31.
All these things heard and seen and sung of old,
He heard and saw and sang them. Once
again
Might foot of man tread, eye of man behold
Things unbeholden save of ancient men,
Ways save by gods untrodden. In his hold
The staff that stayed through some AEtnean
glen
The steps of the most highest, most awful-souled
And mightiest-mouthed of singers, even
as then
Became a prophet’s
rod,
A lyre on fire
of God,
Being still the staff of exile: yea,
as when
The voice poured
forth on us
Was even of AEschylus,
And his one word great as the crying of
ten,
Crying in men’s ears
of wrath toward wrong,
Of love toward right immortal, sanctified with song.
32.
Him too whom none save one before him ever
Beheld, nor since hath man again beholden,
Whom Dante seeing him saw not, nor the giver
Of all gifts back to man by time withholden,
Shakespeare—him too, whom sea-like ages
sever,
As waves divide men’s eyes from
lights upholden
To landward, from our songs that find him never,
Seeking, though memory fire and hope embolden—
Him too this one
song found,
And raised at
its sole sound
Up from the dust of darkling dreams and
olden
Legends forlorn
of breath,
Up from the deeps
of death,
Ulysses: him whose name turns all
songs golden,
The wise divine strong soul,
whom fate
Could make no less than change and chance beheld him
great.
33.
Nor stands the seer who raised him less august
Before us, nor in judgment frail and rathe,
Less constant or less loving or less just,
But fruitful-ripe and full of tender faith,
Holding all high and gentle names in trust
Of time for honour; so his quickening
breath
Called from the darkness of their martyred dust
Our sweet Saints Alice and Elizabeth,
Revived and reinspired
With speech from
heavenward fired
By love to say what Love the Archangel
saith
Only, nor may
such word
Save by such ears
be heard
As hear the tongues of angels after death
Descending on them like a
dove
Has taken all earthly sense of thought away but love.
34.
All sweet, all sacred, all heroic things,
All generous names and loyal, and all
wise,
With all his heart in all its wayfarings
He sought, and worshipped, seeing them
with his eyes
In very present glory, clothed with wings
Of words and deeds and dreams immortal,
rise
Visible more than living slaves and kings,
Audible more than actual vows and lies:
These, with scorn’s
fieriest rod,
These and the
Lord their God,
The Lord their likeness, tyrant of the
skies
As they Lord Gods
of earth,
These with a rage
of mirth
He mocked and scourged and spat on, in
such wise
That none might stand before
his rod,
And these being slain the Spirit alone be lord or
God.