The Project Gutenberg eBook of Ships in Harbour
Title: Ships in Harbour
Author: David Morton
Release date: February 9, 2009 [eBook #28043]
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by David Garcia, Carla Foust, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Kentuckiana Digital Library (http://kdl.kyvl.org/)
E-text prepared by David Garcia, Carla Foust,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Kentuckiana Digital Library
(http://kdl.kyvl.org/)
| Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Kentuckiana Digital Library. See http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;view=toc;idno=B92-224-31182748 |
Transcriber's note
Minor punctuation errors have been corrected without notice. One printer's error was changed, and it is indicated with a mouse-hover and listed at the end. All other inconsistencies are as in the original.
SHIPS IN HARBOUR
BY
DAVID MORTON
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
The Knickerbocker Press
1921
Copyright, 1921
by
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Printed in the United States of America
To
T. B. M.
AND
M. W. M.
This Book is Affectionately Dedicated
For the privilege of reprinting some of the poems included in this book, the author's thanks are due to The Bookman, The Century, The New York Evening Post, Harper's Magazine, Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, The Designer, The Nation, The New York Sun, Collier's Weekly, Good Housekeeping, The Bellman, Contemporary Verse, Everybody's Magazine, The Smart Set, Ainslee's, The Sonnet, McCall's Magazine, The Touchstone Magazine, The Forum, and The Lyric.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Wooden Ships | 3 |
| October Day-Moon | 4 |
| A Garden Wall | 5 |
| Napoleon in Hades | 6 |
| Symbols | 7 |
| Exiled | 8 |
| Mary Sets the Table | 9 |
| Autumn Tea Time | 10 |
| Battlefields | 11 |
| One Day in Autumn | 12 |
| An Old House and Garden | 13 |
| Immortalis | 14 |
| Touring | 15 |
| Summer | 17 |
| Old Ships | 18 |
| The Town | 19 |
| After Summer Rain | 24 |
| The Kings are Passing Deathward | 25 |
| Renewal | 26 |
| Respondit | 27 |
| Jewels | 28 |
| Chorus | 29 |
| Symbol | 30 |
| To an Unknown Ancestor | 31 |
| Intimation | 32 |
| On a Dead Moth | 33 |
| Mystic | 34 |
| Leviathans | 35 |
| Inviolate | 36 |
| Manuscripts | 37 |
| In an Old Burial Ground | 38 |
| Encore | 39 |
| Redemption | 40 |
| The Hunted | 41 |
| The Schoolboy Reads his Iliad | 42 |
| Moments | 43 |
| Clear Morning | 44 |
| Renaissance | 45 |
| An Old Lover | 46 |
| One Day in Summer | 47 |
| Vines | 48 |
| Audience | 49 |
| The Dance | 50 |
| On Hearing a Bird Sing at Night | 51 |
| Dawn | 52 |
| Daffodils Over Night | 53 |
| Values | 54 |
| A Ghost out of Stratford | 55 |
| Who Walks with Beauty | 56 |
| Raconteur | 57 |
| Affinities | 58 |
| Transfiguration | 59 |
| One Way of Spring | 60 |
| For a Sequestered Lady | 61 |
| Heritage | 63 |
| Shipping News | 64 |
| Articulation | 65 |
| Moonflowers | 66 |
| Challenge | 67 |
| Before Spring | 68 |
| Moons Know No Time | 69 |
| My Neighbour | 70 |
| At the Next Table | 71 |
| Salvage | 72 |
| In a Girl's School | 73 |
| At Eisinore | 74 |
| To William Griffith | 75 |
| Revelation | 76 |
| Discovery | 77 |
| For Bob: A Dog | 78 |
| In Summer | 79 |
| Survival | 80 |
| Nomenclature | 81 |
| To One Returned from a Journey | 82 |
| Attendants | 83 |
| Rendezvous | 84 |
| Sonnets from a Hospital | 85 |
| This Lane in May | 89 |
| Fugitive | 90 |
| An Old Gardener | 91 |
| The Veil | 92 |
| The Year is Old | 93 |
| Mariners | 94 |
| An Abandoned Inn | 95 |
| Prone | 96 |
| Revival | 97 |
| Impostor | 98 |
| Snow Dusk | 99 |
| Mood | 100 |
| Ships in Harbour | 101 |
SHIPS IN HARBOUR
WOODEN SHIPS
The midnight quiet, and the giant dance;
And all the murmuring summers that they knew
Are haunting still their altered circumstance.
Leaves they have lost, and robins in the nest,
Tug of the goodly earth denied to ships,
These, and the rooted certainties, and rest,—
To gain a watery girdle at the hips.
They greet not as a stranger on their ways;
But this old friend, with whom they drank and laughed,
Sits in the stern and talks of other days
When they had held high bacchanalias still,
Or dreamed among the stars on some tall hill.
OCTOBER DAY-MOON
The thin and silver moon,
Floats wide above these oceans
Of yellow afternoon,—
Who slipped her fragile cables,
And blew to sea too soon.
Not anything of note:
How should she, being merely
A slender petal-boat?...
But rated in the shipping:
The dearest tramp afloat.
A GARDEN WALL
That has no league at all with great affairs,
That knows no ruder hands than clematis,
No louder blasts than blowing April airs.
Yet, with a grey solemnity it broods,
Above the walk where simple folk go past,
And in its crannies keeps their transient moods,
Holding their careless words unto the last.
That season after season clings in trust,
And shivered poppies red as Roman wine,—
These things at last will haunt its crumbled dust—
Not dreams of empires shattered where they lie,
But children's laughter, birds, and bits of sky.
NAPOLEON IN HADES
And whispered each to each in awed surprise,
Seeing this figure brood along the shapes,
World tragedies thick-crowding through his eyes.
On either side the ghostly groups drew back
In huddled knots, yielding him way and room,
Their foolish mouths agape and fallen slack,
Their bloodless fingers pointing through the gloom.
Splendid in scorn, rapt in a cloudy dream,
He paused at last upon the Stygian silt,
And raised calm eyes above the angry stream....
Hand in his breast, he stood till Charon came,
While Hades hummed with gossip of his name.
SYMBOLS
With what swift colours on their fragile wings!—
Some that are less articulate than a sigh,
Some that were names of ancient, lovely things.
What delicate careerings of escape,
When they would pass beyond the baffled reach,
To leave a haunting shadow and a shape,—
Eluding still the careful traps of speech.
Seeing the cloudy cavalcades blow past,—
Happy if some bright vagrant, soon or late,
May venture near the snares of sound, at last—
Most fortunate captor if, from time to time,
One may be taken, trembling, in a rhyme.
EXILED
Where seed and soil most happily conspire
To furnish forth gay rituals of mirth,
Of shaken leaves and pointed blooms of fire,—
I wonder then that thoughtful man, alone,
Walks darkly and all puzzled with a doubt,
Bewildered, and in truth, half-fearful grown
Of wild, wild earth and April's joyous rout.
With happy earth through many a happy Spring,
We yet may learn that joy was all our need,—
That man's long thought is but a broken wing,
Of less account, as things may come to pass,
Than Spring's first robin breasting through the grass.
MARY SETS THE TABLE
With delicate, deft fingers that are learned
In ways of silverware and cup and glass,
Arrayed in ordered patterns, trimly turned;—
And never guesses how this subtle ease
Is older than the oldest tale we tell,
This gift that guides her through such tricks as these,——
And my delight in watching her, as well.
Is one with ancient women baking bread:
An epic heritance come down of late
To slender hands, and dear, delightful head,—
How Trojan housewives vie in serving me,
Where Mary sets the table things for tea.
AUTUMN TEA TIME
Turned amber from a yellow tree,—
And there are yellow cups for four,
And lemon for the tea.
Have lit the golden afternoon,
An ambient radiance that shames
The ineffective moon....
Quenching the street with chills and damps—
Leaving these asters where they burn,
Mellow like evening lamps.
BATTLEFIELDS
These hills that lift their many a naked scar,
There yet shall come the indomitable mirth
Of Springs that have remembered where they are.
The slow processions of sweet sun and rain
Will crown the changing seasons as they pass,
With healing and green fruit and swollen grain,
And banners of the gay and dauntless grass.
And here the patient cattle come to stand,
Until, grown half-incredulous, these men
Looking from doorways on the evening land,
Can scarcely think—so deep the quiet lies—
How all of this was ever otherwise.
ONE DAY IN AUTUMN
Where leaves have littered every forest way,
If there be lovers, they should be together:
For this is golden ... but the end is grey.
Beyond this shimmer where the bright leaves fall,
Behind this haze of silver shot with gold,
There is a greyness waiting for it all,—
A little longer ... and the world is old.
As this that haunts these late October days,
With smoky twilights gathering at the door,
With grey mist clouding on familiar ways ...
And well for him who has another near,
When fires are lighted for the dying year.
AN OLD HOUSE AND GARDEN
I think they walk these ways that knew their feet,
And tread these sunken pavements, one by one,
Keen for old Summers that were wild and sweet;
Where rainy lilacs blow against the dark,
And grasses bend beneath the weight they bear,
The night grows troubled, and we still may mark
Their ghostly heart-break on the tender air.
What eager hands reach vainly for a door,
Remembered since they folded them in sleep,—
Frail hands that lift like lilacs, evermore,
And lean along the darkness, pale and still,
To touch a window or a crumbling sill.
IMMORTALIS
Thaïs, Cassandra, Helen and their fames,
Burn like tall candles through forgotten time,
Lighting the Past's dim arras with their names.
Around their faces wars the eager dark,
Wherein all other lights are sunken now;
Yet, casting back, the seeker still may mark
A flame of hair, a bright, immortal brow.
Wearing their radiance to the darkened room,——
Surely, new-comers to Oblivion
May still descry, in that all-quenching gloom,
Rare faces, lovely, lifted and alight,
Like tapers burning through the windy night.
TOURING
World on world of summer green—
Summer earth and summer sky,
Fields of summer turning by;
Hills beyond us fall away,
Tumbled slopes in disarray,
Fold and melt into a plain:
Fire and gold of summer grain.
Heavy-fruited, green and still,
Heave a shoulder to the sky,
Bend and bow and hurry by;
Fields of clover burn and pass,
Cattle knee-deep in the grass
Lift a lazy head and look
Pictures in a picture-book....
Corn in swift, revolving rows,
Dripping sunlight where it goes,
Wheels and glitters and returns:
Bladed beauty's lifted urns;
Woods all shadowed, cooling earth,
Murmuring of a quiet mirth,
Pour damp odours where they pass,
Breath of fern and earth and grass ...
Ramblers on a lichened wall,
Ramblers, ramblers pouring all
Colour that the world has known
Out upon an aging stone.—
Little towns of street and spire,
Dooryard roses, heart's desire,
Light a dream within the mind,
Light a dream ... and fall behind.
World on world of summer kept
Turning, turning softly by,—
Summer earth and summer sky:
Fields of summer that will be
Summer always unto me—
Never lost, not left behind:
Always summer for my mind.
SUMMER
Comes this long wave of Summer, bursting white
In shivered apple-blossoms on the shore
That is our homeland for a day and night!
A wide, hushed spirit floats above the foam,
A sweetness that was ancient flower and face,
When wine-red poppies stained the walls of Rome,
And daisies starred those summer fields of Thrace.
Some fragrance that was petals, once, and lips,
And whispered, brief avowals that they made,—
Borne hither, now, in vague, invisible ships,
Whose weightless cargoes, poured upon the air,
Are flowers forgot, and faces that were fair.
OLD SHIPS
A weightless cargo in the musty hold,—
Of bright lagoons and prow-caressing lips,
Of stormy midnights,—and a tale untold.
They have remembered islands in the dawn,
And windy capes that tried their slender spars,
The tortuous channels where their keels have gone,
And calm, blue nights of stillness and the stars.
Or bitter seas, or winds that made them wise;
There is a dream upon them, evermore;—
And there be some who say that sunk ships rise
To seek familiar harbours in the night,
Blowing in mists, their spectral sails like light.
THE TOWN
(For Morristown, N. J.)
I
More tenderly than these their tree-lined Town
Which, lacking Muses for a wider praise,
Lives in their hearts in still and sweet renown.
The market square, the wagons in the dawn,
The streets like music when their names are said,
The Sunday spire, the green, untrammelled lawn,—
These be the things on which their hearts are fed.
That lifts her crosses for the Town to see
How sleep those quiet neighbours, townsmen still,
How there is peace for such as weary be ...
And as they come, each like a sleepy guest,
She takes them, one by one, and gives them rest.
II
SUNDAY MORNING
There is a hushed suspension on the air,
And the slow bells summon unhurried feet
To dim reclosures kept for praise and prayer.
Drawn blinds have shut the merchant's wares away,
Where two by two the goodly folk go by,
Out of their toilsome days into this day
Of special airs beneath a special sky.
The streets are stilled of passers up and down;
Only the pealing bells toll on and on,—
Till these, too, cease, and all the silent Town
In street, and roof, and spire, and grassy sod,
Lies steeped in sunlight, smiling back at God.