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Selected Poems

Chapter 10: TWILIGHT
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About This Book

A varied collection of lyric and narrative verse that moves between seascapes and quiet rural scenes, pairing vigorous maritime imagery—trade winds, night watches, shipboard life—with intimate portraits of loss, domestic memory, and aging. The selections encompass ballads, sonnets, dramatic choruses, and occasional longer pieces, shifting between brisk rhythmic songs and more reflective monologues. Recurring concerns include longing for travel and elemental nature, endurance in the face of sorrow, and the work of memory and observation. Together the poems chart a range of moods from restless wanderlust to sombre contemplation, rendered in plain, musical diction.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Selected Poems

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Title: Selected Poems

Author: John Masefield

Release date: February 1, 2020 [eBook #61286]
Most recently updated: October 17, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Tim Lindell, Chuck Greif and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

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

Selected Poems

By
John Masefield

Selected Poems from The Indian Love Lyrics of Laurence Hope. F’cap 8vo. Cloth, 5s.; leather, 7s. 6d.

Selections from Swinburne, edited by Edmund Gosse, C.B., and T. J. Wise. Cr. 8vo. 6s. net.

The Works of Swinburne, Golden Pine Edition. In 6 vols. F’cap 8vo. Cloth, 4s.; leather, 6s. each.


LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN, LTD.

 
 



(W. Strang
Jan 1912
John Masefield.)

Selected Poems

By
John Masefield



LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN, LTD.

 

Printed in Great Britain.


TO

MY   WIFE

 
 

CONTENTS

 PAGE
From Salt Water Ballads
Trade Winds1
Sea-fever2
Prayer3
The West Wind4
From Poems and Ballads
Cargoes5
An Old Song Re-sung6
Twilight7
Invocation8
A Creed8
When Bony Death10
The Death Rooms10
C. L. M.11
Waste12
The Wild Duck13
From Pompey the Great
Chorus14
Epilogue15
From The Everlasting Mercy
The Scallenge16
Epilogue18
From The Widow in the Bye Street
The End19
From Dauber
The Setting of the Watch22
The Watch Below23
The Horn26
The South-west Wind29
We therefore commit our Brother33
From Philip the King
The Messenger’s Speech63
Truth76
The “Wanderer”77
August, 191488
Biography91
Ships104
Sonnet on the Death of his Wife108
They closed her Eyes109
From Good Friday
The Madman Speaks113
From Lollingdon Downs
Sonnets117
From Gallipoli
Epilogue136
From Enslaved
Prologue152
The End154
The Hounds of Hell162
Animula186
Forget193
On Growing Old194
From Esther
Choruses205
Act II209

 

The books from which these selections are taken are published by the following firms, to whom the author makes the usual acknowledgments:—

Salt Water BalladsMessrs. Elkin Mathews, Ltd.
Poems and Ballads
Pompey the GreatMessrs. Sidgwick & Jackson, Ltd.
The Everlasting Mercy
The Widow in the Bye Street
DauberMessrs. William Heinemann, Ltd.
The Daffodil Fields
Philip the King
Gallipoli
Good Friday
Lollingdon Downs
Reynard the Fox
Enslaved
Right Royal
Esther

 

 

Selections from

SALT-WATER BALLADS

TRADE WINDS

SEA-FEVER

PRAYER

THE WEST WIND

Selections from

POEMS AND BALLADS

CARGOES

AN OLD SONG RE-SUNG

TWILIGHT

INVOCATION

O wanderer into many brains,
O spark the emperor’s purple hides,
You sow the dusk with fiery grains
When the gold horseman rides.
O beauty on the darkness hurled,
Be it through me you shame the world.

A CREED

I held that when a person dies
His soul returns again to earth;
Arrayed in some new flesh-disguise
Another mother gives him birth.
With sturdier limbs and brighter brain
The old soul takes the roads again.
Such was my own belief and trust;
This hand, this hand that holds the pen,
Has many a hundred times been dust
And turned, as dust, to dust again;
These eyes of mine have blinked and shone
In Thebes, in Troy, in Babylon.
I know that in my lives to be
My sorry heart will ache and burn,
And worship, unavailingly,
The woman whom I used to spurn,
And shake to see another have
The love I spurned, the love she gave.
And I shall know, in angry words,
In gibes, and mocks, and many a tear,
A carrion flock of homing-birds,
The gibes and scorns I uttered here.
The brave word that I failed to speak
Will brand me dastard on the cheek.
And as I wander on the roads
I shall be helped and healed and blessed;
Dear words shall cheer and be as goads
To urge to heights before unguessed.
My road shall be the road I made;
All that I gave shall be repaid.
So shall I fight, so shall I tread,
In this long war beneath the stars;
So shall a glory wreathe my head,
So shall I faint and show the scars,
Until this case, this clogging mould,
Be smithied all to kingly gold.

WHEN BONY DEATH

When bony Death has chilled her gentle blood,
And dimmed the brightness of her wistful eyes,
And changed her glorious beauty into mud
By his old skill in hateful wizardries;
When an old lichened marble strives to tell
How sweet a grace, how red a lip was hers;
When rheumy grey-beards say, “I knew her well,”
Showing the grave to curious worshippers;
When all the roses that she sowed in me
Have dripped their crimson petals and decayed,
Leaving no greenery on any tree
That her dear hands in my heart’s garden laid,
Then grant, old Time, to my green mouldering skull,
These songs may keep her memory beautiful.

THE DEATH ROOMS

Those dropping rooms are haunted by a death,
A something like a worm gnawing a brain,
That bids me heed what bitter lesson saith
The blind wind beating on the widow-pane.
None dwells in those old rooms: none ever can:
I pass them through at night with hidden head;
Lock’d rotting rooms her eyes must never scan,
Floors that her blessed feet must never tread.
Haunted old rooms: rooms she must never know,
Where death-ticks knock and mouldering panels glow.

C. L. M.

In the dark womb where I began
My mother’s life made me a man.
Through all the months of human birth
Her beauty fed my common earth.
I cannot see, nor breathe, nor stir,
But through the death of some of her.
If the grave’s gates could be undone,
She would not know her little son,
I am so grown. If we should meet
She would pass by me in the street,
Unless my soul’s face let her see
My sense of what she did for me.
What have I done to keep in mind
My debt to her and womankind?
What woman’s happier life repays
Her for those months of wretched days?
For all my mouthless body leeched
Ere Birth’s releasing hell was reached?
What have I done, or tried, or said
In thanks to that dear woman dead?
Men triumph over women still,
Men trample women’s rights at will,
And man’s lust roves the world untamed.
* * * *
O grave, keep shut lest I be shamed.

WASTE

O, many glowing beauties Time has hid
In that dark, blotting box the villain sends.
He covers over with a coffin-lid
Mothers and sons, and foes and lovely friends.
Maids that were redly-lipped and comely-skinned,
Friends that deserved a sweeter bed than clay.
All are as blossoms blowing down the wind,
Things the old envious villain sweeps away.
And though the mutterer laughs and church bells toll,
Death brings another April to the soul.

THE WILD DUCK

Selections from

POMPEY THE GREAT

Chorus

Man is a sacred city, built of marvellous earth.
Life was lived nobly here to give this body birth.
Something was in this brain and in this eager hand.
Death is so dumb and blind, Death cannot understand.
Death drifts the brain with dust and soils the young limbs’ glory.
Death makes women a dream and men a traveller’s story,
Death drives the lovely soul to wander under the sky,
Death opens unknown doors. It is most grand to die.

Chorus

Kneel to the beautiful women who bear us this strange brave fruit.
Man with his soul so noble: man half god and half brute.

Women bear him in pain that he may bring them tears.
He is a king on earth, he rules for a term of years.
And the conqueror’s prize is dust and lost endeavour.
And the beaten man becomes a story for ever.
For the gods employ strange means to bring their will to be.
We are in the wise gods’ hands and more we cannot see.

Epilogue

Selections from

THE EVERLASTING MERCY

THE SCALLENGE

The moonlight shone on Cabbage Walk,
It made the limestone look like chalk.
It was too late for any people,
Twelve struck as we went by the steeple.
A dog barked, and an owl was calling,
The squire’s brook was still a-falling,
The carved heads on the church looked down
On “Russell, Blacksmith of this Town,”
And all the graves of all the ghosts
Who rise on Christmas Eve in hosts
To dance and carol in festivity
For joy of Jesus Christ’s Nativity
(Bell-ringer Dawe and his two sons
Beheld ’em from the bell-tower once),
Two and two about about
Singing the end of Advent out.
All the old monks’ singing places
Glimmered quick with flitting faces,
Singing anthems, singing hymns
Under carven cherubims.
Ringer Dawe aloft could mark
Faces at the window dark

Crowding, crowding, row on row,
Till all the Church began to glow.
The chapel glowed, the nave, the choir,
All the faces became fire
Below the eastern window high
To see Christ’s star come up the sky.
Then they lifted hands and turned,
And all their lifted fingers burned,
Burned like the golden altar tallows,
Burned like a troop of God’s own Hallows,
Bringing to mind the burning time
When all the bells will rock and chime
And burning saints on burning horses
Will sweep the planets from their courses
And loose the stars to burn up night.
Lord, give us eyes to bear the light.
We all went quiet down the Scallenge
Lest Police Inspector Drew should challenge.
But ’Spector Drew was sleeping sweet,
His head upon a charges sheet,
Under the gas jet flaring full,
Snorting and snoring like a bull,
His bull cheeks puffed, his bull lips blowing,
His ugly yellow front teeth showing.
Just as we peeped we saw him fumble
And scratch his head, and shift, and mumble.
Down in the lane so thin and dark
The tan-yards stank of bitter bark,
The curate’s pigeons gave a flutter,
A cat went courting down the gutter,
And none else stirred a foot or feather.
The houses put their heads together,
Talking, perhaps, so dark and sly,
Of all the folk they’d seen go by,
Children, and men and women, merry all,
Who’d some day pass that way to burial.

Epilogue