The Poems of William Watson eBook

William Watson, Baron Watson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 136 pages of information about The Poems of William Watson.

The Poems of William Watson eBook

William Watson, Baron Watson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 136 pages of information about The Poems of William Watson.

But while, as yet unbounden of thy bands,
I hear the breeze from inland chide and chafe
Along the margin of thy muttering sands,

Somewhat I fain would crave, if thou vouchsafe
To hear mine asking, and to heed wilt deign. 
Behold, I come to fling me as a waif

Upon thy waters, O thou murmuring main! 
So on some wasteful island cast not me,
Where phantom winds to phantom skies complain,

And creeping terrors crawl from out the sea,
(For such thou hast)—­but o’er thy waves not cold
Bear me to yonder land once more, where She

Sits throned amidst of magic wealth untold: 
Golden her palace, golden all her hair,
Golden her city ’neath a heaven of gold!

So may I see in dreams her tresses fair
Down-falling, as a wave of sunlight rests
On some white cloud, about her shoulders bare,
Nigh to the snowdrifts twain which are her breasts.”

So ran the song,—­say rather, so did creep,
With drowsy faltering feet unsure, till Sleep
Himself made end of it, with no rude touch
Sealing the lips that babbled overmuch. 
Howbeit the boon of boons most coveted
Withholden was, and in that vision’s stead
Another Dream from its dim hold uprose,
Which he who tells the tale shall straight disclose.

PART THE FOURTH

That night he dreamed that over him there stole
A change miraculous, whereby his soul
Was parted from his body for a space,
And through a labyrinth of secret ways
Entered the world where dead men’s ghosts abide
To seek the Seer who yestermorn had died. 
And there in very truth he found the Seer,
Who gazing on him said, “What would’st thou here,
O royal-born, who visitest the coasts
Of darkness, and the dwellings of the ghosts?”

Then said the Prince, “I fain would know to find
The land as yet untrod of mortal-kind
Which I beheld by gracious leave of Sleep.” 
To whom the Spirit:  “O Prince, the seas are deep
And very wide betwixt thee and that land,
And who shall say how many days do stand,
As dim-seen armed hosts between thy bliss
And thee?—­Moreover, in the world there is
A certain Emerald Stone which some do call
The Emerald of the Virtues Mystical;
(Though what those Virtues Mystical may be
None living knows) and since, O youth, to me
Thou dost apply for counsel, be it known
Except thou have this wondrous emerald stone,
Go seek through all the world, thou shalt not find
The land thou wouldst:  but like the houseless wind
That roams the world to seek a resting-place,
Thou through inhospitable time and space
Shalt roam, till time and space deliver thee,
To spaceless, timeless, mute eternity.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Poems of William Watson from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.