When your lotions fail to heal—
When the salted scar is burning—
When aturtle turns the keel:
When the lights are lost to leeward—
When the last least hope is gone—
Then I call ye—Oh my children—
As a Mother calls her spawn.
By no sudden quick surcease:
Slow, so slow, ye cannot know it
Do I bring ye your release.
As the blackened heavens soften
To the morning’s growing gray,
And the gray spreads gold and crimson
Till in splendor breaks the day:
That ye may not know or see,
Do I soothe the salted searing—
Do I bid the shadows flee—
Do I weld the torn heart-cord
No surgeon art may heal,
Till ye lift the fastened latchet
And go forth in laughing weal.
I call my broken clan;
We may not meet in lane or street
Or greet us man and man:
But slowly spread my wide-leagued wings—
And falling tenderly,
I wrap my troubled Earth-spawn
Unto the heart of me.
MY LOVES
Then you must come with me
To every land of all the lands
And the waves of every sea.
Nor careth who discern,
For she’s the breeze o’ the Southern Seas
Where the egg-spume waters turn.
With a crushing grasp and wild,
For she was born o’ the six-months morn,
A strong, tumultuous child.
And the kiss is the rainbow spray,
Then laughing in glee, coquettishly,
She lightly trips away.
A dazzling beauty bold—
Lilac and rose and amber,
Scarlet and blazing gold.
And folds me nearer yet,
A blushing maid with crown of jade
Where the first pale stars are set.
Then you must come with me
To every land of all the lands
And the waves of every sea.
THE FORUM
Returning honored home:
Here rose the gorgeous temples
Of proud imperial Rome.
The endless seasons through:
Here reared the haughty Arches
The far-flung Nations knew.
King of the Outer Seas—
Where beat a heart, where stood a mart,
There bended suppliant knees—
Cradled among the hills,
Who still through the countless centuries
The wondering watcher thrills.
Power and Pride and Death—
And the afterlight of an Empire’s might—
And the soft Campania’s breath.
And Memory’s lingering wine,
And the grass and the scarlet poppies
And clover and dandelion.
THE MASTERPIECE
“Des Sohnes letzter Gruss” (“The Son’s last Salutation”). A modern painting by Karl Hoff in the Royal Picture Gallery, Dresden.
We gazed each priceless gem—
Jordäens—Rubens—Raphael—
We paused and pondered them.
The fatuous forms at ease—
And the Wedding Feast with Cavaliers—
And a drunken Hercules.
The farthest Nations know—
Till room on room of light and gloom
Swept row on outer row.
Whose praise the wide World sings;
And some we fled with callous dread
For flat and flaccid things.
In the room with the roof-let door,
We saw a young man standing—
The Lone Son bid to War.
Clean-limbed, clear-eyed and tall—
And the parting gaze of the parting ways
When the battered trumpets call.
And the prostrate, sobless grief;
And the pitying priest beside her,
And the gentle, vain relief.
’Twixt love, reproach and tears—
The tender light of the summer night
Where brood the unfathomed years.
Fair as the first, faint star:
A dainty symbol sent to prove
How near the angels are.
. . . . . . . . . .
We gleaned the gallery’s gorgeous wealth—
But lost its wondrous worth,
As we bowed a head in silence
To the Good of all the Earth.
THE HERITAGE
Full well they sowed the seed—
Full well they held by life and life
The seal of the title deed.
They waged a sacred fray:
Oh Sons of Iron Men give ye not
Your heritage away.
Ye’ve raised a mighty state;
But ’ware the pampered spirit,
Ere ye ’ware the worst too late.
Thrive ye forevermore,
But hold ye to the Iron Age—
The Iron Age of War.
With spirit stern and high,
Keep ye the ways o’ warrior days—
The days that may not die.
Maintain the armor bright,
For where ye’ve raised your fathers blazed—
Hold ye their honor white.
Unpampered, age on age—
Shall guarded stand their promised land—
Our Sacred Heritage.
THE ADJUSTING HOUR
With nobody else around,
And you sort o’ straighten things a bit,
Beginning right down at the ground.
When plans have gone askew,
And you stand with your back to the fire—
And only your God and you.
Pondering very slow,
And you lay the firm foundations
And you pray that they will grow—
That they who run may see,
What the Adjusting Hour
Has given to you and me.
THE OUTPOSTERS
Whence all the breezes fan,
From Cuba clear to Tokio
And back to Hindustan.
To see the Taj Mahal
Rise mystic white in the moonlit night
Above the Jumna wall.
We shook you by the hand,
And watched among Tosari’s hills
The lace Tjemaras stand:
High—majestic—bare—
Or Karnak’s columns rising sheer
Through the clear Egyptian air.
In the heart of Borneo,
Ere we hit the trail to northward
Where the lesser rivers flow:
And the endless jungles rise,
And the Dyak kampongs nestle ’neath
The speckless, fleckless skies.
The Roads of Singapore,
By the crooked, winding, white-walled streets
Of burning Bangalore:
Aglitter above the trees,
Where the tiny ti bells tinkle
In the sough of the sunset breeze:
Of the great Sri Rangam rise,
To Bangkok’s triple temple roofs,
Red-gold against the skies:
By Hong Kong’s towering lights—
By the gorgeous Rajputana stars
That blazon the blue-black nights:
Outposters—far—alone—
Beyond the glut of the cities’ rut,
And we claim you for our own.
And the roar of the rolling cart,
Beyond the blind of the stifled mind
And the hawking, haggling mart.)
And some were “18 fine”—
But on the whole—we saw your soul—
Oh outbound kin of mine.
By every ocean, gulf and land,
Stout hearts and humble knees:
Oh men of the Outer Reaches—
Oh men of the palm-lined beaches—
Oh men where the ice-pack bleaches—
Oh Brethren o’ the far-flung seas.
[A] Pronounced Poorook Jow.
WONDERING
Looking o’er the sea,
Winking at the little stars,
While they wink at me.
Wondering how it happened
Ages long ago,
Wondering why I’m here to night—
Wondering where I’ll go.
Bends his mighty tail,
Wondering if the Archer’s aim
Makes Antares quail:
Wondering why Australia’s Crown
Happened to be made,
Wondering if I really ought
Not to be afraid.
Ever has a bend,
Wondering if the Milky Way
Ever has an end,
Wondering why the Southern Cross
Has an arm askew,
Wondering lots o’ funny things,
(I wonder, wouldn’t you?)
Wondering if He’d see
Anything so very small
Just as you or me?
Wondering and wondering—
But still the echoes fail—
And so I’m left awondering
Over the silent rail.
LINES TO AN ELDERLY FRIEND
Written in a presentation copy of “My Bunkie and Other Ballads” given to A. Van Vleck, Esq., of New York City.
In the doldrums’ deadly pause,
Where the lights above the Polar capes
Spread out in a golden gauze:
Where lilac tints are listing
O’er purple tropic seas—
Where the Arctic winds are whistling
And the north-flung rivers freeze—
We’ve met the men the Maker made
To dwell ’neath fir and palm—
And, we salute thee, friend and man—
M’sieur—le gentilhomme.
BATTLESHIPS
Addressed to “little-navy” Congressmen.
Fools there’ll live when the Nations melt in the mold of the markless sod.
Fools there are and fools there were and fools there’ll ever be—
But none like the fools whom the ages teach, and then refuse to see.
The Other Peoples laden down with debt—
In the richest of the Nations you’ll cut appropriations,
But the Day of Reckoning—have ye counted yet?
Weigh the cost, and gasp, and pare it down again;
Till the twelve-inch children roar and the troop-ships grate the shore
And you hear the coming tread of marching men.
Build a Fleet and build it swiftly overnight;
Ah truly ye who knew it all these years can surely do it,
For ye and only ye alone are right.
Go gaze adown the peaceful, busy street;
May the prestige of your town be your all-in-all renown,
And scorn the men who bid you, “BUILD THE FLEET.”
Much they’ll help a scarred and battle-riven land.
Oh they’ll do a monstrous earning when the crops they grow are burning—
Because you would not hear the clear command.
And the Sneaking Cur that watches on the west—
You’ll bargain, skimp and whine till the gray hulls lift the line,
And your children stand betrayèd and confessed.
For the sake of “politics” or local greed—
Will you brand yourselves arch traitors to the Nation—
You, the sons of men who served us in our need?
A land our faithful Fathers fell to save,
By the bleaching bones of Valley Forge and Monmouth
Or the crimson flood the Bloody Angle gave?
Will you learn War’s callous, lurid, livid wrath
By the wailing ’long the wayside, by the ashes of the cities,
Ere your gathered army flings across their path?
You may call our race the Chosen of the Lord—
But if your town they raze—and if your home’s ablaze
You will wake and learn the Kingdom of the Sword.
You will wake and learn the truth—but all too late:
By the shrieking shrapnel’s crying—by the homeless, wronged and dying—
You shall count what, you begrudged to Guard the Gate.
THE AMERICAN FLAG
It should be needless to note that the persons here addressed do not comprise the whole American people but a certain distinctive type.
Oh fatted pigs of a sty,
Through the Star Spangled Banner ye calmly sit,
Nor see the wrong, nor the why,
And ye stand with your hats on your thoughtless heads,
When the Flag of the Nation goes by.
Till the fetid brain’s grown cold,
Till ye forget the days that are set
And the glorious deeds of old—
And the Song and the Passing Colors
Are drowned in a flood of gold?
Arise and understand
The battle-hymn of your fathers—
And the Flag of your Fatherland—
To the drum and the bugle’s call;
As it tasted the dregs of raw reverse—
As it rushed through the breach in the wall:
Till new hands swung it high—
As it dipped in rest to East and West
Where it watched its Children die:
And the great gulls reeled in fright;
As it bore the brave ’neath the whispering wave
To the Squadron’s hushed Goodnight:
Till, far o’er land and sea,
It gave each fold to the sunlight’s gold—
And the name of Victory.
Of the Anthem rolls on high—
And see that ye stand uncovered
To the Colors passing by
And pray to your God for strength to guard
The Flag ye glorify.
THE GREAT DOCTORS
Kings above the Kings—
Fame beyond all earthly fame
Where the censer swings.
Patient, cautious, calm—
E’en as the ministering angels—
Even as Gilead’s Balm—
Where hope has fled apace,
And the Reaper’s scythe is swaying
Across the ashen face.
No thundering cheer and drum—
As creeps the light of the starlit night
God’s Emissaries come.
Or ever it snaps in twain;
And as the light of the starlit night
They silently pass again.
THE DREAMER AND THE DOER
High in th’ empyrean blue,
And slowly it passed until at last
He called to the Man he knew—
“Look, thou Dolt of the Blinded Heart—
Slave of Rod and Rule—
And drink of the wine of my sight divine—
Oh churl of a plodding school!”
And hammered and pieced again,
But his eyes they were on the things that he saw—
The Things of the Earth-bound Men:
And he called to the Dreamer passing—
“Oh stop, thou fool, and see
On water and land the work of my hand,
For the service of such as thee.”
SPAIN
And we call the vision Rome,
Where the close-locked legions trample
And the triremes cut the foam.
Grace and regal beauty—
And Athena’s temples rise
Above the fertile Attic plains
And blue Ægean skies.
But when, in wanton whispers
Creeps o’er the tired brain
The word Romance, there falls the trance—
The spell of olden Spain.
. . . . . . . . . .
The humdrum of the city
The workshop and the street,
They gently slip behind us—
As glide our tired feet
O’er the pavements of Sevilla,
Where the Grandees pass again
To ogle in the balconies
The matchless eyes of Spain.
In the great square tower ring—
Once more the sword and cowl draw back—
“The King—make way—The King!”
Sevilla—Mother of a world
Of pride and golden gain,
And greed and love and laughter
Of Periclean Spain.
Or coral-locked lagoon,
We watch the bowsprit cutting
The pathway of the moon.
The long white beach, the swaying palms’
Shifting silver sheen—
And the flickering flares of the flimsy fleet
Where the spear-poised fishers lean.
The flaunting skull and bones—
The buccaneer on his poop-deck
Roaring in thunder tones
To a swarthy, ill-begotten crew—
As slow the daylight dies,
And he lifts with a smile the chartless isle
Where the buried treasure lies.
Caressing heart and brain:
Harp, guitar and mandolin
In languorous, limpid strain.
The fluttering fan—the furtive glance—
The black mantilla’s reign—
And the Captains bold who drop their gold
To bask in the eyes of Spain.
Thrice-tiered above the foam:
The ringing round-shot roaring,
And the crash of the hit gone home:
The yard-arms staggering under,
Where, scorning the iron rain
And showing its fangs to a parting world,
Goes down the Lion of Spain.
. . . . . . . . . .
When the clattering city cloys you
With the stress of its strident call—
When practical, calculating Things
Are domineering all—
When your clamped mind in its weariness
To Romance turns again,
Seek ye the Andalusian crags—
The flare of the gold and crimson flags—
And the scented breath where the night wind drags
Through the Isles of the Spanish Main.
C. Q. D.
THE PRESENT-DAY “S. O. S.”
Hush at my outer breath,
As sightless I glide o’er the wind-lashed tide
In my race with the deep-sea death.
War and Trade and the Laws ye made
Halt at the Letters Three,
Bound on my errand of mercy—I—
The ultimate C.Q.D.
Though it tower a hundred feet;
No storm shall ever stay me,
Though sky and waters meet.
Piercing the howling heavens—
Skimming the churning sea—
Through blast and gale I bring the tale—
I—the pitying C.Q.D.
THE LIGHTS
Across a tranquil main,
By beam and beam so bright they seem
A laughing, endless chain.
Nor flash nor leap nor fail—
But slowly burn where the billows churn
In the teeth of the driving gale.
Are welcome sights to see—
But the foul-weather lights o’ the stormy nights,
Are the Lamps of the Years to be.
THE CHOSEN
To each and each the deed,
And never a word was ever heard
Of Prophet or Saint or Creed.
But the path that each had run,
Till the purple mist stooped down and kissed
And said that the work was done.
Nor gold could bend or buy:
And there stood she of the Mother Love
That never asketh why.
But striving, gained the Crest:
And there stood she who nursed them back
With bullet-ridden breast.
But the left—it never knew:
And there stood she who held him fast
When the Beckoning Whispers blew.
By fire, sea or sword:
And these were Chiefs of the Upper Hosts
And first before the Lord.
Higher than any stand,
I saw the chosen of the King
At the right of the Master’s hand.
And the silent face aglow,
Till the Guiding One It answered me
The word that I wished to know—
Where the shrieking bullet sings,
The roaring front lines reel and rock
As a wounded vulture swings.
The quivering squadrons break,
Till the shattered herds catch up the words,
‘Back, back for your Country’s sake!’”
THE FAIREST MOON
Above the waving grain,
Oh ye who tell of the silent moon
That glitters across the plain.
That lifts each peak and crag,
Oh ye who tell of the ocean moon
Where the long, black shadows drag.
In wanton ecstasy,
Ye never tell of the fairest moon—
The fairest moon to me.
Above the lake-side pine,
And good is your song of the circling moon
Where snowy meadows shine.
Where dazzling rapids leap:
For wondrous bright is the fairy sight
Of the soul of a World asleep.
With a rough and ragged rim,
And a mystic light that makes the night
All bright but doubly dim....
O’er the shift of a swinging sea
With a mellow fold o’ silver gold,
Reveals my moon to me.
THE STRIVER
By East and West anew,
Where, roaring through the riven tape
The sweeping Conqueror drew.
And East and West they rose and blest
With laurel wreath and cheers,
As they had done ’neath every sun
Adorn the countless years.
A faltering footfall trailed,
Till broken flesh that called on flesh
Stumbled and rocked and failed.
A well run dry—a sightless sky—
Where mind and matter part:
A quivering frame—a nameless name—
Wrapped in a lion’s heart.