19.
Nor less the light of story than of song
With graver glories girt his godlike head,
Reverted alway from the temporal throng
Of lives that live not toward the living
dead.
The shadows and the splendours of their throng
Made bright and dark about his board and
bed
The lines of life and vision, sweet or strong
With sound of lutes or trumpets blown,
that led
Forth of the ghostly
gate
Opening in spite
of fate
Shapes of majestic or tumultuous tread,
Divine and direful
things,
These foul as
priests or kings,
Those fair as heaven or love or freedom,
red
With blood and green with
palms and white
With raiment woven of deeds divine and words of light.
20.
The thunder-fire of Cromwell, and the ray
That keeps the place of Phocion’s
name serene
And clears the cloud from Kosciusko’s day,
Alternate as dark hours with bright between,
Met in the heaven of his high thought, which lay
For all stars open that all eyes had seen
Rise on the night or twilight of the way
Where feet of human hopes and fears had
been.
Again the sovereign
word
On Milton’s
lips was heard
Living: again the tender three days’
queen
Drew bright and
gentle breath
On the sharp edge
of death:
And, staged again to show of mortal scene,
Tiberius, ere his name grew
dire,
Wept, stainless yet of empire, tears of blood and
fire.
21.
Most ardent and most awful and most fond,
The fervour of his Apollonian eye
Yearned upon Hellas, yet enthralled in bond
Of time whose years beheld her and past
by
Silent and shameful, till she rose and donned
The casque again of Pallas; for her cry
Forth of the past and future, depths beyond
This where the present and its tyrants
lie,
As one great voice
of twain
For him had pealed
again,
Heard but of hearts high as her own was
high,
High as her own
and his
And pure as love’s
heart is,
That lives though hope at once and memory
die:
And with her breath his clarion’s
blast
Was filled as cloud with fire or future souls with
past.
22.
As a wave only obsequious to the wind
Leaps to the lifting breeze that bids
it leap,
Large-hearted, and its thickening mane be thinned
By the strong god’s breath moving
on the deep
From utmost Atlas even to extremest Ind
That shakes the plain where no men sow
nor reap,
So, moved with wrath toward men that ruled and sinned
And pity toward all tears he saw men weep,
Arose to take
man’s part
His loving lion
heart,
Kind as the sun’s that has in charge
to keep
Earth and the
seed thereof
Safe in his lordly
love,
Strong as sheer truth and soft as very
sleep;
The mightiest heart since
Milton’s leapt,
The gentlest since the gentlest heart of Shakespeare
slept.