Title:   A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass

Subject:  

Author:   Amy Lowell

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PDF Version:   1.2



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Bookmarks





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A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Amy Lowell



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Page No 2


Table of Contents

A Dome of ManyColoured Glass .....................................................................................................................1

Amy Lowell.............................................................................................................................................1

Lyrical Poems.........................................................................................................................................2

Before the Altar ........................................................................................................................................2

Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats's Poems..........................................................................4

Apples of Hesperides...............................................................................................................................5

Azure and Gold ........................................................................................................................................5

Petals ........................................................................................................................................................6

Venetian Glass.........................................................................................................................................7

Fatigue.....................................................................................................................................................7

A Japanese WoodCarving.....................................................................................................................8

A Little Song ............................................................................................................................................9

Behind a Wall........................................................................................................................................10

A Winter Ride ........................................................................................................................................10

A Coloured Print by Shokei ...................................................................................................................11

Song.......................................................................................................................................................12

The Fool Errant ......................................................................................................................................13

The Green Bowl .....................................................................................................................................15

Hora Stellatrix ........................................................................................................................................15

Fragment................................................................................................................................................16

Loon Point ..............................................................................................................................................16

Summer ..................................................................................................................................................17

"Tomorrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New" .................................................................................18

The Way .................................................................................................................................................19

Diya  {original title is Greek, Deltaiotapsialpha} ...........................................................................19

Roads.....................................................................................................................................................21

Teatro Bambino.  Dublin, N. H. .............................................................................................................22

The Road to Avignon .............................................................................................................................23

New York at Night .................................................................................................................................24

A Fairy Tale...........................................................................................................................................25

Crowned .................................................................................................................................................26

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins....................................................................................................................27

The Promise of the Morning Star ...........................................................................................................28

JK. Huysmans ....................................................................................................................................29

March Evening .......................................................................................................................................30

Sonnets ..................................................................................................................................................30

Leisure ....................................................................................................................................................30

On Carpaccio's Picture:  The Dream of St. Ursula................................................................................31

The Matrix.............................................................................................................................................31

Monadnock in Early Spring ...................................................................................................................32

The Little Garden ...................................................................................................................................32

To an Early Daffodil..............................................................................................................................33

Listening................................................................................................................................................33

The Lamp of Life ...................................................................................................................................34

HeroWorship.......................................................................................................................................34

In Darkness............................................................................................................................................35

Before Dawn..........................................................................................................................................35

The Poet.................................................................................................................................................36


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Table of Contents

At Night.................................................................................................................................................36

The Fruit Garden Path ............................................................................................................................37

Mirage ....................................................................................................................................................37

To a Friend .............................................................................................................................................38

A Fixed Idea ...........................................................................................................................................38

Dreams...................................................................................................................................................39

Frankincense and Myrrh........................................................................................................................39

From One Who Stays .............................................................................................................................40

Crepuscule du Matin ..............................................................................................................................40

Aftermath...............................................................................................................................................41

The End ..................................................................................................................................................41

The Starling ............................................................................................................................................42

Market Day............................................................................................................................................43

Epitaph in a ChurchYard in Charleston, South Carolina .....................................................................43

Francis II, King of Naples ......................................................................................................................44

To John Keats........................................................................................................................................44

The Boston Athenaeum .........................................................................................................................45

The Boston Athenaeum ..........................................................................................................................45

Verses for Children ...............................................................................................................................48

Sea Shell................................................................................................................................................48

Fringed Gentians ....................................................................................................................................49

The Painted Ceiling...............................................................................................................................49

The Crescent Moon ................................................................................................................................50

Climbing................................................................................................................................................51

The Trout...............................................................................................................................................52

Wind .......................................................................................................................................................52

The Pleiades ...........................................................................................................................................53


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Page No 4


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Amy Lowell

Lyrical Poems 

Before the Altar 

Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats's Poems 

Apples of Hesperides 

Azure and Gold 

Petals 

Venetian Glass 

Fatigue 

A Japanese WoodCarving 

A Little Song 

Behind a Wall 

A Winter Ride 

A Coloured Print by Shokei 

Song 

The Fool Errant 

The Green Bowl 

Hora Stellatrix 

Fragment 

Loon Point 

Summer 

"Tomorrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New" 

The Way 

Diya {original title is Greek, Deltaiotapsialpha} 

Roads 

Teatro Bambino. Dublin, N. H. 

The Road to Avignon 

New York at Night 

A Fairy Tale 

Crowned 

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins 

The Promise of the Morning Star 

JK. Huysmans 

March Evening 

Sonnets 

Leisure 

On Carpaccio's Picture: The Dream of St. Ursula 

The Matrix 

Monadnock in Early Spring 

The Little Garden 

To an Early Daffodil 

Listening 

The Lamp of Life 

HeroWorship 

In Darkness 

Before Dawn 

The Poet  

A Dome of ManyColoured Glass 1



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At Night 

The Fruit Garden Path 

Mirage 

To a Friend 

A Fixed Idea 

Dreams 

Frankincense and Myrrh 

From One Who Stays 

Crepuscule du Matin 

Aftermath 

The End 

The Starling 

Market Day 

Epitaph in a ChurchYard in Charleston, South Carolina 

Francis II, King of Naples 

To John Keats 

The Boston Athenaeum 

The Boston Athenaeum 

Verses for Children 

Sea Shell 

Fringed Gentians 

The Painted Ceiling 

The Crescent Moon 

Climbing 

The Trout 

Wind 

The Pleiades  

Stains the white radiance of Eternity."

                                                  Shelley, "Adonais".

"Le silence est si grand que mon coeur en frissonne,

Seul, le bruit de mes pas sur le pave resonne."

                                                  Albert Samain.

Lyrical Poems

Before the Altar

Before the Altar, bowed, he stands

With empty hands;

Upon it perfumed offerings burn

Wreathing with smoke the sacrificial urn.

Not one of all these has he given,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Lyrical Poems 2



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No flame of his has leapt to Heaven

Firesouled, vermilionhearted,

Forked, and darted,

Consuming what a few spare pence

Have cheaply bought, to fling from hence

In idlyasked petition.

His sole condition

Love and poverty.

And while the moon

Swings slow across the sky,

Athwart a waving pine tree,

And soon

Tips all the needles there

With silver sparkles, bitterly

He gazes, while his soul

Grows hard with thinking of the poorness of his dole.

"Shining and distant Goddess, hear my prayer

Where you swim in the high air!

With charity look down on me,

Under this tree,

Tending the gifts I have not brought,

The rare and goodly things

I have not sought.

Instead, take from me all my life!

"Upon the wings

Of shimmering moonbeams

I pack my poet's dreams

For you.

My wearying strife,

My courage, my loss,

Into the night I toss

For you.

Golden Divinity,

Deign to look down on me

Who so unworthily

Offers to you:

All life has known,

Seeds withered unsown,

Hopes turning quick to fears,

Laughter which dies in tears.

The shredded remnant of a man

Is all the span

And compass of my offering to you.

"Empty and silent, I

Kneel before your pure, calm majesty.

On this stone, in this urn

I pour my heart and watch it burn,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Lyrical Poems 3



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Page No 7


Myself the sacrifice; but be

Still unmoved: Divinity."

From the altar, bathed in moonlight,

The smoke rose straight in the quiet night.

Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats's Poems

Wild little bird, who chose thee for a sign

To put upon the cover of this book?

Who heard thee singing in the distance dim,

The vague, far greenness of the enshrouding wood,

When the damp freshness of the morning earth

Was full of pungent sweetness and thy song?

Who followed over moss and twisted roots,

And pushed through the wet leaves of trailing vines

Where slanting sunbeams gleamed uncertainly,

While ever clearer came the dropping notes,

Until, at last, two widening trunks disclosed

Thee singing on a spray of branching beech,

Hidden, then seen; and always that same song

Of joyful sweetness, rapture incarnate,

Filled the hushed, rustling stillness of the wood?

We do not know what bird thou art. Perhaps

That fairy bird, fabled in island tale,

Who never sings but once, and then his song

Is of such fearful beauty that he dies

From sheer exuberance of melody.

For this they took thee, little bird, for this

They captured thee, tilting among the leaves,

And stamped thee for a symbol on this book.

For it contains a song surpassing thine,

Richer, more sweet, more poignant. And the poet

Who felt this burning beauty, and whose heart

Was full of loveliest things, sang all he knew

A little while, and then he died; too frail

To bear this untamed, passionate burst of song.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats's Poems 4



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Apples of Hesperides

Glinting golden through the trees,

Apples of Hesperides!

Through the moonpierced warp of night

Shoot pale shafts of yellow light,

Swaying to the kissing breeze

Swings the treasure, goldengleaming,

Apples of Hesperides!

Far and lofty yet they glimmer,

Apples of Hesperides!

Blinded by their radiant shimmer,

Pushing forward just for these;

Dewbesprinkled, bramblemarred,

Poor duped mortal, travelscarred,

Always thinking soon to seize

And possess the goldenglistening

Apples of Hesperides!

Orbed, and glittering, and pendent,

Apples of Hesperides!

Not one missing, still transcendent,

Clustering like a swarm of bees.

Yielding to no man's desire,

Glowing with a saffron fire,

Splendid, unassailed, the golden

Apples of Hesperides!

Azure and Gold

April had covered the hills

With flickering yellows and reds,

The sparkle and coolness of snow

Was blown from the mountain beds.


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Across a deepsunken stream

The pink of blossoming trees,

And from windless appleblooms

The humming of many bees.

The air was of rose and gold

Arabesqued with the song of birds

Who, swinging unseen under leaves,

Made music more eager than words.

Of a sudden, aslant the road,

A brightness to dazzle and stun,

A glint of the bluest blue,

A flash from a sapphire sun.

Bluebirds so blue, 't was a dream,

An impossible, unconceived hue,

The high sky of summer dropped down

Some rapturous ocean to woo.

Such a colour, such infinite light!

The heart of a fabulous gem,

Manyfaceted, brilliant and rare.

Centre Stone of the earth's diadem!

           . . . . .

Centre Stone of the Crown of the World,

"Sincerity" graved on your youth!

And your eyes hold the bluebird flash,

The sapphire shaft, which is truth.

Petals

Life is a stream

On which we strew

Petal by petal the flower of our heart;

The end lost in dream,

They float past our view,

We only watch their glad, early start.

Freighted with hope,

Crimsoned with joy,

We scatter the leaves of our opening rose;

Their widening scope,


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Petals 6



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Page No 10


Their distant employ,

We never shall know. And the stream as it flows

Sweeps them away,

Each one is gone

Ever beyond into infinite ways.

We alone stay

While years hurry on,

The flower fared forth, though its fragrance still stays.

Venetian Glass

As one who sails upon a wide, blue sea

Far out of sight of land, his mind intent

Upon the sailing of his little boat,

On tightening ropes and shaping fair his course,

Hears suddenly, across the restless sea,

The rhythmic striking of some towered clock,

And wakes from thoughtless idleness to time:

Time, the slow pulse which beats eternity!

So through the vacancy of busy life

At intervals you cross my path and bring

The deep solemnity of passing years.

For you I have shed bitter tears, for you

I have relinquished that for which my heart

Cried out in selfish longing. And tonight

Having just left you, I can say: "'T is well.

Thank God that I have known a soul so true,

So nobly just, so worthy to be loved!"

Fatigue

Stupefy my heart to every day's monotony,

Seal up my eyes, I would not look so far,

Chasten my steps to peaceful regularity,


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Venetian Glass 7



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Page No 11


Bow down my head lest I behold a star.

Fill my days with work, a thousand calm necessities

Leaving no moment to consecrate to hope,

Girdle my thoughts within the dull circumferences

Of facts which form the actual in one short hour's scope.

Give me dreamless sleep, and loose night's power over me,

Shut my ears to sounds only tumultuous then,

Bid Fancy slumber, and steal away its potency,

Or Nature wakes and strives to live again.

Let each day pass, well ordered in its usefulness,

Unlit by sunshine, unscarred by storm;

Dower me with strength and curb all foolish eagerness 

The law exacts obedience. Instruct, I will conform.

A Japanese WoodCarving

High up above the open, welcoming door

It hangs, a piece of wood with colours dim.

Once, long ago, it was a waving tree

And knew the sun and shadow through the leaves

Of forest trees, in a thick eastern wood.

The winter snows had bent its branches down,

The spring had swelled its buds with coming flowers,

Summer had run like fire through its veins,

While autumn pelted it with chestnut burrs,

And strewed the leafy ground with acorn cups.

Dark midnight storms had roared and crashed among

Its branches, breaking here and there a limb;

But every now and then broad sunlit days

Lovingly lingered, caught among the leaves.

Yes, it had known all this, and yet to us

It does not speak of mossy forest ways,

Of whispering pine trees or the shimmering birch;

But of quick winds, and the salt, stinging sea!

An artist once, with patient, careful knife,

Had fashioned it like to the untamed sea.

Here waves uprear themselves, their tops blown back

By the gay, sunny wind, which whips the blue

And breaks it into gleams and sparks of light.

Among the flashing waves are two white birds


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

A Japanese WoodCarving 8



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Page No 12


Which swoop, and soar, and scream for very joy

At the wild sport. Now diving quickly in,

Questing some glistening fish. Now flying up,

Their dripping feathers shining in the sun,

While the wet drops like little glints of light,

Fall pattering backward to the parent sea.

Gliding along the green and foamflecked hollows,

Or skimming some white crest about to break,

The spirits of the sky deigning to stoop

And play with ocean in a summer mood.

Hanging above the high, wide open door,

It brings to us in quiet, firelit room,

The freedom of the earth's vast solitudes,

Where heaping, sunny waves tumble and roll,

And seabirds scream in wanton happiness.

A Little Song

When you, my Dear, are away, away,

How wearily goes the creeping day.

A year drags after morning, and night

Starts another year of candle light.

O Pausing Sun and Lingering Moon!

Grant me, I beg of you, this boon.

Whirl round the earth as never sun

Has his diurnal journey run.

And, Moon, slip past the ladders of air

In a single flash, while your streaming hair

Catches the stars and pulls them down

To shine on some slumbering Chinese town.

O Kindly Sun! Understanding Moon!

Bring evening to crowd the footsteps of noon.

But when that long awaited day

Hangs ripe in the heavens, your voyaging stay.

Be morning, O Sun! with the lark in song,

Be afternoon for ages long.

And, Moon, let you and your lesser lights

Watch over a century of nights.


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A Little Song 9



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Page No 13


Behind a Wall

I own a solace shut within my heart,

A garden full of many a quaint delight

And warm with drowsy, poppied sunshine; bright,

Flaming with lilies out of whose cups dart

        Shining things

        With powdered wings.

Here terrace sinks to terrace, arbors close

The ends of dreaming paths; a wanton wind

Jostles the halfripe pears, and then, unkind,

Tumbles aslumber in a pillar rose,

        With content

        Grown indolent.

By night my garden is o'erhung with gems

Fixed in an onyx setting. Fireflies

Flicker their lanterns in my dazzled eyes.

In serried rows I guess the straight, stiff stems

        Of hollyhocks

        Against the rocks.

So far and still it is that, listening,

I hear the flowers talking in the dawn;

And where a sunken basin cuts the lawn,

Cinctured with iris, pale and glistening,

        The sudden swish

        Of a waking fish.

A Winter Ride

Who shall declare the joy of the running!

Who shall tell of the pleasures of flight!

Springing and spurning the tufts of wild heather,

Sweeping, widewinged, through the blue dome of light.


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Page No 14


Everything mortal has moments immortal,

Swift and Godgifted, immeasurably bright.

So with the stretch of the white road before me,

Shining snowcrystals rainbowed by the sun,

Fields that are white, stained with long, cool, blue shadows,

Strong with the strength of my horse as we run.

Joy in the touch of the wind and the sunlight!

Joy! With the vigorous earth I am one.

A Coloured Print by Shokei

It winds along the face of a cliff

This path which I long to explore,

And over it dashes a waterfall,

And the air is full of the roar

And the thunderous voice of waters which sweep

In a silver torrent over some steep.

It clears the path with a mighty bound

And tumbles below and away,

And the trees and the bushes which grow in the rocks

Are wet with its jewelled spray;

The air is misty and heavy with sound,

And small, wet wildflowers star the ground.

Oh! The dampness is very good to smell,

And the path is soft to tread,

And beyond the fall it winds up and on,

While little streamlets thread

Their own meandering way down the hill

Each singing its own little song, until

I forget that 't is only a pictured path,

And I hear the water and wind,

And look through the mist, and strain my eyes

To see what there is behind;

For it must lead to a happy land,

This little path by a waterfall spanned.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

A Coloured Print by Shokei 11



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Page No 15


Song

Oh! To be a flower

Nodding in the sun,

Bending, then upspringing

As the breezes run;

Holding up

A scentbrimmed cup,

Full of summer's fragrance to the summer sun.

Oh! To be a butterfly

Still, upon a flower,

Winking with its painted wings,

Happy in the hour.

Blossoms hold

Mines of gold

Deep within the farthest heart of each chaliced flower.

Oh! To be a cloud

Blowing through the blue,

Shadowing the mountains,

Rushing loudly through

Valleys deep

Where torrents keep

Always their plunging thunder and their misty arch of blue.

Oh! To be a wave

Splintering on the sand,

Drawing back, but leaving

Lingeringly the land.

Rainbow light

Flashes bright

Telling tales of coral caves half hid in yellow sand.

Soon they die, the flowers;

Insects live a day;

Clouds dissolve in showers;

Only waves at play

Last forever.

Shall endeavor

Make a sea of purpose mightier than we dream today?


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Song 12



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Page No 16


The Fool Errant

The Fool Errant sat by the highway of life

And his gaze wandered up and his gaze wandered down,

A vigorous youth, but with no wish to walk,

Yet his longing was great for the distant town.

He whistled a little frivolous tune

Which he felt to be pulsing with ecstasy,

For he thought that success always followed desire,

Such a very superlative fool was he.

A maiden came by on an ambling mule,

Her gown was rosered and her kerchief blue,

On her lap she carried a basket of eggs.

Thought the fool, "There is certainly room for two."

So he jauntily swaggered towards the maid

And put out his hand to the bridlerein.

"My pretty girl," quoth the fool, "take me up,

For to ride with you to the town I am fain."

But the maiden struck at his upraised arm

And pelted him hotly with eggs, a score.

The mule, lashed into a fury, ran;

The fool went back to his stone and swore.

Then out of the cloud of settling dust

The burly form of an abbot appeared,

Reading his office he rode to the town.

And the fool got up, for his heart was cheered.

He stood in the midst of the long, white road

And swept off his cap till it touched the ground.

"Ah, Reverent Sir, well met," said the fool,

"A worthier transport never was found.

"I pray you allow me to mount with you,

Your palfrey seems both sturdy and young."

The abbot looked up from the holy book

And cried out in anger, "Hold your tongue!

"How dare you obstruct the King's highroad,

You saucy varlet, get out of my way."

Then he gave the fool a cut with his whip

And leaving him smarting, he rode away.


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The Fool Errant 13



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Page No 17


The fool was angry, the fool was sore,

And he cursed the folly of monks and maids.

"If I could but meet with a man," sighed the fool,

"For a woman fears, and a friar upbraids."

Then he saw a flashing of distant steel

And the clanking of harness greeted his ears,

And up the road journeyed knightsatarms,

With waving plumes and glittering spears.

The fool took notice and slowly arose,

Not quite so sure was his foolish heart.

If priests and women would none of him

Was it likely a knight would take his part?

They sang as they rode, these lusty boys,

When one chanced to turn toward the highway's side,

"There's a sorry figure of fun," jested he,

"Well, Sirrah! move back, there is scarce room to ride."

"Good Sirs, Kind Sirs," begged the crestfallen fool,

"I pray of your courtesy speech with you,

I'm for yonder town, and have no horse to ride,

Have you never a charger will carry two?"

Then the company halted and laughed out loud.

"Was such a request ever made to a knight?"

"And where are your legs," asked one, "if you start,

You may be inside the town gates tonight."

"'T is a lazy fellow, let him alone,

They've no room in the town for such idlers as he."

But one bent from his saddle and said, "My man,

Art thou not ashamed to beg charity!

"Thou art well set up, and thy legs are strong,

But it much misgives me lest thou'rt a fool;

For beggars get only a beggar's crust,

Wise men are reared in a different school."

Then they clattered away in the dust and the wind,

And the fool slunk back to his lonely stone;

He began to see that the man who asks

Must likewise give and not ask alone.

Purple treeshadows crept over the road,

The level sun flung an orange light,

And the fool laid his head on the hard, gray stone

And wept as he realized advancing night.

A great, round moon rose over a hill


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

The Fool Errant 14



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Page No 18


And the steady wind blew yet more cool;

And crouched on a stone a wayfarer sobbed,

For at last he knew he was only a fool.

The Green Bowl

This little bowl is like a mossy pool

In a Spring wood, where dogtooth violets grow

Nodding in chequered sunshine of the trees;

A quiet place, still, with the sound of birds,

Where, though unseen, is heard the endless song

And murmur of the never resting sea.

'T was winter, Roger, when you made this cup,

But coming Spring guided your eager hand

And round the edge you fashioned young green leaves,

A proper chalice made to hold the shy

And little flowers of the woods. And here

They will forget their sad uprooting, lost

In pleasure that this circle of bright leaves

Should be their setting; once more they will dream

They hear winds wandering through lofty trees

And see the sun smiling between the leaves.

Hora Stellatrix

The stars hang thick in the apple tree,

The south wind smells of the pungent sea,

Gold tulip cups are heavy with dew.

The night's for you, Sweetheart, for you!

Starfire rains from the vaulted blue.

Listen! The dancing of unseen leaves.

A drowsy swallow stirs in the eaves.

Only a maiden is sorrowing.


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The Green Bowl 15



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Page No 19


'T is night and spring, Sweetheart, and spring!

Starfire lights your heart's blossoming.

In the intimate dark there's never an ear,

Though the tulips stand on tiptoe to hear,

So give; ripe fruit must shrivel or fall.

As you are mine, Sweetheart, give all!

Starfire sparkles, your coronal.

Fragment

What is poetry? Is it a mosaic

Of coloured stones which curiously are wrought

Into a pattern? Rather glass that's taught

By patient labor any hue to take

And glowing with a sumptuous splendor, make

Beauty a thing of awe; where sunbeams caught,

Transmuted fall in sheafs of rainbows fraught

With storied meaning for religion's sake.

Loon Point

Softly the water ripples

Against the canoe's curving side,

Softly the birch trees rustle

Flinging over us branches wide.

Softly the moon glints and glistens

As the water takes and leaves,

Like golden ears of corn

Which fall from loosebound sheaves,

Or like the snowwhite petals

Which drop from an overblown rose,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Fragment 16



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Page No 20


When Summer ripens to Autumn

And the freighted year must close.

From the shore come the scents of a garden,

And between a gap in the trees

A proud white statue glimmers

In cold, disdainful ease.

The child of a southern people,

The thought of an alien race,

What does she in this pale, northern garden,

How reconcile it with her grace?

But the moon in her wayward beauty

Is ever and always the same,

As lovely as when upon Latmos

She watched till Endymion came.

Through the water the moon writes her legends

In light, on the smooth, wet sand;

They endure for a moment, and vanish,

And no one may understand.

All round us the secret of Nature

Is telling itself to our sight,

We may guess at her meaning but never

Can know the full mystery of night.

But her power of enchantment is on us,

We bow to the spell which she weaves,

Made up of the murmur of waves

And the manifold whisper of leaves.

Summer

Some men there are who find in nature all

Their inspiration, hers the sympathy

Which spurs them on to any great endeavor,

To them the fields and woods are closest friends,

And they hold dear communion with the hills;

The voice of waters soothes them with its fall,

And the great winds bring healing in their sound.

To them a city is a prison house


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Summer 17



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Page No 21


Where pent up human forces labour and strive,

Where beauty dwells not, driven forth by man;

But where in winter they must live until

Summer gives back the spaces of the hills.

To me it is not so. I love the earth

And all the gifts of her so lavish hand:

Sunshine and flowers, rivers and rushing winds,

Thick branches swaying in a winter storm,

And moonlight playing in a boat's wide wake;

But more than these, and much, ah, how much more,

I love the very human heart of man.

Above me spreads the hot, blue midday sky,

Far down the hillside lies the sleeping lake

Lazily reflecting back the sun,

And scarcely ruffled by the little breeze

Which wanders idly through the nodding ferns.

The blue crest of the distant mountain, tops

The green crest of the hill on which I sit;

And it is summer, glorious, deeptoned summer,

The very crown of nature's changing year

When all her surging life is at its full.

To me alone it is a time of pause,

A void and silent space between two worlds,

When inspiration lags, and feeling sleeps,

Gathering strength for efforts yet to come.

For life alone is creator of life,

And closest contact with the human world

Is like a lantern shining in the night

To light me to a knowledge of myself.

I love the vivid life of winter months

In constant intercourse with human minds,

When every new experience is gain

And on all sides we feel the great world's heart;

The pulse and throb of life which makes us men!

"Tomorrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New"

As for a moment he stands, in hardy masculine beauty,

Poised on the fircrested rock, over the pool which below him

Gleams in the wavering sunlight, waiting the shock of his plunging.

So for a moment I stand, my feet planted firm in the present,

Eagerly scanning the future which is so soon to possess me.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

"Tomorrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New" 18



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Page No 22


The Way

At first a mere thread of a footpath half blotted out by the grasses

Sweeping triumphant across it, it wound between hedges of roses

Whose blossoms were poised above leaves as pond lilies float on the water,

While hidden by bloom in a hawthorn a bird filled the morning with singing.

It widened a highway, majestic, stretching ever to distant horizons,

Where shadows of treebranches wavered, vague outlines invaded by sunshine;

No sound but the wind as it whispered the secrets of earth to the flowers,

And the hum of the yellow bees, honeyladen and dusty with pollen.

And Summer said, "Come, follow onward, with no thought save the longing

    to wander,

The wind, and the bees, and the flowers, all singing the great song

    of Nature,

Are minstrels of change and of promise, they herald the joy of the Future."

Later the solitude vanished, confused and distracted the road

Where many were seeking and jostling. Left behind were the trees

    and the flowers,

The halfrealized beauty of quiet, the sacred unconscious communing.

And now he is come to a river, a line of gray, sullen water,

Not blue and splashing, but dark, rolling somberly on to the ocean.

But on the far side is a city whose windows flame gold in the sunset.

It lies fair and shining before him, a gem set betwixt sky and water,

And spanning the river a bridge, frail promise to longing desire,

Flung by man in his infinite courage, across the stern force of the water;

And he looks at the river and fears, the bridge is so slight,

    yet he ventures

His life to its fragile keeping, if it fails the waves will engulf him.

O Arches! be strong to uphold him, and bear him across to the city,

The beautiful city whose spires still glow with the fires of sunset!

Diya {original title is Greek, Deltaiotapsialpha}


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

The Way 19



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Page No 23


Look, Dear, how bright the moonlight is tonight!

See where it casts the shadow of that tree

Far out upon the grass. And every gust

Of light night wind comes laden with the scent

Of opening flowers which never bloom by day:

Nightscented stocks, and fouro'clocks, and that

Pale yellow disk, upreared on its tall stalk,

The evening primrose, comrade of the stars.

It seems as though the garden which you love

Were like a swinging censer, its incense

Floating before us as a reverent act

To sanctify and bless our night of love.

Tell me once more you love me, that 't is you

Yes, really you, I touch, so, with my hand;

And tell me it is by your own free will

That you are here, and that you like to be

Just here, with me, under this sailing pine.

I need to hear it often for my heart

Doubts naturally, and finds it hard to trust.

Ah, Dearest, you are good to love me so,

And yet I would not have it goodness, rather

Excess of selfishness in you to need

Me through and through, as flowers need the sun.

I wonder can it really be that you

And I are here alone, and that the night

Is full of hours, and all the world asleep,

And none can call to you to come away;

For you have given all yourself to me

Making me gentle by your willingness.

Has your life too been waiting for this time,

Not only mine the sharpness of this joy?

Dear Heart, I love you, worship you as though

I were a priest before a holy shrine.

I'm glad that you are beautiful, although

Were you not lovely still I needs must love;

But you are all things, it must have been so

For otherwise it were not you. Come, close;

When you are in the circle of my arm

Faith grows a mountain and I take my stand

Upon its utmost top. Yes, yes, once more

Kiss me, and let me feel you very near

Wanting me wholly, even as I want you.

Have years behind been dark? Will those to come

Bring unguessed sorrows into our two lives?

What does it matter, we have had tonight!

Tonight will make us strong, for we believe

Each in the other, this is a sacrament.

Beloved, is it true?


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

The Way 20



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Page No 24


Roads

I know a country laced with roads,

They join the hills and they span the brooks,

They weave like a shuttle between broad fields,

And slide discreetly through hidden nooks.

They are canopied like a Persian dome

And carpeted with orient dyes.

They are myriadvoiced, and musical,

And scented with happiest memories.

O Winding roads that I know so well,

Every twist and turn, every hollow and hill!

They are set in my heart to a pulsing tune

Gay as a honeybee humming in June.

'T is the rhythmic beat of a horse's feet

And the pattering paws of a sheepdog bitch;

'T is the creaking trees, and the singing breeze,

And the rustle of leaves in the roadside ditch.

A cow in a meadow shakes her bell

And the notes cut sharp through the autumn air,

Each chattering brook bears a fleet of leaves

Their cargo the rainbow, and just now where

The sun splashed bright on the road ahead

A startled rabbit quivered and fled.

O Uphill roads and roads that dip down!

You curl your sunspattered length along,

And your march is beaten into a song

By the softly ringing hoofs of a horse

And the panting breath of the dogs I love.

The pageant of Autumn follows its course

And the blue sky of Autumn laughs above.

And the song and the country become as one,

I see it as music, I hear it as light;

Prismatic and shimmering, trembling to tone,

The land of desire, my soul's delight.

And always it beats in my listening ears

With the gentle thud of a horse's stride,

With the swiftfalling steps of many dogs,

Following, following at my side.

O Roads that journey to fairyland!

Radiant highways whose vistas gleam,

Leading me on, under crimson leaves,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Roads 21



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Page No 25


To the opaline gates of the Castles of Dream.

Teatro Bambino. Dublin, N. H.

How still it is! Sunshine itself here falls

In quiet shafts of light through the high trees

Which, arching, make a roof above the walls

Changing from sun to shadow as each breeze

Lingers a moment, charmed by the strange sight

Of an Italian theatre, storied, seer

Of vague romance, and time's long history;

Where tiers of grassgrown seats sprinkled with white,

Sweetscented clover, form a broken sphere

Grouped round the stage in hushed expectancy.

What sound is that which echoes through the wood?

Is it the reedy note of an oaten pipe?

Perchance a minute more will see the brood

Of the shaggy forest god, and on his lip

Will rest the rushes he is wont to play.

His train in woven baskets bear ripe fruit

And weave a dance with ropes of gray acorns,

So light their touch the grasses scarcely sway

As they the measure tread to the lilting flute.

Alas! 't is only Fancy thus adorns.

A cloud drifts idly over the shining sun.

How damp it seems, how silent, still, and strange!

Surely 't was here some tragedy was done,

And here the chorus sang each coming change?

Sure this is deep in some sweet, southern wood,

These are not pines, but cypress tall and dark;

That is no thrush which sings so rapturously,

But the nightingale in his most passionate mood

Bursting his little heart with anguish. Hark!

The tread of sandalled feet comes noiselessly.

The silence almost is a sound, and dreams

Take on the semblances of finite things;

So potent is the spell that what but seems

Elsewhere, is lifted here on Fancy's wings.

The little woodland theatre seems to wait,

All tremulous with hope and wistful joy,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Teatro Bambino.  Dublin, N. H. 22



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Page No 26


For something that is sure to come at last,

Some deep emotion, satisfying, great.

It grows a living presence, bold and shy,

Cradling the future in a glorious past.

The Road to Avignon

A Minstrel stands on a marble stair,

Blown by the bright wind, debonair;

Below lies the sea, a sapphire floor,

Above on the terrace a turret door

Frames a lady, listless and wan,

But fair for the eye to rest upon.

The minstrel plucks at his silver strings,

And looking up to the lady, sings: 

     Down the road to Avignon,

     The long, long road to Avignon,

     Across the bridge to Avignon,

     One morning in the spring.

The octagon tower casts a shade

Cool and gray like a cutlass blade;

In sunbaked vines the cicalas spin,

The little green lizards run out and in.

A sail dips over the ocean's rim,

And bubbles rise to the fountain's brim.

The minstrel touches his silver strings,

And gazing up to the lady, sings: 

     Down the road to Avignon,

     The long, long road to Avignon,

     Across the bridge to Avignon,

     One morning in the spring.

Slowly she walks to the balustrade,

Idly notes how the blossoms fade

In the sun's caress; then crosses where

The shadow shelters a carven chair.

Within its curve, supine she lies,

And wearily closes her tired eyes.

The minstrel beseeches his silver strings,

And holding the lady spellbound, sings: 

     Down the road to Avignon,

     The long, long road to Avignon,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

The Road to Avignon 23



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Page No 27


Across the bridge to Avignon,

     One morning in the spring.

Clouds sail over the distant trees,

Petals are shaken down by the breeze,

They fall on the terrace tiles like snow;

The sighing of waves sounds, far below.

A hummingbird kisses the lips of a rose

Then laden with honey and love he goes.

The minstrel woos with his silver strings,

And climbing up to the lady, sings: 

     Down the road to Avignon,

     The long, long road to Avignon,

     Across the bridge to Avignon,

     One morning in the spring.

Step by step, and he comes to her,

Fearful lest she suddenly stir.

Sunshine and silence, and each to each,

The lute and his singing their only speech;

He leans above her, her eyes unclose,

The hummingbird enters another rose.

The minstrel hushes his silver strings.

Hark! The beating of hummingbirds' wings!

     Down the road to Avignon,

     The long, long road to Avignon,

     Across the bridge to Avignon,

     One morning in the spring.

New York at Night

A near horizon whose sharp jags

Cut brutally into a sky

Of leaden heaviness, and crags

Of houses lift their masonry

Ugly and foul, and chimneys lie

And snort, outlined against the gray

Of lowhung cloud. I hear the sigh

The goaded city gives, not day

Nor night can ease her heart, her anguished labours stay.

Below, straight streets, monotonous,

From north and south, from east and west,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

New York at Night 24



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Page No 28


Stretch glittering; and luminous

Above, one tower tops the rest

And holds aloft man's constant quest:

Time! Joyless emblem of the greed

Of millions, robber of the best

Which earth can give, the vulgar creed

Has seared upon the night its flaming ruthless screed.

O Night! Whose soothing presence brings

The quiet shining of the stars.

O Night! Whose cloak of darkness clings

So intimately close that scars

Are hid from our own eyes. Beggars

By day, our wealth is having night

To burn our souls before altars

Dim and treeshadowed, where the light

Is shed from a young moon, mysteriously bright.

Where art thou hiding, where thy peace?

This is the hour, but thou art not.

Will waking tumult never cease?

Hast thou thy votary forgot?

Nature forsakes this manbegot

And festering wilderness, and now

The long still hours are here, no jot

Of dear communing do I know;

Instead the glaring, manfilled city groans below!

A Fairy Tale

On winter nights beside the nursery fire

We read the fairy tale, while glowing coals

Builded its pictures. There before our eyes

We saw the vaulted hall of traceried stone

Uprear itself, the distant ceiling hung

With pendent stalactites like frozen vines;

And all along the walls at intervals,

Curled upwards into pillars, roses climbed,

And ramped and were confined, and clustered leaves

Divided where there peered a laughing face.

The foliage seemed to rustle in the wind,

A silent murmur, carved in still, gray stone.

High pointed windows pierced the southern wall


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A Fairy Tale 25



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Page No 29


Whence proud escutcheons flung prismatic fires

To stain the tessellated marble floor

With pools of red, and quivering green, and blue;

And in the shade beyond the further door,

Its sober squares of black and white were hid

Beneath a restless, shuffling, wideeyed mob

Of lackeys and retainers come to view

The Christening.

A sudden blare of trumpets, and the throng

About the entrance parted as the guests

Filed singly in with rare and precious gifts.

Our eager fancies noted all they brought,

The glorious, unattainable delights!

But always there was one unbidden guest

Who cursed the child and left it bitterness.

The fire falls asunder, all is changed,

I am no more a child, and what I see

Is not a fairy tale, but life, my life.

The gifts are there, the many pleasant things:

Health, wealth, longsettled friendships, with a name

Which honors all who bear it, and the power

Of making words obedient. This is much;

But overshadowing all is still the curse,

That never shall I be fulfilled by love!

Along the parching highroad of the world

No other soul shall bear mine company.

Always shall I be teased with semblances,

With cruel impostures, which I trust awhile

Then dash to pieces, as a careless boy

Flings a kaleidoscope, which shattering

Strews all the ground about with coloured sherds.

So I behold my visions on the ground

No longer radiant, an ignoble heap

Of broken, dusty glass. And so, unlit,

Even by hope or faith, my dragging steps

Force me forever through the passing days.

Crowned

You came to me bearing bright roses,

Red like the wine of your heart;

You twisted them into a garland


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Crowned 26



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Page No 30


To set me aside from the mart.

Red roses to crown me your lover,

And I walked aureoled and apart.

Enslaved and encircled, I bore it,

Proud token of my gift to you.

The petals waned paler, and shriveled,

And dropped; and the thorns started through.

Bitter thorns to proclaim me your lover,

A diadem woven with rue.

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins

Dear Bessie, would my tired rhyme

Had force to rise from apathy,

And shaking off its lethargy

Ring wordtones like a Christmas chime.

But in my soul's high belfry, chill

The bitter wind of doubt has blown,

The summer swallows all have flown,

The bells are frostbound, mute and still.

Upon the crumbling boards the snow

Has drifted deep, the clappers hang

Prismed with icicles, their clang

Unheard since ages long ago.

The rope I pull is stiff and cold,

My straining ears detect no sound

Except a sigh, as round and round

The wind rocks through the timbers old.

Below, I know the church is bright

With haloed tapers, warm with prayer;

But here I only feel the air

Of icy centuries of night.

Beneath my feet the snow is lit

And gemmed with colours, red, and blue,

Topaz, and green, where light falls through

The saints that in the windows sit.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins 27



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Page No 31


Here darkness seems a spectred thing,

Voiceless and haunting, while the stars

Mock with a light of long dead years

The ache of present suffering.

Silent and winterkilled I stand,

No carol hymns my debt to you;

But take this frozen thought in lieu,

And thaw its music in your hand.

The Promise of the Morning Star

Thou father of the children of my brain

By thee engendered in my willing heart,

How can I thank thee for this gift of art

Poured out so lavishly, and not in vain.

What thou created never more can die,

Thy fructifying power lives in me

And I conceive, knowing it is by thee,

Dear other parent of my poetry!

For I was but a shadow with a name,

Perhaps by now the very name's forgot;

So strange is Fate that it has been my lot

To learn through thee the presence of that aim

Which evermore must guide me. All unknown,

By me unguessed, by thee not even dreamed,

A tree has blossomed in a night that seemed

Of stubborn, barren wood. For thou hast sown

This seed of beauty in a ground of truth.

Humbly I dedicate myself, and yet

I tremble with a sudden fear to set

New music ringing through my fading youth.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

The Promise of the Morning Star 28



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Page No 32


JK. Huysmans

A flickering glimmer through a windowpane,

A dim red glare through mud bespattered glass,

Cleaving a path between blown walls of sleet

Across uneven pavements sunk in slime

To scatter and then quench itself in mist.

And struggling, slipping, often rudely hurled

Against the jutting angle of a wall,

And cursed, and reeled against, and flung aside

By drunken brawlers as they shuffled past,

A man was groping to what seemed a light.

His eyelids burnt and quivered with the strain

Of looking, and against his temples beat

The all enshrouding, suffocating dark.

He stumbled, lurched, and struck against a door

That opened, and a howl of obscene mirth

Grated his senses, wallowing on the floor

Lay men, and dogs and women in the dirt.

He sickened, loathing it, and as he gazed

The candle guttered, flared, and then went out.

Through travail of ignoble midnight streets

He came at last to shelter in a porch

Where gothic saints and warriors made a shield

To cover him, and tortured gargoyles spat

One long continuous stream of silver rain

That clattered down from myriad roofs and spires

Into a darkness, loud with rushing sound

Of water falling, gurgling as it fell,

But always thickly dark. Then as he leaned

Unconscious where, the great oak door blew back

And cast him, bruised and dripping, in the church.

His eyes from long sojourning in the night

Were blinded now as by some glorious sun;

He slowly crawled toward the altar steps.

He could not think, for heavy in his ears

An organ boomed majestic harmonies;

He only knew that what he saw was light!

He bowed himself before a cross of flame

And shut his eyes in fear lest it should fade.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

JK. Huysmans 29



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Page No 33


March Evening

Blue through the window burns the twilight;

Heavy, through trees, blows the warm south wind.

Glistening, against the chill, gray sky light,

Wet, black branches are barred and entwined.

Sodden and spongy, the scarcegreen grass plot

Dents into pools where a foot has been.

Puddles lie spilt in the road a mass, not

Of water, but steel, with its cold, hard sheen.

Faint fades the fire on the hearth, its embers

Scattering wide at a stronger gust.

Above, the old weathercock groans, but remembers

Creaking, to turn, in its centuried rust.

Dying, forlorn, in dreary sorrow,

Wrapping the mists round her withering form,

Day sinks down; and in darkness tomorrow

Travails to birth in the womb of the storm.

Sonnets

Leisure

Leisure, thou goddess of a bygone age,

When hours were long and days sufficed to hold


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March Evening 30



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Page No 34


Wideeyed delights and pleasures uncontrolled

By shortening moments, when no gaunt presage

Of undone duties, modern heritage,

Haunted our happy minds; must thou withhold

Thy presence from this overbusy world,

And bearing silence with thee disengage

Our twined fortunes? Deeps of unhewn woods

Alone can cherish thee, alone possess

Thy quiet, teeming vigor. This our crime:

Not to have worshipped, marred by alien moods

That sole condition of all loveliness,

The dreaming lapse of slow, unmeasured time.

On Carpaccio's Picture: The Dream of St. Ursula

Swept, clean, and still, across the polished floor

From some unshuttered casement, hid from sight,

The level sunshine slants, its greater light

Quenching the little lamp which pallid, poor,

Flickering, unreplenished, at the door

Has striven against darkness the long night.

Dawn fills the room, and penetrating, bright,

The silent sunbeams through the window pour.

And she lies sleeping, ignorant of Fate,

Enmeshed in listless dreams, her soul not yet

Ripened to bear the purport of this day.

The morning breeze scarce stirs the coverlet,

A shadow falls across the sunlight; wait!

A lark is singing as he flies away.

The Matrix

Goaded and harassed in the factory

That tears our life up into bits of days


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

On Carpaccio's Picture:  The Dream of St. Ursula 31



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Page No 35


Ticked off upon a clock which never stays,

Shredding our portion of Eternity,

We break away at last, and steal the key

Which hides a world empty of hours; ways

Of space unroll, and Heaven overlays

The leafy, sunlit earth of Fantasy.

Beyond the ilex shadow glares the sun,

Scorching against the blue flame of the sky.

Brown lilypads lie heavy and supine

Within a granite basin, under one

The bronzegold glimmer of a carp; and I

Reach out my hand and pluck a nectarine.

Monadnock in Early Spring

Cloudtopped and splendid, dominating all

The little lesser hills which compass thee,

Thou standest, bright with April's buoyancy,

Yet holding Winter in some shaded wall

Of stern, steep rock; and startled by the call

Of Spring, thy trees flush with expectancy

And cast a cloud of crimson, silently,

Above thy snowy crevices where fall

Pale shrivelled oak leaves, while the snow beneath

Melts at their phantom touch. Another year

Is quick with import. Such each year has been.

Unmoved thou watchest all, and all bequeath

Some jewel to thy diadem of power,

Thou pledge of greater majesty unseen.

The Little Garden

A little garden on a bleak hillside

Where deep the heavy, dazzling mountain snow


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

Monadnock in Early Spring 32



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Page No 36


Lies far into the spring. The sun's pale glow

Is scarcely able to melt patches wide

About the single rose bush. All denied

Of nature's tender ministries. But no, 

For wonderworking faith has made it blow

With flowers many hued and starryeyed.

Here sleeps the sun long, idle summer hours;

Here butterflies and bees fare far to rove

Amid the crumpled leaves of poppy flowers;

Here four o'clocks, to the passionate night above

Fling whiffs of perfume, like pale incense showers.

A little garden, loved with a great love!

To an Early Daffodil

Thou yellow trumpeter of laggard Spring!

Thou herald of rich Summer's myriad flowers!

The climbing sun with new recovered powers

Does warm thee into being, through the ring

Of rich, brown earth he woos thee, makes thee fling

Thy green shoots up, inheriting the dowers

Of bending sky and sudden, sweeping showers,

Till ripe and blossoming thou art a thing

To make all nature glad, thou art so gay;

To fill the lonely with a joy untold;

Nodding at every gust of wind today,

Tomorrow jewelled with raindrops. Always bold

To stand erect, full in the dazzling play

Of April's sun, for thou hast caught his gold.

Listening

'T is you that are the music, not your song.

The song is but a door which, opening wide,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

To an Early Daffodil 33



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Page No 37


Lets forth the pentup melody inside,

Your spirit's harmony, which clear and strong

Sings but of you. Throughout your whole life long

Your songs, your thoughts, your doings, each divide

This perfect beauty; waves within a tide,

Or single notes amid a glorious throng.

The song of earth has many different chords;

Ocean has many moods and many tones

Yet always ocean. In the damp Spring woods

The painted trillium smiles, while crisp pine cones

Autumn alone can ripen. So is this

One music with a thousand cadences.

The Lamp of Life

Always we are following a light,

Always the light recedes; with groping hands

We stretch toward this glory, while the lands

We journey through are hidden from our sight

Dim and mysterious, folded deep in night,

We care not, all our utmost need demands

Is but the light, the light! So still it stands

Surely our own if we exert our might.

Fool! Never can'st thou grasp this fleeting gleam,

Its glowing flame would die if it were caught,

Its value is that it doth always seem

But just a little farther on. Distraught,

But lighted ever onward, we are brought

Upon our way unknowing, in a dream.

HeroWorship

A face seen passing in a crowded street,

A voice heard singing music, large and free;


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The Lamp of Life 34



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Page No 38


And from that moment life is changed, and we

Become of more heroic temper, meet

To freely ask and give, a man complete

Radiant because of faith, we dare to be

What Nature meant us. Brave idolatry

Which can conceive a hero! No deceit,

No knowledge taught by unrelenting years,

Can quench this fierce, untamable desire.

We know that what we long for once achieved

Will cease to satisfy. Be still our fears;

If what we worship fail us, still the fire

Burns on, and it is much to have believed.

In Darkness

Must all of worth be travailled for, and those

Life's brightest stars rise from a troubled sea?

Must years go by in sad uncertainty

Leaving us doubting whose the conquering blows,

Are we or Fate the victors? Time which shows

All inner meanings will reveal, but we

Shall never know the upshot. Ours to be

Wasted with longing, shattered in the throes,

The agonies of splendid dreams, which day

Dims from our vision, but each night brings back;

We strive to hold their grandeur, and essay

To be the thing we dream. Sudden we lack

The flash of insight, life grows drear and gray,

And hour follows hour, nerveless, slack.

Before Dawn

Life! Austere arbiter of each man's fate,

By whom he learns that Nature's steadfast laws


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In Darkness 35



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Page No 39


Are as decrees immutable; O pause

Your even forward march! Not yet too late

Teach me the needed lesson, when to wait

Inactive as a ship when no wind draws

To stretch the loosened cordage. One implores

Thy clemency, whose wilfulness innate

Has gone uncurbed and roughshod while the years

        Have lengthened into decades; now distressed

He knows no rule by which to move or stay,

And teased with restlessness and desperate fears

He dares not watch in silence thy wise way

        Bringing about results none could have guessed.

The Poet

What instinct forces man to journey on,

Urged by a longing blind but dominant!

Nothing he sees can hold him, nothing daunt

His never failing eagerness. The sun

Setting in splendour every night has won

His vassalage; those towers flamboyant

Of airy cloudland palaces now haunt

His daylight wanderings. Forever done

With simple joys and quiet happiness

He guards the vision of the sunset sky;

Though faint with weariness he must possess

Some fragment of the sunset's majesty;

He spurns life's human friendships to profess

Life's loneliness of dreaming ecstasy.

At Night

The wind is singing through the trees tonight,

A deepvoiced song of rushing cadences


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Page No 40


And crashing intervals. No summer breeze

Is this, though hot July is at its height,

Gone is her gentler music; with delight

She listens to this booming like the seas,

These elemental, loud necessities

Which call to her to answer their swift might.

Above the tossing trees shines down a star,

Quietly bright; this wild, tumultuous joy

Quickens nor dims its splendour. And my mind,

O Star! is filled with your white light, from far,

So suffer me this one night to enjoy

The freedom of the onward sweeping wind.

The Fruit Garden Path

The path runs straight between the flowering rows,

A moonlit path, hemmed in by beds of bloom,

Where phlox and marigolds dispute for room

With tall, red dahlias and the briar rose.

'T is reckless prodigality which throws

Into the night these wafts of rich perfume

Which sweep across the garden like a plume.

Over the trees a single bright star glows.

Dear garden of my childhood, here my years

Have run away like little grains of sand;

The moments of my life, its hopes and fears

Have all found utterance here, where now I stand;

My eyes ache with the weight of unshed tears,

You are my home, do you not understand?

Mirage

How is it that, being gone, you fill my days,

And all the long nights are made glad by thee?


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Page No 41


No loneliness is this, nor misery,

But great content that these should be the ways

Whereby the Fancy, dreaming as she strays,

Makes bright and present what she would would be.

And who shall say if the reality

Is not with dreams so pregnant. For delays

And hindrances may bar the wishedfor end;

A thousand misconceptions may prevent

Our souls from coming near enough to blend;

Let me but think we have the same intent,

That each one needs to call the other, "friend!"

It may be vain illusion. I'm content.

To a Friend

I ask but one thing of you, only one,

That always you will be my dream of you;

That never shall I wake to find untrue

All this I have believed and rested on,

Forever vanished, like a vision gone

Out into the night. Alas, how few

There are who strike in us a chord we knew

Existed, but so seldom heard its tone

We tremble at the halfforgotten sound.

The world is full of rude awakenings

And heavenborn castles shattered to the ground,

Yet still our human longing vainly clings

To a belief in beauty through all wrongs.

O stay your hand, and leave my heart its songs!

A Fixed Idea

What torture lurks within a single thought

When grown too constant, and however kind,


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Page No 42


However welcome still, the weary mind

Aches with its presence. Dull remembrance taught

Remembers on unceasingly; unsought

The old delight is with us but to find

That all recurring joy is pain refined,

Become a habit, and we struggle, caught.

You lie upon my heart as on a nest,

Folded in peace, for you can never know

How crushed I am with having you at rest

Heavy upon my life. I love you so

You bind my freedom from its rightful quest.

In mercy lift your drooping wings and go.

Dreams

I do not care to talk to you although

Your speech evokes a thousand sympathies,

And all my being's silent harmonies

Wake trembling into music. When you go

It is as if some sudden, dreadful blow

Had severed all the strings with savage ease.

No, do not talk; but let us rather seize

This intimate gift of silence which we know.

Others may guess your thoughts from what you say,

As storms are guessed from clouds where darkness broods.

To me the very essence of the day

Reveals its inner purpose and its moods;

As poplars feel the rain and then straightway

Reverse their leaves and shimmer through the woods.

Frankincense and Myrrh

My heart is tuned to sorrow, and the strings

Vibrate most readily to minor chords,


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Page No 43


Searching and sad; my mind is stuffed with words

Which voice the passion and the ache of things:

Illusions beating with their baffled wings

Against the walls of circumstance, and hoards

Of torn desires, broken joys; records

Of all a bruised life's maimed imaginings.

Now you are come! You tremble like a star

Poised where, behind earth's rim, the sun has set.

     Your voice has sung across my heart, but numb

And mute, I have no tones to answer. Far

Within I kneel before you, speechless yet,

     And life ablaze with beauty, I am dumb.

From One Who Stays

How empty seems the town now you are gone!

A wilderness of sad streets, where gaunt walls

Hide nothing to desire; sunshine falls

Eery, distorted, as it long had shone

On white, dead faces tombed in halls of stone.

The whir of motors, stricken through with calls

Of playing boys, floats up at intervals;

But all these noises blur to one long moan.

What quest is worth pursuing? And how strange

That other men still go accustomed ways!

     I hate their interest in the things they do.

A spectrehorde repeating without change

An old routine. Alone I know the days

     Are stillborn, and the world stopped, lacking you.

Crepuscule du Matin

All night I wrestled with a memory

Which knocked insurgent at the gates of thought.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

From One Who Stays 40



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Page No 44


The crumbled wreck of years behind has wrought

Its disillusion; now I only cry

For peace, for power to forget the lie

Which hope too long has whispered. So I sought

The sleep which would not come, and night was fraught

With old emotions weeping silently.

I heard your voice again, and knew the things

Which you had promised proved an empty vaunt.

I felt your clinging hands while night's broad wings

Cherished our love in darkness. From the lawn

A sudden, quivering birdnote, like a taunt.

My arms held nothing but the empty dawn.

Aftermath

I learnt to write to you in happier days,

And every letter was a piece I chipped

From off my heart, a fragment newly clipped

From the mosaic of life; its blues and grays,

Its throbbing reds, I gave to earn your praise.

To make a pavement for your feet I stripped

My soul for you to walk upon, and slipped

Beneath your steps to soften all your ways.

But now my letters are like blossoms pale

We strew upon a grave with hopeless tears.

I ask no recompense, I shall not fail

Although you do not heed; the long, sad years

Still pass, and still I scatter flowers frail,

And whisper words of love which no one hears.

The End

Throughout the echoing chambers of my brain

I hear your words in mournful cadence toll


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Page No 45


Like some slow passingbell which warns the soul

Of sundering darkness. Unrelenting, fain

To batter down resistance, fall again

Stroke after stroke, insistent diastole,

The bitter blows of truth, until the whole

Is hammered into fact made strangely plain.

Where shall I look for comfort? Not to you.

    Our worlds are drawn apart, our spirit's suns

Divided, and the light of mine burnt dim.

Now in the haunted twilight I must do

    Your will. I grasp the cup which overruns,

And with my trembling lips I touch the rim.

The Starling

           "`I can't get out', said the starling."

                                       Sterne's `Sentimental Journey'.

Forever the impenetrable wall

Of self confines my poor rebellious soul,

I never see the towering white clouds roll

Before a sturdy wind, save through the small

Barred window of my jail. I live a thrall

With all my outer life a clipped, square hole,

Rectangular; a fraction of a scroll

Unwound and winding like a worsted ball.

My thoughts are grown uneager and depressed

    Through being always mine, my fancy's wings

Are moulted and the feathers blown away.

I weary for desires never guessed,

    For alien passions, strange imaginings,

To be some other person for a day.


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Page No 46


Market Day

White, glittering sunlight fills the market square,

Spotted and sprigged with shadows. Double rows

Of bartering booths spread out their tempting shows

Of globed and golden fruit, the morning air

Smells sweet with ripeness, on the pavement there

A wicker basket gapes and overflows

Spilling out cool, blue plums. The market glows,

And flaunts, and clatters in its busy care.

A stately minster at the northern side

Lifts its twin spires to the distant sky,

Pinnacled, carved and buttressed; through the wide

Arched doorway peals an organ, suddenly 

Crashing, triumphant in its pregnant tide,

Quenching the square in vibrant harmony.

Epitaph in a ChurchYard in Charleston, South Carolina

                         GEORGE AUGUSTUS CLOUGH

                           A NATIVE OF LIVERPOOL,

    DIED SUDDENLY OF "STRANGER'S FEVER"

                       NOV'R 5th 1843

                                       AGED 22

He died of "Stranger's Fever" when his youth

Had scarcely melted into manhood, so

The chiselled legend runs; a brother's woe

Laid bare for epitaph. The savage ruth

Of a sunny, bright, but alien land, uncouth

With cruel caressing dealt a mortal blow,

And by this summer sea where flowers grow

In tropic splendor, witness to the truth

Of ineradicable race he lies.

The law of duty urged that he should roam,

Should sail from fog and chilly airs to skies

Clear with deceitful welcome. He had come

With proud resolve, but still his lonely eyes


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Page No 47


Ached with fatigue at never seeing home.

Francis II, King of Naples

Written after reading Trevelyan's "Garibaldi and the making of Italy"

Poor foolish monarch, vacillating, vain,

Decaying victim of a race of kings,

Swift Destiny shook out her purple wings

And caught him in their shadow; not again

Could furtive plotting smear another stain

Across his tarnished honour. Smoulderings

Of sacrificial fires burst their rings

And blotted out in smoke his lost domain.

Bereft of courtiers, only with his queen,

From empty palace down to empty quay.

No challenge screamed from hostile carabine.

A single vessel waited, shadowy;

All night she ploughed her solitary way

Beneath the stars, and through a tranquil sea.

To John Keats

Great master! Boyish, sympathetic man!

Whose orbed and ripened genius lightly hung

From life's slim, twisted tendril and there swung

In crimsonsphered completeness; guardian

Of crystal portals through whose openings fan

The spiced winds which blew when earth was young,

Scattering wreaths of stars, as Jove once flung

A golden shower from heights cerulean.

Crumbled before thy majesty we bow.

    Forget thy empurpled state, thy panoply

Of greatness, and be merciful and near;


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Page No 48


A youth who trudged the highroad we tread now

    Singing the miles behind him; so may we

Faint throbbings of thy music overhear.

The Boston Athenaeum

The Boston Athenaeum

Thou dear and wellloved haunt of happy hours,

How often in some distant gallery,

Gained by a little painful spiral stair,

Far from the halls and corridors where throng

The crowd of casual readers, have I passed

Long, peaceful hours seated on the floor

Of some retired nook, all lined with books,

Where reverie and quiet reign supreme!

Above, below, on every side, high shelved

From careless grasp of transient interest,

Stand books we can but dimly see, their charm

Much greater that their titles are unread;

While on a level with the dusty floor

Others are ranged in orderly confusion,

And we must stoop in painful posture while

We read their names and learn their histories.

The little gallery winds round about

The middle of a most secluded room,

Midway between the ceiling and the floor.

A type of those high thoughts, which while we read

Hover between the earth and furthest heaven

As fancy wills, leaving the printed page;

For books but give the theme, our hearts the rest,

Enriching simple words with unguessed harmony


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Page No 49


And overtones of thought we only know.

And as we sit long hours quietly,

Reading at times, and at times simply dreaming,

The very room itself becomes a friend,

The confidant of intimate hopes and fears;

A place where are engendered pleasant thoughts,

And possibilities before unguessed

Come to fruition born of sympathy.

And as in some gay garden stretched upon

A genial southern slope, warmed by the sun,

The flowers give their fragrance joyously

To the caressing touch of the hot noon;

So books give up the all of what they mean

Only in a congenial atmosphere,

Only when touched by reverent hands, and read

By those who love and feel as well as think.

For books are more than books, they are the life,

The very heart and core of ages past,

The reason why men lived, and worked, and died,

The essence and quintessence of their lives.

And we may know them better, and divine

The inner motives whence their actions sprang,

Far better than the men who only knew

Their bodily presence, the soul forever hid

From those with no ability to see.

They wait here quietly for us to come

And find them out, and know them for our friends;

These men who toiled and wrote only for this,

To leave behind such modicum of truth

As each perceived and each alone could tell.

Silently waiting that from time to time

It may be given them to illuminate

Dull daily facts with pristine radiance

For some longwaitedfor affinity

Who lingers yet in the deep womb of time.

The shifting sun pierces the young green leaves

Of elm trees, newly coming into bud,

And splashes on the floor and on the books

Through old, high, rounded windows, dim with age.

The noisy citysounds of modern life

Float softened to us across the old graveyard.

The room is filled with a warm, mellow light,

No garish colours jar on our content,

The books upon the shelves are old and worn.

'T was no belated effort nor attempt

To keep abreast with old as well as new

That placed them here, tricked in a modern guise,

Easily got, and held in light esteem.

Our fathers' fathers, slowly and carefully

Gathered them, one by one, when they were new

And a delighted world received their thoughts


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Page No 50


Hungrily; while we but love the more,

Because they are so old and grown so dear!

The backs of tarnished gold, the faded boards,

The slightly yellowing page, the strange old type,

All speak the fashion of another age;

The thoughts peculiar to the man who wrote

Arrayed in garb peculiar to the time;

As though the idiom of a man were caught

Imprisoned in the idiom of a race.

A nothing truly, yet a link that binds

All ages to their own inheritance,

And stretching backward, dim and dimmer still,

Is lost in a remote antiquity.

Grapes do not come of thorns nor figs of thistles,

And even a great poet's divinest thought

Is coloured by the world he knows and sees.

The little intimate things of every day,

The trivial nothings that we think not of,

These go to make a part of each man's life;

As much a part as do the larger thoughts

He takes account of. Nay, the little things

Of daily life it is which mold, and shape,

And make him apt for noble deeds and true.

And as we read some muchloved masterpiece,

Read it as long ago the author read,

With eyes that brimmed with tears as he saw

The message he believed in stamped in type

Inviolable for the slowcoming years;

We know a certain subtle sympathy,

We seem to clasp his hand across the past,

His words become related to the time,

He is at one with his own glorious creed

And all that in his world was dared and done.

The long, still, fruitful hours slip away

Shedding their influences as they pass;

We know ourselves the richer to have sat

Upon this dusty floor and dreamed our dreams.

No other place to us were quite the same,

No other dreams so potent in their charm,

For this is ours! Every twist and turn

Of every narrow stair is known and loved;

Each nook and cranny is our very own;

The dear, old, sleepy place is full of spells

For us, by right of long inheritance.

The building simply bodies forth a thought

Peculiarly inherent to the race.

And we, descendants of that elder time,

Have learnt to love the very form in which

The thought has been embodied to our years.

And here we feel that we are not alone,

We too are one with our own richest past;


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Page No 51


And here that veiled, but ever smouldering fire

Of race, which rarely seen yet never dies,

Springs up afresh and warms us with its heat.

And must they take away this treasure house,

To us so full of thoughts and memories;

To all the world beside a dismal place

Lacking in all this modern age requires

To tempt along the unfamiliar paths

And leafy lanes of old time literatures?

It takes some time for moss and vines to grow

And warmly cover gaunt and chill stone walls

Of stately buildings from the cold North Wind.

The lichen of affection takes as long,

Or longer, ere it lovingly enfolds

A place which since without it were bereft,

All stript and bare, shorn of its chiefest grace.

For what to us were halls and corridors

However large and fitting, if we part

With this which is our birthright; if we lose

A sentiment profound, unsoundable,

Which Time's slow ripening alone can make,

And man's blind foolishness so quickly mar.

Verses for Children

Sea Shell

Sea Shell, Sea Shell,

Sing me a song, O Please!

A song of ships, and sailor men,

And parrots, and tropical trees,


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Verses for Children 48



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Page No 52


Of islands lost in the Spanish Main

Which no man ever may find again,

Of fishes and corals under the waves,

And seahorses stabled in great green caves.

Sea Shell, Sea Shell,

Sing of the things you know so well.

Fringed Gentians

Near where I live there is a lake

As blue as blue can be, winds make

It dance as they go blowing by.

I think it curtseys to the sky.

It's just a lake of lovely flowers

And my Mamma says they are ours;

But they are not like those we grow

To be our very own, you know.

We have a splendid garden, there

Are lots of flowers everywhere;

Roses, and pinks, and four o'clocks

And hollyhocks, and evening stocks.

Mamma lets us pick them, but never

Must we pick any gentians  ever!

For if we carried them away

They'd die of homesickness that day.

The Painted Ceiling

My Grandpapa lives in a wonderful house

With a great many windows and doors,


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Fringed Gentians 49



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Page No 53


There are stairs that go up, and stairs that go down,

And such beautiful, slippery floors.

But of all of the rooms, even mother's and mine,

And the bookroom, and parlour and all,

I like the green diningroom so much the best

Because of its ceiling and wall.

Right over your head is a funny round hole

With apples and pears falling through;

There's a big bunch of grapes all purply and sweet,

And melons and pineapples too.

They tumble and tumble, but never come down

Though I've stood underneath a long while

With my mouth open wide, for I always have hoped

Just a cherry would drop from the pile.

No matter how early I run there to look

It has always begun to fall through;

And one night when at bedtime I crept in to see,

It was falling by candlelight too.

I am sure they are magical fruits, and each one

Makes you hear things, or see things, or go

Forever invisible; but it's no use,

And of course I shall just never know.

For the ladder's too heavy to lift, and the chairs

Are not nearly so tall as I need.

I've given up hope, and I feel I shall die

Without having accomplished the deed.

It's a little bit sad, when you seem very near

To adventures and things of that sort,

Which nearly begin, and then don't; and you know

It is only because you are short.

The Crescent Moon

Slipping softly through the sky

Little horned, happy moon,

Can you hear me up so high?


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Page No 54


Will you come down soon?

On my nursery windowsill

Will you stay your steady flight?

And then float away with me

Through the summer night?

Brushing over tops of trees,

Playing hide and seek with stars,

Peeping up through shiny clouds

At Jupiter or Mars.

I shall fill my lap with roses

Gathered in the milky way,

All to carry home to mother.

Oh! what will she say!

Little rocking, sailing moon,

Do you hear me shout  Ahoy!

Just a little nearer, moon,

To please a little boy.

Climbing

High up in the apple tree climbing I go,

With the sky above me, the earth below.

Each branch is the step of a wonderful stair

Which leads to the town I see shining up there.

Climbing, climbing, higher and higher,

The branches blow and I see a spire,

The gleam of a turret, the glint of a dome,

All sparkling and bright, like white sea foam.

On and on, from bough to bough,

The leaves are thick, but I push my way through;

Before, I have always had to stop,

But today I am sure I shall reach the top.

Today to the end of the marvelous stair,

Where those glittering pinacles flash in the air!

Climbing, climbing, higher I go,

With the sky close above me, the earth far below.


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Page No 55


The Trout

Naughty little speckled trout,

Can't I coax you to come out?

Is it such great fun to play

In the water every day?

Do you pull the Naiads' hair

Hiding in the lilies there?

Do you hunt for fishes' eggs,

Or watch tadpoles grow their legs?

Do the little trouts have school

In some deep sunglinted pool,

And in recess play at tag

Round that bed of purple flag?

I have tried so hard to catch you,

Hours and hours I've sat to watch you;

But you never will come out,

Naughty little speckled trout!

Wind

He shouts in the sails of the ships at sea,

He steals the down from the honeybee,

He makes the forest trees rustle and sing,

He twirls my kite till it breaks its string.

     Laughing, dancing, sunny wind,

     Whistling, howling, rainy wind,

     North, South, East and West,

     Each is the wind I like the best.


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Page No 56


He calls up the fog and hides the hills,

He whirls the wings of the great windmills,

The weathercocks love him and turn to discover

His whereabouts  but he's gone, the rover!

     Laughing, dancing, sunny wind,

     Whistling, howling, rainy wind,

     North, South, East and West,

     Each is the wind I like the best.

The pine trees toss him their cones with glee,

The flowers bend low in courtesy,

Each wave flings up a shower of pearls,

The flag in front of the school unfurls.

     Laughing, dancing, sunny wind,

     Whistling, howling, rainy wind,

     North, South, East and West,

     Each is the wind I like the best.

The Pleiades

By day you cannot see the sky

For it is up so very high.

You look and look, but it's so blue

That you can never see right through.

But when night comes it is quite plain,

And all the stars are there again.

They seem just like old friends to me,

I've known them all my life you see.

There is the dipper first, and there

Is Cassiopeia in her chair,

Orion's belt, the Milky Way,

And lots I know but cannot say.

One group looks like a swarm of bees,

Papa says they're the Pleiades;

But I think they must be the toy

Of some nice little angel boy.

Perhaps his jackstones which today

He has forgot to put away,

And left them lying on the sky


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Page No 57


Where he will find them bye and bye.

I wish he'd come and play with me.

We'd have such fun, for it would be

A most unusual thing for boys

To feel that they had stars for toys!

                            THE END


A Dome of ManyColoured Glass

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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass, page = 5

   3. Amy Lowell, page = 5

   4.  Lyrical Poems, page = 6

   5. Before the Altar, page = 6

   6. Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats's Poems, page = 8

   7. Apples of Hesperides, page = 9

   8. Azure and Gold, page = 9

   9. Petals, page = 10

   10. Venetian Glass, page = 11

   11. Fatigue, page = 11

   12. A Japanese Wood-Carving, page = 12

   13. A Little Song, page = 13

   14. Behind a Wall, page = 14

   15. A Winter Ride, page = 14

   16. A Coloured Print by Shokei, page = 15

   17. Song, page = 16

   18. The Fool Errant, page = 17

   19. The Green Bowl, page = 19

   20. Hora Stellatrix, page = 19

   21. Fragment, page = 20

   22. Loon Point, page = 20

   23. Summer, page = 21

   24. "To-morrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New", page = 22

   25. The Way, page = 23

   26. Diya  {original title is Greek, Delta-iota-psi-alpha}, page = 23

   27. Roads, page = 25

   28. Teatro Bambino.  Dublin, N. H., page = 26

   29. The Road to Avignon, page = 27

   30. New York at Night, page = 28

   31. A Fairy Tale, page = 29

   32. Crowned, page = 30

   33. To Elizabeth Ward Perkins, page = 31

   34. The Promise of the Morning Star, page = 32

   35. J--K. Huysmans, page = 33

   36. March Evening, page = 34

   37.  Sonnets, page = 34

   38. Leisure, page = 34

   39. On Carpaccio's Picture:  The Dream of St. Ursula, page = 35

   40. The Matrix, page = 35

   41. Monadnock in Early Spring, page = 36

   42. The Little Garden, page = 36

   43. To an Early Daffodil, page = 37

   44. Listening, page = 37

   45. The Lamp of Life, page = 38

   46. Hero-Worship, page = 38

   47. In Darkness, page = 39

   48. Before Dawn, page = 39

   49. The Poet, page = 40

   50. At Night, page = 40

   51. The Fruit Garden Path, page = 41

   52. Mirage, page = 41

   53. To a Friend, page = 42

   54. A Fixed Idea, page = 42

   55. Dreams, page = 43

   56. Frankincense and Myrrh, page = 43

   57. From One Who Stays, page = 44

   58. Crepuscule du Matin, page = 44

   59. Aftermath, page = 45

   60. The End, page = 45

   61. The Starling, page = 46

   62. Market Day, page = 47

   63. Epitaph in a Church-Yard in Charleston, South Carolina, page = 47

   64. Francis II, King of Naples, page = 48

   65. To John Keats, page = 48

   66.  The Boston Athenaeum, page = 49

   67. The Boston Athenaeum, page = 49

   68.  Verses for Children, page = 52

   69. Sea Shell, page = 52

   70. Fringed Gentians, page = 53

   71. The Painted Ceiling, page = 53

   72. The Crescent Moon, page = 54

   73. Climbing, page = 55

   74. The Trout, page = 56

   75. Wind, page = 56

   76. The Pleiades, page = 57