The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Magic House, and Other Poems
Title: The Magic House, and Other Poems
Author: Duncan Campbell Scott
Release date: August 25, 2016 [eBook #52898]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Chuck Greif and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
book was produced from scanned images of public domain
material from the Google Books project.)
THE MAGIC HOUSE
THE MAGIC HOUSE
A N D O T H E R P O E M S
BY
DUNCAN CAMPBELL SCOTT
METHUEN AND CO.
18 BURY STREET, W.C.
LONDON
1893
Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to Her Majesty
TO
MY MOTHER
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| A LITTLE SONG | |
| The sunset in the rosy west, | 1 |
| THE HILL PATH | |
| Are the little breezes blind, | 2 |
| THE VOICE AND THE DUSK | |
| The slender moon and one pale star, | 5 |
| FOR REMEMBRANCE | |
| It would be sweet to think when we are old, | 7 |
| THE MESSAGE | |
| Wind of the gentle summer night, | 8 |
| THE SILENCE OF LOVE | |
| My heart would need the earth, | 10 |
| AN IMPROMPTU | |
| The stars are in the ebon sky, | 11 |
| FROM THE FARM ON THE HILL | |
| The night wind moves the gloom, | 13 |
| AT SCARBORO’ BEACH | |
| The wave is over the foaming reef, | 15 |
| THE FIFTEENTH OF APRIL | |
| Pallid saffron glows the broken stubble, | 17 |
| IN AN OLD QUARRY | |
| Above the lifeless pools the mist films swim, | 19 |
| TO WINTER | |
| Come, O thou conqueror of the flying year, | 20 |
| TO WINTER | |
| Come, O thou season of intense repose, | 21 |
| THE IDEAL | |
| Let your soul grow a thing apart, | 22 |
| A SUMMER STORM | |
| Last night a storm fell on the world, | 23 |
| LIFE AND DEATH | |
| I thought of death beside the lonely sea, | 25 |
| IN THE COUNTRY CHURCHYARD | |
| This is the acre of unfathomed rest, | 26 |
| SONG | |
| I have done, | 32 |
| THE MAGIC HOUSE | |
| In her chamber, wheresoe’er, | 33 |
| IN THE HOUSE OF DREAMS | |
| The lady Lillian knelt upon the sward, | 36 |
| THE RIVER TOWN | |
| There’s a town where shadows run, | 38 |
| OFF THE ISLE AUX COUDRES | |
| The moon, Capella, and the Pleiades, | 40 |
| AT LES EBOULEMENTS | |
| The bay is set with ashy sails, | 41 |
| ABOVE ST. IRÉNÉE | |
| I rested on the breezy height, | 42 |
| WRITTEN IN A. LAMPMAN’S POEMS | |
| When April moved in maiden guise, | 45 |
| OFF RIVIÈRE DU LOUP | |
| O ship incoming from the sea, | 48 |
| AT THE CEDARS | |
| You had two girls—Baptiste— | 50 |
| THE END OF THE DAY | |
| I hear the bells at eventide, | 54 |
| THE REED-PLAYER | |
| By a dim shore where water darkening, | 56 |
| A FLOCK OF SHEEP | |
| Over the field the bright air clings and tingles, | 58 |
| A PORTRAIT | |
| All her hair is softly set, | 60 |
| AT THE LATTICE | |
| Good-night, Marie, I kiss thine eyes, | 63 |
| THE FIRST SNOW | |
| The field pools gathered into frosted lace, | 64 |
| IN NOVEMBER | |
| The ruddy sunset lies, | 66 |
| THE SLEEPER | |
| Touched with some divine repose, | 68 |
| A NIGHT IN JUNE | |
| The world is heated seven times, | 70 |
| MEMORY | |
| I see a schooner in the bay, | 72 |
| YOUTH AND TIME | |
| Move not so lightly, Time, away, | 73 |
| A MEMORY OF THE ‘INFERNO’ | |
| An hour before the dawn I dreamed of you, | 74 |
| LA BELLE FERONIÈRE, | |
| I never trod where Leonardo was, | 75 |
| A NOVEMBER DAY | |
| There are no clouds above the world, | 76 |
| OTTAWA | |
| City about whose brow the north winds blow, | 78 |
| SONG | |
| Here’s the last rose, | 79 |
| NIGHT AND THE PINES | |
| Here in the pine shade is the nest of night, | 80 |
| A NIGHT IN MARCH | |
| At eve the fiery sun went forth, | 82 |
| SEPTEMBER | |
| The morns are grey with haze and faintly cold, | 86 |
| BY THE WILLOW SPRING | |
| Come hither, Care, and look on this fair place, | 87 |
A LITTLE SONG
Burned soft and high;
A shore-lark fell like a stone to his nest
In the waving rye.
From the dreamy lawn,
The pansies nodded their purple heads,
The poppies began to yawn.
Only his gentle breath:
But a rose lay strewn in a snowy heap,
For the rose it was only death.
And only one death to die:
Good-morrow, new world, have you nothing to give?—
Good-bye, old world, good-bye.
THE HILL PATH
TO H.D.S.
They that push me as they pass?
Do they search the tangled grass
For some path they want to find?
Take my fingers, little wind;
You are all alone, and I
Am alone too. I will guide,
You will follow; let us go
By a pathway that I know,
Leading down the steep hillside,
Past the little sharp-lipped pools,
Shrunken with the summer sun,
Where the sparrows come to drink;
And we’ll scare the little birds,
Coming on them unawares;
And the daisies every one
We will startle on the brink
Of a doze.
(Gently, gently, little wind),
Very soon a wood we’ll see,
There my lover waits for me.
(Go more gently, little wind,
You should follow soft, behind.)
You will hear my lover say
How he loves me night and day,
But his words you must not tell
To the other little winds,
For they all might come to hear,
And might rustle through the wood,
And disturb the solitude.
(Blow more softly, little wind,
You are tossing all my hair,
Go more gently, have a care;
If you lead you can’t be blind,
So,—good-bye:)
There he goes: I see his feet
On the grass;
Now the little pools are blurred
As they pass;
And he must be very fleet,
For I see the bushes stirred
Near the wood. I hope he’ll tell,
If he isn’t out of breath,
That he met me on the hill.
But I hope he will not say
That he kissed me for good-bye
Just before he flew away.
THE VOICE AND THE DUSK
A rose-leaf and a silver bee
From some god’s garden blown afar,
Go down the gold deep tranquilly.
A mighty town with tower and spire,
From a cloud bastion masked with rose
The lightning flashes diamond fire.
The purlieus of the iris fen;
The king-bird rushes up and out,
He screams and whirls and screams again.
Of cedar buds and tamarac bloom,
He throws his rapid flexile phrase,
A flash of emeralds in the gloom.
A happy love of long ago;
Ah! tender voice, be still, be still,
‘’Tis sometimes better not to know.’
Floats tremblingly along the plain,
Where in the reeds with fairy light
The lingering fireflies gleam again.
Or drifted from some ferny rise,
The swooning of the golden throat
Drops in the mellow dusk and dies.
A wave leaps silverly and stirs
The rustling sedge, and then is gone
Down the black cavern in the firs.
FOR REMEMBRANCE
Of all the pleasant days that came to pass,
That here we took the berries from the grass,
There charmed the bees with pans, and smoke unrolled,
And spread the melon nets when nights were cold,
Or pulled the blood-root in the underbrush,
And marked the ringing of the tawny thrush,
While all the west was broken burning gold.
As girls press pansies in the poet’s leaves
And find them afterwards with sweet surprise;
Or treasure petals mingled with perfume,
Loosing them in the days when April grieves,—
A subtle summer in the rainy room.
THE MESSAGE
Dwell in the lilac tree,
Sway the blossoms clustered light,
Then blow over to me.
You frighten the ships at sea,
Now come floating your delicate freight
Out of the lilac tree.
To ferry a scent so light,
Will you carry my love a message as frail
Through the hawk-haunted night?
Bitter and bold and free,
I scare the beautiful timid child,
As you frighten the ships at sea;
With the golden stars above,
The only thing my heart can bear
Is a lilac message of love.
Up to her window white;
Give her a gentle tender kiss,
Bid her good-night—good-night.
THE SILENCE OF LOVE
My voice would need the sea,
To only tell the one half
How dear you are to me.
The stars and the planets as well,
I might tell the other half,
Or perhaps I would try to tell.
AN IMPROMPTU
Burning, gold, alone;
The wind roars over the rolling earth,
Like water over a stone.
The stream runs over,
They see the iris, and arrowhead,
Anemone, and clover.
For all their strife,
For the strong river swirls and swings—
And that is much like life.
And there’s something bright above;
But the ills of breathing only seem,
When we know the light is love.
Burning, gold, alone;
The wind roars over the rolling earth,
Like water over a stone.
FROM THE FARM ON THE HILL
TO A.P.S.
In the shadowy basswood;
Mysteriously the leaves sway and sing;
So slow, so tender is the wind,
The slender elm-tree
Is hardly stirred.
With diaphanous tissue;
Through their dissolving films
The stars shine,
But how infinitely removed;
How inaccessible!
Under the obscure towers
The lights of watchers gleam;
From the dim fields
At intervals in the silence
A cuckoo utters
A distorted cry;
Through the low woods,
Haunted with vain melancholy,
A whip-poor-will wanders,
Forcing his monotonous song.
Of the human spirit
Has returned upon me in this hour,
All the wild longing
That cannot be satisfied.
Break, O anguish of nature,
Into some glorious sound!
Let me touch the next circle of being,
For I have compassed this life.
AT SCARBORO’ BEACH
Leaping alive in the sun,
Seaward the opal sails are blown
Vanishing one by one.
To the sunny coast of Spain,
And the ships that sail so deftly out
May never come home again.
There’s a shadow on the land,
But the sea is in the splendid sun,
Plunging so careless and grand.
Ready to mount and fly;
Whenever a ripple reaches their feet
They rise with a timorous cry.
For this is the treacherous main,
And though you may sail so deftly out,
You may never come home again.
THE FIFTEENTH OF APRIL
TO A.L.
Brimmed with silver lie the ruts,
Purple the ploughed hill;
Down a sluice with break and bubble
Hollow falls the rill;
Falls and spreads and searches,
Where, beyond the wood,
Starts a group of silver birches,
Bursting into bud.
Down a path of rosy gold
Floats the slender moon;
Ringing from the rounded barrow
Rolls the robin’s tune;
Lighter than the robin; hark!
Quivering silver-strong
From the field a hidden shore-lark
Shakes his sparkling song.
Dimmer grow the burnished rills,
Breezes creep and halt,
Soon the guardian night shall kindle
In the violet vault,
All the twinkling tapers
Touched with steady gold,
Burning through the lawny vapours
Where they float and fold.
IN AN OLD QUARRY
NOVEMBER
On the lowlands where sedges chaff and nod;
The withered fringes of the golden-rod
Hang frayed and formless at the quarry’s rim.
Filled with the wine of sunset to the brim,
These limestone pits are cups for the night god,
Set for his lips when he strays hither, shod
With shadows, all the stars following him.
And as gloom grows and deepens like a psalm,
This broken field which summer has passed by
Has caught the ultimate lethean calm,
The fabulous quiet of far Thessaly,
And though the land has lost the bloom and balm,
Nature is all content in liberty.
TO WINTER
Come from thy fastness of the Arctic suns;
Mass on the purple waste and wide frontier
Thy wanish hosts and silver clarions.
With shifting bastions; let thy storm winds blare;
Drift wide thy pallid gonfalon unfurled;
And arm with daggers all the desperate air.
Thou art a gentle giant that half sleeps,
And blusters grandly to his frozen thralls,
The more to charm them with the wealth he keeps:
When over the first flower sings the first bird.
TO WINTER
Come with thy lidded eyes and crystal breath;
Come gently with thy soft release of snows;
And bring thy few short months of tender death.
With green clear chambers in the icy rift,
Carve the sleep rune above the crystal door,
And trench a legend in the pallid drift.
Watching the confines of the world’s great sleep;
Spread the vast province of the purple sky,
With thy wan curtains dropped from deep to deep.
Pass gently, leave the tired world in peace.
THE IDEAL
Untroubled by the restless day,
Sublimed by some unconscious art,
Controlled by some divine delay.
Who fret along its shallow bars:
Swing out the boom to float or sink
And front the ocean and the stars.
A SUMMER STORM
From heights of drouth and heat,
The surly clouds for weeks were furled,
The air could only sway and beat,
The hawks fell twanging from the sky,
The west unrolled a feathery wind,
And the night fell sullenly.
Like the shadow of doom,
The poignard lightning searched the air,
The thunder ripped the shattered gloom,
Full-voiced and clamorous and deep,
The weary world had its heart’s desire,
And fell asleep.
The clouds are sailing by
Clearly, oh! so clearly,
The distant mountains lie.
The clouds obey his will,
They part and part and onward go,
Travelling together still.
On a morning that’s so fair,
For nothing seems to stir or strive,
In the unconscious air.
Ringing so wild and free;
Only one bird has a blither mood,
The white-throat on the tree.
LIFE AND DEATH
That went beyond the limit of my sight,
Seeming the image of his mastery,
The semblance of his huge and gloomy might.
With sober bulk and adamantine hold,
The water but a mantle for her girth,
That played about her splendour fold on fold.
That stretched from the wet sands’ last wavy crease,
Beneath the sea’s remote and sombre roar,
To inland stillness and the wilds of peace.
Life is the sovereign presence everywhere.