Through the fragrances, alone,
By the sudden-silent brook,
From the open world unknown,
To the close of speech and book;
There to find the foreign look
In the faces of his own.
Sharing was beyond his skill;
Shyly yet, he made essay:
Sought to dip, and share, and fill
Heart’s-desire, from day to day.
But their eyes, some foreign way,
Looked at him; and he was still.
Last, he reached his arms to sleep,
Where the Vision waited, dim,
Still beyond some deep-on-deep.
And the darkness folded him,
Eager heart and weary limb.—
All day long, he kept the sheep.
THE LONG LANE
All through the summer night, down the long lane in
flower,
The moon-white
lane,
All through the summer night,—dim as a
shower,
Glimmer and fade
the Twain:
Over the cricket hosts, throbbing the hour by hour,
Young voices bloom
and wane.
Down the long lane they go, and past one window, pale
With visions silver-blurred;
Stirring the heart that waits,—the eyes
that fail
After a spring
deferred.
Query, and hush, and Ah!—dim through a
moon-lit veil,
The same one word.
Down the long lane, entwined with all the fragrance
there;
The lane in flower
somehow
With youth, and plighted hands, and star-strewn air,
And muted ‘Thee’
and ’Thou’:—
All the wild bloom and reach of dreams that never
were,
—Never
to be, now.
So, in the throbbing dark, where ebbs the old refrain,
A starved heart
hears.
And silver-bright, and silver-blurred again
With moonlight
and with tears.
All the long night they go, down the long summer lane,
The long, long
years.
Ah but, Beloved, men may do
All things to music;—march, and die;
And wear the longest vigil through,
... And say
good-by.
All things to music!—Ah, but where
Peace never falls upon the air;—
These city-ways of dark and din
Where greed has shut and barred them in!
And thundering, swart against the sky,
That whirlwind,—never to go by—
Of tracks and wheels, that overhead
Beat back the senses with their roar
And menace of undying war,—
War—war—for daily
bread!
All things to silence! Ah, but where
Men dwell not, but must make a lair;—
And Sorrow may not sit alone,
Nor Love hear music of its own;
And Thought that strives to breast that sea
Must struggle even for memory.
Day-long, night-long,—besieging din
To thrust all pain the deeper in!—
And drown the flutter of first-breath;
And batter at the doors of Death.
To lull their dearest:—watch their dead;
While the long thunders overhead,
Gather and break for evermore,
Eternal tides—eternal War,
War—war—Bread—bread!