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Songs of love and empire

Chapter 22: III
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About This Book

A late‑Victorian verse collection blends patriotic and imperial reflection with intimate lyric poems, ballads, and devotional pieces. The book moves from stirring tributes to martial memory and national duty through narrative ballads and ghostly or romantic sketches, then into domestic and pastoral lyrics about love, longing, and seasonal change, and ends with hymns and meditative elegies. Recurring concerns are memory, honor, grief, and the interplay between public glory and private feeling; tones range from celebratory and declamatory to quiet, introspective, and mournful, using direct address, narrative balladry, and vivid natural imagery.

Laurels, bring laurels, sheaves on sheaves,
Till England’s boughs are bare of leaves!
Soon comes the flower more rare, more dear
Than any laurel this year weaves—
The Aloe of the hundredth year
Since from the smoke of Trafalgar
He passed to where the heroes are,
Nelson, who passed and yet is here,
Whose dust is fire beneath our feet,
Whose memory mans our fleet.

A SONG OF TRAFALGAR

WATERLOO DAY

[June 18]

A SONG OF PEACE AND HONOUR

[December, 1895]

TO   THE   QUEEN

II

THE BALLAD OF THE WHITE LADY

Sir Geoffrey met the white lady
Upon his marriage morn,
Her eyes were blue as cornflowers are,
Her hair was gold like corn.

THE GHOST BEREFT

The poor ghost came through the wind and rain
And passed down the old dear road again.
Thin cowered the hedges, the tall trees swayed
Like little children that shrank afraid.
The wind was wild and the night was late
When the poor ghost came to the garden gate;
Dank were the flower-beds, heavy and wet,
The weeds stood up where the rose was set.

THE VAIN SPELL

THE ADVENTURER

IN THE ENCHANTED TOWER

FAITH

THE REFUSAL

PRELUDE

Out of the west when the sun was dying
Clouds of white wings came flying, flying,
Wheeling and whirling they swept away
Into the heart of the eastern gray;
But one white dove came straight to my breast
Out of the west.
Into the west when the dawn was pearly
Clouds of white wings went, dewy-early,
Straight from the world of the waning stars;
O beating pinions! O prison bars!
My dove flies free no more with the rest
Into the west.

AT THE SOUND OF THE DRUM

THE GOOSE-GIRL

THE PEDLAR

THE GUARDIAN ANGEL

When my good-nights and prayers are said
And I am safe tucked up in bed,
I know my guardian angel stands
And holds my soul between his hands.
I cannot see his wings of light
Because I keep my eyes shut tight,
For, if I open them, I know
My pretty angel has to go.
But through the darkness I can hear
His white wings rustling very near;
I know it is his darling wings,
Not Mother folding up my things!

III

“SHEPHERDS ALL AND MAIDENS FAIR”

A PORTRAIT

THE OFFERING