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This eBook is a reproduction produced by the National Library of New Zealand from source material that we believe has no known copyright. Additional physical and digital editions are available from the National Library of New Zealand.

EPUB ISBN: 978-0-908328-82-6

PDF ISBN: 978-0-908331-78-9

The original publication details are as follows:

Title: Songs unsung

Author: Andersen, Johannes Carl

Published: Whitcombe and Tombs, Christchurch, N.Z., 1903

SONGS UNSUNG

BV r JOHANNES CARL ANDERSEN.

Christchurch, Wellington & Dunedin, N.Z.;

Melbourne and London :

WHITCOMBE AND TOMBS LIMITED.

PRINTED BY WHITCOMBE AND TOMBS LIMITED. CHRISTCHURCH, WELLINGTON AND DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND MELBOURNE AND LONDON.

Dedicated with the “Cradle Song to My Mother.

INTRODUCTION.

I HAVE been asked by the author, as a former student of mine, to write a few lines of introduction to his volume. It is with some reluctance that I have consented ; for its intrinsic merits are such that it should find its public without introduction. When the manuscript was put into my hands, I was delighted to find, wherever I dipped into it, the “good wine” of true poetry “that needs no bush.” On almost every page that I read, I recognised the fine music by nature wedded to beauty of emotion or thought that marks the work of a real poet. I could not fail to find echoes of the old familiar Home singers; for Mr. Andersen is manifestly a keen student of all that is poetically best in European literature. But even in the deliberate imitations, as e.g. in “Aspirations to Immortality,” there is a distinctive, if not original, note that makes them well worth reading. It is a somewhat ambitious project to answer and revise the philosophy of Wordsworth in a direct echo of his famous Ode on “Intimations of Immortality”: it seems to justify itself; for the thought is as philosophical as the model, without loss of clearness, and the language is as limpid and musical, whilst there is nothing of slavishness in the echo. But it is in the lyrics, it seems to me, that the volume is most successful. I would instance only three: “Morning,” “Can we Change?” and the “Cradle Song.” For the musical expression of the sounds and sights of the

vi

dawn by the seaside, it would be difficult to surpass the first. In “Can we Change?” the old thought is worked up into a song that is worthy of the best musical setting, and has a flavour of Herrick about it. But the “ Cradle Song” is, to my mind, the finest of the lyrics ; it is so pathetic, and so nobly expressive of the noblest of all passions—maternal love, and it has the very rhythm of the rocking cradle in its music. And for the more artificial forms of poetry, it would be difficult to find anything more poetical than the Rondeau “Soft, Low and Sweet,” or the Sonnet “Summer’s Last Flower.”

It is a great pleasure to know that such fine work can be produced in a country like ours, given over entirely, as is commonly supposed, to the clipping of wool and the freezing of mutton. It would be a still greater pleasure to know that there is a large public in these colonies capable of appreciating such good work.

J. Macmillan Brown

GENERAL INDEX.

Note.— Against pieces which have been previously published, the name of the publication has been inserted. The Editors are hereby thanked for permission to include the same in this volume. Contributions to Sydney Bulletin are over the pen-name Ahau.

PAGE

1. Home-Echoes ... ... ... ... 1

2. Lilies (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... ... 5

3. April of the Antipodes ( Sydney Bulletin) ... 6

4. June (Canterbury Times) ... ... 7

5. Soft, Low and Sweet (Canterbury Times , etc.) ... 9

6. Retrospect ... ... ... ... ... 10

Cradle-Song ... ... ... ... 11

8. Moonrise (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... ... 13

9. When we are One ... ... ... ... 15 {New Zealand Illustrated Magazine)

10. Rosemary and Rue (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 16

11. Peace (Weekly Press)... ... ... ... 18

12. Summer’s Last Flower ... ... ... 20

13. Evensong (Canterbury Times) ... ... ... 21

14. Love’s Onward Day (Sydney Bulletin)... ... 23

15. The Dance ... ... ... ... 24

16. One By One (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 27

17. Pikiarero —Yellow Clematis ... ... ... 28

18. Be Near Me Then ... ... ... ... 29

19. The Two Iseults (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 30

20. The Leaves are Gathered ... ... ... 32

21. We Three ... ... ... ... 34

22. Love Once Sat A-sighing ... ... ... 36 (New Zealand Graphic etc. )

viii

PAGE

23. Cease ... ... ... ... 37

24. Spring-time of Roses ... 38

25. Dream’s Vagary ... .. ... 40

26. Time ... ... ... ... ... 41

27. Beauty Has Been (Canterbury Times) ... 42

28. Love’s Perjury ... ... 44

29. Love Has Been ... ... . 46

30. Time Passes ... ... ... ... 48

31. What and Whence Art “Thou”? ... ... 49 ( Sydney Bulletin)

32. The Sharing of the Earth (Sydney Bulletin) ... 32

33. Winter ... ... ... 54

34. Older Years (Canterbury Times) ... ... 55

35. The Tauhou—Silvereye ... ... 56

36. Songs Unsung {Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 57

37. Prelude to Sappho’s Prayer {Otago Witness) ... 58

38. Eros [Otago Witness) ... ... ... ... 60

39. There’s Not One Wish ... 62

40. Two Lovers ... ... ... 63

41. Rest ... ... ... ... ... 64

42. When Gorgeous Days ( Canterbury Times, etc.) ... 66

43. Pleasant Days ... ... ... 67

44. Philosophy from Schiller ( Sydney Bulletin) ... 68

45. Autumn ... ... ... ... 72

46. Rosebuds (New Zealand Graphic, etc.) .. .. 74

47. Reverie {Canterbury Times) ... ... ... 76

48. Soft Hands ... ... ... ... ... 78

49. Morning ... ... ... ... ... 79

50. Spring-Festal ... ... ... ... 80

51. How Much Is Said ... 81

52. Aspirations to Immortality ... ... ... 82

53. Art and Labour ... ... 88

54. Evolution ... ... 89

55. First-Love ... ... .. 90

56. Lady Mine ... ... ... ... ... 91

ix

PAGE

57. Twilight and the Makomako ... ... 93 {New Zealand Illustrated Magazine)

58. Kata-bloom and Tui . ... ... 94 (New Zealand Illustrated Magazine)

59. On the Shore {Sydney Bulletin) ... 95

60. Summer Day ... ... ... ... 97

61. Time Flies ... .. ... ... 98

62. Can We Change? {Canterbury Times) ... ... 99

63. Serenade {Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 102

64. Waterfall and the Piwakawaka ... ... 104 {New Zealand Illustrated Magazine)

65. Ti-trees and the Kukupa ... ... ... 105 [New Zealand Illustrated Magazine)

66. Spring-time and Echo ... ... 106

67. Fortune ... ... . . ... 109

68. The Cry of the Dishonoured (Canterbury Times) 110

69. The Old Story (Sydney Bulletin) ... ... 116

70. The Acorn Hath a Grove of Oaks ... 120

71. Perennial Joy ... ... ... ... 121

72. Margaret at the Spinning-wheel 122

73. Old Love-songs ... ... ... ... 124

74. On Cremation and Ode to a Cremation Urn ... 126 (Sydney Bulletin)

75. After-Life {Canterbury Times) ... 132

76. Patito ... ... ... ... 135

77. In the Forest ... ... ... 145

SONGS UNSUNG

r.

Home-Echoes.

Year after year, age after age

The white-topped billows of the unwearying sea

Have beaten out on shell-white sands their rage,

Or lost it, rolling past majestic walls

Clothed in green forests or white waterfalls.

Lonely she lay, in sunny, singing seas,

A virgin land, of untaught harmonies;

Bright, sunny beaches ; fiords imperious, cold ;

Plains, forests, lakes, and mountains skyward roll’d.

Softened in purple hazes or soft-limned in gold.

First the adventurers, wanderers, falcon-eyed, ;

On the horizon, mountain shapes espied

And with high hopes and swelling hearts,

They cried a welcome from the sea-beat sand

To that fair land

Whence never Spring departs.

Bevelling in its beauties, grave or gay,

In their sea solitude they charmed the years away

A

2

HOME-ECHOES

Then we, from countries hoary in the ways

Of man from ancient days,

Saw where wild Nature’s wilder children trod

A country fresh and lovely from the hands of God

From that far North which gave us birth,

Wind-beat, we baffled half this watery earth ;

Be it from mountain-land of lake, ravine,

Where heather blooms between,

Whence the fierce hardy clans of chieftains sprang,

Where Ossian lived and sang —

Be it from where the sails of the great world

In merchant-ships lie furled,

That land all flowery meadowed, many streamed,

Where Chauoerlived, and Spenser dreamed ;

Or where in Time’s young reign

Balder the good was slain,

Where Thor the angry in the thunders roll’d,

Where dragon-ships breasted the peopled waves,

And Odin’s skalds in rhythmic, lettered staves

Praised gods and heroes bluff and great in that good

Age of Gold.

We came, our hearts impress’d

With ancient hills, great castles, ruins gray,

With quietnesses where moss-covered rest

The hearts of happy ages pass’d away

We came, with eyes still bright

22

BOME-ECHOES

From gazing on the scenes of youth’s delight

Or eyes yet dim with sorrow of farewell

To ingle, and loved dell

Full of old scenes and memories we came,

And feigned the old and new might yet become the same.

But all was new.

In sound, in shape, in hue.

All was most strange, tho’ fair ;

And while scarce felt, impalpable as air

The old familiar things seemed haunting everywhere.

With us we even tempted Oldworld Spring,

And Autumn, sere and gold !

Willows and elms from the familiar wold,

Poplars and oaks, where woodland dryads sing :

Fain would we have the holly, mistletoe,

To herald Christmas with December snow

But here, in Summer-day,

That season comes, and sadly goes its way.

Where only silver-foliaged, purple-tasselled ratas blow!

The lark in cloudland floats,

The thrush and blackbird pour their careless notes :

From river-grove :

These too we brought; and each in cadence weaves

4

HOME-ECEOE

Its song of frosty glades, of fluttering leaves

In that land where we first knew life and love

The cheer of Winter days, the charm of Summer eves

These old remembrancers around us, how we fain

In song pourtray the land that saw us roam !

And every beauty, every sweet refrain—

Yes, every joy, and too delicious pain,

Finds a far echo in our earlier home !

And we have yet to learn

Those true, peculiar charms our longings hide ;

The new and old we now see side by side :

And whilst we can discern

The new is beautiful, cannot withhold

Our sad interpretation thro’ the old.

How long, before our voices will outgive

In song, those beauties in whose midst we live ?

The quaint, sweet-throated birds ; the men

Whose songs and legends wail from hill and glen

How long, before our hearts will see and hear

O' The charms themselves, not those that youth makes dear 1

How long ?—Alas ! We wean ourselves with pain

From that which, while desired, we know comes not again.

11.

Lilies.

O lily of the fountains

Of sparkling, deep delight

0 lily of the mountains,

Edelweiss, snow-white

Dream upon your stream and snow,

Pure and undefiled so ;

Happy they, whoever may

One half your pureness know.

O lily of the valleys

Whose scent exultant wells,

Quaint fancy-pageant rallies

About your snowy bells ;

Nod above your broad green leaf

Whiles may Pleasure, welcome thief.

Half-unknown till he is flown,

Rifle every heart of grief.

0 Lily of the Spirit,

Of wonderfullest bloom;

Blest whoso may inherit

Thine Eden-sweet perfume

May thy buds of beauty start

And their petals sweetly part

Thro’ the dole of every soul,

0 Lily of the Heart.

111.

April of the Antipodes.

The October of her life,

Sweet seventeen,

When the trees are full of sap,

And all the leaves are green

The time of falling tears,

With flying clouds the while,

And gleaming thro’ the showers

The rainbow of a smile.

IV.

June.

For woman, memory has joys in store ;

For man, regrets that they were not more :

The might have been is the woman’s dream ;

The past’s dead promise, the man’s sad theme

She {her side the World.)

Do you remember the days of Spring ?—■

Spring’s gladdest day ?

How scents were sweet and birds aswing

On the hawthorn spray 1

How the first gay revel of blossoming

Went singing away ?

All things made for pleasure,

Nothing for regret;

All was to remember,

And nothing to forget

The earth was a white-flowered garden of tune ;

For May had just turned June.

27

JUNE

He (his side the World.)

Have I forgotten the old Spring days

With their changing skies !

When only the flowers in their fragrant sprays

Had tear-dimmed eyes !

Have I forgotten the hawthorn ways,—

And the words, — and the sighs,—

Ah, — nothing makes for pleasure

All is now regret

The dearest to remember, Alas ! ’twere best forget!

The earth is white, its frosts are strewn

For May has just turned June.

V.

RONDEAU.

Soft, Low and Sweet.

Soft, low and sweet, the blackbird wakes the day

And clearer pipes, as rosier grows the gray

Of the wide sky, far, far into whose deep

The rath lark soars, and scatters down the steep

His runnel song, that skyey roundelay.

Earth with a sigh awakes ; and tremors play.

Coy in her leafy trees, and falt’ring creep

Across the daisy lawn and whisper, “ Well-a-day,”

Soft, low and sweet.

From violet-banks, the scent-clouds float away

And spread around their fragrance, as of sleep :

From evTy mossy nook the blossoms peep •

From ev’ry blossom comes one little ray

That makes the world-wealth one with Spring, alway

Soft, low and sweet

VI

Retrospect.

Pass we by the trysting-place,

Heigh-ho ! the river !

We have lost the little grace :

Giv’n us then and there

Pass by,— but eyes look back, —

Ah me ! lips quiver !

All our joy is now our lack,

All our burden, care.

Think we of that king of days,

Heigh-ho ! it leaves us !

Life has many blended ways,—

We tread sundered now

Once met, — and that we scorned, —

Ah me ! now grieves us, —

They grow graceless who have mourned,

Sorrow sears the brow

Backward looks and sweet-sad sighs,

Heigh-ho ! they linger !

Voice-echoes, beaming eyes,

How they gleam and call !

Kind Time would blot all out

With his soft, firm finger,—

But we find our sadness, doubt,

Sweetest thoughts of all!

VII

Cradle-Song.

Song of the night, song of the day,

Where are the forms that we fondled alway 1

Song of the eve, song of the morn,

Soon they forsake us as others are born ;

Mothers sit watching with faces of love,

God watches them from His Heaven above ;

Life is a task, set with a vow, —

Babies that slept in us where are ye now ?

Up from our arm, up from our breast,

Where are ye wandered in East or in West ?

Mothers may love, mothers may croon, :

Ye become stripling and maiden too soon ;

Stripling and maiden, — and lo the refrain

Crooned by the mother is murmured again :

Life is a war, life is a race, —

Over the cradle a heavenly face.

Son of my heart, where wilt thou go 1

Empty mine arms when thou leavest me so ;

‘Where wilt thou speed, daughter of mine ?

Look in my face as I looked upon thine; —•

31

CRADLESONG

Earth is a wilderness open and wide;

Shun ye its evil, and God be your Guide:

Children of mine, go on your way—

Think ye of mother when aging and gray I

“ Goest so soon, idol of love ?

Goest so soon to the Father above I

Thou in mine arms cradled shalt be ;

Goest so soon from thy cradle and me '!

Earth is too wide for thy weak little feet 1

Life is too weary ? and Heaven so sweet ?

Idol of love; soul of my heart;

Heaven is thine who of Heaven wast part.”

Life and its toil, death and its sleep,

Children must wander and mothers will weep ,

Life is so wide, death is so cold,

Other embraces than mother’s enfold :

Children are mothers and mothers are gone, ;

Cradles are rocking forevermore on ;

Children are born, never remain,—

Life is a rocking of pleasure and pain

VIII

Moonrise.

(FROM NEW BRIGHTON PIER.)

There’s the moon rising

Up from the sea ;

Shadows disguising

River and lea,

Hasten and flee ;

0, there’s a paven,

Ripple-traced road,

Straight to the haven

Of Quiet’s abode.

But for a shallop

Gauzily-sailed—

Nautilus, scallop—

Lover-breath-galed,

Angel-waft-swaled,

Only to speed me

Over the road,

Only to lead me

To Quiet’s abode.

33

MOONBISE

Over the dimples

Pressed on the sea,

Under the wimples

Night-shade flings free

O’er you and me,

Floating and sailing

Swift on the road, —

Everything’s ailing

From Quiet’s abode

Where does it finish,

Path o’ the wave ?

Will it diminish

But in the grave 1—

God our souls save !

Might we explore it,

’Vanescent road,

Travelling o’er it

To Quiet’s abode!

IX.

RONDEAU.

When We are One.

When we are one, and thenceforth life we share,

Trusting and trusted, all our hope and care—

That glow or shade that may have come and gone—

Shall be as benisons to help us on,

Content with what we’ve borne, and yet may bear.

When carelessness grows staider, yet can spare

A tithe of its life-joyance—and anon

Grows to the full, —life’s day-dream shall be fair

When we are one.

Be Earth as’t will; ourselves, we can declare

All Earth is good that we may look upon;

All blemishes that seemed to be, are gone,

For in the fulness of the glory there,

Each little sorrow hides a joy most rare

When we are one.

X

Rosemary and Rue.

There’s rosemary, that’s far remembrance ; pray you, love, remember: . there’s rue for you, and here’s some for me.

The days when we were strangers,

(Pray love, remember ;)

To Love and his sweet dangers,—

Ah, forget them not

Days of all days cherished,

When strangeness fled and perished,

Utterly forgot

Timid questionings of eyes

Mutely glad in mute replies,

Wishes only voiced in sighs,—

Love ; forget them not.

The days of Spring-time wooing,

(Pray love, remember;)

With Earth her charms renewing,—

Ah, forget not these !

Words as new as flowers were,

Grateful as the showers were

To the flowers and trees.

Words as untaught as the wind,

Sweet as new light to the blind, —

Words, of new worlds undefined,

Ah, forget not these 1

ItOSEMABY AND SUE

36

How the life grew keener,

Pray love, remember;

Heav’n and Earth serener,—

Ah, forget not this :

How when glances mingled,

And all our pulses tingled,

Lips taught lips to kiss.

Ah dear love, the joy we knew ;

Days sped swiftly, all too few,

As our lives together grew,—

Love ! forget not this !

Hmo our dream was broken,

Do not, love, remember !

How our last words spoken,

Ah dear love, forget !

How the flowers faded,

How we drooped as they did,

Haw our cheeks were wet.

Broken dreams may come again ;

There’s an end to deepest pain :

That our dearest hopes are vain,

Ah sweet love, forget !

XL

Peace.

Ah ; on this upland there is peace enough.

Night’s wingless phantoms creep from the dark East,

To overtake the calm magnificence

Of the tired sun-god, pausing in the West.

The last few remnants of the day he takes,

And presses from them gold and amethyst,

Drenching the clouds, making the hills run fire, —

Then downward plunges. With far-reaching hands,

The phantoms grasp and scatter in his steps

The gorgeousness and gold.

This is unpeered.

Languid is Earth ; the singing winds have ceased,

And whisper benedictions to the world :

The phantoms tread the dark to upper glooms,

Where their dusk fingers trim the burning stars.

Out in the dimness, see, the church-spire lifts

Its jewelled finger, bidding : —“ Hush ; this hour

Of peace and rest it is wherein your God

Stands near to guard and bless.”

38

PEACE

Ope we our hearts,

And long-sought blessings fall, as falls the dew.

Move we together down the winding road,

Thro’ the gaunt firs, thro’ busy streets and home.

We on the heights together have seen God

And heard His voice : it dwells within us now,

A silence strange; a still, expectant awe.

XII.

Summer’s Last Flower.

Alas ! the fading of the regal Summer.

It goes ere scarcely comes its fullest day ;

Those winds that blow the Autumn gold away

Will beat to death this latest lowly comer.

The Summer, ah, it fades ; and going sweetly,

Bears too the firstling’s bleat, the hedgerow’s may ;

The fruit hangs plump where bark was bare and gray.

Leaves fashioned newly fall away completely.

Yet all is meet: for laden well and truly,

Now sleeps the gleaming, nimble-footed bee;

The golden sea is shaken into foam :

The august season brings its offering duly,

In fruit of brake and herb, of flower and tree,

And songs awake, deep in the breezes’ home.

XIII

Evensong.

The poplars bend across the dark’ning sky,

And whisper to the east wind from the seas;

Night comes ; with it, the wish that you were by

To bend and whisper, soft as Summer’s trees.

The hills grow distant, dark, —then fade away ;

My thoughts of you have lived beyond the day.

The white mists from the river float to heaven, So my thoughts float to you this Summer even

The birds are mute, and my song falls away,

That thought may hear what hope dreamed thro’ the day.

The heavy scent of honeysuckle clings

And overpowers the sweetness of the rose ;

So melancholy, with his heavy wings,

Broods over me, at this day’s quiet close.

■22

EVENSONG

I have not heard nor seen you, many days

Tho’ I in dreams have heard you, and have seen ;

Thus often Earth has lain in rain and haze,

And only one blue flash of sky has been.

I eagerly have sought you, hour by hour ;

As winds have sought, have found and lost the flower.

I have sought honey from your sweetness, but

Came, like the late bee, when the flower was shut.

I saw you, and have striven you to reach,

But beat myself like seas on a rough beach.

Twilight has gone : cloud has obscured the star ;

The sad winds in the dark trees sink to rest:

I muse ; and, tired, would be where you are,

Your hand in my hand, my breast by your breast

XIV.

RONDEAU.

Love’s Onward Day.

Love’s onward day ; as sun of morn

Kissing,—soft kiss, —Spring’s budded thorn.

Flooding the verdure of Earth’s breast, —

Pearly the east, purple the west, —

So wakes new life, when love is born.

As noon of day :—one cloud forlorn

Straying about the mountain-crest, —

Full trees, rich blooms and fields of corn,

Love’s onward day.

As noon to sober eve has worn

And birds are silent in the nest,

And winds are so unmoved in rest

That eve’s light cloud-woof scarce is torn, —

Such restfulness, such peace, adorn

Love’s onward day.

XV.

The Dance.

(FROM SCHILLER.)

See how with hovering steps, in undulations the dancers

Move, while the light-winged feet touch but an instant the floor.

Are they shadows I see, released from the gyves of the body t

Are they the moonlight elves, dancing in light hearted maze 1

Light as the smoke in the air wafted by zephyr from earth,

Light as the rocking skiff borne on the silvery tide,

Flutter the docile feet to the music’s billowy sweetness;

Murmuring violin-tones bear up the body to heaven.

Now, inspired with a zeal to break thro’ the dance and its fetters,

Swings an adventurous pair into the closely-set ranks :

Soon before them a path opens and closes behind them ;

Magical hands, it seems, open and close the way.

44

THE DANCE

See ; this moment they’re gone, in wildest confusion they mingle,

Lost is their grace-endowed motion, lost in the changing world. —

No, —in triumph they hover unfettered, the knot disentangling,

Only in varied grace is the rule manifest here.

Ever destroyed, self-created continues this whirling creation,

An invisible law binds its transmutable parts.

Say how it chances ; this maze, wavering, still moves in order,

And rest still exists where the whole form is unrest ?

Each one a ruler, free, hears hut his own heart’s dictating,

Arid in speediest course finds thro’ confusion his way.

Shall I discover the cause 1 Tis melody, mighty and godlike,

That in the sociable dance orders each movement and pause;

It as a Nemesis curbs with the golden bridle of rhythm

Pleasure’s impetuous joy, subduing intractable mirth.

45

THE DANGI

Round you murmurs in vain the harmony of the star worlds 1

Cannot you comprehend the music of their great song 1

Cannot you hear the measure beating thro 1 animate nature 1

Nor see the whirling dance in which thro’ eternal space

Bright burning suns majestic move in vast wonderful courses 1

No ; you can honour in sport that which in earnest you shun.

XYT

One by One.

One by one, lover and friend must go

Tho’ in the absence, sorrow will linger on

One by one, as stars in the morning glow,

Tremble, and fade, and are gone.

One by one, raindrops are falling fast;

Sighs moan so low and so sad in the cold, wet tree

One by one, tears fall for days that are past,

Mourning, that parting must be.

One by one. Ah, and you too, must go :

You who have lingered so short and so sweet a while

One by one, —ah, that the heart must know

Sorrow, for Pleasure’s soft smile.

XVII

Pikiarero.

(The. Yellow Clematis.)

Meek clematis; tree-dweller ; child of dew :

Nursling of light and air !

Slow-trailing stars, or showers of misty suns, —

Whence is the hand thou reachest wistfully,

Feeling, on earth, for something not of earth ?

Lo, is this Bethel, and the gate of Heaven 1

Art thou the golden ladder, whereon pass

God’s angels up and down continually 1

Ev’n now (God’s thoughts are angels) one descends; —

A pure gold petal flutters to my feet.

XVIII

RONDEAU.

Be Near Me Then.

Be near me then, when I am old,

And in the veins the blood grows cold,

And Earth becomes a stranger, dear ;

If you alone will linger near

The shadows will not all-enfold.

Tho’ life be bought, and love be sold

Must both, on aging, disappear t

When from the tomb the stone is roll’d

Be near me then

Ay ; Earth can nothing dearer hold,

Nor aught can burn more nobly clear

Than that thy love, pure and sincere

Sweet; as the last slow days are doled

That mark the sinking to the mould,

Be near me then.

XIX.

CANZONETS.

The Two Iseults.

If wand’ring some gray eve

In the oak-grove whose sere leaves straw the ground,

My dream of years should leave,

And waking me from reverie profound

Bid me rejoice, or grieve,—

I wonder which were keener, joy or grief 1

Belief, or disbelief t

For many years I’ve loved the woman-graces

Of old times and old places ;

I’ve walked where they have walked ; have heard

Their sorrow and their joy ; have seen their eyes,

Have known without disguise

The deepest feelings that within them stirr’d :

I’ve laughed with them, and with them I have wept;

Loved them, in dream awake, in truth when I have slept.

31

THE TWO ISEULTS

Iseult of Cornwall; she

Whom Tristram loved, and woman none beside :

Iseult of Brittany,

Loving, unloved, beautiful, mournful-eyed,—

Which was more sad I—ay me,

One loved, was loved again ; but love’s best bliss, —-

She could but dream of this :

One loved, was loved not, yet beside her trod

Her vain love’s only god.—

0 women, both denied that dearest love,

Where was the virtue of your constancy 1

Ah ; ’twas not constancy

To man, to flesh, but to a spirit above.—

But, when two souls as one might never be,

Would either wish extinction ?—or eternity 1

XX.

BALLADE

The Leaves are Gathered.

The leaves are gather’d from the wintry bough,

The flowers are faded and their beauty strown ;

The Earth is sere and frosty-cold; then how

May we be young where all is older grown ?

Each Summer songster with that day has flown.

And Earth is hush’d of voice, and void of song

Only the dirges of the night make moan

That hope to Love, and Love to death belong.

Have not the lines begun to mark the brow

With deepening furrows, so the shades are thrown

Darker upon its whiteness even now 1

Has not the heart begun to feel alone

On the broad Earth I —the grassy knoll and stone

Seem welcome,—as when days are hard and long

Is sleep to tired eyes ; —and still the moan

That hope to Love, and Love to death belong.

THE LEAVES ABE OAT HE BED

33

Sick, mournful heart: it is not Earth, but thou ;

That, being wearied, dost so sadly groan,

As do the pines when to the winds they bow

And tremble yet, when winds are over-blown :

For Youth, Earth’s gaiety;—let Age atone

For its own follies if it deem them wrong :

And yet, tho’ rest may come, too comes the moan

That hope to Love, and Love to death belong.

L’Envoy.

Look to the Spring,—she from her radiant zone

Casts life and love ; and dews to flowerets throng

Like tears to happy eyes : —and yet, the moan

That hope to Love, and Love to death belong.

XXL

We Three.

Dost thou love thy little maid,

Love her well 1 love her true 1

Canst thou love her unafraid

Of the things the years may do ?

Canst thou this 1 tell me true !

What dost thou resign for her ?

Hope of years 1 pride of place 1

Canst thou give without demur

All thy life for her sweet face ?

Canst thou this 1 and with grace 1

Much thy little maid must give,

Much indeed, loving thee :

But, so we two happy live,

What’s the loss to thee or me?—

Only gain, I can see.

Thou hadst lost thy freedom sure

Said she Ay, said she Nay,—

But our happiness will ’dure

Till ourselves are past away ;

This I pray, night and day.

35

WE THREE

Dost thou love thy little maid

Tho’ she chafe 1 tho’ she fret 1

Dearest one ! when she is laid

In the grass, wilt thou forget 1

Think her fair 1 love her yet ?

Nay ; thou shalt not be downcast;

She’s full glad ; she’s full well

Once the hour of pain is past,

Hearts can not their gladness tell.

Kiss thy maid; all is well.

Ah yes ; kiss me with a smile,

As of old ; long ago

We have spent a happy while

In the vale where hot tears flow

We knew none, none we know.

Dost thou love thy little maid

As of old 1 dear old days !

She will suffer unafraid

As her mother-debt she pays ;

Ah those sweet, future days !

Kiss me now for what has been;

What we two found and knew ;

Kiss me for the pleasures keen

All the years can not undo.

Kiss the face of—me and you !

XXII

RONDEAU.

Love Once Sat A-Sighing.

Love once sat a-sighing, by a reedy brook, —

Near, a shepherd loitered with his horn and crook; —

Love sought one to fasten with his flowery chain

Then to watch the chafing at the bonds in vain,—

Yet towards the shepherd, never would he look !

Sought the shepherd, sighing, ev’ry cornfield nook, ;

Seeking one to love him, and be loved again

Yet was Love all wayward : while the long reeds shook,

Love once sat a-sighing !

Love ! enchant the shepherd, when the sickled hook :

Of the Queen Diana reaps the skyey plain,

Where the corn all golden, falls like summer rain: —

Still is Love all wayward ; and like sage from book,

Culls what best may please him : near the corn in stock,

Love once sat a-sighing !

XXIII.

Cease.

(FROM HEINE.)

The day is in the night beloved,

The Springtime in the Winter,

The life is beloved in death

And thou, thou lovest me.

Thou lov’st me—and about thee now

Fall shadows gray and gloomy ;

Thy blossoming is fading ;

Thy spirit-heart is bleeding.

O, cease from loving me, and love

The butterfly, more ennobled

As it flutters in sunny beams—

O, cease from love and sorrow !

XXIV.

SESTINA.

The Spring-time of Roses.

Of roses red, of roses white I sing,

Clasping the trellis, stately in the bed,

Or in the hedgeways, pendent as they swing ;

There’s the full rose unfolded, whose bent head

Droops with the haste of the departing Spring,

And buds whose green shews yet no white nor red.

Nay ; every rose that pulls aside her head,

With weight of her own beauties all aswing,

Has love of me ; but chiefest white and red,

Be these of Summer’s pride, or youth of Spring :

One glows, as glows the day-lord’s western bed, —

But gold shines blood ; so not of gold I sing.

The wealth of tales that flowers awake in Spring !

And know’st thou how the white rose turned tc red 1

Nay; an thou know’st not, other lips shall sing

As they have sung : now raise thee from thy bed,

And look where young Aurora’s censers swing

Now that Apollo lifts his golden head !

THE SPMINO-TIME OF MOSES

Lift up with them, lift up with them thine head

0 maid ! and let thy spirit heav’nward swing,

Yor let the morning look on thee abed:

Thy spirit with the lark shall rise and sing,

And thou shalt see where morning clouds run red,

And Earth laughs, wet and fragrant, in the Spring!

Yea, and of fairer roses I would sing ;

For on thy cheek they nestle, white and red

Perfect their colour in thy youthful Spring,

Thou with thy tresses round about thine head I

And as thy thoughts in varied channels swing,

One colour vies with other in its bed

To hide the flaming rose, thou droop’st thine head

Thy tresses roundward with the motion swing

Aiding therein; how, in one silken bed

Lie two sweet warring hearts ; yet therefore sing,

Since sweet is blending of the white and red,

Sweetest of all in life’s fair youth and Spring !

Of wars and roses, life and love I sing,

Eoses and love, alternate white and red ;

And fairest these, now Earth is fair in Spring.

XXV

Dream's Vagary.

It is not true, it is not true: —they say

Where thoughts have closely centred thro’ the day

The dream clings too at night;

That where the wishes from the heart have sped,

Thereto the soul in sleep’s soft leash is led,

Finding night’s day of light

More living and more bright.—

But ’tis not true; o love, it is not true ;

I cannot dream of you

One day ? no, nights and days my thoughts have flown

Heaven-high round one star, till it has grown

The only light on high ;

One day and many days my heart has yearned For you, towards you, and my soul has turned

Its one desire to fly

Upward to your clear sky :

But when night comes, —0 love, it is not true ;■ —

I cannot dream of you.

XXVI

SONNET

Time.

0, obdurate face of changeless Time the old,

We look on thee thro’ orbs of diverse eyes :

Before us, as a book, thy record lies, —

Or rather, as a papyrus unroll’d :

For tho’ the characters are firm and bold

Marked upon thee, rarely in any wise

Can we, for all our industry, surmise

The depth of secrets thou alone dost hold.

Some deem thy face all smiles, some deem it frowns ;

Some think it hard and stern, some think it mild ;

Some see it lined in age, some wreath’d in youth

’Tis we who change : a calm sereneness crowns

Thee, who art old or young to man or child,

And, for us all, a Citadel of Truth,

XXVII

BALLADE.

Beauty Has Been.

Soft, in the twinkle of stars at night,

Nurtured in dew, are blossoms rare ;

Scarce’ they endure in the broader light

Flashed by the sun over Earth, and ere

Half of their beauty the blossoms can bear,

All are they faded; and none can tell

j j How, in the bloom that is drooping there,

Beauty has been and was never so well.

Soft, in the clamour of Earth’s hard fight,

Jewels are born that a world might wear ;

But that the world in an heedless slight

Casts them without, and beyond its care :

Soon are they lost, in the wear and tear

Toiling and moiling, and ardour fell: —

One soft glow in the ceaseless glare

Beauty has been and was never so well.

43

BEAUTY HAS BEEN

Faint little stars in the heaven’s height

Falter their rays down the skyey stair

Faint little stars;—and the sun, all-bright

Gathers the rays to himself; and fair,

Many star-thousands a sparkle spare,

living the sun, that they all may swell

Into that glory whose beams declare

Scanty has been and was never so well.

L’Envoy.

Lives of the Earth ; they have each a share

Moulding the world where as one they dwell;

Each of his best, —and beyond compare,

Beauty has been and was never so well.

XXVIII

Love’s Perjury.

Does the child know how its life began ?

Not any more than the wise old man !

Does the dew know why it falls from above ?

And I

Can I know why I love 1

I know that I live, I know that I love;

That Earth is as wondrous as Heaven above :

That the grace of a flower or the might of the ocean

Can move in my breast a delicious emotion;

The magic of clouds and the mists of the river.

The spirits that move when the leaves are a-quiver ;

The liberal depths of the haunt of the thrush,

With its echo of song or significant hush ;

The blossoming tree, the budding, the fruity,

The infinite changes of infinite beauty;

The depth of a clear eye ; the hue of a cheek;

The curve of a bosom, a blossom, —all speak,

Bidding —“Love and rejoice: ye have Beauty forever;

It changes, it varies,—but vanishes never ! ”

LOVE'S PERJURY

45

Why art thou crying,

Pretty-eyed one ?

Time is for sighing

When joys are done !

Art thou so jealous of all the rest'!

How if I say that I love thee best—

That I am the sun,

And thou, —

Art the wonderful East and West 1

XXIX.

Love Has Been.

What has sorrow to you and me

Told in passing I —Of joys to be 1

Keen and poignant,—ah too keen

To last for ever, —Love has been.

And we found it; yes, we two

Found and treasured what so few

Ever bloom in : and ours has blown

As sweet a Love-summer as ever was known.

Ah, the Autumn, red and gold,

Has our Summer fast in’s hold

Many Autumns went and came,

Still our Summer bloomed the same.

Now ’tis fallen unawares !

(So the star-world earthward fares).

47

LOVE HAS BEEN

We look upward and see the sky ;

Of life’s fair colours passing by ;

Ah the sorrow, thus to gaze

Where loving gave us our best days !

Hush ; for sorrow sunders all,

He comes bearing shroud and pall;

Takes so deftly one of twain, —

One must go, and one remain.

Two worlds together share this one :

One’s in darkness, one i’ the sun, —

And that we dreamed in. —Ah, dreams break;

In the other must we awake.

67

Time Passes.

Too soon, too soon, our childhood wears away,

And broken is its fairy-peopled slumber ;

Too soon its childlike fancies cease to play,

While in their place come doubts and fears past number :

And youth wears on to its maturity,

And old age follows manhood’s golden noon ;

Thro’ all this burden beats unceasingly,—

“Time passes—all, Time passes, soon, too soon."

XXXI.

What and Whence Art “Thou."

(Any Lover to his Love.)

Thou awful and mysterious sojourner

Upon an earth of shadows and unrest,

Wakening in me a strange disquietude,—

What and whence art thou 1

In the obscure past,

Upon an earth, weird, and to us unknown,

That spirit lived and moved, gyved in a form

That no conjecture can discover; mine

Too lived and moved. We have inherited

That which our ancient fathers had from eld !

Whence is the fabric that composes “ thee ” 1

So like this “ me,” and yet how different!

How have thy bodily elements been knit

And folded round the spirit thou dost bear 1 —

Our elements may be co-mingled now !

Yet our attraction has repulsion too,

And between these, we pause and hesitate.

D

WHAT AND WHENCE ART “ THOU ”

69

Lives there a mood, swift and imperious,

Of some old lover in thee, one that swayed

/ J A world of men and women, and then died 1 —

With such an influence thou comest to me!

Dwells there within thee but the smallest part

Of one that warred with part of that in me

And slew, or else was slain 1 —for times there be

When love is veiled in a most ominous mood.

A glimpse of terror from thy presence breaks ;

What creature’s dust may in thy cheek repose,

Or monstrous shape fashion a part of thee 1

Some brute that trampling crushed the tender herb,

Some lurid rock that earth smokingly hurled,

And ages ground to dust, absorbed in thee t

That passes, ghost-like ; and a sweeter mood

Speaks of the resurrection of fair things

That live in thee as mortals live in joy.

The scattered dust of queens may lodge in thee ;

The dust of creatures, lowly and blind and frail ;

The vapors that have dyed the violet,

Or that in evening calm the sun has dyed.

Thou hast the allurement of the luminous sea,

Moon-gladdened, infinite ; the exquisite

And musical tenderness of airs

Trembling with bird-song and the murmuring bee ;

WHAT AHD WHENCE AST "THOU"

51

The persuasiveness of love-compelling flowers ;

The life that was, lingers about thee still!

The breath thou breathest may have touched the lips

Of our first parents ; and the shape they bore

May be, in thee, mirrored and faintly traced !

Thou art no new thing ; only a new form

Of ancient and most venerable parts

Reknit in living substance. Therefore, I,

Feeling myself kin in antiquity,

Look curiously on thee if I may trace

The immemorial parts of ages flown ;

Mysterious, awful, whirled like sands and rain

Limitless ages between earth and sky,

Dispersed, and all these variable part:

Reanimate. Another heir of Time

Stands before thee, and gazing thro’ those eyes

That beam as windows in the shrouding mists

Of past and future, speculates with awe

What once thou wast who now art what thou art!

XXXII.

The Sharing of the Earth.

(FROM SCHILLER.)

Take hence the world ! cried Zeus from his heaven

Unto mankind : take it, yours shall it he.

To you the earth as heritage is given ;

Hut, sharing, dwell in amity.

In haste, whoso had hands, thereon fell slaving

To win his share; so labored young and old.

The husbandman seized fields of gold corn waving,

The young squire hunted deer in wood and wold,

The merchant rose, his warehouse goods securing,

The abbot chose his share of last-year wine ;

The king stopped roads and bridges, with assuring

Saying : “ The tithes and tolls are mine.”

Too late, when the division all was over

The poet came ; he came from lands abroad;

/Vlas, no vacant place could he discover,

For all things now possessed their lord

THE SHARING OF THE EARTH

53

“ Alas ! am I the only one remaining

Forgotten quite 1 I, truest son alone 1 ”

Loudly unto the skies went his complaining;

He cast himself before Jove’s throne.

Since you in lands of dreams and fields Elysian

Roved far, quoth Jove, do not come blaming me.

JFhere were you loit’ring when they made division 1

Then said the poet: “I was here by thee.

“ Mine eyes were fastened on thy face sun-beaming ;

Harmonious heaven held enchained mine ear ;

Pardon the Spirit so enchanted dreaming,

That he has lost earth’s share while wond’ring here.”

IVhat's te be done 1 said Zeus ; the world is given,

The harvest, hunt, the fields, are mine no more

If you will dwell with me up here in heaven,

Oft as you come you’ll find an open door.

xxxm

Winter.

This burden bears each falling leaf—

“ lam the emblem of a grief."

Gone is all pleasure from the land

For birds and bees,

For Winter with his ruthless hand

Strips flowers and trees ;

And now are seen the many nests,

Woven and warm,

That fluttering trees hid in their breasts

Safe from the storm :

Empty they lie above, and bare

To heaven’s dew :

Love’s nests lie open to the air,

Deserted too

Winter of life and all fair things ;

But we, alas,

Will never know what Spring-time brings

When bleak days pass

Gone is all pleasure from the land ;

Ah, one thought stings us ;

We know not what death’s ruthless hand

Thereafter brings us.

XXXIV.

RONDEL.

Older Years.

The happy days are happy years,

And hours are pleasure-fill’d alone,

When Life has fuller, richer grown,

Than Youth of shadow-hopes and fears.

When we have pass’d the Vale of Tears

And have the sequent gladness known,

The happy days are happy years,

And hours are pleasure-fill’d alone.

Richly engemmed in rainbow spheres

The blossom-youth has gaily blown

In tints and blushes all its own

But, tho’ the blossom droops and seres,

The happy days are happy years.

XXXV

The Tauhou.

(Or Silver-eye.)

A SUMMER long the sun and thou

In flowering bush have lingered merry,

Ye both have left the bushlands now.

Where neither flower there is, nor berrv,

And insects, as the days turn cold,

Hide deep in bark, and leaf, and mould.

The keen winds and thy plaintive cry

Have come together down the glen ;

Is Earth unkind, 0 Silver-eye,

Thou comest to the haunts of men.

Ah ; we desert our gay haunts thus

When life grows cold, unkind to us.

XXXVI

RONDEL,

Songs Unsung.

Songs unsung will the longest last,

Soft sweet tones are at rest so soon

Clear and full is the lark at noon,

But still when the even hour is past.

All the songs that in Spring fall fast

Cease when the Winter snows are strewn

Songs unsung will the longest last,

Soft sweet tones are at rest so soon.

Ardent vows to the winds are cast

Faint as the sighs that brood and croon

Deep in the firs ’neath rising moon :

But, while others are dead and past,

Songs unsung will the longest last.

XXXVII

SAPPHICS.

Prelude to Sappho’s Prayer.

“ Sands of gold, these, boatman of Lesbos ferry !

Sweet, as the trade plies, gleam the skies and water :

Hardly a gray age toiling thus should find thee.—

Seem I a stranger 1

“ Stranger 1 Yea, truth ; stranger as seems my boyhood ;

Tho’ as the days past, pleasant thoughts thou stirrest;

Rarely the old boat lightly as this even

Breasted the billows.

“ Swift my blood Hies, —who is the Lesbos boatman 1

Yea I am old, grey ; these my boat and ferry ;

Ah, but the gay youth flushed back thro’ the ages,

Warmed bv thv touches ! ”

“ Wouldst thou know youth, e’en as in days departed 1

Leave to the high gods age and age’s wisdom 1—

Be it as thou wilt; take my golden girdle,

Clasp it about thee.”

High on rocks, 10, Sappho is seated musing

Dreams she of great deeds 1 mighty, valiant heroes ?

Rather of sweet love ; Phaon by the ferry

Sees she, but heeds not.

Pit FI. UDE TO SAPPHO'S PRAYER

59

Neither long time looks she upon the stranger;

(Dreams of the dead stream, Charon, Proserpina):

Dreaming her eyes turn back to those below her, —

See them no longer.

“ Where art thou gone, Phaon, and where the fair one 1

Who is the youth, lithe, active as the athlete,

Supple of limb, tall, ruddy of complexion,

Hair like Apollo 1 ”

(Rue it, dark maid ; rue it and turn thee homeward ;

He as a dream dreamed, now appears before thee ;

Flown is thy heart’s ease, all thy soul has floated

Out to the stripling.)

“ Ah the sweet power, rending us this and that way

Ah, but the mad love, wild bird never caged ;

Spoiler of heart’s peace,—spoiler or restorer ?

Whither wilt lead me ?

“ Dearest Queen, hear ; thou, Aphrodite, hear me ;

Conjure thy spoilt child, him with the dreaded arrows;

Shoot he of love, hate,—so he shoot but rightly,

Bare is my bosom.”

XXXVIII.

Eros.

(FROM ANACREON.)

(Written j or the late John Mouat, of Dunedin, who

supplied a literal translation.)

Once in the quiet hours of middle night,

When all mankind lay sleeping, spent with toil,

And Arctos had already turned himself

Down to the hand of Bootes, —Eros came

To me who knew him not. Against the bolts

That shut my door he beat, and wakened me.

“Who knocks,” said I, “my door, and knocking comes

Breaking my dreams up and ray sleep 1 ” But Eros,

“ Open to me,” said he ; “I am a child,”

And nothing dreadful; lam wet and cold

With wand Ting down the moonless night.”

I rose

From hearing these things, and my lamp I trimmed ;

I opened, and a child indeed I saw,

With wings, a bow and quiver. By my hearth

I set him ; with my palms I warmed his hands,

And squeezed the moisture from his hair. But then,

When that his chill was past, said Eros, “ Come ;

We now will try my bow, and if from wetting

The string hath taken hurt.”

80

EROS

He drew the bow,

And underneath the breasts he smote me keen

As it had been an arrow.

Up he jumped,

And, giggling,—“ Host, rejoice with me,” he cried ;

“ Without hurt is my bow; but thou henceforth,

As to thy heart wilt suffer pain enough.”

XXXIX

RONDEAU.

There’s Not One Wish.

There’s not one wish I would not give for thee, :

If wishing might the heart’s fulfilment be :

There’s not one hope nor dearest thought of mine

That should not, were it worth, be also thine,

And being ours, be wealth to thee and me.

Each dream of night, might it day’s glory see,

And live and thrive in broader light divine, —

That dreams should fail or be of less degree

There’s not one wish

In harmony our lives, an both agree

To meet half-way, and each to each incline :

The noblest glories do not richest shine,

And if content, at one with all, are we,

That we should ever greater, statelier be,

There’s not one wish.

XL

Two Lovers.

He called her every fair thing Nature wrought

Or fancy fashioned ;

He gave her the best homage that love taught

To him impassioned ;

He woo’d her as the morn woos the star-night forlorn,

And as the slim fern woos the breaking river:—

She turned her head aside, —“ No, no ; not love,” she cried,

And shivered as the silver-birches shiver.

A gaunt and shrouded form ; :

Passed, with its features covered ;

Her life-blood red and warm,

Hot in her white cheeks hovered

She sprang up, life flushed thro’ her, —

She, who to love was numb,

When cold death came to woo her, —

“ Sweet Death” she cried, “ I come."

XU

Rest.

When Spring comes dancing on the flowery lea,

Why then, of all times, should Death come to me ?

Rest, my beloved, rest,

Thy hands together press’d,

And laid upon thy breast.

Rest, in the clinging white, ;

No more thy day beams bright;

Sleep, thro’ the endless night.

Sleep, rest. Thy day is done :

And, with thy darkened sun

Thy woes sink, every one

No more thy looks, thy motion, or thy speech

May pleasure me ; no more thy goodness teach ;

Only thy spirit hands towards me reach

Why art thou gone, now that the Spring is here

With golden scented blossoms, and with clear

Blue skies as were thine eyes I —Spring deck thy bier.

65

REST

Not only white ; purple and blue and gold

Be flowers upon thee strown; —but thou shalt hold

Them close, nor feel them press thy bosom cold.

Sweet scented, as the spirit that is fled

Was sweet in life, is sweet now life is dead. —

And Spring shall quilt the covers of thy bed.

Two such there might not be.

Spring laughs on hill and lea,

My Love has gone from me.

Two such Earth could not keep.

Spring’s pulses wake and leap,

My Love is fall’n asleep.

E

XLII

RONDEL.

When Gorgeons Days.

When gorgeous days have fall’n away,

w ' V The half-gray eve is doubly clear ;

And in the star-rayed atmosphere

The night is lovely as the day.

So calm the eve, the soft lights stray

In ripples on the reedy mere,

When gorgeous days have fall’n away

And half-gray eve is doubly clear

When wiseless youth has played its play

And life is surer, more sincere,

Love’s ceaseless after-glows appear

More truly coloured, tho’ less gay,

When gorgeous days have fall’n a wav

XLIII

Pleasant Days.

0, we are fall’n on pleasant days,

Yet look with longing to the dead :

Our sunset skies are gold and red,-

Yet none so dear as olden grays :

Nor life so merry in her maze,

Nor death so soft when all is said :

0, we are fall’n on pleasant days,

Yet look with longing to the dead.

Where is the guile of artless ways 1

Where the garland for Pleasure’s head ?

Where the rhapsody of Joy’s dread 1

Past’s past; as dream alone it stays ;

O, we are fall'll on pleasant days.

XLIY.

Philosophy from Schiller.

The Highest.

Seek you the highest, the greatest t The plant can

teach you the secret.

It is this : be with will, what the plant is without !

The true Ideal.

All men may know what you think; your own is

what lies in your feeling.

Is he to be as your own, feel then the God of your thought.

The Key.

Would you yourself know, observe the evolving of others :

But, would you understand them, then you must

scan your own heart.

My Faith.

What’s my religion ? you ask me ; none of the many

Mentioned by you ; and why none I My religion

forbids it!

PHILOSOPHY FROM SCHILLER

69

The best State.

Do you ask how I know the best state 1 By even the method

Of knowing good women : friend, nobody talks of these two.

Friend and Foe.

Precious to me is my friend, and also my foe is of value:

My friend points me out what I can, my enemy what I should do.

Love and Desire

Rightly said, layman! one loves what he has, one desires what he has not:

The man who is rich in emotion, loves; the poor one desires.

Science.

Science to one is holy, a heavenly goddess; to another,

Only an excellent cow, existing to butter his bread

Goodness and Greatness.

Two great virtues there are. 0, were they at all times united :

Always the Good with the Great, always the Great with the Good.

PHILOSOPHY FROM SCHILLER

89

The Bond of Union.

How does Nature proceed in welding the greatest and meanest

Of mankind I —She sets vanity only between.

Perilous Consequences

Friend, be careful to speak of bold Truth only in whispers :

Speak thereof loudly, and you man’s animosity rouse.

Expectation and Fulfilment.

On the ocean, youth with a thousand masts sets voyaging;

Age, in a storm-toss’d boat, painfully comes tc harbour.

The Most Estimable.

Honour the whole as you will; I can appreciate parts

Only in studying parts, have I caught sight of the whole.

False Studies.

Countless thine enemies, Truth ! My spirit is bleed' ing

Seeing the owlish creation nourished to life in thy light.

PHILOSOPHY FROM SCHILLER

71

The Fount of Rejuvenescence.

Trust me, this is no fable; the fountain of youth ever bubbles

Certain, unfailing: whence comes it 1 From art

of the poets.

The Child in the Cradle

Happiest infant! your cradle to you is an infinite space.

Grow, and the endless world will cramp and confine you as man.

XLV.

Autumn.

Autumn has come from o’er the seas,

With yellow hair :

Autumn in the Antipodes,—

Sweet here, as there

The spear-head poplars’ shafts of green

Are shafts of gold,

Standing in aisles that run between

Firs, dark and cold.

With golden beaten barbs a-spring

The birches quiver

And icy-hearted dewdrops fling

Upon the river

Ripe rounded globes on bending stems

Grown sweet and mellow,

O’erload the drooping trees with gems

Of red and yellow.

AUTUMN

92

Bluff Autumn fills his coffers now,

Till running o’er;

The season of the golden bough,

And golden store.

Ah ; Autumn from across the seas,

With yellow hair;

Autumn in the Antipodes,—

Sad here, as there.

XL VI

Rosebuds.

High on the lattice-work clustered the roses

And lower, half blown,

One little bud in the morning was drooping,

Fragrant, alone

And my little sweetheart saw it, and claimed it

All as her own

I lifted her up; she would taste of its sweetness

From the tree as it hung

She drew it towards her, her lips were all hidden

The petals among

But the blossom was wet, and the dews were down shaken

From where they had clung.

Then she loosened her hold of the pinky-pearl blossom

And stood by my side,

And her cheeks, —they were wet from the dews that

were shaken,

As tho’ she had cried :

And she pouted, complaining the bloom kissed

unkindly

As half satisfied.

ROSEBUDS

94

Then I told her I knew of a bud that was sweeter

Than rosebuds to me ;

And the dews only made it more lovely and rosy

And tempting to see ;

Then 1 kiss’d her dear lips,—and she waywardly left me

Alone by the tree.

XL VII

Reverie.

In tremulous chords, wakened by little hands

From the white keys, my spirit lives :

There lies revealed one land of many lands,

Whose beauty gives

Glory, thro’ her, to all things else so drear ;

And she herself is glory ; —dear, so dear

Yon withered tree, lifting its arms all bare

To the blue sky, brings olden dreams

When it too spread its leaves in vernal air

And sunny beams ;

And the cold wind, when the night’s stars are clear

Whispers a by-gone story;—dear, so dear.

Yon barren rock, by the long-surging sea,

Nor leaf will love, nor seabird build her nest,

All cold and gray, when winds wail from the lea,

And darkened west,

In its hard sleep, dreams, more than life sincere,

Live of the sea of Summer ;—dear, so dear

It EVE HIE

77

Ah, joyless life : when the last hopes are dead,

And dreams no more glamour the clouded day ;

When the soul sleeps, in fancies pillowed,

Love far away,—

ihose little hands ; one voice, divine and clear,

Waken departed glory ;—dear, so dear.

XL VIII.

RONDEI-

Soft Hands.

Soft hands on tired eyes,

Cool breath o’er paling brow,

Life sinks to slumber now

’Mid music of soft sighs.

Hands on the breast cross-wise

Trust in Above avow

Soft hands on tired eyes,

Cool breath o’er paling brow.

Echo of faint “Good-byes,”—

Life, Life, too sweet art thou ;

Why Death this part allow 1—

Peace, if no death denies

Soft hands on tired eyes.

XLIX

Morning.

Morn ing passes , never ceases ,

Day-break laughs on earth forever.

Now is the hour of the morning’s prime,—

(List to the voices ; —sea-sprites hymning !)

Wispy clouds from the sea-haze climb, ;

Rosy gulls in a gold sea swimming ;

Waves defying Time’s aging hand

Dance to the gleaming sand.

Now is the hour of the morning’s prime,

Earth lies laughing and Heaven bends over :

Bees are a-hum in the banks of thyme,

Bees are a-drone in the fields of clover :

Poppies and cornflowers gem the corn.

And a new world smiles, dew-born.

Now is the hour of the morning’s prime,—

Ho, —the revel of rival thrushes !

(That’s a blackbird hid in the lime,)

Clearly the lark’s lay fills the hushes :

Silver hazes and cloud-wefts sever,—

~ ~ And such morns break forever !

L.

Spring-festal.

(FROM HEINE.)

It is the Spring-time’s sorrowful quest!

The wild troop of maidens blooming and fair

Impetuously comes, with fluttering hair,

And anguished lament, and uncovered breast:—

“ Adonis! Adonis!"

The night smiles round. With torches’ glare

They seek him thro’ the pathless wood,

While echoes, bewildered in multitude

Are crying and laughing, and sobbing despair ;

“ Adonis ! Adonis ! ”

The wondrous lovely form of youth

Lies on the earth cold, pale and dead

His blood dies all the blossoms red,

The air is fill’d with sounds of ruth ;

“Adonis! Adonis!

LI

VILLANELLE.

How Much is Said.

How much is said,

How little done

When we are dead.

Resolves, instead

Of work begun,—

How much is said.

Hopes, glowing red

Sink like the sun

When we are dead.

Vows, idly sped

From every one, —

How much is said.

No more to dread,

No more to shun

When we are dead.

O, hearts have bled,

Life’s sands have run :

How much is said

AY hen we are dead.

F

LII

Aspirations to Immortality.

(Induced and fostered by teachings of Early Childhood.)

From darkness, thro’ a rosy atmosphere,

The little child floats to a Heaven here.

None other has he known;

From no unsorrowful fair sky has flown

Ere that great hour was set

Wherein he should find freedom from the prison

Of his Earth-mother, Love’s bright sun had risen

His Heaven to beget.

A chrysalis he lay, inert and numb,

Nor dreamt of joys and sorrows yet to come.

Within him dwells no heavenly memory;

Tho’ life be his, its joys are yet to be;

And one by one awake within his breast

(As he lies loved, caress’d),

Those feelings and emotions that impart :

All knowledge to his heart

Words, looks of love, these all his hours employ,

And build that mansion fair of childhood joy

ASPIRATIONS TO IMMORTALITY

102

How should this tender slip

Of Heaven, remember that he came from thence 1

His memory is not born with him,

But in his brain lies dim,

Growing, as young perceptions slowly unfold

Untutored is his lip

To tell the past as is his heart to know;

But unto him, as glad days swiftly go,

The secrets of his blossoming life are told,

And Earth is fair, in childhood’s innocence.

He sees great suns arise,

And stars bedeck the skies,

He sees their beauty filling nights and days ;

Who built his Heav’n, build Earth,

And wonders spring to birth,

Around him thronging as he sleeps or plays.

He at his mother’s knee

Learns God is good, that He

Created all things, great be they or small;

And as he then is taught

So is within him wrought

The soul that trusts or fears, gazing on all.

Only his own small pain,

Soothed, soon forgotten, comes within his sphere ;

103

ASPIRATIONS TO IMMORTALITY

That Earth doth ills contain

Pain wearieth all things, skies grow dark thro’ fear

Nothing of this he knows ;

For ever round him flows

The stream that love keeps soft, and pure, and clear

Each day’s a life, an hour ;

No bound he sets

To what may be the term of hour or day :

All light and darkness, going, he forgets,

While he remembers a bright bird, a flower,

Less lasting ev’n than they

Two gods he knows : all he refers to these,

Knowing no other laws than their decrees.

They know the marvels he’s content to see,

Always as beautiful, always as gay

He wonders that such wonders there may be,

Why night and stars succeed to light and day ;

Yet darkness holds no fears,

Terrors or tears

These too, from him, has love kept quite away

As the red flush portends the bright day’s breaking,

Our infancy’s the dream before the waking :

We only dream when waking is most near ;

And blest indeed are we

Who yet have memory,

Forbidding all our dreams to disappear.

ASPIRATIONS TO IMMORTALITY

85

For soon implicit trust

Broadens to questioning, as dreams

Broaden to keener, deep reality :

Till now has all been equable and just.

But now come groping beams ;

And eyes grow dim, beginning first to see.

Now shall those two, thro’ w T hom the child first saw,

Be proven lustrous, or false-rayed thro’ flaw :

For as they led his weak steps to the light,

So now his vision breaks, distorted or aright.

And shall the child, waking from fairy-land,

Distrust those dear enchanters, who could make

A Paradise spread round on every hand 1

Rather his love shall deepen, he awake

And seeing how they watched the path he trod,

He feels the strange, mysterious ways of God,

Tho’ the reality forever flies,

This memory of Heaven will remain ;

And in his life of toil, or bed of pain,

The youth still sees its beauties in the skies

Heart-faith awakens then

Thro’ hope, that he again

May know as glad a Heaven when he dies

ASPIRATIONS TO IMMORTALITY

105

As the boy ages, all the wonders seen

By childhood’s eye,

The majesty of suns, the pure serene

No less majestic star-encrusted sky

Grow vastly greater; and the heart expands

In adoration, as the youth more understands

And he can well conceive

That He who could achieve

Such works, can build that Temple, not of hands,

Where, as illimitable ages roll,

Expands in Godlike awfulness the soul.

The quickly aging man

Looks back to childhood’s time :

Nor deems he that his onward course began In a sublimer and more distant clime.

He looks to a far day

When two now gone above his cradle leant,

And in the infant blent

The glories of an ever living love ;

What less than gods were they

Who taught a love that, stedfast, lingered on

When they themselves were gone t

That dream of childhood came not from above,

But thro’ the magic wand

Of two most kind and fond ;

Too good to he confined in deathly house of clay.

ASPIBATIONS TO IMMORTALITY

87

No soul is downward sent,

Falling from Heav’n-set pinnacle eminent,

To languish upon Earth

In new but lowly birth.

Wakened by earthly love, in mortal time,

Fostered in that small space

That spans the human race,

(The years from infancy to age’s rime),

Such height was hardly dreamt, was never known :

To which the soul has flown ;

Unsealed the height to which man sees it climb:

Swinging from Heaven to Heaven were little worth;

Sublime that upward flight to Heaven from lowly earth.

LIII

Art and Labour.

The tree is in flower; but the flower

Came not without stem, without root:

Thus Beauty and Art: there’s a power

Toiling on before these, unseen, mute :

No flower can exist if no root grope in earth :

A race drags thro’ labour,—and Art is the birth.

LIT

Evolution.

The man is too mean to evolve to a God 1 :

Nay, be not afraid

The colours that animate canvas ;

Of what are these made 1

And the Great Master-artist can colour aright;

Making Children of Earth into Angels of Light

Changing Darkness of Earth to a Heaven of Light

LV

First Love.

(FROM GOETHE.)

Ah, what hand can wake from slumber

Days when first-love rose exultant ?

Who bring back an hour only

Of that gracious time again ?

Now I nurse my sorrow lonely,

And in longings, sighs past number,

Mourn lost happiness, in vain.

Ah, what hand can wake from slumber

That most gracious time again 1

LVI

Lady Mine.

(A song.)

Breathe a lay divine and low,

Lady mine,

Of the ages long ago,

Lady mine

Thro’ the present’s doubtful glory

Breathe the olden knightly story

When fair forms moved to and fro

As now moveth thine,

Lady mine.

Breathe of dreams that once have been

And are dead’;

Dreams that flushed the day between

Rosy red

Breathe of love, so all its seeming

Shall appear no more as dreaming ;

Breathe then of thyself, my queen ;

When the words from thee are sped,

Dreams are fled

111

LADY MINE

Breathe the lay thou lovest best,

Lady mine,

When the clouds are in the west,

Lady mine ;

When the snowy mountains shimmer

And in sunset glories glimmer ;

When the winds are rocked in rest

And the keen stars shine,

Lady mine

LVII

Twilight and the Makomako.

Night on the forest is falling,

Slowly the day leaves the hill,

Birds from the coverts are calling,

Calling in tinkle and trill :

Medley of harmony ringing,

Musical, mellow and chiming

Night-airs a-quiver with singing,—

Jangle of sweetness and riming !

Twilight is gone from the hill, ;

Dark are the woods to the moon

All the sweet voices are still,

Darkness has come too soon.—

One lone bird forgets

That the white moon is climbing ;

While over a hill a star sets,

It is chiming and chiming:—

Bell-birds, softer than bells,

Bell-bird, ever in tune,

What god in your bosom dwells 1 —

What passion your bosom swells

As you chime to the climbing moon 1

113

The Rata-bloom and Tui.

The rata flings purple array ;

O’er the great forest kings ;

The sun-god leads Summer away,

And a wood-dryad sings

Mid the flower-sprays dewy

Inarticulate gasps, then a chime

That no bird of the forest can rime

Then silence again : ’twas a tui.

114

On the Shore.

The sea hath music in its wave,

That sings of the Evermore;

But the waters wash on a mouldering grave ;

When they foam to the sounding shore

For the ebbing tide leaves the broad sands bare,

And the dead lie scattered there.

Beautiful shells and white bleached bones,

And roots of the twisted pine,

Torn sea-weeds, and encrusted stones ;

Roughened in sand and brine ;

But the ocean sings, and the sea-winds sigh,

Till it seems ’twere sweet to die.

Polished shells of perfect mould,

Complete in themselves they seem,

No groping ghouls of the ocean cold

With its cruel charnel gleam.

And strange it is that we feel no dread

When the sea gives up its dead.

96

ON THE SHORE

Death and decay ; but all so fair

And lulled with such lullaby,

That the keenest life is enchanted there

Forgetting it too must die, —

That when its wondrous house is gone

The ocean still sings on.

Life has a sea with a sounding shore,

We are as shells in the deep ;

We hear its music of Evermore,

We live, and we laugh, and weep,—

May we, to a God of eternal breath,

Be as fair as we lie in death.

LX

Summer Day.

0 rare, O sweet the summer day

Whose air is languid from the bloom

Of scented flowers ; the young winds play.

Swinging the censers of perfume,

And half their sweetness they consume :

O rare, O sweet the summer day

When winds from blossoms steal away,

And in the grove’s secluded gloom

Linger and sigh, while skies illume

0 rare ! 0 sweet! the Summer day !

Pleasant to listen to the lisp

Of the young winds : the crickets chirr

In the long grass ; the song-birds stir

The ready air to measures crisp;

The skies have scarce a single blurr,

Since clouds are frayed to finest wisp.

Old Ocean’s unremitting beat

Monotonous, drones far away ;

All Nature’s voices wake and greet

And in one song voluptuous meet

0 rare, 0 sweet, the Summer day !

G

LXI

VILLANELLE.

(In Shorthand.)

Time Flies.

Time flies

While yet

Earth sighs.

Sad eyes

Eegret

Time flies.

Clear skies

Forget

Earth sighs.

Suns rise

And set,

Time flies.

Love cries

In fret

Earth sighs.

Death ties

His net

Time flies,

Earth sighs.

LXII

Can We Change?

What is change to you and me 1

Years may pass,

Each that comes like that which was

As they flee,

Shall they joys for us amass !

We shall see.

Shall we ever, then, grow old,

Wrinkled, gray ?

Will your soft hair fade away

From the gold ?

Will Love in that later day

Be a-cold 1

Faces alter ; souls endure

Evermore ;

Spirit-love is the soul’s core,

Ever sure :

Love of heart for heart therefore

Is most pure.

CAN WE CHANGE f

119

Love of soul for soul shall last

Till the end :

Love of face, —ev’n love of friend,

Soon is past:

Soul with soul our hearts’ loves blend.

Firm and fast

One day like another goes,

Night like night

Lily always pure and white,

Red the rose

Will life always be delight 1

Ah ; who knows ?

Little words are great indeed.

Rightly said;

Hearts from little words have bled—

Some still bleed :

Hearts still love tho’ lips he dead.

Love their need.

Time in one place idly stands,

Looks aside :

Works his changes over wide

Seas and lands :

We, untouched, move side by side,

Clasped our hands,

CAN WE CHANGE!

120

What is change to you and me 1—

Life’s long maze

Alters not our wills, our ways,

Steadfast we :

Will joy last thro’ length of days 1

We shall see !

LXIII

Serenade.

(from korner.)

Cradled in the silent night ;

Life is sweetly sleeping ;

Longing makes the darkness bright,

Love his watch is keeping.

Round about me come and go

Ghosts and spirits lonely

Yet I linger here below,

Faithful to thee only

Gracious maiden, hearest thou 1

Why so long delaying 1

Liest thou in slumber now,

Deep in dreamland straying 1

Nay ; thou movest not in dreams

For my spirit, yearning,

Thro’ thy curtain sees the gleams

Of thy lamp, still burning.

SERENADE

122

Ah ; so glance thou, child most kind :

From thy window bending

Softly ; how the evening wind

Sweet with song is wending.

And the wind shall truly hear,

Bear my thoughts above me,

And shall whisper in thine ear,

Where thou art, —“ I love thee.”

When the earnest lover sings

True love listens, waking ;

But the night to morning wings,

I your rest am breaking.

Slumber till the morning light

Breaks in day the clearest;

Until morning, then, Good-night

Good-night, thou, my dearest.

LXIV.

The Waterfall and the Piwakawaka.

Water falling in foam,

And a dead fuchsia bending

Fi-om the daylight above, to the gloam

Of the chasm descending

Frondage of ferns, and the drip

From hark hanging in tatters,

Sunlight and cheerfulness slip

To the gloom, when asway on the tip

Of a twig, the gay fantail chatters

Death is around it—what matters ?

A flirt of its fan and its flits

And over the foaming sits

And flirts, twits and chatters.

LXV.

Ti-trees and the Kukupa.

A grove of the southern palm

On an islet, alone

In the bosom unrippled and calm

Of a lake with its mountain-zone

The wild bee’s singing

Has ceased in the great white bloom

And the once gay scented plume

Hangs lazily swinging

White 1 it is still milk-white

In its green top serried,

Still milk-white,—

But drooping, heavily berried.

In the midst, iridescent and glowing,

Full-breasted, bead-eyed,

Bright as the Argus shewing,

Not knowing its pride,—

(Low and gentle the call,

Cooing, and cooing

Wood-pigeons ; that is all,

Cooing and wooing).

LXVI

Spring-time and Echo.

(A MYTHOLOGICAL IDYLL.)

I LAY me down in the sweet Spring-time,

(Dreamed a dream of dreams !)

I dreamed the blossoms arose in mime

(Sleep with fancy teems!)

I lay at morn by a stream alone.

(Lay till morn was noon !)

My head was pillowed on a mossy stone

(Noon was all 100 soon !)

I saw a vale lie broad to day

( — Tempo , happy chance !)

Spring-time revelled therein alway

(With faun and satyrs dance

The moody wind-flower stood alone.

(The Love-Queen by it knelt!)

A youth as fair as the carven stone

(As cold to the, Queen he felt!

126

SPRING-TIME AND ECHO

In the woods a maiden wept,

(And Apollo there!)

Scents of laurel about her crept,—

(Laurel in his hair !)

List! a chord of music swept—

(Ah ; Apollo there I)

The flower whose leaf is stamped with grief,

(He whom Zephyr loved !)

Watched in the East but joy was brief.

(The Sun-god onward moved !)

By the pool where naiads swim

(Hovered Echo’s voice !)

Leaned a youth, and a spell held him ;

(To a wayward choice !)

And he gazed in the waters dim.

(Heard not Echo’s void !)

Who is this who kneels and turns

(In the skies,—Apollo !)

To the sun while her heart burns 1 —

(That she may not follow !)

’T is the gold-rayed flower that yearns.

(Ever for Apollo !)

SPUING-TIME AND ECHO

127

O’er a pool a maiden leant,

(Pan leant o’er the maid !)

In her arms the reeds she bent

(On his pipes he played /

Lonely shepherd without sheep,

(Cybele looks thunder !)

Firs stand lonely on the steep,

(Castles lower under !)

Thou and they bemoan in sleep.

(Neither do we wonder !)

Lovely flowers of the olden time,

( Lovely maids and men !)

Lost are the days of your golden prime

(Grant us fancy, then !)

Ye in dreams of the sweet Spring-time

Live and breathe again

LXVII

Fortune.

(FROM HEINE.)

Fortune ! it is all in vain

You are adverse ! I can gain,

Since I know that fighting, striving,

I am your defeat conniving.

I will overcome you yet,

And my yoke upon you set;

In the end you must surrender—

Tho’ my wounds are sore and tender

But it drains my life’s red blood;

And the fair life’s active mood

Peaks away, and I lie dying

With victorious banners flying !

LXVIII.

The Cry of the Dishonoured.

There’s a moan from our by-ways and streets —“We are born to shame :

We are thrust in the dark, being seared with the outcast’s brand :

We are cursed by our fathers that are, and denied name,

And our fathers, in spurning, have made us a cursi to the land ;

And our mothers, —they love us, yet hate; we are bless’d and hann’d ;

For the salt of their tears parch’d the joy at the hour of our birth ;

And the voices of pitiless virtue cry— 1 Woe that ye came,

As a blot to our fame, and a burden to cumber our earth.’

“Unhonoured the name that we bear, and unhonouree our toil—

‘ Can aught that is good be of these 1 ’ —and the upright pass hy ;

Can the fruitage be good from the tree if evil the soil !

For they cast us where evil must flourish and

virtue must die :

THE CRY OF THE DISHONOURED

130

And serenely they move, content if obscured from their eye

And shut from their ear are the sight and the sound of our pain,

The gloom of our sorrow, the ceaselessness of our moil—

What wonder we harden, if prayers are forever in vain ?

What law can be guidance to us when the lawgivers turn

The sword to our hearts 1 —from the first we are doomed in their eyes :

Our fathers are proud in their midst, while our mothers they spurn,

They place us in deepest of hell, and themselves in the skies,

And crush us with tyrannous laws if we murmur or rise :

We must labour in darkness, and love like the beasts of the field

Since Nature’s first law was transgressed ! we must evermore bum

In the fire of those sins, no better from being concealed.

131

THE OBT OF THE DISHONOVBED

“ And our mothers ; gaunt women of weeping that once were fair;

Whose tears have burned in their cheeks the ‘ furrows of vice,’ they say :

Whose eyes looked furtively up to the creatures who cast them there,

But now are fierce with the fire of animals turned to bay ;

God’s image is man —if the man-god will help not the devil-god may;—

A.nd once we are soiled and spurned, it needs a powerful hand

To help us, if not to save honour, dishonour to bear;—•

If no help for us is forthcoming, what soul can the curse withstand 1

“ Only the patient women workers whose fingers are worn,

Whose hands are hard, but whose hearts are soft are the ones who feel;

These most know the despair and the anguish of sisters forlorn,

Of the struggles to save the honour dishonours conceal,

132

THE CRT OF THE DISHONOURED

For not one-half of their strivings their shames reveal;

And callously, men look down on the burning shame alone.

Awake, if men; bring mercy forth living, and not still-born :

Nor, when we call from the heart for pardon, down crush with the stone.—

Death in life ; when the honour is dead that we’re taught to revere ; —

And make they the straitened ways easier, the burden to bear 1

Do they help us herein 1 Ye women that tremble so near

That chasm whose awfulness marks not the foul from the fair,

Take heed; for the man is self-seeking, evading his share;

He will leave you to stumble alone to destruction’s abyss ;

He escapes what to you is such travail; he laughs, and you fear;

He calls you to love and to life, and he leaves you to this.

H

114

THE CRY OF THE DISHONOURED

“But they say that the woman through justice may hold to her own :

For justice compels, where the man is unwilling to do.

Ay ! ’tis nothing the shame of the woman thro’ trust should be known,

And nothing how false she appear if but justice seem true;

Then either in broad-reaching shame, or in deeppiercing rue

Must she bear what her love and her trust were too willing to take:

Then who is the first that against her shall lift up the stone 1

Who is the pure one to curse and to crush, for God’s sake ? ”

Nature’s law over-rules man’s, tho’ he try to reverse

With his puniest learning the laws that will bless if obeyed :

The blessing of bearing is now as the veriest curse

To thousands whose hunger for love will not die nor be stayed.—

134

THE CRY OF THE DISHONOURED

And what are they lesser therefore 1 No shame to the maid

If she’s weaker than Nature, hut, shame to the man, who should be

A.s strong as his vaunting, at least; yet these weak they immerse

In the flood of dishonour; that brackish, black, horror-waved sea.

There’s a moan from our by-ways and streets, toi piteous to speak;

We know not one-half, not a tithe of the misery there,

Nor can we; but women are wronged, and women are meek,

Whilst against them is pitted the callous old giant Despair :

Tho’ our ears and our eyes are fast closed, the sorrows they bear

Seem to touch us, we cannot tell how, as o’erladen they plod;

And what little service we render to shelter the weak

Is a service that strengthens ourselves, and the goodness of God.

LXIX

The Old Story.

Our youth of life together we have spent:

Together we have reached our middle age ;

We did not mark the pathway as we went,

We did not sift our thoughts like sober mage

Alas ; we did not even gage

What our lives taught, or what life’s teaching meant.

It now has come to this ; that we must say,—

Those bygone days seem pleasant to the thought

That backward turns: our paths diverge to-day

’Tis not all sweet to go the way we might.

JVhat recompenses has Time brought ?

These :—Love to each; pledges of Life's warm May.

We two thought not, nor dreamed to seek out love ;

So close beside, but looked beyond our pale

How could such friends ever as lovers move ?

How could the friend take up the lover’s tale 1

And yet; it seems the found loves fail

To meet the tests we set their truth to prove.

136

THE OLD STOHy

Why should we think of parting with regret t

Each knows the other goes his joy to meet,

Each knows, too, his own purpose : . . ay, and yet

The newer meeting does not seem complete.

We laugh, and say To part is sweet.-

Whence then the wish for tears, and to forget 1

Go, meet your lover while I too meet mine.

They wait for us to join them : well they know

That we were friends, are friends; can they define,

Can they resolve, the doubts that move us so

Now that ’tis time we both should go,

To remain, more than ever we incline.

What is it then ; why should this wonder be !

We’ve often spoken of it, laughed at it.

Why should I wish to know you still near me

Why should your going trouble me one whit I

We’re friends, —ah yes ; and, Life is lit

With friendship : true ; and still we fail to see.

Is it that we would rather wander on

In the old way, because it is so good 1

I cannot think of life, you being gone,

In the same way : now, it is understood

But we two parted I —o, I would

The dream were clearer that we chance upon,

137

THE OLD STORY

Cannot we find contentment otherwise ?

Are we mistaken when we deem that we

Part to our joy I—O, close those longing eyes.

For I look back to you as you to me

We give our hands to others ; see

How our two hearts return, and feign surprise ■

No, no : it is not good for us to part

Love must be ours : we long ago have given

Each to the other ;—nay love; do not start

As I an ill thought to your soul had driven.—

So, love : you are my only heaven,

My breast your rest, your sanctuary my heart

Will this be hard, be unjust to those two,

The one you leave, the one that I have left ?

Yes, yes; you-will, I have: . . . what should we do ?

The soul must bleed and bleed whose heart is cleft,—

Will we cleave theirs I—His left

Only to part, then, evermore to rue.

Now we have found our hearts we turn to go ;

You to yours, I to mine, as we are pledged.

Try to forget this truth that now we know, —

Strive that this callow thing be never fledged.

O love : are all truths double-edged,

That one edge salves, and one must torture so '?

THE OLD STORY

138

Is it Good-bye then ? . . . gather up our strength

That we may conquer where we are enslaved.

What hollow mockery that at this length

We find Love’s banner over us has waved !

Deep truth is in that saying graved—

“ In our most weakness we discover strength.”

You shall not go; shall not: it is a reed

To lean on, thinking we shall ever win

To conquer this, long-lived: my love shall plead

With yours : and who shall overtop with din

The wm-d that bids ycm let me in, —

Nay, lam in ! ... . Let he, is all I plead / ... .

Lean so and rest then ; surely it is best

Ah ; why till now has your head never found

This is its place ?—scorn rears an angry crest

But, unregarded, topples to the ground.

We two shall bide in depth profound

Of Love, where warring worlds shall not molest.

Ha, ha ! what was it tried to part us then 1

That very deed has made us see the truth !

Who would have dreamt Love was about us, when

We side by side walked—dreamed we waked to ruth !

No, we must never part, love ; —sooth,

Mishaps bring Heav’n. Praise Heav’n therefor

Amen.

LXX

The Acorn Hath a Grove of Oaks.

What are words once given ;

Breaths that pass away ?

(Clouds at night are riven.

And are naught at day :) —

Is a word a thing so small,

Thoughtless, idly spoken,

That no hopes of all in all

Can thereby be broken ?

What are plighted vows;

Whispers that have been 1

(Often Spring-trees’ boughs

Lose their promised green :) —

Is a vow a thing so light,

One with ease can sever,

Nor be cursed of its blight

Ever and forever ?

LXXI

Perennial Joy.

Why sorrow when joy is past t

Know we not well that it cannot stay 1

Look you; the loveliest Summer’s day

Must go at last.

No pleasure, hut some alloy

Is blended ; and, is it not more dear

Thus two-fold I —if all must age and sere,

Why should not joy 1

But softly, dear heart; for then,

When it is gone like the day’s blue sky,

Know we not well, ev’n by night’s sorrow-sigh.

’Twill wake again 1

141

Margaret at Her SpinningWheel.

(from gcethe.)

My peace is gone,

My heart is sore ;

I’ve lost it forever

And evermore.

When he is not by

I am like to die ;

The world is all

Suffused with gall

My aching head

Is racked with pain.

My restless soul

Is rent in twain

My peace is gone,

My heart is sore

I’ve lost it forever

And evermore.

MARGARET AT HER SPINNING WHEEL

142

To see him only

I sit at the pane,

I leave the house only

To meet him again.

His stately front,

His noble guise,

His mouth’s soft laughter

His wonderful eyes.

The magic tones

In that word of his ;

His firm hand clasp ;

And ah ! his kiss !

My peace is gone,

My heart is sore ;

I've lost it forever

And evermore.

My bosom yearns

With him to be :

Ah, dared I hut hold him

And clasp him to me !

To kiss his lips

Unchecked, unchidden

Tho’ I from kisses

To death were bidden

LX XIII.

Old Love-Songs.

When song has sounded high,

And divine chords their melodies have flung,

There comes a murmur from the days gone by

Of hands that have such wakened, and lips sung

Comes a diviner air, full, sad and slow,

Of lingered singing, subdued, perfect, clear ;

Those accents that the soul but once might know,

And knowing, hold most dear

When music’s failing notes

In languishment grow slower, and more slow,

Bright with its swiftness a clear vision floats ;

And echoes passing by, faltered and low,

Breathe half-remembered, simple, olden songs,

That sleep till some unlooked for, trivial call

Wakens them beating to a life that throngs

With newer notes and chords, and blends them all.

Ah, the remembrance ; ah, the afterthought;

eauty grows fairer, happiness more dear :

orgot is this dull present, when unsought

The memories of other days are near I

144

OLD LOVE-SONOS

0 tones, that ready stir

To whatso hand can waken you to song,—

And such, how few ! —awaken now, and long,

Ah long in blissfulness vibrate, and sing of her.

0 tones, all ready set

To sing the best that ever has been sung,

Reveal to me the sweets that to you clung,

Those sweet sad wistful songs of love’s regret!

O tones, that sleep so fast

When hands are inexpert to set you free, —

Whisper those glories only once to me,

That from my heart the echoes may outlast

My thought, my life, when I have ceased to be.

LXXIV.

On Cremation.

What the eye sees not, grieves not the heart ; —for remembrance, without the remembrancer, must perish; and we put away our dearest in the midst of strangers, forgetful, as we read the epitaph, of what is passing under the daisies. Dead sea apples were fair without, but ashes within ; —and the grave, so beautiful to look upon ; will we think of that 1

Man’s lowly house; God’s acre ; the green grass turf; it is the name we cling to and are loth to relinquish ; mother Earth calls us to her breast, lovingly and persistently ; and we forget that her visible beauty, like that of her fair children, is but skin deep.

If there is one sorrow more deep while more common than another, it is this severing in death ; and it of all sorrows is the one we most cherish; choosing for its emblem that mournfullest of colours, melancholy black, sorrow’s harbinger.

ON CREMATION

146

Underneath this sable hearse

Lies the subject of all verse.

Death has, at the graveside, inspired as many mournful reflections, and sometimes even hopeful, as love has inspired happy ones; and not yet do we know which is stronger, love or death; for though death gathers to himself the strongest love, even the weakest survives his dissolution ; and life and death are one, love links them in the grave.

The grave : mother Earth calls back her children ; but does that quiet voice call them to darkness, cold and shuddering, while close above, though hearts may be heavy, and eyes wet, the birds still sing, the flowers laugh by the forest ways, and the skies are tenderly blue t Earth on her breast would rock and croon to her children, weary of life ; we make her a charnel-house, breathing decay. What though the decay be hidden by

the grass green knoll and mossy stone,

and the thought of it seem put quite away ; at times we cannot but think of it; and then death’s chill fingers press our wrist, so coldly and faintly the life pulses within us.

Sweet mourners ! your tears only wither the flowers on the grave that your hands make beautiful: well it is that love can beautify death, and forgetfulness dull his terrors.

147

ON CREMATION

We must be patient: hut I cannot choose but weep, to think they should lay him i’ the cold ground.

Poor Ophelia : mourning her father more, perhaps, thro’ already having lost her lover; giving her flowers in careful foolishness to those who soon would forget her and her griefs in their more immediate own.

There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance ; pray you, love, remember : and there is pansies, iha£s for thoughts there’s rue for you: and here’s some for me: .. .

Work as we will, alas, rosemary and rue for us all

Round the head of death is a halo, woven of sorrow and affection, and its beams have flickered down from antiquity : flickered, yet so strong are they that the grave cannot quench them, but over it they linger, an ‘ ignus fatuus,’ indeed, but not altogether of evil.

Old customs are shackles ; and so strange is our human nature, that certain of our bonds we love; and this old sorrow of burial, this old woe o’ the world, one of them : nay, had we our choice, we would even seek heaven through the lowly wicket of the grave rather than through the gateway of the skies; seek it in the doleful hearse rather than in the chariot of fire.

148

ON CBE MAT lON

It is this chariot of fire that seems so commendable; yet we eye it with disfavour, as we would a supplanter and a stealer of birthrights : fire, the cleanly, the everbright; the refiner, the lifegiver; fire, in whose arms life is cradled, and whose extinction were the end of all.

Odes there are in abundance : odes to life and to death, to sorrow and to happiness ; to every feeling that has at any time affected the heart of man ; but never yet an

Ode to a Cremation Urn.

Thou placidest container of the dust

That was a being ! unchanged thro’ the years

When man feels hopes and fears,

Unsullied and untarnished, free from rust

Tho’ thy curved sides are bathed with human tears !

Thou form of changeless beauty ; far more firm

Than was the wonder whose last ashes lie

Still in thy sides : the living charms must die,

But thou surviv’st unchanged their longest term

Their looks decay ere half their day is past;

Thou guard’st their ashes closely at the last.

The teeming brain that scorned the body’s thrall,

The loving heart, for its weak house too strong,

The aspiring spirit, pent on earth too long,—

I

ON CREMATION

149

Thou hold’st the body that contained them all

That body, purged of dross by heavenly fire,

No more knows fruitless hope, or blank desire.

And we : shall we regret

The pleasures that are past ?

Their memory lives yet,—

They were too good to last

Gladness be ours that such joys might be known ;

Not sorrow that they’re flown

Gladness be ours that we can not forget

Immortal ! Keeper of the mortal part

Of one whose spirit never shall know death ;

The dust of earth within thee slumbereth

No more flushed red with blood of a pure heart!

Keen with high aspiration was that form;

Now’t is impassive, lustreless and cold ;

Thy little bound that restless dust can hold

Within whose bounds high hopes surged live and warm.

No looks unloving rest on thee, fair urn !

No careless passer wonders who lies there !

No cynic at thy epitaph shall turn

And laugh at who displays too fond a care

ON CREMATION

150

Impassive sepulchre ! untouched by frost,

Nor sodden with the rains, nor scorched by sun,—

Undimmed thou standest till our day is done,

Thy charge unscattered, nor thy beauty lost!

Thus in earth’s frailties man his strength displays,

Moulding a shape that far outlasts his days ;

And mortal man invents

Immortal monuments

And in his works will still remembered be ;

Himself must pass away ;

To thee he gives his clay,

And sets thy beauty ’gainst eternity.

LXXV

After-Life.

Weave the wreath of moly ;

Is it the victor, Death,

Gives us this crown most holy,

Taking our latest breath 1

Shall we forget this life we leave ?

Have we forgotten an earlier left t

Is it cause to joy, or cause to grieve,

That we of remembrance are quite bereft 1

Bow the head most lowly :

We of the Earth are born,

Bless’d with a spirit holy,

Giv’n of Life’s rose and thorn.

Do we return from ages past,

Or is our spirit but now create 1

Is the world we tread the one that last

Was the scene of a former life’s estate 1

152

AFTEB-LIFE

Look with awe and wonder ;

What are we all but dust 1

Earth we are sure is under ;

Heav’n is above, we trust: —

Or is our trust an errant thing,

Seeking without what is most within 1

Is it true that death our soul shall bring

To Earth, that its new life may begin 1

Breadths unknown asunder,

Life from life is set

All that was ever under,

Lives under Heaven yet;

All that has lived in the ages gone

Lives, and shall live till time be past

The first create till the end lives on,

And first shall be always the same as last.

Same, but upward lifting ;

So shall the base be dead,

All that is noble, drifting

To the supreme God head.

So shall each good deed lift us more,

Nearer the goal we at length shall reach ;

And the fight we win shall strength outpour,

And the truth we see shall a greater teach.

153

AFTER-LIPI-

Good from evil sifting,

Glorious spirit-flight;

Souls of the Years up-drifting :

Passing from Doubt’s dark night:—

Shall we forget each friend, each tie,

Binding us closely, and sweet past thought ?

If dying we live, is it hard to die 1

Shall Death’s be the hand to make past life naught 1

What is all our feeling ?

Is it the force that moulds

That which Life, half revealing,

As the Soul’s end, unfolds ?

That which is perfect, pure and clean,

That which must broaden in power and grace,

Till the veil of doubt can no more screen

Its eyes from its Maker’s, its great God’s face 1

What seems most concealing

To our unknowing mind,

May be the best revealing :

Of the great Life, Mankind

Deep is it hidden, the truth we seek ;

Yet are we able to find it out. —

But the rayless depths, adverse and bleak,

We must traverse and trace ere freed from doubt

LXXVT.

Patito.

Who is the spearman whose fame comes to Eeinga the dreary 1

Whose is the prowess that rings even ’mid shades of the dead 1

He upon earth ; and I, locked in the caverns of darkness :

Were I above, would his arm wield with such valour the spear 1

Patito am I, the too, : —ah for the shout of the battle, Clash of the mere and grate spear against spear impelled !

Still’d is the bosom of youth, old are the sinews of vigour,

Dim grow the eyes that flashed, fierce in the face of the foe.

Who is the spearman that now boasts there are none to oppose him 1

Can he he bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh is he % Worthy his arm indeed, if worthy the arm of my fathers !—

Only again to return, measuring spear with spear ; Test if the fame of the lips finds a true tongue in his manhood ;

Test if the arm itself urges the fame or no.

155

PATITO

Never a change in the gloom ; shadow on shadow is gliding

Fast from the rooky gate, jaws of the Mother of Death ;

Jaws that between them griped Maui the god and enchanter

When he would pierce the deeps where the dark mother lay hid;

j j Mother of endless death, daughter and helpmate of Tane,

First of all women begot out of the maiden of earth.

Fast from the rocky gate ; none to its portals returning

Watch where the flaming sun dips in the waters of life :

Maui, the giver of fire, Maui, upborne on the waters, ;

Sunsnarer,—even a god knew Hine-nui-te-po

How then shall I, a man, warrior indeed but a mortal,

Hope to return to life, walk in the pleasantest sun 1

Lower and lower I sink, deeper in shades of Reinga

Full of the sacred food, earthward I cannot return.

Yet, is it quite beyond hope ?—once Mataora returned,

Left the dark caves with his wife, bringing the moko to man.

PATITO

156

Ah, but no off ring he made ; sacrificed naught at the portals ;

Wherefore no man can return once he has dwelt in the gloom.

What is the warrior to do 1 fight his own fears in his bosom 1

Combat with armies of ghosts, silent as shadows of clouds 1

Never the tumult of war, only the aching and longing :

Are they as goodly on earth now as in time-eaten days 1

Ah ; and the spearman whose fame comes to Reinga the dreary!

Even the spirits that sigh, leaving old life and its joys.

Murmur the message and say,—“ He is the foremost of spearmen ;

His is the arm of a god ; his is a god-driven spear;

Tu in his bosom is glad, Tu in his bosom rejoices,

Having a son so fierce, skilled in the arts that he loves.”

Knew they the warriors of old, eager and hardy and fearless 1

Knew they of spearmen of days gone as the light of a dream ?

157

PATITO

Nothing these spirits can know ; nothing of death conquered valour ;

Nothing of too, of old; nothing of prowess and might

Back to the portals I flit. Shimmering down thro’ the water

Comes the pale light of the sun : far in the sky, how he laughs !

Pallid and sickly he smiles, here where his snarer was vanquished !

Over the river I wade ; regions of night are behind,

Realms of the day are before,—ah that I could but attain them !

Clearer the wavering light sinks to the cleft where I stand ;

Shadowed above, behold ; netting the sunbeams among them

Float the great tangles of weed; over them hang the two roots

Dropping from earth to the sea. Now thro’ the tangles an opening,—

Up ! — tho’ despair drag me down, —up to the warmth of the day !—

PATITO

158

This was my journey of old ; dreary and rocky and silent;

O’er the two hills, to the tree out from whose buttress the roots

Drop till they dip in the weeds ceaselessly tangled by ocean.

Southward is laughing life ; southward is shouting of war!

Lo! Ahipara beyond, bounded and washed by the billows.

Delicate winnowing sand, soft as if trodden in dream :

Life-giving breezes of heaven ; deeply they sink in my bosom,

Warming my blood till my cheeks burn with their olden fire.

Over my spirit the leaves, lost as I ended my journey,

Bend as the leaves of the ti closely encircle its heart

Shielding the immature flower ; over my spirit the mantle

Gross, of the flesh, descends; gross, but how joyously thrilled !

One little battle on earth better than ages unnumbered

Down in the spirit-land haunted by demons and gnomes.

159

PATITO

Ha; round yon hummock of sand, who is the warrior approaches ?

Massy of limb is he; breasted and shouldered a god

Head held imperiously high,—now if my arm be abased not,

Low on the sand shall he fall, victor again I will be.—

Htiere mai e tua ! Patito am I, the valourous !

Dead, I have heard of the fame home by the son of my loins :

Dead, I have yearned for the day when in the impulse of battle

Arm against arm opposed, spear against spear inclined,

I of his strength might know, is it of arm or breath only:

Thou art a foeman of worth ; limbs of no stripling are thine :

Try if thy thrusted spear break thro’ the guard 1 present thee ;

Try if thy strongest guard bend from its course my spear !

“ Patito art thou indeed 1 I and my tribe call thee father !

Son of thy loins am I, glory is mine in the name.

160

PATITO

Where is the foe that dared ever oppose me in battle 1

Only my name can turn Tu the red-eyed to our hand.

Come thou again to thine own ; there shall be feast and rejoicing ;

Come to thy kindred, and lead first in the fight as of yore.”

Mine is no lust for the feast; heart have I none for rejoicing ;

War have I loved, but war charmed me not back from the dead :

All I desire is with thee, fairly with weapon for weapon,

Trial of skill with the spear.

“ Nay ; but thine arm is grown old ;

Mine as the sapling is strong, bending when blasts of the conflict

Sing, as it shaketh out death.”

Is then thy might in thy tongue 1

Never a son of mine lightly avoided a challenge !

What is mine age to thee 1 knowest thou not that the pine

Drops but a bough in the blast, breaking the delicate saplings 1

Son of thy mother thou art; —none of thy mother’s proud lord !

PATITO

161

“ That shall be proven or no ! not for thine age did I taunt thee :

Never a noble son fought with a father as bold

Striving with him as a foe. Father, thy son is not lacking

Now in the art thou didst teach, learnt ere his warrior-days.”

Steady then ; point and point: ah, how the combative spirit

Warms me and fills me with life truly my son to view !

Pass so —and guard—aha ! —skilled in my tricking and cunning t

Son, thou art more than son; out of thine eyes I gaze!

Come then, again, and again ; swift from the sinewy shoulder :

Pleasant the rasp of shafts thrills to the quivering heart I

Well thou canst fend, my son ; thrustest thou well as thou fendest —

What! —was the feint undiscerned 1 —lo, thou art wounded, my son.

Sorely I longed for a fight equalling this in its promise

Art thou hast some, but alas; better was buried with me.

162

PATITO

“ Better ; but stay thou with us ; teach us thy skill as aforetime ;

How can the stripling excel, lacking the teacher and sage 1

Stay thou, and lead us in war.”

Nay; if thine arm be the stoutest,

Swiftest of all thy spear, strongest of all in the land

Where is the man I should cope, where should I meet with my fellows 1

—J Weaklings are not for the strong ; give me my shadows again;

Down to my peers will I go, valiant still in Reinga.

There move the too,; and there, gazing on spirits and shades,

Well shall I dream of the past, dream of the mana of heroes ;

Dream of the days when the gods were not remote from the earth ;

Tane the maker of man, and Maui the fisher of islands.

Ah ; my desire was life;—now my desire is death

Death had been conquered hadst thou wielding thy spear overcome me;

Then had I longed to return, joyous in arts that I loved.

Memory livens and stirs, more than a dream that is broken :

Wherefore farewell to the dream ; memory only be mine.

163

PATITO

NOTES.

Hine-nui-te-po.—Daughter and afterwards wife of Take, god of forests. On learning her parentage, she in shame left Tane, and descended to the Lower Regions, where she became Queen, and took the name Hine-nui-te-po, or The Great Mother of Death. Here she continually strove to drag down man’s soul to darkness.

Maui.—The great hero of the Maori. He was born prematurely, and as this was unlucky, his mother wrapped him in her topknot and cast him into the sea: hence his full name, Maui-tikitiki-o-Taranga. He was, however, rescued by an ancestor, and it was prophesied that he was to be the death of Hine-nui-te-po : owing to his father making a slip in the baptismal ceremony, however, this prophecy was not fulfilled. Maui fished up the North Island, stole fire from Heaven, snared the sun and made it move more slowly over heaven, and did other wonderful things before his ignominious death. This took place while he was striving to win immortality for man by penetrating the secrets of Hine-nui-te-po : some birds were watching the performance, when a fantail, ludicrously affected, could not refrain from laughing: this woke up the old Lady, and she nipped Maui in two at the shoulders.

Reinqa.—The Underworld. The spirit leaving the body for Reinga, travelled towards North Cape, coming first to a hill, Waihokimai, where it stopped to lament and strip off its spirit-dress, leaves of the wharangi, makuku and horopito: then it passed a second hill, Waiotioti, and came to a pohutukawa tree, from which two roots descended into a tangle of weeds in the sea. Hanging from these roots the spirit waited till the weeds opened, then plunged down to Reinqa. Here it crossed a stream and was offered food : if it ate, it could never return to the upper world, but suffered gradual extinction.

Tank.—God of forests; the son who separated his parents Ranoi and Papa (Heaven and Earth).

Tu. —The god of war: brother of Tane.

Mataora.—A mortal who descended to the lower regions, and brought thence the moko, or art of tattooing in curves.

Toa.—A brave fighting man

Haere max c tua !—Form of address to a man

LXXVII

In the Forest.

Persons.

Sivaed. —A jarts son.

Hilda. —Daughter of a distant rival jarl.

Knud.— Hilda’s cousin.

Scene I.

A Summer morning. Glade in a pine-forest on a hill-side overlooking the upper arm of a fiord.

Sivard pacing along the glade ; his horse fastened in a thicket close by.

Sir. —lmpatience for his leader, how time lags

Three hours since sunrise, and it seems a day !

The fourth morn after Odin’s feast; —she’ll come,—

And then, ho time ! Upon my hither way

I heard, or seemed to hear the echoes long

Of blowing horns ; if Thorwald hunts to-day

His daughter stays no cage-bird I —yet she sure

Might tarry, deeming greater danger ours

If found together ; and that jealous lynx

Her cousin, may have eyes for other hunt

Than that of shaggy bear or nimble deer.—

(An echo of horns heard faintly.)

K

IN TEE FOREST

165

Again ; no fancy : those are Thorwald’s horns ;

His hinds and hounds can not be far away.—

Well, on a little way upon this soft

Thick needle-carpet ; on, whence Hilda comes

And if not, . . . soft, . . a horseman, and in haste;

It may be her, but the whole hunt’s abroad,-

(Loosens his sword as he retires behind the trees. Enter Hilda riding hastily.)

HU. —No Sivard.

Siv. — Yea; and Thor be praised’t is thou

HU. —Ah, Sivard, there is danger in the air-

Siv. —Whereof I heard the echoes 1

HU. — You must go— Siv. —So long to wait, and such a little space

To meed the waiting 1

HU. — Hush ; that’s recklessness

Your bravery lies now in leaving me.

I know your courage of heart, your strength of arm,

But would not here behold the test of both

To your sure hurt—for Knud is not alone.

Siv. —He hunts then 1

HU.- - All game !

Siv. — Be it even so ;

The hunter surely finds his doom some day,

IN THE FOREST

166

And then hounds yelp at random; let him come;

Am I not ready 1

HU. — Sivard ; as you know,

Your peril is not thro’ his arm alone,

And where you cannot hope to win,—no, no ;

While time is, leave me.

Siv. — Far enough’s the hunt,

Dear life, nor lies this glade within its range ;

They’ll hunt to southward in the forest’s heart;

What sport is near the shore 1

HU. — Can you say that ?

What sport is keener than the ringing clash

Of blade with blade, of chain-mail against mail 1

Hear now, if ever you would hear me more ;

Tempt not the serious Norns. What hope have we

If wisdom do not prompt our counsel I—You May meet me but so rarely—

Siv. — Yea, by Thor

Too rarely. Wkat; need you return again 1

Why not away for ever from th’ old tower

And sit the lady of my hall I—l1 —I swear

Your welcome shall be great, your state as high

Your honour more than in your father’s house.—

He bore your mother from a southern jarl—

167

IN THE FOREST

HU. —Ah there : but he was kind, she learned to love

HU.

Can I but love him who was kind to her 1 —

Tho’ Frigga took her many a year ago.

Siv. —Thy love I chide not, —nay, if needs must be,

I’ll brave the bear’s den, seek you in your bower

And take you as he sits at meat and mead.

(Echo of horns coming nearer.)

HU.- —Sivard ; good love : go now, and I will send

Have I not sent before, and safe enough 1—

And we shall con again those pleasant truths

Our faces tell each other ; —not as now

When I’m afraid and you are reckless ; go

When next we meet there need be no Farewell.

Siv. —Away then, love ; and Freja be your guard

Your hand—l have the rein—

HU. — My hand ; and here

My lips. Farewell.

168

IN THE FOREST

Scene 11,

A Winter night. A blulf above a river tumbling into the fiord : behind, Jarl Thorwald’s stronghold. The great hall is lighted up, and laugh and song come from the revellers within.

Sirxird, under cover of wall.

(Enter Hilda hastily, in mantle and hood.)

HU.— Sivard, what folly! Kolf, with frightened looks—

The poor boy sees the danger more than you,—

Gave me your words ev’n as I left the hall.

What madness has possessed you, thus to dare

Into the very midst of foes 1

Siv. — Give o’er

Fear not; I’m here, let’s make of that, my girl,

The most we may ; they have broached

Suttung’s mead

Within there, by the revel, —but the dregs

That Odin spilt on earth by that last stave !

HU. —And you can jest with ghastly death at hand !

That’s not the Sivard unlocked Hilda’s heart.

Siv. —Ah ; is’t the thought of death that makes me gay *

Rather your nearness makes an end of him.—

Come lower down the steep-way to the boats—

Hear you them grind below like chafing jaws

As the flood swirls around them ?—there’s a place

169

IN THE FOREST

Under a bank where we are safe enough,

Where we can watch the up-way and the down

And not be seen ; —or is the frost too eager ?

HU. —No hazard, Sivard, is too hazardous

So you are farther hence.

(They move downwards towards the boats, a crouching figure following.)

Siv. —Brr ! this is Winter ; —good hap Njord is still

And herds not now his winds : the stars are keen,

And black the moonless night; only the pulse

Of northern lights throbs wavering here and there

Across the Wain and Bear ; but from the trees

The heavy snow falls, as with growing weight

The branches bend : the owl can find no warmth

And hoots in discontent

Uil.— And hear you : far

Away the dismal howl of hungry wolves

Where lies the path for your home-going, Sivard t

A long night’s journey thro’ these frozen woods

Will barely take you thither, and the way

Will now be thick with dangers.

Siv. — The more need

To keep sharp eyes and ready weapons : lo ;

Hither I came with never a mishap,

IN THE FOREST

170

And Thor being good, without mishap we’ll go;—

For fain I would have company ; alone

Should no man’s journeying be; —and would you come

Your horse were readied at a word; and mine,—

Cannot I borrow from my friends within 1

HU.-— Sivard, it may not be; and if it might—

Siv. —But wherefore may not t is there let so great

We cannot laugh at ?—need there’s none for aught

Save our two selves, and under us our steeds !

We would be hence, or ever morning broke,

A night of leagues; and ere the brawlers stirred

A night and morn ; too far to be o’erta’en.

HU. —Nay ; for you take no count of prowling wolves

Marauding hears; snow-drifts and splintered pines;

The forest is as full of traps and snares

And dangers as the hall; and can we ’scape

From every one ?

Siv. — The dangers are not there

An we heed well: I know each turn of path,

Each dip and swell therein ; and what’s my sword

But guard and stay I—nor wolves are yet so fierce

But they have dread of man—

171

IN THE FOREST

HU. —(hastily) What sound was that ?

No hoot of owl nor cry of raven—

Siv. — Naught;

A branch’s rustle as the snow brushed past;

A hare within the copse —

HU. — I thought a laugh

Came smothered from above.

Siv. — Ho ; they are free

To sing and laugh as ’t pleases ! Say then, love :

Shall we two lonely pass beneath the pines

Out of their lives ?—Even I’ll cast a boat

From the complaining fleet below, and pull

Across the fiord, avoiding forest paths

Till morning opes them up ? My horse is there

And, shall I say 1 another one for you

The carle waits where we land—

HU. — No ; the black fiord

Has ice upon its bosom, and the jags

Bite treacherously : I feel afraid and cold,

Sivard ; I would not stay in this dark burg,

But dread the forest; wait till Summer suns

Have thawed the snow and made all bright again.

Siv. —Too long, too long ; already far too long

We’ve waited; days knit firmer bonds

About us ; and when Summer comes, —lo you

IN THE FOREST

172

Will even then be tardy : love, come now

When both are willing, both are ready : see

Can one night hold more danger and more dread

Than that long time where days and nights abound,

When every day is full of thwarting deeds,

And every night more desolate than this ?

Yea, days and nights ; how many have I told

Since that last Summer day you rode so fast ?

What hand has stayed you all these days and days

From riding with your maidens in the wood ;

Or setting out for the high promontory

To watch the viking ships sail up the fiord

Breasting the billows like sea-ereatures ?

HU— Ah;

No ships have sailed; for Berse, nor Orne, nor Knud,

Have borne sea spirits of late ; but hunt and raid

Inland have been their zest.

Slv. — Your brothers then

Love changes too I —l thought them sheer sea wolves

With no concern save for the briny waves—

And would they’d beat their ocean to and fro

If staying hinders you—

IN THE FOREST

173

HU. — But Knud’s alert!

I know it. When I came from my hard ride,

He, who I thought in fore-front of the chase,

Stood at the gate and eyed me as I past

“ So, Hilda ; thou rid’st fast and far,” said he

“ Hast too been hunting 1 ’’—and tho’ no more said,

I knew he watched me keener day by day,

Till life was all a burden.

Siv. — Thor’s my life !

A spear’s his only need—

HU. — That must not be :

Enough already ’twixt your house and mine :

And I stand promised, thro’ a father’s whim— Siv. —To Knud 1

HU. — To him, my cousin

Siv. — And to me

Thro’ your own whim and mine;—and that’s enough

To thwart their wishes. Snap the bond to-night;

Why more delay when every day is danger 1

(A breath of wind passes through the pines.)

Hark ; even now old Njord turns in his sleep

And soon will loose the North wind with its snows :

174

IN THE FOREST

And listen; in the fiord Ran heaves her breast

Grating the ices harshly ; the North lights

Have flickered out, and stars grow dim in mist:—

Come, Hilda ; ere the air be filled with keen

Swift ringing winds loaded with frozen snow ;

And ere the pine trees rock towards heaven their arms,

Scattering down their burdens! A warm snood,

Thy furs and gloves, no more, — and then away :—

All the night’s elements, the forest glooms,

Are nothing to the conflict in my thoughts

Thinking of thee away. Wouldst thou remain

Prisoned and chafing all these weary days

To ’scape the fancied dangers of one night ?

HU.-—No, no. . . I’ll come to-night!

Siv. — There spoke the maid

Whom men call Hilda ; there the maid whose heart

Sivard unlocked !

HU. — But all the dangers set

For him who slipped the bolt!

Siv. — Who slipped, can brave !

HU. —Ha, ha ! now having set my face to thee,

My back to all else, how the sweet warm blood

Sings in my veins till I must laugh again !

IN THE FOREST

175

Siv. —Nor laughing, fear the night 1

HU. — Nor it, nor day.

I even can think of what has been till now

A dream ; and now I wake and laugh at fears

That troubled me when sleeping.

Siv. — Thou shalt laugh

With forest deeps to echo ; now away,

While to the stables —

HU. — Need is none for that!

My horse is ever ready ; —ah, bold love,

A midnight ride has lingered in my dreams !

And thine, the warriors’ steeds are ever set

With bit and saddle, ready for all chance

Siv. — All chance ?

HU. — Tho’ never was this fancy dreamed

But thou ; thou know’st the lodge at the west end

Near the great gate 1

Siv. — I know it

HU. — Wait me there.

A stairway from my bower to it—

Siv. — I’ll wait

And watch that all is safe.

HU. — There ; . . hark again. .

Was that a laugh 1

IN THE FOREST

176

Siv. — I heard a rustling bush ;

But the North wind is rousing from his lair.

HU. —I heard the rustle, but a laugh as well.

But haste we, lord ; . . yea, lord or love, say I,

And let us break away from bonds and death.

(They move upwards to the castle.)

177

IN THE FOREST

Scene 111.

(A shadow approaches the lodge from the way to the boats.)

Shadow. —Has watched her keenly ; keenly ;

yea; and there’s somewhat bites keenly ; . . . .

so that the bitten needs no watching.—Look to

the horses, boy; .... if Hel be not thy

hostess within the hour, then Knud shall be her

guest Ho : this is Knud’s task, and it

shall have brave doing. A spear’s his only

need 1 ... no, not so much as a spear; not so much.

(He enters the lodge, which is in darkness. A Chorus i heard from the hall:—

“ Vimur rose quickly as Thor in it stood ;

Over his shoulders he sank in the flood :

‘ Whence comes the water ? ’ in anger quoth Thor ;

Down came the torrent, more and yet more :

Gejrrod’s great daughter stood over the Hood ;

Drown me ? ’ cried he, ‘ mingle water and blood ; ’

Lifted a stone ; as he smote the maid sore,

* Greet me your father with water ! ’ quoth Thor.”)

(Laughter and shouting as Sivard approaches the lodge.

He enters, but falls back stunned.)

Shadow. —“Sivard shall ride over Gjaller to-night!”—

and it shall be lonely riding:

ha ! we knew it; the boy wears mail; ’twas

well Knud’s knife was not his only henchman ;

but now, there knife; .. . . seek

178

IN THE FOREST

his heart ; ei! you have warm

welcome ! Now is no more of Sivard than his

name and this.—(Rising and kicking the body.)

Light ho ! now, Knud ; there’s more to follow

(He lights a small torch at the wall, and sets the dead body

upright on a bench beneath it; then hides outside the door

as steps are heard, and a voice softly humming :

“ Freija loved the giant-maid,

Loved her well, loved her true :

Freija gave his flashing blade—

Say love; what give you ?

Sivard loves the prisoned maid,

Loves her well—”

(The inner door opens, and Hilda enters, in furs.)

HU. —A light! . . . . what’s here 1 ... . and Sivard!

(Throws off furs and kneels at Sivard’s side.)

A blow ! poor stricken brow. . . . Here’s

blood ; yet warm ;

It oozes from thy breast.—

(Hearing a sound she rises ; and turning, confronts Knud.)

You Knud!

Knud. —Yes me, blue-eyes; and none the less your

cousin for all, I hope.

HU. —Cousin ! . . . you my blood ! . . . niding that

you are—

179

TN THE FOREST

Knud. —Now softly, Hilda; —don’t you love your dog ?

I’d serve you like a dog ; my only thanks

A look, a smile—

HU. — Would my dog do this deed 1—

And did he this, what then 1

Knud. What then 1 . . . why then—

HU —My dog would die too! What was he to you ?

What was his fault then

Knud. — Stole my promised bride.

HU. —Who promised with a right ?

Knud. —Promise or no promise, I have it, whoever

gave it; and Knud’s not the lad to go

tamely wanting.

HU. —Sivard was all, you nothing ; leave me then

Go drink with your companions ; there’s you place.

Mine’s here, —and here’s no room for dogs like you.

(Turns to Sivard.)

Knud. —What’s he but carrion now ; here is a living

man ready to do your bidding—be your slave—

HU. —My slave

Knud. —Ay ! . . till such time as it is in his power to

make you his ! . . . Lie with your lover,

great white girl; . . . . fondle him; kiss

him; , . . he’s gone; not to Yalhal—

180

IN THE FOREST

HU. —(turning on him) When you seek Hel, you ne’er shall find him there !

Knud. —Ho, white-arms! fire can live in snow, it seems!

HU. —White-arms t

Knud. —Well a few bloody plashes, truly ; but then—

HU. — Are white arms firm enough to thrust

A knife ■ (Stabs him in the breast.)

Knud. —A shrewd thrust, beauty ! but with mail—

(He falls with a groan as she stabs him in the temple.)

HU. —O Sivard ; long and dark the ride to-night;

If Mother Frigga wills it, we shall meet

In Valhal, ay, to-night. .. . The wind is ris’n. . .

((foes into the night of wind and snow.)

SUBJECT INDEX.

PAGE

page

New Zealand Themes:—

Flo web and Bird Fancies—cont.

April of the Antipodes ... 6

Pikiarero— Yellow Clematis 28

Rosebuds 74

The Tauhou—Silvereye ... 56

Twilight and the Makomako 93

Twilight and the Makomako 93

Rata-bloom and Tui ... 94

Rata-bloom and Tui ... 94

Waterfall and the Piwakawaka KM

Waterfall and Piwakawaka 104

Ti-tree and Kukupa ... 105

Spring-time and Echo ...106

Ti-tree and the Kukupa ... 105

Patito 135

Love Themes:—

New Zealand and the Old World

Retrospect 10

Rosemary and Rue ... 16

Home-echoes 1

Peace 18

June 7

Evensong 21

Autumn 72

One by One 27

Seasons, Nights and Days:—

The Two Iseults 30

April of the Antipodes ... 6

We Three 31

June 7

Dream’s Vagary 40

Soft, Low and Sweet ... 9

Love’s Perjury 44

Moonrise 13

Love Has Been 46

Summer’s Last Flower ... 20

What and Whence Art “ Thou ” ? 49

Evensong 21

Winter 54

Prelude to Sappho’s Prayer 58

Older Years 55

Eros 60

When Gorgeous Days ... 66

Two Lovers 63

Pleasant Days 67

Rest 64

Rosebuds 74

Autumn 72

Morning 79

Reverie 76

First-Love 90

Spring-Festal 80

Summer-day 97

Lady Mine 91

Can We Change? 99

Spring-time and Echo ... 106

Serenade 102

The Old Story 116

Flower and Bird Fancies:—

The Acorn Hath a Grove of Oaks 1*20

Lilies 6

Pikiarero —Yellow Clematis 28

Old Love-Songs 124

Spring-time of Roses ... 38

The Tauhou—Silvereye ... 56

(Also all Rondeaus.)

SUBJECT INDEX

PAGE

PAGE

Love and Hate:— In the Forest 145

Artificial Forms— cont. Sonnet—

Time 41

Artificial Forms:—

Rondeaus—

Translations

Soft, Low and Sweet ... 9

When We Are One ... 15

The Dance (Schiller) ... 24

Cease (Heine) 37

Love’s Onward Day ... 23

Be Near Me Then 29

The Sharing of the Earth

Love Once Sat A-sighing... 36

There’s Not One Wish ... 62

(Schiller) 52

Eros (Anacreon) 60

Philosophy from Schiller 68

Spring-Festal (Heine) ... SO

First-Love (Goethe) ... 90

Serenade (Korner) 102

Bondels-

Older Years 55

Songs Unsung 57

When Gorgeous Days ... 66

Pleasant Days 67

Fortune (Heine) 109

Margaret at Her Spinninj

Soft Hands 78

Wheel (Goethe)

Ballades—

Miscellaneous

The Leaves Are Gathered 32

Beauty Has Been 42

Cradle-Song 11

Summer’s Last Flower ... 20

Canzonets —

Time 41

The Two Iseults 30

Time Passes 48

Sestina—

Aspirations to Immortality 82

The Springtime of Roses 38

Art and Labour 88

Evolution 89

Sapphics—

On the Shore 95

Prelude to Sappho’s Prayer 58

Villanelles —

The Cry of the Dishonoured 110

Perennial Joy 121

How Much Is Said 81

On Cremation ... ... 126

Time Flies 98

After-Life 132

182

INDEX TO FIRST LINES.

PAGE

A grove of the. southern palm 105

Ahy on this upland there is peace enough ; 18

Ah, what hand can wake from slumber 90

Alas, the fading of the regal Summer ; ... ... 20

All men may know what you think ; ... 68

A summer long the sun and thou ... ... ... 56

Autumn has come from o'er the seas , 72

Be near me then , when lam old , 29

Breathe a lay divine and low, ... ... ... ... 91

Countless thine enemies , Truth ! ... 70

Cradled in the silent night , ... 102

Does the child know how its life began ? ... ... 44

Do you ask how I know the best state ? ... . ... 69

Do you remember the days of Spring ? ... 7

Dost thou love thy little maid , ... ... ... ... 34

Fortune! it is all in vain... ... ... ... 109

For woman , memory has joys in stare ; . ... ... 7

Friend , he careful to speak 70

From darkness to a rosy atmosphere ... ... 82

Gone is all pleasure from the land 54

Happiest infant! your cradle to you ... 71

He called her every fair thing Nature wrought ... 63

High on the lattice-work clustered the roses, ... 74

INDEX TO FIRST LINES 165

PAGE

Honour the whole as you will, I can ... 70

How does Nature proceed in welding ... 70

How much is said , 81

If wandering some gray eve ... ... 30

I lay me down in the sweet Spring-time , ... ... 106

Impatience for his leader, how Time lags ; ... ... 145

In tremulous chords , wakened hy little hands, .. 76

It is not true ; it is not true ; —they say ... ... 40

It is the Spring-time’s son'owful quest! 80

Love once sat a-sighing hy a reedy brook ... ... 36

Love’s onward day ;as sun of mom ... 23

Meek clemat is ; tree-dweller ; child of dew; 28

Morning passes , never ceases , 79

My pea/ie is gone, 122

Night on the forest is falling , ... 93

Now is the hour of the morning's prime, — 79

Of roses red, of roses white I sing, ... 38

0 lily of the fountains ... 5

Once in the quiet hours of middle-night ... 60

One hy one lover and friend must go ... 27

0, obdurate face of changeless Time the old ... ... 41

0 rare , 0 sweet the Summer day , 97

On the ocean , youth with a thousand masts 70

Our youth of life together we have spent, 116

0 wc are falVn on pleasant days, ... ... 67

Pass we hy the trysting plaice, ... .. ... 10

Precious to me is my friend , ... 69

Rightly said, layman! one loves what he has .... 69

185

INDEX TO FIRST LINES

PAGE

Sands of gold , these, boatman of Lesbos ferry ... 58

Science to one is a holy, a heavenly goddess ; 69

See how with hovering steps in undulations 24

Seek ye the highest, the greatest? .... ... 68

Soft, low and sweet, the blackbird wakes the day ... 9

Soft hands on tired eyes, ... ... ... ... ... 78

Soft in the twinkle of stars of night, ... ... 42

Song of the night, song of the day, ... ... ... 11

Songs unsung will the longest last, ... 57

Take hence the world I cried Zeus ... 52

The day is in the night beloved, ... ... ... 37

The days when we were strangers, 16

The happy days are happy years 55

The leaves are gather'd from the wintry hough, . 32

The man is too mean to evolve to a God ? ... 89

The October of her life, 6

The poplars bend across the darkening sky, ... ... 21

The rata flings purple array ... ... ... ... 94

There's a moan in our by-ways and streets, —... 110

There's not one ivish I would not give for thee, ... 62

There's the moon rising ... .. .. 13

The sea hath music in its wave ... ... ... 95

The tree is in flower ; but the flower ... ... ... 88

This burden bears each falling leaf — ... ... 54

Thou awful and mysterious sojourner ... ... 49

Thouplacidest container of the dust ... ... ... 129

Time flies ... ... ... ... ... ... .. 98

Too soon, too soon our childhood wears away,... ... 48

Trust me, this is no fable; .... ... ... 71

Two great virtues there are, 69

Weave the wreath of moly; .. 132

Water falling in foam, .. ... ... ... ... 104

What are words once given ? ... 120

What has sorrow to you and me 46

INDEX TO FIRST LINES

186

PAGK

What is change to you and me ? 99

What's my religion ? you ask me 68

“ What the eye sees not grieves not the heart,” ... 126

When gorgeous days have fall’n away, 66

When song has sounded high, 124

When Spring comes dancing on the flowery lea, 64

When we are one, and thenceforth life we share, 15

Who is the spearman whose fame 135

Why sorrow when joy is past ? ... ... ... ... 121

Would you yourself know, observe ... 68

Year after year, age after age 1

Printed by Whitcombe & Tombs Limited, Christchurch—olo7%.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/books/ALMA1903-9917503723502836-Songs-unsung

Bibliographic details

APA: Andersen, Johannes Carl. (1903). Songs unsung. Whitcombe and Tombs.

Chicago: Andersen, Johannes Carl. Songs unsung. Christchurch, N.Z.: Whitcombe and Tombs, 1903.

MLA: Andersen, Johannes Carl. Songs unsung. Whitcombe and Tombs, 1903.

Word Count

22,154

Songs unsung Andersen, Johannes Carl, Whitcombe and Tombs, Christchurch, N.Z., 1903

Songs unsung Andersen, Johannes Carl, Whitcombe and Tombs, Christchurch, N.Z., 1903

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