The Project Gutenberg eBook of In the Great Steep's Garden
Title: In the Great Steep's Garden
Author: Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Illustrator: Kenneth Hartley
Release date: January 7, 2009 [eBook #27735]
Most recently updated: January 4, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Garcia, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Kentuckiana Digital Library)
Poems by Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Pictures by Kenneth Hartley
The Hill People.
They pass me by in the hurrying street.
From the white-flecked alp the hill winds blow—
Lilting back to the land of the air,
Is it only the wind that comes down from the hills?
That whispered a gay little rhyme to me?
And dances at dawn around Cameron’s Cone?
An Aztec memory trill on the morn?
As she passed with a hymn for the great white peak?
And lay little snatches of song on my lips,
Where the pit-lark soars and the gentians blow.
And the pilgrim road unfolds for me,
The gardens and cloisters and shrines of the Steep.
By what fair host is the palmer met
Is it only the wind that comes down from the hills?
Columbine in the Hills.
And Columbine waltzes a gypsy tune;
Or deep in the pleasance, happily met,
She whirls with a gay little pirouette,
Where the long trees lean in a twilight trance,
Dreaming her over the seas to France.
Misty-eyed little pensive maid,
Musing under the Great Steep’s tree,
Is it for Pierrot?—where is he?
Sashes and streamers and holiday tire,
Columbine trips her a measure for you,
Gayest heart of the waltzing choir.
Under the pines I saw her dance,
Lilting a gay little tune of France.
Saxifrage.
A great blue dome that quivered near.
Out of the broad gray breast of a stone!
You whisper your one sweet rune-telling word,
And the Heart of the Sky leaned down to me?
Alpine Forget-Me-Not.
Where Paradise leaned over Iran’s plain,
A man god looked from his templed fane
On a maiden wondrously fair:
He saw her first in the Cashmere’s danks,
Singing at dawn by a river’s banks,
Where the long grass leaned to her, ranks on ranks,
Forget-me-nots twined in her hair.
For a god may not wed with a maid of men—
Driven in wrath was the man god then
From the genii’s holy mirth,
Till the river-maid’s hand shall scatter and pour
The seeds of the little blue flowers she wore,
From the happy lintels of heaven’s own door
To the uttermost ends of the earth.
Araby-sweet is the spice on the air:
Ah, softly tread, have gentle care,
Love’s handmaid has passed this way.
Did the long miles fret or the red suns beat?
Did the great stones tear at her little white feet?
Did the storm winds harry with stinging sleet,
Or the mad seas bid her stay?
When the woman-heart needs make atoning and wait:
She has led him back to the crystal gate,—
Together they entered there.
The Great Steep’s Garden is musked today:
The spices of Araby over it lay,
For Love’s handmaiden has passed this way,
Forget-me-nots tressed in her hair.
Indian Paint Brush.
On the summit place where the wind-torn pine
At the battle front of the timberline
Knows never an end of the harrowing war
Of Life on Death!—and there arrayed
In the trappings of battle and unafraid,
Painted and feathered in hostile design,
Indian chief on the marching line!
Arctic Gentian.
The long trail lifting, lifting,
Past wizened gardens of low gaunt pine,
Crouching out of the great storm’s path:
The last tree flees from the arctic wrath,
But on is the white trail lifting.
A fantasy, fading, fading,
Lost away in the myth of a dream:
And the wide land reaches beyond our eyes,
A Navajo carpet of strange soft dyes:
Patterned with cities the great web lies,
Woven with fantasies, fading.
The reach of the long land merging:
Where the still white surges part and cross
The quivering vistas seem to be
Of a lost land under the waves of a sea.
O summit flower, what strange waves toss
Below in the long, long surging!
Alpine Primrose.
How the primrose flamed in the arctic chills!
And you heard the flutes of the summit birds:
You will keep forever their sky-lost words,
Happy Heart coming home from the hills.
Transcriber's Note
The handwritten image captions were, in some cases, very difficult to make out. Following are transcriptions, with [notes] where there was any doubt about content.
Colorado Columbine (½ actual size)
Aquilegia coerulea
Cather Springs, June 27
Small-leaved Saxifrage (⅓ actual size)
Saxifraga parvifolia
Pikes Peak, Aug. 15. 9300 ft. Altitude
Alpine Forget-me-not (natural size)
Mertensia alpina
Pikes Peak, 12,500 ft. altitude
Indian Paint Brush (natural size)
[rest of caption unreadable, possibly Castilleja pruinosa]
Arctic Gentian (natural size)
[unreadable]
Pikes Peak
Alpine Primrose
[rest of caption unreadable]