A Hidden Life and Other Poems eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about A Hidden Life and Other Poems.

A Hidden Life and Other Poems eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about A Hidden Life and Other Poems.

Downward went the sun;
Down low, behind the low and sullen clouds
That walled the west; and down below the hills
That lay beneath them hid.  Uprose the moon,
And looked for silence in her moony fields,
But there she found it not.  The staggering cart,
Like an o’erladen beast, crawled homeward still,
Returning light and low.  The laugh broke yet,
That lightning of the soul, from cloudless skies,
Though not so frequent, now that labour passed
Its natural hour.  Yet on the labour went,
Straining to beat the welkin-climbing toil
Of the huge rain-clouds, heavy with their floods. 
Sleep, like enchantress old, soon sided with
The crawling clouds, and flung benumbing spells
On man and horse.  The youth that guided home
The ponderous load of sheaves, higher than wont,
Daring the slumberous lightning, with a start
Awoke, by falling full against the wheel,
That circled slow after the sleepy horse. 
Yet none would yield to soft-suggesting sleep,
Or leave the last few shocks; for the wild rain
Would catch thereby the skirts of Harvest-home,
And hold her lingering half-way in the storm.

The scholar laboured with his men all night. 
Not that he favoured quite this headlong race
With Nature.  He would rather say:  “The night
Is sent for sleep, we ought to sleep in it,
And leave the clouds to God.  Not every storm
That climbeth heavenward, overwhelms the earth. 
And if God wills, ’tis better as he wills;
What he takes from us never can be lost.” 
But the old farmer ordered; and the son
Went manful to the work, and held his peace.

The last cart homeward went, oppressed with sheaves,
Just as a moist dawn blotted pale the east,
And the first drops fell, overfed with mist,
O’ergrown and helpless.  Darker grew the morn. 
Upstraining racks of clouds, tumultuous borne
Upon the turmoil of opposing winds,
Met in the zenith.  And the silence ceased: 
The lightning brake, and flooded all the earth,
And its great roar of billows followed it. 
The deeper darkness drank the light again,
And lay unslaked.  But ere the darkness came,
In the full revelation of the flash,
He saw, along the road, borne on a horse
Powerful and gentle, the sweet lady go,
Whom years agone he saw for evermore. 
“Ah me!” he said; “my dreams are come for me,
Now they shall have their time.”  And home he went,
And slept and moaned, and woke, and raved, and wept. 
Through all the net-drawn labyrinth of his brain
The fever raged, like pent internal fire. 
His father soon was by him; and the hand
Of his one sister soothed him.  Days went by. 
As in a summer evening, after rain,
He woke to sweet quiescent consciousness;
Enfeebled much, but with a new-born life.

As slow the weeks passed, he recovered strength;
And ere the winter came, seemed strong once more. 
But the brown hue of health had not returned
On his thin face; although a keener fire
Burned in his larger eyes; and in his cheek
The mounting blood glowed radiant (summoning force,
Sometimes, unbidden) with a sunset red.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Hidden Life and Other Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.