poem_sappho_and_phaon.php
SAPPHO AND PHAON.
Joaquin Miller
- SONG FIRST.
- "In the beginning God—"
- When God's Spirit moved upon
- The waters' face, and vapors curled
- Like incense o'er deep-cradled dawn
- That dared not yet the mobile world,—
- When deep-cradled dawn uprose,
- Ere the baby stars were born.
- When the end of all repose
- Came with that first wondrous morn,—
- In the morning of the world
- When light leapt,—a giant born:
- that morning of the world.
- That vast, first tumultuous morn!
- PART FIRST
- I.
- hat is there in a dear dove's eyes,
- Or voice of mated melodies,
- That tells us ever of blue skies
- And cease of deluge on Love's seas?
- The dove looked down on Jordan's tide
- Well pleased with Christ the Crucified;
- The dove was hewn in Karnak stone
- Before fair Jordan's banks were known.
- The dove has such a patient look,
- I read rest in her pretty eyes
- As in the Holy Book.
- I think if I should love some day—
- And may I die when dear Love dies—
- Why, I would sail Francisco's Bay
- And seek to see some sea-dove's eyes:
- To see her in her air-built nest,
- Her wide, warm, restful wings at rest;
- To see her rounded neck reach out,
- Her eyes lean lovingly about;
- And seeing this as love can see,
- I then should know, and surely know,
- That love sailed on with me.
- II.
- See once this boundless bay and live.
- See once this beauteous bay and love.
- See once this warm, bright bay and give
- God thanks for olive branch and dove.
- Then plunge headlong yon sapphire sea
- And sail and sail the world with me.
- Some isles, drowned in the drowning sun.
- Ten thousand sea-doves voiced as one;
- Lo! love's wings furled and wings unfurled;
- Who sees not this -warm, half-world sea,
- Sees not, knows not the world.
- How knocks he at the Golden Gate,
- This lord of waters, strong and bold,
- And fearful-voiced and fierce as fate,
- And hoar and old, as Time is old;
- Yet young as when God's finger lay
- Against Night's forehead that first day.
- And drove vast Darkness forth, and rent
- The waters from the firmament.
- Hear how he knocks and raves and loves!
- He wooes us through the Golden Gate
- With all his soft sea-doves.
- Now on and on, up, down, and on,
- The sea is oily grooves; the air
- Is as your bride's sweet breath at dawn
- When all your ardent youth is there.
- And oh, the rest! and oh, the room!
- And oh, the sensuous sea perfume!
- Yon new moon peering as we passed
- Has scarce escaped our topmost mast.
- A porpoise, wheeling restlessly.
- Quick draws a bright, black, dripping blade.
- Then sheathes it in the sea.
- * * * * * *
- Vast, half-world, wondrous sea of ours!
- Dread, unknown deep of all sea deeps!
- What fragrance from thy strange sea-flowers
- Deep-gardened where God's silence keeps!
- Thy song is silence, and thy face
- Is God's face in His holy place.
- Thy billows swing sweet censer foam.
- Where stars hang His cathedral's dome.
- Such blue above, below such blue!
- These burly winds so tall, they can
- Scarce walk between the two.
- Such room of sea! Such room of sky!
- Such room to draw a soul-full breath!
- Such room to live! Such room to die!
- Such room to roam in after death!
- White room, with sapphire room set 'round,
- And still beyond His room profound;
- Such room-bound boundlessness o'erhead
- As never has been writ or said
- Or seen, save by the favored few.
- Where kings of thought play chess with stars
- Across their board of blue.
- * * * * * *
- III.
- The proud ship wrapped her in the red
- That hung from heaven, then the gray.
- The soft dove-gray that shrouds the dead
- And prostrate form of perfumed day:
- Some noisy, pigmy creatures kept
- The deck a spell, then, leaning, crept
- Apart in silence and distrust,
- Then down below in deep disgust.
- An albatross,—a shadow cross
- Hung at the head of buried day,—
- At foot the albatross.
- Then came a warm, soft, sultry breath—
- A weary wind that wanted rest;
- A breath as from some house of death
- With flowers heaped; as from the breast
- Of such sweet princess as had slept
- Some thousand years embalmed, and kept,
- In fearful Karnak's tomb-hewn hill.
- Her perfume and spiced sweetness still,—
- Such breath as bees droop down to meet,
- And creep along lest it may melt
- Their honey-laden feet.
- The captain's trumpet smote the air!
- Swift men, like spiders up a thread.
- Swept suddenly. Then masts were bare
- As when tall poplars' leaves are shed.
- And ropes were clamped and stays were clewed.
- 'T was as when wrestlers, iron-thewed.
- Gird tight their loins, take full breath,
- Aud set firm face, as fronting death.
- Three small brown birds, or gray, so small,
- So ghostly still and swift they passed,
- They scarce seemed birds at all.
- Then quick, keen saber-cuts, like ice;
- Then sudden hail, like battle-shot.
- Then two last men crept down like mice.
- And man, poor pigmy man, was not.
- The great ship shivered, as with cold—
- An instant staggered back, then bold
- As Theodosia, to her waist
- In waters, stood erect and faced
- Black thunder; and she kept her way
- And laughed red lightning from her face
- As on some gala day.
- The black sea-horses rode in row;
- Their white maues tossing to the night
- But made the blackness blacker grow
- From flashing, phosphorescent light.
- And how like hurdle steeds they leapt!
- The low moon burst; the black troop swept
- Right through her hollow, on and on.
- A wave-wet simitar was drawn,
- Flashed twice, flashed thrice triumphantly,
- But still the steeds dashed on, dashed on,
- And drowned her in the sea.
- What headlong winds that lost their way
- At sea, and wailed out for the shore!
- How shook the orient doors of day
- With all this mad, tumultuous roar!
- Black clouds, shot through with stars of red;
- Strange stars, storm-born and fire fed;
- Lost stars that came, and went, and came;
- Such stars as never yet had name.
- The far sea-lions on their isles
- Upheaved their huge heads terrified,
- And moaned a thousand miles.
- What fearful battle-field! What space
- For light and darkness, flame and flood!
- Lo! Light and Darkness, face to face,
- In battle harness battling stood!
- And how the surged sea burst upon
- The granite gates of Oregon!*
- It tore, it tossed the seething spume.
- And wailed for room! and room! and room!
- It shook the crag-built eaglets' nest
- Until they screamed from out their clouds,
- Then rocked them back to rest.
- How fiercely reckless raged the war!
- Then suddenly no ghost of light.
- Or even glint of storm-born star.
- Just night, and black, torn bits of night;
- Just night, and midnight's middle noon,
- With all mad elements in tune;
- Just night, and that continuous roar
- Of wind, wiud, night, and nothing more.
- Then all the hollows of the main
- Sank down so deep, it almost seemed
- The seas were hewn in twain.
- How deep the hollows of this deep!
- How high, how trembling high the crest!
- Ten thousand miles of surge and sweep
- And length and breadth of billow's breast!
- Up! up, as if against the skies!
- Down! down, as if no more to rise!
- The creaking wallow in the trough,
- As if the world was breaking off".
- The pigmies in their trough down there!
- Deep in their trough they tried to pray—
- To hide from God in prayer.
- Then boomed Alaska's great, first gun
- In battling ice and rattling hail;
- Then Indus came, four winds in one!
- Then came Japan in counter mail
- Of mad cross winds; and Waterloo
- Was but as some babe's tale unto.
- The typhoon spun his toy in play
- And whistled as a glad boy may
- To see his top spin at his feet:
- The captain on his bridge in ice,
- His sailors mailed in sleet.
- What unchained, unnamed noises, space!
- What shoreless, boundless, rounded reach
- Of room was here! Fit field, fit place
- For three fierce emperors, where each
- Came armed with elements that make
- Or unmake seas and lands, that shake
- The heavens' roof, that freeze or burn
- The seas as they may please to turn.
- And such black silence! Not a sound
- Save whistling of that mad, glad boy
- To see his top spin round.
- Then swift, like some sulked Ajax, burst
- Thewed Thunder from his battle-tent;
- As if in pent-up, vengeful thirst
- For blood, the elements of Earth were rent.
- And sheeted crimson lay a wedge
- Of blood below black Thunder's edge.
- A pause. The typhoon turned, upwheeled.
- And wrestled Death till heaven reeled.
- Then Lightning reached a fiery red,
- And on Death's fearful forehead wrote
- The autograph of God.
- IV.
- God's name and face—what need of more?
- Morn came: calm came; and holy light,
- And warm, sweet weather, leaning o'er.
- Laid perfumes on the tomb of night.
- The three wee birds came dimly back
- And housed about the mast in black,
- And all the tranquil sense of morn
- Seemed as Dakota's fields of corn,
- Save that some great soul-breaking sigh
- Now sank the proud ship out of sight
- Now sent her to the sky.
- V.
- One strong, strange man had kept the deck—
- One silent, seeing man, who knew
- The pulse of Nature, and could reck
- Her deepest heart-beats through and through.
- He knew the night, he loved the night.
- When elements went forth to fight
- His soul went with them without fear
- To hear God's voice, so few will hear
- The swine had plunged them in the sea,
- The swine down there, but up on deck
- The captain, God and he.
- VI.
- And oh, such sea-shell tints of light
- High o'er those wide sea-doors of dawn!
- Sail, sail the world for that one sight,
- Then satisfied, let time begone.
- The ship rose up to meet that light.
- Bright candles, tipped like tasseled corn,
- The holy virgin, maiden morn.
- Arrayed in woven gold and white.
- Put by the harp—hush minstrelsy;
- Nor bard or bird has yet been heard
- To sing this scene, this sea.
- VII.
- Such light! such liquid, molten light!
- Such mantling, healthful, heartful morn!
- Such morning born of such mad night!
- Such night as never had been born!
- The man caught in his breath, his face
- Was lifted up to light and space;
- His hand dashed o'er his brow, as when
- Deep thoughts submerge the souls of men;
- And then he bowed, bowed mute, appalled
- At memory of scenes, such scenes
- As this swift morn recalled.
- He sought the ship's prow, as men seek
- The utmost limit for their feet,
- To lean, look forth, to list nor speak,
- Nor turn aside, nor yet retreat
- One inch from this far vantage-ground,
- Till he had pierced the dread profound
- And proved it false. And yet he knew
- Deep in his earth that all was true;
- So like it was to that first dawn
- When God had said, "Let there be light,"
- And thus he spake right on:
- "My soul was born ere light was born,
- When blackness was, as this black night.
- And then that morn, as this sweet morn!
- That sudden light, as this swift light!
- I had forgotten. Now, I know
- The travail of the world, the low,
- Dull creatures in the sea of slime
- That time committed unto time.
- As great men plant oaks patiently,
- Then turn in silence unto dust
- And wait the coming tree.
- "That long, lorn blackness, seams of flame.
- Volcanoes bursting from the slime,
- Huge, shapeless monsters without name
- Slow shaping in the loom of time;
- Slow weaving as a weaver weaves;
- So like as when some good man leaves
- His acorns to the centuries
- And waits the stout aucestral trees.
- But ah, so piteous, memory
- Reels back, as sickened, from that scene—
- It breaks the heart of me!
- "Volcanoes crying out for light!
- The very slime found tongues of fire!*
- Huge monsters climbing in their might
- O'er submerged monsters in the mire
- That heaved their slimy mouths, and cried
- And cried for light, and crying, died.
- How all that wailing through the air
- But seems as some unbroken prayer.
- One ceaseless prayer that long night
- The world lay in the loom of time
- And waited so for light!
- "And I, amid those monsters there,
- A grade above, or still below?
- Nay, Time has never time to care;
- And I can scarcely dare to know.
- I but remember that one prayer;
- Ten thousand wide mouths in the air.
- Ten thousand monsters in their might,
- All eyeless, looking up for light.
- We prayed, we prayed as never man,
- By sea or land, by deed or word.
- Has prayed since light began.
- "Great sea-cows laid their fins upon
- Low-floating isles, as good priests lay
- Two holy hands, at early dawn,
- Upon the altar cloth to pray.
- Aye, ever so, with lifted head,
- Poor, slime-born creatures and slime-bred,
- We prayed. Our sealed-up eyes of night
- All lifting, lifting up for light.
- And I have paused to wonder, when
- This world will pray as we then prayed.
- What God may not give men!
- "Hist! Once I saw,—What was I then?
- Ah, dim and devious the light
- Comes back, but I was not of men.
- And it is only such black night
- As this, that was of war and strife
- Of elements, can wake that life,
- That life in death, that black and cold
- And blind and loveless life of old.
- But hear! I saw—heed this and learn
- How old, how holy old is Love,
- However Time may turn:
- "I saw, I saw, or somehow felt,
- A sea-cow mother nurse her young.
- I saw, and with thanksgiving knelt.
- To see her head, low, loving, hung
- Above her nursling. Then the light,
- The lovelight from those eyes of night!
- I say to you 't was lovelight then
- That first lit up the eyes of men.
- I say to you lovelight was born
- Ere God laid hand to clay of man,
- Or ever that first morn.
- "What though a monster slew her so.
- The while she bowed and nursed her young?
- She leaned her head to take the blow,
- And dying, still the closer clung—
- And dying gave her life to save
- The helpless life she erstwhile gave.
- And so sank back below the slime,
- A torn shred in the loom of time.
- The one thing more I needs must say,
- That monster slew her and her young;
- But Love he could not slay."
- SONG SECOND.
- "And God said, Let there be light."
- Rise up! How brief this little day?
- We can but kindle some dim light
- Here in the darkened, wooded way
- Before the gathering of night.
- Come, let us kindle it. The dawn
- Shall find us tenting farther on.
- Come, let us kindle ere we go—
- We know not where; but this we know.
- Night cometh on, and man needs light.
- Come! camp-fire embers, ere we grope
- Yon gray archway of night.
- Life is so brief, so very brief,
- So rounded in, we scarce can see
- The fruitage grown about the leaf
- And foliage of a single tree
- In all God's garden; yet we knoio
- That goodly fruits must grow and grow
- Beyond our vision. We but stand
- In some deep hollow of God's hand.
- Hear some siveet bird its little day.
- See cloud and sun a season pass,
- And then, sweet friend, away!
- Clouds pass, they come again; and we,
- Are we, then, less than these to God?
- Oh, for the stout faith of a tree
- That drops its small seeds to the sod.
- Safe in the hollow of God's hand,
- And knows that perish from the land
- It shall not! Yea, this much we know,
- T'hat each, as best it can, shall grow
- As God has fashioned, fair or plain,
- To do its best, or cloud or sun.
- Or in His still, small rain.
- Oh, good to see is faith in God!
- But better far is faith in good:
- The one seems but a sign, a nod,
- The one seems God's own flesh and blood.
- How many names of God are sung!
- But good is good in every tongue.
- And this the light, the Holy Light
- That leads thro' night and night and night;
- Thro' nights named Death, that lie between
- The days named Life, the ladder round
- Unto the Infinite Unseen.
- PART SECOND
- I.
- he man stood silent, peering past
- His utmost verge of memory.
- What lay beyond, beyond that vast
- Bewildering darkness and dead sea
- Of noisome vapors and dread night?
- No light! not any sense of light
- Beyond that life when Love was born
- On that first, far, dim rim of morn:
- No light beyond that beast that clung
- In darkness by the light of love
- And died to save her young.
- And yet we know life must have been
- Before that dark, dread life of pain;
- Life germs, love germs of gentle men.
- So small, so still; as still, small rain.
- But whence this life, this living soul,
- This germ that grows a godlike whole?
- I can but think of that sixth day
- When God first set His hand to clay.
- And did in His own image plan
- A perfect form, a manly form,
- A comely, godlike man.
- II.
- Did soul germs grow down in the deeps.
- The while God's Spirit moved upon
- The waters? High-set Lima keeps
- A rose-path, like a ray of dawn;
- And simple, pious peons say
- Sweet Santa Rosa passed that way;
- And so, because of her fair fame
- And saintly face, these roses came.
- Shall we not say, ere that first morn.
- Where God moved, garmented in mists,
- Some sweet soul germs were born?
- III.
- The strange, strong man still kept the prow ;
- He saw, still saw before light was.
- The dawn of love, the huge sea-cow.
- The living slime, love's deathless laws.
- He knew love lived, lived ere a blade
- Of grass, or ever light was made;
- And love was in him, of him, as
- The light was on the sea of glass.
- It made his heart great, and he grew
- To look on God all unabashed;
- To look lost eons through.
- IV.
- Illuming love! what talisman!
- That Word which makes the world go 'round!
- That Word which bore worlds in its plan!
- That Word which was the Word profound!
- That Word which was the great First Cause,
- Before light was, before sight was!
- I would not barter love for gold
- Enough to fill a tall ship's hold;
- Nay, not for great Victoria's worth-
- So great the sun sets not upon
- In all his round of earth.
- I would not barter love for all
- The silver spilling from the moon;
- I would not barter love at all
- Though you should coin each afternoon
- Of gold for centuries to be,
- And count the coin all down as free
- As conqueror fresh home from wars,—
- Coin sunset bars, coin heaven-born stars,
- Coin all below, coin all above,
- Count all down at my feet, yet I—
- I would not barter love.
- V.
- The lone man started, stood as when
- A strong man hears, yet does not hear.
- He raised his hand, let fall, and then
- Quick arched his hand above his ear
- And leaned a little; yet no sound
- Broke through the vast, serene profound.
- Man's soul first knew some telephone
- In sense and language all its own.
- The tall man heard, yet did not hear;
- He saw, and yet he did not see
- A fair face near and dear.
- For there, half hiding, crouching there
- Against the capstan, coils on coils
- Of rope, some snow still in her hair,
- Like Time, too eager for his spoils.
- Was such fair face raised to his face
- As only dream of dreams give place;
- Such shyness, boldness, sea-shell tint,
- Such book as only God may print,
- Such tender, timid, holy look
- Of startled love and trust and hope,—
- A gold-bound story-book.
- And while the great ship rose and fell,
- Or rocked or rounded with the sea,
- He saw,—a little thing to tell.
- An idle, silly thing, maybe,—
- Where her right arm was bent to clasp
- Her robe's fold in some closer clasp,
- A little isle of melting snow
- That round about and to and fro
- And up and down kept eddying.
- It told so much, that idle isle.
- Yet such a little thing.
- It told she, too, was of a race
- Born ere the baby stars were born;
- She, too, familiar with God's face.
- Knew folly but to shun and scorn;
- She, too, all night had sat to read
- By heaven's light, to hear, to heed
- The awful voice of God, to grow
- In thought, to see, to feel, to know
- The harmony of elements
- That tear and toss the sea of seas
- To foam-built battle-tents.
- He saw that drifting isle of snow.
- As some lorn miner sees bright gold
- Seamed deep in quartz, and joys to know
- That here lies hidden wealth untold.
- And now his head was lifted strong.
- As glad men lift the head in song.
- He knew she, too, had spent the night
- As he, in all that wild delight
- Of tuneful elements; she, too,
- He knew, was of that olden time
- Ere oldest stars were new.
- VI.
- Her soul's ancestral book bore date
- Beyond the peopling of the moon,
- Beyond the day when Saturn sate
- In royal cincture, and the boon
- Of light and life bestowed on stars
- And satellites; ere martial Mars
- Waxed red with battle rage, and shook
- The porch of heaven with a look;
- Ere polar ice-shafts propt gaunt earth,
- And slime was but the womb of time,
- That knew not yet of birth.
- VII.
- To be what thou wouldst truly be,
- Be bravely, truly, what thou art.
- The acorn houses the huge tree,
- And patient, silent bears its part.
- And bides the miracle of time.
- For miracle, and more sublime
- It is than all that has been writ.
- To see the great oak grow from it.
- But thus the soul grows, grows the heart,—
- To be what thou wouldst truly be,
- Be truly what thou art.
- To be what thou wouldst truly be,
- Be true. God's finger sets each seed,
- Or when or where we may not see;
- But God shall nourish to its need
- Each one, if but it dares be true;
- To do what it is set to do.
- Thy proud soul's heraldry? 'T is writ
- In every gentle action; it
- Can never be contested. Time
- Dates thy brave soul's ancestral book
- From thy first deed sublime.
- VIII.
- Wouldst learn to know one little flower.
- Its perfume, perfect form and hue?
- Yea, wouldst thou have one perfect hour
- Of all the years that come to you?
- Then grow as God hath planted, grow
- A lordly oak or daisy low.
- As He hath set His garden; be
- Just what thou art, or grass or tree.
- Thy treasures up in heaven laid
- Await thy sure ascending soul.
- Life after life,—be not afraid!
- IX.
- Wouldst know the secrets of the soil?
- Wouldst have Earth bare her breast to you?
- Wouldst know the sweet rest of hard toil?
- Be true, be true, be ever true!
- Ah me, these self-made cuts of wrong
- That hew men down! Behold the strong
- And comely Adam bound with lies
- And banished from his paradise!
- The serpent on his belly still
- Eats dirt through all his piteous days.
- Do penance as he will.
- Poor, heel-bruised, prostrate, tortuous snake!
- What soul crawls here upon the ground?
- God willed this soul at birth to take
- The round of beauteous things, the round
- Of earth, the round of boundless skies.
- It lied, and lo! how low it lies!
- What quick, sleek tongue to lie with here!
- Wast thou a broker but last year?
- Wast known to fame, wast rich and proud?
- Didst live a lie that thou mightst die
- With pockets in thy shroud?
- X.
- Be still, be pitiful! that soul
- May yet be rich in peace as thine.
- Yea, as the shining ages roll
- That rich man's soul may rise and shine
- Beyond Orion; yet may reel
- The Pleiades with belts of steel
- That compass commerce in their reach;
- May learn and learn, and learning, teach,
- The while his soul grows grandly old.
- How nobler far to share a crust
- Than hoard car-loads of gold!
- XI.
- Oh, but to know; to surely know
- How strangely beautiful is light!
- How just one gleam of light will glow
- And grow more beautifully bright
- Than all the gold that ever lay
- Below the wide-arched Milky Way!
- "Let there be light!" and lo! the burst
- Of light in answer to the first
- Command of high Jehovah's voice!
- Let there be light for man to-night,
- That all men may rejoice.
- XII.
- The little isle of ice and snow
- That in her gathered garment lay,
- And dashed and drifted to and fro
- Unhindered of her, went its was
- The while the warm winds of Japan
- Were with them, and the silent man
- Stood by her, saying, hearing naught,
- Yet seeing, noting all; as one
- Sees not, yet all day sees the sun.
- He knew her silence, heeded well
- Her dignity of idle hands
- In this deep, tranquil spell.
- XIII.
- The true soul surely knows its own.
- Deep down in this man's heart he knew,
- Somehow, somewhere along the zone
- Of time, his soul should come unto
- Its safe seaport, some pleasant land
- Of rest where she should reach a hand.
- He had not questioned God. His care
- Was to be worthy, fit to share
- The glory, peace, and perfect rest.
- Come how or when or where it comes,
- As God in time sees best.
- Her face reached forward, not to him.
- But forward, upward, as for light;
- For light that lay a silver rim
- Of sea-lit whiteness more than white.
- The vast full morning poured and spilled
- Its splendor down, and filled and filled
- And overfilled the heaped-up sea
- With silver molten suddenly.
- The night lay trenched in her meshed hair;
- The tint of sea-shells left the sea
- To make her more than fair.
- What massed, what matchless midnight hair!
- Her wide, sweet, sultry, drooping mouth,
- As droops some flower when the air
- Blows odors from the ardent South—
- That Sapphic, sensate, bended bow
- Of deadly archery; as though
- Love's legions fortressed there and sent
- Bed arrows from his bow fell bent.
- Such apples! such sweet fruit concealed
- Of perfect womanhood make more
- Sweet pain than if revealed.
- XIV.
- How good a thing it is to house
- Thy full heart treasures to that day
- When thou shalt take her, and carouse
- Thenceforth with her for aye and aye;
- How good a thing to give the store
- That thus the thousand years or more,
- Poor, hungered, holy worshiper.
- You kept for her, and only her!
- How well with all thy wealth to wait
- Or year, or thousand thousand years,
- Her coming at love's gate!
- XV.
- The winds pressed warm from warm Japan
- Upon her pulsing womanhood.
- They fanned such fires in the man
- His face shone glory where he stood.
- In Persia's rose-fields, I have heard,
- There sings a sad, sweet, one-winged bird;
- Sings ever sad in lonely round
- Until his one- winged mate is found;
- And then, side laid to side, they rise
- So swift, so strong, they even dare
- The doorway of the skies.
- XVI.
- How rich was he! how richer she!
- Such treasures up in heaven laid,
- Where moth and rust may never be,
- Nor thieves break in, or make afraid.
- Such treasures, where the tranquil soul
- Walks space, nor limit nor control
- Can know, but journeys on and on
- Beyond the golden gates of dawn;
- Beyond the outmost round of Mars;
- Where God's foot rocks the cradle of
- His new-born baby stars.
- XVII.
- As one who comes upon a street,
- Or sudden turn in pleasant path.
- As one who suddenly may meet
- Some scene, some sound, some sense that hath
- A memory of olden days,
- Of days that long have gone their ways.
- She caught her breath, caught quick and fast
- Her breath, as if her whole life passed
- Before, and pendant to and fro
- Swung in the air before her eyes;
- And oh, her heart beat so!
- How her heart beat! Three thousand years
- Of weary, waiting womanhood.
- Of folded hands, of falling tears.
- Of lone soul-wending through dark wood;
- But now at last to meet once more
- Upon the bright, all-shining shore
- Of earth, in life's resplendent dawn,
- And he so fair to look upon!
- Tall Phaon and the world aglow!
- Tall Phaon, favored of the gods,
- And oh, her heart beat so!
- Her heart beat so, no word she spake;
- She pressed her palms, she leaned her face,—
- Her heart beat so, its beating brake
- The cord that held her robe in place
- About her wondrous, rounded throat,
- And in the warm winds let it float
- And fall upon her soft, round arm.
- So warm it made the morning warm.
- Then pink and pearl forsook her cheek,
- And, "Phaon, I am Sappho, I—"
- Nay, nay, she did not speak.
- And was this Sappho, she who sang
- When mournful Jeremiah wept?
- When harps, where weeping willows hang.
- Hung mute and all their music kept?
- Aye, this was Sappho, she who knew
- Such witchery of song as drew
- The war-like world to hear her sing,
- As moons draw mad seas following.
- Aye, this was Sappho; Lesbos hill
- Had all been hers, and Tempos vale,
- And song sweet as to kill.
- Her dark Greek eyes turned to the sea:
- Lo, Phaon's ferry as of old!
- He kept his boat's prow still, and he
- Was stately, comely, strong, and bold
- As when he ferried gods, and drew
- Immortal youth from one who knew
- His scorn of gold. The Lesbian shore
- Lay yonder, and the rocky roar
- Against the promontory told.
- Told and retold her tale of love
- That never can grow old.
- Three thousand years! yet love was young
- And fair as when Æolis knew
- Her glory, and her great soul strung
- The harp that still sweeps ages through.
- Ionic dance or Doric war.
- Or purpled dove or dulcet car.
- Or unyoked dove or close-yoked dove,
- What meant it all but love and love?
- And at the naming of Love's name
- She raised her eyes, and lo! her doves!
- Just as of old they came.
- SONG THIRD.
- "And God saw the light that it was good."
- I heard a tale long, long ago,
- Where I had gone apart to pray
- By Shasta's pyramid of snow.
- That touches me unto this day.
- I know the fashion is to say
- An Arab tale, an Orient lay;
- Bui when the grocer rings my gold
- On counter, flung from greasy hold.
- He cares not from Acadian vale
- It comes, or savage mountain chine;—
- But this the Shastan tale:
- Once in the olden, golden days,
- When men and beasts companioned, when
- All went in peace about their ways
- Nor God had hid His face from men
- Because man slew his brother beast
- To make his most unholy feast,
- A gray coyote, monkish cowled,
- Upraised his face and wailed and howled
- The while he made his patient round;
- For lo! the red men all lay dead.
- Stark, frozen on the ground.
- The very dogs had fled the storm,
- A mother with her long, meshed hair
- Bound tight about her baby's form,
- Lay frozen, all her body bare.
- Her last shred held her babe in place;
- Her last breath warmed her baby's face.
- Then, as the good monk brushed the snow
- Aside from mother loving so,
- He heard God from the mount above
- Speak through the clouds and loving say:
- " Yea, all is dead but Love."
- " Now take up Love and cherish her,
- And seek the white man with all speed.
- And keep Love warm within thy fur;
- For oh, he needeth love indeed.
- Take all and give him freely, all
- Of love you find, or great or small;
- For he is very poor in this.
- So poor he scarce knows what love is."
- The gray monk raised Love in his paws
- And sped, a ghostly streak of gray.
- To where the white man was.
- But man uprose, enraged to see
- A gaunt wolf track his new-hewn town.
- He called his dogs, and angrily
- He brought his flashing rifle down.
- Then God said: " On his hearthstone lay
- The seed of Love, and come away;
- The seed of Love, 't is needed so.
- And pray that it may grow and grow."
- And so the gray monk crept at night
- And laid Love down, as God had said,
- A faint and feeble light.
- So faint, indeed, the cold hearthstone
- It seemed would chill starved Love to death;
- And so the monk gave all his own
- And crouched and fanned it with his breath
- Until a red cock crowed for day.
- Then God said: "Rise up, come away."
- The beast obeyed, but yet looked back
- All morn along his lonely track;
- For he had left his all in all,
- His oiun Love, for that famished Love
- Seemed so exceeding small.
- And God said: " Look not back again."
- But ever, where a campflre burned.
- And he beheld strong, burly men
- At meat, he sat him down and turned
- His face to wail and wail and mourn
- The Love laid on that cold hearthstone.
- Then God was angered, and God said:
- "Be thou a beggar then; thy head
- Hath been a fool, but thy swift feet.
- Because they bore sweet Love, shall be
- The fleetest of all fleet."
- And ever still about the camp.
- By chine or plain, in heat or hail,
- A homeless, hungry, hounded tramp.
- The gaunt coyote keeps his wail.
- And ever as he wails he turns
- His head, looks back and yearns and yearns
- For lost Love, laid that wintry day
- To warm a hearthstone far away.
- Poor loveless, homeless beast, I keep
- Your lost Love warm for you, and, too,
- A cañon cool and deep.
- PART THIRD.
- I.
- nd they sailed on; the sea-doves sailed,
- And Love sailed with them. And there lay
- Such peace as never had prevailed
- On earth since dear Love's natal day.
- Great black-backed whales blew bows in clouds,
- Wee sea-birds flitted through the shrouds.
- A wide-winged, amber albatross
- Blew by, and bore his shadow cross.
- And seemed to hang it on the mast,
- The while he followed far behind,
- The great ship flew so fast.
- She questioned her if Phaon knew,
- If he could dream, or halfway guess
- How she had tracked the ages through
- And trained her soul to gentleness
- Through many lives, through every part
- To make her worthy his great heart.
- Would Phaon turn and fly her still.
- With that fierce, proud, imperious will,
- And scorn her still, and still despise?
- She shuddered, turned aside her face,
- And lo, her sea-dove"s eyes!
- II.
- Then days of rest and restful nights;
- And love kept tryst as true love will,
- The prow their trysting-place. Delights
- Of silence, simply sitting still,—
- Of asking nothing, saying naught;
- For all that they had ever sought
- Sailed with them; words or deeds had been
- Impertinence, a selfish sin.
- And oh, to know how sweet a thing
- Is silence on those restful seas
- When Love's dove folds her wing!
- The great sea slept. In vast repose
- His pillowed head half-hidden lay,
- Half-drowned in dread Alaskan snows
- That stretch to where no man can say.
- His huge arms tossed to left, to right,
- Where black woods, banked like bits of night.
- As sleeping giants toss their arms
- At night about their fearful forms.
- A slim canoe, a night-bird's call,
- Some gray sea-doves, just these and Love,
- And Love indeed was all!
- III.
- Far, far away such cradled Isles
- As Jason dreamed and Argos sought
- Surge up from endless watery miles!
- And thou, the pale high priest of thought.
- The everlasting throned king
- Of fair Samoa! Shall I bring
- Sweet sandal-wood? Or shall I lay
- Bich wreaths of California's bay
- From sobbing maidens? Stevenson,
- Sleep well. Thy work is done; well done!
- So bravely, bravely done!
- And Molokia's lord of love
- And tenderness, and piteous tears
- For stricken man! Go forth, O dove!
- With olive branch, and still the fears
- Of those he meekly died to save.
- They shall not perish. From that grave
- Shall grow such healing! such as He
- Gave stricken men by Galilee.
- Great ocean cradle, cradle, keep
- These two, the chosen of thy heart,
- Rocked in sweet, baby sleep.
- IV.
- Fair land of flowers, land of flame,
- Of sun-born seas, of sea-born clime.
- Of clouds low shepherded and tame
- As white pet sheep at shearing time,
- Of great, white, generous high-born rain,
- Of rainbows builded not in vain—
- Of rainbows builded for the feet
- Of love to pass dry-shod and fleet
- From isle to isle, when smell of musk
- 'Mid twilight is, and one lone star
- Sits in the brow of dusk.
- Oh, dying, sad-voiced, sea-born maid!
- And plundered, dying, still sing on.
- Thy breast against the thorn is laid—
- Sing on, sing on, sweet dying swan.
- How pitiful! And so despoiled
- By those you fed, for whom you toiled!
- Aloha! Hail you, and farewell.
- Far echo of some lost sea-shell!
- Some song that lost its way at sea,
- Some sea-lost notes of nature, lost.
- That crying, came to me.
- Dusk maid, adieu! One sea-shell less!
- Sad sea-shell silenced and forgot.
- O Rachel in the wilderness.
- Wail on! Your children they are not.
- And they who took them, they who laid
- Hard hand, shall they not feel afraid?
- Shall they who in the name of God
- Kobbed and enslaved, escape His rod?
- Give me some after-world afar
- From these hard men, for well I know
- Hell must be where they are.
- V.
- Lo! suddenly the lone ship burst
- Upon an uncompleted world,
- A world so dazzling white, man durst
- Not face the flashing search-light hurled
- From heaven's snow-built battlements
- And high-heaved camp of cloud-wreathed tents.
- And boom! boom! boom! from sea or shore
- Came one long, deep, continuous roar.
- As if God wrought; as if the days.
- The first six pregnant mother morns,
- Had not quite gone their way.
- What word is fitting but the Word
- Here in this vast world-fashioning?
- What tongue here name the nameless Lord?
- What hand lay hand on anything?
- Come, let us coin new words of might
- And massiveness to name this light,
- This largeness, largeness everywhere!
- White rivers hanging in the air,
- Ice-tied through all eternity!
- Nay, peace! It were profane to say:
- We dare but hear and see.
- Be silent! Hear the strokes resound!
- 'T is God's hand rounding down the earth
- Take off thy shoes, 't is holy ground,—
- Behold! a continent has birth!
- The skies bow down, Madonna's blue
- Enfolds the sea in sapphire. You
- May lift, a little spell, your eyes
- And feast them on the ice-propped skies.
- And feast but for a little space:
- Then let thy face fall grateful down
- And let thy soul say grace.
- VI.
- At anchor so, and all night through,
- The two before God's temple kept.
- He spake: "I know yon peak; I knew
- A deep ice-cavern there. I slept
- With hairy men, or monsters slew.
- Or led down misty seas my crew
- Of cruel savages and slaves.
- And slew who dared the distant waves,
- And once a strange, strong ship—and she,
- I bore her to yon cave of ice,—
- And Love companioned me.
- VII.
- "Two scenes of all scenes from the first
- Have come to me on this great sea:
- The one when light from heaven burst.
- The oue when sweet Love came to me.
- And of the two, or best or worst,
- I ever hold this second first,
- Bear with me. Yonder citadel
- Of ice tells all my tongue can tell:
- My thirst for love, my pain, my pride,
- My soul's warm youth the while she lived.
- Its old age when she died.
- "I know not if she loved or no.
- I only asked to serve and love;
- To love and serve, and ever so
- My love grew as grows light above,—
- Grew from gray dawn to gold midday,
- And swept the wide world in its sway.
- The stars came down, so close they came,
- I called them, named them with her name.
- The kind moon came,—came once so near,
- That in the hollow of her arm
- I leaned my lifted spear.
- "And yet, somehow, for all the stars.
- And all the silver of the moon,
- She looked from out her icy bars
- As longing for some sultry noon;
- As longing for some warmer kind,
- Some far south sunland left behind.
- Then I went down to sea. I sailed
- Thro' seas where monstrous beasts prevailed.
- Such slimy, shapeless, hungered things!
- Red griffins, wide-winged, bat-like wings.
- Black griffins, black or fire-fed.
- That ate my fever-stricken men
- Ere yet they were quite dead.
- "I could not find her love for her,
- Or land, or fit thing for her touch.
- And I came back, sad worshiper,
- And watched and longed and loved so much!
- I watched huge monsters climb and pass
- Reflected in great walls, like glass;
- Dark, draggled, hairy, fearful forms
- Upblown by ever-battling storms,
- And streaming still with slime and spray;
- So huge from out their sultry seas,
- Like storm-torn islands they.
- "Then even these she ceased to note,
- She ceased at last to look on me,
- But, baring to the sun her throat,
- She looked and looked incessantly
- Away against the south, away
- Against the sun the livelong day.
- At last I saw her watch the swan
- Surge tow'rd the north, surge on and on.
- I saw her smile, her first, faint smile;
- Then burst a new-born thought, and I,
- I nursed that all the while.
- VIII.
- "I somehow dreamed, or guessed, or knew,
- That somewhere in the dear earth's heart
- Was warmth and tenderness and true
- Delight, and all love's nobler part.
- I tried to think, aye, thought and thought;
- In all the strange fruits that I brought
- For her delight I could but find
- The sweetness deep within the rind.
- All beasts, all birds, some better part
- Of central being deepest housed;
- And earth must have a heart.
- "I watched the wide-winged birds that blew
- Continually against the bleak
- And ice-built north, and surely knew
- The long, lorn croak, the reaching beak.
- Led not to ruin evermore;
- For they came back, came swooping o'er
- Each spring, with clouds of younger ones,
- So dense, they dimmed the summer suns.
- And thus I knew somehow, somewhere.
- Beyond earth's ice-built, star-tipt peaks
- They found a softer air.
- "And too, I heard strange stories, held
- In mem'ries of my hairy men.
- Vague, dim traditions, dim with eld,
- Of other lands and ages when
- Nor ices were, nor anything;
- But ever one warm, restful spring
- Of radiant sunlight: stories told
- By dauntless men of giant mold,
- Who kept their cavern's icy mouth
- Ice-locked, and hungered where they sat,
- With sad eyes tow'rd the south:
- "Tales of a time ere hate began.
- Of herds of reindeer, wild beasts tamed.
- When man walked forth in love with man,
- Walked naked, and was not ashamed;
- Of how a brother beast he slew.
- Then night, and all sad sorrows knew;
- How tame beasts were no longer tame;
- How God drew His great sword of flame
- And drove man naked to the snow.
- Till, pitying. He made of skins
- A coat, and clothed him so.
- "And, true or not true, still the same,
- I saw continually at night
- That far, bright, flashing sword of flame,
- Misnamed the Borealis light;
- I saw my men, in coats of skin
- As God had clothed them, felt the sin
- And suff'ering of that first death
- Each day in every icy breath.
- Then why should I still disbelieve
- These tales of fairer lands than mine,
- And let my lady grieve?
- IX.
- "Yea, I would find that land for her!
- Then dogs, and sleds, and swift reindeer;
- Huge, hairy men, all mailed in fur.
- Who knew not yet the name of fear,
- Nor knew fatigue, nor aughf that ever
- To this day has balked endeavor.
- And we swept forth, while wide, swift wings
- Still sought the Pole in endless strings.
- I left her sitting looking south,
- Still leaning, looking to the sun,—
- My kisses on her mouth!
- X.
- "Far toward the north, so tall, so far,
- Oue tallest ice shaft starward stood—
- Stood as it were itself a star,
- Scarce fallen from its sisterhood.
- Tip-top the glowing apex there
- Upreared a huge white polar bear;
- He pushed his swart nose up and out,
- Then walked the North Star round about,
- Below the Great Bear of the main,
- The upper main, and as if chained,
- Chained with a star-linked chain.
- XI.
- "And we pushed on, up, on, and on.
- Until, as in the world of dreams.
- We found the very doors of dawn
- With warm sun bursting through the seams.
- We brake them through, then down, far down,
- Until, as in some park-set town,
- We found lost Eden. Very rare
- The fruit, and all the perfumed air
- So sweet, we sat us down to feed
- And rest, without a thought or care,
- Or ever other need.
- "For all earth's pretty birds were here;
- And women fair, and very fair;
- Sweet song was in the atmosphere,
- Nor effort was, nor noise, nor care.
- As cocoons from their silken house
- Wing forth and in the sun carouse.
- My men let fall their housings and
- Passed on and on, far down the land
- Of purple grapes and poppy bloom.
- Such warm, sweet land, such peaceful land!
- Sweet peace and sweet perfume!
- "And I pushed down ere I returned
- To climb the cold world's walls of snow.
- And saw where earth's heart beat and burned.
- An hundred sultry leagues below;
- Saw deep seas set with deep-sea isles
- Of waving verdure; miles on miles
- Of rising sea-birds with their broods,
- In all their noisy, happy moods!
- Aye, then I knew earth has a heart,
- That Nature wastes nor space or place,
- But husbands every part.
- XII.
- "My reindeer fretted: I turned back
- For her, the heart of me, my soul!
- Ah, then, how swift, how white my track!
- All Paradise beneath the Pole
- Were but a mockery till she
- Should share its dreamful sweets with me. . . .
- I know not well what next befell,
- Save that white heaven grew black hell.
- She sat with sad face to the south,
- Still sat, sat still; but she was dead—
- My kisses on her mouth.
- XIII.
- "What else to do but droop and die?
- But dying, how my poor soul yearned
- To fly as swift south birds may fly—
- To pass that way her eyes had turned,
- The dear days she had sat with me,
- And search and search eternity!
- And, do you know, I surely know
- That God has given us to go
- The way we will in life or death—
- To go, to grow, or good or ill,
- As one may draw a breath?"
- SONG FOURTH.
- "And God saw everything
that He had made,
and, behold, it was very good."
- Says Plato, "Once in Greece the gods
- Plucked grapes, pressed wine, and, reveled deep
- And drowsed below their poppy-pods,
- And lay full length the hills asleep.
- Then, waking, one said, 'Overmuch
- We toil : come, let us rise and touch
- Red clay, and shape it into man,
- That he may build as we shall plan!'
- And so they shaped man, all complete,
- Self-procreative, satisfied ;
- Two heads, four hands, four feet.
- "And then the gods slept, heedless, long;
- But waking suddenly one day.
- They heard their valley ring with song
- And saw man reveling as they.
- Enraged, they drew their swords and said,
- 'Bow down! bend down!—but man replied
- Defiant, fearless, everywhere
- His four fists shaking in the air.
- The gods descending cleft in twain
- Each man; then wiped their swords on grapes;
- And let confusion reign.
- "And such confusion! each half ran,
- Ran here, ran there; or weep or laugh
- Or what he would, each helpless man
- Ran hunting for his other half.
- And from that day, thenceforth the grapes
- Bore blood and flame, and restless shapes
- Of hewn-down, helpless halves of men,
- Ran searching ever; crazed, as when
- First hewn in twain, they grasped, let go,
- Then grasped again; but rarely found
- That lost half once loved so."
- Now, right or wrong, or false or true,
- 'Tis Plato's tale of hitter sweet;
- But I know well and well know you
- The quest keeps on at fever heat.
- Let Love, then, wisely sit and wait!
- The world is round; sit by the gate,
- Like blind Belisarius : being blind.
- Love should not search; Love shall not find
- By searching. Brass is so like gold.
- How shall this blind Love know new brass
- From pure soft gold of old?
- PART FOURTH.
- I.
- ay, turn not to the past for light;
- Nay, teach not Pagan tale forsooth!
- Behind lie heathen gods and night,
- Before lift high, white light and truth.
- Sweet Orpheus looked back, and lo,
- Hell met his eyes and endless woe!
- Lot's wife looked back, and for this fell
- To something even worse than hell.
- Let us have faith, sail, seek and find
- The new world and the new world's ways:
- Blind Homer led the blind!
- II.
- Come, let us kindle Faith in light!
- Yon eagle climbing to the sun
- Keeps not the straightest course in sight.
- But room and reach of wing and run
- Of rounding circle all are his.
- Till he at last bathes in the light
- Of worlds that look far down on this
- Arena's battle for the right.
- The stoutest sail that braves the breeze.
- The bravest battle ship that rides,
- Rides rounding up the seas.
- Come, let us kindle faith in man!
- What though yon eagle, where he swings,
- May moult a feather in God's plan
- Of broader, stronger, better wings!
- Why, let the moulted feathers lie
- As thick as leaves upon the lawn:
- These be but proof we cleave the sky
- And still round on and on and on.
- Fear not for moulting feathers; nay.
- But rather fear when all seems fair,
- And care is far away.
- Come, let us kindle faith in God!
- He made, He kept. He still can keep.
- The storm obeys His burning rod,
- The storm brought Christ to walk the deep.
- Trust God to round His own at will;
- Trust God to keep His own for aye—
- Or strife or strike, or well or ill;
- An eagle climbing up the sky—
- A meteor down from heaven hurled—
- Trust God to round, reform, or rock
- His new-born baby world.
- III.
- How full the great, full-hearted seas
- That lave high, white Alaska's feet!
- How densely green ihe dense green trees!
- How sweet the smell of wood! how sweet!
- What sense of high, white newness where
- This new world breathes the new, blue air
- That never breath of man or breath
- Of mortal thing considereth!
- And O, that Borealis light!
- The angel with his flaming sword
- And never sense of night!
- IV.
- Are these the walls of Paradise—
- Yon peaks the gates man may not pass?
- Lo, everlasting silence lies
- Along their gleaming ways of glass!
- Just silence and that sword of flame;
- Just silence and Jehovah's name,
- Where all is new, unmamed, and white!
- Come, let us read where angels write—
- "In the beginning God"—aye, these
- The waters where God's Spirit moved;
- These, these, the very seas!
- Just one deep, wave-washed chariot wheel :
- Such sunset as that far first day!
- An unsheathed sword of flame and steel;
- Then battle flashes; then dismay,
- And mad confusion of all hues
- That earth and heaven could infuse,
- Till all hues softly fused and blent
- In orange worlds of wonderment:
- Then dying day, in kingly ire,
- Struck back with one last blow, and smote
- The world with molten fire.
- So fell Alaska, proudly, dead
- In battle harness where he fought.
- But falling, still high o'er his head
- Far flashed his sword in crimson wrought,
- Till came his kingly foeman. Dusk,
- In garments moist with smell of musk.
- The bent moon moved down heaven's steeps
- Low-bowed, as when a woman weeps;
- Bowed low, half-veiled in widowhood;
- Then stars tiptoed the peaks in gold
- And burned brown sandal-wood.
- Fit death of Day; fit burial rite
- Of white Alaska! Let us lay
- This leaflet 'mid the musky night
- Upon his tomb. Come, come away;
- For Phaon talks and Sappho turns
- To where the light of heaven burns
- To love light, and she leans to hear
- With something more than mortal ear.
- The while the ship has pushed her prow
- So close against the fir-set shore
- You breathe the spicy bough.
- V.
- Some red men by the low, white beach;
- Camp fires, belts of dense, black fir:
- She leans as if she still would reach
- To him the very soul of her.
- The red flames cast a silhouette
- Against the snow, above the jet
- Black, narrow night of fragrant fir,
- Behold, what ardent worshiper!
- Lim'd out against a glacier peak,
- With strong arms crossed upon his breast;
- The while she feels him speak:
- "How glad was I to walk with Death
- Far down his dim, still, trackless lands.
- Where wind nor wave nor any breath
- Broke ripples o'er the somber sands.
- I walked with Death as eagerly
- As ever I had sailed this sea.
- Then on and on I searched, I sought,
- Yet all my seeking came to naught.
- I sailed by pleasant, peopled isles
- Of song and summer time; I sailed
- Ten thousand weary miles!
- "I heard a song! She had been sad,
- So sad and ever drooping she;
- How could she, then, in song be glad
- The While I searched? It could not be.
- And yet that voice! so like it seemed,
- I questioned if I heard or dreamed.
- She smiled on me. This made me scorn
- My very self ; for I was born
- To loyalty. I would be true
- Unto my love, my soul, my self,
- Whatever death might do.
- "I fled her face, her proud, fair face,
- Her songs that won a world to her.
- Had she sat songless in her place,
- Sat with no single worshiper.
- Sat with bowed head, sad-voiced, alone,
- I might have known! I might have known!
- But how could I, the savage, know
- This sun, contrasting with that snow.
- Would waken her great soul to song
- That still thrills all the ages through?
- I blindly did such wrong!
- "Again I fled. I ferried gods;
- Yet, pining still, I came to pine
- Where drowsy Lesbos Bacchus nods
- And drowned my soul in Cyprian wine.
- Drowned! drowned my poor, sad soul so deep,
- I sank to where damned serpents creep!
- Then slowly upward; round by round
- I toiled, regained this vantage-ground.
- And now, at last, I claim mine own,
- As some long-banished king comes back
- To battle for his throne."
- VI.
- I do not say that thus he spake
- By word of mouth, by human speech;
- The sun in one swift flash will take
- A photograph of space and reach
- The realm of stars. A soul like his
- Is like unto the sun in this:
- Her soul the plate placed to receive
- The swift impressions, to believe,
- To doubt no more than you might doubt
- The wondrous midnight world of stars
- That dawn has blotted out.
- VII.
- And Phaon loved her; he who knew
- The North Pole and the South, who named
- The stars for her, strode forth and slew
- Black, hairy monsters no man tamed;
- And all before fair Greece was born,
- Or Lesbos yet knew night or morn.
- No marvel that she knew bim when
- He came, the chiefest of all men.
- No marvel that she loved and died.
- And left such marbled bits of song—
- Of broken Phidian pride.
- VIII.
- Oh, but for that one further sense
- For man that man shall yet possess!
- That sense that puts aside pretense
- And sees the truth, that scorns to guess
- Or grope, or play at blindman's bufi".
- But knows rough diamonds in the rough!
- Oh, well for man when man shall see,
- As see he must man's destiny!
- Oh, well when man shall know his mate,
- One-winged and desolate, lives on
- And bravely dares to wait!
- IX.
- Full morning found them, and the land
- Received them, and the chapel gray;
- Some Indian huts on either hand,
- A smell of pine, a flash of spray,—
- White, frozen rivers of the sky
- Far up the glacial steeps hard by.
- Far ice-peaks flashed with sudden light.
- As if they would illume the rite.
- As if they knew his story well.
- As if they knew that form, that face.
- And all that Time could tell.
- X.
- They passed dusk chieftains two by two,
- With totem gods and stroud and shell
- They slowly passed, and passing through,
- He bought of all—he knew them well.
- And one, a bent old man and blind,
- He put his hands about, and kind
- And strange words whispered in his ear,
- So soft, his dull soul could but hear.
- And hear he surely did, for he,
- With full hands, lifted up his face
- And smiled right pleasantly.
- How near, how far, how fierce, how tame!
- The polar bear, the olive branch;
- The dying exile, Christ's sweet name—
- Vast silence! then the avalanche!
- How much this little church to them—
- Alaska and Jerusalem!
- The pair passed in, the silent pair
- Fell down before the altar there,
- The Greek before the gray Greek cross,
- And Phaon at her side at last,
- For all her weary loss.
- The bearded priest came, and he laid
- His two hands forth and slowly spake
- Strange, solemn words, and slowly prayed,
- And blessed them there, for Jesus' sake.
- Then slowly they arose and passed.
- Still silent, voiceless to the last.
- They passed : her eyes were to his eyes,
- But his were lifted to the skies,
- As looking, looking, that lorn night.
- Before the birth of God's first-born
- As praying still for Light.
- XI.
- So Phaon knew and Sappho knew
- Nor night nor sadness any more. . . .
- How new the old world, ever new.
- When white Love walks the shining shore!
- They found their long-lost Eden, found
- Her old, sweet songs; si;ch dulcet sound
- Of harmonies as soothe the ear
- When Love and only Love can hear.
- They found lost Eden; lilies lay
- Along their path, whichever land
- They journeyed from that day.
- XII.
- They never died. Great loves live on.
- You need not die and dare the skies
- In forms that poor creeds hinge upon
- To pass the gates of Paradise.
- I know not if that sword of flame
- Still lights the North, and leads the same
- As when he passed the gates of old.
- I know not if they braved the bold.
- Defiant walls that fronted them
- Where awful Saint Elias broods,
- Wrapped in God's garment-hem.
- I only know they found the lost,
- The long-lost Eden, found all fair
- Where naught had been but hail and frost;
- As Love finds Eden anywhere.
- And wouldst thou, too, live on and on?
- Then walk with Nature till the dawn.
- Aye, make thy soul worth saving—save
- Thy soul from darkness and the grave.
- Love God not overmuch, but love
- God's world which He called very good;
- Then lo, Love's white sea-dove!
- XIII.
- I know not where lies Eden-land;
- I only know 't is like unto
- God's kingdom, ever right at hand—
- Ever right here in reach of you.
- Put forth thy hand, or great or small,
- In storm or sun, by sea or wood,
- And say, as God hath said of all,
- Behold, it all is very good.
- I know not where lies Eden-land;
- I only say receive the dove:
- I say put forth thy hand.
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