviolate peace around him, Calm amid mighty quietudes did he rest, The fierce cold for a manacle that bound him, The arctic stars to sparkle on his crest. Here silence, like a monarch, reigned immensely, The quintessence of cold was here, no less, Each utter as before God spake intensely And visible things leapt out from nothingness. THE ICEBERG. 125 A land wherewith no living sign was blended, A white monotony of weird device ; One towering boreal torpor, chaste and splendid, One monstrous immobility of ice ! But when light woke within that bleak heaven, grandly To illume pale polar summits, range on range, Then blindly through his glacial soul yet blandly He felt the movement of mysterious change. He seemed to have heard across vast ocean-reaches A summoning voice from equatorial calms, From languorous tropic bowers and lucid beaches, From blossoming headlands and high plumes of palms ! A voice compelling and a voice commanding, Yet sweet as flute-notes near still purple seas, Strange beyond speech and strong beyond withstanding, Yet soft withal as tremulous airs in trees. A voice of such deep charm that while he wondered Plungingly seaward his huge frame he bent, And all its proud enormity was sundered From all its fetters of encompassment. Then he went down superbly over distance Of mad uproarious surges, height on height, That hurled tempestuous onslaughts of resistance Round his serene magnificence of might. Then he went down across the unknown sea-spaces, A spot of radiance on their billowy whirl, Scintillant with the sun's most dazzling graces, Or touched by moonbeams to phantasmal pearl ! 126 FANTASY AND PASSION. One chill wind, like a breath of death, ran blowing Incessantly along his path austere, And far before the grandeur of his going, Like birds the little vessels fled in fear. Green flashed the glassy bastions whence transcendent His frosted pinnacles blazed out above, While in colossal crystal calm resplendent, Superbly he went down to meet his love ! But journeying thus, too thrilled for all confusion Of boisterous wave or bluff blast to annoy, He had lessened with insidious diminution, He had wasted and not known it in his joy. For through him there had pulsed a fire of yearning 'Twas ruin although 'twas rapture to have known, And love within his frozen life lay burning, Like a ruby under fathoms of stern stone ! And so while passion in his dumb breast kindled A lordlier larger impulse to adore, The more his eminent glories waned and dwindled As that ethereal voice allured the more. And then with bitterest pangs he felt the fleeting Of all his luminous loftiness and pride, And shuddered with the dark thought of not meeting That vague invisible love before he died ! And still the summoning voice came sweet and eager, Though touched with semitones of divine regret, And hourly growing meagre and more meagre, He journeyed on, desiring, yearning yet ! . . . Till now he vanished utterly, and the tender Lulled waves of tropic ocean smiled above Him that in all the morning of his splendor Superbly had gone down to meet his love ! PERSPE CTI VES. 1 2 7 PERSPECTIVES. TTOW much in life we utterly forget ! ■*- -*- How many pangs, how many smiles and tears ! What joy, what pain, what yearning, what regret Lies lost within the oblivion of dead years ! And journeying on, inexorably fast, Accomplishing our fated length of days, We turn to look upon the ample past, Clothed bafflingly with indeterminate haze ! Its tracts of shadowy vagueness die away To meet the shadowy sky-line of all thought ; Dreamily neutral, featurelessly gray, They are not something, neither are they naught ! But here and there, in such clear-seen relief As scarce the annulling distance may efface, We mark the rigid outline of some grief, Like a great tree that overtops its race ! Or yet like quiet hills, not towering high, Though proudly rounded, we discern, no less, Joys that with beauteous dominance defy These ghostly vapors of forgetfulness ! But ah, how lovelier when our eyes have won, August in retrospect as we recede, Like some snow-crested mountain bathed in sun, The pure firm grandeur of some noble deed ! 128 FANTASY AND PASSION THE MOON IN THE CITY. "DALE roamer through the purple hollow of night, -*- In all thy wanderings weird from East to West, What wonder thou dost gladly shower thy light On many a dusky region of earth's breast ? Wide tracts of cloisteral forest-land, I know, Are welcome to that luminous heart of thine, Where under murmurous branches thou canst throw Dim palpitant arabesques of shade and shine ! Smooth meadows dying against far opal skies Thou lovest with lonely splendors to illume, And turn their bodiless vapors, when they rise, To phantoms greatening in the doubtful gloom ! The haughtiest mountain happy dost thou feel To mantle with thy radiance, chastely soft, Like intercessional mercy's meek appeal Where cold majestic justice towers aloft ! When deep in measureless peace he lulls his waves, Or when their perilous masses proudly curl, Thy pennon of brilliance, though he smiles or raves, Along the varying sea dost thou unfurl ! But ah ! though forest, mountain, meadow and sea Shall each thy separate favor sweetly win, White lily of heaven, how can it pleasure thee To blossom above the city's ghastly sin ! FIRE. 129 FIRE. FOR all that lives I am a spirit of hate ; All beauty and strength I would annul or ban ; And yet, through some imperious edict, fate Puts my vast power within the rule of man. For me, to whom sad ruin and death are sweet, This lowly slavery galls with pangs austere ; I loathe the illumined hearth where loved ones meet, The shivering outcast whose chilled frame I cheer. In the wide hurry and clash of this great town, I long perpetually, with zeal intense, To break the tyrannous bonds that bind me down And revel awhile in red magnificence ! Thus with invisible wrath I chafe and strain Amid my stern captivity's dreary days, Till after infinite effort I attain A riotous liberty, and madly blaze. Then in high watch-towers bells are tolled with might, And summoning peals ring loud above my roar, And bold men with my turbulent fury fight, Till, utterly quelled, I am a slave once more ! But often amid defeat a thought that charms, While yet the water drowns my crackle and hiss, Is that I have wrapped some life in these wild arms, Or laid on some dead face my blackening kiss ! 9 130 FANTASY AND PASSION. DECAY. TT7ITH beauty and health and hardiness it shares * * Enduring sovereignty malign and strange ; Innumerable are all its haunts and lairs ; Immeasurable its vast and stealthy range. Forever varying in its forms of ill, Forever does it borrow, of stores immense, Those opulent colors that await its will, Sombrely rich or radiantly intense. On pools of foul miasmatic stagnance brood Its gentler tints of violet or of rose ; Through many a wood's majestic solitude, In ruin of rotting logs its crimson glows. Its mellower browns in faded blooms are seen ;' Its rancorous yellows in slow rust exist ; In noisome mildew lurks its pestilent green ; Its ghostly grays are in malarial mist. In noxious mold are hidden its ashy blues ; Its ambers are in old marble's crumbling slabs ; On desolate tombstones are its grimmer hues, Blots of dense black, or sullen-glimmering drabs. But all its gaudier splendors full to air In Autumn's blighted foliage are outrolled, And often amid sweet sunsets it will wear Deep melancholy purple or vivid gold ! WASTE. 131 Yet ah ! the agony that no words may speak, When, positive though intangible, it lies In the red hectic flower on some dear cheek, Or shines with ominous fire from worshiped eyes ! Oh, then what wonder if our difficult lives Guess vaguely, from the shadow of their dim lot, How some white incorruptibility thrives In luminous bournes of peace, where time is not? WASTE. T\OWN the long orchard-aisles where I have strolled, -*-^ On fragrant sward the slanted sunlight weaves, Rich-flickering through the dusk of plenteous leaves, Its ever-tremulous arabesques of gold ! In globes of glimmering color, sweet to see, The apples greaten under halcyon sky, Green, russet, ruddy, or deep-red of dye, Or yellow as the girdle of a bee ! But o'er the verdure's blended shine and shade Small blighted fruits lie strown in dull array, Augmenting silently from day to day, Gnarled and misshapen, worm-gnawed and decayed. And over them, as favoring sunbeams bless, To fair perfection will those others grow, In mellow hardihood maturing slow, — While these will shrivel into viewlessness ! 132 FANTASY AND PASSION. Ah, me ! what strange frustration of intent, What dark elective secret, undescried, Lives in this dreary failure, side by side With opulence of full-orbed accomplishment ! O seeming mockery ! O strange doubt wherein The baffled reason gropes and cannot see ! If made at all, why only made to be In irony for that which might have been ? Nay, vain alike to question or surmise ! . . . There, plucking white moon-daisies, one by one, Through yonder meadow comes my little son, My pale-browed hunchback, with the wistful eyes ! DECORATION DAY. ' I ^O-DAY, as the pulses powerful A Of the glad young year awake, It would seem that with tokens flowerful A nation had gone to take, While passing in throngs processional Over sweeps of mellowed sod, The sky for a blue confessional, And to tell its grief to God ! But more than to march regretfully With the earthward-pointing gun, And more than to merge forgetfully The Blue and the Gray in one, DECORATION DAY. 133 Were to love, with its sweet sublimity, The thought of an endless peace, And to swear, in grand unanimity, That war shall forever cease ! For how is your service beautiful, O mourners that meet to-day, If the hands that are now so dutiful Shall to-morrow spoil and slay ? If the hate that your love is levelling Shall to-morrow lift its brow, And redden with bloody revelling The graves that you garland now ? For only if all humanity Could have learned to well abhor The imperious blind insanity, The iniquitous waste of war, Would the splendid and stainless purity Of to-day beam out afar, Down the duskiness of futurity, As with light of a morning-star ! And then would the blooms you shed upon These numberless grave-mounds, be As though the dews they had fed upon Were the waters of Galilee ! . May 31st, 1875. 134 FANTASY AND PASSION. CUSTER. (July, 1876.) XT TELL had he won the honoring love we gave * * His resolute martial heart, to fear unknown, ]Mow lying at rest within his distant grave Beside the myriad-canoned Yellowstone. A spirit of splendid nerve to coolly dare ; Stern as an enemy, as a friend most true, Impetuous, haughty, gallant, debonair ; Now fierce as fire and now as soft as dew, In this adventurous life did we behold, Translated to those perilous lands afar, The prowess of some new D'Artagnan, the bold Invincibility of some new Bayard ! May the rich picture that his memory leaves Light history's page for many an unborn year, While many an unborn soldier proudly weaves Fresh laurels for this valorous cavalier ! Time the sweet radiance of his fame shall prove, And, while the unmeasured future flows along, His sinewy figure, buckskin-clad, shall move Down glimmering paths of story and of song ! For horror thrills through every class and clan When wrong so riots in victory, and when One in such eminent lordliness a man Lies ruined by these red mockeries of men ! CUBA. 135 So from thy sorrowing country thou shalt win Rank beside all her loyalest and her best, Thou new Leonidas, with thy noble kin, Dead in that wild Thermopylae of the West ! CUBA. WE know the black scowl of her brow, Her tyrant greed, her bigot glee, Old arrogant Spain, that reaches now A lean dark arm across the sea ! " Once slave, and so for ever slave," On ocean-winds her proud words float, While, by the warm Caribbean wave, Her talons meet in Cuba's throat ! And Cuba, levelled of the grip, Shivers and strains and fights to rise, Her own blood on her moaning lip And anguish in her lurid eyes ! But clear, below that tropic sun, Gleams the wild hand she stretches forth, Where the dim domes of Washington Bulge up against the mighty North ! And we, that know and hear and see Her strife to break from crushing powers, To gain our giant help and be A thing no more that quails and cowers, 136 FANTASY AND PASSION. We hold her as some mere hurt brute, And muse, while watching her mad pain, " Tobacco . . . sugar . . . coffee . . . fruit . She never should belong to Spain ! " January, 1873. ALBERT F. WEBSTER, JR. (Died at sea, Dec. 27, 1876.) T IKE a dreary wanderer, from the West, J - -/ This tale of your lonely death departs, And finding those who have loved you best, Knocks loud at the doorway of their hearts ! Our fears had faded ; our hope re-bloomed ; You had cheered us happily from afar ; Your danger seemed from the life it gloomed To pass like a cloud from the morning-star ! But yearning still for the sun that shines With a richer gladness on summer calms, You sailed from the dark balsamic pines For blue Oceania's island-palms ! But while you were sailing, brief and stern Came the solemn summons that none can brave, And now you rest, as in grief we learn, With the vast Pacific for your grave ! O friend, endowed with a worth so rare, Whom intellect served, whom truth obeyed, O forehead so chastely, brightly fair With the shinino- aureole genius made ! ALBERT F. WEBSTER, JR. 137 What fatal irony follows man With a curse no wisdom hath understood, And reels amid nature's ordered plan Like a drunken faun through a peaceful wood ? Should life, in its meagre and troublous term, Be marred by mockeries harsh as those That set in the leaf's young green a worm, That kill in the bud its waiting rose ? That smite the lark as its wings unfold In the dawn whose thrilling dews they crave, That shatter the column ere it hold The sculptured grace of its architrave ? Ah, proud philosophy, shut thy book ! Art thou better, for all thy boasted might, Than a little child, when it turns its look On the silver labyrinths of the night ? Ah, haughty science, whose hand can weigh The monstrous planet in mighty skies, Thou hast not strength in thine arm, this day, To tear the bandage from off thine eyes ! Yet, precious friend, into distance past, All Godlike mercy can only seem, All sweet intuitions, first and last, Are wild delusion, are baseless dream, Or still, dear lost one, your soul endures^, High-sheltered from earthly cares and fears, While brows that are more divinely yours Bend down in pity upon our tears ! 138 FANTASY AND PASSION. TO EDWIN BOOTH. On his Return to the A merican Stage. T~\EATH, shadowing for a time thy future, leaves ^-J Its heaven unclouded, and the applausive throng Gathers again where pale Melpomene weaves, In statuesque attitude austerely sweet, Still lordlier laurel-chaplets, fresh and strong, For him who walks again, with reverent feet, Through stately lands of loved Shakspearian song ! As Denmark's prince we shall behold thy face Lighten or gloom in passionate change once more ; Watch thee, with calm and meditative pace, Move toward the gates of death, to pause afraid ! Or, like some terrible angel, stand before The cowering queen ; or meet thy father's shade Among the moon-bathed towers of Elsinore ! Marvels of falsehood in the Moor's thrilled ear, As subtle Iago thou shalt softly sigh, And be, while thy swart victim quakes to hear, The appalling incarnation of deceit, Untruth's transcendent charlatan, vastly sly, Snakily cunning, loathsomely discreet, With lean dead smile and cold metallic eye ! And we shall watch ambition's fiercest fang Gnaw thee as Cawdor's throne-aspiring thane ; Hear, in the witches' vault, thy footstep clang ; See thee, at gory Banquo's grim rebuff, Shackled with guilty horror's iciest chain ; Or, under that hot falchion of MacDuff, Die like a slaughtered bull, at Dunsinane ! THE SCHOLAR'S SWEETHEART. 139 In these, and many immortal moods like these, May wondering thousands, with delighted care, Note thy chaste charms of classic-postured ease, Thy sculptural face, thy rich voice, nor forget That thou of Kean, Macready and all who wear The buskin grandly in art's annals yet, Beamest the radiant equal and true heir ! October, 1875. THE SCHOLAR'S SWEETHEART. A LL day he toils, with zeal severe, **• ■*" On something learnedly polemic ; From Harvard he returned last year, With bounteous honors academic. His parents name him but in praise, His little sisters quite adore him, And all the loving household lays Allegiance willingly before him ! What forms his labor, week by week ? They could not understand — oh, never ! 'Tis something eminently Greek, 'Tis something intricately clever ! But still his task, unfinished yet, He shapes with industry unflagging, And writes his treatise that shall set The heads of noted pundits wagging ! Is it of Homer's doubtful lines ? Or yet some question, subtly finer, Of whether certain famous wines Were first obtained from Asia Minor ? 14° FANTASY AND PASSION. Is it of dialects impure ? Is it some long-fought rule of grammar ? Is it old Sanscrit roots obscure ? Is it that wearisome digamma ? But whether this or whether that, Through fragrant fields, when work is ended, While darkly wheels the zigzag bat And all the West is warmly splendid, He steals to meet, in loving wise, With eager steps that do not tarry, A rosy girl whose shining eyes Grow tender as she calls him " Harry." What altered thoughts can she awake, This pearl of sweethearts, best and fairest ! And what a contrast does she make To ' comments on the Second Aorist ' ! So strongly round him can she throw Her dazzling spells of sweet retention, 'Tis doubtful now if he could go Correctly through his first declension ! For while near mossy meadow-bars, With spirit thrilled by sacred pleasures, He lingers till the dawn of stars, He lingers by the girl he treasures, This grave young scholar scarcely knows If Hector was a fighting seaman, If lofty Pindar wrote in prose, Or Athens lay in Lacedaemon ! LA BELLE HELLENE. H ] LA BELLE HELENE. T SAT in my small loge, five francs' worth, ■^ At the Varietes, unknown, ignored, And heard, in its mad Parisian mirth, How the thousand-throated audience roared. With all its volatile rompish glee, Do I often view that gay play yet, As when, a wave in the living sea, I stared at the stage through my good lorgnette. It was travesty under its wildest spell, It was sad Melpomene, grand, serene, With her stately peplum tucked up well, To frolic in French a la Colombiue. The Belle Hilene — who has forgotten it ? That mass of incongruous lights and shades — That making a new French roof to sit On the Parthenon's haughty colonnades ! That blending of most antipodal things — Old reverend Homer stretched on the rack — Sublime Agamemnon, a king of kings, Keeping time to the tunes of Offenbach ! 142 FANTASY AND PASSION. The mighty Achilles made to forget Both prince and demigod in a trice, And Calchas, the awful soothsayer, set To playing at " Goose " with loaded dice ! It is all so droll that my lips, I know, Give lusty share to the laughter brave ; But my mirth has a mournful thought below, Like the darkness under a sparkling wave ! I remember the dead heroic days, The reckless sin of the Spartan wife, The black ships thronging the blue sea-ways, And the ten wild stubborn years of strife ! I think of how many solemn scenes In that old majestic story dwell ; Of slaughtered heroes and weeping queens, Of woful appeal and wailed farewell ! I see Andromache strive to check The tears from a soul that sorrow racks, With one white arm about Hector's neck And one round the babe, Astyanax. I see, at the fatal fearful hour, Pale Iphigeneia wait to die ; Or Helen stands on the Scsean tower, And curses life with a bitter sigh. Cassandra, crying her people's doom, Disdained of those that should heed her most ; Lonely Penelope, at her loom, On desolate Ithaca's gray coast. LA BELLE 11ELENE. 143 And saddest of all, in pathos sweet, Old white-haired Priam, a suppliant one, Low-bent at the proud Pelides' feet, To beg the corpse of his dearest son ! So these and so other legends kept The feet of memory wandering slow Near the hearts that throbbed and the eyes that wept Two thousand shadowy years ago ! And I said to myself, " Those tricks of song, Those can-can follies that half appall, Those odd buffooneries, witty and wrong, Are sorry ways to remember it all." " And yet," I mused, " it is surely best That the meanest weed on a grave should grow Than that barren sods lie above the rest Of the crumbling slumberer below ! " And here on this busy and fickle earth, It were wiser, doubtless, did one confess Even such sham memories more of worth Than voids of utter forgetfulness ! " 144 FANTASY AND PASSION. GENTLEMAN JO. T N the years of youth, ere the years despoil, ■*- When death is a word we seldom say, When the Hebe of health pours wine all day And the lamp of life burns odorous oil, Oh, sweet to clasp, and to clasp anew, One friend by the hand whose heart rings true, And glows with your own lost love's rare glow, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! I see your eyes, of a brown so warm, Your deep sweet dimples, your tossed brown hair, Your easeful gracious courteous air, And the strong fine curves of your manful form. Not a hint of the clever stuff you wrote In trick of collar, caprice of coat, — Not a touch of the false, the flippant, no ! Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! Was there ever a man as keen as you To strip all sham of its gaudy guise ? To aim your scorn upon social lies And with shafts of laughter shoot them through ? When your cheek flushed up with the circling cheer, What a happy thing was your voice to hear, In its rhythmic richness, loud or low, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! GENTLEMAN JO. 145 Yet you dealt in nothing to flash and fade, No smart grandiloquence mock-sublime, No dainty curse of the men, the time, No brilliant brummagem of tirade ; No flimsily-dazzling cynic trope, Where the egotist hides in the misanthrope ; Not the least word meant for mere bald show, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! For the love was large in your breast innate, Your charity mild as a mother's tears ; When you flung at the world your trenchant sneers It was duty spoke, it was never hate ! And the blows were struck with a better nerve, Since the hand that gave them was fain to serve ; Would have rather blest than have struck one blow, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! You counted the petty spites and greeds That buzz like flies about human souls ; You marked the vice and the pride that lolls In the pompous purple of Christly creeds ; You saw how life, in its long advance, Is slave to satiric circumstance ; You shared all loftiest want and woe, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! No sounding cant could your faith convince To adore some God whom the people plan In the poor similitude of a man, A little larger than priest or prince. 146 FANTASY AND PASSION. That impious piety vexed you well Which says of God, the unthinkable, He is or He is not thus and so, Gentleman To ! Gentleman Jo ! What wonder you dropt off tired, my friend, From the brutelike human rush for gain ? What wonder that your true heart and brain Turned very weary before, the end ? . . . ' Till your spirit's beautiful steadfast light Flickered in death's cold wind, one night, As I watched your last breath weakly, go, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! You are vanished away in shadow vast, Yet your loss has left to me moments dear When the stars of memory steal out clear, To tremble in twilights of the past ! The world, although she owed you a crown Of lordliest laurel, smote you down ! And all she lost she shall never know, Gentleman Jo ! Gentleman Jo ! PIPES AND BEER. 147 PIPES AND BEER. T3EF0RE I was famous I used to sit ■*~* In a dull old underground room I knew, And sip cheap beer, and be glad for it, With a wild Bohemian friend or two. And oh, it was joy to loiter thus, At peace in the heart of the city's stir, Entombed, while life hurried over us, In our lazy bacchanal sepulchre. There was artist George, with the blond Greek head, And the startling creeds, and the loose cravat ; There was splenetic journalistic Fred, Of the sharp retort and the shabby hat ; There was dreamy Frank, of the lounging gait, Who lived on nothing a year, or less, And always meant to be something great, But only meant, and smoked to excess ; And last myself, whom their funny sneers Annoyed no whit as they laughed and said, 1 1 listened to all their grand ideas And wrote them out for my daily bread.' The Teuton beer-bibbers came and went, Night after night, and stared, good folk, At our table, noisy with argument, And our chronic aureoles of smoke. 148 FANTASY AND PASSION. And oh, my life ! but we all loved well The talk, free, fearless, keen, profound, The rockets of wit that flashed and fell In that dull old tavern underground ! . . . But there came a change in my days at last, And fortune forgot to starve and stint, And the people chose to admire aghast The book I had eaten dirt to print And new friends gathered about me, then, New voices summoned me there and here ; The world went down in my dingy den, And drew me forth from the pipes and beer. I took the stamp of my altered lot, As the sands of the certain seasons ran, And slowly, whether I would or not, I felt myself growing a gentleman. But now and then I would break the thrall, I would yield to a pang of dumb regret, And steal to join them, and find them all, With the amber wassail near them yet. Find, and join them, and try to seem A fourth for the old queer merry three, With my fame as much of a yearning dream As my morrow's dinner was wont to be. But the wit would lag, and the mirth would lack, And the god of jollity hear no call, And the prosperous broadcloth on my back Hung over their spirits like a pall ! PIPES AND BEER. H9 It was not that they failed, each one, to try Their warmth of welcome to speak and show ; I should just have risen and said good-bye, With a haughty look, had they served me so. It was rather that each would seem, instead, With not one vestige of spleen or pride, Across a chasm of change to spread His greeting hands to the further side. And our gladdest words rang strange and cold, Like the echoes of other long-lost words ; And the nights were no more the nights of old Than Spring would be Spring without the birds ! So they waned and waned, these visits of mine, Till I married the heiress, ending here. For if caste approves the cigars and wine, She must frown perforce upon pipes and beer. And now 'tis years since I saw these men, Years since I knew them living yet. And of this alone I am sure, since then — That none has gained what he toiled to get. For I keep strict watch on the world of art, And George, with his wide rich-dowered brain ! His fervent fancy, his ardent heart, Though he greatly toiled, has toiled in vain. And Fred, for all he may sparkle bright In caustic column, in clever quip, Of a truth must still be hiding his light Beneath the bushel of journalship. 150 FANTASY AND PASSION. And dreamy Frank must be dreaming still, Lounging through life, if yet alive, Smoking his vast preposterous fill, Lounging, smoking, striving to strive. And I, the fourth in that old queer throng, Fourth and least, as my soul avows, — I alone have been counted strong, I alone have the laurelled brows ! Well, and what has it all been worth-? May not my soul to my soul confess That "succeeding," here upon earth, Does not alway assume success ? I would cast, and gladly, from this gray head Its crown, to regain one sweet lost year With artist George, with splenetic Fred, With dreamy Frank, with the pipes. and beer ! TO AN OLD STREET-LAMP. [" WATCH thee now, with meditative mood, ■*■ In the old street, noiseless under midnight's spell, Whereof through many a midnight hast thou stood, Poor flickering lamp, the yellow sentinel. Thine humble flame no rivalry invites ; More than thyself thou dost not care to seem ; Thou art not of the world's most shining lights, Yet what thou art is of benignant beam! TO AN OLD STREET-LAMP. 151 Harsh gusts that haughtiest waves have reared and rocked, Sweeping the untraversed street with lonely roar, Have paused amid their savage speed and knocked With frigid knuckles at thy glassy door. Half draped in snow-drift thou hast burned obscure ; Innumerous rain-streaks thy dull panes have crost, And cold has vestured thine uncouth contour In pale fantastic filigrees of frost ! And ah, the uncounted faces thou hast lit, Seen but by fleeting intervals before Each into distance and the dark would flit, Some to return again, and some no more ! The moneyed autocrat ; the beggar meek ; The shambling rag-pick, half a man for mud ; The exhausted work-girl, on whose wasting cheek Blooms the white flower that drinks the toiler's blood ! The young bride, near her lord, all life at rest ; The expectant lover, speeding to his tryst ; The wearied house-drudge, with her babe at breast, And forehead purpled from a brutish fist ; The ruminant poet, with his rusty coat ; The thief that shoots to covert in hot flight ; The reveller, flinging from audacious throat A reckless dithyramb on the startled night ! Theirs hast thou seen, and many another's face, Since this thy special flame was called by fate To illume, from its unclassic biding-place, These stolid pavements' monochrome of slate. 152 FANTASY AND PASSION For now the ladder that first scaled thine height Is fallen, perchance, to utter rot and rust, And doubtless the first hand that gave thee light Knows now the unending quietude of dust ! Hast thou not sometimes heard a bacchanal tongue Pay thee sad slanders, worth no honest heed, While arms about thy rigid pillar clung With the fierce friendship of a friend in need ? Yet then, I doubt not, thou wert calm no less, Though named unstable in delirious strain, Too proudly conscious of thy steadfastness For any answer but a dumb disdain ! Patient and unpretentious, with the sweet Desire alike to live for low and high, Shine on, old lamp, within the shadowy street Where fortune hath ordained thy lot to lie ! And mayst thou fade, when time at last shall tell The gaseous ardor from thy pipe to cease, Like one that having done his duty well Sinks to oblivion with a brow of peace ! A BARNYARD ECLOGUE. 153 A BARNYARD ECLOGUE. GOOD neighbor mine, can you endure To look on man in miniature ? I keep no magic mirror hid, (As the ancient Cagliostros did) Unveiling it for one to see Humanity in epitome. Or, if at all with such I deal, 'Tis only that my powers reveal Those fleet fantastic shapes which pass O'er caricature's cracked looking-glass ? Now do you love your race too well To admit the comic parallel That lies between ourselves and this Ornithologic metropolis, Which near us clucks and struts and thrives, — Four hundred appetizing lives ? That fowl in whose tail's ebon sweep Rich emerald lustres love to sleep, Who deems his top-knot, black as tar, To have doubtless crowned him barnyard czar, Or heir presumptive, beyond all ban, To El Dorados of golden bran — Search Europe, and you shall not see Such an aristocrat as he ! But there are those before whose brow Even this black Marmion must bow, 154 FANTASY AND PASSION. Though ill can brook his haughty eye Precedence from such low canaille. Look yonder, where the lord doth stand Of all this polygamic land, — The sultan, caliph, Brigham Young Of the abject throngs he rules among ; Or, as we call, in homelier talk, His Highness — Cock of All the Walk ! What boots it in one's veins to hold A royal current, rare and old — Be prince by right of head-tuft, legs, Through ancestries of blameless eggs, When some vile upstart crows with zeal On heights no vulgar claw should feel, Rearing a head that seems to glow With Communism's red overflow ? Alas ! the tribes are few on earth Where brute force may not level birth ! These feathered Bourbons do but serve To show the usurper's hardy nerve, And prove by their own bitter smarts Even barnyards may have Bonapartes ! Mark with what grave maternal pride This patient hen, her chicks at side, Moves like a dame of proud degree, Each chick a sort of Ywt. fie-wee, Filling with sound that scarce knows hush Its biped ball of tawny plush. Ill could we find in human mood More motherly solicitude, Or the intense devotion match Of that same strenuous awkward scratch, A BARNYARD ECLOGUE. 155 Whose good results, whate'er they be, Her offspring seize in hot sortie, While o'er them, softly wishing luck, Sounds her self-abnegating cluck. Ah, what rich burlesque may we trace On the " fat, fair and forty " race, In this majestic hen, this gray Cornelia of a latter clay, Showing, with all their plaintive din, Her downy Gracchi, six times twin ! What eye but plainly finds in her, The yard's bucolic dowager, A life that stands (no common boon !) At chickenhood's mellow afternoon ? Her figure, as one promptly sees, Attains embonpoint 's ampler ease, From early indiscretions born (Girls will be girls) in granary-corn ; And with her matron mien we find A sad austerity entwined — Something that tells us, at a glance, She has outlived her first romance, And buried young love's dream, may be, In some long-eaten fricassee ! Notice that plain ill-favored cock, Commonplace, of indifferent stock. Thus far about his earthly lot The least delights have gathered not. Always, through some harsh whim of fate's, A neighbor beak beside him waits. 156 FANTASY AND PASSION. Ready to seize, ere he can guess, The yellow corn-grain of success. And much change hath he seen withal, Since first he served as fortune's ball : The low turned high, the high made low By flashy plume and pompous crow ; Discord and pecking ; rise and fall, Now social, now political ; Governments trembling with the shock Of some great head brought to the block ; Those reigns of terror that we men Rouse in the barnyard now and then, Robespierres, Dantons setting free When company drops in to tea, And eating broiled, with no regrets, Gallinaceous Marie Antoinettes ! Such change and more hath passed him by, Met now with philosophic eye, Since he at last in heart has come To observe events in Roosterdom With ripened wisdom's critic view, As so much . . . cockadoodledoo ! Ah, friend, for hours my speech might brood O'er many an odd similitude, And let, while murmuring careless things, Analogy fly with fancy's wings. We all know well, who know aright, Some foolish fowls will sometimes fight ; But far too rudely have I rent The apparent veil of sweet content A BARNYARD ECLOGUE. 157 That wraps with such idyllic charm These simple gypsies of the farm. Best in their harmless joys believe, Nor brush, with too bold sweep of sleeve, From fruit so seeming-fresh of hue The illusive damask of its dew ! If human greed, spite, envy stirs These gentle wayside foragers, (Captives that never need a guard, Meek tentless Bedouins of the yard) Why, best that we should shirk intact The disenchanting realm of fact, Skeptic as though some lip to-day To our incredulous ear should say : " In yonder garden's glimmering close, The lily wrangles with the rose." Ah, that recalls, before you go, The new grand rose I was to show ; (Follow this narrow footpath, please, Down-hill beyond the cedar- trees). A royal rose, good neighbor mine, Large, deep and gold as Rhenish wine ! III. SONNETS. ART. 161 ART. I" SAW in dreams a shape of mightiest mold, •*- Wrought from stern bronze and towering in mid- air ; A grand similitude of some goddess, fair With a beauty radiant yet supremely cold. She seemed invisible distance to behold, Nor ever drooped her languorous look to where, Down-broadening from her pedestal, a stair Of ample depth imperially outrolled. And on these haughty steps, crouched suppliantwise, I saw, at differing intervals apart, Sad men who seemed to adore, lament, entreat ; And one, a poet, with anguish in his eyes, Tore from a wound his own red quivering heart And flung it against the statue's brazen feet! 162 FANTASY AND PASSION. GENIUS. AS haughty Artemis, virgin without stain, Once drooped, in passionate grace, her mouth's warm flower To young Endymion's lips amid the bower Where tired on shady turf the boy had lain, Even thus, at moments rare, some youth will gain The kiss of another goddess, great in power, — And all his spirit is troubled, from that hour, Perpetually by sweet unearthly pain ! Either among the future's visitant dreams, Pale Sculpture's calm ideals his soul entrance, Or round him Painting's heavens of color rise, Or through his thought strange eloquent Music streams, Or Poesy lures him with her velvet glance And white limbs lovelier than the Lorelei's ! SLEEP. 163 SLEEP. (For a Picture.) A YELLOW sunset, soft and dreamy of dye, "*■ Met sharply by black fluctuant lines of grass ; A river, glimmering like illumined glass, And narrowing till it ends in distant sky ; Pale scattered pools of luminous rain, that lie In shadowy amplitudes of green morass ; A crescent that the old moon, as moments pass, Has turned to a silver acorn hung on high ! Now through this melancholy and silent land Sleep walks, diaphanous- vestured, vaguely fair. Within her vaporous robe and one dim hand Much asphodel and lotus doth she bear, Going lovely and low-lidded, with a band Of dull-red poppies amid her dull-gold hair ! 164 FANTASY AND PASSION. TO (On receiving a Volume of his Poems.) TT is not only that your poesy shows •*- Exquisite elegance and daintiest care, But through its melody, as a grace more rare, The protean soul of Nature moves and glows. Now gayly, like some radiant brook, it flows, Now with a violet's fragrance perfumes air, And now its tropic luxury seems to wear The balmy crimson of an opening rose ! I think that if your kindlier fate had been To have lived when lover-minstrels were not mute, You might have sung, reclined at languorous ease, Amid some tapestried chamber's gold and green, To some fair damosel, on some ribboned lute, Such delicate and delicious songs as these ! THE CITY. 165 THE CITY. TT THEN night is on the city and silence reigns, * * How all its dark tranquillity, bathed in sleep, Is like that quietude of the ocean's deep Remotely above whose realm the surge complains ! For even as monsters that o'er weird domains Of cold subaqueous dimness dart and creep, Within the vague metropolis wakeful keep Those hideous vices that its heart retains ! In fancy I watch black crimes like sea-growths loom ; In fancy I view large hopes, once fair and whole, Grown wrecks where memory's mosses now un- furl. Yet here and there, amid the encircling gloom, I know that some serene exceptional soul Dwells in its lovely purity, like a pearl ! 1 66 FANTASY AND PASSION. KINDLINESS. *F?AR more than many a lawless life may guess, •*■ Pure kindliness hath a spell they only know Whose hearts, however assailed by care and woe, Have cause its sweet talismanic worth to bless ! It looks at first a power of feeble stress, Yet fights with dauntless fortitude blow for blow, Until some towering human fault lies low, Beneath this delicate spell of kindliness ! Thus, when the radiant spear of Perseus leapt Against that wallowing bulk of scaly hide, It seemed like a reed by contrast, and as firm . . . But when with gradual surge the sea had crept About Andromeda's rock, its falling tide Bore slowly off the monstrous, massacred worm ! COMMONPLA CES. 1 67 COMMONPLACES. 'T^ROUBLED in spirit at the unvaried ways -*• Wherewith perpetually I seemed to view, In regular and familiar retinue, Coming and going, the processional days, I yearned to mark with many a novel phase This round of dull monotonies that I knew, And treat life's commonplaces, dreary of hue, As phantoms that the intellect sternly lays ! But wheresoe'er my wandering feet might be, Like some persistent word that memory saith, Or like a ship's own shadow on wastes of sea, Or the very wind's inevitable breath, I found, among all changes, following me The dark ubiquitous commonplace of death ! 168 FANTASY AND PASSION. CITY WINDOWS. ' r T" s HROUGH many an evening, while my spirit gains, - -*■ Amid the populous city's ebb and flow, A keener sense of solitude than they know Who dwell on desolate hills or houseless plains, I roam long streets where dubious dimness reigns, Where bright inscrutable windows calmly glow, And with mysterious pleasure, as I go, Shape weird conjectures from the illumined panes ! In yonder room two amorous hearts may thrill ; Some fiery quarrel, here, may grow apace ; There may some vigilant mother, pale and still, Bend in deep agony o'er a wasting face ; And here a murderess by some bed may spill The deadly colorless drop that leaves no trace ! A THISTLE. 169 A THISTLE. f\ ROSEATE thistle, blooming by a rock, ^-^ With fragrant silkiness in prickly thrall, How darkly, while I watch you, does it fall That o'er me such disconsolate fancies flock ? I see calamitous battles, feel the shock Of treachery and intrigue, revolt and brawl ; I see (oh, saddest picture of them all !) Pale Mary cowering by the ghastly block ! Ah, wherefore think such bitter thoughts as these, While sweet auroral freshness charms and cheers ? Why mar the morning's brilliance and its breeze With weary memories of those crimeful years ? Why tell this poor flower in what blood and tears They have bathed its Scottish kindred overseas ! 170 FANTASY AND PASSION. MAPLES. AMID this maple-avenue, on the brow ■*■*• Of this cool hill, while summer suns were bold, No gaudier coloring could I then behold Than the deep green of many a breezy bough ; But up the foliaged vista gazing now, Where Autumn's halcyon brilliancies unfold And opulent scarlet blends with dazzling gold, I feel my wandering fancy dream of how, In some old haughty city, centuries since, Before the coming of some conqueror-prince Back from famed fights with all his war-worn bands, While jubilant bells in tower and steeple swung, Down over sculptured balconies were hung Great gorgeous tapestries out of Eastern lands ! A COBWEB. 171 A COBWEB. T OVER devout of many a lonely place, -*— ' Mute gossamer guest of dimness and repose, As loyally as lily or balmy rose Obey the sunshine, does your delicate lace Hang sombre filaments where the stealthy pace Of time's disfeaturing footstep vaguely goes, — From shelves that bear old ponderous folios, To some poor yellowing portrait's dusty face ! Yet though in solemn nooks you rightly reign, Here, woven across the green of this fresh vine, The dignity of your wonted state you lose ; For now the halcyon morning on your skein, As though to merrily challenge its dark sign, Strings the warm splendors of her jewelling dews ! 172 FANTASY AND PASSION. AN OCTOBER DAY. HP HE emergent sun looks forth on sparkling grass, -*- Filmed with the frost's pale gossamer of snow. And now long resonant breezes wake and blow The empurpled mists from meadow and morass. The withering aster shivers ; dry leaves pass ; Red sumachs burn ; the yellowing birches glow ; And on the elastic air, in many a mass. Rolling through pale-blue heaven, the great clouds go ! In the afternoon all windy sounds are still : From wooded ways the cricket's chirp takes flight, And the dreamy Autumn hours lapse on until . . . See ! the sweet evening-star, that night by night Drops luminous, like an ever-falling tear, Down dying twilights of the dying year ! A WILLOW-TREE. 173 A WILLOW-TREE. "DALE sorrower, in whose listless grace one sees ■*• Not any shadow of joy while summer beams, Looking, as all your foliage earthward streams, The inconsolable Niobe of trees, For me, if some appropriate mood shall please To have led me where your leafy languor gleams, Then through my heart, a band of glimmering dreams, Float these, or lovelier memories than these : A white shape, framed in jealous passion's gloom, Meek Desdemona doth her sad song raise ; Or mad Ophelia, just before her doom, Hangs on your treacherous branch her wild wood sprays ; Or yet, this hour, you shade De Musset's tomb, Among the sculpturings of old Pere la Chaise ! 174 FANTASY AND PASSION. THISTLEDOWN. HPH ROUGH summer's gradual death, how sweet a •*- sight The flowering thistle's tardy gleam appears, Her thorny boughs like intricate chandeliers When lit for festival with soft rosy light ! Yet closelier watching her, to left and right You see the odorous beauty that she rears Girt on all sides with countless emerald spears, Eager the invading hand to pierce or smite ! But when the autumnal trees in ruin glow, You meet her white ghost wandering to and fro Aerially upon the fitful blast, As though the spirit of this proud blossom came To haunt the world in expiatory shame, Repentant of her cold imperious past ! VELVET. 175 FABRICS. I. VELVET. TTERE fittingly is the one most regal dress, ■*•-*-, For in the manner its full round folds divide We see superb calm and imperial pride With soft alluring luxury acquiesce. Now we behold it utterly lustreless, Now mellow glimmerings in its depths abide, Where masses of rich varying shadow hide, Close-wedded to its sumptuous heaviness. Always it shows me some traditional scene Of thrones, ambassadors and the pomp of rule, Great marriages, princely promises held cheap, The pampered favorite, the neglected queen, The reckless insolence of the gaudy fool, The fawning courtier, and the assassin's leap ! 176 FANTASY AND PASSION. II. SATIN. "TVTO moonlit pool is lovelier than the glow -*-^ Of this bright sensitive texture, nor the sheen On sunny wings that wandering sea-birds preen ; And sweet, of all fair draperies that I know, To mark the smooth tranquillity of its flow, Where shades of tremulous dimness intervene. Shine out with mutable splendors, mild, serene, In some voluminous raiment white as snow. For then I feel impetuous fancy drawn Forth at some faint and half-mysterious call, Even like a bird that breaks from clasping bars ; And lighted vaguely by the Italian dawn, I see rash Romeo scale the garden-wall, While Juliet dreams below the dying stars ! BROCADE. 177 III. BROCADE. TT THEN, in the festal glory of grand events, * * This pale-flowered silk some stately form en- sheathes, Wrought intricately with pearly sprays and wreaths, Arabesques and scrolls and leaflike ornaments, What memories of old majesties intense To the present its elaborate woof bequeathes, Whose very rustle and sweep augustly breathes Of leisure and wealth and grave magnificence. For when I watch it, amber, yellow or rose, As though some delicate wand were waved in air By some invisible wondersmith, I gaze On courtly gentlemen with embroidered hose And radiant ladies with high powdered hair, Stepping through minuets in colonial days ! 12 178 FANTASY AND PASSION. THE OLD MIRROR. TN yonder homestead, wreathed with bounteous vines, ■*- A lonely woman dwells, whose wandering feet Pause often amid one chamber's calm retreat, Where an old mirror from its quaint frame shines. And here, soft-wrought in memory's vague designs, Dim semblances her wistful gaze will greet Of lost ones that in thrall phantasmally sweet The mirror's luminous quietude enshrines. But unto her these dubious forms that pass With shadowy majesty or dreamy grace, Wear nothing of ghostliness in mien or guise. The only ghost that haunts this glimmering glass Carries the sad reality in its face rard cheeks and desolate eyes ! EARTHQUAKE. 179 EARTHQUAKE. A GIANT of awful strength, he dumbly lies r- *- Far-prisoned among the solemn deeps of earth ; The sinewy grandeurs of his captive girth, — His great-thewed breast, colossally-molded thighs, And arms thick-roped with muscle of mighty size, Repose in a slumber where no dream gives birth For months, even years, to any grief or mirth ; A slumber of tranquil lips, calm-lidded eyes ! Yet sometimes to his spirit a dream will creep Of the old glad past when clothed in dauntless pride He walked the world, unchained by tyrannous powers ; And then, while he tosses restlessly in sleep, Dark terrible graves for living shapes yawn wide, Or a city shrieks among her tottering towers ! 180 FANTASY AND PASSION. TO F. S. S. " C'^tait un demon se tordant sous un ange, Un enfer sous un ciel." Theophile Gautier. OEEING thy face, with all thy fluctuant hair ^ Falling in dull-gold opulence from thy brow, Watching thy light-blue eyes, now fired or now Laughterful, or now dim as with despair, I wonder, friend, that it should be God's care To have made at all, what matter when or how, A being so sadly, desolately rare, So beautifully incomplete as thou ! O rank black pool, with one star's imaged form! O sweet rich-hearted rose, with rot at core ! O summer heaven, half purpled by stern storm ! O lily, with one white leaf dipt in gore ! O angel-shape, whereover curves and clings The awful imminence of a devil's wings ! MEDUSA. 181 MEDUSA. (For a Picture.) A FACE in whose voluptuous bloom there lies Olympian faultlessness of mold and hue ; Lips that a god were worthy alone to woo ; Round chin, and nostrils curved in the old Greek wise. But there is no clear pallor of arctic skies, Fathom on crystal fathom of livid blue, So bleakly cold that one might liken it to The pitiless icy splendors of her eyes ! Her bound hair, colored lovelier than the sweet Rich halcyon yellow of tall harvest wheat, Over chaste brows a glimmering tumult sheds ; But through the abundance of its warm soft gold, Coils of lean horror peer from many a fold, With sharp tongues nickering in flat clammy heads ! 1 82 FANTASY AND PASSION ANTIPODES. I. POE. TTE loved all shadowy spots, all seasons drear ; •*■ -*• All ways of darkness lured his ghastly whim ; Strange fellowships he held with goblins grim, At whose demoniac eyes he felt no fear. On midnights through dense darkness he would peer, To watch the pale ghoul feed, by tombstones dim. The appalling forms of phantoms walked with him, And murder breathed its red guilt in his ear ! By desolate paths of dream, where fancy's owl Sent long lugubrious hoots through sombre air, Amid thought's gloomiest caves he went to prowl, And met delirium in her awful lair, And mingled with cold shapes that writhe or scowl, Serpents of horror, black bats of despair ! WHITTIER. 183 II. WHITTIER. "THRESH as on breezy seas the ascendant day, •*■ And bridit as on thick dew its radiant trace Hopeful as meadows at the breath of May, One loftiest aim his melodies obey, Like dawnward larks in roseate deeps of space — While that large reverent love for all his race Makes him a man in manhood's lordlier way ! His words like pearls are luminous yet strong ; His duteous thought ennobles while it calms ; We seem to have felt the falling, in his song, Of benedictions and of sacred balms ; To have seen the aureoled angels group and throng In heavenly valleylands, by shining palms ! 184 FANTASY AND PASSION CAMEOS. I. THACKERAY. TI 7TTH satire's poignant spear he loved to fight, * v And flocks of scampering falsehoods to disband, So sinewy were the savage blows he planned, So sweeping yet so accurate his keen sight ! Than he no man more loyally loved the right, No man could wrong more valiantly withstand, Who shook the old human web with such fierce hand That half fraud's ambushed vermin swarmed to light ! How forcefully could he paint the proud grandee ; The skilled adventuress, with her game sly-played ; The toadying snob, in triple brass arrayed ; The dissolute fop ; the callous debauchee ; And dowagers, in rouge, feathers and brocade, Sneering at life across their cards and tea ! DICKENS. X 8 5 II. DICKENS. \ S one who flings large hospitable doors "*■ *- Wide to a world of masquers whom he has bade Sweep hurrying onward with their paces mad, And gaily flood the vacant chamber-floors, Even so with him about whose form in scores Humanity's eager passions, blithe or sad, Rush revelling, and however strangely clad, Are still the old rascals, bigots, fools and bores ! Ah ! what a riotous witch-dance they prolong Of avarice, hatred, hope, revenge, despair ! How right flies timorous from the clutch of wrong ! How pleasure and ease take hands with toil and care ! While humor, that wild harlequin, here and there Dashes in spangled somersaults through the throng ! 1 86 FANTASY AND PASSION. III. KEATS. TT fell, in youthful hours, that he should stray ■*• To some enchanted garden's magic gate, And being elect that he should pass elate Where long parterres of blossoming splendor lay. But while he gathered many a fragrant spray, In passionate rapture and in wonder great, Death, gliding up to him with eyes like fate And cold implacable hand, led him away ! Yet later, lingering briefly among men, He dropt before the world's feet those few flowers Whose color and odor brave all blight of years, And the rare radiance of whose bloom, since then, Pathos, their sweet attendant, ever dowers With the soft silver dews of pitying tears ! DUMAS, PERE. 187 IV. DUMAS, PkRE. TDORN heir-presumptive to Boccaccio's bays, •*-^ What generous genial art this man possessed, Pillaging history's mighty treasure-chest, Loving the most her most adventurous days : Painting, in such adroit and happy phrase, King, priest, cavalier, the jester with his jest, Or D'Artagnan, big Porthos and the rest, Who fought so valorously for Louis Treize ! No morbid analyst, healthful, honest, bland, How he adored all perilous deeds and wild ! Romance's monarch, story-teller grand, How long he made, by halcyon spells beguiled, Great haughty France, with head upon her hand, Crouch at his feet and listen like a child ! 1 88 FANTASY AND PASSION. N V. HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN.- OW that we know him dead, conjecture brings The marvelling fancies it can ill control ; We picture in some last fair dreamy goal Him round whose name such dreamy influence clings. In some strange land that teems with butterfly-wings, Flower-cradled fairies, elf-shapes grimly droll, We see his calm and incontaminate soul Walk with delight amid miraculous things ! And yet, although his dear Valhalla lies At happiest distance from all earthly harms, We are sure he will not love its choicest charms Unless, however opulent, these comprise Children, with shining hair, with limpid eyes, To enwreathe him in their balmy rosy arms ! HERBERT SPENCER. 189 VI. HERBERT SPENCER. A SPACIOUS-BRAINED arch-enemy of lies, •*■ *• For years he has followed, with sure pace and fleet, The stainless robe and radiant-sandalled feet That truth makes vaguely visible as she flies. For years he has searched, with undiscouraged eyes, Deep at the roots of life, eager to meet One law beneath whose sovereignty complete Each vast and fateful century dawns or dies ! His intellect is a palace, on whose walls Great rich historic frescoes may be seen, And where, in matron dignity of mien, Meeting perpetually amid its halls Messages from victorious generals, Calm Science walks, like some majestic queen ! 190 FANTASY AND PASSION VII. GUSTAVE DORE. TTOW rare the audacious spirit that invokes ■*• ■*■ These shadowy grandeurs, and can bid appear All horror's genii, awful and austere, And paint infinity with a few strong strokes ! That steals where mortal suffering writhes and chokes, Where sorrow has wept her last hot heavy tear, And where, while moans of misery smite the ear, Some great calamitous battle roars and smokes ! Now are we fain to applaud him, — and anon To shrink from power of such uncanny spell ; We tire of death's chill touch and visage wan ; Of agony ; of corruption's rank sick smell ; Of this strange soul that seems to have gazed upon Terrific things in the red heart of hell ! BAUDELAIRE. 191 VIII. BAUDELAIRE. S~\ POET of such unique fantastic rhyme, ^^ Lover of some strange muse who bound her hair With poisonous myrtles, grown in no Greek air But fostered of some feverous Gothic clime ; Degenerate god, half loathsome, half sublime, By what fatality wert thou led to fare Through haunts that all corruption's colors wear, Through pestilent noisome paths of woe and crime ? For me thy poesy's morbid splendors wake A thought of how, in close miasmatic gloom, Deep amid some toad-haunted humid brake That dark moss clothes or flexuous fern-leaves plume, Some rank red fungus, dappled like a snake, Spots the black dampness with its clammy bloom ! Cambridge : Press of John Wilson & Son. e* '/ c *