Tasuta

One Day & Another: A Lyrical Eclogue

Tekst
Märgi loetuks
Šrift:Väiksem АаSuurem Aa

4

Entering the skiff, she speaks:
 
Waters, flowing dark and bright
In the sunlight or the moon,
Seize my soul with such delight
As a visible music might;
As some slow, majestic tune
Made material to the sight.
 
 
Blossoms colored like the skies,
Sunset-hued and tame or wild,
Fill my soul with such surmise
As the mind might realize
If our thoughts, all undefiled,
Should take form before our eyes.
 
 
So to me do these appeal;
So they sway me every hour:
Letting all their beauty steal
On my soul to make it feel,
Through a rivulet or flower,
More than any words reveal.
 

5

He speaks, rowing
 
See, sweetheart, how the lilies lay
Their lambent leaves about our way;
Or, pollen-dusty, nod and float
Their moon-like flowers around our boat. —
The middle of the stream we've reached
Three strokes from where our boat was beached.
 
 
Look up. You scarce can see the sky,
Through trees that lean, dark, deep, and high;
And coiled with grape and trailing vine
Build a vast roof of shade and shine;
A house of leaves, where shadows walk,
And whispering winds and waters talk.
 
 
There is no path. The saplings choke
The trunks they spring from. There an oak
Lies rotting; and that sycamore,
Which lays its bulk from shore to shore, —
Uprooted by the floods, – perchance,
May be the bridge to some romance.
 
 
Now opening through a willow fringe
The waters creep, one tawny tinge
Of sunset; and on either marge
The cottonwoods make walls of shade;
And, near, the gradual hills loom large
Within its mirror. Herons wade,
Or fly, like Faery birds, from grass
That mats the shore by which we pass.
 
She speaks
 
On we pass; we rippling pass,
On sunset waters still as glass.
A vesper-sparrow flies above
Soft twittering to its woodland love.
A whippoorwill now calls afar;
And 'gainst the west, like some swift star,
A glittering jay flies screaming. Slim
The sand-snipes and king-fishers skim
Before us; and some evening thrush —
Who may discover where such sing? —
The silence rinses with a gush
Of mellow music bubbling.
 
He speaks
 
On we pass. – Now let us oar
To yonder strip of ragged shore,
Where, from a rock with lichens hoar,
A ferny spring wells. Gliding by
The sulphur-colored firefly
Lights its pale lamp where mallows gloom,
And wild-bean and wild-mustard bloom. —
Some hunter there within the woods
Last fall encamped those ashes say
And campfire boughs. – The solitudes
Grow dreamy with the death of day.
 

6

She sings
 
Over the fields of millet
A young bird tries its wings;
And sweet as a woodland rillet,
Its first wild music rings —
Soul of my soul, where the meadows roll
What is the song it sings?
 
 
"Love, and a glad good-morrow,
Heart where the rapture is!
Good-morrow, good-morrow!
Adieu to sorrow!
Here is the road to bliss:
Where all day long you may hearken my song,
And kiss, kiss, kiss!"
 
 
Over the fields of clover,
Where the wild bee drones and sways,
The wind, like a shepherd lover,
Flutes on the fragrant ways —
Heart of my heart, where the blossoms part,
What is the air he plays?
 
 
"Love, and a song to follow,
Soul with the face a-gleam!
Come follow, come follow,
O'er hill and o'er hollow,
To the land o' the bloom and beam;
Where under the flowers you may listen for hours,
And dream, dream, dream!"
 

7

He speaks, letting the boat drift
 
Here the shores are irised. Grasses
Clump the water dark that glasses
Broken wood and deepened distance.
Far the musical persistence
Of a field-lark lingers low
In the west where tulips blow.
 
 
White before us flames one pointed
Star; and Day hath Night anointed
King; from out her azure ewer
Pouring starry fire, truer
Than pure gold. Star-crowned he stands
With the star-light in his hands.
 
 
Will the moon bleach through the ragged
Tree-tops ere we reach yon jagged
Rock, that rises gradually,
Pharos of our homeward valley? —
All the west is smouldering red;
Embers are the stars o'erhead.
 
 
At my soul some Protean elf is;
You're Simaetha; I am Delphis.
You are Sappho and your Phaon,
I. – We love. – There lies a ray on
All the Dark Æolian seas
'Round the violet Lesbian leas.
 
 
On we drift. I love you. Nearer
Looms our island. Rosier, clearer,
The Leucadian cliff we follow,
Where the temple of Apollo
Shines – a pale and pillared fire…
Strike, oh, strike the Lydian lyre! —
While in Hellas still we seem,
Let us sing of that we dream.
 

8

Landing, he sings
 
Night, night, 'tis night. The moon drifts low above us,
And all its gold is tangled in the stream:
Love, love, my love, and all the stars, that love us,
The stars smile down and every star's a dream.
 
 
In odorous purple, where the falling warble
Of water cascades and the plunged foam glows,
A columned ruin lifts its sculptured marble
Friezed with the chiselled rebeck and the rose.
 
She sings
 
Sleep, Sleep, sweet Sleep sleeps at the drifting tiller,
And in our sail the Spirit of the Rain —
Love, love, my love, ah, bid thy heart be stiller,
And, hark! the music of the resonant main.
 
 
What flowers are those that blow their balm unto us
From mouths of wild aroma, each a flame? —
That breathe of love, of love we know that drew us,
That kissed our eyes, so we might see the same.
 
He speaks
 
Night, night, 'tis night! – no dream is this to banish;
The temple and the nightingale are there!
Our love has made them, nevermore to vanish,
Real as yon moon, this wild-rose in your hair.
 
 
Night, night, 'tis night! – and love's own star's before us,
Its bright reflection in the starry stream —
Yes, yes, ah, yes! its presence shall watch o'er us,
Night, night, to-night, and every night we dream.
 

9

Homeward through flowers; she speaks:
 
Behold the offerings of the common hills!
Whose lowly names have made them three times dear:
The evening-primrose and dim multitudes
Of violets that sky the mossy dells
With heaven's ambrosial blue; dew-dripping plumes
Of mauve lobelias; and the red-stained cups
Of blackberry-lilies all along the creek,
Where, lulled, the freckled silence sleeps, and vague
 
 
The water flows; where, at high noon, the cows
Wade knee-deep, and the heat is honied with
The drone of drowsy bees. The fleur-de-lis,
Blue, streaked with crystal like a summer day,
The monkey-flower and the touch-me-not,
All frailly scented and familiar as
Fair baby faces and soft infant eyes.
 
 
Simple suggestions of a life most fair!
You whisper me of love and untaught faith,
Whose habitation is within the soul,
Not of the Earth, yet for the Earth indeed…
What is it halcyons my heart? makes calm,
With calmness not of wisdom, all my soul
To-night? – Is't love? or faith? or both? —
The lore of all the world is less than these
Simple suggestions of a life most fair,
And love most sweet; that I have learned to know!
 

10

He speaks, musingly
 
Yes, I have known its being so;
Long ago was I seeing so —
Beckoning on to a fairer land,
Out of the flowers it waved its hand;
Bidding me on to life and love;
Life with the hope of the love thereof.
 
 
What is the value of knowing it,
If you are shy in showing it? —
Need of the earth unfolds the flower,
Dewy sweet at the proper hour;
And in the world of the human heart
Love is the flower's counterpart.
 
 
So when the soul is heedable,
Then is the heart made readable —
I in the book of your heart have read
Words that are truer than truth has said;
Measures of love, the spirit's song,
Writ of your soul to haunt me long.
 
 
Love can hear each laudable
Thought of the loved made audible,
Spoken in wonder, or bliss, or pain,
And re-echo it back again;
Ever responsive, ever awake,
Ever replying with ache for ache.
 

11

She speaks, dreamily
 
Earth gives its flowers to us
And heaven its stars. Indeed,
These are as lips that woo us,
Those are as lights that lead,
With love that doth pursue us,
With hope that still doth speed.
 
 
Yet shall the flowers lie riven,
And lips forget to kiss;
The stars fade out of heaven,
And lights lead us amiss —
As love for which we've striven;
As hope that promises.
 

12

He laughs, wishing to dispel her seriousness:
 
If love I have had of you, you had of me,
Then doubtless our loving were over;
One would be less than the other, you see;
Since what you returned to your lover
Were only his own; and —
 

13

She interrupts him, speaking impetuously:
 
But if I lose you, if you part with me,
I will not love you less
Loving so much now. If there is to be
A parting and distress, —
What will avail to comfort or reprieve
The soul that's anguished most? —
The knowledge that it once possessed, perceive,
The love that it has lost.
You must acknowledge, under sun and moon
All that we feel is old;
Let morning flutter from night's brown cocoon
Wide wings of flaxen gold;
The moon split through the darkness, soaring o'er,
Like some great moth and white,
These have been seen a myriad times before
And with the same delight. —
So 'tis with love – how old yet new it is! —
This only should we heed, —
To once have known, to once have felt love's bliss,
Is to be rich indeed. —
Whether we win or lose, we lose or win,
Within our gain or loss
Some purpose lies, some end unseen of sin,
Beyond our crown or cross.
 

14

Nearing home, he speaks
 
True, true! – Perhaps it would be best
To be that star within the west;
Above the earth, within the skies,
Yet shining in your own blue eyes.
 
 
Or, haply, better here to blow
A flower beneath your window low;
That, brief of life and frail and fair,
Finds yet a heaven in your hair.
 
 
Or well, perhaps, to be the breeze
That sighs its soul out to the trees;
A voice, a breath of rain or drouth,
That has its wild will with your mouth.
 
 
These thing I long to be. I long
To be the burthen of some song
You love to sing; a melody,
Sure of sweet immortality.
 

15

At the gate. She speaks
 
Sunday shall we ride together? —
Not the root-rough, rambling way
Through the wood we went that day,
In last summer's sultry weather.
 
 
Past the Methodist camp-meeting,
Where religion helped the hymn
Gather volume; and a slim
Minister, with textful greeting
 
 
Welcomed us and still expounded. —
From the service on the hill
We had gone three hills and still
Very near the singing sounded.
 
 
Nor that road through weed and berry
Drowsy days led me and you
To the old-time barbecue,
Where the country-side made merry.
 
 
Dusty vehicles together;
Darkies with the horses near
Tied to trees; the atmosphere
Redolent of bark and leather.
 
 
As we went the homeward journey
You exclaimed, – "They intermix
Pleasure there with politics.
It reminds me of a tourney."
 
 
And the fiddles! – through the thickets,
How the wind brought from the hill
Remnants of the old quadrille! —
It was like the drone of crickets…
 
 
Neither road. The shady quiet
Of that path by beech and birch,
Winding to the ruined church
Near the stream that sparkles by it.
 
 
Where the silent Sundays listen
For the preacher – Love – we bring
In our hearts to preach and sing
Week-day shade to Sabbath glisten.