» 3505 ^^5284 B 921 opy 1 ^N MASTERSON iTRICAL NARRATIVE BY KENNETH CAMPBELL Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/johnmastersonorpOOcamp John Masterson; OR, Passion and Tlie Priest A METRICAL NARRATIVE BY KENNETH CAMPBELL iiiiiiii')iiiii''iiiiiii SAN DIEGO CAMPBELL PRESS 807 8th St. 2 John Mastkrson; or ^^Ki^' >v COPYRIGHTED, 1921, By JOHN P. CAMPBELL, Publisher, San Diego, California 1 g)CI.A624818 -^,__ — ^ — — ^„.^-__ — . . I Passion and Thk Prikst D ED I C ATI O N TO MY MOTHER John Masterson; or FOREWORD Since Time began, one of man's most heart- bleeding, sternest wars has been the conflict be- tween the love instinct, the mating of the sexes, and the interference of parental and other outside adjustment; between the laws of convention and rebellious native instincts. John Masterson was a victim of both, and it is his soul struggle in this world-old strife that I have sought to portray in terms of emotion. The Author. Sacramento, California, Passion and Thk Priest I. LA JOLLA--1913 MAY Forgetfulness, ah that is more Than Memory; the Gone Before, The Lost to lose — that were a power To gild v/ith bliss the bleakest hour. — In work I cannot sink the past: The dreams of Night must lower at last. I sleep, but day for me begins And preying Thought, vampirish, wins! — Aileen! A name that lives like myrrh In Urns of Memory; I may not slur My lady lost, of gentle will; Too strange her love— I love her still! Her beauty is my nocturne's wraith! I fight, I fight, to hold my faith: For if I lose that, I am lost, A cynic soul, in self engrossed. — I sit within the gloomed embrasure Of the cliff; the surf's erasure Blots out each message on the sand Below, with paced recurrence bland. The Moon hath laid her Rug of Flame Across the Sea; 'twas so she came Into my life, too soon away, In Beauty as Dian astray. Her father with his millions heaped Where weaklings at his bidding leaped. With domination overbore My landless love — to me his door John Mastkrson; or Was locked with triple links of steel; His lackeys' arrogance I feel Unto this night. My scorned dismissal Was followed by Aileen's epistle: " 'Tis best we never meet again ; I fight my father's will in vain." — This ring that binds my smallest finger She sent; our first embraces linger In visions when my day is done, But she, my love, my life, is gone! II. JUNE I. A green cove all a pulsing blur Of lightless sound by night, Save when the lunar breezes stir From depths of soundless light, By day a blaze of beryl and of blue? The sounding surf, the fifing mew. 2. The v/aves, the breezes, sing "Aileen" To one who can't forget; The crinkling swells in fitful sheen Are pens that write it yet. To me, to me they spell "A-i-1-e-e-n," My first, my last, my joy, my teen! 3. The bathers lance the bellowing foam With spear-point hands, or lie In sands, or idly cliffward roam, Where spume-tossed opals fly And shatter to a futile spray As broke a dream of mine one day. Passion and The Prikst 4. One of the gay and one apart Idly I plied the sand, Which shifted as a woman's heart, I thought, and with my hand Destroyed the fabrics that I wrought — When far-flung fear seaward I caught. 5. A woman's agony can pierce The sentient ear of man And nerve him with a spirit fierce As moved the primal clan To meet the monsters of the cave — Responding, swift I fought the wave. 6. It seemed the rigor of my soul Resolved in lenient joy; *Twas not I sought the hero's role. That egoist's alloy Of selfish aim and Gascon pride: 'Twas that I hungered to be tried. 7. My hands locked strands of gold-wet hair; The face was pallid under; And lo! There lay that Aileen there! Again must dull Fate blunder? The weird three sisters mix the cards And oddly heap the human shards? 8. I swam with my lax love ashore, The clamor of the throng Unheard, and to the lee I bore Her from the wild surf-song Below a rock; her eyelids stirred: "Aileen!" I cried — that fateful word! 9. And ere the prattling gossips came, John Mastkrson; or She smiled and sighed with me: Precluded passion leaped to flame— And only I was free! — beloved,'* was all she said, Ere memory again had fled. 10. They bore her to the bungalow. Her sumptuous Summer eyrie; And That has intervened, I know. Will make my lot less dreary: These barriers of the social law^s Are reared to give the timid pause. II. For she is mated with a pang Encarnalized, a thorn, That pierces as the serpent's fang; Where love lives not, the scorn Of her pure mind for such as he Who purchased her, turns inwardly. 12. She scorns herself as one of those Nomads of the street. Who never bask in love's repose. Nor learn its duties sweet- — Incarnate sacrifice to pride. The Vestal flame within her died. 13. Convention ever stones to death The unsafeguarded Phryne: But wedded goods is spared foul breath — As though the guilt were tiny That welds two lives where love is not And one remembers — unforgot! 14. What barrier should there be to love Such as binds her to me? Passion and The Prikst Mine ark is beached; I've launched a dove To find a nascent tree, Then bring to me the herald twig; The world is small; the heart is big! III. JULY 1. J am martial today in my delight, For the brimming is mine without measure; The chill shadows are fled in a night; All the day is but votive to pleasure; And I'll wander the canyon's cool maze Through the manifold beauteous hours, Where the crimson poinsettias blaze. Oh for me the militant flowers! 2. March, march, march, with your sword, whitest soldiers Of the chaparral, parading the slope; Spanish bayonets, how firmly you hold yours; White, white, forever my hope! And ever I know that the Summer Will die in your withering arms; Today you are routing the mummer. And the scyther is hid with his harms, 3. While the woodpecker hammers his drum", Vitality, action, delight, Virility, fervor now come. In spirit until the rich night: For my fairest is stealing to meet me In a dell by a musical stream; She is coming to thank and entreat me To go, to forgive and — to dream! 10 John Masterson; or IV. Perplexities assail the finite thought Of man; he has been born to doubt. When fervor passes and the morning calm And drab has sunk rrom night's jet store, How slowly click the cams of introspection, Remorseless as the mill stones of the gods. Till each indissoluble deed is tossed A.side by force that grinds in vain, To crush it for the mind's digestion I To-day am teeming with the vain employment. What wrecks of wild convention are we all I Wild as the frigid, molar Arctic Waste! Tradition racks the woman's blinded feet And warps the thought of superstitious man. But in a moment's wild rebellion, all Restrictions of the Cheops-mummy past Are disentangled: vividly the Novj^. The instant moment's fiery passion burns Athwart the bandages that calm discretion All piously enwrapped about the soul, And wildly rejuvescent, stifled flames Consume all usage — gone Religion's ban. Lost fear of pointing fingers and forgot Is Conscience, spirit monitor and law. That ebbs before the vital sun of Love I She came as Dian from the splendor trod The flower-singing way unto her shepherd. Mad sweetly sung of Keats, Endymion. The silken filminess of her green gown, Ethereal, was intermingled in The moon-glazed background of the glade, Where carpeting eyes of the ice-plant wept For her glad beauty. I may not list Passion and Thk Prikst 11 As in a catalogue the things she said — Sweet volubilities of past, dear days, And praise and gratitude for my small deed Of rescue — ever holding well aloof From perilous allusion to her state Of marriage with the wealthy lecher whom She loathed; and vaguest tints athwart her face And glints within her eyes, revealed the fears /\nd sorrows felt, when pensive silence fell. But time so fled before our happiness By contrast with our sorrow trebly sweet — Thus so because we sensed it to be transient From the Sibyl voices, psychic, of the soul — That the round moon had plumbed her arc of sad And ebon sky and overhung the canyon scarp in melancholy, luminous farewell. Ere half the banal sweets of speech were tasted, That lacked the pith but had the sound of meaning. It was that which she did not say that spake The loudest, thus: "I love you," though no nun E.re kept more strictly all proprieties Until — ah God — there fell a drench of sound 1 hrough all that mystic mountain majesty, Where, maddened by the soul of Sappho, sang A morbid mocking bird whose aching throat Seemed bursting to empress the passion pent \^ithin his frenzy rapt, high-soaring soul. And weeping, though a willing **wronged Lucrece,*' She sent me from her beauteous side, to meet — Where? When? — We twain by Nature's in- stmct tied. By man-made error kept apart as long As her forbidding faith ententacled Her heart with duteous fear 12 John Mastkrson; or V. SACRAMENTO— TWO YEARS LATER JANUARY 1. Human life should not be known in years, But in terms of feeling; smiles and tears, Thoughts, dreams, joy, despair, love, hate, hopes and fears. 2. Our emotions are the shifting tones Of the song of Time, and they are stones Whose suppression hearing never owns. 3. Acts are but the progeny of these. Are the many infants on the knees Of the gods, whose whims their puppets please. 4. Phases of my groping life's career Through the bitter, sweet, the lush, the sere. Flow in numbers, as emotions veer. 5. Calm, majestic, through the rifted brake, From the dome I see the river take Turbidly its way, a moving lake. 6. So my life these months has gloomed and gon© Down a river never sunned upon, As the hidden Alph, earth under, drawn! Passion and Thk Priest 13 VI. JUNE -Yet now the elms mirror a greener shade, Whose interlacing limbs, a cool arcade, In Summer's torrid waste, adown th% street Have tented for toil a vocal promenade. Orchestral with the lilt of blithesome birds, Whose operas lose not for lack of words. 2. Hydrangias weave in winds with fresher hope On every shaded lawn, or sunny slope; The daisies and the dahlias brighter greet; The tendrils of the ivy peakward grope With more exalted striving to mine eyes, To-day made all alert from quaint surprise. 3. A new strangeness— there came to me a line. From Aileen, pithy, sad, and yet divine, The first from her in all these days Restrained and sorrowful — the child is mine; Wtih Nature's true design, delineation Depicts distinct to her too fond creation. 4. It cannot be exuberence I feel, But that which comes at night to those who kneel; A stern joy, deeply sacred feeling sways; Perhaps such as to martyrs ere the wheel Revolved, which menaced them with hoarded pain. Designed by tyrant, zealously insane. 5. This life of my life is to me denied By canons of propriety and pride; Avowal of paternity would be a sin, 14 John Mast^rson; or A crime unto the innocent, beside Which, sacrifice of native yearnings wild, Is duty to the mother and the child. 6. The world hsis no suspicion, wrote Aileen, Though nuances of such she late had seen, Mere flickers of a puzzled doubt within Fler husband's stolid heart, disturb his mien — No tender traits revealed parental bliss, No baby slang, no proudly loving kiss. VII. PATERNAL LOVE 1. Decir little baby of mine. Whence came thy Cupid's bow coral? Who could have painted thine eyen With the blue of the deepest dyes floral? Oh, I know, I know I 'Twas thy mother And the Spirit of Love, and none other E 2. Who could have rapt from the rose Her delicate pink for thy cheeks, And the stainless delight of the snows From Sierra's inviolate peaks? It is plain, it is plain! 'Twas thy mother And the Spirit of Love, and none other l Whence, pretty fairy, thy smile. The bitterest wight to disarm? And thy gurglings that evil beguile To become thy warder from harm? My heart tells, my heart tells! 'Twas thy mother And the Spirit of Love, and none other. Passion and The Priest 15 VIII. THE RIVER JULY 1. The steamer swings into the morning mist, Now rising o'er the river; The drawbridge strains its ponderous bulk atwisl; There is a constant quiver, A regulated cadence fore and aft, The beating of the heart within the craft. 2. The pilot steers a serpentining course From bank to bank and center, Familiar with the channel from its source To where the salt-tides enter. — And I am swept along o'er unknown seas, My only log-book one of memories. 3. Aileen is on the boat and by my side, And with her tiny Helen; From whom as many walls and gulfs divide As if I were a felon. She had been welcomed by a valley friend And to her "master's" side her ways now tend 4. The meeting is not chance, but prearranged And lasts but for the journey; Her "Sultan's" love is now somewhat estranged, And though he would be stern, he Succeeds in being only brutal, till He rouses all the woman of her will. 5. I quarrel not with fervor, faith and creed. The trusses of religion, 16 John Mastkrson; or For millions find they fill a yearning need To rest a hopeful bridge on Into the Future and its hidden ways, Where mortal nights become immortal days. 6. The day on which this in my diary goes Finds me a firm agnostic, An open mind that only oiie thing knows: That Fate to him is caustic. And that he would not lay the guilt on God, But puppets, who, as pulls convention, nod. 7. But Aileen is of that devoted Faith Through which the bond of marriage Forever knits, until the husband's death Shall terminate miscarriage Of that most well intended, futile plan Which puts a better mating 'neath the ban 8. HER sin was in her yield — but cm bono? The past is passed forever; She shall not fill the fate of Desdemona To his Othello — never! Of this she gravely spoke, and of her fears, So palely brave, repressing natural teari. And though my heart was desolate, bereft Of all that makes life matter. And only lees of bitter rue were left, I could not think to shatter The decalogue her church prescribed for her; Agnostic, yet HER Faith I must not stir. PaSvSion and The Priest 17 10. "He dreads the scandal of divorce in selfish pride,'* She said, "not for my feeling. He fears the gossip tongues that would deride, The hidden blot revealing, For he is one who bears an ancient name That must not be besmirched by public shame. 11. "But many savage slights he heaps on me Within our life domestic. And oh that I again were free I" The day marched on, majestic. The willows and the cottonwoods retreated Along the banks, as warriors defeated. 12. Night rode down day upon a vaulting gale. Tanged with the salt of ocean; The genius breath of tragedy; the pale Dusk sipped its potion Of red wine from the beaker of the sun; Revived, the stars peeped, timid, one by one. 13. The moon had hung a demi-disk of snow In icy far serenity, But now she gained a luminescent glow, A languid, lorn amenity, As if she tended Man to shepherd Him from the Hate that makes of Law a leopard. 14. Ahead, the jagged bastions of Diabalo Seemed progress interposing. 18 John Maste:rson; or Lit by the waning sunset's winy glow, An awful fortress closing; And then the river made a sudden turn, As motion learns fixed obstacles to spurn. 15. The river finds a level in the sea, Through many tortured mazes, And this a symbol Sybil lene to me; My life's entrammeled phases Will one day merge into the primal vast — Or will it into purest day have passed? 16. I left Aileen and Helen safe aboard The steamer for the southland; Though all the man within me mad implored For love, with firm set mouth and Factitious calm I bade them both farewell. Aileen and I each knew a different hell. 17. Hers was the Hades of the after-death, All blasting fire and fury. Save for the Purgatorial mercy-breath Of an Archangel jury. Mine was the Sheol of the thwarted now — Convention's Crown of Thorns, Love's Bleed ing Brow! 18. One life frowned 'twixt a present Heav'n and me, I mused, in hopeless brooding; His icy interposing mastery, Law-sanctioned, right eluding, Of two souls' happiness were never fled, By Aileen's code — until he join the dead. Passion and The Priest 19 IX. THE PRIMITIVE— ONE YEAR LATER. 1. Can this be happiness here in the cool and shady glamour, Out of the harsh domain where on the racks of trade men clamor? The primitive simplicity of this benignant wood Uncrucifies from ivied bole, the passion of the rood. All graced about with messengers of healing peace and balm; Here life pervades with all the grandeur of Creation's calm. 2. We've builded up a wattled cot, pavilioned by the boughs, Aeolian hung, of harps among the Dryads' peeping brows. It lies within a sheltered dell, a haven in the hills, Anear the everlasting swell and metronoming spills Of icy water o'er a granite plunge, a pine-high scarp; As veers, or rests the fitful wind, its clang is dull or sharp. 3. Barbaric cruelties, refinements of the subtle art Of innuendo and the torture of a wincing heart, Aileen had borne until the buyer of her freedom stepped Beyond the limits of the ills of woman once outwept. Beyond the toleration that her Master's faith demanded. Unto such tortures, unescaped, as mankind makes red-handed. 4. So that in wild revolt she left the hated nuptial Led; With Helen joined me, and despair into the forest led; Sequestered from the hounding of the Puritanic clan That on discovered sinnings only burns the scarlet ban; Reversing epic origin that Christians find their creed in, We've fled from worldly woes into this high-embowered Eden. 20 John Mastkrson; or X. PREMONITION Sweet purple-hearted pimpernel, But vermeil as an ocean shell Upon thy petal fringes, In thee perceptive instincts dwell; Detecting ere slow senses tell A coming storm, thy closing bell With omen fancy tinges. And as thy furling sepals so My dreams their prescient shuttings know, As of impending crashes, When lancing rains the paths shall strew With ravished lilies* ruined snow: And lightnings torch the thunder throe Till strife torrential dashes. What wonder as the spirit sees Such vision, then to still hearts*-ease It bends sad glances burning. Ah, sacred flowVet, born to please. Thy innocence my fever frees. Thy healing nod, thy calm decrees. Some shimmer of truth discerning! Passion and The Priest 21 XI. THE PRIEST OF GATH I. Within the wildest ways that men Have trod, far from the grave- Hke den Of coded tyranny, I roamed in chase Of deer and game; or scanned the face Of waters clear to diamond deeps, The icy pools, where, pining, sleeps, Narcissus of the marble heart. But mine the trout-enticer's part: Or mountain dainties far I sought For those within our lone love cot. 2. Day unto day uttereth bliss And timeless love rains kiss on kiss. Aileen's pale beauty bloomed to joy Near perfect, which could never cloy. Forsooth we knew not when the day Should dawn, when snatched the cup away, And shivered the chime's cerulean tones. The righteous people and their stones Should burst into our Eden sweet And chain us to their penance seat. 3. One eve I found a man whose moan Bespoke dire need; he'd fallen prone Upon an obscure mountain path; 1 learned him as the Priest of Gath, For he was one who'd sworn a vow To storm sin's citadel somehow. ^A pulmonary plaint impelled 22 John Mastkrson; or Him to the solitude; he dwelled Within a grove of pine and fir W^iere constant healing spirits stir. 4, We nursed him to a semblance of His former self; he sunned his love Upon us, warm and pure and bright, As calm as sacred thoughts at night — A holy man, if ever such Since Christ and His redeeming touch, And frequent strove he to recast My creedless shoon to his own last, And sorrowful, he heard our story, As one who grieves for glooming glory. 5. '^Father," I said, "if God were good, If such there were, he never would Have turned awry the hearts of men. Who merely sordid motives ken. He never would see women sold Upon the block for lecher's gold And merit crushed by greedy power. Nor slavery the poor man's dower, Nor Nations vampire Nations' blood And glut upon the reeking flood." 6. "Yet love will conquer all the world,'* He calmly said. "Too near us whirled Are vast events, to view the whole, Or we should see as good the goal Of this world in the universe; Faith will your darkling doubts disperse." And ever toiled he to recall Aileen to be religion's thrall So that uneasy fears I knew Lest she return to churchly rue. Passion and The Priest 23 XI. THE PIT 1. It was as if we two were slaves Of law and domineering knaves, By Circumstance set up as master Whom to defy egged on Disaster: As if a momentary respite Were ours from the pursuing despot, But ever nearer on the wind The baying of the chosen dinned. Why could we not be let alone? A damnable doctrine — the "must atone!" 2. The Priest of Gath at length essayed Return unto his templed glade, There piously on saints to brood— An outdoor priest, but not a Druid To sacrifice young, weeping Love And moaning incense wreathe above The fell, red pyre; with good intent He came into our lives and sent Full many a pious prayer to "God" That "He" not smite us with his '*rod." 3. There dawned a day when darkling clouds Lay on the peaks like Titan shrouds. The air oppressive with alarm. So still the thin Aeolian charm Of pine harmoniums fell mute And louder pulsed the foaming chute. That spilled eternal tides below. Fed by the sun's transmuted snow. 24 John Mastkrson; or I kissed Aileen's forebodings still And proved the mystery of the hilL 4. A cloudy deep unplumbed of man, Cleft when the primal shuddering ran Athwart Creation's rocky spine, Breathed up miasmis as a mine, Down which the quaking fancy peers And Vulcan hammers faintly hears In vast imagining of fables Read nervously on midnight tables. Gaped on my left hand where the trail. But seldom used, led from the vale. 5. The shaggy, mongrel, woody locks Of manzanita crowned rude rocks Of granite, like crushed heads Titanic, Unnecked by thunderbolts tyrannic, When raged rebellious ire of giant, Of Jupiter's regime defiant; And here and yon, hoary and bald. Old skinless skulls of rock appalled With sense of ruined past and future — Sardonic socket and jagged suture. 6. Long, long ago some troglodyte. Upon the margin of the night, Deep down into this plumbless chasm Peering, blinked — when passed the thunder spasm Of grinding elements — and hurled the ape Tarpeian over, then agape. He gazed and hearkened for a sound, But merely awful silence round — As yet, to-day, into the void, War hurls her hosts to be destroyed. 7. As spent with climbing, I rested here, Passion and Thk Priest 25 Unwelcome noises held my ear, Stumbling of one upon the trail Far round a rock that served to veil The climbing traveler, and me From him; I sensed hostility And hid behind an aged boulder, Colossal, yet so poised the shoulder Might with a heave hurl it down crashing. And over the brink send dashing and smashing. 8. Aileen's husband, nemesis, came io stalk me for his private game! At last around the angle leaning. He paused below the overweening Fragment of the elder cliff. One motion of my arm — if — if — - No witness to accuse — no — trace — The plunge of Lucifer in space — The drag upon two lives adrift — Ah how the sands Satanic shift! 9. The power that withheld my hand Was more than I could understand. It seemed a stalemate of the will. The stone that spake: "Thou shalt not kill," W^s but a Moses sculptored line, Sinai-conceived, but not divine. The interdiction of all ages On wise, imperishable pages, ihe sheep's defense against the lion, Supernally ascribed to Zion. 10. And still my spirit lost its blur, My rage its momentary spur; The Cain-red hand of hate eluded, Like some stern statue there I brooded. While he whose strands were interwoven 26 John Mastkrson; or In tangled tapestry and cloven Where mine began, in Life's skeined scheme, Seemed some ghost figure in a dream, While Premonition, Hke a vuhure. There hovered for some vile sepulture. 11. More tangible, but terror- fraught, A sudden sight made polyglot A babel of the inner voices, From Fear to Hope — as Dawn rejoices. In consummated deeds of night, The man v^ho's struggled fierce with Right And lost, but lavish Fate, his aid. Misfortune on his rival laid — So o'er me transient gloating swept At Death which on the other crept. 12. It was a stalking mountain lion Whose stealth disturbed no foliaged cion, Whose yellow eyes, abhorrent, burned. As they upon his prey were turned — A savage symboled cinerary. Fuming all the hate my heart could carry. — Unmindful of his nemesis, (So obtuse Man's native premises) The hunter hunted idly rested, An easy spoil for an end detested. 13. Again, what monitor, what hand. What minatory, stern command; What triumph of the Inner Spirit, What Power made me list and hear It, Unconceived; 'twas not my will Which reft the lion of his kill, W^,hich bade me raise, and aim and fire, To balk the beast of his desire. Passion and Thk Priest 27 Mysterious, occult ends of Fate! Most senseless what I now narrate! 14. For he whose life I had preserved. Yea twice a better will deserved, Perceiving me now half revealed And thinking not myself to shield, With face fear white and raw, red oath, 'Assassin!" shrieked— and ere we both A nearing step could take, upraised His rifle, and searing, grazed The scoring bit of steel and lead, A harmless pain athwart my head. 15. And ere the maniac again Might aim, perhaps and not in vain, I grappled with him on the brink Of space — the brain knows not to think In dreams, when, falling endlessly. The lifting nadir we can see. To strain for epithets is vain; 1 cannot conjure from my brain Meet words; he whirled into the chasm — ■ It seemed a wild, dream-borne phantasm! 16. And still no dream; his cap there lay Upon the weapon cast in the fray. In semi-stupor I hurled them wide Into the maw of the mountain side, Then shivering, hastened from the scene To sift the sequel with Aileen: Whether to meet the law half way Or saving silence to obey; And all the homeward path I heard That poor, last, vain accusing word. 17. When yet afar, amazed, I saw 28 John Mastkrson; or A fitful smoke, as of wet straw, And leaping madly through the brake, Down tangled slopes new trails to make, Vaulting pebbled, arid beds Of bygone brooks and tramping heads Of tender buds that interposed, I came to where the chapter closed. Our rough-hewn hut in ashes lay Gone, gone, save dregs of dead flames, gray! XII. FEVER. 1. Falling, falling, endlessly falling, Like the flame of a shivered star: Calling, calling, soundlessly calling, As the dreams of a dreamer are: Out of Orion in the aeons past Fiery mist moths flew in the vast. Drawing a comet's car. 2. Into the sun from out of Orion, The fire-moths are warming their wings; Pinions of melody, such as Amphion Wove on Aeolian strings; But as Icarian, waxen were they. Molten as snow in a premature May — The soul falls and falls as it sings. 3. Can there be no end to the flaming? Can there be no floor to the fall? Fire into water, earth aiming, And over the craggy wall. Down, down, down in a fuming Quest of its rest resuming: Awaiting Creation's call. Passion and Thk Priest 29 4. Fire and water are living And song is Creation's breath; Love burning, sorrow^ giving Its ashes the pit of Death. Real or unreal this dreaming? Seen or unseen this seeming? No mortal thing happiness hath! XIII. JUDGMENT. 1. They've called me guilty; Ivs^elve men said The wrong of it lay on my head; The gallows bear perennially; No lovingkindness nurtures them; More lethal than the upas tree, Vile in root, branch, in bud and stem: And I shall bloom and fade thereon, For mercy from the world is gone. 2. The fever left my brain ne.it morn And as the leper all men scorn, Marked by the curse that blighted Job, But lacking hope of happy end. Upon my soul a sackcloth robe. In vain I fevered for a friend: The story told lacked all belief: Men look for murder in a thief. 3. For love illicit is a theft, By laws transmitted from the weft Of social fabric when the clan Decided on monogamy, And stocks and chains were for the man 30 John Mastkrson; or Who lived in free misogamy. It is done well; it is done well; But loveless marriage is a hell. 4. And still, no more than marriageless love, When free of fetters is the dove. Aileen the victim was of BOTH; On her fair head the double curse; How beautiful the sanctioned troth! Than love illegal, can aught be worse? But love by gold is crucified! Nailed on the cross, love drooped and died! 5. My tale of self-defense was dust Before the wind, or as the rust That blinkards see on tarnished truth: They made a martyr of the dead; The living won no word of ruth; "Hanging too good for him," they said. And so to-omorrow's morning sun Will see the real murder done. 6. 1 gaze upon thee, fading day, Who soon resume the primal clay: But musical the heart within, For Aileen at the death-cell stood, And oh, I seemed all purged of sin: I felt the future would be good. My baby took my praying kiss And faith then came with flooding bliss! 7. How I rejoice the ashes of That hut held not the two I love! Aileen's mad father set the fire And with my loves departed: And as Lot's wife looked on the pyre, But spared, she gazed, though broken-hearted. Passion and Thk Prikst 31 It was a strand within the plot: The husoand's awful night was not. 8. farewell, broad earth with all I love; Farewell, hills, vales and peaks above; Farewell, sweet flowers of the forest; Farewell, bright songsters of the glen; Farewell, thou sea, as foam thou pourest; Farewell, farewell, all haunts of men; Farewell to all; in peace I leave; Farewell, farewell, twain hearts that grieve! XIV. OiN TAMALPAIS. In Excelsis, In dreams, I stood Exalted far above the Wood: Fir, bay, laurel, pine Below this rocky shrine, The flayed madrone. As fairy shoots. There, poised alone Upon the fruits Of Time's upheaval With Cain coeval, I read the roots Of mysteries, [he histories Of souls and stars In all the graphic imagery of scars. 2. The mist that robed The sleeping sea The light englobed revealed to me. Blown o'er the minor hills — Illusion Thought distills — Creation rolled 32 John Masterson; or As if from chaos, Worlds manifold Of light, to ray us, Were spawned prolific In beatific Forms to dismay us. It was Creation And Revelation Of God to those Who visioned primal planetary throes. 3. That drama vast Awoke within Feelings akin To Shelley's arching thought; Mine inner gropings sought For words; came none! Beyond expression ! As tremors run In pent recession Along mute lyres Whose unthrummed wires Have ta'en possession Of inspired yearning From vast tones turning To slaves of waves A..11 vibrant atoms, e'en to Heavens architraves! XV. 1. So passed the glimmer of a midnight dream. As along the Summer seas the ghostly gleam Of some far falling meteorite lies For one flame-penciled moment, then dies; When up I started from waning sleep; Passion and The Prikst 33 A palpitating fancy moved me deep: My warders were approaching with a priest, Ere faintly God's red stylus wrote the east. What hastened they? Why grudged me half my vision. To disincorporate me with elision Of moments priceless — ere the sempiternal And starry dial should blue to light diurnal, And I might taste a final kissing sun So niggardly admitted by the one Checked casement ? Now with careful, feline tread, The cautious footfalls hemmed my cell, and lo! I blinked, as weak-orbed mortals at the snov/, For garishly a light was flung full on my face. "Father!" I cried. "You come with grace!" And then the massive bolts were shot amain, To grate and groan as though inflicted pain Spilled fear: I gazed and in my vision's path I read a miracle — the Priest of Gath! 2. A modern Paul to open prison gates! By him to be sweet solaced, solving hates For a prospective gallows bourgeon! I held His kindly hand in silence and beheld Some subtle, oriflamming radiance, As if an aureoled Apostle did advance. "Good Father!" raven-wise I croaked at last, "Some marvelous illusion, or some vast, Deceptive wile of vainly hoping thought Writes glory in some message joy-enwrought Upon your face! ' His eyes were moistly luminous, And ill reserved his feelings — human is Even the man whose duties clerical Preclude surrender to a mien hysterical. "Reprieved," he said in that bell-voice disease Could not deprive of all its charm to please. "A pardon very shortly must ensue. 34 John Masterson; or The Governor has signed this boon for you." And hereupon the Captain of the Guard \ With kindly speech confirmed .... This night bright starred \ For me: the cogs of Fate at last had turned, | Reversing, for it seemed their victim spurned Had naught of further worth in lieu of moans — And hearts at last were living — not stones! 3. Too tedious would it be the priestly words To recapitulate; of all the bird? Most tiresome is the magpie, so that only The substance I impart. That tragic, lonely Encounter on the verge precipitous, The Priest of Gath had seen, far over us Ensconced within a certain beetling eyrie That overlooked a waste of rock as dreary As Dante's dusk Inferno, fastnesses Profound, mysterious, and vastnesses Of craggy, violet distance. He had sought To follow me, but native feelings wrought Upon his pulmonary weakness so That, crimson from his pallid lips the flow Ensued. He fell into a dreamless swoon. Reviving hours later when the moon, Serenely sheening pity, shone upon His suffering and lighted with a wan Effulgence all his falt'ring homeward path — And many days the Priest of Gath Alone fought off inexorable throes, But still preserved the courage Vision knows. Until his mustered strength permitted travel: His testimony saved without a cavil. Passion and Thk Priest 35 XVI. ANOTHER YEAR PASSES ]. The Priest of Gath is healed and I am ill. But not in faith of reclamation still Of ill-starred destiny: I moiled a maze Of disappointment many, many days Of twisting in an inefficient search, As one who sought a shrine rapt trom a church. State's pardon came to wash my tablets clean And all my heart-beats pulsed into a pean Till clsished the muting discord of a lost Aileen! 2. A prisoner within her father's castle kept; As many a feudal maiden once outwept Long days; what lie he must have told her! Forgive him? Yes. Restore the hopes that moulder? That were another matter. Believed me dead? Such is true solace . . . Late one night she fled. The age is new. But Wealth is tyrant still! As Mirabeau's own father's overweening will By cachet dungeoned him, his rebel fire to chill. 3. Through all the marts of men I sought her, A Gabriel, in search of Benedict's lorn daughter. Evangeline? I hold mine no less pure In heart. To me the stain sole must inure. And so I dare reversed comparison. — Yet like to wasted soldiers in a garrison, Besieged and famished, daily promise dwindled A.nd every new delusion that my fancy kindled Turned tawdry, as by Rumor's brass a dupe is swindled. 4. Then fever came to burn my barriers down. Despairing furies stormed and took the town. 36 John Mastkrson; or The Priest of Gath in lovingkindness came To balm with cooling hands the throbbing flame. The balsams of the forest, mountain air Had healed this sacrificing man of prayer, Whose thought had ever been of aiding others, Aspiring but amelioration of his brother's Trials with a love exalted as a mother's. 5. Aileen, I faint, in my great love of thee! Bright visions vie, in gorgeous pageantry! I see thy beauteous face as in a mist! And lo! It bends upon me! I have kissed A luminous dissolving nothingness! Thus balefully doth Fancy soothe and bless A^nd torture with its sweetest vanishment. Until the fiery love within the victim pent Hath burned his heart into an ash to find its vent! 6. But still the ember glows and so it must Till love, its germ, with it is cold in dust. The priestly care has gradually restored My courage, nearly of its phials poured. "My son," he says. "Within a passing while I leave for Molochai, the leper isle. That is my destiny, the voice of God Commands me, humble as my Jesus trod. To whose most muted whisper must I, yielding, nod." 7. To Molochai, the isle of living death! Where Time is but the pulsing of one breath! "Father," said I, "And might I thus atone For all the tares my selfishness has sown — " "No, no," he gently put the thought aside. "Your duty clear. It cannot be denied. It is to find the woman, make her wife And give the child a name; there is the end of strife; I've planned a compensating purpose for your life." Passion and Thk Prie:st 37 XVII. COMPENSATION 1, The glasses glitter 'neath the garish blaze; The dancers wend athwart the waltz's maze Within the polished place of tables clear, Where many sip the contemplative wine, Or, more plebeian, quaff the brimming beer. And weirdly syncopated music hear. Where Gaiety reigns on his urban throne, And each would hide and leave his canker care alone. 2. The shifting moments see new revelers fed Adown the marble stair, to gay lights led; For San Francisco's night is second day; The artist and the artisan but learn Then how to make the "Western Paris" gay, When midnight censers in the cabaret. To Babylonian bursts of laughter burn. And ashen Care, intolerant, dies in the urn. 3. I sit alone, a puzzled looker-on, A hopeful skeptic, perverse interest drawn, Sub-conscious stirrings in my restive mind, A premonition of events to fall, The strange, unbidden sense that seems to find In the Before from pangs long left Behind, A change of fortune, as a far soul's call In some wise penetrates the kindred spirit's wall. 38 John Mastkrson; or 4. The dilettantes return unto their nooks With lavish color and more froward looks, To yield the floor to one who is to dance, Some new and daring, gracile coryphee — Some "La Petite Marie" from sprightly France, Who shall recall how swift the fads advance — A beauteous being from the wings I see. And startle with a cry: "Aileen!" — -and not "Marie!" 5. No dramatist fantastical devised A stranger scene than that we improvised. As open arras to open arms we met; She pale and momentarily overborne. As one who sees a ghost she can't forget. Whose heart believes, whose doubting brain not yet Is mistress of its power, passion torn, Rejoicing, though its habit long to mourn. 6. And all impressions vaguely to a blur Were interfused, except the gift of her . . The queries curious, the lip-curled leers. The hum of all the titillated crowd. The sympathy of better hearts avowed, And though we were the cynosure of sneers. No carmine shame we knew, for these were sacred tears. 7. Remote, unreal, was the sweep of lights And all confusion of a city's nights As sv/iftly, soon for her retreat we sped. And in the afterglow of sudden joy She spoke of how she learned to deem me dead. How hope a!id almost reason from her fled, When, prisoned, by her father she was tcld That one was duly dead for whom no knell was knolled Passion and The Priest 39 8. Abhorrent was the thought of Hfe until A baby's hands implored a sterner will; And motived by a wild desire to flee Her hateful home and him who caused the wreck, By strategem she and the child were free, Supposing quicklime were the end of me. She followed fortune's ever casual beck, Became the ballet, as a rose without a fleck. 9. Next morning were we wedded by our priest: The sun had hymned his pean from the east; The gloried winds had blown a symphony. And roses, roses, Beauty's incense shed: But, joy of all! Our baby lisped to me That sacred, loving word of ecstacy, That gladdens gloom unto the heart that bled; The Priest of Gath his noble benediction shed. 10. Next morning sailed he for his dutied Gath, For Molochai to tread the martyr's path. To yield his life unto his fellow man; His Christ-like spirit seemed an aureole About his silvered brow; since Time began No greater abnegation led the van; One touched his robe as lepers did the stole, The sacred white of Jesus' faith that made them whole. 11. He'd given me an island in the sea Of Oceania, his by legacy, A coral-coasted, breaker-beaten strand. With harbor crescented for commerce calm — One-half the copra for his lepers planned. The other mine, the yield of pearl and palm — Aileen a farewall wept; I pressed his hand And boundless love he sped from eyes, sky blue and bland 1 40 John Mastkrson; or 12. And so we bade The Priest of Gath Farewell: The steamer bore him to the vales where dwell They who have quaffed disciples' blood and bread Of Christ's own deathless body theirs, One with their tissue, yea, for whom the prayers Of saints beyond the Sinaied temple pled I — The Priest of Gath as one a nimbus wears And knows it not — a Grail-keeper unawares! «S.^"^ Of" CONGRESS f iililililill . 018 602 515 5 9