Produced by Al Haines








  SORROW OF WAR

  POEMS


  BY

  LOUIS GOLDING



  METHUEN & CO. LTD.
  36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
  LONDON




_First Published in 1919_




  FOR
  MOTHER
  AND THE
  OTHER MOTHER




Certain of these poems have appeared in the "English Review," "To-Day,"
the "Englishwoman," the "Red Triangle," the "Nation," the "Cambridge
Magazine," the "Sphere," the "Herald," the "Manchester Guardian," and
the "Westminster Gazette."

To the editors of these journals I tender my acknowledgments.




  CONTENTS

  Lilac, Laburnum
  Streets of Gold
  "In the Gallery where the Fat Men go"
  Dead in Gallipoli
  A Journey South
  The New Trade
  The Woman who Shrieked against Peace
  The Women at the Corners Stand
  Joining-up
  During the Battle
  Jack
  German Boy
  Skylark and Dawn
  Jack of April
  Statesmen Debonair
  Over in Flanders
  Wild Weather
  Broken Bodies
  A Thought
  The Vintner
  For now comes Summer
  The Advent of Mars
  Prophet and Fool
  Whatever Path I walk upon
  London Magdalene
  Secret Girl
  Lanky Tim
  Mrs. Briggs
  Athens Now
  Down Tottenham Court Road
  In a Station
  Liza
  Women of the Night
  I Standing in the Street
  Slum Evening
  Fires of Change
  Poetry
  The Prisoner
  Nerves
  A Poet
  For My Friend
  "I shall be splendidly and tensely Young"
  "I"
  I know not whence my Poems come
  Lyrria
  Faringdon from Salonica
  Call of the Plover
  The Gallant Road
  The Quest
  Having finished "Jude the Obscure"
  Ghost and Body
  Gallop
  We Lads who Barter Rhymes
  Who knows Me?
  Judæus Errans
  Cold Stars
  Reactionary
  Late
  Wind of Black Night
  Yellow Satins
  My Mother's Portrait
  To A. L. O.
  The Dark Knight of the Road
  To the Swift
  Green Wind
  The Midmost Field in Kent
  Murmuryngeham
  Winchester Downs
  Cycling in October
  The Shepherd
  Derwentwater
  "I vowed that I would be a Tree"
  Wounded Soldiers
  Still Life in France
  I Dream'd I Died
  Flowers in War
  Evening--Kent
  Black Magic
  A Soldier Dying
  At Last War Ends




  SORROW OF WAR



  LILAC, LABURNUM

  Lilac, lilac, laburnum,
    How shall you bloom this Spring?
  Gathering birds, gathering birds,
    How shall you sing?

  Gathering birds, gathering birds,
    How shall you lift your singing head?
  Lilac, lilac, laburnum,
    Shall not your blossom be fiery red?

  Lilac, laburnum, gathering birds...?

  _Spring_ 1918




  STREETS OF GOLD

  O there are streets of gold in Bethnal Green,
    With troughs of pearl where lovely horses drink,
  And tripping on the greenswards, silver-clean,
    The girls are marvellouser than you can think.
        Gawd blimey!  Bethnal Green!
      (All this from Tommy Jones,
      Delirious in the trench with shattered bones).

  O there is harvest now in Camden Town,
    And songs and laughing and old flasks of wine!
  O the grand moon of bronze! the wakeful brown
    Owl in the barn! ghost-poppies and dream-kine!
        Lor lumme!  Camden Town!
      (This with the gasp of death
      From 'Erbert, chlorine-gassed and green for breath).

  O what green seas sweep winds through Camberwell,
    Through all her islands where the palm-trees heave!
  O winding down the channels steals a bell
    Calling poor weary lads to bathe at eve!
        God blawst it!  Camberwell!
      (This from old Bob, whose side
      Is pierced with wounds like Jesus crucified).




  "IN THE GALLERY WHERE THE FAT MEN GO"

  ("GREAT PICTURES OF THE SOMME OFFENSIVE,
  DAY BY DAY.  THE ACTUAL FIGHTING")

  _See Omnibus and Underground Notices,
  April_ 1918

  They are showing how we lie
  With our bodies run dry:
  The attitudes we take
  When impaled upon a stake.
  These and other things they show
  In the gallery where the fat men go.

  In the gallery where the fat men go
  They're exhibiting our guts
  Horse-betrampled in the ruts;
  And Private Tommy Spout,
  With his eye gouged out;
  And Jimmy spitting blood;
  And Sergeant lying so
  That he's drowning in the mud,
  In the gallery where the fat men go.

  They adjust their pince-nez
  In the gentle urban way,
  And they plant their feet tight
  For to get a clearer sight.
  They stand playing with their thumbs,
  With their shaven cheeks aglow.
  For the Terror never comes,
  And the worms and the woe.
  For they never hear the drums
  Drumming Death dead-slow,
  In the gallery where the fat men go.

  If the gallery where the fat men go
  Were in flames around their feet,
  Or were sucking through the mud:
  If they heard the guns beat
  Like a pulse through the blood:
  If the lice were in their hair,
  And the scabs were on their tongue,
  And the rats were smiling there,
  Padding softly through the dung,
  Would they fix the pince-nez
  In the gentle urban way,
  Would the pictures still be hung
  In the gallery where the fat men go?




  DEAD IN GALLIPOLI

      He died in Gallipoli.
        What English flower
  That we cherish shall grow of him?
        Never a flower
  Shall grow that we know of him!
    No white daisy-coverlet
  Shall grow from the ground of him;
    No English bird-loverlet
  Pipe love-songs around of him.
  Under the sycamore
    His grave not appears,
  Where the crocuses flicker more
    Than armies with spears.
  Under no tree at all
    England designed
  His body may be at all
    Gently consigned.

      He died in Gallipoli
          The death on a stake.
        Gallipoli poison
  Is now the great part of him.
          A flower like a snake
  Shall writhe from the heart of him.
      The desolate surf
  Below him is muttering.
      Over his turf
    A bird like a devil
  Is flapping and fluttering.
    The poisonous bird
      Whose scarlet eye glowers,
      The poisonous flowers
        With petals unclean
    Are the only things heard
        And the only things seen.

  Is that the whole of you,
    White lad from England,
  Is that the soul of you,
      Dead in Gallipoli?
  You are dead to me, dead to me,
        Barren and far,
  But a Thing that was said to me,
        By a bird, by a star,
      --An old thing of solace,
    O stupid it seemed;
  And I now cannot tell at all
  If the whisper that fell at all
    I heard or I dreamed.
      It seemed that I caught a
    Faint whisper or sign,
      Being drunken with water,
    Or hallowed with wine.

  Ah, would that I knew
    What the Word was that came,
      What the Thing was that gleamed
    With a wind and a flame;
  Ah, would that I knew,
        Even as you,
  O white lad from England,
  White lad from England,
      Dead in Gallipoli,
  Would that I knew
      If I heard or I dreamed!




  A JOURNEY SOUTH

  To the South lands, the green lands, from the
        North, the harsh
    Rocks, where the eagles whose granite bills
    Screech from the scars of toppling hills.
  To the South lands, the green lands, from the
        North, the marsh
    Hollows which black waste water fills,
          --The South green lands!

  To the South lands, the green lands, where
        the flowers of fruit
    Are moons entangled in cosmic trees,
    Where birds are rocks in the foam of seas,
  The wind's a player, the grass a lute
    Whose wires are swept by the wings of bees,
          --The South green lands!

  To the South lands, the green lands--but
        halt, O hark!
    A sob of birds in a poisoned wood!
    The fume of poppies crushed foul in mud!
  The whine of the wings of Death through the dark!
    A sunset of flame, a moon of blood!
          --The South red lands!




  THE NEW TRADE

  In the market-places they have made
    A dolorous new trade.
  Now you will see in the fierce naphtha-light,
    Piled hideously to sight,
  Dead limbs of men bronzed in the over-seas,
    Bomb-wrenched from elbows and knees;
  Torn feet, that would, unwearied by harsh loads,
    Have tramped steep moorland roads;
  Torn hands that would have moulded exquisitely
    Rare things for God to see.
  And there are eyes there--blue like blue doves' wings,
    Black like the Libyan kings,
  Grey as before-dawn rivers, willow-stirred,
    Brown as a singing-bird;
  But all stare from the dark into the dark,
    Reproachful, tense, and stark.
  Eyes heaped on trays and in broad baskets there,
    Feet, hands, and ropes of hair.
  In the market-places ... and women buy ...
    ... Naphtha glares ... hawkers cry ...
  Fat men rub hands....
            O God, O just God, send
    Plague, lightnings ...
            Make an end!




  THE WOMAN WHO SHRIEKED AGAINST PEACE

  Abundant woman panting there,
    Whose breast is flecked with spots of grease
  That splutter from your laboured hair,
      O dew-lapped woman, you who reek
        Of stout and steak and fish and chips,
      Why does the short indignant shriek
        Come toppling from your fleshy lips;
  Because, poor smitten fool, I dare
    To breathe the outcast name of Peace?

  And shall your flesh grow less to view,
    And shall your chubby arms grow thin,
  And shall you miss your stout and stew,
      The bracelets which you wear so well,
        If blinded boys no more shall creep
      Along the scorching roads to Hell,
        If thick red blood no more shall steep
      Green fields in France, nor corpses smell;
        If Peace send down her blasting blight,
        O shall it spoil your sleep at night,
    And shall you lose your treble chin?




  THE WOMEN AT THE CORNERS STAND

  The women at the corners stand.  They say,
  "Where are the men you stole from us away?
  Where are they now, the laughing lovers whom
  You heaped in sombre ranks against the gloom?"
  They murmur ceaselessly and without haste,
  "Our arms are empty and our wombs are waste."
  "Where are the men that marched into the dusk?"
  They say with voices withered like a husk.
  "Night is like cinders: day is lean and stern.
  Our hearts are parched with thirsting; yea, we burn.
  Where are the men you took?  Bid them return."

  The women at the corners stand.  But no
  Reply is heard.  They wait till night.  They go
  Back to their homes.  Once more they come next day,
  "Where are the men you stole from us away?"
  They draw their shawls around their heads.  They wait.
  They say, "But we are weary.  It is late."
  They murmur ceaselessly and without haste,
  "Our arms are empty and our wombs are waste."
  No word is said to them.  But only they,
  The women at the corners, stand.  They say,
  "Send back our lovers whom you stole away."




  JOINING-UP

  No, not for you the glamour of emprise,
  Poor driven lad with terror in your eyes.

  No dream of wounds and medals and renown
  Called you like Love from your drab Northern town.

  No haunting fife, dizzily shrill and sweet,
  Came lilting drunkenly down your dingy street.

  You will not change, with a swift catch of pride,
  In the cold hut among the leers and oaths,
  Out of your suit of frayed civilian clothes,
  Into the blaze of khaki they provide.

  Like a trapped animal you crouch and choke
  In the packed carriage where the veterans smoke
  And tell such pitiless tales of Over There,
  They stop your heart dead short and freeze your hair.

  Your body's like a flower on a snapt stalk,
  Your head hangs from your neck as blank as chalk.

  What horrors haunt you, head upon your breast!
  ... O but you'll die as bravely as the rest!




  DURING THE BATTLE

  O the terror of the Battle at this ending of the days!
    O the thunder of the wings through the gloom!
  O the thousand thousand companies that strew the sombre ways
        To achieve this final doom!

  Where the flames disrupt the night and the hell-fumes flee,
    'Mid the darkness and the splitting of the skies,
  Only your young white wistful face I see,
        My brother, only your eyes!

  _March_ 1918




  JACK

  The heavy smells of Spring
  Are flooding through my skin.
  My body drinks them in.
  Like rich red veils they cling
  About my prostrate head.
  I swoon into a bed,
  The heavy smells of Spring.

  I now almost forget
  The pain, the pain, the pain;
  Now being lulled by rain,
  And smells and warm wings wet.
  I swoon into a bed,
  Almost forget you're dead,
  Almost, almost forget.

  Now, now my memories drowse
  Amid the whine of bells,
  The fumes of rich red smells,
  The stupor round my brows.
  My nerves and veins are lead.
  I swoon into a bed,
  Where all my sorrows drowse.

  Then suddenly you return,
  O marrow of my bone,
  Blood flowing through my own!
  My pulses yearn and burn.
  I battle round my head,
  Cry strickenly from my bed.
  Suddenly you return!

  O God of War and Dearth,
  O shattering Blast that blew,
  Blood-eyed, blood-fingered, you
  Damned God of War and Dearth!
  He whom you wrenched from me
  To monstrous things and vain,
  Burned, broken, buried, _he_,
  _He_ is this smell of earth,
  This dead moist smell of rain!




  GERMAN BOY

  German boy with cold blue eyes,
  In the cold and blue moonrise,
  I who live and still shall know
  Flowers that smell and winds that blow,
  I who live to walk again,
  Fired the shot that broke your brain.

  By your hair all stiff with blood,
  By your lips befouled with mud,
  By your dreams that shall no more
  Leave the nest and sing and soar,
  By the children never born
  From your body smashed and torn,
  --When I too shall stand at last
  In the deadland vast,
  Shall you heap upon my soul
  Agonies of coal?
  Shall you bind my throat with cords,
  Stab me through with swords?
  Or shall you be gentler far
  Than a bird or than a star?
  Shall you know that I was bound
  In the noose that choked you round?
  Shall you say, "The way was hid.
  Lord, he knew not what he did"?
  Shall your eyes that day be mild,
  Like the Sacrifice, the Child?
  ... German boy with cold blue eyes,
  In the cold and blue moonrise.




  SKYLARK AND DAWN

  (To Maurice Samuel)

  Stretched and silent they lie to the furious gold of the dawn,
    And the earth like a leper's face is pitted and scarred.
    Firm in the grip of the wire relentless and hard,
  They lie with their dead young faces pallid and drawn.

  Somewhere stupidly, thickly, a big gun booms!
    A rifle cracks like the spit of a snake in the trees!
  And ever the great sun rises, rolling the glooms
    Of the sulphurous night to the fields and the cliffs and the seas.

  The groan of a dying man crawls out from his teeth!
    He groans no more: his lips become leaden and cold!
  And ever the sun flashes forth like a sword from its sheath,
    And dazzles the dawn with terrors of scarlet and gold.

  The guns snarl out like a dog reluctant and grim.
    The triggers of rifles loosen in blue numb hands.
  Faintly the wings of a silence frightened and dim
    Hover down closer over the blasted lands.

      Gods of the great wars,
        Gods that stand
      Somewhere afar off,
        Cruel and grand,
      Silence, Silence,
        In No Man's Land!

      Gods of the great wars,
        Cruel and high,
      Listen afar off!
        Grant us to die
      With the song of Silence
        In the morning sky!

      Gods of the great wars,
        Gas-wave and gun,
      Are ye not happy
        With the red work done?
      Drown ye the planets,
        Shatter the sun!

  Not a twitching of bloodless lip or of glazing eye!
    For the Silence is deeper than Noon and older than Time,
  The Silence inert and intense of the far first sky
    When never a wind breathed over the primal slime.

  The Sun is stayed in his march, and even Death
    With the flush of triumph mantling his cheeks of gloom,
  He too stands still for an instant and holds his breath.
    A million of years passes by in a moment of doom.

              Suddenly!
          Terrible!  Wild!
      A skylark shatters the spell,
      With a music more fiery than hell,
      More frail than the laugh of a child!

  His little brown wings soar high to assault the sun.
    His little round throat sends a challenge audacious and far
  To the pale-faced legions of Silence that waver and run,
    To the uprisen dawn and every invisible star.

  Ah God! the song cuts deeper than tempered steel!
    The eyes overflow with the surge of a salt harsh tear,
  Again to listen to Music, again to feel
    The uttermost glory of living when Death is so near!

            Scream of a shell! ...
        Dull dead thud in a trench,
        Curses and flame and stench! ...

  Instantly all the white dawn,
    Fragrant and frail and cool,
  Breaks like a vase in the hands of a fool.
  For the thick sick lips of Death have spoken,
  The fine gold chain of the bird-song is broken.
  The lank dank hand of Death has withdrawn
  The curtain of bird-song and magic dawn
    From the sullen red windows of Hell.

  Rattle of rifle and shriek of gun,
    Gas-cloud sickly and heavy and dun,
  Death has taken his armies in hand,
    And the bodies lie countless in No Man's Land.

        Out of the shock of the storm
          Where the foul winds meet and cry,
            Something drops down at my feet,
            A little brown body and sweet,
        A little dead body and warm.

  The tiny dead throat shall sing no more,
  Nor the quick eyes flash nor the swift wings soar;
  But the shells shall hurtle, the grim guns roar,
        O skylark out of the sky!

  My singing is ended, the pall descended on land and sea.
    I sang my song to the tune of my own heart-beat
  Between the sound of the wars, and there sang with me
    My little brother the skylark, dead at my feet.

  France, 1917




  JACK OF APRIL

  April!--this is when
  All the flowers beloved of men,
  This is when they laugh all day,
        Birds and they.
  Then are they not opened quite
  To the singing year's delight.
  This is when the April showers
  Make a running road of noise;
  Woods are stormed by boyish flowers,
        Flowery boys.
  Would you then not weep with me,
        Wring your hands,
  Sing a dirge of saddest grief,
  If your eyes should chance to see
  Blight upon the April leaf;
        O, but more,
  Would you not weep long and sore,
  If an April flower that stands
  Waiting for the kiss of May,
  Suddenly, swift, were snapt away,
  Down, deep down, were crushed in clay?
  Then would you not almost say,
        "Curst be April!
  Never sunlight bring in May!
        Curst be June!
  Death hath seized the budding year.
  Never flush of copper stir
  On the unrisen harvest moon!
  May stark winter come straightway
  --Now my little flower of April,
      Now is cold and clay!"

  April!--this was when
  Jack went laughing to the wars.
        Now he knew
  What a boy in Spring must do.
  There are flowers to learn, he said,
  In the countries where I go.
  There are birds to talk to and
  Skies and winds to understand.
  Never a moment knew he pause.
  Jack went swinging to the ships
  With a laughter on his lips,
  Jack went singing to the wars.
  Jack among the boys and men
  Went to France in April when
  Flowers and boys laughed all the day,
        Birds and they.
  ... Till the Doom came down that day,
  Even though the time was Spring,
        Even April,
  Even though he had not sung
  Half the songs a lad should sing,
  When the nesting-time is young,
        April, Spring.

  And he shuddered for a moment,
  Blood and flame convulsed the day,
  And he crumpled on the way,
  And the scarlet tide went sweeping,
        Heaping, heaping
  Clay upon his trodden clay,
        April, Spring!
  April!--can you wonder then
  That my bitten lips have said,
        "Curst be men,
  Now that Jack in lyric April,
        Jack is dead.
  Curst be all the race of men!
  May the last child die away
  From the poisoned air of day!
  Never May-time come, nor summer;
        Never autumn
  Crown the dim uncertain ending
  To the fevers of the race
  With a drowsy peace descending
  On their spirits racked and rending,
  On the evil human face.
  May the last supernal winter
  Freeze the earth straightway,
  Now my little Jack of April,
        Now is cold and clay!"




  STATESMEN DEBONAIR

  O ye statesmen debonair,
  With the partings in your hair;
  Statesmen, ye who do your bit
  In the arm-chairs where you sit;
  You with top-hats on your head
  Even when you lie in bed;
  O superbly happy, ye
  Traders in Humanity;
      Every time you smile, sweet friends,
      A moan goes up, a plague descends.
      Every time you show your teeth,
      A hundred swords desert the sheath.
      Every time you pare your nails,
      The manhood of a city fails.
      Every time you dip your pen,
      You slaughter ten platoons of men.
      For every glass of port you hold,
      Blood is spilt ten thousandfold....
  O ye statesmen debonair,
  With the partings in your hair;
  O ye statesmen pink and white,
  Sleep like little lambs to-night.




  OVER IN FLANDERS ...

  They were writing for the Poetry bookshops,
      Poetry no doubt well worth reading.
  Over in Flanders, in the wet weather,
          Love lay bleeding!

  If you carefully record your emotions,
      Lyric or Sonnet that haunts your head,
  Will you revive for me over in Flanders
          Love stone dead?




  WILD WEATHER

  Wild weather, O my heart, and strong winds beating
    The great trees straining in their despair.
      The crumpled leaves that fall and flee
    Whistle like ghosts across the air.
  And how should I, lone mortal fleeting,
  Not be uprooted by winds that, meeting,
      Wrench at my limbs to cast them in the sea!

  Wild weather, O my heart, for all my lovers,
    The lads I loved in the time entombed,
      Crumpled and stark against trench and tree,
    Whistle like leaves through the woods engloomed.
  There all year long my poor ghost hovers,
  Never to see what the darkness covers,
      The faces I loved of old that so loved me.




  BROKEN BODIES

  Not for the broken bodies,
    When the War is over and done,
  For the miserable eyes that never
    Again shall see the sun;
  Not for the broken bodies
    Crawling over the land,
  The patchwork limbs, the shoddies,
  Not for the broken bodies,
    Dear Lord, we crave your hand.

  Not for the broken bodies,
    We pray your dearest aid,
  When the ghost of War for ever
    Is levelled at last and laid;
  Not for the broken bodies
    That wrought their sorrowful parts
  Our chiefest need of God is,
  Not for the broken bodies,
    Dear Lord--the broken hearts!




  A THOUGHT

  To-night a thought leapt in my head like flame.
    Suppose one night I walked into my room
    And found that someone filling all the gloom
  Was waiting on my bed until I came;

  And I walked in and switched the light on straight,
    And found the figure sitting on my bed,
    Limp with contrition and with sunken head,
  Was God bowed down under His burden's weight;

  And He looked up with sorrow and surmise
    To see how deep the tale the Wars have written
    Lay on my mortal features, battle-smitten,
  And in the shadows of my deathless eyes;

  --This was the thought and flame that pierced me through:
    If God sat waiting there, anxious and grey,
    Then should I have the charity to say,
  "God, we forgive you; you know not what you do"?




  THE VINTNER

  The War-God now is happy.
    His sunken eyeballs shine.
  The War-God is a Vintner
    Who makes the rarest wine.

  His vineyard is not bounded
    Between the West and East.
  A thousand mothers hourly
    Grow pregnant for his feast.

  The grapes the Vintner presses
    Below his granite feet
  Are bodies, bodies, bodies,
    Alive and brown and sweet.

  O how the red juice splashes
    Around his pounding limbs!
  It stains the deepest rivers,
    The furthest sunset rims.

  O how the Gods his comrades,
    When he, the Vintner, calls,
  Drain deep the lurid beakers
    In their carousal halls!

  All night they hold red riot,
    "For this is wine indeed!
  Then bravo! merry Vintner,
    We wish thy work good speed!"

  And still the Vintner presses
    The grapes with feet of stone,
  Until the deep green ocean-cup
    Shall hold red wine alone.




  FOR NOW COMES SUMMER

  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds.
  And I must add up figures all the day.
  And I must drive a tram the whole day long.
  And I must make a living out of words.
  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds;
  And in green fields the little lambs will play,
  Brown birds will lift so loud a storm of song,
  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds.

  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds.
  And I must make munitions right away.
  And I must check the biscuits at the base.
  And I must plan to slaughter men in herds,
  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds.
  My brother's lying quiet on his face.
  And I must sit and wait and die to-day,
  For now comes Summer with a thousand birds.

  HARFLEUR




  THE ADVENT OF MARS

  (To Thomas Moult)

                          Then suddenly ...
  A thunder was heard like the cracking of suns,
  A blackness blacker than blood there came
  To choke the world with a fume and a flame.
        A palsy fell on the guns.
      A numbness froze the hands
      Of the gunners in all the lands.
      Half-way over the parapet
      The limbs of the climbing infantry set
        Like limbs of basalt-stone.
  The bayonets fell from the fingers numb,
  The throats of the officers dried dead-dumb,
  For the Terror had come, the Terror had come,
  The Terror out of the stark Unknown!
      The Shadow was fallen upon the wars
      That had raged three centuries long
      To shatter the Lie and Wrong,
      From the ice-fanged polar jaws,
      With never a lull nor pause,
      And over the Temperate Zone,
      With never a moment's rest,
      And over the Burning Line,
      With never a halting sign,
      And over the East and West,
      And down to the ultimate mouth
      Of the white Antarctic South.
      From the torpid Esquimo-man
        Who slew his Esquimo-mate
        And poured his fat in a plate,
          And lit up a wick therein,
      And studied the secret plan
    For the poisonous new harpoon.
        Wherewith he was going to win
    The Esquimo-battle soon.
  From the Esquimo-man to the sinister black
  Cannibal-boy in his skeleton-shack,
        Whose ardent patriot labours
      Were extracting the eyes of his foes,
      The bones of their fingers and toes,
        To teach them never to violate
        The inter-cannibal laws of State,
  And the boundary-stone of his weaker neighbours.

            But now ...
              Great God,
          What is the menace,
              Now,
          The shadow, the thunder,
              Now,
          Ice on my heart,
          Flame on my brow,
            The skies dispart,
    Lightnings rift through the obscene glooms,
  The thews of the darkness are rent in sunder,
        And a voice, a voice, a voice,
            A great voice booms!

            "Children of Earth,
        Listen a moment before ye die.
  We have waited long, we have waited long,
    (Children of Mars, lift up your song,
  For the children of Mars shall be lords of the sky!)
        Long have we patiently waited
        In a huge red planetous hall.
  But never a wind of ruth or grace
  Blew through the marshes of your earth-face.
        And deeper into the hole
        Of your cavernous earthen soul,
        Deeper than God and Love and all,
            Boulders of evil fall.
        Long have we patiently waited
          In a huge red planetous hall,
        But never a grace not violated,
          Never a devil ye did not call!
        You have torn, you have torn,
    The flowers by their roots, consumed the seed,
    Wherever a flower was, planted a weed.
        In the pitch of your scorn
          Defiled the morn,
    Bitten deep death in the mould and the corn.
        You have eaten the wings
          Of the lily-like frail
    Butterfly caught in your treacherous veil.
        You have festered the springs
          With the corpses ye slew
    And given your children to drink of the brew.
        Never a grace not violated,
          Left God never a roof nor wall;
        Never a passion ye have not sated,
          Never a devil ye did not call.
    And a Word came forth from the Sun to Mars,
  'Gird ye now for the final wars!
        For over the planet of Earth,
        Wooden and waste and wide,
        Great red wounds in his side,
          A shadow, a bloodless dearth
    Ashen-pale in the caves of his eyes,
    Throwing the ghost of a Cross on the skies,
    The body of Christ lies crucified!'
  We have come with a gladness terrible to behold.
  We have come to reclaim the Godhead that was sold.
  The levins we shall loosen ye have not ever known,
  And the breath of our singing shall fall on you like stone.

  Our weapons shall be flame and the blades be keen,
  And they shall not rest again till the skies be clean.
  Our weapons shall be tides, the tide of the sea,
          The surgings of the tide
          Shall not again subside,
  Until the Sun's sky-ways again shall be free!"

            So the voice spake,
            Thunderous and proud,
            So the voice spake,
            Then died in a cloud.
  And then again the Darkness, the Darkness gathered round,
  And the hushed world waited, but heard not a sound.
  So hushed was the world, the slaying and the weeping,
  So hushed was the world, the world seemed sleeping,
          But lo! in the West,
            Lo! in the West!
            Leaping, leaping,
          A tongue of fire ...




  PROPHET AND FOOL

  From twigs of visionary boughs
    I gather berries red and rare.
  I twine around my pallid brows
    An insubstantial dryad's hair.

  Such song I hear in mission-halls,
    As Jason heard in violet seas,
  While bodiless birds sing madrigals
    In tumult round my head and knees;

  The draper-shops that light their jets
    To blink along the lanes of mire,
  Weave splendours round the muddy sets
    And tip my feet with points of fire.

  For I pursue the Golden Fleece
    Down slum-ways magical and cool;
  And there I hear the flutes of peace,
    Being a prophet and a fool.




  WHATEVER PATH I WALK UPON

  (To George Fasnacht)

  Whatever path I walk upon
  That path itself is Avalon.
  Whatever woman talks to me,
  Venus' foamy self is she.
  The floors of factories are made
  Of jasper, porphyry and jade.
  All that I drink, all food I eat,
  Is my Lord's blood and body sweet.

  But if a moth should singe his wings,
  The world is black with dismal things.
  And if a strangled sparrow fall,
  There is not any God at all.
  And if a baby moan for food,
  My eyes blaze red with rage for blood.




  LONDON MAGDALENE

  How she is careful to make manifest
    The budded beauty of her breast;
  To hint beneath her unconcealing blouse
    The curved seductions there that house.
  Would that some Christ your mournful care had seen,
  Unmaidened maiden, London Magdalene.

  God gave you roses warm from Paradise,
    And they are bleaker now than ice.
  God gave you fountains flowing honey-sweet,
    And they are spilt upon the street.
  All your seductions are the Dead Sea Fruit,
  O rifled nest, blown flower, O string-snapt lute.

  In those breast-seas no baby-boat will swim
    Through channels warm and dim;
  You'll not awake to a twittering in the leaves
    When baby bird-throat heaves.
  Poor London Magdalene, before you sleep,
  Ah weep with me, if not too late to weep.




  SECRET GIRL

  (To Bessie McKellen)

  Thy nudity, like a white flame,
    I shall inviolably guard:
      O Secret Girl, mine eyes have yet
      Not in the place of mortals met.
    O Secret Girl whom, splendour-starred,
  Some lordly noon my soul shall claim.

  More than the Brahman Heart of Ind,
    I shall be spears about thy breasts:
      When thou no more, O Secret Goal,
      Art secret from mine eyes and soul,
    O Mother of my waiting nests,
  O dew and dark, O day and wind.

  Thou shalt be sheer beyond the wars,
    And sacred from the waste of words:
      O Secret Girl, O Dove, O Pard,
      I shall inviolably guard.
    For we shall crowd the trees with birds,
  The sky with swarms of shouting stars!




  LANKY TIM

  A narrow world is Lanky Tim's,
    The funnel and the griding lift.
    Never the blank walls drop or shift
    To show the far fields thro' a rift
  Where he might go and stretch his limbs.

  Hour after hour the storeys rise.
    "First floor?  Yes, round the corner just,
    For Madame Smirkey's Wig and Bust.
    Second?  That way for Lawyer Thrust.
    Fifth?"--The quack doctor, spiders, dust ...
  These are his depths and these his skies.

  And did Life take you unawares
    While you were dreaming still your dreams,
    And eyes were wild and shy with gleams,
    And heart was thick with aching themes?
  --But someone's pushed the bell downstairs.

  And did you fly thro' boyland dells
    To catch the songs of youthful kings,
    And fly before the flight of Springs?
    --But there's no room in here for wings,
    Where Life is only these three things--
  A lift, a grid, a screech of bells.

  Poor Lanky Tim, the days that drift
    Thro' your drab dismal prison, they
    Have drifted all those dreams away,
    Till your heart's just a pumping clay.
    And now I often wonder, say,
    If you'll be nearer God some day
  Than the fifth storey up the lift.




  MRS. BRIGGS

  Her ample breasts like moons are seen
    Beneath her thin alpaca blouse.
  Mrs. Briggs of Sausage Green,
  She is an old Egyptian queen,
    And she has Cheops Briggs for spouse.

  And when she shouts down Turnip Street,
    "Lawks! of all the dirty sights!
    'Enry, quit that puddle quick!"
  She has the regal voice that beat
    The eardrums of the Israelites,
      And turned the tribal bosoms sick.

  But when 'Enry drooped and ailed,
    And 'Enry from her side was torn
      In a hearse down Dingy Lane,
      O she wept the lad in vain,
  As that other queen bewailed
    The slaying of the eldest born.




  ATHENS NOW

  Behold Athens!  What is Athens now?
  Cinders and weeds where the eyeballs were, filth for
        the marble brow.
  Ilissus, Ilissus of the plain?
  --Sardine-tins and a dead cat in a drain!
  Dead, dead, dead are the Caryatids
  Because of the horror that smote their petal-thin lids.
  And the Parthenon now is a jawful of yellow teeth
  In the snarling skull of an animal humped in death.
  For Athens is only a squalor of traders that hope
  To retire on the profits from soap.
  And the trousers of half of the children of Pallas are
        dirty with grease,
  And the other half ardently brush them and keep them
        in crease.
  Then pray, O London, my city, when you are dead,
  That none know the place where you reared your mad proud head;
  That there be not a mound nor a stone nor even a tree,
  But only the ignorant river or the desert sea!




  DOWN TOTTENHAM COURT ROAD

  Down Tottenham Court Road they ululate,
    The droning choruses of Fate.
    They walk the length of every wind,
  The women who sin, the women who have sinned.
  This evening's crime, all immemorial crimes,
    Here gather from all lands and times.
    Here with Orestes through the mart
  Walks the grey lad who stabbed his mother's heart.
  Gaunt Clytæmnestra stumbles round the feet
    Of Sarah from a Soho street,
    Who slew her sallow man to-night
  With thin-lipped poison in the street lamp-light.
  Pale Helen braids her legendary hair,
    Lurking outside a gallery-stair,
    While softly through the music calls
  Aspasia to her lover in the stalls.
  Here broken Orpheus searches, drunken-wild,
    Eurydice, the fallen child,
    Who, leagues down in the underworld,
  Flaunts her white bosom, rouged lips, and gilt hair curled.
  Behind the plate-glass windows drum the looms
    Of Destinies spinning antique dooms.
    The droning choruses of Fate,
  Down Tottenham Court Road they ululate.




  IN A STATION

  A station drizzling like a hymn
  Sung out of tune by neurasthenes,
  In a tin church where darkness leans
  Down through the windows blear and grim!
  A miserable oil-lamp winks
  Like a drab slut, and stares and stinks.
  The train snorts out a large disgust,
  And snorts again and spits out dust.

  Then suddenly a lightning wakes!
  The fumes, the squalors dissipate.
  Then suddenly a young voice breaks
  Into the darkness like a knife;
  --Full of choked hopes and whipt regrets,
  Hungry for love, half-dumb with hate,
  Intense with death and sick for life,
  --Into the darkness like a knife!
  "Buy Choc-o-late and Cig-ar-ettes!
  Buy Cig-ar-ettes and Choc-o-late!"




  LIZA

  Liza sits on a three-legged stool all day
      beneath the railway-stairs.
  (Liza is a shadowy woman selling shadowy wares.)
  The boots that Liza wears to-day were worn
      a score of years ago
  By Dick the tramp who threw them away as
      far as ever he could throw.
  The petticoats that Liza wears around her
      limbs of sticks and skin
  Were thrown aside with tall disdain into a
      back-street rubbish bin.
  But O the bonnet that Liza wears, it is the
      summit of her pride;
  A big limp feather hangs over her nose and
      two more hang on either side.
  There's no more stately woman than Liza,
      be she the sought of a score of kings.
  (Liza is a shadowy woman, selling shadowy things.)
  All day long she sits upright, waiting upon
      her three-legged stool,
  Until the hosts of little children come tumbling
      homeward out of school.
  Then Liza shows her wooden tray whenever
      the children meet her eye.
  "Come along, babies, only a kiss for any
      little dainty you may buy.
  Purple figs from a Grecian garden, pomegranate
      blossoms blazing red.
  Jangle bells of langling silver to wrangle
      around of a wee girl's head."
  Liza's fingers twitch and tighten, her deep-down
      eyes they are flecked and starred.
  But her voice is like a moan in a rifted chimney
      and you can only hear it if you listen very hard.
  Never the little children hear, they toddle
      homeward day by day.
  --Who would look at a bogey-woman whispering
      over an empty tray?
  Ironically floats the bobbing feather over
      Liza's hungry eye.
  "Isn't there just one wee little baby to come
      to my face and kiss and buy?"
  ... All day long and all year round she
      waits, but no one pays her price.
  (Liza is a shadowy woman selling shadowy merchandise.)




  WOMEN OF THE NIGHT

  Come, I will take you, O ye empty-eyed,
    Into my heart as sheep into a fold
        Upon the waste hill-steep.
  For ye are weary, O unsatisfied,
    Whose breasts were filled for love and sell for gold;
        Come, I will give you sleep.

  All night your bodies move like furtive ghosts,
    All the black futile night, your hands and feet
        Heavy as sunken lead;
  Sad, numberless, immortal, bloodless hosts,
    Who haunt the hollows of the ashen street,
        O ye my living-dead!

  Only a scent of Death, sweet and corrupt,
    Breathes from the false flower-gardens of your hair,
        O and in your eyes,
  No, not the light of the mad wine you supped,
    Not tears nor laughter, O but swaying there,
        Unweepable miseries!

  Come, I will take you to a still green place,
    Where birds that hover above the laden nests,
        Birds shall make song.
  There shall ye wash with dew the painted face,
    Press two wild flowers against the barren breasts,
        There hold a vigil long.

  A vigil long until the evening go,
    Then sleep, long sleep; till with a shout, O then,
        Our Lord the Sun shall rise.
  With hearts invincible and bodies like snow,
    Back ye shall turn into the place of men,
        Love peerless in your eyes!

  _August_ 1918




  I STANDING IN THE STREET

  I standing in the street, I standing,
  Gaze on the unwashed windows, dingy walls,
  When lo! a clarion ...
  Lo! thro' the slum a spring-time trumpet calls.
  Lo! on the roofs a rose-leaf magic falls.
  Thro' all the windows dance and jewels shine.
  Thro' all the rooms go lissome girls with scent.
  The window-frames are tendrilled with the vine.
      (Ah, God!  I weep in my content.)

  I standing in the street, I standing,
  Gaze on my vision splendid and most dear,
  When lo! a chimney ...
  Lo! on my dreams the soot drifts dry and sere.
  Lo! all my flowers wilt in a reek of beer.
  On the drab flags squat children dusty-eyed,
  Cursed at by blousy women with dank hair.
  Just down the street there sprawls a suicide.
      (Ah, God!  I laugh in my despair.)




  SLUM EVENING

  A dove-grey evening, dusk empearled
    By lamps along the fading slums.
    Out of the sky a silence comes,
  A honey on the wormwood world.

  The flirting adolescents stand
    And hush their tingling turbid vows.
    For softly on their foolish brows
  The evening lays a sober hand.

  Even the butcher, he who shares
    The corner-shop with "Boots and Shoes,"
    Although he has no time to lose,
  Delays to light the naphtha flares.

  A bleary woman down the road
    With a large twin on either arm,
    Her wits are stolen by the charm,
  She quite forgets her puling load.

  I know not in what twilight stream
    She bathes her dropsy-swollen feet,
    But they were fair as dawn and fleet,
  In the dead girlhood of her dream.




  FIRES OF CHANGE

  Think you that Athens and Jerusalem
  Rot in the places where they builded them?
  This is the Temple, this the Parthenon
  The priests of old days laid their hands upon?
  No more a stream sends the same waters twice
  Along its channels to sea-sacrifice.
  Not God Himself shall bid Time stand to lock
  The midmost atom in the mightiest rock.
  Still the most secret atom shall be hurled
  Into the riotous wind-ways of the world.
  Still, the most ancient town, up wrenched, shall float
  Freer than flame and light as a bird's note.
  Still shall the crumbling globe itself be spun
  Into fresh ethers conquered by the sun.

  So, even so, my soul shall wear no more
  The countless shapes my soul endued of yore.
  Yea, the stout granite of my soul shall range
  Molten across the blasting fires of change.
  Not this am I you saw an hour ago.
  Me fluid as thought your science shall not know.
  Hourly my conquering spirit digs and delves
  A grave to hold a hundred slaughtered selves.
  Hourly through cowering moons and stellar dins,
  I stride across buried virtues and slain sins.




  POETRY

  A star that was mute
    Was heard to sing.
    A flower took wing,
  A bird took root.

  The Right is a Wrong,
    The Wrong is a Right.
    I fought with the Night,
  I sang you a song.

  I slaughtered Time,
    For the path I trod
    To the feet of God
  Was the road of a rhyme.

  A flower took wing,
    A bird took root.
    A star that was mute
  Was heard to sing.




  THE PRISONER

  If you have not a bird inside you,
    You have no reason to sing.
  But if a pent bird chide you,
    A beak and a bleeding wing,
    Then you have reason to sing.

  If merely you are clever
    With thoughts and rhymes and words,
  Then always your poems sever
    The veins of our singing-birds,
    With blades of glinting words.

  Yet if a Song, without ending,
    Inside you choke for breath,
  And a beak, devouring, rending,
    Tear through your lungs for breath,
    Sing--or you bleed to death.




  NERVES

  You are like an ebony sea with derelict ships,
    Cold as my lover is cold;
  Until Beauty rises like the moon and whips
    You into shivering gold.

  You are like a tree-top at the bleak last hour
    When birds to the tombs belong;
  Until Beauty blows like the dawn, and you flower
    Into buds of innumerable song.

  You are like a virginal and a most pale
    Girl in a secret mead;
  Until Beauty, like the indomitable Male,
    Enflames you with innermost seed.

  You are like a corpse with worms in the holes of the head,
    Between a board and a board;
  Until Beauty shouts like the Trump that convulses the dead,
    And you enter the House of the Lord.




  A POET

  He has a voice so exquisite
    You can hardly hear it at all:
  Tragedy's there and there is wit,
    Both faint as a leaf's fall.

  His feet pass hardly like human feet,
    Five-toed and leathern-shod,
  But more with the sound of bended wheat,
    Swayed by the skirts of God.

  His eyes are a wistful and grey sea,
    Till a song stir his blood.
  Then are they flowers that suddenly
    Open from the pent bud.

  But when at the shutting of the day,
    He sings faint songs for me,
  Then is it very hard to say
    If the wind sings or he.




  FOR MY FRIEND

  (F. V. B.)

  Go forth and conquer with the wind for a sword,
        O scorching might;
  Go forth and blaze through the jungles of night,
  Lead in the tameless stars with a cord;
        Go forth, Lover of Right!

  Make moons thy pebbles and suns thy coins,
        And thy language light.
  Fill highest space with thy depth and height;
  Gather the nebulæ round thy loins;
        Go forth and fight!

  Go forth and conquer--return, return,
        When the hawthorn's white.
  Encompass the void; then turn and learn
  The veins of the grass and the bee's delight;
        Return, Lover of Right!




  "I SHALL BE SPLENDIDLY AND TENSELY YOUNG"

  I shall be splendidly and tensely young,
      While yet my limbs are mine.
      Each of them shall be strung
      As a bowstring by an archer
      With fingers strict and fine.

  I shall be splendidly and tensely young,
      My heart being whole, my brain
      Keen as a hawk's flight flung
      Against my victim seen securely
      From my austere Inane.

      But when my limbs no more are mine,
      My feet to walk, my hands to hold,
  I shall be most supremely young.
      Then shall my flawless songs be sung,
      My brow be sealed with a proud sign:
      When I am deaf and blind and fleshless,
  I shall be most supremely young,
              When I am old.




  "I"

  I shall slough my self as a snake its skin,
  My white spots of virtue, my black spots of sin.
  I shall abandon my sex, my brain,
  My scheming for pleasure, escaping from pain.
  I shall dig roots deep down and be
  A weed or a reed, a flower, a tree.
  I shall lose body and miry feet,
  Float with the clouds and sway with the wheat.
  I am a fool and foolisher than
  Anything else that is not a man.
  For of all the things that I see or feel,
  The I-that-is-I is far the least real.
  And only when I shall learn at the last
  That a stream-bed pebble is far more vast
  In the scale of Mind and its secret schemes
  Than all my passion and blunders and dreams;
  Then only that I that shall not be I
  Shall play due part beneath sun and sky,
  Ranked below sparrow, just above sod,
  I shall take my place in the Self of God.




  I KNOW NOT WHENCE MY POEMS COME

  I know not why nor whence you come,
    My poems.  Only this I know.
  You fall like petals failing down
  Upon the dustbins of a town.
    You fall like flakes of doubtful snow.
    Like fairy flutes your musics flow.
  _You thunder like a madman's drum._

  You falter on my worthless lips.
    You give me grapes to press for wine.
  Unasked, you bring me balm and spice,
    You lead me into fields of kine,
    With tinted dreams and anodyne.
  _You freeze my flesh with flames of ice.
  You scorch my shrieking soul with whips._




  LYRRIA

  Lyrria is an old country.
    Lost travellers tremble and call.
  A very white, wan, weird country
    Where never came traveller at all.

  I am an old, old poet.
    Lost poems tremble and call.
  A very white, wan, weird poet
    Who never wrote poems at all.




  FARINGDON FROM SALONICA

  There's a far road off to Faringdon,
    Under the downs it goes;
  Into the fine wood, the beech, the pine wood
    The dim road shadows and glows.

  My cycle hums to Faringdon,
    Hums like a joyful bee,
  Through dropping shy light of green tree twilight,
    Music of wind and tree.

  Springtime, bluebells, Faringdon,
    And a cycle through all three;
  Great shadow reaches of English beeches,
    Downs far down to the sea.

  There's a far road down to Faringdon.
    There no more I ride.
  The boys hear mostly a rider ghostly,
    The girls they run and hide.

  But that's my ghost in Faringdon,
    All year cycling it goes.
  Into the fine wood, the beech, the pine wood,
    The dim ghost shadows and glows.

  Salonica, 1916




  CALL OF THE PLOVER

  (To Harry Owen)

  The crying of the lonely plover
    From the morning cloud!
  Do the wings and clouds still hover
    Where my heart sang loud?

  O the valley and the stream there.
    Where we shouted, being young!
  Are there boys still dream a dream there,
    Are the boys' songs sung?

  O the winds that once blew round us,
    O the sun! the rain!
  Shall the ancient spells that bound us,
    Bind us ever again?

  O a great Word then was spoken,
    Then was a boy's will clean and strong!
  Is the boy's will broken
    That went straight along?

  O our ageing ears are ringing
    With many sad things!
  Shall we come again with singing
    Where the plover sings?

  CLOUD END




  THE GALLANT ROAD

  (For my School--without permission)

  Grant us, O Lord, to do the thing
    Clean men and boys have always done;
  These works to do, these songs to sing,
    The gallant road to run.

  Grant us, O Lord, that we go straight
    Along the path where shines the sun;
  These things to love, these things to hate,
    The gallant road to run.

  Grant us, O Lord, to win the fight
    That all the cleanly hearts have won,
  Having sure feet, even at night
    The gallant road to run.

  Grant us, O Lord, when Death enfold,
    That we take Death as half in fun;
  Like men and boys that knew of old
    The gallant road to run.

  1915




  THE QUEST

  "I have sought you," I said; "I have
      found you," I said, "in the pitch of your
      intimate midnight lair."
  He drew back with a sob like the swish of a
      stick thro' the smarting air.

  "I have moved like Death on deliberate
      feet thro' a thousand towns and a hundred lands.
  Thinking you found, I have squeezed men's
      throats with pulsing, twitching, inquisitive hands.

  "But the fire that waned in their blood-starred
      eyes was not the flame of the fire I sought,
  And I went my way with the sword in my
      heart and the sword in my hand of passion
      and thought.

  "My blood spurted over the boulders of far
      intolerant mountains of iron and ice,
  But never in crevice or cave or chasm I found
      the flesh of my sacrifice.

  "I burned with the wrath of a wind from hell
      thro' molten deserts panting and pent;
  But ever my foeman fled me afar, the sinister
      goal of my intent.

  "I have sought you," I said, "I have found
      you," I said; "we shall die together, for
      I am you."
  The foam and fever oozed out of my forehead,
      with a dew like blood, with a blood like dew.

  He wailed like a child that recoils from a
      shadow that moves with menace over his bed;
  But I pierced my heart with the sword in my
      hand, and his body at last lay stretched
      and dead.




  HAVING FINISHED "JUDE THE OBSCURE"

  Such purposeless and iron wings
    Obscure our mortal music quite?
  Such gloom to monstrous gloom outflings
    The stenches of a churchyard night?

  We are no more for God or Sin
    Than parasites in rotting hair,
  No different but only in
    The boundlessness of our despair?

  Glories have sprung before our gaze
    From the wet wood the grey tide warps!
  We have heard peals of music blaze
    Sheer from the cold heart of a corpse!




  GHOST AND BODY

      I that am wiser than most,
      Have yielded the tract of my ghost
  To a panting and flat-eyed ghost who gathers these useless things.
      In a country of seventeen moons,
      He sits in the sound of bassoons
  Playing terrible stupid tunes to the first of the ghostial kings.

      He has gathered my ghost with the rest
      To plough it, or do what is best,
  And doubtless he does it with zest in the country whereover
          he reigns.
      I am glad--for the thing was a pest;
      It lay at the roots of my chest,
  And it darkened the East and the West and it plastered
          my eyes with stains.

      But heigh-ho! my arms and my feet
      Now are mine as I swing down the street,
  And my heart for to storm and to beat whenever my body desires.
      My eyes will look when they please
      Down the drains or high to the trees.
  My body is mine to freeze or shrivel with whitest fires!




  GALLOP

  My drunken head is a whirl of song,
    My heart is a drumstick beating time.
  My pen goes swiftly galloping along
    The echoing roads of rhythm and rhyme.

  The stars are dizzy, for they circle in a ring.
    Round about the Pole Star all hold hands.
  The moon lifts her skirts up to do a giddy fling,
    The trees in the forest dance in big black bands.

  The river is bounding from place to place,
    The fishes in the cold air rise and shine.
  The parallel hedgerows are running in a race,
    For each of them and all of them are drunk with wine.

  The grand old buildings, alas and woe is me!
    Sway about unsteadily from side to side.
  The streets are moreover crooked things to see;
    There is no object anywhere will stand and bide.

  The goblins are assembled in a mad-moon crowd
    Upon the hazy summit of the palpitating hill.
  Let the things that have no voice shout out loud!
    Let them dance, the fickle things, and have their fill!

  And if again they will not sub-subside,
    (For round-around-around ho! and dance shall we!)
  The road of the rebel stars is cool and wide,
    The mad waves dance on the sea!

  Then beat like thunder heart, then! round go head!
    The red stars swing in time.
  For soon enough, the Lord knows, shall I be dead,
    And dead my rhythm and rhyme!

  OXFORD




  WE LADS WHO BARTER RHYMES

  There's some be red of face, they be,
    Like jolly suns in harvest times,
  And some be haggard men to see,
    Because of certain hidden crimes.
      But let us sing with one accord
      That we're the chosen of the Lord,
    We lads who barter rhymes.

  There's some so tall and fair and free,
    Like policemen in their leisure times,
  And some are like a wizened pea,
    Some worth no more than twenty dimes.
      But here's our sober view expressed,
      We're three times better than the best,
    We lads who barter rhymes.




  WHO KNOWS ME?

  Who knows me?  None knows me.
  I hobble on two blistered feet
  Round the corner, down the street.
  Now and then a child will cry,
  Seeing a strange thing in my eye,
  A Bogey Man, a Thing of Dread,
  Stand from each eye in my head.
  Now and then a baby 'll smile,
  --But that's only once a while.
  Boys of thirteen all throw stones
  At my stiff and creaky bones.
  Middle-aged people, fat and bright,
  Shrug and sniff "It serves him right."
  Round the corner, out of sight,
  Down the Street, across the Night.

  Who knows me?  None knows me.
  I am young and I am proud,
  Strong as sun and pure as cloud.
  All the five seas wash my veins
  With stinging foam and swinging rains.
  With the white stars I commune
  In a silent spheric tune.
  Who knows me?  None knows me.
  Only but a brown Bird,
  Only but a little Child,
  A little Child, a little Bird,
  Only they know me.




  JUDÆUS ERRANS

  He hath no place to rest his head.
    O happy nations, weep indeed.
  He is forlorn till he be dead.
    O pity him his wretched meed,
      His wounds that bleed.

  There is no resting in his eyes,
    And he hath scars upon his feet.
  He is a stranger to all skies.
    He walks sad-eyed along the street,
      And shadow-wise.

  For with the dawn must he depart,
    And with the sunset make his way.
  All day he bears an aching heart,
    All night his aching sorrows stay,
      Yea, night and day.

  Then look a moment as he goes,
    A little sadly, in his eyes.
  For there are written all the woes,
    And a surprise.
      For he is sadder than God knows.




  COLD STARS

  Cold night, cold with pointed stars
  That swing like instant scimitars,
  How you reproach with acid fire
  The smoky lamps of our desire.

  Cold stars, inexorably aloof,
  That freeze from Vision's dizziest roof,
  On these our human sins you brood
  In pride of glacial rectitude.

  Cold stars, come down and walk along
  Our avenues of Sense and Song;
  Take human shape one night and vex
  Your bowels with the scourge of sex.

  When you return at last to those
  Cold skies from whence your travel rose,
  Will you still stare with such disdain,
  When you, cold stars, are stars again?




  REACTIONARY

  My heart's blood leaps high, O my Lady, in a
        fountain of restless aspiring.
  That you should dangle within it the dissolute
        gold of your hair.
  I have shattered the doors of my spirit that
        you might thereinto retiring
  Reposefully lie on my pain and reflect that
        the morning is fair.

  You may go to the devil, my Lady, yourself
        and the rest of your species!
  I mean it, O desperate damsel, O Lady most
        anxious and coy!
  I shall retire to my chamber to see that my
        clothes are in creases,
  For I see by the tilt of your brow the minuteness
        of brain you enjoy.

  You have set the clear bells of my spirit to
        crack in a dissonant jangle.
  You are fair in your way, O my Lady, but rather
        oppressively sexed.
  There is no such fatal mistake as a primitive
        facial angle.
  Good-bye, O my dispossessed Lady, remember
        my name to the next.




  LATE

  I am very desolate.
  I am afraid.
  I am alone.
  The shadows wait
  Till I am laid
  Beneath a stone.

  I am very desolate.
  I can hear feet.
  I can see ghosts.
  Fear's by the gate,
  Death's in the street
  By the dark posts.

  I am very desolate.
  What have I made
  Of the dead time?
  The night is late.
  I am afraid
  Of my own rhyme.




  WIND OF BLACK NIGHT

  I would go where you go,
  You sole monarch that I know.
    Wind, wind of black night,
    I would go with your delight.
  Take me by my streaming hair,
  Take me where in the air
      Planets meet, stars fight.

  I have need of the speed
  Of your thunder-shattering steed.
    Wind, wind of black night,
    I would battle with your might.
  Take me by my soaring mind.
  No more blind, I shall find
      Hell's depth and sky's height.

  I would follow where you lead,
  Freed, freed of sense and creed.
    Wind, wind of black night,
    I would see with your sight.
  Take me by my burning soul,
  Stark, whole, to God my goal,
      Clean darkness, sheer light.




  YELLOW SATINS

  (To Janey Golding)

  When I am rich, mother,
    You will sit in satins,
  Yellow satins, looking out upon the street.
  You will smile out on the neighbours,
    Who will have no yellow satins;
  And there'll be a great big hassock to rest your tired feet.

  You'll have a gold-clasped family album,
    And a grand piano in the corner;
  But yellow satins, yellow satins, I have chiefly dreamed of them.
  And the most wonderful silk-lined work-box,
    With the clothes of my first baby,
  For your dear pale fingers to hem.

  And the neighbours will come to see you,
    And pretend not to be looking
  At the wonderful yellow satins, till I take you away to bed.
  But in dreaming of the yellow satins,
    I have forgotten, I have forgotten....
  Isn't it seven years, little mother, since you've been dead?




  MY MOTHER'S PORTRAIT

  Dost thou turn thine eyes away from me,
      thy stern and gentle eyes,
  From the error of my living days, O thou in
      Death most wise?
          O thou in Death most wise,
          With thy stern and gentle eyes,
  Then is thy sleep disturbed by doubt, thy
      coffin by surprise?

  Have I not trodden then the ways which thou
      wouldst have me tread?
  Then was it but a wind of words, the passioned
      vows I said?
          The passioned vows I said,
          The ways which I should tread,
  So have I quite forgotten these now thou art
      safely dead?

  Unless I take thy buried lips my final word to say,
  Unless I take thy crumbled eyes to light my tangled way,
          To light my tangled way,
          My final word to say,
  Suddenly, Death, come down in flame and
      shrive me from the day!




  TO A. L. O.

  My soul is a white flame that has burned longer
    Than Mars or Aldebaran or all the stars,
  And gentler than a snowdrop, and far stronger
    Than all the steel of its containing bars.
  In cosmic triumphs upon timeless cars
    My lordly soul hath lain.  My soul is younger
  Than the new-fallen dews in flowery jars:
    My soul, my godly food, my godly hunger.

  Where shall I place my soul for most safe keeping
    From boisterous intention and omnivorous wave?
  And sow it in what field for goodliest reaping,
    From night to shield it and from sins to save?
  Thou art my treasure-house, awake or sleeping,
    Or wind-free in meadows or in the obscure grave.




  THE DARK KNIGHT OF THE ROAD

  Three tall poplars are his plumes,
    The Dark Knight of the Road.
  And he is cuirassed round with glooms,
    And all his stern abode
  Is loud with seas and dooms.

  A rock he takes to be his shield.
    Loud winds his clarions are.
  Should banded warriors take the field,
    Though strong troops come from far,
  Naught know they but to yield.

  But if a sparrow taunt his helm,
    Froth-like his power is blown.
  Him shall the mating thrush o'erwhelm.
    Yea, I have even known
  Tom-tit usurp his realm.




  TO THE SWIFT

  Swift, feathered lightning, swift,
    Flesh of flame, wind-fleet,
  God who gave you your good gift
    Gave me only two slow feet.

  Countries merge within the span
    Of your single hour's essay.
  I being but a wingless man
    Plod my score of miles a day.

  Fading into blankness now,
    Song that flies and flight that sings,
  I am chained to clay, but thou,
    Winds are leashed around thy wings.

  Art thou faded, swift? then see,
    Poet where the swift shall halt,
  Poet see the sun assault
    The stone towers of Finity.

  Swift, dreamless atom, clod,
    Swift, thou art slower than
  Any eyeless, limbless man.
    Him his soul shall drive to God.

  FRESHWATER




  GREEN WIND

  The wind of course is Green.
    There is no other word
  For what no man has seen
    And every man has heard.

  It's neither man nor fowl,
    And neither fish nor beast.
  But it comes out of the West
    And goes into the East.

  It never was defined
    By instrument or mouth.
  But it comes out of the North
    And goes into the South.

  The wind it is a Green Thing
    That swishes thro' the corn,
  And shouts you to praise loudly
    The day that you were born.

  The wind it is a Wise Thing
    That rumbles thro' the beech,
  And bids you to learn there
    A wisdom it can teach.

  The wind's as Green as Greenness
    Possibly can be,
  And lashes to a foam of Green
    The deepest bluest sea.

  And even in the grassless towns,
    The murky streets and mean,
  Along the greys, behind the browns,
    It sings a Song of Green.

  And whither does it go then,
    And whence does it come forth?
  It comes out of the South,
    And goes into the North.

  It comes out of the East,
    And goes into the West,
  And why the wind is Green as Green,
    God alone knows best.




  THE MIDMOST FIELD IN KENT

  There is a time of charm and chime,
  And this is Sabbath evening time.
  There is a place of dear content,
  This is the midmost field in Kent.
  This is the time and this the place
  Where boughs droop down with dews of grace;
  Where under hedges hung with sleep,
  Through atmospheres of music creep
  Sheep like ghosts and ghosts like sheep.
  Here a great Lord of Magic comes
  Fanfarronading with far drums,
  And deep athwart the night he throws
  His banners of white fire and rose.
  From the great town unto the sea,
  He thunders through his empiry.
  But when his drums are heard no more,
  The quiet is quiet as before.
  And there's a drowsy dreamy scent
  Drenches the midmost field in Kent.
  Neither more quickly nor more slow,
  Shadows come, shadows go.
  Shadows that reap while others sow,
  Shadows that sow while others reap,
  Shadows whose windy singings keep,
  Sheep like ghosts and ghosts like sheep.




  MURMURYNGEHAM

  In Murmuryngeham, in Murmuryngeham,
    The bees is always singing,
    The flowers is always chiming,
      The sheep stands on their head.
    There's lads and lasses clinging,
    And minor poets rhyming,
  In Murmuryngeham, in Murmuryngeham,
      When they should be in bed.
    So now my feet is winging,
    When other men's are climbing,
        To Murmuryngeham, which I shall find
        If my good Patron be inclined,
  Murmuryngeham, Murmuryngeham,
      Some day before I'm dead.




  WINCHESTER DOWNS

  In Winchester on the white downs
    This is not mist at all,
  But the thin silk of fairy gowns
  Which is not woven in the towns
    And all behind a wall.

  In Winchester, be taught of me,
    The fairies seize your wrist.
  Their gowns are caught in every tree;
  --But if you have no eyes to see,
    Then sure, it's only mist.




  CYCLING IN OCTOBER

  O the wind blowing round me, the wind
      blowing round me, the same wind that
      blew when the grey world was green!
  The high hills before me, the brown hills before
      me, that stand in their places where Death
      has not been.
  The blue sky over my head is singing, is singing,
      is singing, as loudly as I.
  For Death was only a seeming, a dreaming,
      and Life is as clouds that fade and fly.
  The strong hills vanish, as thin clouds vanish,
      as I shall vanish, my dream, my pain;
  But all my dreams and I the dreamer, clouds
      and hills shall sing again.
  Then birds of October, hills of October, winds
      of October, wrap me round.
  Carry me forward, road of October, sped on
      the wheels of light and sound.
  For the birds are on wings now and I am on
      wings now over the white road the dead
      men trod.
  And there are no dead men, there are no dead
      men, but living men only and dead men
      are God!




  THE SHEPHERD

  "Ah me," the shepherd said
  Who dwelt beside a fold
  Upon the Northern hills.
  "Ah me, 'tis bitter cold,
  My oldest friends be dead.
  And O a humming fills
  My nid-nod-nodding head."

  The guns lie in the beams.
  The shepherd feeds the fire
  With fingers old and numb.
  The lamplight flickers higher.
  A double winter seems
  Surely to have come.
  The old friends hover nigher
  In simple shepherd dreams.

  The frost lies on the fells.
  The moon's a great white flower.
  The stars have cruel hearts.
  And loud and very clear,
  With sudden silly starts,
  The old clock ticks and tells
  The changing of the hour.
  But the shepherd hears the bells
  No other man may hear.

  A look's within his eyes
  I have not seen before
  In shepherd North or South.
  The old head sinketh lower.
  The shadows fall and rise
  Along the earthen floor.
  --God wot, he'll go no more
  Beneath the windy skies.

  No more the shepherd will
  Lead down the misty scars
  The small sheep frail and lost,
  Nor thread the bracken hill
  Singing a shepherd's rune.
  The moorland wind is still,
  Beneath the ancient moon.
  The fells are white with frost.
  The white peaks touch the stars.




  DERWENTWATER

  (To J. L. Paton)

  God give me Derwentwater when I die.
  Let no one else be by
  To say prayers over me or close my eye.

  On Friar's Crag my body will lie down.
  On green grass and earth brown.
  I will forget the fever and the town.

  Over the tops of ancient Borrowdale,
  Slowly the clouds will sail
  Through great sky spaces, exquisite and frail.

  And grandly will the flames of heather climb
  Up Skiddaw-Hill sublime,
  With head unbowed before the knees of time.

  Thro' the still dusk a little bird will sing
  Sweetly a holy thing,
  And fade in silence on a drowsy wing.

  The winds will pass along the quiet lake,
  And God will gently take
  My own breath with them for His Godhead's sake.




  "I VOWED THAT I WOULD BE A TREE"

  I vowed that I would be a tree.
    I went up to an oak and said,
  "What shall I do that I might be
  A beech, an oak, or any tree,
    With branches leafing from my head?"

  There was a sound of sap that ran,
    There was a wind of leaves that spoke.
  "So you would cease to be a man,
  And be a green tree, if you can,
    A pine, a beech, an oak?"

  I answered, "I am tired of men,
    As tired as they of me.
  I fain would not return again
  To the perplexity of men,
    But straightway be a tree."

  There was a sound of winds that went
    To summon every oldest tree,
  To hold their austere Parliament
  About the thing had craved to be
    Elect of their calm company.

  There was a sound of bursting tide,
    There was a wash of clanging foam,
  A crumbling shore, a bursting tide.
  There came a thunder that outcried,
    "Go, wretched mortal, get thee home!

  "Who art thou that would be a tree,
    Least of the weeds that shoot and pass?
  Bide till a Wisdom come, and see
  Before a mortal be a tree,
    He first must be a blade of grass!"




  WOUNDED SOLDIERS

  Have you no arms, soldier?
    See, I have two.
  Whatever deeds for arms there be,
    These still I can do.
  Out of clay I still can make
    Living things like me and you.
  I still can cleave the lake
    With strong arms true.

  Have you no feet, soldier,
    No feet at all?
  I still have feet to climb
    Oak-tree and tall.
  Still as in our boyhood,
    I leap the hedge and climb the wall.
  Still my feet will chase the Spring
    When birds call.

  Have you no eyes, soldier,
    Keen eyes like me?
  My eyes still have light that draw
    Strength from the great sea.
  O soldier, is it hard to lose
    The first Spring-whisper on the tree,
  Sun foaming round the love you choose,
    Whosoever she?

  Ah! but you have something, soldier,
    Never we shall know.
  You shall hear the holy winds
    We can not hear blow.
  From your garden-soul shall start
    Flowers of flaming snow.
  There's the secret at your heart
    Never we shall know.




  STILL LIFE IN FRANCE

  Sweet peas drooping in a vase
    Like the tears of Niobe,
  Poppies like the cheeks of Mars
    Kissing the Aphrodite.

  Pansies like a dryad's eyes,
    Open-wide and half-afraid,
  Like unfolded butterflies
    In a little Tempe glade.

  *  *  *  *  *

  Flowers and words might be my toys
    Half a drowsy summer day,
  But at night I hear the noise
    Of bombardment far away.

  Very quiet I am then,
    Like a moon-enchanted boy,
  As I see the khaki men
    Storm the granite walls of Troy.

  HARFLEUR, 1917




  I DREAM'D I DIED

  I dream'd I died.
  The green of Spring was not yet manifest
  Upon the cold hillside.
  They bore me slowly to my place of rest,
  And let me bide.
  Far from the pale I lay of space and light,
  Of dusk and dawn.
  I knew the sharp stars of the winter night
  Were far withdrawn.
  Silent I lay upon my bed,
  In sooth at rest.
  The earth pressed heavily on my head,
  My lean hands cross'd my breast.
  I saw not through my eyes.
  When I had faded from the room of sighs,
  Someone had sealed them down with clay,
  Had whispered, "He hath seen the whole
  Of summer earth and starlit skies,
  Or yellow hills of tumbled hay
  That he shall see.
  Here till the time of Judgment let him be.
  God soothe his soul."

  Under the moon
  I lay remote from the dear nightingale.
  Late and soon,
  Faintly I heard the wan wind drone and wail.
  I dream'd,
  Thro' many years it seemed:
  Until I wearied me of dreaming
  And closed the windows of my soul,
  Where no sun streaming
  Show'd how God's far far days did westward roll.
  All blind, blind,
  A sea of sleep did drown me unconfin'd,
  Wide and deep,
  A sea of utter sleep,
  Its levels no time stirred by any wind.
  And so I slept,
  My hands across my breast.
  My clamped spirit kept
  A total rest.

  *  *  *  *  *

  Earth of the Earth I slumber'd long,
  I slumber'd in the untrod glooms,
  And then Dawn came.
  I felt the world was glad with song,
  I felt the hillsides were a flame
  Of king-cup blooms.
  And when Dawn came,
  Three times I knocked upon the door
  Which was my seal, my world and sky,
  Three times with might.
  There came a burst of sound and light,
  A knowledge broad and deep and high,
  The long breath of a sloping moor.
  I looked into the daylight wide,
  A bird sang thro' the singing blue,
  And then, O heart, and then I knew
  I _dream'd_ I died.




  FLOWERS IN WAR

      Still, still, with all your ancient bloom,
        You glow athwart our gloom.
        Still, O too callous flowers,
      You load with gems these swooning hours.
    Still, still, the lilac foams and falls
    Against our hollow silenced walls.
    Against the cinders of our homes,
        Wistaria falls and foams.

  When all the Spring is all a loaded grave,
    How can your banners wave?
  How when the wind goes round your way,
    How can your trumpets play?

      For whom your splendours chiefly shone,
        All those, all those, are gone.
        Now Spring is nipped and hoar,
      Too callous flowers, why bloom ye more?
    Still, still, the scarlet sorrel gleams
    All noon along the noon-gold streams.
    Still, still, the meadow-pippet's feet
        Are dewed on meadow-sweet.

  Be curst, O callous flowers that come so fair
    With taunts at our despair.
  Or if next Spring shall lead you back,
    Be all your petals black!




  EVENING--KENT

  Sheep, like woolly clouds dropt from the sky,
    Drift through the quiet meads.
  From over the seas, a little cry,
    --Europe bleeds!

  Clouds, like woolly sheep, hardly stir'd,
    Drift through the quiet skies.
  From over the seas, a little word,
    --Europe dies!




  BLACK MAGIC

  Hands on the window-sill
    I hear but cannot see.
  Ghosts riding down the hill
      I see but cannot hear.
      My heart is cold with fear
    Of every trembling tree.

  The day has never been,
    And day will never be.
  And Night is very lean,
      And Death is very swift.
      And green eyes blink and shift
    Through every monstrous tree.

  Black arms across the night,
    And hands I may not flee,
  And fingers grasping tight
      That choke my little cries,
      And I shall have green eyes
    Within a phantom tree.




  A SOLDIER DYING

  "Lad, why are your fingers twitching,
    What is the thing they strain to hold?
  Why does your blood flow thick, enriching
        A bleak strange place?"

  "Dying, dying--then do not task me!"
    "Tell me before your lips are cold."
  "I am afraid of the thing you ask me."
        "--Before the dark is in your face."

  "This is why my blood is oozing.
  Because my masters did the choosing.
        Blood is cheap and bought for gold."

  "Are they masters of your knowing?"
    "I know not who my masters be.
  I only know my blood is flowing,
        Because my secret masters said,
        'We shall live and he be dead.'"

  "This is why your fingers straining
    Clutch the thing they shall not hold?"
  "This is why the blood is waning,
        Waning from my face.
        They gathered in the market-place,
        They gathered to buy merchandise.
        My blood was bought for little price,
        My masters bought and I was sold.
        This is why my blood is oozing,
        Blood is cheap and bought for gold."




  AT LAST WAR ENDS

  And still the War went on: till only ten
  Were left to win the War; they fought; and then,
        Then there were no more men.

  There was a gloom of apprehension lest
  For lack of flesh the first and last and best
        Of wars might be suppressed.

  But Mars was far too sage to be surprised.
  Now that the race of men were quite demised,
        The women mobilized.

  So now for gassier gas and flamier flame!
  Compared with what the present War became,
        The old War was a game.

  The old had fifty years in which to thrive;
  When this had lasted only twenty-five,
        Two dames remained alive.

  With flammen-werfer strictly up-to-date,
  They stalked each other, singing Hymns of Hate:
        --But one was just too late!

  The Victress trying vainly to decide
  For whom her late opponent had just died,
        Committed suicide.

  So now the world consisted but of trees
  And dogs and beetles livid with disease,
        And babies blue with fleas.

  Trees, dogs, and beetles perished from the day.
  Like flies brought crawling earthwards by a spray,
        The babies dropped away.

  Now truly War seemed ended.  Mars was pained
  Beyond expression till he ascertained,
        Two babes, thank God! remained.

  He fired them with the fury of all wars.
  A bloody hunger stung their toothless jaws.
        They squealed--"The Cause!  The Cause!"

  Black to the blinding noon they foamed and swore.
  Each from his brother's breast the red heart tore.
        Then there was War no more.




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