The Project Gutenberg eBook of Path Flower, and Other Verses
Title: Path Flower, and Other Verses
Author: Olive Tilford Dargan
Release date: November 20, 2008 [eBook #27297]
Most recently updated: July 15, 2020
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Garcia, Stephen Blundell and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
PATH FLOWER
All rights reserved
PATH FLOWER
AND
OTHER VERSES
BY
OLIVE T. DARGAN
MCMXIV
LONDON: J. M. DENT & SONS LTD.
NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Path Flower | 1 |
| The Piper | 6 |
| To a Hermit Thrush | 8 |
| Thanksgiving | 14 |
| The Road | 16 |
| La Dame Revolution | 23 |
| The Rebel | 24 |
| These Latter Days | 25 |
| Abnegation | 26 |
| The Little Tree | 27 |
| The Game | 28 |
| Ballad | 31 |
| A Dirge | 37 |
| His Argument | 39 |
| The Conqueror | 40 |
| To Moina | 41 |
| "There's Rosemary" | 42 |
| At the Grave of Heine | 43 |
| To a Lost Comrade | 45 |
| For M. L. P. | 46 |
| To Sleep | 47 |
| "Le Penseur" | 48 |
| Vision | 49 |
| Safe | 50 |
| On Bosworth Field | 52 |
| Old Fairingdown | 53 |
| The Kiss | 58 |
| Youth | 60 |
| To Mirimond | 62 |
| Sorolla | 63 |
| In the Blue Ridge | 66 |
| Ye who are to Sing | 70 |
| "And the Last shall be First" | 73 |
| Magdalen to her Poet | 76 |
| Friends | 85 |
| Tryst | 89 |
| In the Studio | 90 |
| Lovers' Leap | 91 |
| Havened | 94 |
| Mid-May | 102 |
| The Loss | 104 |
| Called | 105 |
| Song of To-morrow | 108 |
| Little Daughters | 110 |
PATH FLOWER
A lark o'er Golder's lane,
As I the April pathway trod
Bound west for Willesden.
And taller stood to hear,
And every leaf on every twig
Was like a little ear.
To catch the rippling rain,—
So still, a hare kept at my side
His tussock of disdain,—
A soft pit-pat surprise,
And looking round my eyes fell deep
Into sweet other eyes;
So clear and trustful brown,
Without a bubble warning you
That here's a place to drown.
Had told of more than one.
She answered like a dreaming Muse,
"I came from Islington."
Then seemed to lift a wing,
And words fell soft as willow-buds,
"I came to find the Spring."
In ways so sweet to roam,
As it with honey bees had played
And could no more go home.
I heard the hucksters bawl,
I stifled with the thickened air
Of bickering mart and stall.
Her feet had set her free.
Her rags, that decency defied,
Seemed new with liberty.
The trail of hungering
That for an hour she had forgot
In wonder of the Spring.
It seemed a sin to chat.
(A tea-shop snuggled off the road;
Why did I think of that?)
But she was passing on,
And I but muddled "You'll accept
A penny for a bun?"
Of rose climbed for it must;
A wilding lost till safe it lay
Hid by her curls of rust;
With pride that bore no name;
So old it was she knew not whence
It sudden woke and came;
Was startled, sadder thought
That I should give her back the fear
Of life she had forgot.
Putting God's hand aside,
Till for the want of sun and shade
His little children died;
With Spring went up and down,
Must greet a soul that ached for her
With "penny for a bun!"
Whose sin upon him cries,
I watched the flowers leave her face,
The song go from her eyes.
And of her charity
A hand of grace put softly out
And took the coin from me.
A lark o'er Golder's lane;
But I, alone, still glooming stood,
And April plucked in vain;
And sudden music played:
Out of such sacred thirst as hers
The world shall be remade.
As might have smiled the Spring,
And humble as a wondering child
I watched her vanishing.
THE PIPER
Who pointed down the piper's road
With shaken staff and fearsome glance,—
"Ware, ware the dance!"
The wind, the wind was in my feet,
The rose and leaf on eager boughs
Unvestalled them of dew-writ vows,
And I as light as leaf and rose
Danced to the summer's close.
Of singing birds there is not one;
All, all the world droops into grey,—
O piper Love, must thou yet play?
The wildest note of all he blew,
And fast my worn feet flew.
TO A HERMIT THRUSH
That fold cool arms about thine altar place,
What joyous race
Of gods dost serve with such unfaltering vows?
Of slumbering, haunted trees,
And star-sweet fragrances
No day defiled;
Of bowering nights innumerable,
And nestling hours breath-nigh a dryad's heart
That sleeping yet was wild
With dream-beat that thou mad'st a part
Of thy dawn-fluting; ay, and keep'st it still,
Striving so late these godless woods to fill
With undefeated strain,
And in one hour build the old world again.
Wast thou found singing when Diana drew
Her skirts from the first night?
Didst feel the sun-breath when the valleys grew
Warm with the love of light,
Till blades of flower-lit green gave to the wind
The mystery that made sweet
The earth forever,—strange and undefined
As life, as God, as this thy song complete
That holds with me twin memories
Of time ere men,
And ere our ways
Lay sundered with the abyss of air between?
The world, my song,
Deep in the heart of day,
Day that is long
As the ages dream or the stars delay!
Keep thou from me,
Sigh-throated man,
Forever to be
Under the songless wanderer's ban.
I am of time
That counteth no dawn;
Thy æons yet climb
To skies I have won,
Seeking for aye an unrisen sun!
Before the moon, I creep beneath the trees,
Even to the boughs whose lowest circling tips
Whisper with the anemones
Thick-strewn as though a cloud had made
Its drifting way through spray and leafy braid
And sunk with unremembering ease
To humbler heaven upon the mossy heaps.
And here a warmer flow
Urges thy melody, yet keeps
The cool of bowers; as might a rose blush through
Its unrelinquished dew;
Or bounteous heart that knows not woe,
Put on the robe of sighs, and fain
Would hold in love's surmise a neighbour's pain.
So tender now thy song in flight,
So sweet its lingerings are,
It seems the liquid memory
Of time when thou didst try
Thy gleaning wing through human years,
And met, ay, knew the sigh
Of men who pray, the tears
That hide the woman's star,
The brave ascending fire
That is youth's beacon and too soon his pyre,—
Yea, all our striving, bateless and unseeing,
That builds each day our Heaven new.
More deep in time's unnearing blue,
Farther and ever fleeing
The dream that ever must pursue.
When the song dies:
Come to the forest,
Brother of the sighs.
Heart-need is song-need,
Brother, give me thine!
Song-meed is heart-meed,
Brother, take mine!
I go the still way,
Cover me with night;
Thou goest the will way
Into the light.
Dust and the burden
Thou shall outrun;
Bear then my guerdon,
Song, to the sun!
I go bewildered from thine altar place,
These brooding boughs and grey-lit forest wings,
Nor know if thou deniest
My destiny and race,
Man's goalward falterings,
To sing the perfect joy that lay
Along the path we missed somewhere,
That led thee to thy home in air,
While we, soil-creepers, bruise our way
Toward heights and sunrise bounds
That wings may know nor feet may win
For all their scars, for all their wounds;
Or have I heard within thy strain
Not sorrow's self, but sorrowing
That thou did'st seek the way more free,
Nor took with us the trail of pain
That endeth not, e'er widening
To life that knows what Life may be;
And ere thou fall'st to silence long
Would golden parting fling:
I journey not so far;
My wings must fail e'en with my song.
THANKSGIVING
I bring my thanks to thee;
Not for the health that does not fail,
And wings me over land and sea;
Not for this body's pearl and rose,
And radiance made sure
By thine enduring life that flows
In sky-print swift and pure;
Glides far, eternal, free,
And surging back in thy full hour
Bears the wide world to me;
Not for the friends whose presence is
The warm, sweet heart of things
Where leans the body for the kiss
That gives the soul its wings;
The little feet that run,
And make the earth a fitter thing
For thee to look upon;
Not for mine ease within my door,
My roof when rains beat strong,
My bed, my fire, my food in store,
My book when nights are long;
A leper rots and cries;
Find thou my offering in his hands,
My worship in his eyes.
As thou dost give to him, thy least,
Thou givest unto me;
As he is fed I make my feast,
And lift my thanks to thee.
THE ROAD
('Tis noon, and I forget;)
By Gilead road the ferns are deep,
And waves run emerald, wind-beset,
To some unsanded shore
Of doe and dove and fay;
And I for love of that before,
Forget the hindward way.
(To what unshadowed sea?)
Bough-hidden here,—there by the sun's
Gold treachery unbared to me.
O Beauty in retreat,
From beckoned eyes you steal,
But the pursuing heart, more fleet,
Lifts your secretest veil.
Their domes where thrushes sing!
My heart glides in, a worshipper
At shrines that ne'er knew offering,
Nor eye hath seen, and yet
What soul hath not been there,
Deep in song's fane where we forget
To pray, for we are prayer.
I hear soft, woodland feet;
And who are they that deeper bide
Where beechen twilights meet?
What trancèd beings smile
On things I may not see?
As with a dream they would beguile
Their own eternity?
('Tis eve, and I forget;)
Here in this world where mortals play
As gods with no god's leave or let.
My hope in high purlieus
Desire erst lockt and kept,
On wing unbarred shall seek and choose,—
Ay, choose, when I have slept.
And bliss must sometime bed.
Fern-deep I fall, lose sight and song,
The slim palms close above my head,
And Life, the Shadow, weaves
The charm on sleepers laid
Till Time's spent ghost comes not nor grieves
An hourless Gilead.
I sigh, I turn, I weep.
Alack, that waking we forget
But to remember when we sleep!
O vision of closed eyes,
That burns the heart awake!
O the forgotten truth's reprise
For the forsaken's sake!
Thy hot, unsilenced breath;
Meet thy unburied eyes of pain
That, dying ever, find no death;
See childhood's one gold hour
Bartered for crust and bed,
And man's o'erdriven noon devour
His evening peace and bread.
To souls on Gilead road:
"Tell us the way—we sent ye out—
We bought ye free—we paid our blood!"
Gaunt arms make signal mad;
O, feel the woe-waves break!
Does no one hear in Gilead?
Will one, not one turn back?
That sea-surge of despair!
A flame creeps over Gilead,
Unseen, unfelt by any there.
They look not back, the while
Doom shadows round them dance,
And smile meets slow, unstartled smile
As in it sleep's mid-chance.
We send ye far to see!
We break beneath the double load
That ye may walk unbowed and free!
'Tis ours, the healing shade;
'Tis ours, the singing stream;
'Tis ours, the charm on sleepers laid;
'Tis ours, the toil-won dream!"
To me who hear that cry.
"Our every star is hid with dust;
The way, the way! Let us not die!"
Up from the trampled ferns,
(O Beauty's praying hands!)
I stricken start, as one who turns
From plague's unholy lands.
An unresolving fire,
Till beacon hearts make it their own
And men are lit with man's desire.
I mourn no Gilead fair,
Back to my own I speed,
And all my tears are falling where
They sell the sun for bread.
Mine too the flames that sere;
And on my breast not one proud star
That leaves a brother's heaven bare.
Life is the search of God
For His own unity;
I walk stone-bare till all are shod,
No gold may sandal me.
LA DAME REVOLUTION
White was the Hope that bore thee,
Heaven and Earth desired thee,
And Hell from thy lovers tore thee;
But barren to the ravisher,
Thou bearest Love thy child,
Immortal daughter, Peace; for her
Waits Man, the Undefiled.
THE REBEL
Of frenzy be a gracious thing?
His soul has hands; above the bruit
They lift a song-bird quivering.
Till Beauty's drenched and lonely eyes
Mourn a deserted earth? But no!
Men go not down till men arise.
And whirls to dust her overlings;
Her abluent winds shall spare no sin,
Though hidden in the breast of kings;
To her old lap their fallen bones,
For down the throbbing ways there wakes
The laughter of her greater sons.
THESE LATTER DAYS
In vain thou hangest there thy changeless sign.
We lift our eyes to power's glowing cup,
Nor care if blood make strong that wizard wine,
So we but drink and feel the sorcery
Of conquest in our veins, of wits grown keen
In strain and strife for flesh-sweet sovereignty,—
The fatal thrill of kingship over men.
What though the soul be from the body shrunk,
And we array the temple, but no god?
What though, the cup of golden greed once drunk,
Our dust be laid in a dishonoured sod,
While thy loud hosts proclaim the end of wars?
We read no sign. O God, take down thy stars!
ABNEGATION
By the long, white highway bare,
Where the hot road dust made grey Thy feet?
Ay,—but the woman's hair!
The cup of water to give,
Did a poet die on the mount's cool crown?
Ay,—and for that dost thou live!
THE LITTLE TREE
The pebbles of her grave;
A poplar hastening to be green
And silver signals wave.
Were met by branches stirred,
And whiter grew as grew the croon
That seemed her hidden word.
My eyes were on the mound;
And lowlier hung my waiting head
Above the prisoning ground.
The lad who most did love;
"She stoops to us; the little tree
Is wakened from above!"
THE GAME
Would cast the game away.
As silent as a sailing bird,
The shift and change of play.
So many do me bless;
The hazel, deep as deep wood-mere
Where leaves are flutterless;
With dusking, golden play
Of shadows like betraying breath
From some shy, hidden day;
Let stars be soon or late;
The blue, a morning never dimmed,
Opposing Heaven to fate;
That hold horizon rain;
Or when, steel-darkling, stoic-wise,
They bring the gods again;
Fed from far-risen streams;
But oh, the eyes, the eyes that know
The silent game of dreams!
Lap-held, not half a year
From Heaven, looked at me and smiled,
And far I went with her.
And past Time's blindfold day,
Beyond the star-ring of the earth,
We found us room to play.
With unavailing tears,
Who from her hair's down-tangled fold
Shook out the grey-blown years,
And lifted eyes—what themes!
I could not pass, I sat me down
To play the game of dreams.
Though earth heard not his strain;
And since he went no eyes can stir
My own to play again.
BALLAD
And grief is mellowed in your breast;
When you do nothing fret
If jest come gently in with tea,
And Purr is stroked for want of me;
When thought robust bestirs your mind,
And with a candid start you find
The world must move
To living love
And you forthright on travel set;
Awake the woe that winks for sleep,
Or swell the lessening tear;
I do not ask; dear to me still
May be the eyes regret would fill;
And, sooth, in vain I'd Nature sue
To go a little out for you;
But whether 'tis
Or that or this
Is from the matter there and here.
Till each a thousand more begot;
Such easy progeny
You with small trouble still may have;
(Though women die, love has no grave;)
Forget the quaint, the nest-born ways,
And ponder things more to my praise,
That I may long
Be worth a song
Though deep in tongueless clay I be.
Still knew a bead of Hippocrene
From baser bubbles bright;
My ear could catch, or short or long,
The echo of true-hammered song;
And many a book we journeyed through;
Some turned us home again, 'tis true,
(Not all who pen
Are more than men,)
And some, like stars, outwore the night.
Took half, at least, my troubles straight,
(Let women have their boast;)
Homed well with chance, and passing where
The gods kept house would take a chair,
Perchance at ease, with naught ado,
With Jove would toss a quip or two;
The nectar stale,
A mug of ale
On goodly earth would serve a toast.
Where thou didst choose to dream, the while
I sought a farther mead,
Or clomb a ridge for flowers that wore
Of earth the less, of stars the more,
I hastened back, confess of me,
To lay my treasure on thy knee;
Nor didst thou hear
Of stone or brere,
Or how my hidden feet did bleed.
The whole round world takes heart again
To rise and dance with Spring;
When robin drives the snow-wind home,
And sweetened is the warmèd loam,
When deeper root the violets,
And every bud its fear forgets
With upward glance
For lovers' chance
In Venus' dear and fateful ring;
Bechill thy warm heart beating red,
And thy new ardours dim;
But if, good hap, you rove where I
Beneath the twinkling moss then lie,
Be glad to see me decked so gay,
(Spring's the best handmaid without pay,)
I like things new,
In season too,
And fain must smile to be so trim.
Another mate to woo and take,
And as thy soul to love.
Rise with the dew, stay not the noon,
What's good cannot be found too soon,
The wind will not be always south,
Nor like a rose is every mouth,
Time's quick to press,
Do thou no less,
And may the night thy wisdom prove.
In great or small that loved hath been,
Keep this sole troth with me,—
Forget my name, my form, my face,
But meet me still in every place,
Since we are what we love, and I
Loved everything beneath the sky.
So may I long
Be worth a song,
Though I who sang forgotten be.