The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lyrics of Earth
Title: Lyrics of Earth
Author: Archibald Lampman
Release date: June 1, 2004 [eBook #12664]
Most recently updated: October 28, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Andrew Sly.
LYRICS OF EARTH
BY
ARCHIBALD LAMPMAN
BOSTON
COPELAND AND DAY
MDCCCXCV
Copyright by Copeland and Day, 1895.
CONTENTS
| The Sweetness of Life | 5 |
| God-speed to the Snow | 7 |
| April in the Hills | 8 |
| Forest Moods | 9 |
| The Return of the Year | 10 |
| Favorites of Pan | 11 |
| The Meadow | 14 |
| In May | 17 |
| Life and Nature | 19 |
| With the Night | 20 |
| June | 21 |
| Distance | 24 |
| The Bird and the Hour | 25 |
| After Rain | 25 |
| Cloud-break | 27 |
| The Moon-path | 28 |
| Comfort of the Fields | 29 |
| At the Ferry | 32 |
| September | 35 |
| A Re-assurance | 38 |
| The Poet's Possession | 39 |
| An Autumn Landscape | 39 |
| In November | 40 |
| By an Autumn Stream | 42 |
| Snowbirds | 44 |
| Snow | 45 |
| Sunset | 46 |
| Winter-store | 48 |
| The Sun Cup | 56 |
TO MY MOTHER
Battling long ago,
What the heaping years fulfil,
Light and song, I owe;
Send my little book a-field,
Fronting praise or blame
With the shining flag and shield
Of your name.
THE SWEETNESS OF LIFE
And the winds, the concave sky,
The flowers and the beasts in the meadow
Seemed happy even as I;
And I stretched my hands to the meadow,
To the bird, the beast, the tree:
"Why are ye all so happy?"
I cried, and they answered me.
That stretches so wide, so far,
That none can say how many
Thy misty marguerites are?
And what say ye, red roses,
That o'er the sun-blanched wall
From your high black-shadowed trellis
Like flame or blood-drops fall?
"We are born, we are reared, and we linger
A various space and die;
We dream, and are bright and happy,
But we cannot answer why."
That from the dreaming hill
All down the broadening valley
Liest so sharp and still?
And thou, Oh murmuring brooklet,
Whereby in the noonday gleam
The loosestrife burns like ruby,
And the branchèd asters dream?
"We are born, we are reared, and we linger
A various space and die;
We dream and are very happy,
But we cannot answer why."
That like a ghost the while
Stood from me and calmly answered,
With slow and curious smile:
"Thou art born as the flowers, and wilt linger
Thine own short space and die;
Thou dream'st and art strangely happy,
But thou canst not answer why."
GOD-SPEED TO THE SNOW
Nothing more is thine to do;
April kisses thee good-bye;
Thou must haste and follow too;
Silent friend that guarded well
Withered things to make us glad,
Shyest friend that could not tell
Half the kindly thought he had.
Haste thee, speed thee, O kind snow;
Down the dripping valleys go,
From the fields and gleaming meadows,
Where the slaying hours behold thee,
From the forests whose slim shadows,
Brown and leafless cannot fold thee,
Through the cedar lands aflame
With gold light that cleaves and quivers,
Songs that winter may not tame,
Drone of pines and laugh of rivers.
May thy passing joyous be
To thy father, the great sea,
For the sun is getting stronger;
Earth hath need of thee no longer;
Go, kind snow, God-speed to thee!
APRIL IN THE HILLS
With sunny fields of lucid air,
And waters dancing everywhere;
The snow is almost gone;
The noon is builded high with light,
And over heaven's liquid height,
In steady fleets serene and white,
The happy clouds go on.
And every hollow rings and gleams
With jetting falls and dashing streams;
The rivers burst and fill;
The fields are full of little lakes,
And when the romping wind awakes
The water ruffles blue and shakes,
And the pines roar on the hill.
About the meadows all day long
The shore-lark drops his brittle song;
And up the leafless tree
The nut-hatch runs, and nods, and clings;
The bluebird dips with flashing wings,
The robin flutes, the sparrow sings,
And the swallows float and flee.
A wanderer in enchanted lands,
I feel the sun upon my hands;
And far from care and strife
The broad earth bids me forth. I rise
With lifted brow and upward eyes.
I bathe my spirit in blue skies,
And taste the springs of life.
I waken with the wakening earth;
I match the bluebird in her mirth;
And wild with wind and sun,
A treasurer of immortal days,
I roam the glorious world with praise,
The hillsides and the woodland ways,
Till earth and I are one.
FOREST MOODS
In the heart of the listening solitudes,
Pewees, and thrushes, and sparrows, not few,
And all the notes of their throats are true.
A tender dream of the treasured and gone;
But the sparrow singeth with pride and cheer
Of the might and light of the present and here.
In the heart of the sensitive solitudes,
The roseate bell and the lily are there,
And every leaf of their sheaf is fair.
THE RETURN OF THE YEAR
That hangs upon her healing scars,
The midnight round, the great red moon,
The mother with her brood of stars,
Blown soft in many a forest way,
The yellowing elm-trees, and again
The blood-root in its sheath of gray.
Of yearning notes that gush and stream,
The lyric joy, the tenderness,
And once again the dream! the dream!
A something it is life to learn,
Comes back to earth, and one short hour
The glamours of the gods return.
Falls smitten by an older truth,
And the gray world wins back to her
The rapture of her vanished youth.
Shall hear, as by a spirit led,
A song among the golden reeds:
"The gods are vanished but not dead!"
They haunt us, a forgotten mood,
A glory upon mead and mere,
A magic in the leafless wood.
Of Dian's quiver on the hill,
And somewhere in the glades I know
That Pan is at his piping still.
FAVORITES OF PAN
Had left this earth, by stream and forest glade,
Where the first plough upturned the clinging sods,
Or the lost shepherd strayed,
There came at noonday or beneath the stars
A sound, he knew not whence, so sweet and clear,
That all his aches and scars
Fallen asunder from his soul took flight,
Like mist or darkness yielding to the press
Of an unnamed delight,—
A magic fire drawn down from Paradise,
That rent the cloud with golden gleam apart,—
And far before his eyes
Lay like a limitless dream remote and strange,
The joy, the strife, the triumph and the mirth,
And the enchanted change;
Till faith had traversed her appointed span,
And murmured as he pressed the sacred ground:
"It is the note of Pan!"
Or dewy forest sounds the secret reed—
For Pan is gone—Ah yet, the infinite dream
Still lives for them that heed.
Regains its pensive youth, and a soft breath
And amorous influence over marsh and mere
Dissolves the grasp of death,
Wandering like children with untroubled eyes,
Far from the noise of cities and the strife,
Strange flute-like voices rise
From every watery waste; and in that hour
The same strange spell, the same unnamed delight,
Enfolds them in its power.
The warmth and glow of an immortal balm,
The mood-touch of the gods, the endless dream,
The high lethean calm.
The services of earth, the life of man;
And, listening to the magic cry they say:
"It is the note of Pan!"
Of hostile hymns and conquering faiths grew keen,
And the old gods from their deserted fanes,
Fled silent and unseen,
Sadly obedient to the mightier hand,
Cut him new reeds, and in a sore distress
Passed out from land to land;
Of fount or sinuous stream or grassy marge,
He set the syrinx to his lips, and blew
A note divinely large;
Cool earth the frogs came up, and with a smile
He took them in his hairy hands, and set
His mouth to theirs awhile,
And ever from that hour the frogs repeat
The murmur of Pan's pipes, the notes,
And answers strange and sweet;
By knowledge in some god-like touch conveyed,
Entering again into the eternal mood,
Wherein the world was made.
THE MEADOW
And the quaint crows flock thicker day by day,
Filling the forests with a pleasant din,
And the soiled snow creeps secretly away,
Comes the small busy sparrow, primed with glee,
First preacher in the naked wilderness,
Piping an end to all the long distress
From every fence and every leafless tree.
Winter's iron work is wondrously undone;
In all the little hollows cored with ice
The clear brown pools stand simmering in the sun,
Frail lucid worlds, upon whose tremulous floors
All day the wandering water-bugs at will,
Shy mariners whose oars are never still,
Voyage and dream about the heightening shores.
Prattles upon his frolic flute, or flings,
In bounding flight across the golden morn,
An azure gleam from off his splendid wings.
Here the slim-pinioned swallows sweep and pass
Down to the far-off river; the black crow
With wise and wary visage to and fro
Settles and stalks about the withered grass.
The watchful lark before my feet takes flight,
And wheeling to some lonelier field far on,
Drops with obstreperous cry; and here at night,
When the first star precedes the great red moon,
The shore-lark tinkles from the darkening field,
Somewhere, we know not, in the dusk concealed,
His little creakling and continuous tune.
Hunt the waste grass for forage, or prolong
From every quarter of these fields the bold,
Blithe phrases of their never-finished song.
The white-throat's distant descant with slow stress
Note after note upon the noonday falls,
Filling the leisured air at intervals
With his own mood of piercing pensiveness.
Mine eyes have seen the forest break in bloom,
The rose-red maple and the golden birch,
The dusty yellow of the elms, the gloom
Of the tall poplar hung with tasseled black;
Ah, I have watched, till eye and ear and brain
Grew full of dreams as they, the moted plain,
The sun-steeped wood, the marsh-land at its back,
Yon city glimmering in its smoky shroud,
And out at the last misty rim the hills
Blue and far off and mounded like a cloud,
And here the noisy rutted road that goes
Down the slope yonder, flanked on either side
With the smooth-furrowed fields flung black and wide,
Patched with pale water sleeping in the rows.
The bloom break sheath, the summer's strength uprear,
In earth's great mother's heart already planned
The heaped and burgeoned plenty of the year,
Even as she from out her wintry cell
My spirit also sprang to life anew,
And day by day as the spring's bounty grew,
Its conquering joy possessed me like a spell.
I sought these upland fields and walked apart,
Musing on Nature, till my thought did seem
To read the very secrets of her heart;
In mooded moments earnest and sublime
I stored the themes of many a future song,
Whose substance should be Nature's, clear and strong,
Bound in a casket of majestic rhyme.
Like hers our mother's who with every hour,
Easily replenished from the sleepless root,
Covers her bosom with fresh bud and flower;
Yet I was happy as young lovers be,
Who in the season of their passion's birth
Deem that they have their utmost worship's worth,
If love be near them, just to hear and see.
IN MAY
To-morrow I may grieve again;
But now along the windy plain
The clouds have taken flight.
The lusty river brimmeth on;
The curtains from the hills are gone;
The leaves are out; and lo,
The light horizons, and between
The glory of the perfect green,
The tumult of the May.
More softly than the softest flute,
And lightlier than the lightest lute
Their fairy tambours ring.
The cherry-blooms are swept and thinned;
In yonder swaying elms the wind
Is charging gust on gust.
The ministers of sun and shadow
Horde all the perfumes of the meadow
Behind a grassy wall.
Adown the guarded hollow sets,
Over whose brink the violets
Are nodding peacefully.
The flashing swallows dip and pass,
Above the tufted marish grass,
And here at rest am I.
Nor if to-morrow bid me moan;
To-day is mine, and I have known
An hour of blessedness.
LIFE AND NATURE
The streets were strange and still,
Through the doors of the open churches
The organs were moaning shrill.
I heard the murmur of prayer,
And the sound of their solemn singing
Streamed out on the sunlit air;
That lay on the world's dark breast,
Of the old, and the sick, and the lonely,
And the weary that cried for rest.
Like one distracted or mad.
"Oh, Life! Oh, Life!" I kept saying,
And the very word seemed sad.
And I heard the small birds sing,
I laid me down in the meadows
Afar from the bell-ringing.
I lay on the earth's quiet breast,
The poplar fanned me with shadows,
And the veery sang me to rest.
And the earth green at my feet;
"Oh, Life! Oh, Life!" I kept saying,
And the very word seemed sweet.
WITH THE NIGHT
That harassed and oppressed the day,
Ye poor remorses and vain tears,
That shook this house of clay:
JUNE
That pale-browed April passed with pensive tread
Through the frore woods, and from its frost-bound bed
Woke the arbutus with her silver horn;
And now May, too, is fled,
The flower-crowned month, the merry laughing May,
With rosy feet and fingers dewy wet,
Leaving the woods and all cool gardens gay
With tulips and the scented violet.
And the sad drooping bellwort, and no more
The snowy trilliums crowd the forest's floor;
The purpling grasses are no longer young,
And summer's wide-set door
O'er the thronged hills and the broad panting earth
Lets in the torrent of the later bloom,
Haytime, and harvest, and the after mirth,
The slow soft rain, the rushing thunder plume.
The humid air is burdened with the rose;
In moss-deep woods the creamy orchid blows;
And now the vesper-sparrows' pealing hymn
From every orchard close
At eve comes flooding rich and silvery;
The daisies in great meadows swing and shine;
And with the wind a sound as of the sea
Roars in the maples and the topmost pine.
Tunes magically his music of fine dreams,
In briary dells, by boulder-broken streams;
And wide and far on nebulous fields aflush
The mellow morning gleams.
The orange cone-flowers purple-bossed are there,
The meadow's bold-eyed gypsies deep of hue,
And slender hawkweed tall and softly fair,
And rosy tops of fleabane veiled with dew.
The fervid hours with long return go by;
The far-heard hylas piping shrill and high
Tell the slow moments of the solemn night
With unremitting cry;
Lustrous and large out of the gathering drouth
The planets gleam; the baleful Scorpion
Trails his dim fires along the droused south;
The silent world-incrusted round moves on.
Nestle deep down in every brooding tree,
And sleeping birds, touched with a silly glee,
Waken at midnight from their blissful dreams,
And carol brokenly.
Dim surging motions and uneasy dreads
Scare the light slumber from men's busy eyes,
And parted lovers on their restless beds
Toss and yearn out, and cannot sleep for sighs.
As dreamers of old time were wont to feign,
In living form of flesh, and striven in vain;
Yet when some sudden old-world mystery
Of passion fired my brain,
Thy shape hath flashed upon me like no dream,
Wandering with scented curls that heaped the breeze,
Or by the hollow of some reeded stream
Sitting waist-deep in white anemones;
A dream for mortal eyes too proudly coy,
Yet in thy place for subtle thought's employ
The golden magic clung, a light that shone
And filled me with thy joy.
Before me like a mist that streamed and fell
All names and shapes of antique beauty passed
In garlanded procession with the swell
Of flutes between the beechen stems; and last,
Alpheus stream divine, the sighing shore,
And through the cool green glades, awake once more,
Psyche, the white-limbed goddess, still pursued,
Fleet-footed as of yore,
The noonday ringing with her frighted peals,
Down the bright sward and through the reeds she ran,
Urged by the mountain echoes, at her heels
The hot-blown cheeks and trampling feet of Pan.
DISTANCE
Blue and broad and dim!
Peace is not in burgh or meadow,
But beyond the rim.
Follow still my soul,
Till this earth is lost in heaven,
And thou feel'st the whole.
THE BIRD AND THE HOUR
And floods the valley with gold—
A torrent of gold;
And the hither field is green and still;
Beyond it a cloud outrolled,
Is glowing molten and bright;
And soon the hill, and the valley and all,
With a quiet fall,
Shall be gathered into the night.
And yet a moment more,
Out of the silent wood,
As if from the closing door
Of another world and another lovelier mood,
Hear'st thou the hermit pour—
So sweet! so magical!—
His golden music, ghostly beautiful.
AFTER RAIN
In sullen packs that loomed and broke,
With flying fringes dim as smoke,
The columns of the rain went by;
At every hour the wind awoke;
The darkness passed upon the plain;
The great drops rattled at the pane.
Fell to a sough remote and dull;
And all night long with rush and lull
The rain kept drumming on the roof:
I heard till ear and sense were full
The clash or silence of the leaves,
The gurgle in the creaking eaves.
The darkness and the rain were by;
The sunward roofs were steaming dry;
And all the world was flecked and strewn
With shadows from a fleecy sky.
The haymakers were forth and gone,
And every rillet laughed and shone.
The world, despairing in her blight,
Uplifted with her least delight,
On me, as on the earth, there fell
New happiness of mirth and might;
I strode the valleys pied and still;
I climbed upon the breezy hill.
Sole shadow on the shining world;
I saw the mountains clothed and curled,
With forest ruffling to the top;
I saw the river's length unfurled,
Pale silver down the fruited plain,
Grown great and stately with the rain.