Econlib

The Library

Other Sites

Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow i.: poems. - The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vol. 9 (Poems)

Return to Title Page for The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vol. 9 (Poems)

Search this Title:

Also in the Library:

Subject Area: Literature

i.: poems. - Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vol. 9 (Poems) [1909]

Edition used:

The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, in 12 vols. Fireside Edition (Boston and New York, 1909).

Part of: The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, in 12 vols. (Fireside Edition).

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


i.

poems.

poems.

the sphinx.

    • The Sphinx is drowsy,
    • Her wings are furled:
    • Her ear is heavy,
    • She broods on the world.
    • “Who'll tell me my secret,
    • The ages have kept?—
    • I awaited the seer
    • While they slumbered and slept:—
    • “The fate of the man-child,
    • The meaning of man;
    • Known fruit of the unknown;
    • Dædalian plan;
    • Out of sleeping a waking,
    • Out of waking a sleep;
    • Life death overtaking;
    • Deep underneath deep?
    • “Erect as a sunbeam
    • Upspringeth the palm;
    • The elephant browses
    • Undaunted and calm;
    • In beautiful motion
    • The thrush plies his wings;
    • Kind leaves of his covert,
    • Your silence he sings.
    • “The waves, unashamed,
    • In difference sweet,
    • Play glad with the breezes,
    • Old playfellows meet;
    • The journeying atoms,
    • Primordial wholes,
    • Firmly draw, firmly drive,
    • By their animate poles.
    • “sea, earth, air, sound, silence,
    • Plant, quadruped, bird,
    • By one music enchanted,
    • One deity stirred,—
    • Each the other adorning,
    • Accompany still;
    • Night veileth the morning,
    • The vapor the hill.
    • “The babe by its mother
    • Lies bathed in joy;
    • Glide its hours uncounted,—
    • The sun is its toy;
    • Shines the peace of all being,
    • Without cloud, in its eyes;
    • And the sum of the world
    • In soft miniature lies.
    • “But man crouches and blushes,
    • Absconds and conceals
    • He creepeth and peepeth,
    • He palters and steals;
    • Intirm, melaneholy,
    • Jealous glancing around,
    • An oaf, an accomplice,
    • He poisons the ground.
    • “Out spoke the great mother,
    • Beholding his tear;—
    • At the sound of her accents
    • Cold shuddered the sphere:—
    • ‘Who has drugged my boy's cup?
    • Who has mixed my boy's bread?
    • Who, with sadness and madness,
    • Has turned my child's head?’”
    • I heard a poet answer
    • Aloud and cheerfully,
    • “Say on, sweet Sphinx! thy dirges
    • Are pleasant songs to me.
    • Deep love lieth under
    • These pictures of time;
    • They fade in the light of
    • Their meaning sublime.
    • “The fiend that man harries
    • Is love of the Best;
    • Yawns the pit of the Dragon,
    • Lit by rays from the Blest.
    • The Lethe of Nature
    • Can't trance him again,
    • Whose soul sees the perfect,
    • Which his eyes seek in vain,
    • “To vision prof bunder
    • Man's spirit must dive;
    • His aye-rolling orb
    • At no goal will arrive;
    • The heavens that now draw him
    • With sweetness untold,
    • Once found,—for new heavens
    • He spurneth the old.
    • “Pride ruined the angels,
    • Their shame them restores;
    • Lurks the joy that is sweetest
    • In stings of remorse.
    • Have I a lover
    • Who is noble and free?—
    • I would he were nobler
    • Than to love me.
    • “Eterne alternation
    • Now follows, now flies;
    • And under pain, pleasure,—
    • Under pleasure, pain lies.
    • Love works at the centre,
    • Heart-heaving alway;
    • Forth speed the strong pulses
    • To the borders of day.
    • “Dull Sphinx, Jove keep thy five wits;
    • Thy sight is growing blear;
    • Rue, myrrh and cummin for the Sphinx,
    • Her muddy eyes to clear!”
    • The old Sphinx bit her thick lip,—
    • Said, “Who taught thee me to name?
    • I am thy spirit, yoke-fellow,
    • Of thine eye I am eyebeam.
    • “Thou art the unanswered question;
    • Couldst see thy proper eye,
    • Alway it asketh, asketh;
    • And each answer is a lie.
    • So take thy quest through nature,
    • It through thousand natures ply;
    • Ask on, thou clothed eternity;
    • Time is the false reply.”
    • Uprose the merry Sphinx,
    • And crouched no more in stone;
    • She melted into purple cloud,
    • She silvered in the moon;
    • She spired into a yellow flame;
    • She flowered in blossoms red;
    • She flowed into a foaming wave;
    • She stood Monadnoc's head.
    • Thorough a thousand voices
    • Spoke the universal dame;
    • “Who telleth one of my meanings,
    • Is master of all I am.”

each and all.

    • Little thinks, in the field, yon red-cloaked down
    • Of thee from the hill-top looking down;
    • The heifer that lows in the upland farm,
    • Far-heard, lows not thine ear to charm;
    • The sexton, tolling his bell at noon,
    • Deems not that great Napoleon
    • Stops his horse, and lists with delight,
    • Whilst his files sweep round yon Alpine height;
    • Nor knowest thou what argument
    • Thy life to thy neighbor's creed has lent.
    • All are needed by each one;
    • Nothing is fair or good alone.
    • I thought the sparrow's note from heaven,
    • Singing at dawn on the alder bough;
    • I brought him home, in his nest, at even;
    • He sings the song, but it cheers not now,
    • For I did not bring home the river and sky;—
    • He sang to my ear,—they sang to my eye.
    • The delicate shells lay on the shore;
    • The bubbles of the latest wave
    • Fresh pearls to their enamel gave,
    • And the bellowing of the savage sea
    • Greeted their safe escape to me.
    • I wiped away the weeds and foam,
    • I fetched my sea-born treasures home;
    • But the poor, unsightly, noisome things
    • Had left their beauty on the shore
    • With the sun and the sand and the wild uproar.
    • The lover watched his graceful maid,
    • As ‘mid the virgin train she strayed,
    • Nor knew her beauty's best attire
    • Was woven still by the snow-white choir.
    • At last she came to his hermitage,
    • Like the bird from the woodlands to the cage;—
    • The gay enchantment was undone,
    • A gentle wife, but fairy none.
    • Then I said, ‘I covet truth;
    • Beauty is unripe childhood's cheat;
    • I leave it behind with the games of youth;’—
    • As I spoke, beneath my feet
    • The ground-pine curled its pretty wreath,
    • Running over the club-moss burrs;
    • I inhaled the violet's breath;
    • Around me stood the oaks and firs;
    • Pine-cones and acorns lay on the ground;
    • Over me soared the eternal sky,
    • Full of light and of deity;
    • Again I saw, again I heard,
    • The rolling river, the morning bird;—
    • Beauty through my senses stole;
    • I yielded myself to the perfect whole.

the problem.

    • I like a church; I like a cowl;
    • I love a prophet of the soul;
    • And on my heart monastic aisles
    • Fall like sweet strains, or pensive smiles;
    • Yet not for all his faith can see
    • Would I that cowlèd churchman be.
    • Why should the vest on him allure,
    • Which I could not on me endure?
    • Not from a vain or shallow thought
    • His awful Jove young Phidias brought;
    • Never from lips of cunning fell
    • The thrilling Delphic oracle;
    • Out from the heart of nature rolled
    • The burdens of the Bible old;
    • The litanies of nations came,
    • Like the volcano's tongue of flame,
    • Up from the burning core below,—
    • The canticles of love and woe:
    • The hand that rounded Peter's dome
    • And groined the aisles of Christian Rome
    • Wrought in a sad sincerity;
    • Himself from God he could not free;
    • He builded better than he knew;—
    • The conscious stone to beauty grew.
    • Know'st thou what wove yon woodbird's nest
    • Of leaves, and feathers from her breast?
    • Or how the fish outbuilt her shell,
    • Painting with morn each annual cell?
    • Or how the sacred pine-tree adds
    • To her old leaves new myriads?
    • Such and so grew these holy piles,
    • Whilst love and terror laid the tales.
    • Earth proudly wears the Parthenon,
    • As the best gem upon her zone,
    • And Morning opes with haste her lids
    • To gaze upon the Pyramids;
    • O'er England's abbeys bends the sky,
    • As on its friends, with kindred eye;
    • For out of Thought's interior sphere
    • These wonders rose to upper air;
    • And Nature gladly gave them place,
    • Adopted them into her race,
    • And granted them an equal date
    • With Andes and with Ararat.
    • These temples grew as grows the grass;
    • Art might obey, but not surpass.
    • The passive Master lent his hand
    • To the vast soul that o'er him planned;
    • And the same power that reared the shrine
    • Bestrode the tribes that knelt within.
    • Ever the fiery Pentecost
    • Girds with one flame the countless host,
    • Trances the heart through chanting choirs,
    • And through the priest the mind inspires.
    • The word unto the prophet spoken
    • Was writ on tables yet unbroken;
    • The word by seers or sibyls told,
    • In groves of oak, or fanes of gold,
    • Still floats upon the morning wind,
    • Still whispers to the willing mind.
    • One accent of the Holy Ghost
    • The heedless world hath never lost.
    • I know what say the fathers wise,—
    • The Book itself before me lies,
    • Old Chrysostom, best Augustine,
    • And he who blent both in his line,
    • The younger Golden Lips or mines,
    • Taylor, the Shakspeare of divines.
    • His words are music in my ear,
    • I see his cowlèd portrait dear;
    • And yet, for all his faith could see,
    • I would not the good bishop be.

to rhea.

    • Thee, dear friend, a brother soothes,
    • Not with flatteries, bat truths,
    • Which tarnish not, but purify
    • To light which dims the morning's eye.
    • I have come from the spring-woods,
    • From the fragrant solitudes;—
    • Listen what the poplar-tree
    • And murmuring waters counselled me.
    • If with love thy heart has burned;
    • If thy love is unreturned;
    • Hide thy grief within thy breast,
    • Though it tear thee unexpressed;
    • For when love has once departed
    • From the eyes of the false-hearted,
    • And one by one has torn off quite
    • The bandages of purple light;
    • Though thou wert the loveliest
    • Form the soul had ever dressed,
    • Thou shalt seem, in each reply,
    • A vixen to his altered eye;
    • Thy softest pleadings seem too bold,
    • Thy praying lute will seem to scold;
    • Though thou kept the straightest road,
    • Yet thou errest far and broad.
    • But thou shalt do as do the gods
    • In their cloudless periods;
    • For of this lore be thou sure,—
    • Though thou forget, the gods, secure,
    • Forget never their command,
    • Bat make the statute of this land.
    • As they lead, so follow all,
    • Elver have done, ever shall.
    • Warning to the blind and deaf,
    • 'T is written on the iron leaf,
    • Who drinks of Cupid's nectar cup
    • Loveth downward, and not up;
    • He who loves, of gods or men,
    • Shall not by the same be loved again;
    • His sweetheart's idolatry
    • Falls, in turn, a new degree.
    • When a god is once beguiled
    • By beauty of a mortal child
    • And by her radiant youth delighted,
    • He is not fooled, but warily knoweth
    • His love shall never be requited.
    • And thus the wise Immortal doeth,—
    • 'T is his study and deligh
    • To bless that creature day and night;
    • From all evils to defend her;
    • In her lap to pour all splendor;
    • To ransack earth for riches rare,
    • And fetch her stars to deck her hair;
    • He mixes music with her thoughts,
    • And saddens her with heavenly doubts;
    • All grace, all good his great heart knows,
    • Profuse in love, the king bestows,
    • Saying, ‘Hearken! Earth, Sea, Air;
    • This monument of my despair
    • Build I to the All-Good, All-Fair.
    • Not for a private good,
    • But I, from my beatitude.
    • Albeit scorned as none was scorned,
    • Adorn her as was none adorned.
    • I make this maiden an ensample
    • To Nature, through her kingdoms
    • Whereby to model newer races,
    • Statelier forms and fairer faces;
    • To carry man to new degrees
    • Of power and of comeliness.
    • These presents be the hostages
    • Which I pawn for my release.
    • See to thyself, O Universe!
    • Thou art better, and not worse.’—
    • And the god, having given all,
    • Is freed forever from his thrall.

the visit.

    • Askest, ‘How long thou shalt stay;
    • Devastator of the day!
    • Know, each substance and relation,
    • Thorough nature's operation,
    • Hath its unit, bound and metre;
    • And every new compound
    • Is some product and repeater,—
    • Product of the earlier found.
    • But the unit of the visit,
    • The encounter of the wise,—
    • Say, what other metre is it
    • Than the meeting of the eyes?
    • Nature poureth into nature
    • Through the channels of that feature,
    • Riding on the ray of sight,
    • Fleeter far than whirlwinds go,
    • Or for service, or delight,
    • Hearts to hearts their meaning show,
    • Sum their long experience,
    • And import intelligence.
    • Single look has drained the breast;
    • Single moment years confessed.
    • The duration of a glance
    • Is the term of convenance,
    • And, though thy rede be church or state,
    • Frugal multiples of that.
    • Speeding Saturn cannot halt;
    • Linger,—thou shalt rue the fault;
    • If Love his moment overstay,
    • Hatred's swift repulsions play.

uriel.

    • It fell in the ancient periods
    • Which the brooding soul surveys,
    • Or ever the wild Time coined itself
    • Into calendar months and days.
    • This was the lapse of Uriel,
    • Which in Paradise befell.
    • Once, among the Pleiads walking,
    • Seyd overheard the young gods talking;
    • And the treason, too long pent,
    • To his ears was evident.
    • The young deities discussed
    • Laws of form, and metre jusi,
    • Orb, quintessence, and sunbeams,
    • What subsisteth, and what seems.
    • One, with low tones that decide,
    • And doubt and reverend use defied,
    • With a look that solved the sphere,
    • And stirred the devils everywhere,
    • Grave his sentiment divine
    • Against the being of a line.
    • ‘Line in nature is not found;
    • Unit and universe are round;
    • In vain produced, all rays return;
    • Evil will bless, and ice will burn;
    • As Uriel spoke with piercing eye,
    • A shudder ran around the sky;
    • The stern old war-gods shook their heads,
    • The seraphs frowned from myrtle-beds;
    • Seemed to the holy festival
    • The rash word boded ill to all;
    • The balance-beam of Fate was bent;
    • The bounds of good and ill were rent;
    • Strong Hades could not keep his own,
    • But all slid to confusion.
    • A sad self-knowledge, withering, fell
    • On the beauty of Uriel;
    • In heaven once eminent, the god
    • Withdrew, that hour, into his cloud;
    • Whether doomed to long gyration
    • In the sea of generation,
    • Or by knowledge grown too bright
    • To hit the nerve of feebler sight.
    • Straightway, a forgetting wind
    • Stole over the celestial kind,
    • And their lips the secret kept,
    • If in ashes the fire-seed slept.
    • But now and then, truth-speaking things
    • Shamed the angels’ veiling wings;
    • And, shrilling from the solar course,
    • Or from fruit of chemic force,
    • Procession of a soul in matter,
    • Or the speeding change of water,
    • Or out of the good of evil born,
    • Came Uriel's voice of cherub scorn,
    • And a blush tinged the upper sky,
    • And the gods shook, they knew not why.

the world-soul.

    • Thanks to the morning light,
    • Thanks to the foaming sea,
    • To the uplands of New Hampshire,
    • To the green-haired forest free;
    • Thanks to each man of courage,
    • To the maids of holy mind,
    • To the boy with his games undaunted
    • Who never looks behind.
    • Cities of proud hotels,
    • Houses of rich and great,
    • Vice nestles in your chambers,
    • Beneath your roofs of slate.
    • It cannot conquer folly,—
    • Time-and-space-conquering steam,—
    • And the light-outspeeding telegraph
    • Bears nothing on its beam.
    • The politics are base;
    • The letters do not cheer;
    • And 't is far in the deeps of history,
    • The voice that speaketh clear.
    • Trade and the streets ensnare us,
    • Our bodies are weak and worn;
    • We plot and corrupt each other,
    • And we despoil the unborn.
    • Yet there in the parlor sits
    • Some figure of noble guise,—
    • Our angel, in a stranger's form,
    • Or woman's pleading eyes;
    • Or only a flashing sunbeam
    • In at the window-pane;
    • Or Music pours on mortals
    • Its beautiful disdain.
    • The inevitable morning
    • Finds them who in cellars be;
    • And be sure the all-loving Nature
    • Will smile in a factory.
    • Yon ridge of purple landscape,
    • Yon sky between the walls,
    • Hold all the hidden wonders
    • In scanty intervals.
    • Alas! the Sprite that haunts us
    • Deceives our rash desire;
    • It whispers of the glorious gods,
    • And leaves us in the mire.
    • We cannot learn the cipher
    • That's writ upon our cell;
    • Stars taunt us by a mystery
    • Which we could never spell.
    • If but one hero knew it,
    • The world would blush in flame;
    • The sage, till he bit the secret,
    • Would hang his head for shame.
    • Our brothers have not read it,
    • Not one has found the key;
    • And henceforth we are comforted,—
    • We are but such as they.
    • Still, still the secret presses;
    • The nearing clouds draw down;
    • The crimson morning flames into
    • The fopperies of the town.
    • Within, without the idle earth,
    • Stars weave eternal rings;
    • The sun himself shines heartily,
    • And shares the joy he brings.
    • And what if Trade sow cities
    • Like shells along the shore,
    • And thatch with towns the prairie broad
    • With railways ironed o'er?—
    • They are but sailing foam-bells
    • Along Thought's causing stream,
    • And take their shape and sun-color
    • From him that sends the dream.
    • For Destiny never swerves,
    • Nor yields to men the helm;
    • He shoots his thought, by hidden nerves,
    • Throughout the solid realm.
    • The patient Dæmon sits,
    • With roses and a shroud;
    • He has his way, and deals his gifts,—
    • But ours is not allowed.
    • He is no churl nor trifler,
    • And his viceroy is none,—
    • Love-without-weakness,—
    • Of Genius sire and son.
    • And bis will is not thwarted;
    • The seeds of land and sea
    • Are the atoms of his body bright,
    • And his behest obey.
    • He serveth the servant,
    • The brave he loves amain;
    • He kills the cripple and the sick,
    • And straight begins again;
    • For gods delight in gods,
    • And thrust the weak aside;
    • To him who scorns their charities
    • Their arms fly open wide.
    • When the old world is sterile
    • And the ages are effete,
    • He will from wrecks and sediment
    • The fairer world complete.
    • He forbids to despair;
    • His cheeks mantle with mirth;
    • And the unimagined good of men
    • Is yeaning at the birth.
    • Spring still makes spring in the mind
    • When sixty years are told;
    • Love wakes anew this throbbing heart,
    • And we are never old.
    • Over the winter glaciers
    • I see the summer glow,
    • And through the wild-piled snowdrift,
    • The warm rosebuds below.

alphonso of castile.

    • I, Alphonso, live and learn,
    • Seeing Nature go astern.
    • Things deteriorate in kind;
    • Lemons run to leaves and rind;
    • Meagre crop of figs and limes;
    • Shorter days and harder times.
    • Flowering April cools and dies
    • In the insufficient skies.
    • Imps, at high midsummer, blot
    • Half the sun's disk with a spot;
    • 'T will not now avail to tan
    • Orange cheek or skin of man.
    • Roses bleach, the goats are dry,
    • Lisbon quakes, the people cry.
    • Yon pale, scrawny fisher fools,
    • Gaunt as bitterns in the pools,
    • Are no brothers of my blood;—
    • They discredit Adamhood.
    • Eyes of gods! ye must have seen,
    • O'er your ramparts as ye lean,
    • The general debility;
    • Of genius the sterility;
    • Mighty projects countermanded;
    • Rash ambition, brokenhanded;
    • Pony man and scentless rose Tormenting Pan to double the dose,
    • Rebuild or ruin: either fill
    • Of vital force the wasted rill,
    • Or tumble all again in heap
    • To weltering chaos and to sleep.
    • Say, Seigniors, are the old Niles dry,
    • Which fed the veins of earth and sky,
    • That mortals miss the loyal heats,
    • Which drove them erst to social feats;
    • Now, to a savage aelfness grown,
    • Think nature barely serves for one;
    • With science poorly mask their hurt,
    • And vex the gods with question pert,
    • Immensely curious whether you
    • Still are rulers, or mildew?
    • Masters, I'm in pain with you;
    • Masters, I'll be plain with you;
    • In my palace of Castile,
    • I, a king, for kings can feel.
    • There my thoughts the matter roll,
    • And solve and oft resolve the whole.
    • And, for I'm styled Alphonse the Wise,
    • Ye shall not fail for sound advice.
    • Before ye want a drop of rain,
    • Hear the sentiment of Spain.
    • You have tried famine: no more try it;
    • Fly us now with a full diet;
    • Teach your pupils now with plenty,
    • For one sun supply us twenty.
    • I have thought it thoroughly over,—
    • State of hermit, state of lover;
    • We must have society,
    • We cannot spare variety.
    • Hear you, then, celestial fellows!
    • Fits not to be overzealous;
    • Steads not to work on the clean jump,
    • Nor wine nor brains perpetual pump.
    • Men and gods are too extense;
    • Could you slacken and condense?
    • Your rank overgrowths reduce
    • Till your kinds abound with juice?
    • Earth, crowded, cries, ‘Too many men!’
    • My counsel is, kill nine in ten,
    • And bestow the shares of all
    • On the remnant decimal.
    • Add their nine lives to this cat;
    • Stuff their nine brains in one hat;
    • Make his frame and forces square
    • With the labors he must dare;
    • Thatch his flesh, and even his years
    • With the marble which he rears.
    • There, growing slowly old at ease,
    • No faster than his planted trees,
    • He may, by warrant of his age,
    • In schemes of broader scope engage.
    • So shall ye have a man of the sphere
    • Fit to grace the solar year.

mithridates.

    • I cannot spare water or wine,
    • Tobacco-leaf, or poppy, or rose;
    • From the earth-poles to the line,
    • All between that works or grows,
    • Every thing is kin of mine.
    • Give me agates for my meat;
    • Give me cantharida to eat;
    • From air and ocean bring me foods,
    • From all zones and altitudes;—
    • From all natures, sharp and slimy,
    • Salt and basalt, wild and tame;
    • Tree and lichen, ape, sea-lion,
    • Bird, and reptile, be my game.
    • Ivy for my fillet band;
    • Blinding dog-wood in my hand;
    • Hemlock for my sherbet cull me,
    • And the prussic juice to lull me;
    • Swing me in the upas boughs,
    • Vampyre-fanned, when I carouse.
    • Too long shut in strait and few,
    • Thinly dieted on dew,
    • I will use the world, and sift it,
    • To a thousand humors shift it,
    • As you spin a cherry.
    • O doleful ghosts, and goblins merry;
    • O all you virtues, methods, mights,
    • Means, appliances, delights,
    • Reputed wrongs and braggart rights,
    • Smug routine, and things allowed,
    • Minorities, things under cloud!
    • Hither! take me, use me, fill me,
    • Vein and artery, though ye kill me!

to j. w.

    • Set not thy foot on graves;
    • Hear what wine and roses say;
    • The mountain chase, the summer waves,
    • The crowded town, thy feet may well delay.
    • Set not thy foot on graves;
    • Nor seek to unwind the shroud
    • Which charitable Time
    • And Nature have allowed
    • To wrap the errors of a sage sublime.
    • Set not thy foot on graves;
    • Care not to strip' the dead
    • Of his sad ornament,
    • His myrrh, and wine, and rings,
    • His sheet of lead,
    • And trophies buried;
    • Go, get them where he earned them when alive;
    • As resolutely dig or dive.
    • Life is too short to waste
    • In critic peep or cynic bark,
    • Quarrel or reprimand:
    • 'T will soon be dark;
    • Up! mind thine own aim, and
    • God speed the mark!

destiny.

    • That you are fair or wise is vain,
    • Or strong, or rich, or generous;
    • You must add the untaught strain
    • That sheds beauty on the rose.
    • There's a melody born of melody,
    • Which melts the world into a sea.
    • Toil could never compass it;
    • Art its height could never hit;
    • It came never out of wit;
    • But a music music-born
    • Well may Jove and Juno scorn.
    • Thy beauty, if it lack the fire
    • Which drives me mad with sweet desire,
    • What boots it? What the soldier's mail,
    • Unless he conquer and prevail?
    • What all the goods thy pride which lift,
    • If thou pine for another's gift?
    • Alas! that one is born in blight,
    • Victim of perpetual slight:
    • When thou lookest on his face,
    • Thy heart saith, ‘Brother, go thy ways!
    • None shall ask thee what thou doest,
    • Or care a rush for what thou knowest,
    • Or listen when thou repliest,
    • Or remember where thou lieat,
    • Or how thy supper is sodden;’
    • And another is born
    • To make the sun forgotten.
    • Surely he carries a talisman
    • Under his tongue;
    • Broad his shoulders are and strong;
    • And his eye is scornful,
    • Threatening and young.
    • I hold it of little matter
    • Whether your jewel be of pure water,
    • A rose diamond or a white,
    • But whether it dazzle me with light.
    • I care not how you are dressed,
    • In coarsest weeds or in the best;
    • Nor whether your name is base or brave;
    • Nor for the fashion of your behavior;
    • But whether you charm me,
    • Bid my bread feed and my fire warm me,
    • And dress up Nature in your favor.
    • One thing is forever good;
    • That one thing is Success,—
    • Dear to the Eumenides,
    • And to all the heavenly brood.
    • Who bides at home, nor looks abroad,
    • Carries the eagles, and masters the sword.

guy.

    • Mortal mixed of middle clay,
    • Attempered to the night and day,
    • Interchangeable with things,
    • Needs no amulets nor rings,
    • Guy possessed the talisman
    • That all things from him began;
    • And as, of old, Polycrates
    • Chained the sunshine and the breeze,
    • So did Guy betimes discover
    • Fortune was his guard and lover;
    • In strange junctures, felt, with awe,
    • His own symmetry with law;
    • That no mixture could withstand
    • The virtue of his lucky hand.
    • He gold or jewel could not lose,
    • Nor not receive his ample dues.
    • Fearless Guy had never foes,
    • He did their weapons decompose.
    • Aimed at him, the blushing blade
    • Healed as fast the wounds it made.
    • If on the foeman fell his gaze,
    • Him it would straightway blind or craze
    • In the street, if he turned round,
    • His eye the eye 't was seeking found.
    • It seemed his Genius discreet
    • Worked on the Maker's own receipt,
    • And made each tide and element
    • Stewards of stipend and of rent;
    • So that the common waters fell
    • As costly wine into his well.
    • He had so sped his wise affairs
    • That he caught Nature in his snares.
    • Early or late, the falling rain
    • Arrived in time to swell his grain;
    • Stream could not so perversely wind
    • But corn of Guy's was there to grind:
    • The siroc found it on its way,
    • To speed his sails, to dry his hay;
    • And the world's sun seemed to rise
    • To drudge all day for Guy the wise.
    • In his rich nurseries, timely skill
    • Strong crab with nobler blood did fill;
    • The aephyr in his garden rolled
    • From plum-trees vegetable gold;
    • And all the hours of the year
    • With their own harvest honored were.
    • There was no frost but welcome came,
    • Nor freshet, nor midsummer flame.
    • Belonged to wind and world the toil
    • And venture, and to Guy the oil.

hamatreya.

    • Bulkeley, Hunt, Willard, Hosmer, Meriam, Flint,
    • Possessed the land which rendered to their toil
    • Hay, corn, roots, hemp, flax, apples, wool and wood.
    • Each of these landlords walked amidst his farm,
    • Saying, “T is mine, my children's and my name's.
    • How sweet the west wind sounds in my own trees!
    • How graceful climb those shadows on my hill!
    • I fancy these pure waters and the flags
    • Know me, as does my dog: we sympathize;
    • And, I affirm, my actions smack of the soil.'
    • Where are these men? Asleep beneath their grounds:
    • And strangers, fond as they, their furrows plough.
    • Earth laughs in flowers, to see her boastful boys
    • Earth-proud, proud of the earth which is not theirs;
    • Who steer the plough, but cannot steer their feet
    • Clear of the grave.
    • They added ridge to valley, brook to pond,
    • And sighed for all that bounded their domain;
    • ‘This suits me for a pasture; that's my park;
    • We must have clay, lime, gravel, granite-ledge,
    • And misty lowland, where to go for peat.
    • The land is well,—lies fairly to the south.
    • 'T is good, when you have crossed the sea and back,
    • To find the sitfast acres where you left them.’
    • Ah! the hot owner sees not Death, who adds
    • Him to his land, a lump of mould the more.
    • Hear what the Earth says:—

earth-song.

    • ‘Mine and yours;
    • Mine, not yours,
    • Earth endures;
    • Stars abide—
    • Shine down in the old sea;
    • Old are the shores;
    • But where are old men?
    • I who have seen much,
    • Such have I never seen.
    • ‘The lawyer's deed
    • Ran sure,
    • In tail,
    • To them, and to their heirs
    • Who shall succeed,
    • Without fail,
    • Forevermore.
    • ‘Here is the land,
    • Shaggy with wood,
    • With its old valley,
    • Mound and flood.
    • But the heritors?—
    • Fled like the flood's foam.
    • The lawyer, and the laws,
    • And the kingdom,
    • Clean swept herefrom.
    • ‘They called me theirs,
    • Who so controlled me;
    • Yet every one
    • Wished to stay, and is gone,
    • How am I theirs,
    • If they cannot hold me,
    • But I hold them?’
    • When I heard the Earth-song,
    • I was no longer brave;
    • My avarice cooled
    • Like lust in the chill of the grave.

good-bye.

    • Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home:
    • Thou art not my friend, and I'm not thine.
    • Long through thy weary crowds I roam;
    • A river-ark on the ocean brine,
    • Long I've been tossed like the driven foam;
    • But now, proud world! I'm going home.
    • Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face;
    • To Grandeur with his wise grimace;
    • To upstart Wealth's averted eye;
    • To supple Office, low and high;
    • To crowded halls, to court and street;
    • To frozen hearts and hasting feet;
    • To those who go, and those who come;
    • Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home.
    • I am going to my own hearth-stone,
    • Bosomed in yon green hills alone,—
    • A secret nook in a pleasant land,
    • Whose groves the frolic fairies planned;
    • Where arches green, the livelong day,
    • Echo the blackbird's roundelay,
    • And vulgar feet have never trod
    • A spot that is sacred to thought and God.
    • O, when I am safe in my sylvan home,
    • I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome;
    • And when I am stretched beneath the pines,
    • Where the evening star so holy shines,
    • I laugh at the lore and the pride of man,
    • At the sophist schools and the learned clan;
    • For what are they all, in their high conceit,
    • When man in the bush with God may meet?

the rhodora:
on being asked, whence is the flower?

    • In May, when sea-winds pierced our solitudes,
    • I found the fresh Rhodora in the woods,
    • Spreading its leafless blooms in a damp nook,
    • To please the desert and the sluggish brook.
    • The purple petals, fallen in the pool,
    • Made the black water with their beauty gay;
    • Here might the red-bird come his plumes to cool,
    • And court the flower that cheapens his array.
    • Rhodora! if the sages ask thee why
    • This charm is wasted on the earth and sky,
    • Tell them, dear, that if eyes were made for seeing,
    • Then Beauty is its own excuse for being:
    • Why thou wert there, O rival of the rose!
    • I never thought to ask, I never knew:
    • But, in my simple ignorance, suppose
    • The self-same Power that brought me there brought you.

the humble-bee.

    • Burly, dozing humble-bee,
    • Where thou art is clime for me.
    • Let them sail for Porto Rique,
    • Far-off heats through seas to seek;
    • I will follow thee alone,
    • Thou animated torrid-zone!
    • Zigzag steerer, desert cheerer,
    • Let me chase thy waving lines;
    • Keep me nearer, me thy hearer.
    • Singing over shrubs and vines.
    • Insect lover of the sun,
    • Joy of thy dominion!
    • Sailor of the atmosphere;
    • Swimmer through the waves of air!
    • Voyager of light and noon;
    • Epicurean of June;
    • Wait, I prithee, till I come
    • Within earshot of thy hum,—
    • All without is martyrdom.
    • When the south wind, in May days,
    • With a net of shining haze
    • Silvers the horizon wall,
    • And with softness touching all,
    • Tints the human countenance
    • With a color of romance,
    • And infusing subtle heats,
    • Turns the sod to violets,
    • Thou, in sunny solitudes,
    • Rover of the underwoods,
    • The green silence dost displace
    • With thy mellow, breezy bass.
    • Hot midsummer's petted crone,
    • Sweet to me thy drowsy tone
    • Tells of countless sunny hours
    • Long days, and solid banks of flowers;
    • Of gulfs of sweetness without bound
    • In Indian wildernesses found;
    • Of Syrian peace, immortal leisure,
    • Firmest cheer, and bird-like pleasure.
    • Aught unsavory or unclean
    • Hath my insect never seen;
    • But violets and bilberry bells,
    • Maple-sap and daffodels,
    • Grass with green flag half-mast high,
    • Succory to match the sky,
    • Columbine with horn of honey,
    • Scented fern, and agrimony,
    • Clover, catchfly, adder's-tongue
    • And brier-roses, dwelt among;
    • All beside was unknown waste,
    • All was picture as he passed.
    • Wiser far than human seer,
    • Yellow-breeched philosopher!
    • Seeing only what is fair,
    • Sipping only what is sweet,
    • Thou dost mock at fate and care,
    • Leave the chaff, and take the wheat.
    • When the fierce northwestern blast
    • Cools sea and land so far and fast,
    • Thou already slumberest deep;
    • Woe and want thou canst outsleep;
    • Want and woe, which torture us,
    • Thy sleep makes ridiculous.

berrying.

    • May be true what I had heard,—
    • Earth's a howling wilderness,
    • Truculent with fraud and force
    • Said I, strolling through the pastures,
    • And along the river-side.
    • Caught among the blackberry vines,
    • Feeding on the Ethiops sweet,
    • Pleasant fancies overtook me.
    • I said, ‘What influence me preferred,
    • Elect, to dreams thus beautiful?’
    • The vines replied, ‘And didst thou deem
    • No wisdom from our berries went?’

the snow-storm.

    • Announced by all the trumpets of the sky,
    • Arrives the snow, and, driving o'er the fields,
    • Seems nowhere to alight: the whited air
    • Hides hills and woods, the river, and the heaven,
    • And veils the farm-house at the garden's end.
    • The sled and traveller stopped, the courier's feet
    • Delayed, all friends shut out, the housemates sit
    • Around the radiant fireplace, enclosed
    • In a tumultuous privacy of storm.
    • Come see the north wind's masonry.
    • Out of an unseen quarry evermore
    • Furnished with tile, the fierce artificer
    • Curves his white bastions with projected roof
    • Round every windward stake, or tree, or door.
    • Speeding, the myriad-handed, his wild work
    • So fanciful, so savage, nought cares he
    • For number or proportion. Mockingly,
    • On coop or kennel he hangs Parian wreaths;
    • A swan-like form invests the hidden thorn:
    • Fills up the farmer's lane from wall to wall,
    • Maugre the farmer's sighs; and at the gate
    • A tapering turret overtops the work.
    • And when his hours are numbered, and the world
    • Is all his own, retiring, as he were not,
    • Leaves, when the sun appears, astonished Art
    • To mimic in slow structures, stone by stone,
    • Built in an age, the mad wind's night-work,
    • The frolic architecture of the snow.

woodnotes.

i.

    • 1.

    • When the pine tosses its cones
    • To the song of its waterfall tones,
    • Who speeds to the woodland walks?
    • To birds and trees who talks?
    • Cæsar of his leafy Rome,
    • There the poet is at home.
    • He goes to the river-side,—
    • Not hook nor line hath he;
    • He stands in the meadows wide,—
    • Nor gun nor scythe to see.
    • Sure some god his eye enchants:
    • What he knows nobody wants.
    • In the wood he travels glad,
    • Without better fortune had,
    • Melancholy without bad.
    • Knowledge this man prizes best
    • Seems fantastic to the rest:
    • Pondering shadows, colors, clouds,
    • Grass-buds and caterpillar-shrouds,
    • Boughs on which the wild bees settle
    • Tints that spot the violet's petal,
    • Why Nature loves the number five,
    • And why the star-form she repeats:
    • Lover of all things alive,
    • Wonderer at all he meets,
    • Wonderer chiefly at himself,
    • Who can tell him what he is?
    • Or how meet in human elf
    • Coming and past eternities?
    • 2.

    • And such I knew, a forest seer,
    • A minstrel of the natural year,
    • Foreteller of the vernal ides,
    • Wise harbinger of spheres and tides,
    • A lover true, who knew by heart
    • Each joy the mountain dales impart;
    • It seemed that Nature could not raise
    • A plant in any secret place,
    • In quaking bog, on snowy hill,
    • Beneath the grass that shades the rill,
    • Under the snow, between the rocks,
    • In damp fields known to bird and fox.
    • But he would come in the very hour
    • It opened in its virgin bower,
    • As if a sunbeam showed the place.
    • And tell its long-descended race.
    • It seemed as if the breezes brought him
    • It seemed as if the sparrows taught him
    • As if by secret sight he knew
    • Where, in far fields, the orchis grew.
    • Many haps fall in the field
    • Seldom seen by wishful eyes
    • But all her shows did Nature yield,
    • To please and win this pilgrim wise.
    • He saw the partridge drum in the woods;
    • He heard the woodcock's evening hymn;
    • He found the tawny thrushes' broods;
    • And the shy hawk did wait for him;
    • What others did at distance hear,
    • And guessed within the thicket's gloom,
    • Was shown to this philosopher,
    • And at his bidding seemed to come.
    • 3.

    • In unploughed Maine he sought the lumberers' gang
    • Where from a hundred lakes young rivers sprang;
    • He trode the unplanted forest floor, whereon
    • The all-seeing sun for ages hath not shone;
    • Where feeds the moose, and walks the surly bear,
    • And up the tall mast runs the woodpecker.
    • He saw beneath dim aisles, in odorous beds,
    • The slight Linnæa hang its twin-born heads,
    • And blessed the monument of the man of flowers,
    • Which breathes his sweet fame through the northern bowers.
    • He heard, when in the grove, at intervals,
    • With sudden roar the aged pine-tree falls,—
    • One crash, the death-hymn of the perfect tree,
    • Declares the close of its green century.
    • Low lies the plant to whose creation went
    • Sweet influence from every element;
    • Whose living towers the years conspired to build,
    • Whose giddy top the morning loved to gild.
    • Through these green tents, by eldest Nature dressed,
    • He roamed, content alike with man and beast
    • Where darkness found him he lay glad at night;
    • There the red morning touched him with its light.
    • Three moons his great heart him a hermit made,
    • So long he roved at will the boundless shade.
    • The timid it concerns to ask their way,
    • And fear what foe in caves and swamps can stray,
    • To make no step until the event is known,
    • And ills to come as evils past bemoan.
    • Not so the wise; no coward watch he keeps
    • To spy what danger on his pathway creeps;
    • Go where he will, the wise man is at home,
    • His hearth the earth,—his hall the azure dome;
    • Where his clear spirit leads him, there's his road
    • By God's own light illumined and foreshowed.
    • 4.

    • 'Twas one of the charmed days
    • When the genius of God doth flow,
    • The wind may alter twenty ways,
    • A tempest cannot blow;
    • It may blow north, it still is warm;
    • Or south, it still is clear;
    • Or east, it smells like a clover-farm;
    • Or west, no thunder fear.
    • The musing peasant lowly great
    • Beside the forest water sate;
    • The rope-like pine roots crosswise grown
    • Composed the network of his throne;
    • The wide lake, edged with sand and grass,
    • Was burnished to a floor of glass,
    • Painted with shadows green and proud
    • Of the tree and of the cloud.
    • He was the heart of all the scene;
    • On him the sun looked more serene;
    • To hill and cloud his face was known,—
    • It seemed the likeness of their own;
    • They knew by secret sympathy
    • The public child of earth and sky.
    • ‘You ask,’ he said, ‘what guide
    • Me through trackless thickets led,
    • Through thick-stemmed woodlands rough and wide.
    • I found the water's bed.
    • The watercourses were my guide;
    • I travelled grateful by their side,
    • Or through their channel dry;
    • They led me through the thicket damp,
    • Through brake and fern, the beavers’ camp,
    • Through beds of granite cut my road,
    • And their resistless friendship showed:
    • The falling waters led me,
    • The foodful waters fed me,
    • And brought me to the lowest land,
    • Unerring to the ocean sand.
    • The moss upon the forest bark
    • Was pole-star when the night was dark;
    • The purple berries in the wood
    • Supplied me necessary food;
    • For Nature ever faithful is
    • To such as trust her faithfulness.
    • When the forest shall mislead me,
    • When the night and morning lie,
    • When sea and land refuse to feed me,
    • 'T will be time enough to die;
    • Then will yet my mother yield
    • A pillow in her greenest field,
    • Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
    • The clay of their departed lover.'

woodnotes.

ii.

    • As sunbeams stream through liberal space And nothing jostle or displace,
    • So waved the pine-tree through my thought And fanned the dreams it never brought.
    • ‘Whether is better, the gift or the donor?
    • Come to me,’
    • Quoth the pine-tree,
    • ‘I am the giver of honor.
    • My garden is the cloven rock,
    • And my manure the snow;
    • And drifting sand-heaps feed my stock,
    • In summer's scorching glow.
    • He is great who can live by me.
    • The rough and bearded forester
    • Is better than the lord;
    • God fills the scrip and canister,
    • Sin piles the loaded board.
    • The lord is the peasant that was,
    • The peasant the lord that shall be;
    • The lord is hay, the peasant grass,
    • One dry, and one the living tree.
    • Who liveth by the ragged pine
    • Foundeth a heroic line;
    • Who liveth in the palace hall
    • Waneth fast and spendeth all.
    • He goes to my savage haunts,
    • With his chariot and his care;
    • My twilight realm he disenchants,
    • And finds his prison there.
    • ‘What prizes the town and the tower?
    • Only what the pine-tree yields;
    • Sinew that subdued the fields;
    • The wild-eyed boy, who in the woods
    • Chants his hymn to hills and floods,
    • Whom the city's poisoning spleen
    • Made not pale, or fat, or lean;
    • Whom the rain and the wind purgeth,
    • Whom the dawn and the day-star urgeth,
    • In whose cheek the rose-leaf blusheth,
    • In whose feet the lion rusheth,
    • Iron arms, and iron mould,
    • That know not fear, fatigue, or cold.
    • I give my rafters to his boat,
    • My billets to his boiler's throat,
    • And I will swim the ancient sea
    • To float my child to victory,
    • And grant to dwellers with the pine
    • Dominion o'er the palm and vine.
    • Who leaves the pine-tree, leaves his friend,
    • Unnerves his strength, invites his end.
    • Cut a bough from my parent stem,
    • And dip it in thy porcelain vase;
    • A little while each russet gem
    • Will swell and rise with wonted grace;
    • But when it seeks enlarged supplies,
    • The orphan of the forest dies.
    • Whoso walks in solitude
    • And inhabiteth the wood,
    • Choosing light, wave, rock and bird,
    • Before the money-loving herd,
    • Into that forester shall pass.
    • From these companions, power and grace.
    • Clean shall he be, without, within,
    • From the old adhering sin,
    • All ill dissolving in the light
    • Of his triumphant piercing sight:
    • Not vain, sour, nor frivolous;
    • Not mad, athirst, nor garrulous;
    • Grave, chaste, contented, though retired,
    • And of all other men desired.
    • On him the light of star and moon
    • Shall fall with purer radiance down;
    • All constellations of the sky
    • Shed their virtue through his eye.
    • Him Nature giveth for defence
    • His formidable innocence;
    • The mounting sap, the shells, the sea,
    • All spheres, all stones, his helpers be;
    • He shall meet the speeding year,
    • Without wailing, without fear;
    • He shall be happy in his love,
    • Like to like shall joyful prove;
    • He shall be happy whilst he wooes,
    • Muse-born, a daughter of the Muse.
    • But if with gold she bind her hair,
    • And deck her breast with diamond,
    • Take off thine eyes, thy heart forbear,
    • Though thou lie alone on the ground.
    • ‘Heed the old oracles,
    • Ponder my spells;
    • Song wakes in my pinnacles
    • When the wind swells.
    • Soundeth the prophetic wind,
    • The shadows shake on the rock behind,
    • And the countless leaves of the pine are strings
    • Tuned to the lay the wood-god sings.
    • Hearken! Hearken!
    • If thou wouldst know the mystic song
    • Chanted when the sphere was young.
    • Aloft, abroad, the pæan swells;
    • O wise man! hear'st thou half it tells?
    • O wise man! hear'st thou the least part?
    • 'T is the chronicle of art.
    • To the open ear it sings
    • Sweet the genesis of things,
    • Of tendency through endless ages,
    • Of star-dust, and star-pilgrimages,
    • Of rounded worlds, of space and time,
    • Of the old flood's subsiding slime,
    • Of chemic matter, force and form,
    • Of poles and powers, cold, wet and warm:
    • The rushing metamorphosis
    • Dissolving all that fixture is,
    • Melts things that be to things that seem,
    • And solid nature to a dream.
    • O, listen to the undersong,
    • The ever old, the ever young;
    • And, far within those cadent pauses,
    • The chorus of the ancient Causes!
    • Delights the dreadful Destiny
    • To fling his voice into the tree,
    • And shock thy weak ear with a note
    • Breathed from the everlasting throat.
    • In music he repeats the pang
    • Whence the fair flock of Nature sprang.
    • O mortal! thy ears are stones;
    • These echoes are laden with tones
    • Which only the pure can hear;
    • Thou canst not catch what they recite
    • Of Fate and Will, of Want and Right,
    • Of man to come, of human life,
    • Of Death and Fortune, Growth and Strife.’
    • Once again the pine-tree sung:—
    • ‘Speak not thy speech my boughs among: Put off thy years, wash in the breeze;
    • My hours are peaceful centuries.
    • Talk no more with feeble tongue;
    • No more the fool of space and time,
    • Come weave with mine a nobler rhyme.
    • Only thy Americans
    • Can read thy line, can meet thy glance,
    • But the runes that I rehearse
    • Understands the universe;
    • The least breath my boughs which tossed
    • Brings again the Pentecost;
    • To every soul resounding clear
    • In a voice of solemn cheer,—
    • “Am I not thine? Are not these thine?”
    • And they reply, “Forever mine!”
    • My branches speak Italian,
    • English, German, Basque, Castilian,
    • Mountain speech to Highlanders,
    • Ocean tongues to islanders,
    • To Fin and Lap and swart Malay,
    • To each his bosom-secret say.
    • Come learn with me the fatal song
    • Which knits the world in music strong,
    • Come lift thine eyes to lofty rhymes,
    • Of things with things. of times with times,
    • Primal chimes of sun and shade,
    • Of sound and echo man and maid,
    • The land reflected in the flood,
    • Body with shadow still pursued.
    • For Nature beats in perfect tune,
    • And rounds with rhyme her every rune,
    • Whether she work in land or sea,
    • Or hide underground her alchemy.
    • Thou canst not wave thy staff in air,
    • Or dip thy paddle in the lake,
    • But it carves the bow of beauty there.
    • And the ripples in rhymes the oar forsake.
    • The wood is wiser far than thou;
    • The wood and wave each other know
    • Not unrelated, unaffied,
    • But to each thought and thing allied,
    • Is perfect Nature's every part,
    • Rooted in the mighty Heart.
    • But thou, poor child! unbound. unrhymed,
    • Whence camest thou, misplaced, mistimed,
    • Whence, O thou orphan and defrauded?
    • Is thy land peeled, thy realm marauded?
    • Who thee divorced, deceived and left?
    • Thee of thy faith who hath bereft,
    • And torn the ensigns from thy brow,
    • And sunk the immortal eye so low?
    • Thy cheek too white, thy form too slender,
    • Thy gait too slow, thy habits tender
    • For royal man;— they thee confess
    • An exile from the wilderness, —
    • The hills where health with health agrees,
    • And the wise soul expels disease.
    • Hark! in thy ear I will tell the sign
    • By which thy hurt thou may'st divine.
    • When thou shalt climb the mountain cliff,
    • Or see the wide shore from thy skiff,
    • To thee the horizon shall express
    • But emptiness on emptiness;
    • There lives no man of Nature's worth
    • In the circle of the earth;
    • And to thine eye the vast skies fall,
    • Dire and satirical,
    • On clucking hens and prating fools,
    • On thieves, on drudges and on dolls.
    • And thou shalt say to the Most High,
    • “Godhead! all this astronomy,
    • And fate and practice and invention,
    • Strong art and beautiful pretension,
    • This radiant pomp of sun and star,
    • Throes that were, and worlds that are,
    • Behold! were in vain and in vain; —
    • It cannot be,—I will look again.
    • Surely now will the curtain rise,
    • And earth's fit tenant me surprise; —
    • But the curtain doth not rise,
    • And Nature has miscarried wholly
    • Into failure, into folly.”
    • ‘Alas! thine is the bankruptey,
    • Blessed Nature so to see.
    • Come, lay thee in my soothing shade,
    • And heal the hurts which sin has made,
    • I see thee in the crowd alone;
    • I will be thy companion,
    • Quit thy friends as the dead in doom,
    • And build to them a final tomb;
    • Let the starred shade that nightly falls
    • Still celebrate their funerals,
    • And the bell of beetle and of bee
    • Knell their melodious memory.
    • Behind thee leave thy merchandise,
    • Thy churches and thy charities;
    • And leave thy peacock wit behind;
    • Enough for thee the primal mind
    • That flows in streams, that breathes in wind;
    • Leave all thy pedant lore apart;
    • God hid the whole world in thy heart.
    • Love shuns the sage, the child it crowns,
    • Gives all to them who all renounce.
    • The rain comes when the wind calls;
    • The river knows the way to the sea;
    • Without a pilot it runs and falls,
    • Blessing all lands with its charity;
    • The sea tosses and foams to find
    • Its way up to the cloud and wind;
    • The shadow sitsc close to the flying ball;
    • The date fails not on the palm-tree tall;
    • And thou,—go burn thy wormy pages,—
    • Shalt outsee seers, and outwit sages.
    • Oft didst thou thread the woods in vain
    • To find what bird had piped the strain:—
    • Seek not, and the little eremite
    • Flies gayly forth and sings in sight.
    • ‘Hearken once more!
    • I will tell thee the mundane lore.
    • Older am I than thy numbers wot,
    • Change I may, but I pass not,
    • Hitherto all things fast abide,
    • And anchored in the tempest ride.
    • Trenchant time behoves to hurry
    • All to yean and all to bury:
    • All the forms are fugitive,
    • But the substances survive.
    • Ever fresh the broad creation,
    • A divine improvisation,
    • From the heart of God proceeds,
    • A single will, a million deeds.
    • Once slept the world an egg of stone,
    • And pulse, and sound, and light was none;
    • And God said, “Throb!” and there was motion
    • And the vast mass became vast ocean.
    • Onward and on, the eternal Pan,
    • Who layeth the world's incessant plan,
    • Halteth never in one shape,
    • But forever doth escape,
    • Like wave or flame, into new forms
    • Of gem, and air, of plants, and worms.
    • I, that to-day am a pine,
    • Yesterday was a bundle of grass.
    • He is free and libertine,
    • Pouring of his power the wine
    • To every age, to every race;
    • Unto every race and age
    • He emptieth the beverage;
    • Unto each, and unto all,
    • Maker and original.
    • The world is the ring of his spells,
    • And the play of his miracles.
    • As he giveth to all to drink,
    • Thus or thus they are and think.
    • With one drop sheds form and feature;
    • With the next a special nature;
    • The third adds heat's indulgent spark;
    • The fourth gives light which eats the dark;
    • Into the fifth himself he flings,
    • And conscious Law is King of kings.
    • As the bee through the garden ranges,
    • From world to world the godhead changes;
    • As the sheep go feeding in the waste,
    • From form to form He maketh haste;
    • This vault which glows immense with light
    • Is the inn where he lodges for a night.
    • What recks such Traveller if the bowers
    • Which bloom and fade like meadow flowers
    • A bunch of fragrant lilies be,
    • Or the stars of eternity?
    • Alike to him the better, the worse,—
    • The glowing angel, the outcast corse.
    • Thou metest him by centuries,
    • And lo! he passes like the breeze;
    • Thou seek'st in globe and galaxy,
    • He hides in pure transparency;
    • Thou askest in fountains and in fires,
    • He is the essence that inquires.
    • He is the axis of the star;
    • He is the sparkle of the spar;
    • He is the heart of every creature;
    • He is the meaning of each feature;
    • And his mind is the sky.
    • Than all it holds more deep, more high.’

monadnoc.

    • Thousand minstrels woke within me,
    • ‘Our music's in the hills;’—
    • Gayest pictures rose to win me,
    • Leopard-colored rills.
    • ‘Up!—If thou knew'st who calls
    • To twilight parks of beech ard pine,
    • High over the river intervals,
    • Above the ploughman's highest line,
    • Over the owner's farthest walls!
    • Up! where the airy citadel
    • O'erlooks the surging landscape's swell!
    • Let not unto the stones the Day
    • Her lily and rose, her sea and land display.
    • Read the celestial sign!
    • Lo! the south answers to the north;
    • Bookworm, break this sloth urbane;
    • A greater spirit bids thee forth
    • Than the gray dreams which thee detain.
    • Mark how the climbing Oreads
    • Beckon thee to their arcades;
    • Youth, for a moment free as they,
    • Teach thy feet to feel the ground,
    • Ere yet arrives the wintry day
    • When Time thy feet has bound.
    • Take the bounty of thy birth,
    • Taste the lordship of the earth.’
    • I heard, and I obeyed,—
    • Assured that he who made the claim,
    • Well known, but loving not a name,
    • Was not to be gainsaid.
    • Ere yet the summoning voice was still,
    • I turned to Cheshire's haughty hill.
    • From the fixed cone the cloud-rack flowed
    • Like ample banner flung abroad
    • To all the dwellers in the plains
    • Round about, a hundred miles,
    • With salutation to the sea and to the bordering isles.
    • In his own loom's garment dressed,
    • By his proper bounty blessed,
    • Fast abides this constant giver,
    • Pouring many a cheerful river;
    • To far eyes, an aerial isle
    • Unploughed, which finer spirits pile
    • Which morn and crimson evening paint
    • For bard, for lover and for saint;
    • An eyemark and the country's core,
    • Inspirer, prophet evermore;
    • Pillar which God aloft had set
    • So that men might it not forget;
    • It should be their life's ornament,
    • And mix itself with each event;
    • Gauge and calendar and dial,
    • Weatherglass and chemic phial,
    • Garden of berries, perch of birds,
    • Pasture of pool-haunting herds,
    • Graced by each change of sum untold,
    • Earth-baking heat, stone-cleaving cold.
    • The Titan heeds his sky-affairs,
    • Rich rents and wide alliance shares;
    • Mysteries of color daily laid
    • By morn and eve in light and shade;
    • And sweet varieties of chance,
    • And the mystic seasons' dance;
    • And thief-like step of liberal hours
    • Thawing snow-drift into flowers.
    • O, wondrous craft of plant and stone
    • By eldest science wrought and shown!
    • ‘Happy,’ I said, ‘whose home is here!
    • Fair fortunes to the mountaineer!
    • Boon Nature to his poorest shed
    • Has royal pleasure-grounds outspread.’
    • Intent, I searched the region round,
    • And in low hut the dweller found:
    • Woe is me for my hope's downfall!
    • Is yonder squalid peasant all
    • That this proud nursery could breed
    • For God's vicegerency and stead?
    • Time out of mind, this forge of ores;
    • Quarry of spars in mountain pores;
    • Old cradle, hunting-ground and bier
    • Of wolf and otter, bear and deer;
    • Well-built abode of many a race;
    • Tower of observance searching space;
    • Factory of river and of rain;
    • Link in the alps' globe-girding chain;
    • By million changes skilled to tell
    • What in the Eternal standeth well,
    • And what obedient Nature can;—
    • Is this colossal talisman Kindly to plant and blood and kind,
    • But speechless to the master's mind?
    • I thought to find the patriots
    • In whom the stock of freedom roots;
    • To myself I oft recount
    • Tales of many a famous mount,—
    • Wales, Scotland, Uri, Hungary's dells;
    • Bards, Roys, Scanderbegs and Tells;
    • And think how Nature in these towers
    • Uplifted shall condense her powers,
    • And lifting man to the blue deep
    • Where stars their perfect courses keep,
    • Like wise preceptor, lure his eye
    • To sound the science of the sky,
    • And carry learning to its height
    • Of untried power and sane delight:
    • The Indian cheer, the frosty skies,
    • Rear purer wits, inventive eyes,—
    • Eyes that frame cities where none be,
    • And hands that stablish what these see:
    • And by the moral of his place
    • Hint summits of heroic grace;
    • Man in these crags a fastness find
    • To fight pollution of the mind;
    • In the wide thaw and ooze of wrong,
    • Adhere like this foundation strong,
    • The insanity of towns to stem
    • With simpleness for stratagem.
    • But if the brave old mould is broke,
    • And end in churls the mountain folk
    • In tavern cheer and tavern joke.
    • Sink, O mountain, in the swamp!
    • Hide in thy skies, O sovereign lamp!
    • Perish like leaves, the highland breed
    • No sire survive, no son succeed!
    • Soft! let not the offended muse
    • Toil's hard hap with scorn accuse,
    • Many hamlets sought I then,
    • Many farms of mountain men.
    • Rallying round a parish steeple
    • Nestle warm the highland people,
    • Coarse and boisterous, yet mild,
    • Strong as giant, slow as child.
    • Sweat and season are their arts,
    • Their talismans are ploughs and carts;
    • And well the youngest can command
    • Honey from the frozen land;
    • With eloverheads the swamp adorn,
    • Change the running sand to corn;
    • For wolf and fox, bring lowing herds,
    • And for cold mosses, cream and curds:
    • Weave wood to canisters and mats;
    • Drain sweet maple juice in vats.
    • No bird is safe that cuts the air
    • From their rifle or their snare;
    • No fish, in river or in lake,
    • But their long hands it thence will take;
    • Whilst the country's flinty face,
    • Like wax, their fashioning skill betrays,
    • To fill the hollows, sink the hills,
    • Bridge gulfs, drain swamps, build dams and mills,
    • And fit the bleak and howling waste
    • For homes of virtue, sense and taste.
    • The World-soul knows his own affair,
    • Forelooking, when he would prepare
    • For the next ages, men of mould
    • Well embodied, well ensouled,
    • He cools the present's fiery glow,
    • Sets the life-pulse strong but slow:
    • Bitter winds and fasts anstere
    • His quarantines and grottoes, where
    • He slowly cures decrepit flesh,
    • And brings it infantile and fresh.
    • Toil and tempest are the toys
    • And games to breathe his stalwart boys:
    • They bide their time, and well can prove,
    • If need were, their line from Jove;
    • Of the same stuff, and so allayed,
    • As that whereof the sun is made,
    • And of the fibre, quick and strong,
    • Whose throbs are love, whose thrills are song.
    • Now in sordid weeds they sleep,
    • In dulness now their secret keep;
    • Yet, will you learn our ancient speech,
    • These the masters who can teach.
    • Fourscore or a hundred words
    • All their vocal muse affords;
    • But they turn them in a fashion
    • Past clerks' or statesmen's art or passion.
    • I can spare the college bell,
    • And the learned lecture, well;
    • Spare the clergy and libraries,
    • Institutes and dictionaries,
    • For that hardy English root
    • Thrives here, unvalued, underfoot
    • Rude poets of the tavern hearth,
    • Squandering your unquoted mirth,
    • Which keeps the ground and never soars,
    • While Jake retorts and Reuben roars;
    • Scoff of yeoman strong and stark,
    • Goes like bullet to its mark;
    • While the solid curse and jeer
    • Never balk the waiting ear.
    • On the summit as I stood.
    • O'er the floor of plain and flood
    • Seemed to me, the towering hill
    • Was not altogether still,
    • But a quiet sense conveyed:
    • If I err not, thus it said: —
    • ‘Many feet in summer seek,
    • Oft, my far-appearing peak;
    • In the dreaded winter time,
    • None save dappling shadows climb,
    • Under clouds, my lonely head,
    • Old as the sun, old almost as the shade;
    • And comest thou
    • To see strange forests and new snow,
    • And tread uplifted land?
    • And leavest thou thy lowland race,
    • Here amid clouds to stand?
    • And wouldst be my companion
    • Where I gaze, and still shall gaze,
    • Through tempering nights and flashing days,
    • When forests fall, and man is gone
    • Over tribes and over times,
    • At the burning Lyre,
    • Nearing me,
    • With its stars of northern fire,
    • In many a thousand years?
    • ‘Gentle pilgrim, if thou know
    • The gamut old of Pan,
    • And how the hills began,
    • The frank blessings of the hill
    • Fall on thee, as fall they will.
    • ‘Let him heed who can and will;
    • Enchantment fixed me here
    • To stand the hurts of time, until
    • In mightier chant I disappear.
    • If thou trowest
    • How the chemic eddies play,
    • Pole to pole, and what they say;
    • And that these gray erags
    • Not on crags are hung,
    • But beads are of a rosary
    • On prayer and music strung;
    • And, credulous, through the granite seeming,
    • Seest the smile of Reason beaming;—
    • Can thy style-discerning eye
    • The hidden-working Builder spy,
    • Who builds, yet makes no chips, no din,
    • With hammer soft as snowflake's flight;—
    • Knowest thou this?
    • O pilgrim, wandering not amiss!
    • Already my rocks lie light,
    • And soon my cone will spin.
    • ‘For the world was built in order,
    • And the atoms march in tune;
    • Rhyme the pipe, and Time the warder,
    • The sun obeys them and the moon.
    • Orb and atom forth they prance,
    • When they hear from far the rune;
    • None so backward in the troop,
    • When the music and the dance
    • Reach his place and circumstance,
    • But knows the sun-creating sound,
    • And, though a pyramid, will bound.
    • ‘Monadnoc is a mountain strong,
    • Tall and good my kind among;
    • But well I know, no mountain can,
    • Zion or Meru, measure with man.
    • For it is on zodiacs writ,
    • Adamant is soft to wit:
    • And when the greater comes again
    • With my secret in his brain,
    • I shall pass, as glides my shadow
    • Daily over hill and meadow.
    • ‘Through all time, in light, in gloom
    • Well I hear the approaching feet
    • On the flinty pathway beat
    • Of him that cometh, and shall come;
    • Of him who shall as lightly bear
    • My daily load of woods and streams,
    • As doth this round sky-cleaving boat
    • Which never strains its rocky beams;
    • Whose timbers, as they silent float,
    • Alps and Caucasus uprear,
    • And the long Alleghanies here,
    • And all town-sprinkled lands that be,
    • Sailing through stars with all their history.
    • ‘Every morn I lift my head,
    • See New England underspread,
    • South from Saint Lawrence to the Sound,
    • From Katskill east to the sea-bound.
    • Anchored fast for many an age,
    • I await the bard and sage,
    • Who, in large thoughts, like fair pearl-seed,
    • Shall string Monadnoc like a bead.
    • Comes that cheerful troubadour,
    • This mound shall throb his face before,
    • As when, with inward fires and pain,
    • It rose a bubble from the plain.
    • When he cometh, I shall shed,
    • From this wellspring in my head,
    • Fountain-drop of spicier worth
    • Than all vintage of the earth.
    • There's fruit upon my barren soil
    • Costlier far than wine or oil.
    • There's a berry blue and gold,—
    • Autumn-ripe, its juices hold
    • Sparta's stoutness, Bethlehem's heart,
    • Asia's rancor, Athens’ art,
    • Slowsure Britain's secular might,
    • And the German's inward sight.
    • I will give my son to eat
    • Best of Pan's immortal meat,
    • Bread to eat, and juice to drain;
    • So the coinage of his brain
    • Shall not be forms of stars, but stars,
    • Nor pictures pale, but Jove and Mars.
    • He comes, but not of that race bred
    • “Who daily climb my specular head.
    • Oft as morning wreathes my scarf,
    • Fled the last plumule of the Dark,
    • Pants up hither the spruce clerk
    • From South Cove and City Wharf.
    • I take him up my rugged sides,
    • Half-repentant, scant of breath,—
    • Bead-eyes my granite chaos show,
    • And my midsummer snow:
    • Open the daunting map beneath,—
    • All his county, sea and land,
    • Dwarfed to measure of his hand;
    • His day's ride is a furlong space,
    • His city-tops a glimmering haze.
    • I plant his eyes on the sky-hoop bounding;
    • “See there the grim gray rounding
    • Of the bullet of the earth
    • Whereon ye sail,
    • Tumbling steep
    • In the uncontinented deep.”
    • He looks on that, and he turns pale.
    • 'T is even so, this treacherous kite,
    • Farm-furrowed, town-incrusted sphere,
    • Thoughtless of its anxious freight,
    • Plunges eyeless on forever;
    • And he, poor parasite,
    • Cooped in a ship he cannot steer,—
    • Who is the captain he knows not,
    • Port or pilot trows not,—
    • Risk or ruin he must share.
    • I scowl on him with my cloud.
    • With my north wind chill his blood;
    • I lame him. clattering down the rocks;
    • And to live he is in fear.
    • Then, at last, I let him down
    • Once more into his dapper town,
    • To chatter, frightened, to his clan
    • And forget me if he can.'
    • As in the old poetic fame
    • The gods are blind and lame,
    • And the simular despite
    • Betrays the more abounding might,
    • So call not waste that barren cone
    • Above the floral zone,
    • Where forests starve:
    • It is pure use;—
    • What sheaves like those which here we glean and bind
    • Of a celestial Ceres and the Muse?
    • Ages are thy days,
    • Thou grand affirmer of the present tense,
    • And type of permanence!
    • Firm ensign of the fatal Being,
    • Amid these coward shapes of joy and grief,
    • That will not bide the seeing!
    • Hither we bring
    • Our insect miseries to thy rocks;
    • And the whole flight, with folded wing,
    • Vanish, and end their murmuring,—
    • Vanish beside these dedicated blocks,
    • Which who can tell what mason laid?
    • Spoils of a front none need restore,
    • Replacing frieze and architrave;—
    • Where flowers each stone rosette and metope brave;
    • Still is the haughty pile erect
    • Of the old building Intellect.
    • Complement of human kind,
    • Holding us at vantage still,
    • Our sumptuous indigence,
    • O barren mound, thy plenties fill!
    • We fool and prate;
    • Thou art silent and sedate.
    • To myriad kinds and times one sense
    • The constant mountain doth dispense;
    • Shedding on all its snows and leaves,
    • One joy it joys, one grief it grieves.
    • Thou seest, O watchman tall,
    • Our towns and races grow and fall,
    • And imagest the stable good
    • For which we all our lifetime grope,
    • In shifting form the formless mind,
    • And though the substance us elude,
    • We in thee the shadow find
    • Thou, in our astronomy
    • An opaker star,
    • Seen haply from afar,
    • Above the horizon's hoop,
    • A moment, by the railway troop,
    • As o'er some bolder height they speed,
    • By circumspeet ambition,
    • By errant gain,
    • By feasters and the frivolous,—
    • Recallest us,
    • And makest sane.
    • Mute orator! well skilled to plead,
    • And send conviction without phrase,
    • Thou dost succor and remede
    • The shortness of our days,
    • And promise, on thy Founder's truth,
    • Long morrow to this mortal youth.

fable.

    • The mountain and the squirrel
    • Had a quarrel,
    • And the former called the latter ‘Little Prig;
    • Bun replied,
    • ‘You are doubtless very big;
    • But all sorts of things and weather
    • Must be taken in together,
    • To make up a year
    • And a sphere.
    • And I think it no disgrace
    • To occupy my place.
    • If I'im not so large as you,
    • You are not so small as I,
    • And not half so spry.
    • I'll not deny you make
    • A very pretty squirrel track;
    • Talents differ; all is well and wisely put;
    • If I cannot carry forests on my back,
    • Neither can you crack a nut’

ode.
inscribed to w. h. channing.

    • Though loath to grieve
    • The evil time's sole patriot,
    • I cannot leave
    • My honied thought
    • For the priest's cant,
    • Or statesman's rant.
    • If I refuse
    • My study for their politique,
    • Which at the best is trick,
    • The angry Muse
    • Puts confusion in my brain.
    • But who is he that prates
    • Of the culture of mankind,
    • Of better arts and life?
    • Go, blindworm, go,
    • Behold the famous States
    • Harrying Mexico
    • With rifle and with knife!
    • Or who, with accent bolder,
    • Dare praise the freedom-loving mountaineer?
    • I found by thee, O rushing Contoocook!
    • And in thy valleys, Agiochook!
    • The jackals of the negro-holder.
    • The God who made New Hampshire
    • Taunted the lofty land
    • With little men;—
    • Small bat and wren
    • House in the oak:—
    • If earth-fire cleave
    • The upheaved land, and bury the folk,
    • The southern crocodile would grieve.
    • Virtue palters; Right is hence;
    • Freedom praised, but hid;
    • Funeral eloquence
    • Rattles the coffin-lid.
    • What boots thy zeal,
    • O glowing friend,
    • That would indignant rend
    • The northland from the south?
    • Wherefore? to what good end?
    • Boston Bay and Bunker Hill
    • Would serve things still;—
    • Things are of the snake.
    • The horseman serves the horse,
    • The neatherd serves the neat,
    • The merchant serves the purse,
    • The eater serves his meat;
    • 'T is the day of the chattel,
    • Web to weave, and corn to grind;
    • Things are in the saddle,
    • And ride mankind.
    • There are two laws discrete,
    • Not reconciled,—
    • Law for man, and law for thing!
    • The last builds town and fleet,
    • But it runs wild,
    • And doth the man unking.
    • 'T is fit the forest fall,
    • The steep be graded,
    • The mountain tunnelled,
    • The sand shaded,
    • The orchard planted,
    • The glebe tilled,
    • The prairie granted,
    • The steamer built
    • Let man serve law for man;
    • Live for friendship, live for love,
    • For truth's and harmony's behoof;
    • The state may follow how it can,
    • As Olympus follows Jove.
    • Yet do not I implore
    • The wrinkled shopman to my sounding woods,
    • Nor bid the unwilling senator
    • Ask votes of thrushes in the solitudes
    • Every one to his chosen work;—
    • Foolish hands may mix and mar;,
    • Wise and sure the issues are.
    • Round they roll till dark is light,
    • Sex to sex, and even to odd;—
    • The over-god
    • Who marries Right to Might,
    • Who peoples, unpeoples,—
    • He who exterminates
    • Races by stronger races,
    • Black by white faces,—
    • knows to bring honey
    • Out of the lion;
    • Grafts gentlest scion
    • On pirate and Turk.
    • The Cossack eats Poland,
    • Like stolen fruit;
    • Her last noble is ruined,
    • Her last poet mute:
    • Straight, into double band
    • The victors divide;
    • Half for freedom strike and stand;—
    • The astonished Muse finds thousands at her side,

astræ

    • Each the herald is who wrote
    • His rank, and quartered his own coat.
    • There is no king nor sovereign state
    • That can fix a hero's rate;
    • Each to all is venerable,
    • Cap-a-pie invulnerable,
    • Until he write, where all eyes rest,
    • Slave or master on his breast.
    • I saw men go up and down,
    • In the country and the town,
    • With this tablet on their neck,—
    • ‘Judgment and a judge we seek.’
    • Not to monarchs they repair,
    • Nor to learned jurist's chair;
    • But they hurry to their peers,
    • To their kinsfolk and their dears;
    • Louder than with speech they pray,—
    • ‘What am I? companion, say.’
    • And the friend not hesitates
    • To assign just place and mates;
    • Answers not in word or letter,
    • Yet is understood the better;
    • Each to each a looking-glass,
    • Reflects his figure that doth pass.
    • Every wayfarer he meets
    • What himself declared repeats,
    • What himself confessed records,
    • Sentences him in his words;
    • The form is his own corporal form,
    • And his thought the penal worm.
    • Yet shine forever virgin minds,
    • Loved by stars and purest winds,
    • Which, o'er passion throned sedate,
    • Have not hazarded their state;
    • Disconcert the searching spy,
    • Rendering to a curious eye
    • The durance of a granite ledge.
    • To those who gaze from the sea's edge
    • It is there for benefit;
    • It is there for purging light;,
    • There for purifying storms;
    • And its depths reflect all forms;
    • It cannot parley with the mean,—
    • Pure by impure is not seen.
    • For there's no sequestered grot,
    • Lone mountain tarn, or isle forgot,
    • But Justice, journeying in the sphere,
    • Daily stoops to harbor there.

étienne de la boéce.

    • I serve you not, if you I follow,
    • Shadowlike, o'er hill and hollow;
    • And bend my fancy to your leading,
    • All too nimble for my treading.
    • When the pilgrimage is done,
    • And we've the landscape overrun,
    • I am bitter, vacant, thwarted,
    • And your heart is unsupported.
    • Vainly valiant, you have missed
    • The manhood that should yours resist,—
    • Its complement; but if I could,
    • In severe or cordial mood,
    • Lead you rightly to my altar,
    • Where the wisest Muses falter,
    • And worship that world-warming spark
    • Which dazzles me in midnight dark,
    • Equalizing small and large,
    • While the soul it doth surcharge,
    • Till the poor is wealthy grown,
    • And the hermit never alone,—
    • The traveller and the road seem one
    • With the errand to be done,—
    • That were a man's and lover's part,
    • That were Freedom's whitest chart.

compensation.

    • Why should I keep holiday
    • When other men have none?
    • Why but because, when these are gay,
    • I sit and mourn alone?
    • And why, when mirth unseals all tongues,
    • Should mine alone be dumb?
    • Ah! late I spoke to silent throngs,
    • And now their hour is come.

forbearance.

    • Hast thou named all the birds without a gun?
    • Loved the wood-rose, and left it on its stalk?
    • At rich men's tables eaten bread and pulse?
    • Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust?
    • And loved so well a high behavior,
    • In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained,
    • Nobility more nobly to repay?
    • O, be my friend, and teach me to be thine!

the park.

    • The prosperous and beautiful
    • To me seem not to wear
    • The yoke of conscience masterful,
    • Which galls me everywhere.
    • I cannot shake off the god;
    • On my neck he makes his seat;
    • I look at my face in the glass,—
    • My eyes his eyeballs meet.
    • Enchanters! enchantresses!
    • Your gold makes you seem wise;
    • The morning mist within your grounds
    • More proudly rolls, more softly lies.
    • Yet spake yon purple mountain,
    • Yet said yon ancient wood,
    • That Night or Day, that Love or Crime,
    • Leads all souls to the Good.

forerunners.

    • Long I followed happy guides,
    • I could never reach their sides;
    • Their step is forth, and, ere the day
    • Breaks up their leaguer, and away.
    • Keen my sense, my heart was young,
    • Right good-will my sinews strung,
    • But no speed of mine avails
    • To hunt upon their shining trails.
    • On and away, their hasting feet
    • Make the morning proud and sweet;
    • Flowers they strew,—I catch the scent;
    • Or tone of silver instrument
    • Leaves on the wind melodious trace;
    • Yet I could never see their face.
    • On eastern hills I see their smokes,
    • Mixed with mist by distant lochs.
    • I met many travellers
    • Who the road had surely kept;
    • They saw not my fine revellers,—
    • These had crossed them while they slept.
    • Some had heard their fair report,
    • In the country or the court.
    • Fleetest couriers alive
    • Never yet could once arrive,
    • As they went or they returned,
    • At the house where these sojourned.
    • Sometimes their strong speed they slacken,
    • Though they are not overtaken;
    • In sleep their jubilant troop is near,—
    • I tuneful voices overhear;
    • It may be in wood or waste,—
    • At unawares 't is come and past.
    • Their near camp my spirit knows
    • By signs gracious as rainbows.
    • I thenceforward and long after
    • Listen for their harp-like laughter,
    • And carry in my heart, for days,
    • Peace that hallows rudest ways.

sursum corda.

    • Seek not the spirit, if it hide
    • Inexorable to thy zeal:
    • Trembler, do not whine and chide:
    • Art thou not also real?
    • Stoop not then to poor excuse;
    • Turn on the accuser roundly; say,
    • ‘Here am I, here will I abide
    • Forever to myself soothfast;
    • Go thou, sweet Heaven, or at thy pleasure stay!’
    • Already Heaven with thee its lot has cast,
    • For only it can absolutely deal.

ode to beauty.

    • Who gave thee, O Beauty,
    • The keys of this breast,—
    • Too credulous lover
    • Of blest and unblest?
    • Say, when in lapsed ages
    • Thee knew I of old?
    • Or what was the service
    • For which I was sold?
    • When first my eyes saw thee,
    • I found me thy thrall,
    • By magical drawings,
    • Sweet tyrant of all!
    • I drank at thy fountain
    • False waters of thirst;
    • Thou intimate stranger,
    • Thou latest and first!
    • Thy dangerous glances
    • Make women of men;
    • New-born, we are melting
    • Into nature again.
    • Lavish, lavish promiser,
    • Nigh persuading gods to err!
    • Guest of million painted forms,
    • Which in turn thy glory warms!
    • The frailest leaf, the mossy bark,
    • The acorn's cup, the raindrop's arc,
    • The swinging spider's silver line,
    • The ruby of the drop of wine,
    • The shining pebble of the pond,
    • Thou inscribest with a bond,
    • In thy momentary play,
    • Would bankrupt nature to repay.
    • Ah, what avails it
    • To hide or to shun
    • Whom the Infinite One
    • Hath granted his throne?
    • The heaven high over
    • Is the deep's lover;
    • The sun and sea,
    • Informed by thee,
    • Before me run
    • And draw me on,
    • Yet fly me still,
    • As Fate refuses
    • To me the heart Fate for me chooses.
    • Is it that my opulent soul
    • Was mingled from the generous whole;
    • Sea-valleys and the deep of skies
    • Furnished several supplies;
    • And the sands whereof I'm made
    • Draw me to them, self-betrayed?
    • I turn the proud portfolio
    • Which holds the grand designs
    • Of Salvator, of Guercino,
    • And Piranesi's lines.
    • I hear the lofty pæans
    • Of the masters of the shell,
    • Who heard the starry music
    • And recount the numbers well;
    • Olympian bards who sung
    • Divine Ideas below,
    • Which always find us young
    • And always keep us so.
    • Oft, in streets or humblest places,
    • I detect far-wandered graces,
    • Which, from Eden wide astray,
    • In lowly homes have lost their way.
    • Thee gliding through the sea of form,
    • Like the lightning through the storm,
    • Somewhat not to be possessed,
    • Somewhat not to be caressed,
    • No feet so fleet could ever find,
    • No perfect form could ever bind.
    • Thou eternal fugitive,
    • Hovering over all that live,
    • Quick and skilful to inspire
    • Sweet, extravagant desire,
    • Starry space and lily-bell
    • Filling with thy roseate smell,
    • Wilt not give the lips to taste
    • Of the nectar which thou hast
    • All that's good and great with thee
    • Works in close conspiracy;
    • Thou hast bribed the dark and lonely
    • To report thy features only,
    • And the cold and purple morning
    • Itself with thoughts of thee adorning;
    • The leafy dell, the city mart,
    • Equal trophies of thine art;
    • E'en the flowing azure air
    • Thou hast touched for my despair;
    • And, if I languish into dreams,
    • Again I meet the ardent beams.
    • Queen of things! I dare not die
    • In Being's deeps past ear and eye;
    • Lest there I find the same deceive,
    • And be the sport of Fate forever.
    • Dread Power, but dear! if God thou be,
    • Unmake me quite, or give thyself to me!

give all to love.

    • Give all to love;
    • Obey thy heart
    • Friends, kindred, days,
    • Estate, good-fame,
    • Plans, credit and the Muse,—
    • Nothing refuse.
    • 'T is a brave master;
    • Let it have scope:
    • Follow it utterly,
    • Hope beyond hope:
    • High and more high
    • It dives into noon,
    • With wing unspent,
    • Untold intent:
    • But it is a god,
    • Knows its own path
    • And the outlets of the sky.
    • It was never for the mean;
    • It requireth courage stout.
    • Souls above doubt,
    • Valor unbending,
    • It will reward,—
    • They shall return
    • More than they were,
    • And ever ascending.
    • Leave all for love;
    • Yet, hear me, yet,
    • One word more thy heart behoved,
    • One pulse more of firm endeavor,—
    • Keep thee to-day,
    • To-morrow, forever,
    • Free as an Arab
    • Of thy beloved.
    • Cling with life to the maid;
    • But when the surprise,
    • First vague shadow of surmise
    • Flits across her bosom young,
    • Of a joy apart from thee,
    • Free be she, fancy-free;
    • Nor thou detain her vesture's hem,
    • Nor the palest rose she flung
    • From her summer diadem.
    • Though thou loved her as thyself,
    • As a self of purer clay,
    • Though her parting dims the day,
    • Stealing grace from all alive;
    • Heartily know.
    • When half-gods go,
    • The gods arrive.

to ellen
at the south.

    • The green grass is bowing,
    • The morning wind is in it;
    • 'T is a tune worth thy knowing,
    • Though it change every minute.
    • 'T is a tune of the Spring;
    • Every year plays it over
    • To the robin on the wing,
    • And to the pausing lover.
    • O'er ten thousand, thousand acres,
    • Goes light the nimble zephyr;
    • The Flowers—tiny sect of Shakers—
    • Worship him ever.
    • Hark to the winning sound!
    • They summon thee, dearest,—
    • Saying, ‘We have dressed for thee the ground,
    • Nor yet thou appearest.
    • ‘O hasten;’ 't is our time,
    • Ere yet the red Summer
    • Scorch our delicate prime,
    • Loved of bee,—the tawny hummer.
    • ‘O pride of thy race!
    • Sad, in sooth, it were to ours,
    • If our brief tribe miss thy face,
    • We poor New England flowers.
    • ‘Fairest, choose the fairest members
    • Of our lithe society;
    • June's glories and September's
    • Show our love and piety.
    • 'Thou shalt command us all,—
    • April's cowslip, summer's clover,
    • To the gentian in the fall,
    • Blue-eyed pet of blue-eyed lover.
    • ‘O come, then, quickly come!
    • We are budding, we are blowing;
    • And the wind that we perfume
    • Sings a tune that's worth the knowing.’

to eva.

    • O fair and stately maid, whose eyes
    • Were kindled in the upper skies
    • At the same torch that lighted mine;
    • For so I must interpret still
    • Thy sweet dominion o'er my will,
    • A sympathy divine.
    • Ah! let me blameless gaze upon
    • Features that seem at heart my own;
    • Nor fear those watchful sentinels,
    • Who charm the more their glance forbids,
    • Chaste-glowing, underneath their lids,
    • With fire that draws while it repels.

the amulet.

    • Your picture smiles as first it smiled;
    • The ring you gave is still the same;
    • Your letter tells, O changing child!
    • No tidings since it came.
    • Give me an amulet
    • That keeps intelligence with you,—
    • Red when you love, and rosier red,
    • And when you love not, pale and blue.
    • Alas! that neither bonds nor vows
    • Can certify possession;
    • Torments me still the fear that love
    • Died in its last expression.

thine eyes still shined.

    • Thine eyes still shined for me, though far
    • I lonely roved the land or sea:
    • As I behold yon evening star,
    • Which yet beholds not me.
    • This morn I climbed the misty hill
    • And roamed the pastures through;
    • How danced thy form before my path
    • Amidst the deep-eyed dew!
    • When the redbird spread his sable wing,
    • And showed his side of flame;
    • When the rosebud ripened to the rose,
    • In both I read thy name.

eros.

    • The sense of the world is short,—
    • Long and various the report,—
    • To love and be beloved;
    • Men and gods have not outlearned it;
    • And, how oft soe'er they've turned it,
    • Not to be improved.

hermione.

    • On a mound an Arab lay,
    • And sung his sweet regrets
    • And told his amulets:
    • The summer bird
    • His sorrow heard,
    • And, when he heaved a sigh profound,
    • The sympathetic swallow swept the ground,
    • ‘If it be, as they said, she was not fair,
    • Beauty's not beautiful to me,
    • But sceptred genius, aye inorbed,
    • Culminating in her sphere.
    • This Hermione absorbed
    • The lustre of the land and ocean,
    • Hills and islands, cloud and tree,
    • In her form and motion.
    • ‘I ask no bauble miniature,
    • Nor ringlets dead
    • Shorn from her comely head,
    • Now that morning not disdains
    • Mountains and the misty plains
    • Her colossal portraiture;
    • They her heralds be,
    • Steeped in her quality,
    • And singers of her fame
    • Who is their Muse and dame.
    • ‘Higher, dear swallows! mind not what I say.
    • Ah! heedless how the weak are strong,
    • Say, was it just,
    • In thee to frame, in me to trust,
    • Thou to the Syrian couldst belong?
    • I am of a lineage
    • That each for each doth fast engage;
    • In old Bassora's schools, I seemed
    • Hermit vowed to books and gloom,—
    • Ill-bestead for gay bridegroom.
    • I was by thy touch redeemed;
    • When thy meteor glances came,
    • We talked at large of worldly fate,
    • And drew truly every trait.
    • Once I dwelt apar,
    • Now I live with all;
    • As shepherd's lamp on far hill-side
    • Seems, by the traveller espied,
    • A door into the mountain heart,
    • So didst thou quarry and unlock
    • Highways for me through the rock.
    • ‘Now, deceived, thou wanderest
    • In strange lands unblest;
    • And my kindred come to soothe me.
    • Southwind is my next of blood;
    • He is come through fragrant wood,
    • Drugged with spice from climates warm,
    • And in every twinkling glade,
    • And twilight nook,
    • Unveils thy form.
    • Out of the forest way
    • Forth paced it yesterday;
    • And when I sat by the watercourse,
    • Watching the daylight fade,
    • It throbbed up from the brook.
    • ‘River and rose and crag and bird,
    • Frost and sun and eldest night,
    • To me their aid preferred,
    • To me their comfort plight;—
    • “Courage! we are thine allies,
    • And with this hint be wise,—
    • The chains of kind
    • The distant bind;
    • Deed thou doest she must do,
    • Above her will, be true;
    • And, in her strict resort
    • To winds and waterfalls
    • And autumn's sunlit festivals,
    • To music, and to music's thought,
    • Inextricably bound,
    • She shall find thee, and be found.
    • Follow not her flying feet;
    • Come to us herself to meet.”’

initial, dæmonic, and celestial love

i.

the initial love.

    • Venus, when her son was lost,
    • Cried him up and down the coast,
    • In hamlets, palaces and parks,
    • And told the truant by his marks,—
    • Golden curls, and quiver and bow.
    • This befell how long ago!
    • Time and tide are strangely changed,
    • Men and manners much deranged:
    • None will now find Cupid latent
    • By this foolish antique patent.
    • He came late along the waste,
    • Shod like a traveller for haste;
    • With malice dared me to proclaim him
    • That the maids and boys might name him.
    • Boy no more, he wears all coats,
    • Frocks and blouses, capes, capotes;
    • He bears no bow, or quiver, or wand,
    • Nor chaplet on his head or hand.
    • Leave his weeds and heed his eyes,—
    • All the rest he can disguise.
    • In the pit of his eye's a spark
    • Would bring back day if it were dark;
    • And, if I tell you all my thought,
    • Though I comprehend it not,
    • In those unfathomable orbs
    • Every function he absorbs;
    • Doth eat, and drink, and fish, and shoot,
    • And write, and reason, and compute,
    • And ride, and run, and have, and hold,
    • And whine, and flatter, and regret,
    • And kiss, and couple, and beget,
    • By those roving eyeballs bold.
    • Undaunted are their courage,
    • Right Cossacks in their forages;
    • Fleeter they than any creature,—
    • They are his steeds, and not his feature;
    • Inquisitive, and fierce, and fasting,
    • Restless, predatory, hasting;
    • And they pounce on other eyes
    • As lions on their prey;
    • And round their circles is writ,
    • Plainer than the day,
    • Underneath, within, above,—
    • Love—love—love—love.
    • He lives in his eyes;
    • There doth digest, and work, and spin,
    • And buy, and sell, and lose, and win;
    • He rolls them with delighted motion,
    • Joy-tides swell their mimic ocean.
    • Yet holds he them with tortest rein,
    • That they may seize and entertain
    • The glance that to their glance opposes,
    • Like fiery honey sucked from roses.
    • He palmistry can understand,
    • Imbibing virtue by his hand
    • As if it were a living root;
    • The pulse of hands will make him mute;
    • With all his force he gathers balms
    • Into those wise, thrilling palms.
    • Cupid is a casuist,
    • A mystic and a cabalist,—
    • Can your lurking thought surprise,
    • And interpret your device.
    • He is versed in occult science,
    • In magic and in clairvoyance,
    • Oft he keeps his fine ear strained,
    • And Reason on her tiptoe pained
    • For aëry intelligence,
    • And for strange coincidence.
    • But it touches his quick heart
    • When Fate by omens takes his part,
    • And chance-dropped hints from Nature's sphere
    • Deeply soothe his anxious ear.
    • Heralds high before him run;
    • He has ushers many a one;
    • He spreads his welcome where he goes,
    • And touches all things with his rose.
    • All things wait for and divine him,—
    • How shall I dare to malign him,
    • Or accuse the god of sport?
    • I must end my true report,
    • Painting him from head to foot,
    • In as far as I took note,
    • Trusting well the matchless power
    • Of this young-eyed emperor
    • Will clear his fame from every cloud
    • With the bards and with the crowd.
    • He is wilful, mutable,
    • Shy, untamed, inscrutable,
    • Swifter-fashioned than the fairies,
    • Substance mixed of pure contraries;
    • His vice some elder virtue's token,
    • And his good is evil-spoken.
    • Failing sometimes of his own,
    • He is headstrong and alone;
    • He affects the wood and wild,
    • Like a flower-hunting child;
    • Buries himself in summer waves,
    • In trees, with beasts, in mines and caves,
    • Loves nature like a horned cow,
    • Bird, or deer, or caribou.
    • Shun him, nymphs, on the fleet horses!
    • He has a total world of wit;
    • O how wise are his discourses!
    • But he is the arch-hypocrite,
    • And, through all science and all art,
    • Seeks alone his counterpart.
    • He is a Pundit of the East,
    • He is an augur and a priest,
    • And his soul will melt in prayer,
    • But word and wisdom is a snare;
    • Corrupted by the present toy
    • He follows joy, and only joy.
    • There is no mask but he will wear;
    • He invented oaths to swear;
    • He paints, he carves, he chants, he prays,
    • And holds all stars in his embrace.
    • He takes a sovran privilege
    • Not allowed to any liege;
    • For Cupid goes behind all law,
    • And right into himself does draw;
    • For he is sovereignly allied,—
    • Heaven's oldest blood flows in his side,—
    • And interchangeably at one
    • With every king on every throne,
    • That no god dare say him nay,
    • Or see the fault, or seen betray:
    • He has the Muses by the heart,
    • And the stern Parcæ on his part.
    • His many signs cannot be told;
    • He has not one mode, but manifold,
    • Many fashions and addresses,
    • Piques, reproaches, hurts, caresses.
    • He will preach like a friar,
    • And jump like Harlequin;
    • He will read like a crier,
    • And fight like a Paladin.
    • Boundless is his memory;
    • Plans immense his term prolong;
    • He is not of counted age,
    • Meaning always to be young.
    • And his wish is intimacy,
    • Intimater intimacy,
    • And a stricter privacy;
    • The impossible shall yet be done,
    • And, being two, shall still be one.
    • As the wave breaks to foam on shelves,
    • Then runs into a wave again,
    • So lovers melt their sundered selves,
    • Yet melted would be twain

ii.

the dæmonic love.

    • Man was made of social earth,
    • Child and brother from his birth,
    • Tethered by a liquid cord
    • Of blood through veins of kindred poured.
    • Next his heart the fireside band
    • Of mother, father, sister, stand;
    • Names from awful childhood heard
    • Throbs of a wild religion stirred;—
    • Virtue, to love, to hate them, vice;
    • Till dangerous Beauty came, at last,
    • Till Beauty came to snap all ties;
    • The maid, abolishing the past,
    • With lotus wine obliterates
    • Dear memory's stone-incarved traits,
    • And, by herself, supplants alone
    • Friends year by year more inly known.
    • When her calm eyes opened bright,
    • All else grew foreign in their light.
    • It was ever the self-same tale,
    • The first experience will not fail;
    • Only two in the garden walked,
    • And with snake and seraph talked.
    • Close, close to men,
    • Like undulating layer of air,
    • Right above their heads,
    • The potent plain of Dæmons spreads.
    • Stands to each human soul its own,
    • For watch and ward and furtherance
    • In the snares of Nature's dance;
    • And the lustre and the grace
    • To fascinate each youthful heart,
    • Beaming from its counterpart,
    • Translucent through the mortal covers,
    • Is the Dæmon's form and face.
    • To and fro the Genius hies,—
    • A gleam which plays and hovers
    • Over the maiden's head,
    • And dips sometimes as low as to her eyes.
    • Unknown, albeit lying near,
    • To men, the path to the Dæmon sphere;
    • And they that swiftly come and go
    • Leave no track on the heavenly snow.
    • Sometimes the airy synod bends,
    • And the mighty choir descends,
    • And the brains of men thenceforth,
    • In crowded and in still resorts,
    • Teem with unwonted thoughts:
    • As, when a shower of meteors
    • Cross the orbit of the earth,
    • And, lit by fringent air,
    • Blaze near and far,
    • Mortals deem the planets bright
    • Have slipped their sacred bars,
    • And the lone seaman all the night
    • Sails, astonished, amid stars.
    • Beauty of a richer vein,
    • Graces of a subtler strain,
    • Unto men these moonmen lend,
    • And our shrinking sky extend.
    • So is man's narrow path
    • By strength and terror skirted;
    • Also (from the song the wrath
    • Of the Genii be averted!
    • The Muse the truth uncolored speaking
    • The Dæmons are self-seeking:
    • Their fierce and limitary will
    • Draws men to their likeness still.
    • The erring painter made Love blind,—
    • Highest Love who shines on all;
    • Him, radiant, sharpest-sighted god,
    • None can bewilder;
    • Whose eyes pierce
    • The universe,
    • Path-finder, road-builder,
    • Mediator, royal giver;
    • Rightly seeing, rightly seen,
    • Of joyful and transparent mien
    • 'T is a sparkle passing
    • From each to each, from thee to me,
    • To and fro perpetually;
    • Sharing all, daring all,
    • Levelling, displacing
    • Each obstruction, it unites
    • Equals remote, and seeming opposites.
    • And ever and forever Love
    • Delights to build a road:
    • Unheeded Danger near him strides,
    • Love laughs, and on a lion rides.
    • But Cupid wears another face,
    • Born into Dæmons less divine:
    • His roses bleach apace,
    • His nectar smacks of wine.
    • The Dæmon ever builds a wall,
    • Himself encloses and includes,
    • Solitude in solitudes:
    • In like sort his love doth fall.
    • He doth elect
    • The beautiful and fortunate,
    • And the sons of intellect,
    • And the souls of ample fate,
    • Who the Future's gates unbar,—
    • Minions of the Morning Star.
    • In his prowess he exults,
    • And the multitude insults.
    • His impatient looks devour
    • Oft the humble and the poor;
    • And, seeing his eye glare,
    • They drop their few pale flowers,
    • Gathered with hope to please,
    • Along the mountain towers,—
    • Lose courage, and despair.
    • He will never be gainsaid,—
    • Pitiless, will not be stayed;
    • His hot tyranny
    • Burns up every other tie.
    • Therefore comes an hour from Jove
    • Which his ruthless will defies,
    • And the dogs of Fate unties.
    • Shiver the palaces of glass;
    • Shrivel the rainbow-colored walls,
    • Where in bright Art each god and sibyl dwelt
    • Secure as in the zodiac's belt;
    • And the galleries and halls,
    • Wherein every siren sung,
    • Like a meteor pass.
    • For this fortune wanted root
    • In the core of God's abysm,—
    • Was a weed of self and schism;
    • And ever the Dæmonic Love
    • Is the ancestor of wars
    • And the parent of remorse.

iii.

the celestial love.

    • But God said,
    • ‘I will have a purer gift;
    • There is smoke in the flame;
    • New flowerets bring, new prayers uplift,
    • And love without a name.
    • Fond children, ye desire
    • To please each other well;
    • Another round, a higher,
    • Ye shall climb on the heavenly stair,
    • And selfish preference forbear;
    • And in right deserving,
    • And without a swerving
    • Each from your proper state,
    • Weave roses for your mate.
    • ‘Deep, deep are loving eyes,
    • Flowed with naphtha fiery sweet;
    • And the point is paradise,
    • Where their glances meet:
    • Their reach shall yet be more profound,
    • And a vision without bound:
    • The axis of those eyes sun-clear
    • Be the axis of the sphere:
    • So shall the lights ye pour amain
    • Go, without check or intervals,
    • Through from the empyrean walls
    • Unto the same again.’
    • Higher far into the pure realm,
    • Over sun and star,
    • Over the flickering Dæmon film,
    • Thou must mount for love;
    • Into vision where all form
    • In one only form dissolves;
    • In a region where the wheel
    • On which all beings ride
    • Visibly revolves;
    • Where the starred, eternal worm
    • Girds the world with bound and term;
    • Where unlike things are like;
    • Where good and ill,
    • And joy and moan,
    • Melt into one.
    • There Past, Present, Future, shoot
    • Triple blossoms from one root;
    • Substances at base divided,
    • In their summits are united;
    • There the holy essence rolls
    • One through separated souls;
    • And the sunny Æon sleeps
    • Folding Nature in its deeps,
    • And every fair and every good,
    • Known in part, or known impure,
    • To men below,
    • In their archetypes endure.
    • The race of gods,
    • Or those we erring own,
    • Are shadows flitting up and down
    • In the still abodes.
    • The circles of that sea are laws
    • Which publish and which hide the cause.
    • Pray for a beam
    • Out of that sphere,
    • Thee to guide and to redeem.
    • O, what a load
    • Of care and toil,
    • By lying use bestowed,
    • From his shoulders falls who sees
    • The true astronomy,
    • The period of peace.
    • Counsel which the ages kept
    • Shall the well-born soul accept.
    • As the overhanging trees
    • Fill the lake with images,—
    • As garment draws the garment's hem,
    • Men their fortunes bring with them.
    • By right or wrong,
    • Lands and goods go to the strong.
    • Property will brutely draw
    • Still to the proprietor;
    • Silver to silver creep and wind,
    • And kind to kind.
    • Nor less the eternal poles
    • Of tendency distribute souls.
    • There need no vows to bind
    • Whom not each other seek, but find.
    • They give and take no pledge or oath,—
    • Nature is the bond of both:
    • No prayer persuades, no flattery fawns,—
    • Their noble meanings are their pawns.
    • Plain and cold is their address,
    • Power have they for tenderness;
    • And, so thoroughly is known
    • Each other's counsel by his own,
    • They can parley without meeting;
    • Need is none of forms of greeting;
    • They can well communicate
    • In their innermost estate;
    • When each the other shall avoid,
    • Shall each by each be most enjoyed.
    • Not with scarfs or perfumed gloves
    • Do these celebrate their loves:
    • Not by jewels, feasts and savors,
    • Not by ribbons or by favors,
    • But by the sun-spark on the sea,
    • And the cloud-shadow on the lea,
    • The soothing lapse of morn to mirk,
    • And the cheerful round of work.
    • Their cords of love so public are,
    • They intertwine the farthest star:
    • The throbbing sea, the quaking earth,
    • Yield sympathy and signs of mirth;
    • Is none so high, so mean is none,
    • But feels and seals this union;
    • Even the fell Furies are appeased,
    • The good applaud, the lost are eased.
    • Love's hearts are faithful, but not fond,
    • Bound for the just, but not beyond;
    • Not glad, as the low-loving herd,
    • Of self in other still preferred,
    • But they have heartily designed
    • The benefit of broad mankind.
    • And they serve men austerely,
    • After their own genius, clearly,
    • Without a false humility;
    • For this is Love's nobility,—
    • Not to scatter bread and gold,
    • Goods and raiment bought and sold;
    • But to hold fast his simple sense,
    • And speak the speech of innocence.
    • And with hand and body and blood,
    • To make his bosom-counsel good.
    • He that feeds men serveth few;
    • He serves all who dares be true.

the apology.

    • Think me not unkind and rude
    • That I walk alone in grove and glen;
    • I go to the god of the wood
    • To fetch his word to men.
    • Tax not my sloth that I
    • Fold my arms beside the brook;
    • Each cloud that floated in the sky
    • Writes a letter in my book.
    • Chide me not, laborious band,
    • For the idle flowers I brought;
    • Every aster in my hand
    • Goes home loaded with a thought.
    • There was never mystery
    • But 't is figured in the flowers;
    • Was never secret history
    • But birds tell it in the bowers.
    • One harvest from thy field
    • Homeward brought the oxen strong;
    • A second crop thine acres yield,
    • Which I gather in a song.

merlin.

i.

    • Thy trivial harp will never please
    • Or fill my craving ear;
    • Its chords should ring as blows the breeze,
    • Free, peremptory, clear.
    • No jingling serenader's art,
    • Nor tinkle of piano strings,
    • Can make the wild blood start
    • In its mystic springs.
    • The kingly bard
    • Must smite the chords rudely and hard.
    • As with hammer or with mace;
    • That they may render back
    • Artful thunder, which conveys
    • Secrets of the solar track,
    • Sparks of the supersolar blaze.
    • Merlin's blows are strokes of fate,
    • Chiming with the forest tone,
    • When boughs buffet boughs in the wood;
    • Chiming with the gasp and moan
    • Of the ice-imprisoned flood;
    • With the pulse of manly hearts;
    • With the voice of orators;
    • With the din of city arts;
    • With the cannonade of wars;
    • With the marches of the brave;
    • And prayers of might from martyrs' cave.
    • Great is the art,
    • Great be the manners, of the bard.
    • He shall not his brain encumber
    • With the coil of rhythm and number;
    • But, leaving rule and pale forethought,
    • He shall aye climb
    • For his rhyme.
    • ‘Pass in, pass in,’ the angels say,
    • ‘In to the upper doors,
    • Nor count compartments of the floors,
    • But mount to paradise
    • By the stairway of surprise.’
    • Blameless master of the games,
    • King of sport that never shames,
    • He shall daily joy dispense
    • Hid in song's sweet influence.
    • Forms more cheerly live and go,
    • What time the subtle mind
    • Sings aloud the tune whereto
    • Their pulses beat,
    • And march their feet,
    • And their members are combined.
    • By Sybarites beguiled,
    • He shall no task decline;
    • Merlin's mighty line
    • Extremes of nature reconciled,—
    • Bereaved a tyrant of his will,
    • And made the lion mild.
    • Songs can the tempest still,
    • Scattered on the stormy air,
    • Mould the year to fair increase,
    • And bring in poetic peace.
    • He shall not seek to weave,
    • In weak, unhappy times,
    • Efficacious rhymes;
    • Wait his returning strength.
    • Bird that from the nadir's floor
    • To the zenith's top can soar,—
    • The soaring orbit of the muse exceeds that journey's length.
    • Nor profane affect to hit
    • Or compass that, by meddling wit,
    • Which only the propitious mind
    • Publishes when 't is inclined.
    • There are open hours
    • When the God's will sallies free,
    • And the dull idiot might see
    • The flowing fortunes of a thousand years;—
    • Sudden, at unawares,
    • Self-moved, fly-to the doors,
    • Nor sword of angels could reveal
    • What they conceal.

merlin.

ii.

    • The rhyme of the poet
    • Modulates the king's affairs;
    • Balance-loving Nature
    • Made all things in pairs.
    • To every foot its antipode;
    • Each color with its counter glowed;
    • To every tone beat answering tones,
    • Higher or graver;
    • Flavor gladly blends with flavor;
    • Leaf answers leaf upon on the bough;
    • And match the paired cotyledons.
    • Hands to hands, and feet to feet,
    • In one body grooms and brides;
    • Eldest rite, two married sides
    • In every mortal meet.
    • Light's far furnace shines,
    • Smelting balls and bars,
    • Forging double stars,
    • Glittering twins and trines.
    • The animals are sick with love,
    • Lovesick with rhyme;
    • Each with all propitious Time
    • Into chorus wove.
    • Like the dancers' ordered band,
    • Thoughts come also hand in hand;
    • In equal couples mated,
    • Or else alternated;
    • Adding by their mutual gage,
    • One to other, health and age.
    • Solitary fancies go
    • Short-lived wandering to and fro,
    • Most like to bachelors,
    • Or an ungiven maid,
    • Not ancestors,
    • With no posterity to make the lie afraid,
    • Or keep truth undecayed.
    • Perfect-paired as eagle's wings,
    • Justice is the rhyme of things;
    • Trade and counting use
    • The self-same tuneful muse;
    • And Nemesis,
    • Who with even matches odd,
    • Who athwart space redresses
    • The partial wrong,
    • Fills the just period,
    • And finishes the song.
    • Subtle rhymes, with ruin rife,
    • Murmur in the house of life,
    • Sung by the Sisters as they spin;
    • In perfect time and measure they
    • Build and unbuild our echoing clay.
    • As the two twilights of the day
    • Fold us music-drunken in.

bacchus.

    • Bring me wine, but wine which never grew
    • In the belly of the grape,
    • Or grew on vine whose tap-roots, reaching through
    • Under the Andes to the Cape,
    • Suffer no savor of the earth to scape.
    • Let its grapes the morn salute
    • From a nocturnal root,
    • Which feels the acrid juice
    • Of Styx and Erebus;
    • And turns the woe of Night,
    • By its own craft, to a more rich delight.
    • We buy ashes for bread;
    • We buy diluted wine;
    • Give me of the true,—
    • Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled
    • Among the silver hills of heaven
    • Draw everlasting dew;
    • Wine of wine,
    • Blood of the world,
    • Form of forms, and mould of statures,
    • That I intoxicated,
    • And by the draught assimilated,
    • May float at pleasure through all natures;
    • The bird-language rightly spell,
    • And that which roses say so well.
    • Wine that is shed
    • Like the torrents of the sun
    • Up the horizon walls,
    • Or like the Atlantic streams, which run
    • When the South Sea calls.
    • Water and bread,
    • Food which needs no transmuting,
    • Rainbow-flowering, wisdom-fruiting,
    • Wine which is already man,
    • Food which teach and reason can.
    • Wine which Music is,—
    • Music and wine are one,—
    • That I, drinking this,
    • Shall hear far Chaos talk with me;
    • Kings unborn shall walk with me;
    • And the poor grass shall plot and plan
    • What it will do when it is man.
    • Quickened so, will I unlock
    • Every crypt of every rock.
    • I thank the joyful juice
    • For all I know;—
    • Winds of remembering
    • Of the ancient being blow,
    • And seeming-solid walls of use
    • Open and flow.
    • Pour, Bacchus! the remembering wine;
    • Retrieve the loss of me and mine!
    • Vine for vine be antidote,
    • And the grape requite the lote!
    • Haste to cure the old despair,—
    • Reason in Nature's lotus drenched,
    • The memory of ages quenched;
    • Give them again to shine;
    • Let wine repair what this undid;
    • And where the infection slid,
    • A dazzling memory revive;
    • Refresh the faded tints,
    • Recut the aged prints,
    • And write my old adventures with the pen
    • Which on the first day drew,
    • Upon the tablets blue,
    • The dancing Pleiads and eternal men.

merops.

    • What care I, so they stand the same,—
    • Things of the heavenly mind,—
    • How long the power to give them name
    • Tarries yet behind?
    • Thus far to-day your favors reach,
    • O fair, appeasing presences!
    • Ye taught my lips a single speech,
    • And a thousand silences.
    • Space grants beyond his fated road
    • No inch to the god of day;
    • And copious language still bestowed
    • One word, no more, to say.

saadi.

    • Trees in groves,
    • Kane in droves,
    • In ocean sport the scaly herds,
    • Wedge-like cleave the air the birds,
    • To northern lakes fly wind-borne ducks,
    • Browse the mountain sheep in flocks,
    • Men consort in camp and town,
    • But the poet dwells alone.
    • God, who gave to him the lyre,
    • Of all mortals the desire,
    • For all breathing men's behoof,
    • Straitly charged him, ‘Sit aloof;’
    • Annexed a warning, poets say,
    • To the bright premium,—
    • Ever, when twain together play,
    • Shall the harp be dumb.
    • Many may come,
    • But one shall sing;
    • Two touch the string,
    • The harp is dumb.
    • Though there come a million,
    • Wise Saadi dwells alone.
    • Yet Saadi loved the race of men,—
    • No churl, immured in cave or den;
    • In bower and hall
    • He wants them all,
    • Nor can dispense
    • With Persia for his audience;
    • They must give ear,
    • Grow red with joy and white with fear;
    • Bat he has no companion;
    • Come ten, or come a million,
    • Good Saadi dwells alone.
    • Be thou ware where Saadi dwells;
    • Wisdom of the gods is he,—
    • Entertain it reverently.
    • Gladly round that golden lamp
    • Sylvan deities encamp,
    • And simple maids and noble youth
    • Are welcome to the man of truth.
    • Most welcome they who need him most,
    • They feed the spring which they exhaust;
    • For greater need
    • Draws better deed:
    • But, critic, spare thy vanity,
    • Nor show thy pompous parts,
    • To vex with odious subtlety
    • The cheerer of men's hearts.
    • Sad-eyed Fakirs swiftly say
    • Endless dirges to decay,
    • Never in the blaze of light
    • Lose the shudder of midnight;
    • Pale at overflowing noon
    • Hear wolves barking at the moon;
    • In the bower of dalliance sweet
    • Hear the far Avenger's feet:
    • And shake before those awful Powers,
    • Who in their pride forgive not ours.
    • Thus the sad-eyed Fakirs preach:
    • ‘Bard, when thee would Allah teach.
    • And lift thee to his holy mount,
    • He sends thee from his bitter fount
    • Wormwood,—saying, “Go thy ways;
    • Drink not the Malaga of praise,
    • But do the deed thy fellows hate,
    • And compromise thy peaceful state;
    • Smite the white breasts which thee fed,
    • Stuff sharp thorns beneath the head
    • Of them thou shouldst have comforted;
    • For out of woe and out of crime
    • Draws the heart a lore sublime.”
    • And yet it seemeth not to me
    • That the high gods love tragedy;
    • For Saadi sat in the sun,
    • And thanks was his contrition;
    • For haircloth and for bloody whips,
    • Had active hands and smiling lips;
    • And yet his runes he rightly read,
    • And to his folk his message sped.
    • Sunshine in his heart transferred
    • Lighted each transparent word,
    • And well could honoring Persia learn
    • What Saadi wished to say;
    • For Saadi's nightly stars did burn
    • Brighter than Dschami's day.
    • Whispered the Muse in Saadi's cot;
    • ‘O gentle Saadi, listen not,
    • Tempted by thy praise of wit,
    • Or by thirst and appetite
    • For the talents not thine own,
    • To sons of contradiction.
    • Never, son of eastern morning,
    • Follow falshood, follow scorning.
    • Denounce who will, who will deny,
    • And pile the hills to scale the sky;
    • Let theist, atheist, pantheist,
    • Define and wrangle how they list,
    • Fierce eonserver, fierce destroyer,—
    • But thou, joy-giver and enjoyer,
    • Unknowing war, unknowing crime,
    • Gentle Saadi, mind thy rhyme;
    • Heed not what the brawlers say,
    • Heed thou only Saadi's lay.
    • ‘Let the great world bustle on
    • With war and trade, with camp and town;
    • A thousand men shall dig and eat;
    • At forge and furnace thousands sweat;
    • And thousands sail the purple sea,
    • And give or take the stroke of war,
    • Or crowd the market and bazaar;
    • Oft shall war end, and peace return,
    • And cities rise where cities burn,
    • Ere one man my hill shall climb,
    • Who can turn the golden rhyme.
    • Let them manage how they may,
    • Heed thou only Saadi's lay.
    • Seek the living among the dead,—
    • Man in man is imprisoned;
    • Barefooted Dervish is not poor,
    • If fate unlock his bosom's door,
    • So that what his eye hath seen
    • His tongue can paint as bright, as keen;
    • And what his tender heart hath felt
    • With equal fire thy heart shalt melt.
    • For, whom the Muses smile upon,
    • And touch with soft persuasion,
    • His words like a storm-wind can bring
    • Terror and beauty on their wing;
    • In his every syllable
    • Lurketh nature veritable;
    • And though he speak in midnight dark,—
    • In heaven no star, on earth no spark,—
    • Yet before the listener's eye
    • Swims the world in ecstasy,
    • The forest waves, the morning breaks,
    • The pastures sleep, ripple the lakes,
    • Leaves twinkle, flowers like persons be,
    • And life pulsates in rock or tree.
    • Saadi, so far thy words shall reach:
    • Suns rise and set in Saadi's speech!’
    • And thus to Saadi said the Muse:
    • ‘Eat thou the bread which men refuse;
    • Flee from the goods which from thee flee;
    • Seek nothing,—Fortune seeketh thee.
    • Nor mount, nor dive; all good things keep
    • The midway of the eternal deep.
    • Wish not to fill the isles with eyes
    • To fetch thee birds of paradise:
    • On thine orchard's edge belong
    • All the brags of plume and song;
    • Wise Ali's sunbright sayings pass
    • For proverbs in the market-place:
    • Through mountains bored by regal art,
    • Toil whistles as he drives his cart.
    • Nor scour the seas, nor sift mankind,
    • A poet or a friend to find:
    • Behold, he watches at the door!
    • Behold his shadow on the floor!
    • Open innumerable doors
    • The heaven where unveiled Allah pours
    • The flood of truth, the flood of good,
    • The Seraph's and the Cherub's food.
    • Those doors are men: the Pariah hind
    • Admits thee to the perfect Mind.
    • Seek not beyond thy cottage wall
    • Redeemers that can yield thee all:
    • While thou sittest at thy door
    • On the desert's yellow floor,
    • Listening to the gray-haired crones,
    • Foolish gossips, ancient drones,
    • Saadi, see! they rise in stature
    • To the height of mighty Nature,
    • And the secret stands revealed
    • Fraudulent Time in vain concealed,—
    • That blessed gods in servile masks
    • Plied for thee thy household tasks.’

holidays.

    • From fall to spring, the russet acorn,
    • Fruit beloved of maid and boy,
    • Lent itself beneath the forest,
    • To be the children's toy.
    • Pluck it now! In vain,—thou canst not;
    • Its root has pierced yon shady mound;
    • Toy no longer—it has duties;
    • It is anchored in the ground.
    • Year by year the rose-lipped maiden,
    • Playfellow of young and old,
    • Was frolic sunshine, dear to all men,
    • More dear to one than mines of gold.
    • Whither went the lovely hoyden?
    • Disappeared in blessed wife;
    • Servant to a wooden cradle,
    • Living in a baby's life.
    • Still thon playest;—short vacation
    • Fate grants each to stand aside;
    • Now must thou be man and
    • 'T is the turning of the tide.

xenophanes.

    • By fate, not option, frugal Nature gave
    • One scent to hyson and to wall-flower,
    • One sound to pine-groves and to waterfalls,
    • One aspect to the desert and the lake.
    • It was her stern necessity: all things
    • Are of one pattern made; bird, beast and flower,
    • Song, picture, form, space, thought and character
    • Deceive us, seeming to be many things,
    • And are but one. Beheld far off, they part
    • As God and devil; bring them to the mind,
    • They dull its edge with their monotony.
    • To know one element, explore another,
    • And in the second reappears the first
    • The specious panorama of a year
    • But multiplies the image of a day,—
    • A belt of mirrors round a taper's flame;
    • And universal Nature, through her vast
    • And crowded whole, an infinite paroquet,
    • Repeats one note.

the day's ration.

    • When I was born,
    • From all the seas of strength Fate filled a chalice,
    • Saying, ‘This be thy portion, child; this chalice,
    • Less than a lily's, thou shalt daily draw
    • From my great arteries,—nor less, nor more,’
    • All substances the cunning chemist Time
    • Melts down into that liquor of my life,—
    • Friends, foes, joys, fortunes, beauty and disgust.
    • And whether I am angry or content,
    • Indebted or insulted, loved or hurt,
    • All he distils into sidereal wine
    • And brims my little cup; heedless, alas!
    • Of all he sheds how little it will hold,
    • How much runs over on the desert sands.
    • If a new Muse draw me with splendid ray,
    • And I uplift myself into its heaven,
    • The needs of the first sight absorb my blood,
    • And all the following hours of the day
    • Drag a ridiculous age.
    • To-day, when friends approach, and every hour
    • Brings book, or starbright scroll of genius,
    • The little cap will hold not a bead more,
    • And all the costly liquor runs to waste;
    • Nor gives the jealous lord one diamond drop
    • So to be husbanded for poorer days.
    • Why need I volumes, if one word suffice?
    • Why need I galleries, when a pupil's draught
    • After the master's sketch fills and o'erfills
    • My apprehension? Why seek Italy,
    • Who cannot circumnavigate the sea
    • Of thoughts and things at home, but still adjourn
    • The nearest matters for a thousand days?

blight.

    • Give me truths;
    • For I am weary of the surfaces,
    • And die of inanition. If I knew
    • Only the herbs and simples of the wood,
    • Rue, cinquefoil, gill, vervain and agrimony,
    • Blue-vetch and trillium, hawkweed, sassafras,
    • Milkweeds and murky brakes, quaint pipes and sundew,
    • And rare and virtuous roots, which in these woods
    • Draw untold juices from the common earth,
    • Untold, unknown, and I could surely spell
    • Their fragrance, and their chemistry apply
    • By sweet affinities to human flesh,
    • Driving the foe and stablishing the friend,—
    • O, that were much, and I could be a part
    • Of the round day, related to the sun
    • And planted world, and full executor
    • Of their imperfect functions.
    • But these young scholars, who invade our hills,
    • Bold as the engineer who fells the wood,
    • And travelling often in the cut he makes,
    • Love not the flower they pluck, and know it not,
    • And all their botany is Latin names.
    • The old men studied magic in the flowers,
    • And human fortunes in astronomy,
    • And an omnipotence in chemistry,
    • Preferring things to names, for these were men,
    • Were unitarians of the united world,
    • And, wheresoever their clear eye-beams fell,
    • They caught the footsteps of the Same. Our eyes
    • Are armed, but we are strangers to the stars,
    • And strangers to the mystic beast and bird,
    • And strangers to the plant and to the mine.
    • The injured elements say, ‘Not in us;’
    • And night and day, ocean and continent,
    • Fire, plant and mineral say, ‘Not in us;’
    • And haughtily return us stare for stare.
    • For we invade them impiously for gain;
    • We devastate them unreligiously,
    • And coldly ask their pottage, not their love.
    • Therefore they shove us from them, yield to us
    • Only what to our griping toil is due;
    • But the sweet affluence of love and song,
    • The rich results of the divine consents
    • Of man and earth, of world beloved and lover,
    • The nectar and ambrosia, are withheld;
    • And in the midst of spoils and slaves, we thieves
    • And pirates of the universe, shut out
    • Daily to a more thin and outward rind,
    • Turn pale and starve. Therefore, to our sick eyes,
    • The stunted trees look sick, the summer short,
    • Clouds shade the sun, which will not tan our hay,
    • And nothing thrives to reach its natural term;
    • And life, shorn of its venerable length,
    • Even at its greatest space is a defeat,
    • And dies in anger that it was a dupe;
    • And, in its highest noon and wantonnes;
    • Is early frugal, like a beggar's child;
    • Even in the hot pursuit of the best aims
    • And prizes of ambition, checks its hand,
    • Like Alpine cataracts frozen as they leaped,
    • Chilled with a miserly comparison
    • Of the toy's purchase with the length of life.

musketaquid.

    • Because I was content with these poor fields,
    • Low, open meads, slender and sluggish streams,
    • And found a home in haunts which others scorned,
    • The partial wood-gods overpaid my love,
    • And granted me the freedom of their state,
    • And in their secret senate have prevailed
    • With the dear, dangerous lords that rule our life,
    • Made moon and planets parties to their bond,
    • And through my rock-like, solitary wont
    • Shot million rays of thought and tenderness.
    • For me, in showers, in sweeping showers, the Spring
    • Visits the valley;—break away the clouds,—
    • I bathe in the morn's soft and silvered air,
    • And loiter willing by yon loitering stream.
    • Sparrows far off, and nearer, April's bird,
    • Blue-coated,—flying before from tree to tree,
    • Courageous sing a delicate overture
    • To lead the tardy concert of the year.
    • Onward and nearer rides the sun of May;
    • And wide around, the marriage of the plants
    • Is sweetly solemnized. Then flows amain
    • The surge of summer's beauty; dell and crag,
    • Hollow and lake, hill-side and pine arcade,
    • Are touched with genius. Yonder ragged cliff
    • Has thousand faces in a thousand hours.
    • Beneath low hills, in the broad interval
    • Through which at will our Indian rivulet
    • Winds mindful still of sannup and of squaw,
    • Whose pipe and arrow oft the plough unburies
    • Here in pine houses built of new-fallen trees,
    • Supplanters of the tribe, the farmers dwell.
    • Traveller, to thee, perchance, a tedious road,
    • Or, it may be, a picture; to these men,
    • The landscape is an armory of powers,
    • Which, one by one, they know to draw and use
    • They harness beast, bird, insect, to their work;
    • They prove the virtues of each bed of rock,
    • And, like the chemist mid his loaded jars,
    • Draw from each stratum its adapted use
    • To drug their crops or weapon their arts withal.
    • They turn the frost upon their chemic heap,
    • They set the wind to winnow pulse and grain,
    • They thank the spring-flood for its fertile slime,
    • And, on cheap summit-levels of the snow,
    • Slide with the sledge to inaccessible woods
    • O'er meadows bottomless. So, year by year,
    • They fight the elements with elements,
    • (That one would say, meadow and forest walked,
    • Transmuted in these men to rule their like,)
    • And by the order in the field disclose
    • The order regnant in the yeoman's brain.
    • What these strong masters wrote at large in miles,
    • I followed in small copy in my acre;
    • For there's no rood has not a star above it;
    • The cordial quality of pear or plum
    • Ascends as gladly in a single tree
    • As in broad orchards resonant with bees;
    • And every atom poises for itself,
    • And for the whole. The gentle deities
    • Showed me the lore of colors and of sounds,
    • The innumerable tenements of beauty,
    • The miracle of generative force,
    • Far-reaching concords of astronomy
    • Felt in the plants and in the punctual birds;
    • Better, the linked purpose of the whole,
    • And, chiefest prize, found I true liberty
    • In the glad home plain-dealing Nature gave.
    • The polite found me impolite; the great
    • Would mortify me, but in vain; for still
    • I am a willow of the wilderness,
    • Loving the wind that bent me. All my hurts
    • My garden spade can heal. A woodland walk,
    • A quest of river-grapes, a mocking thrush,
    • A wild-rose, or rock-loving columbine,
    • Salve my worst wounds.
    • For thus the wood-gods murmured in my ear:
    • ‘Dost love our manners? Canst thou silent lie?
    • Canst thou, thy pride forgot, like nature pass
    • Into the winter night's extinguished mood?
    • Canst thou shine now, then darkle,
    • And being latent, feel thyself no less?
    • As, when the all-worshipped moon attracts the eye,
    • The river, hill, stems, foliage are obscure,
    • Yet envies none, none are unenviable.’

dirge.
concord, 1838.

    • I reached the middle of the mount
    • Up which the incarnate soul must climb,
    • And paused for them, and looked around,
    • With me who walked through space and time.
    • Five rosy boys with morning light
    • Had leaped from one fair mother's arms,
    • Fronted the sun with hope as bright,
    • And greeted God with childhood's psalms.
    • Knows he who tills this lonely field
    • To reap its scanty corn,
    • What mystic fruit his acres yield
    • At midnight and at morn?
    • In the long sunny afternoon
    • The plain was full of ghosts;
    • I wandered up, I wandered down,
    • Beset by pensive hosts.
    • The winding Concord gleamed below,
    • Pouring as wide a flood
    • As when my brothers, long ago,
    • Came with me to the wood.
    • But they are gone,—the holy ones
    • Who trod with me this lovely vale;
    • The strong, star-bright companions
    • Are silent, low and pale.
    • My good, my noble, in their prime,
    • Who made this world the feast it was,
    • Who learned with me the lore of time,
    • Who loved this dwelling-place!
    • They took this valley for their toy,
    • They played with it in every mood;
    • A cell for prayer, a hall for joy,—
    • They treated nature as they would.
    • They colored the horizon round;
    • Stars flamed and faded as they bade,
    • All echoes hearkened for their sound,—
    • They made the woodlands glad or mad.
    • I touch this flower of silken leaf,
    • Which once our childhood knew;
    • Its soft leaves wound me with a grief
    • Whose balsam never grew.
    • Hearken to yon pine-warbler
    • Singing aloft in the tree!
    • Hearest thou, O traveller,
    • What he singeth to me?
    • Not unless God made sharp thine ear
    • With sorrow such as mine,
    • Out of that delicate lay could'st thou
    • Its heavy tale divine.
    • ‘Go, lonely man,’ it saith;
    • 'They loved thee from their birth;
    • Their hands were pure, and pure their faith,—
    • There are no such hearts on earth.
    • ‘Ye drew one mother's milk,
    • One chamber held ye all;
    • A very tender history
    • Did in your childhood fall.
    • ‘You cannot unlock your heart,
    • The key is gone with them;
    • The silent organ loudest chants
    • The master's requiem,’

threnody.

    • The South-wind brings
    • Life, sunshine and desire,
    • And on every mount and meadow
    • Breathes aromatic fire;
    • But over the dead he has no power,
    • The lost, the lost, he cannot restore;
    • And, looking over the hills, I mourn
    • The darling who shall not return.
    • I see my empty house,
    • I see my trees repair their boughs;
    • And he, the wondrous child,
    • Whose silver warble wild
    • Outvalued every pulsing sound
    • Within the air's cerulean round,—
    • The hyacinthine boy, for whom
    • Morn well might break and April bloom,
    • The gracious boy, who did adorn
    • The world whereinto he was born,
    • And by his countenance repay
    • The favor of the loving Day,—
    • Has disappeared from the Day's eye;
    • Far and wide she cannot find him;
    • My hopes pursue, they cannot bind him.
    • Returned this day, the south wind searches,
    • And finds young pines and budding birches;
    • But finds not the budding man;
    • Nature, who lost, cannot remake him;
    • Fate let him fall, Fate can't retake him;
    • Nature, Fate, men, him seek in vain.
    • And whither now, my truant wise and sweet,
    • O, whither tend thy feet?
    • I had the right, few days ago,
    • Thy steps to watch, thy place to know:
    • How have I forfeited the right?
    • Hast thou forgot me in a new delight?
    • I hearken for thy household cheer,
    • O eloquent child!
    • Whose voice, an equal messenger,
    • Conveyed thy meaning mild.
    • What though the pains and joys
    • Whereof it spoke were toys
    • Fitting his age and ken,
    • Yet fairest dames and bearded men,
    • Who heard the sweet request,
    • So gentle, wise and grave.
    • Bended with joy to his behest
    • And let the world's affairs go by,
    • A while to share his cordial game,
    • Or mend his wicker wagon-frame,
    • Still plotting how their hungry ear
    • That winsome voice again might hear;
    • For his lips could well pronounce
    • Words that were persuasions.
    • Gentlest guardians marked serene
    • His early hope, his liberal mien;
    • Took counsel from his guiding eyes
    • To make this wisdom earthly wise.
    • Ah, vainly do these eyes recall
    • The school-march, each day's festival,
    • When every morn my bosom glowed
    • To watch the convoy on the road;
    • The babe in willow wagon closed,
    • With rolling eyes and face composed;
    • With children forward and behind,
    • Like Cupids studiously inclined;
    • And he the chieftain paced beside,
    • The centre of the troop allied,
    • With sunny face of sweet repose,
    • To guard the babe from fancied foes.
    • The little captain innocent
    • Took the eye with him as he went;
    • Each village senior paused to scan
    • And speak the lovely caravan.
    • From the window I look out
    • To mark thy beautiful parade,
    • Stately marching in cap and coat
    • To some tune by fairies played;—
    • A music heard by thee alone
    • To works as noble led thee on.
    • Now Love and Pride, alas! in vain,
    • Up and down their glances strain.
    • The painted sled stands where it stood;
    • The kennel by the corded wood;
    • His gathered sticks to stanch the wall
    • Of the snow-tower, when snow should fall;
    • The ominous hole he dug in the sand,
    • And childhood's castles built or planned;
    • His daily haunts I well discern,—
    • The poultry-yard, the shed, the barn,—
    • And every inch of garden ground
    • Paced by the blessed feet around,
    • From the roadside to the brook
    • Whereinto he loved to look.
    • Step the meek fowls where erst they ranged;
    • The wintry garden lies unchanged;
    • The brook into the stream runs on;
    • But the deep-eyed boy is gone.
    • On that shaded day,
    • Dark with more clouds than tempests are,
    • When thou didst yield thy innocent breath
    • In birdlike heavings unto death,
    • Night came, and Nature had not thee;
    • I said, ‘We are mates in misery.’
    • The morrow dawned with needless glow;
    • Each snowbird chirped, each fowl must crow;
    • Each tramper started; but the feet
    • Of the most beautiful and sweet
    • Of human youth had left the hill
    • And garden,—they were bound and still.
    • There's not a sparrow or a wren,
    • There's not a blade of autumn grain,
    • Which the four seasons do not tend
    • And tides of life and increase lend;
    • And every chick of every bird,
    • And weed and rock-moss is preferred.
    • O ostrich-like forgetfulness!
    • O loss of larger in the less!
    • Was there no star that could be sent,
    • No watcher in the firmament,
    • No angel from the countless host
    • That loiters round the crystal coast,
    • Could stoop to heal that only child,
    • Nature's sweet marvel undefiled,
    • And keep the blossom of the earth,
    • Which all her harvests were not worth?
    • Not mine,—I never called thee mine,
    • But Nature's heir,—if I repine,
    • And seeing rashly torn and moved
    • Not what I made, but what I loved,
    • Grow early old with grief that thou
    • Must to the wastes of Nature go,—
    • 'T is because a general hope
    • Was quenched, and all must doubt and grope.
    • For flattering planets seemed to say
    • This child should ills of ages stay,
    • By wondrous tongue, and guided pen,
    • Bring the flown Muses back to men.
    • Perchance not he but Nature ailed,
    • The world and not the infant failed.
    • It was not ripe yet to sustain
    • A genius of so fine a strain,
    • Who gazed upon the sun and moon
    • As if he came unto his own,
    • And, pregnant with his grander thought,
    • Brought the old order into doubt.
    • His beauty once their beauty tried;
    • They could not feed him, and he died,
    • And wandered backward as in scorn,
    • To wait an æon to be born.
    • Ill day which made this beauty waste,
    • Plight broken, this high face defaced!
    • Some went and came about the dead;
    • And some in books of solace read;
    • Some to their friends the tidings say;
    • Some went to write, some went to pray;
    • One tarried here, there hurried one;
    • But their heart abode with none.
    • Covetous death bereaved us all,
    • To aggrandize one funeral.
    • The eager fate which carried thee
    • Took the largest part of me:
    • For this losing is true dying;
    • This is lordly man's down-lying,
    • This his slow but sure reclining,
    • Star by star his world resigning.
    • O child of paradise,
    • Boy who made dear his father's home,
    • In whose deep eyes
    • Men read the welfare of the times to come,
    • I am too much bereft.
    • The world dishonored thou hast left.
    • O truth's and nature's costly lie!
    • O trusted broken prophecy!
    • O richest fortune sourly crossed!
    • Born for the future, to the future lost!
    • The deep Heart answered, ‘Weepest thou?
    • Worthier cause for passion wild
    • If I had not taken the child.
    • And deemest thou as those who pore,
    • With aged eyes, short way before,—
    • Think'st Beauty vanished from the coast
    • Of matter, and thy darling lost?
    • Taught he not thee—the man of eld,
    • Whose eyes within his eyes beheld
    • Heaven's numerous hierarchy span
    • The mystic gulf from God to man?
    • To be alone wilt thou begin
    • When worlds of lovers hem thee in?
    • To-morrow, when the masks shall fall
    • That dizen Nature's carnival,
    • The pure shall see by their own will,
    • Which overflowing Love shall fill,
    • 'T is not within the force of fate
    • The fate-conjoined to separate.
    • But thou, my votary, weepest thou?
    • I gave thee sight—where is it now?
    • I taught thy heart beyond the reach
    • Of ritual, bible, or of speech;
    • Wrote in thy mind's transparent table,
    • As far as the incommunicable;
    • Taught thee each private sign to raise
    • Lit by the supersolar blaze.
    • Past utterance, and past belief,
    • And past the blasphemy of grief,
    • The mysteries of Nature's heart;
    • And though no Muse can these impart,
    • Throb thine with Nature's throbbing breast,
    • And all is clear from east to west.
    • ‘I came to thee as to a friend;
    • Dearest, to thee I did not send
    • Tutors, but a joyful eye,
    • Innocence that matched the sky,
    • Lovely locks, a form of wonder,
    • Laughter rich as woodland thunder,
    • That thou might'st entertain apart
    • The richest flowering of all art;
    • And, as the great all-loving Day
    • Through smallest chambers takes its way,
    • That thou might'st break thy daily bread
    • With prophet, savior and head;
    • That thou might'st cherish for thine own
    • The riches of sweet Mary's Son,
    • Boy-Rabbi, Israel's paragon.
    • And thoughtest thou such guest
    • Would in thy hall take up his rest?
    • Would rushing life forget her laws,
    • Fate's glowing revolution pause?
    • High omens ask diviner guess;
    • Not to be conned to tediousness
    • And know my higher gifts unbind
    • The zone that girds the incarnate mind.
    • When the scanty shores are full
    • With Thought's perilous, whirling pool;
    • When frail Nature can no more,
    • Then the Spirit strikes the hour:
    • My servant Death, with solving rite,
    • Pours finite into infinite.
    • Wilt thou freeze love's tidal flow,
    • Whose streams through nature circling go?
    • Nail the wild star to its track
    • On the half-climbed zodiac?
    • Light is light which radiates,
    • Blood is blood which circulates,
    • Life is life which generates,
    • And many-seeming life is one,—
    • Wilt thou transfix and make it none?
    • Its onward force too starkly pent
    • In figure, bone, and lineament?
    • Wilt thou, uncalled, interrogate,
    • Talker! the unreplying Fate?
    • Nor see the genius of the whole
    • Ascendant in the private soul,
    • Beckon it when to go and come,
    • Self-announced its hour of doom?
    • Fair the soul's recess and shrine,
    • Magic-built to last a season;
    • Masterpiece of love benign,
    • Fairer that expansive reason
    • Whose omen 't is, and sign.
    • Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know
    • What rainbows teach, and sunsets show?
    • Verdict which accumulates
    • From lengthening scroll of human fates,
    • Voice of earth to earth returned,
    • Prayers of saints that inly burned,—
    • Saying, What is excellent,
    • As God lives, is permanent;
    • Hearts are dust, hearts’ loves remain;
    • Heart's love will meet thee again.
    • Revere the Maker; fetch thine eye
    • Up to his style, and manners of the sky.
    • Not of adamant and gold
    • Built he heaven stark and cold;
    • No, but a nest of bending reeds,
    • Flowering grass and scented weeds;
    • Or like a traveller's fleeing tent,
    • Or bow above the tempest bent;
    • Built of tears and sacred flames,
    • And virtue reaching to its aims;
    • Built of furtherance and pursuing,
    • Not of spent deeds, but of doing.
    • Silent rushes the swift Lord
    • Through ruined systems still restored,
    • Broadsowing, bleak and void to bless.
    • Plants with worlds the wilderness;
    • Waters with tears of ancient sorrow
    • Apples of Eden ripe to-morrow.
    • House and tenant go to ground,
    • Lost in God, in Godhead found.'

concord hymn:
sung at the completion of the battle monument, april 19, 1836.

    • By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
    • Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
    • Here once the embattled farmers stood,
    • And fired the shot heard round the world.
    • The foe long since in silence slept;
    • Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
    • And Time the ruined bridge has swept
    • Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.
    • On this green bank, by this soft stream,
    • We set to-day a votive stone;
    • That memory may their deed redeem,
    • When, like our sires, our sons are gone.
    • Spirit, that made those heroes dare
    • To die, and leave their children free,
    • Bid Time and Nature gently spare
    • The shaft we raise to them and thee.