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The ride to the lady, and other poems cover

The ride to the lady, and other poems

Chapter 41: A MEMORY
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About This Book

A gathered sequence of lyrical poems moves between intimate feeling and contemplative observation, often using seasonal and landscape imagery to explore longing, memory, mortality, and faith. Some pieces take an elegiac or isolated cast, others celebrate renewal and triumphant natural energy; a handful of sonnets and shorter lyrics display formal control alongside varied moods. Frequent religious and classical allusions give a ceremonial tone while close sensory description and domestic scenes keep the verse immediate. The volume favors reflective, musical meditations rather than a single narrative, balancing refined diction with accessible emotional resonance.

TO SLEEP

  All slumb'rous images that be, combined,
  To this white couch and cool shall woo thee, Sleep!
  First will I think on fields of grasses deep
  In gray-green flower, o'er which the transient wind
  Runs like a smile; and next will call to mind
  How glistening poplar-tops, when breezes creep
  Among their leaves, a tender motion keep,
  Stroking the sky, like touch of lovers kind.

  Ah, having felt thy calm kiss on mine eyes,
  All night inspiring thy divine pure breath,
  I shall awake as into godhood born,
  And with a fresh, undaunted soul arise,
  Clear as the blue convolvulus at morn.
  —Dear bedfellow, deals thus thy brother, Death?

SISTER SNOW

  Praised be our Lord (to echo the sweet phrase
  Of saintly Francis) for our sister Snow:
  Whose soft, soft coming never man may know
  By any sound; whose down-light touch allays
  All fevers of worn earth. She clothes the days
  In garments without spot, and hence doth go
  Her noiseless shuttle swiftly to and fro,
  And very pure, and pleasant, are her ways.

  But yesterday, how loveless looked the skies!
  How cold the sun's last glance, and unbenign,
  Across the field forsaken, russet-leaved!
  Now pearly peace on all the landscape lies.
  —Wast thou not sent us, Sister, for a sign
  Of that vast Mercy of God, else unconceived?

RETROSPECT

  "Backward," he said, "dear heart I like to look
  To those half-spring, half-winter days, when first
  We drew together, ere the leaf-buds burst.
  Sunbeams were silver yet, keen gusts yet shook
  The boughs. Have you remembered that kind book,
  That for our sake Galeotto's part rehearsed,
  (The friend of lovers,—this time blessed, not cursed!)
  And that best hour, when reading we forsook?"

  She, listening, wore the smile a mother wears
  At childish fancies needless to control;
  Yet felt a fine, hid pain with pleasure blend.
  Better it seemed to think that love of theirs,
  Native as breath, eternal as the soul,
  Knew no beginning, could not have an end.

THE CONTRAST

  He loved her; having felt his love begin
  With that first look,—as lover oft avers.
  He made pale flowers his pleading ministers,
  Impressed sweet music, drew the springtime in
  To serve his suit; but when he could not win,
  Forgot her face and those gray eyes of hers;
  And at her name his pulse no longer stirs,
  And life goes on as though she had not been.

  She never loved him; but she loved Love so,
  So reverenced Love, that all her being shook
  At his demand whose entrance she denied.
  Her thoughts of him such tender color took
  As western skies that keep the afterglow.
  The words he spoke were with her till she died.

A MYSTERY

  That sunless day no living shadow swept
  Across the hills, fleet shadow chasing light,
  Twin of the sailing cloud: but, mists wool white,
  Slow-stealing mists, on those heaved shoulders crept,
  And wrought about the strong hills while they slept
  In witches' wise, and rapt their forms from sight.
  Dreams were they; less than dream, the noblest height
  And farthest; and the chilly woodland wept.

  A sunless day and sad: yet all the while
  Within the grave green twilight of the wood,
  inscrutable, immutable, apart,
  Hearkening the brook, whose song she understood,
  The secret birch-tree kept her silver smile,
  Strange as the peace that gleams at sorrow's heart.

TRIUMPH

  This windy sunlit morning after rain,
  The wet bright laurel laughs with beckoning gleam
  In the blown wood, whence breaks the wild white stream
  Rushing and flashing, glorying in its gain;
  Nor swerves nor parts, but with a swift disdain
  O'erleaps the boulders lying in long dream,
  Lapped in cold moss; and in its joy doth seem
  A wood-born creature bursting from a chain.

  And "Triumph, triumph, triumph!" is its hoarse
  Fierce-whispered word. O fond, and dost not know
  Thy triumph on another wise must be,—
  To render all the tribute of thy force,
  And lose thy little being in the flow
  Of the unvaunting river toward the sea!

IN WINTER, WITH THE BOOK WE READ IN SPRING

  The blackberry's bloom, when last we went this way,
  Veiled all her bowsome rods with trembling white;
  The robin's sunset breast gave forth delight
  At sunset hour; the wind was warm with May.
  Armored in ice the sere stems arch to-day,
  Each tiny thorn encased and argent bright;
  Where clung the birds that long have taken flight,
  Dead songless leaves cling fluttering on the spray.

  O hand in mine, that mak'st all paths the same,
  Being paths of peace, where falls nor chill nor gloom,
  Made sweet with ardors of an inward spring!
  I hold thee—frozen skies to rosy flame
  Are turned, and snows to living snows of bloom,
  And once again the gold-brown thrushes sing.

SERE WISDOM

  I had remembrance of a summer morn,
  When all the glistening field was softly stirred
  And like a child's in happy sleep I heard
  The low and healthful breathing of the corn.
  Late when the sumach's red was dulled and worn,
  And fainter grew the trite and troublous word
  Of tristful cricket, that replaced the bird,
  I sought the slope, and found a waste forlorn.

  Against that cold clear west, whence winter peers,
  All spectral stood the bleached stalks thin-leaved,
  Dry as papyrus kept a thousand years,
  And hissing whispered to the wind that grieved,
  It was a dream—we have no goodly ears—
  There was no summer-time—deceived! deceived!

ISOLATION

  White fog around, soft snow beneath the tread,
  All sunless, windless, tranced, the morning lay;
  All noiseless, trackless, new, the well-known way.
  The silence weighed upon the sense; in dread,
  "Alone, I am alone," I shuddering said,
  "And wander in a region where no ray
  Has ever shone, and as on earth's first day
  Or last, my kind are not yet born or dead."

  Yet not afar, meanwhile, there faltered feet
  Like mine, through that wide mystery of the snow,
  Nor could the old accustomed paths divine;
  And even as mine, unheard spake voices low,
  And hearts were near, that as my own heart beat,
  Warm hands, and faces fashioned like to mine.

THE LOST DRYAD

(TO EDITH M. THOMAS)

  Into what beech or silvern birch, O friend
  Suspected ever of a dryad strain,
  Hast crept at last, delighting to regain
  Thy sylvan house? Now whither shall I wend,
  Or by what wingèd post my greeting send,
  Bird, butterfly, or bee? Shall three moons wane,
  And yet not found?—Ah, surely it was pain
  Of old, for mortal youth his heart to lend
  To any hamadryad! In his hour
  Of simple trust, wild impulse him bereaves:
  She flees, she seeks her strait enmossèd bower
  And while he, searching, softly calls, and grieves,
  Oblivious, high above she laughs in leaves,
  Or patters tripping talk to the quick shower.

A MEMORY

  Though pent in stony streets, 'tis joy to know,
  'Tis joy, although we breathe a fainter air,
  The spirit of those places far and fair
  That we have loved, abides; and fern-scents flow
  Out of the wood's heart still, and shadows grow
  Long on remembered roads as warm days wear;
  And still the dark wild water, in its lair,
  The narrow chasm, stirs blindly to and fro.

  Delight is in the sea-gull's dancing wings,
  And sunshine wakes to rose the ruddy hue
  Of rocks; and from her tall wind-slanted stem
  A soft bright plume the goldenrod outflings
  Along the breeze, above a sea whose blue
  Is like the light that kindles through a gem.

THE GIFTS OF THE OAK

(FOR THE SEVENTIETH BIRTHDAY OF JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL)

  'There needs no crown to mark the forest's king.'
  Thus, long ago thou sang'st the sound-heart tree
  Sacred to sovereign Jove, and dear to thee
  Since first, a venturous youth with eyes of spring,—
  Whose pilgrim-staff each side put forth a wing,—
  Beneath the oak thou lingeredst lovingly
  To crave, as largess of his majesty,
  Firm-rooted strength, and grace of leaves that sing.

  He gave; we thank him! Graciousness as grave,
  And power as easeful as his own he gave;
  Long broodings rich with sun, and laughters kind;
  And singing leaves, whose later bronze is dear
  As the first amber of the budding year,—
  Whose voices answer the autumnnal wind.

THE STRAYED SINGER

(MATTHEW ARNOLD)

  He wandered from us long, oh, long ago,
  Rare singer, with the note unsatisfied;
  Into what charmèd wood, what shade star-eyed
  With the wind's April darlings, none may know.
  We lost him. Songless, one with seed to sow,
  Keen-smiling toiler, came in place, and plied
  His strength in furrowed field till eventide,
  And passed to slumber when the sun was low.

  But now,—as though Death spoke some mystic word
  Solving a spell,—present to thought appears
  The morn's estray, not him we saw but late;
  And on his lips the strain that once we heard,
  And in his hand, cool as with Springtime's tears,
  The melancholy wood-flowers delicate.

THE IMMORTAL WORD

  One soiled and shamed and foiled in this world's fight,
  Deserter from the host of God, that here
  Still darkly struggles,—waked from death in fear,
  And strove to screen his forehead from the white
  And blinding glory of the awful Light,
  The revelation and reproach austere.
  Then with strong hand outstretched a Shape drew near,
  Bright-browed, majestic, armored like a knight.

  "Great Angel, servant of the Highest, why
  Stoop'st thou to me?" although his lips were mute,
  His eyes inquired. The Shining One replied:
  "Thy Book, thy birth, life of thy life am I,
  Son of thy soul, thy youth's forgotten fruit.
  We two go up to judgment side by side."