M-fhiiiLi: i!l'<:>' Willi •**';•;;' ill ' ''t i'- Ji I; .it 1.VJ '^^fli/lili ^5 -L'^''^ > *bv^ •^^o« V/ •, ^ ^'V:^-, -^^ v-^^ ♦ o. ^o.. -TT,-' .0^ '-^ °" A*^ '^f ^'^VT' .A .*'\ G* *3 ♦.-XT'- /V -^^ -^^ • o -U-o^ 5-^ A^ ■<> * o , " o,T Ov- 0* '» o. *bV^ ■v-o^ :° '^^ ,^'^'' -^^i^'- "^.S. ,N^ ■ »>vVA'-. "^^n .<^"^ ^'^^'' -^^ ^^ ^'^%f/h.'_ -^^^ c>"^ »^«!Sli^'. •^.. .v^- /^ ^^P-i" • • * -V ^*' .."•• .O"-^ ^'I'^.'^o, .. ^ i."-^^^ *^-..' V •. J"^-^ y ^ , "t '^0^ o, *'T;t' a ^'' "V.^'^ '0* '. ^^M.bv^ :i^^^< '-^"^0^ f *bV "^« A ^o^^^ o5°o vo ♦-..«' o; TK?£5,riu]^et_vrn.- (/ , t^*-* c.-e^o . /-(. c t '\ m< " / la Oil all-- iW E5T€S0LAV1AT SEP 6 1886 ' ' ' Copyright, ISSn, By Estes and Lauriat. < ^ aiuibcvsita iflvcss: John Wilson and Son, CAMBRincE. THE EARL'S RETURN. o»{o /^^\ AGGED and tall stood the castle wall, "'' And the Squires, at their sport, in the great South Court, ■ tMi o. Lounged all day long from stable to hall j/ W \ Laughingly, lazily, one and all. The land about was barren and blue. And swept by the wing of the wet sea-mew. Seven fishermen's huts on a shelly shore : Sand-heaps behind, and sand-banks before : And a black champaign streaked white all through To a great salt pool which the ocean drew, Sucked into itself, and disgorged it again To stagnate and steam on the mineral plain ; Not a tree or a bush in the circle of sight. But a bare black thorn which the sea-winds had withered With the drifting scum of the surf and blight. And some patches of gray grass-land to the right, Where the lean red-hided cattle were tethered : A reef of rock wedged the water in twain. And a stout stone tower stood square to the main. in the grfqr(§°^ttlC!'^r■'■, LangtliAgly 1 Iqzily. And the flakes of the spray tliat were jerked away From the froth on the Hp of the bleak blue sea Were sometimes flung by the wind, as it swung Over turret and terrace and balcony, To the garden below where, in desolate corners Under the mossy green parapet there. The lilies crouched, rocking their white heads like mourners, And burned off the heads of the flowers that were Pining and pale in their comfortless bowers, Dry-bushed with the sharp stubborn lavender. W^ And paven with disks of the torn sunflowers. Which, day by day, were strangled, and stripped Of their ravelling fringes and brazen bosses. And the hardy mary-buds nipped and ripped Into shreds for the beetles that lurked in the mosses. Here she lived alone, and from year to year She saw the black belt of the ocean appear At her casement each morn as she rose ; and each morn Her eye fell first on the bare black thorn. This was all: nothing more: or sometimes on the shore The fishermen sang when the fishing was o'er; Or the lowing of oxen fell dreamily, Close on the shut of the glimmering eves. Through some gusty pause in the moaning sea. When the pools were splashed pink by the thirsty beeves. Or sometimes, when the pearl-lighted morns drew the tinges Of the cold sunrise up their amber fringes, A white sail peered over the rim of the main, Looked all about o'er the empty sea, Stao^tjered back from the fine line of white lisfht ajjain, And dropped down to another world silently. Then she breathed freer. With sickening" dread She had watched five pale young moons unfold From their notchy cavern in light, and spread To the fuller light, and again grow old. And dwindle away to a luminous shred. " He will not come back till the Spring s green and gold. And I would that I witli the leaves were dead, Quiet somewhere with them in the moss and the mould, When he and the summer come this way," she said. And when the dull sky darkened down to the edges. And the keen frost kindled in star and spar. The sea might be known by a noise on the ledges Of the long crags, gathering power from afar Through his roaring bays, and crawling back Hissing, as o'er the wet pebbles he dragged His skirt of foam frayed, dripping, and jagged, And reluctantly fell down the smooth hollow shell Of the night, whose lustrous surface of black In spots to an intense blue was worn. But later, when up on the sullen sea-bar The wide large-lighted moon had arisen. Where the dark and voluminous ocean grew luminous, Helping after her slowly one little shy star That shook blue in the cold, and looked forlorn, The clouds were troubled, and the wind from his prison Behind them leaped down with a light laugh of scorn ; Then the last thing she saw was that bare black thorn ; For the forked tree, as the bleak blast took it, Howled through it, and beat it, and bit it, and shook it, Seemed to visibly waste and wither and wizen. And the snow was lifted into the air Layer by layer, And turned into vast white clouds that flew Silent and fleet up the sky, and were riven And jerked into chasms which the sun leaped through, Opening crystal gulfs of a breezy blue Fed with rainy lights of the April heaven. From eaves and leaves the quivering dew Sparkled off; and the rich earth, black and bare. Was starred with snowdrops everywhere; And the crocus upturned its flame, and burned Here and there. " The Summer," she said, " cometh blithe and bold ; And the crocus is lit for her welcoming; And the days will have garments of purple and gold ; But I would be left by the pale green Spring With the snowdrops somewhere under the mould ; For I dare not think what the Summer may bring." Pale she was as tlie bramble blooms That fill the long fields with their faint perfumes, When the May-wind flits finely through sun-threaded showers, Breathing low to himself in his dim meadow-bowers. And her cheek each year was paler and thinner, And white as the pearl that was hung at her ear, As her sad heart sickened and pined within her, And failed and fainted from )'ear to year. So that the Seneschal, rough and gray. Said, as he looked in her face one day, " Saint Catherine save all good souls, I pray. For our pale young lady is paling away. Oh the Saints," he said, smiling bitter and grim, " Know she "s too fair and too good for him ! " Sometimes she walked on the upper leads. And leaned on the arm of the weather-worn Warden. Sometimes she sat 'twixt the mildewy beds Of the sea-singed flowers in the Pleasaunce Garden. Till the rotting blooms that lay thick on the walks Were combed by the white sea-gust like a rake. And the stimulant steam of the leaves and stalks Made the coiled memory, numb and cold. That slept in her heart like a dreaming snake, Drowsily lift itself fold by fold. And gnaw and gnaw hungrily, half awake. ,J nir(|ei\' Sometimes she looked from the window below To the great South Court, and the Squires, at their sport, Loungingly loitering to and fro. She heard the grooms there as they cursed one another. She heard the great bowls falling all day long In the bowling-alleys. She heard the song Of the shock-headed Pages that drank without stint in The echoing courts, and swore hard at each other. She saw the red face of the rough wooden Ouintin, And the swinging sand-bag ready to smother The awkward Squire that missed the mark. And, all day long, between the dull noises Of the bowls, and the oaths, and the singing voices, The sea boomed hoarse till the skies were dark. But when the swallow, that sweet new-comer. Floated over the sea in the front of the summer, The salt dry sands burned white, and sickened Men's sight in the glaring horn of the bay ; And all things that fasten, or float at ease In the silvery light of the leprous seas With the pulse of a hideous life were quickened. Fell loose from the rocks, and crawled crosswise away, Slippery sidelong crabs, half strangled By the white sea grasses in which they were tangled. And those half-living creatures, orbed, rayed, and sharp- angled, Fan-fish, and star-fish, and polypous lumps, Hueless and boneless, that languidly thickened, Or flat-faced, or spiked, or ridged with humps. Melting off from their clotted clusters and clumps Sprawled over the sliore in the heat of the day. An hour before the sun was set A darker ripple rolled over the sea; The white rocks quivered in wells of jet; And the great West, opening breathlessly Up all his inmost orange, gave Hints of something distant and sweet That made her heart swell; far up the wave The clouds that lay piled in the golden heat Were turned into types of the ancient mountains In an ancient land; the weeds, which forlorn Waves were swaying neglectfully, By their sound, as they dipped into sparkles that dripped In the emerald creeks that ran up from the shore, Brought back to her fancy the bubble of fountains Leaping and falling continually In valleys where she should wander no more. And when, over all of these, the night Among her mazy and milk-white signs. And clustered orbs, and zigzag lines, Burst into blossom of stars and light. The sea was glassy ; the glassy brine Was paven with lights, — blue, crystalline, And emerald keen ; the dark world hung Balanced under the moon, and swung In a net of silver sparkles. Then she Rippled her yellow hair to her knee, Bared her warm white bosom and throat. And from the lattice leaned athirst. There, on the silence did she gloat With a dizzy pleasure steeped in pain. Half catching the soul of the secret that blended God with his starlight, then feeling it vain, Like a pining poet ready to burst With the weight of the wonder that grows in his brain, Or a nishtinfrale, mute at the sound of a lute That is swelling and breaking his heart with its stram. Waiting, breathless, to die when the music is ended. For the sleek and beautiful midnight stole, Like a faithless friend, her secret care, Crept through each pore to the source of the soul. And mocked at the anguish which he found there, Shining away from her, scornful and fair In his pitiless beauty, refusing to share The discontent which he could not control. The water-rat, as he skulked in the moat, Set all the slumbrous lilies afloat. And sent a sharp quick pulse along The stagnant light, that heaved and swung The leaves together. Suddenly At times a shooting star would spin Shell-like out of heaven, and tumble in, And burst o'er a city of stars ; but she, As he dashed on the back of the zodiac. And quivered and glowed down arc and node. And split sparkling into infinity, Thought that some angel, in his reveries Thinking of earth, as he pensively Leaned over the star-grated balcony In his palace among the Pleiades, And grieved for the sorrow he saw in the land, Had dropped a white lily from his loose hand. And thus many a night, steeped pale in the light Of the stars, when the bells and clocks Had ceased in the towers, and the sound of the hours Was eddying about in the rocks. Deep-sunken in bristling broidery between the black oak Fiends sat she, And under the moth-flitted canopy Of the mighty antique bed in her chamber, With wild eyes drinking up the sea, And her white hands heavy with jewelry, Flashing as she loosed languidly Her satins of snow and of amber. And as, fold by fold, these were rippled and rolled To her feet, and lay huddled in ruins of gold, She looked like some pale spirit above Earth's dazzling passions forever flung by, Freed from the stains of an earthly love, And those splendid shackles of pride that press On the heart till it aches with the gorgeous stress, Quitting the base Past remorsefully. And so she put by the coil and care Of the day that lay furled like an idle weft Of heaped spots which a bright snake hath left, Or that dark house, the blind worm's lair. When the star-winged moth from the windows hath crept. Steeped her soul in a tearful prayer. Shrank into her naked self, and slept. And as she slumbered, starred and eyed All over with angry gems, at her side, The Fiends in the oak kept ward and watch And the querulous clock, on its rusty catch. With a quick tick, husky and thick. Clamored and clacked at her sharply. Unsoothed from slumber she awoke An hour ere dawn. The lamp burned faint. The Fiends glared at her out of the oak. She rose, and fell at the shrine of the Saint. There with clasped hands to the Mother Of many sorrows, in sorrow, she prayed; Till all things in the room melted into each other, And vanished in gyres of flickering shade. Leaving her all alone, with the face Of the Saint growing large in its one bright place. Then on a sudden, from far, a fear Through all her heart its horror drew. As of something hideous growing near. Cold fingers seemed roaming through her damp hair; Her lips were locked. The power of prayer Left her. She dared not turn. She knew. From his panel atilt on the wall up there. The crim Earl was gazing her through and through. But when the casement, a grisly square, Flickered with clay, she flung it wide, And looked below. The shore was bare. In the mist tumbled the dismal tide. One ghastly pool seemed solid white; The forked shadow of the thorn Fell through it, like a raven rent In the steadfast blank down which it went. The blind world slowly gathered sight. The sea was moaninsr on to morn. '£> And the Summer into the Autumn waned. And under the watery Hyades The gray sea swelled, and the thick sky rained, And the land was darkened by slow decrrees. But oft, in the low West, the day Smouldering sent up a sullen flame Along the dreary waste of gray, As though in that red region lay, Heaped up, like Autumn weeds and flowers For fire, its thorny fruitless hours, And God said, "Burn it all away!" When all was dreariest in the skies. And the gusty tract of twilight muttered, A strange slow smile grew into her eyes, As though from a great wa\- off it came And was weary ere down to her lips it fluttered. And turned into a sigh, or some soft name Whose syllables sounded likest sighs, Half smothered in sorrow before they were uttered. ^^ /^n.(! Ifiuii'a«((i iu«® 5. 5;gK p- Sometimes, at night, a music was rolled — A ripple of silver harp-strings cold — From the halls below where the Minstrel sung. With the silver hair, and the golden tongue, And the eyes of passionless, peaceful blue (Like twilight which faint stars gaze througli), Wise with the years which no man knew. And first the music, as though the wings Of some blind angel were caught in the strings, Fluttered with weak endeavor: anon The uncaged heart of music grew bold And cautiously loosened, length by length, The golden cone of its great undertone. Like a strong man using mild language to one That is weaker, because he is sure of his strength. But once — and it was at the fall of the day, When she, if she closed her eyes, did seem To be wandering far, in a sort of dream, With some lost shadow, away, away, Down the heart of a golden land which she Remembered a great way over the sea. There came a trample of horses and men ; And a blowing of horns at the castle gate ; Then a clattering noise ; then a pause ; and then. With the sudden jerk of a heavy weight, And a wrangling and jangling and clinking and clanking, The sound of the falling of cable and chain ; And a grumbling over the dewy planking That shrieked and sung with the weight and strain ; And the rough Seneschal bawled out in the hall, " The Earl and the Devil are come back aeain ! " * -^T^^Tv ■■'■ f,i . * <"'!, ..„V lll.th!-*''' Her heart stood still for a moment or more. Then suddenly tugged, and strained, and tore At the roots, which seemed to give way beneath. She rushed to the window, and held her breatli. High up on the beach were the long black ships, And the brown sails hung from the masts in strips; And the surf was whirled over and over them. And swept them dripping from stern to stem. Within, in the great scjuare court below. Were a hundred rough-faced men, or so. And one or two pale fair-haired slaves Whom the Earl had brought over the winter waves. There was a wringing of horny hands ; And a swearing of oaths; and a great deal of laughter; The grim Earl growling his hoarse commands To the Warden that followed him growling after; A lowing of cattle along the wet sands ; And a plashing of hoofs on the slippery rafter. As the long-tailed black-maned horses each Went over the bridge from the gray sea-beach. Uk« (lr''|i«'l!la.t plung« s.uJ;lil> (1°«\ fr°m tk« tkurJv |nt» a. J'i, thit i^ gr°.\n;n| u.n(!«r, Now muffled and thick; now loud, and more Loud as he came near the chamber door. Then there fell, with a rattle and shock, An iron glove on the iron lock, And the door burst open — the Earl burst through it But she saw him not. The window-pane. Far off, grew large and small again ; Tlie staggering light did wax and wane, Till there came a snap of the heavy brain ; And a slow-subsiding pulse of pain ; And the whole world darkened into rest, As the grim Earl pressed to his grausome breast His white wife. She hung heavy there On his shoulder without breath. Darkly filled with sleepy death From her heart up to lier eyes ; Dead asleep : and ere he knew it (How Death took her by surprise Helpless in her great despair) Smoothing back her yellow hair, He kissed her icy brows; unwound His rough arms, and she fell to the ground. v^prr' Fv fke icrf^M W4,J lv/ I iK"x ,K' 'ti'or\ff,= 'f b'&'r.' • • • • ■Ha.c| iM w'nvK'^ b^^Tv. w;ier nvKV ^K= w*.t Qla*^*--^ TK^I''^ Ki(i f\e/Cr k'-i\ ^irxg, I M't,^- But ««er 'i^te. >f<':^ te|«,r^ f l»<,/«r £^e>,uy ""v fcvrtK hiik K»"v ''t'fS'i l°P«/jr. %, _;i.ig^SiWi And so she died, — the pale-faced girl. And, for nine days after that, the Earl Fumed and fret, and raved and swore, Pacing up and down the chamber floor, And tearing his black beard as he went. In the fit of his sullen discontent. And the Seneschal said it was fearful to hear him ; And not even the weather-worn Warden went near him ; And the shock-headed Pages huddled anear, And bit their white lips till they bled, for fear. But at last he bade them lift her lightly, And bury her by the gray sea-shore, Where the winds that blew from her own land nightly Might wail round her grave through the wild rocks hoar. So they lifted her lightly at dead of night, And bore her down by the long torch-light, — Lank-haired faces, sallow and keen. That burned out of the glassy pools between The splashing sands which, as they plunged through. The coffin-lead weighed them down into; And their feet, as they plucked them up, left pits Which the water oozed into and out of by fits — — And so to the deep-mouthed bays black brim, Where the pale priests, all white-stoled and dim, Lifted the cross and chanted the hymn. That her soul might have peace when her bones were dust. And her name be written among the Just. The Warden walked after the Seneschal grim ; And the shock-headed Pages walked after him : And with mattock and spade a grave was made. Where they carved the cross, and they wrote her name. And, returning each by the way that he came. They left her under the bare black thorn. V 'X'he salt sea-wind sang shrill in the head of it; And the bitter night grew chill with the dread of it; When the great round moon rose up forlorn From the reefs, and whitened towards the morn. For the forked tree, as the bleak blast took it. Howled through it, and beat it, and bit it, and shook it, Like a living thing bewitclied and bedeviled, Visibly shrunk, and shuddered and shrivelled. «>=sSS^ ^A.nd ao'ain the swallow, that false new-comer, Fluttered over the sea in the front of the summer; A careless singer, as he should be That only skimmeth the mighty sea; "^^ Dipped his wings as he came and went, "^ And chirruped and twittered for heart's content, . ■-— And built on the new-made grave. But when The Summer was over he flew back again. :