The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sonnets and Verse
Title: Sonnets and Verse
Author: Hilaire Belloc
Release date: November 10, 2019 [eBook #60663]
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.)
SONNETS AND VERSE
BY
H. BELLOC
SONNETS AND VERSE
BY
H. BELLOC
DUCKWORTH & CO.
3 HENRIETTA STREET, LONDON, W.C.
First Published in 1923
All rights reserved
Made and Printed in Great Britain
by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh
To
JOHN SWINNERTON PHILLIMORE
A DEDICATION
WITH THIS BOOK OF VERSE
We took a most impertinent delight
In foolish, painted and misshapen toys
Which hidden mothers brought to us at night.
CONTENTS
| I. SONNETS | ||
|---|---|---|
| PAGE | ||
| I. | Lift up your Hearts in Gumber, laugh the Weald | 3 |
| II. | I was like one that keeps the Deck by Night | 4 |
| III. | Rise up and do begin the Day’s Adorning | 5 |
| IV. | The Winter Moon has such a quiet Car | 6 |
| V. | Whatever Moisture nourishes the Rose | 7 |
| VI. | Youth gave you to me, but I’ll not believe | 8 |
| VII. | Mortality is but the Stuff you wear | 9 |
| VIII. | Not for the Luckless Buds our Roots may bear | 10 |
| IX. | That which is one they Shear and make it Twain | 11 |
| X. | Shall any Man for whose strong love another | 12 |
| XI. | They that have taken Wages of things done | 13 |
| XII. | Beauty that Parent is to deathless Rhyme | 14 |
| XIII. | What are the Names for Beauty? Who shall praise | 15 |
| XIV. | Love wooing Honour, Honour’s Love did win | 16 |
| XV. | Your Life is like a little Winter’s Day | 17 |
| XVI. | Now shall the certain Purpose of my Soul | 18 |
| XVII. | Because my faltering Feet may fail to dare | 19 |
| XVIII. | When you to Acheron’s ugly Water come | 20 |
| XIX. | We will not Whisper, we have found the Place | 21 |
| XX. | I went to Sleep at Dawn in Tuscany | 22 |
| XXI. | Almighty God, whose Justice like a Sun | 23 |
| XXII. | Mother of all my Cities once there lay | 24 |
| XXIII. | November is that Historied Emperor | 25 |
| XXIV. | Hoar Time about the House betakes him Slow | 26 |
| XXV. | It Freezes: all across a soundless Sky | 27 |
| XXVI. | O my Companion, O my Sister Sleep | 28 |
| XXVII. | Are you the End, Despair, or the poor least | 29 |
| XXVIII. | But Oh! not Lovely Helen, nor the Pride | 30 |
| XXIX. | The World’s a Stage. The Light is in One’s Eyes | 31 |
| XXX. | The World’s a Stage—and I’m the Super Man | 32 |
| XXXI. | The World’s a Stage. The trifling Entrance Fee | 33 |
| LYRICAL, DIDACTIC AND GROTESQUE | ||
| To Dives | 37 | |
| Stanzas Written on Battersea Bridge during a South-Westerly Gale | 39 | |
| The South Country | 42 | |
| The Fanatic | 45 | |
| The Early Morning | 48 | |
| Our Lord and Our Lady | 49 | |
| Courtesy | 51 | |
| The Night | 53 | |
| The Leader | 54 | |
| A Bivouac | 56 | |
| To the Balliol Men still in Africa | 57 | |
| Verses to a Lord who, in the House of Lords, said that those who Opposed the South African Adventure confused Soldiers with Money-Grubbers | 59 | |
| The Rebel | 61 | |
| The Prophet Lost in the Hills at Evening | 63 | |
| The End of the Road | 65 | |
| An Oracle that Warned the Writer when on Pilgrimage | 67 | |
| The Death and Last Confession of Wandering Peter | 68 | |
| Dedicatory Ode | 70 | |
| Dedication on the Gift of a Book to a Child | 78 | |
| Dedication of a Child’s Book of Imaginary Tales | 79 | |
| Homage | 80 | |
| The Moon’s Funeral | 81 | |
| The Happy Journalist | 83 | |
| Lines to a Don | 85 | |
| Newdigate Poem | 88 | |
| The Yellow Mustard | 93 | |
| The Politician or the Irish Earldom | 94 | |
| The Loser | 96 | |
| SONGS | ||
| Noël | 99 | |
| The Birds | 101 | |
| In a Boat | 102 | |
| Song inviting the Influence of a Young Lady upon the Opening Year | 104 | |
| The Ring | 105 | |
| Cuckoo! | 106 | |
| The Little Serving Maid | 107 | |
| Auvergnat | 110 | |
| Drinking Song, on the Excellence of Burgundy Wine | 111 | |
| Drinking Dirge | 113 | |
| West Sussex Drinking Song | 115 | |
| A Ballad on Sociological Economics | 117 | |
| Heretics All | 118 | |
| Ha’nacker Mill | 119 | |
| Tarantella | 120 | |
| The Chaunty of the “Nona” | 122 | |
| The Winged Horse | 125 | |
| Strephon’s Song (from “The Cruel Shepherdess”) | 127 | |
| IV. BALLADES | ||
| Short Ballade and Postscript on Consols and Boers | 131 | |
| Ballade of the Unanswered Question | 134 | |
| Ballade to Our Lady of Czestochowa | 136 | |
| Ballade of Hell and of Mrs Roebeck | 138 | |
| Ballade of Unsuccessful Men | 140 | |
| Ballade of the Heresiarchs | 142 | |
| V. EPIGRAMS | 147 | |
| VI. THE BALLAD OF VAL-ÈS-DUNES | 157 | |
I
SONNETS
I
And you my mother the Valley of Arun sing.
Here am I homeward from my wandering
Here am I homeward and my heart is healed.
You my companions whom the World has tired
Come out to greet me. I have found a face
More beautiful than Gardens; more desired
Than boys in exile love their native place.
II
Bearing the tiller up against his breast;
I was like one whose soul is centred quite
In holding course although so hardly prest,
And veers with veering shock now left now right,
And strains his foothold still and still makes play
Of bending beams until the sacred light
Shows him high lands and heralds up the day.
III
The Summer dark is but the dawn of day.
The last of sunset fades into the morning;
The morning calls you from the dark away.
The holy mist, the white mist of the morning
Was wreathing upward on my lonely way.
The way was waiting for your own adorning
That should complete the broad adornéd day.
IV
That all the winter nights are dumb with rest.
She drives the gradual dark with drooping crest
And dreams go wandering from her drowsy star
Because the nights are silent do not wake
But there shall tremble through the general earth,
And over you, a quickening and a birth.
The Sun is near the hill-tops for your sake.
V
The Rose of the World in laughter’s garden-bed
Where Souls of men on faith secure are fed
And spirits immortal keep their pleasure-close.
Whatever moisture nourishes the Rose,
The burning Rose of the world, for me the same
To-day for me the spring without a name
Content or Grace or Laughter overflows.
VI
That Youth will, taking his quick self, take you.
Youth’s all our Truth: he cannot so deceive.
He has our graces, not our ownselves too.
He still compares with time when he’ll be spent,
By human doom enhancing what we are;
Enriches us with rare experiment,
Lends arms to leagured Age in Time’s rough war.
VII
To show the better on the imperfect sight.
Your home is surely with the changeless light
Of which you are the daughter and the heir.
For as you pass, the natural life of things
Proclaims the Resurrection: as you pass
Remembered summer shines across the grass
And somewhat in me of the immortal sings.
VIII
Now all in bloom, now seared and cankered lying
Will I entreat you, lest they should compare
Foredoomed humanity with the fall of flowers.
Hold thou with me the chaste communion rare
And touch with life this mortal case of ours:
You’re lifted up beyond the power of dying:
I die, as bounded things die everywhere.
IX
Who would Love’s light and dark discriminate:
His pleasure is one essence with his pain,
Even his desire twin brother to his hate.
With him the foiled attempt is half achieving;
And being mastered, to be armed a lord;
And doubting every chance is still believing;
And losing all one’s own is all reward.
X
Has thrown away his wealth and name in one,
Shall he turn mocker of a more than brother
To slight his need when his adventure’s done?
Or shall a breedless boy whose mother won him
In great men’s great concerns his little place
Turn when his farthing honours come upon him
To mock her yeoman air and conscious grace?
XI
When sense abused has blocked the doors of sense,
They that have lost their heritage of the sun,
Their laughter and their holy innocence;
They turn them now to this thing, now to t’other,
For anchor hold against swift-eddying time,
Some to that square of earth which was their mother,
And some to noisy fame, and some to rhyme.
XII
Was Manhood’s maker: you shall bear a Son,
Till Daughters linked adown admiring time
Fulfil the mother, handing Beauty on.
You shall by breeding make Life answer yet,
In Time’s despite, Time’s jeer that men go void;
Your stamp of heaven shall be more largely set
Than my one joy, ten thousand times enjoyed.
XIII
God’s pledge he can fulfil His creatures’ eyes?
Or what strong words of what creative phrase
Determine Beauty’s title in the skies?
But I will call you Beauty Personate,
Ambassadorial Beauty, and again
Beauty triumphant, Beauty in the Gate,
Beauty salvation of the souls of men.
XIV
And had his pleasure all a summer’s day.
Not understanding how the dooms begin,
Love wooing Honour, wooed her life away.
Then wandered he a full five years unrest
Until, one night, this Honour that had died
Came as he slept, in youth grown glorified
And smiling like the Saints whom God has blest.
XV
Whose sad sun rises late to set too soon;
You have just come—why will you go away,
Making an evening of what should be noon.
Your life is like a little flute complaining
A long way off, beyond the willow trees:
A long way off, and nothing left remaining
But memory of a music on the breeze.
XVI
By blind and empty things controlled be,
And mine audacious course to that far goal
Fall short, confessing mere mortality.
Limbs shall have movement and ignore their living,
Brain wit, that he his quickness may deny.
My promised hope forswears in act of giving,
Time eats me up and makes my words a lie.
XVII
The first descendant of the steps of Hell
Give me the Word in time that triumphs there.
I too must pass into the misty hollow
Where all our living laughter stops: and hark!
The tiny stuffless voices of the dark
Have called me, called me, till I needs must follow:
Give me the Word and I’ll attempt it well.
XVIII
Where darkness is and formless mourners brood
And down the shelves of that distasteful flood
Survey the human rank in order dumb.
When the pale dead go forward, tortured more
By nothingness and longing than by fire,
Which bear their hands in suppliance with desire,
With stretched desire for the ulterior shore.