Divine Adventures Part 3
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I saw a la.s.sie on the green, Ah me! Ah me!
No sweeter sight since have I seen, Nor ever more may see.
At morning fair, at evening pale, And overcast.
Oh, stay thou la.s.sie, sad and frail, Why seek the night so fast?
I took her hand, 'twas limp and cold, She had no smile, And in her eyes gleamed something old That flickered out the while.
And then she told such piteous tale, And heaved a sigh:-- "I dreamed that beauty could not fail, "Nor simple pleasure die.
"I held him long, I held him fast-- "But he has gone.
"Oh stay me not--this way he past, "And I must hasten on."
I saw a wannish haggard in the night,-- Alone was she.
I heard her laugh, her eyes were bright, Ah me! ah woe is me!
TIME AND RHIME
Ah Ha! A lack-wit is the Time-- A foolish piece and niddy-noddy, To teach her gentle daughter, Rhime, To flirt and dance with everybody.
Her cheek was fresh, and pa.s.sing fair When very few did come to court her, And king or swain must wors.h.i.+p there, That dared, or fancied to transport her.
And often there a sceptered king, And often there a wit or jester, Have fondly kneel'd her praise to sing, And learned how sore it is to pester.
But now alas! 'Tis come to pa.s.s, She loves the addlest headed dandy.
A bon-bon lyric suits the la.s.s, Her Epic is a piece of candy.
THE POET AND THE WORLD
A poet came in a golden noon, His eyes were bright and his soul in tune, And he sang a song of a nameless bird.
And never a song of songs was sung, As sweet and as rich as the lay that sprung, From the forest-wild muse in the lyrical verd.
An old man dozing and dying alone, Hath startled enrapt at the wondrous tone, And thinks on his own youth's minstrelsy.
And his fingers tremble and itch again And his tongue is lashed in its bed of pain, To know at last such music may be.
A youth starts up, with his soul on fire, And shatters his harp for something higher, And sings of a glory he has not known, Till his mad soul sinks on the raging sea, As sad and as weary as spent wings be, In the guideless paths where his hopes have flown.
And a maiden adream in her virgin bower, Of her love's bright star and its rising hour, Hath heard the song, and her being is folden To the starry breast of a winged G.o.d, In the golden paths of a garden untrod, Which her soul in the lyric depths beholden.
But the world hath roused on its listless bed And calls to the a.s.s for his bray instead, And lo! he hath named the song and the bird!
And the young man lives, and the old man dies, And the G.o.d hath flown from the maiden's eyes, And the singer is gone, and the song is a word.
THE GUERDON
Sculptors have carved for us stories in stone,-- Spirits of G.o.ds from the chrysalis freeing; Toiled for us, starved for us, dying unknown, Still have they sought for the infinite being, Calling it Beauty,--upbuilding its throne.
And this is the guerdon each bears to his tomb: "Fortune is fickle, the saddest and gladdest "Slumber as long as the meanest and maddest-- "Naught hast thou wraught so enduring as doom."
Painters have drawn for us marvellous lines, Hues of the rainbow, and sunset, and morning-- Pigments an innermost glory divines, Laurelled, or stultified canvas adorning; Toiled for us, drunk for us bitterest wines, And this is the guerdon each bears to his tomb: "Fortune is fickle--the saddest and gladdest "Slumber as long as the meanest and maddest "Naught hast thou drawn so enduring as doom."
Poets have sung for us sweetest of song, Aye, they have sung for us, limn'd for us, carved for us.
Laurell'd our fortune, and lightened our wrong-- Still have they dreamed for us, toiled for us, starved for us-- We are their pa.s.sion's most fanciful throng-- And this is the guerdon each bears to his tomb: "Fortune is fickle--the saddest, and gladdest, "Slumber as long as the meanest and maddest, "Naught hast thou sung so enduring as doom."
A SONG
What is so rare as a pearly cloud, With a burning sun behind it?
And this is the jewel I wear on my heart, With a dream to bind it-- This is the treasure you sought from the start, Forgetting to find it.
What is so sweet as the song of a bird, That wakens the fancy that hears it?
And this is the music I hear in my heart Whose heaven enspheres it-- This is the heaven you sought from the start Forgetting to pierce it.
What is so glad as the heart of a child, That gambols as careless as Maytime?
And this is the pleasure I hold to my heart, Acalling it daytime-- This is the pleasure you sought from the start, Forgetting the playtime.
TO X
Boast not, poor man, that thou hast measured time, And named it feeble seven thousand years, Lest all the lore and wit of all thy seers Must brand thee fool, and name thy folly _crime_.
I say that I have seen an eon's rime Upon thy father's head, and bitter tears, Quintillions old. And countless fears, Remembered from an old world's mapless clime.
Nor call thy folly old,--'twas surely born When thou didst cease to think. Thou hast a child, Whose beauty brands thee for a thing forsworn.
Leave thou its tender reason undefiled!
For shame to chain the base of all thy glory, Upon an olden tale, a useless allegory!
ON A FESTAL NIGHT
Above the city hangs a limpid glare, From hollow laughter's laden festal board: Thou seest the lover fondling his adored-- Thou hearest music singing of her hair.
Divine Adventures Part 3
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Divine Adventures Part 3 summary
You're reading Divine Adventures Part 3. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: John Niendorff already has 605 views.
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- Related chapter:
- Divine Adventures Part 2
- Divine Adventures Part 4