Eight Harvard Poets Part 4
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Grief is no more, love rises with the spring, O fly, free wind, and Rapture! Rapture! sing.
IV
Long after both of us are scattered dust And some strange souls perchance shall read of thee, Finding the yearnings that have crushed from me These poor confessions of my love and trust, I know how misinterpreted will be These lines, for men will laugh, or more unjust, Thinking not once of love, but only l.u.s.t, Will stain the vesture of our memory.
And yet a few there may be who will feel My deep devotion and my true desires, And know that these unhappy words reveal Only new images in changeless fires; And they perchance will linger with a sigh To think that beauty such as thine must die.
A SEA GULL
Grey wings, O grey wings against a cloud, Over the rough waves flas.h.i.+ng, Whose was the scream, startling and loud, Keen through the skies,--was it thine, Over the moaning wind and the whine Of the wide seas das.h.i.+ng?
Whose was the scream that I heard In the midst of the hurrying air?
Was it thine, lost bird, Or the voice of an old despair Chanting from years long dead, Inexorable spirit flying On tempest wings that pa.s.sed and fled Through the storm crying?
DOMESDAY
The garlands and the songs of May Shall welcome in the Judgment Day; About the basking country-side Blossom the souls of them that died.
O Dead awake! Arise in bloom Upon the joyous dawn of doom.
They rise up from the bleeding earth In gracious legions of re-birth, Each as a flower or a tree Of verdant immortality.
And hosts of glad-voiced angels sing In the rippling groves of spring.
From the grave of youth there grows A pa.s.sionately-petaled rose, Where the virgin whitely lies A lily fair as Paradise.
And in that old oak's leafy glee Some gouty sire makes sport of me.
O Dead of yore and yesterday All hail the resurrecting May!
Beside you in the flowering gra.s.s The feet of youth and love shall pa.s.s, And we that greet you with a smile Shall join you in a little while.
TO A Pa.s.sEPIED BY SCARLATTI
Strange little tune so thin and rare Like scents of roses of long ago, Quavering lightly upon the strings Of a violin, and dying there With a dancing flutter of delicate wings; Thy courtly joy and thy gentle woe, Thy gracious gladness and plaintive fears Are lost in the clamorous age we know, And pale like a moon in the lurid day; A phantom of music, strangely fled From the princely halls of the quiet dead, Down the long lanes of the vanished years Echoing frailly and far away.
ELEGY FOR ANTINOUS
Come, let us hasten hence and weep no more, The sinking sea flows on its tranquil ways, Night looms serenely at the eastern door And trails the last cloud into lifeless haze.
Antinous is dead, we kneel before The portals of our past in vain, nor raise The laughing phantoms of our yesterdays Upon this desolate and empty sh.o.r.e.
Now deepening pools of shadow overflow Into the sea of dark; a far-off bell Sobs with a sweet vibration long and slow A last farewell, forevermore, farewell; And will He wake and hear? We cannot tell; And will He answer? Ah, we do not know.
SONG
O crimson rose, O crimson rose, Crushed lightly in two little hands; A child's soft kiss was in your heart, A child's warm breath was in your soul.
The child is gone, O crimson rose, And stained and hardened are the hands, And who shall find your golden heart And who shall kiss your withered soul?
Happy are you, O crimson rose, But I have stains upon my hands; You died with kisses in your heart, I live with sorrow in my soul.
"MY PEACE I LEAVE WITH YOU"
He pondered long, and watched the darkening s.p.a.ce Close the red portals whence the hours had run, As like young wistful angels, one by one, The stars cast timid flowers about His face.
"Yea, now another scarlet day is done!"
He cried in anguish, and with sudden grace Stretched forth His arms, as though He would erase The few, dim embers of the scattered sun.
"The scarlet day is done, and soon the light Will wake again my desecrated skies.
Oh, that another dawn might never rise!-- My foolish children!" Through the vast of night The young stars s.h.i.+vered in a silver horde Before the Infinite Sorrow of their Lord.
THE RECOMPENSE
When the last song is sung, and the last spark Of light dies out forever, and the dark, The voiceless dark eternal shrouds the earth; When the last cries of pain and shouts of mirth Sink in the desolate silences of s.p.a.ce; Where then shall flower the beauty of your face, O Love the laughing, Youth the rose-in-hand, In what unknown and undiscovered land Shall flower then the beauty of your face?
I know not but I know that all returns At last unchanged, and to the heart that yearns Shall be repaid all loneliness and loss.
Sometime with shadowy sails shall fly across The sh.o.r.eless ocean of infinity A s.h.i.+p from out the past, and the great sea Of life shall bear you from the strange worlds over The waves, and back again to the old lover.
Yes, in some future far beyond surmise You will dream here with half-remembering eyes, And I shall write these words, content awhile In the slow round of time to see you smile.
R. S. MITCh.e.l.l
Eight Harvard Poets Part 4
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Eight Harvard Poets Part 4 summary
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