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Poems

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About This Book

A collection of lyric poems that blend Catholic faith and rural imagery, moving between devout meditations—Easter reflections, apocalypse and sacramental themes—and lighter pieces of humor and local color. Many poems celebrate nature and ordinary labor, using pastoral scenes and ritual language to explore joy, absurdity, and resurrection; occasional satirical and ballad forms recall village life and pub-going episodes. Tone shifts from solemn processional verse to playful songs of laughter and love, often employing traditional meters and vivid sensory detail to unite spiritual contemplation with everyday experience.

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Title: Poems

Author: Theodore Maynard

Author of introduction, etc.: G. K. Chesterton

Release date: July 9, 2017 [eBook #55079]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Chuck Greif, Bryan Ness and
the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
Libraries)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***

P O E M S

Contents

POEMS

By
THEODORE MAYNARD

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
G. K. CHESTERTON



TORONTO
McCLELLAND AND STEWART, Ltd.
PUBLISHERS

Copyright, 1917, 1918, by Daniel E. Hudson; Copyright, 1917, 1918, by The Sisters of Mercy; Copyright, 1917, 1919, by The Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle in the State of New York.
———
Copyright, 1919, by
Frederick A. Stokes Company
———
All Rights Reserved

Printed in U. S. A.

TO

MY WIFE

We two have seen with our own eyes
God’s multitudinous disguise;
Waylaid Him in His voyaging
Among the buttercups of Spring;
In valleys where the lilies shone
More glorious than Solomon
We met a poet passing by,
And learned his lyric—you and I!
But oh! did kindly Heaven not bless
Our lives with more than loveliness,
When, cast on every sapling-rod,
Was seen the motley of our God;
When having picked our way with craft
Up cliffs to hear Him when He laughed,
We felt, uplifted on the wind,
His folly blown into our mind?
We have no fear that we shall lose
This joyous Gospel of good news,
For our symbolic love has stood
By virtue of its fortitude—
Knowing a bitter Lenten fast,
Satan discomforted at last,
A bowed back scalding with great scars,
Gethsemane of tears and stars,
A journey of the cross, and ah,
Its part and lot in Golgotha!
We know—let the marvellous thing be said!—
Love’s resurrection from the dead ...
For as Magdalen came with cinnamon
And aloes to smear Love’s limbs upon,
But met alone on the Easter grass
Life’s Lord, though she wist not Who He was—
So we, till He spoke as He spoke to her,
Mistook Him for the gardener.

April 14th, 1918.

NOTE

This edition of Theodore Maynard’s poems represents the author’s own selection of such of his published verse as he wishes included in a permanent collection. With few omissions, it represents the contents of the three volumes issued in Great Britain under the titles, “Laughs and Whifts of Song,” 1915; “Drums of Defeat,” 1917; “Folly,” 1918, none of which has hitherto been published in this country.

ON THEODORE MAYNARD’S POEMS

In the case of any poet who has caught and held our recollection, there is generally a particular piece of work which remains in our mind, not as the crown, but as the key. And ever since I saw in The New Witness some lines called “A Song of Colours,” by Theodore Maynard, they have remained to me as a sort of simplification, or permanent element, of the rest of the poet’s writings; and I have felt him especially as a poet of colour. They are not by any means the best of his lines. They are direct, as is appropriate to a ballad; and they have none of the fine whimsicality or the frank humour to be found elsewhere in his work. Among these others the choice is hard: but I should say that the finest poetry as such is to be found in the images, and even in the very title, of “The World’s Miser”: and even more in the poem called “Apocalypse.” In this latter the poet imagines a new world which shall be supernatural in the strongest sense of the word; that of being more vivid and positive than the natural; and not (as it is so often imagined) more tenuous and void.

“Or what empurpled blooms to oust the rose
Or what strange grass to glow like angels’ hair!”

The last line has the touch of the true mystic, which changes a thing and yet leaves it familiar. True artistic pugnacity, a thing that generally goes with true artistic pleasure, is well-expressed in the shrewd lines of the poem printed as a sequel to another poem called “To a Good Atheist.” The sequel is called “To a Bad Atheist,” with the charming explanation: “Who wrote what he called a trinity of meek retorts to the preceding poem, which were not meek, but full of pride and abominable heresy.” He describes the bad atheist’s mind as containing nothing but sawdust, sun and sand; which is accurate and exhaustive. And in so far as poetry appeals to particular temperaments, I myself find enjoyment expecially in the part of the collection properly to be called “Laughs”; in the ballads of feasting and fellowship; and especially in that sublime absolution gravely offered to the Duke of Norfolk.

But the sentiment of colour still ran like a thread through the whole texture; and I think there is hardly a poem that does not repeat it. And this is important; because the whole of Mr. Maynard’s inspiration is part of what is the main business of our time: the resurrection of the Middle Ages. The modern movement, with its Guild Socialism and its military reaction against the fatalism of the Barbarian, is as certainly drawing its life from the lost centuries of Catholic Europe, as the movement more commonly called the Renaissance drew its life from the lost languages and sculptures of antiquity. And, by a quaint inconsistency, Hellenists and Neo-Pagans of the school of Mr. Lowes Dickinson will call us antiquated for gathering the flowers which still grow on the graves of our mediæval ancestors, while they themselves will industriously search for the scattered ashes from the more distant pyres of the Pagans.

And the visible clue to the Middle Ages is colour. The mediæval man could paint before he could draw. In the almost startling inspiration which we call stained glass, he discovered something that is almost more coloured than colour; something that bears the same relation to mere colour that golden flame does to golden sand. He did not, like other artists, try in his pictures to paint the sun; he made the sun paint his pictures. He mixed the aboriginal light with the paints upon his palette. And it is this translucent actuality of colour which I feel in the phraseology of this writer, in a way it is not easy to analyse. We can only say that when he says—

“Among the yellow primroses
He holds His summer palaces”

we have an impression, which it is the object of all poetry to produce. It can only be described by saying that a primrose by the river’s brim a yellow primrose is to him, and it could not possibly be anything more. And this almost torrid directness and distinctness of tint is again connected with another quality of the poet and his poetic tradition: what many would call asceticism alternating with what many would call buffoonery. The colour conventions of the Middle Ages were copied very beautifully by the school of Rossetti and Swinburne. But they lost the exuberance of the Gothic and became a pattern rather than a plan; chiefly because they were not seriously inspired by any of the enthusiasms of the Middle Ages. Its decorative repetitions sometimes became quite dreary and artificial; as in Swinburne’s unfortunate couplet about the lilies and languors of virtue and the raptures and roses of vice. A little healthy gardening would have taught Swinburne that it takes quite as much virtue to grow a rose as to grow a lily. It might also have taught him that virtue is never languid, whatever else it may be: and that even lilies are not really languid so long as they are alive. If such decadents want an image of what it really is that holds up the heads of lilies or any other growing things, I can refer them to a couplet in this little volume, which is more beautiful and more original and means a great deal more—

“What wilful trees of any spring
Than your young body are more fair?”

These lines contain a principle of life and mark the end of a pagan sterility. They contain the secret, not of gathering rosebuds while we may, but of growing them when we choose.

G. K. Chesterton.

CONTENTS

LAUGHS AND WHIFTS OF SONG
 PAGE
A Song of Colours3
Cecidit, Cecidit Babylon Magna5
Apocalypse7
Ghosts9
Processional10
A Song of Laughter12
Ballade in Praise of Arundel13
The Tramp15
The World’s Miser17
Easter19
The Glory of the Oriflamme20
To a Good Atheist21
To a Bad Atheist23
Palm Sunday25
When I Ride into the Town27
Requiem29
Ave Atque Vale30
Aladdin31
Adam32
The English Spring33
At the Crib35
The Mystic37
To Any Saint39
Sunset on the Desert40
FOLLY
Folly43
The Ships45
Laughter47
Vocation49
Blindness50
Drinking Song52
Three Triolets54
A New Canterbury Tale56
In Memoriam F. H. M.62
To the Irish Dead63
John Redmond64
Beauty65
Faith’s Difficulty67
Christmas on Crusade69
The Ascetic71
Sonnet for the Fifth of October75
Warfare76
Treason77
There was an Hour78
Nocturne79
Pride80
Ballade of Sheep Bells82
Ballade of a Ferocious Catholic84
Dawn86
Sunset87
Peace88
Carrion89
The Building of the City91
Eden Re-opened93
The Holy Spring95
Viaticum97
Punishment98
After Communion99
The Universal Mother100
The Boaster102
Unwed104
Wed105
England106
Lyric Love108
DRUMS OF DEFEAT
The Fool113
Don Quixote115
Ireland118
In Memoriam119
Mater Desolata120
The Stirrup Cup121
The Ensign122
Ballade of Orchards124
A Great Wind126
Birthday Sonnet128
Silence129
At Yelverton130
The Joy of the World132
Gratitude135
In Domo Johannis139
At Woodchester140
“For They Shall Possess the Earth”142
Ballade of the Best Song in the World144
Tail-piece146
Ave147
A Reply149
Job151
The Soil of Solace153
To the Dead154
Spring, 1916156
The Return157
Fulfilment158
Prophecy159
The Singer to His Lady160
Certainties161
Fear162
Charity163
Sight and Insight164
Christmas Carol166
A Garden Enclosed167
The Lover169

POEMS

LAUGHS AND WHIFTS OF SONG

 

 

A SONG OF COLOURS

CECIDIT, CECIDIT BABYLON MAGNA!