Idyls of Thought y/ VdH- /j/9/6if The date shoiivs when this volume was taken. All books not in pse for instruction or re- search ^e limited to all borrowers. Volumes of periodi- cals and of pamphlets comprise so many sub- jectSjthat they are held in the library as much as possible. For spe- cial purposes they are given out for a linjit^d time. Gradflates and sen- iors are allowed five .volunles for two weeks. Other students may have two vols. frOtn the circulating library iot two weeks. • Books not needed during recess periods should be returned to the library, or arrange- ments made for their return during borrow- er's absence, if wanted. • Books needed by more than one person are held on the reserve list. Books of special value and gift books, when the giver wishes it, are not allowed to', circulate. _ Cornell University Library PR6015.OS6I4 Idyls of thought and lyrical pieces. 3 1924 013 626 852 The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924013626852 IDYLS OF THOUGHT AND LYRICAL PIECES ^?f GeORGS-Tk!?! U.Li € PL'St (SH g o L^^^^^^^Oe ^^2 ^^^^ii ei. 's7y^''^^^^^^^^^?^^9 ^^C! v\ ^^^^«9P^^^ Mpi n 7 CTJB^S^^^H //Mm ^ "-^i/ m^^S^wS^^^SZ^kmI? il s w E p i^ Id wip o aw isgwAJsa^^^esi U^iglo 'bW ^^S^-^^^^^^Zr^s>MO\ ? ^^a^^^^^^^^^ a^fic 1 r-ii R. U5R1 nT -"vS-o u! se^W IDYLS OF THOUGHT AND LYRICAL PIECES BY F. A. HOMFRAY LONDON GEORGE ALLEN, 156, CHARING CROSS ROAD 1898 Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson 6- Co. At the Ballantyne Press CONTENTS PAGE IDYLS OF thought- Idyl I • • • 3 Idyl II 8 Idyl III— Buttercup Time 14 Idyl IV 21 Idyl V— The Snowclouds 28 Idyl VI— A Mystery of Morning ... 35 Idyl VII— Shore Thoughts . . ■ • • 30 LYRICAL pieces- Rose Birth c, The Elm 5, The Scotch Fir 5j Arbor Pontica „ vi CONTENTS PAGE LYRICAL PIECES {continued)— A Character 59 A Potent Memory ... . . 6i Rough Winds at Night .... 63 A Garden .... ... 66 A City Sigh 68 By a Grave . 70 Distance 71 At an Open Window 75 Waving Grass 76 The Turning from the Grave . . 79 A Sprin Fancy 85 'Four Zones in Yonder Evening Sky' . 87 IDYLS OF THOUGHT IDYLS OF THOUGHT IDYL I I STOOD at eve upon a windswept ridge, That from the dying landscape turned away Its meadow-mantled shoulder, and before, Across a little crooked upland vale Rich with dim elms and darkening hedgerow lines, Saw the steep rampart of the summit climb Up to the growing night. The monstrous wall Reared a grim edge against the windy sky. Unbroken, save that on the midmost height Nested aloft, a shadowy hamlet hung ; And o'er it rose a solitary tower. Tall, queenlike, ghostlike. All about its crown Of fretted balustrades and pinnacles The random shreds and strands of shattered cloud. 4 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Torn by the wind, ran riot ; and the gale, Up from the westward sweeping like a host, Hurled at the church its gusty myrmidons In one gray tumult gathering ; while behind Loomed the sad lights of half -extinguished eve, Slow-dying, vapour-blinded. As I watched, With sudden clamour in the pausing wind I heard the prisoned voices of the tower Fling out a deep-tongued sequence on the night. Voice after voice. The strong wind took the sound. And whirled it up with fragments of the clouds. Fringes of storm and slanted spears of rain, Against the airy dome. But still I heard. Loud in the lull and fainter through the roar, The dizzy-balanced brazen-throated choir Stroke after stroke out-swinging. Not the chimes. The sweet-toned chronicle of hours outworn For ever ; not the holy vesper-bell. Or plaintive curfew ; not the jubilant peal. Sequel of snowy veil and marriage-flowers ; IDYLS OF THOUGHT 5 No, nor the slow heart-sinking knell of death, That ever seems to cease, yet ceases not, So long the sad strokes tarry. But the bells Rang out a tune of ancient psalmody. Broad, simple, grand ; well-worn by worshippers On many a Sabbath ; such as village folk Use, heedless whence the music came, and count As much an heirloom as the village well. Yet somewhere, far away perchance, he lies. In whose full heart of old to God upturned, Rose like a tide the music of the psalm ; And even while they sing, the self-same stars That watch the gray roof of their church, look down With glistening on the grasses of his grave. Forgotten. Not, this night, the voice of men Gave utterance to his holy psalmody. But the loud company of brazen tongues Took up, and told it to the stormy winds. And as the music wandered up the clouds Thro' rainy tumult, ghostlier seemed the tower. As if it lived and sang ; and rooted fast On the high boundary of earth and sky. 6 IDYLS OP THOUGHT Fronting the abyss, and fixed above the hills, Made, by the potency of sacred sound. In name of heavenward-turned humanity, A steadfast answer to the shocks and stress And stormy roughness of the outer world. An old abode of worship, vision-like, Wrought by dead hands, unperishing it stood, A fortress of the faith of other times. And speaking with the voice of other days, The chant of forefathers devout, alive In children's mouths; both lasting as the need That gave them being. For the life of man, Even in the lonely hamlets of the hills. Still battling against outward circumstance, Has need to stretch a hand beyond the world And grasp a higher ; gathering inward strength And purpose from without. Of this the bells Bare record, sounding out the solemn psalm. Above the valley elms, and fields of toil. The dark fell deeper on the upward slopes, And louder swept the gale ; yet still I saw Even as a dim tall spectre, brazen-voiced, The great tower singing to the stormy night. IDYLS OF THOUGHT So strong the notes against the vault of heaven Poured from the grim uphfted battlements, With such endurance in the windy stress, It seemed a conscious power, not desolate In empty clamour, but as if there rose An answering music somewhere in the spheres. IDYL II The early-dying sad November day Left yet more colourless the barren down, And paler every wraith of summer grass That lingered bloom-bereft ; and the gaunt trees, That all day long had borne the whistling east. With still more vain beseeching upward stretched Their line of naked boughs that fringed the plain. And met a joyless heaven ; for overhead The moody west was dark with gathered cloud. Yet, as the interminable sandy waste Bears the green islet for despairing eyes. While I beheld the blank and weary sky. There came a shining rift within the cloud, That widened somewhat, like an open door. Then grew not larger. But my fancy woke Amid the dulness of the earth. Yon door, I thought, whose edges from the rounding dark 8 IDYLS OF THOUGHT 9 Melt inwards into feathery flakes and films Of vapour dyed with light, hath opening, If one could mount in spirit and enter in, To places of unearthly loveliness. There leads a narrow path, — so ran my thought, — From yonder strait bright postern of the clouds To the inner region, through steep banks of light Low-winding, clothed in beauty as of gold Molten to luminous mist. Yet not of gold Alone, but myriad-coloured is the light ; For when the climbing pathway serpentine. Turning at last its topmost angle, gains A height of outlook, — lovelier than all thought Lie, forward-glistening with a thousand hues, The deep rich valleys of the unknown land, Far-widening to the plain's immensity. And over all a liquid radiance hangs. Like to the softness of a summer moon ; It melts the edges of the leaves, and steeps The outlines of the copses dreamily. And swims above the hollows and the glens, And mellows every field and flowery knoll With shadows clear that are but deeper light. Far on, within the land's mid-bosom, sleep 10 IDYLS OF THOUGHT The silvery waters, and the little brooks Shine here and there, and many a brimming curve Of the broad river is bright between the hills. But far horizonward, the sight grows faint For glory of the distant mountain-peaks ; Piled range on range, from misty nothingness. Through zones of purple gloom, and glimmering crags, Up to the topmost spires of dazzling snow. Smitten aslant by rainbow-shafted gleams. And with their white uplifted glistering points Piercing a purer heaven above the heavens, The sapphire deeps, translucent, limitless. And near me on the shelving meadow-slopes Are groups of bright-haired children, ivory- limbed. Moving with joy among the flowers, — ' Nay, cease/ Said a sad inward voice, that brought me back To the chill evening, and the barren down. And the blank sky ; for, when I looked, the rift Was closed, and wan November lord of all. ' Dream not. The gate of cloudland only leads To cloudland ; though for many a lustrous league IDYLS OF THOUGHT ii The upper surface stretches, beautiful, A broken billowy waste of vapour, rich With tides of sunset gold. Else is there nought.' Then I, like one who heavy-hearted views A shattered thing of beauty, slowly thought And spake, ' A heavenly vision profitless. Untrue, the striving of a man's own thought For that he would were real, makes him but feel The cruel bounds that wall his impotence. Better to brook a rayless world, a void Accepted. Is there then no hope for dreams ? ' And lifting saddened eyelids I beheld On the hard ground the gray breath of the east Driving the helpless skeleton of a leaf. Then on my spirit fell a weariness : For though the soft bright vision lingered yet Of the upper land, I knew the inward voice Spake truly, that the cloud was only cloud. Yet still, as loth to deem the open door An idle fancy, and no further worth Than for a moment's pleasing, grieved at heart I wandered up and down the ways of thought For some more perfect insight ; while the wind Sang in the naked branches scornfully. 12 IDYLS OF THOUGHT And made through all the landscape's emptiness Keen inquisition, hunting even the dust From every crack and crevice of the plain. Last, something from the inner silence broke : — ' Take heart ! thy dream of beauty was not vain. For though the world is beautiful, there lives In every loveliness a haunting trace Of something still more lovely, not of earth. Yet no man alway can behold it. Rich Are they who see it oft, and he that sees Draws strength as from a draught of heavenly wine, Whose clusters in a starry vineyard grew. And in the rainbow-tinted starbeam-glows Hung mellowing, till the ripe star-season brought The crystal-flooding vintage. All thy life. Upon its heavenward side, is but a thing Of glimpses, and of glimmerings, and of doors Opened and shut again, with outborne sound Of voices silver-tongued. Wherefore take heart ; For though the gate of cloudland only leads To cloudland, yet that other which thou sawest Within, had spiritual truth ; a glimpse Of higher things which are in higher worlds. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 13 Before the eyes of men there hangs a veil, Hiding those higher unknown things, whereto The deepest tides of soul set evermore. Sortie know not of the veil, and walk content With the scant portion underfoot j and some Know, sorrowful, the veil, but long in vain For opening ; watch thou, for to happier eyes Come the bright rifts, and many a sight and sound Is bursting with the inpent divinity.' IDYL III BUTTERCUP TIME There is a time in England, the year's crown If the gold makes the crown, for gold it wears More sheeny than the yellow harvest-field, And brighter burnished than the dying leaf. Then fills each meadow with a golden flood, Soft-swimming in between its hoary dykes The may-bloom hedgerows, islanding the trees. And many a brake the home of hidden song, With windings, and long levels, and bright arms. Till every little ridge is overborne Of gold waves breaking, and from end to end Afloat with gold, the many-meadowed vale Streams a long glitter to its dreamy verge, Where, like a gentle cliff, the wood upsprings Clothing the hills with green of summer's youth. And all the bright drops of the sea are flowers, Innumerable golden chalices, '4 IDYLS OF THOUGHT 15 Poised every one on slender sap-fed green, That chains it to its place, yet hinders not Stir of vibration to the tenderest thrill Of the young summer's breath. The buttercups Live in the fire they kindle, and the gold, Even while its long lines slumber mistily. Has movement. Of all seasons that to me Most joyful seems in coming of the gold. Saddest departing ; when the cuckoo's flute Falters as if in dread of empty fields. And stammers toward his silence ; when the tint Of the full-vestured woodland sobers down, As if the ecstasy of newborn leaves Had left it weary ; and the bright young grass Waves mellower underneath its ripening spears. With silent increase wax the years and wane. And every month has beauty ; but the gold Comes with the prime, — warm earth and happy skies, Rich odour, painted petal, winged song Meeting the sun, and in all things that live The strong full-veined upshooting of the life. And when the valley-tide of golden cups i6 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Floats at the flood, then stands the mounting year Upon the topmost step of youth, and drinks The wine of won perfection. So to me, On the spread lustre feasting thoughtful eyes, In radiant silence of the summer fields, Out of the many-meadowed vale there comes A glimpse of something more than beautiful, That wraps the soul in easeful warmth ; a dream Of pure perfection wreathed in thornless rose ; A sense unutterable of the glow of life. Of happiness inborn, which the world's pain Crushes not out ; an instinct sure and deep Of the joy-giving Power that somewhere sits Pouring untired on thankless littleness The streams of ever-welling glory-vials. Yet is the old world-haunting pain at hand. Behind the circled hills the strife of men Reels fever-flushed, though here unheard ; and I Who drink this dreamy golden opiate. Am part thereof, thence came and thither go. Nay, yonder gray and peaceful-glimpsing thatch Between the elms, — is all thereunder peace ? The green roof-moss that twinkles to the sun IDYLS OF THOUGHT 17 Might cover cruel deeds and smile as bright. Girdle the globe with farxy's gossamer Each way from hence, — will any thread return Untouched of pain ? The brake, the hedge, the grass Hold war ; through conflict slides the silver brook ; My very feet tread battles, and my lips Draw in the rout of many a tiny host, Victor with vanquished ; through the range of all. Life feeds on life, and being climbs to being O'er piles of crushed existence. Pale with doubt Grows pleasure musing on life's bitter-sweet. But o'er the earth-face here, so passion- marred, Nigh to the pain, nay rooted in the strife. Broods this warm golden dream of buttercups, With such deep power of soothing to the soul. Such sun-fed atmosphere of strength and youth, That even in gazing dazzled doubt falls blind, And hope comes from the hidden heart of things Upbursting like a pure exhaustless well. i8 IDYLS OF THOUGHT If strife is, summer is ! behold the flowers, A shoal of starry kisses by love's lips Imprinted on the earth's pain-furrowed brow. Who suffers loved, less suffers. Hold the hope ! As one that stood upon a mountain-ledge, Watching the far-off battle in the plain. Till some bright-wandering length of morning cloud Stole up between, and left the lonely crags. The white peak's holy silence, and the blue. Might lift his heart and say, ' This sunny peace, This temple-stillness of the solemn heights. Is of the things that last, but yonder fray That reddens and that shrieks behind the cloud. Will pass forever, with its senseless hate And them that felt and wrought it; other men Will come, by wisdom strong and brotherhood. To till and sow and reap the trampled fields With golden plenty ; and the stainless peak, Clothed with the evening like a sacred thoiight, Will speak to them of God.' So I who muse On all creation's battle, men and things. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 19 While round me rich the many -raeado wed vale Glows myriad-petalled, feel within my soul The surging deep of joy unconquerable, Prophetic of its own eternity. For there are faculties unnamed, and powers Unregistered of all philosophy. And by keen-scenting science yet untracked ; Threads intertwined in tangled consciousness, That serve not the rough uses of the world, Dormant, unprized ; but whoso follows them May find in that the lips call beautiful. An instinct drawing him to that which is. Beyond the sense and thought of present man ; Not seeing God in things, but through things God, A record and a sign for his own hour. That borrows not from language of the dead A time-worn evidence, but builds anew On sight and insight. So to me is given. Through musing vision of the valley-gold, The glimpse of joy whose far-off heritage Is conquest over slowly-fading pain. 30 IDYLS OF THOUGHT So, when to doubt life seems a shadow-land, Where the blind battle through the twilight moves, Love's symbol for hope's eyes, God sets the flowers, A gleam of mystic writing on the world. IDYL IV Kin to the clearness of the central blue Whereto he winging sang, the skylark's song, Above the April slopes of wooded knolls, Above the church yews and the orchard sprays. And elm-thronged meadows rolling to the sea, Rose like a summer star, and spread abroad Like a wide water, and fell back to earth A silver rain. Ear-captive, motionless, Blind to the budded beauties of the spring, I heard, and hearing felt the whole world song. But while 1 lived in music, as there comes On sunny fields the shadow of a cloud, So sudden on the radiant treble stole A bell-note deep, whose mellower resonance Came rich, like memories of the autumn woods, And toned with autumn sadness. Where the surge Of budding boughs ringed one dark isle, it spake, 22 IDYLS OF THOUGHT From the old tower amid the older yews. Pauseless above in airy heights the lark Sang on ; so made the twain strange harmony, The wrought bronze heavenward calling close to earth The wild bird vocal half-way up to heaven. The bell came toned with sadness, yet the sound Touched as with human life the sense too high, When rushing, rushing, like a mountain stream, The skylark's passion filled the world. Such joy Lives but in moments, and the soul's foretaste Of what it may be, will be, is not now. Feels sudden earth. Not on one rapture's height, — So ran thought woven with the bird and bell — Nor in one sorrow's depth, albeit from each Look windows on the great world's mystery. Grows wisdom ripe. Yon many-wintered yews. Whose branches darkly tent the mouldering sleep. Which stand like solemn brethren of the tower, And scarce more bending to the reckless winds. With change, to which the dial-hands are swift. Slow-grown above the slowly gathering dead, — IDYLS OF THOUGHT 23 What bygone glances, unuplifted now, Have loved them, seen the dawn-gold touch their tips From many a lucid east, and many a night Their sombre masses shore the lake intense Whereon the moon sails lonely. Minds of men, Whose every thought is dead ; a firm-set stone, A planted sapling grown to wondrous girth, Or some enduring fabric, here and there Attest the nameless hands. Yet o'er them hung The lark-song, and the gray yew-girdled tower Stood in their midst, and hourly that rich bell Tolled their full-pulsing present into past. Dreamless of end, his world was real to each, And he the centre. Whither are they borne. The tides of wasted thought, that evermore Pass from the sunny zone of consciousness, Into the chill dark unremembered void ? How swiftly grows upon the soil of earth. The thing called ' I,' that sets his tiny ring About a fragment of the infinite, Saying * Within, behold myself ; without, The world,' and there abides, yet is but one Of random multitudes that come and go. 24 IDYLS OP THOUGHT Like settlers on the commonland of time. And each, as wrapt in his own fervid dreams, Lives in that point, whose still unstable place Shifts like the reflex of a wandering light On darkness thrown, his ' now ' ; all else is thought ; Behind, a memory ; before, a hope. And each whose life is something more than sleep Has moods like that the lark-song made in me, When the slight confines of the present touch The everlasting, and the wells of life Leap stronger from their depths, and on the soul A bright light glimpses from beyond the world. The little gust that stirs a bank of flowers, Makes in the petal's pearly loveliness A moment's heightened beauty, and is gone. Are those high moments of the conscious self Mere gusty beauties of the soul, vain gleams Athwart the vain ? Or sows mortality. Albeit a blindfold sower, to and fro Pacing within her narrow field of time. Sure seed, whose harvest shall upgather all She was, and all she thought, the useless lost Alone, the husks well sifted from the grain ? IDYLS OF THOUGHT 25 Then were the dead thoughts of forgotten minds But to the undiscerning present dead. Their best still lives in each, and somewhere grows To self-fulfilment. All the nobler past Has future ; nor is theirs an idle work, Who commune with its records lovingly. By yonder tower lies one, borne lately forth From scholar-walls within the peopled town, To rest among the green simplicities. Whose life, that only touched its blameless prime And faded, had this scope, — with reverent toil Made master of what thoughts unperishing Brake like a dawn among the hills of Greece, Or swayed the soul of sovereign Italy, To teach young spirits, whose unfolding flower Was turning on the world with freshness, these, The parent-thoughts of Europe. Yet to him Came doubt perchance, though thrilling with the life Of some bright heart-uplifting vision old He strove to paint, when oft a troubled sound Of wheels, fast-speeding by his cloister-wall 26 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Warned of the eager world that clashed without, Half-blinded with the hunger of the hour. Since, knowing those he taught must plunge therein, He gave them but the inner spirit's gold, That scantly wins the outer. Many a spring May wake the wooded knolls, and touch the elms, And gird the dark-boughed neighbours of his rest With laughing apple-blossom, ere the crown Of just arbitrament reward his toil, By end and issue of full-garnered time. Yet, when the long day of humanity Draws on to lustrous sunset, — not for night. But for some sunrise yet unknown, — shall things Of thought, and heightened moments of the soul Outlast the growths of shallow circumstance. And gather toward fulfilment. Then shall he. As one that knew, and one that helped to know, Find recompense. For still the inward life Runs on through turbid currents of the world. Now faint, now waxing stronger, watched of God; IDYLS OF THOUGHT 27 And they whose vision holds the upper blue, Shall fare, albeit with weary lengths between, From lark-song unto lark-song, till the bell Toll from the shadow-gates, where one by one Pass out the several selves to fuller light. IDYL V THE SNOWCLOUDS Slowly up from the east, on the breast of the moving wind, Dazzling white in the morning light, the fore- most snowcloud swept ; Its mighty train, out-stretching a hundred leagues behind, Floated and flew in the gulfs of blue, and the sun on its forehead slept. Slowly onward it sailed, like an icy mountain- chain, Severed of old when the sphere-storm rolled, and the sphere-flash smote the steep. And the adamant anchors of rock brake loose from the solid plain, Severed and hurled from a ruined world, and launched on the endless deep. s8 IDYLS OF THOUGHT 39 Like a mountain-chain adrift, the column of snowclouds came ; But its rounded swells and shadowy dells and melting heights were soft, Changing and curling ever, like smoke that curls from a flame. When a wild fire flies, and a forest dies, and its thick breath gathers aloft. Softer than hills, they seemed like a shoal of Titans to glide. Goddesses fair through seas of the air slow- voyaging hand-in-hand, With an endless snowy gleam of shoulder and bosom and side, To some sea-verge where the saffron surge breaks warm on a white star-strand. Over the sun-steeped blue they passed till they covered the sun. Covered the blue, and a great gloom grew, and a change on the face of things. 30 IDYLS OF THOUGHT For each way put of the clouds seemed dark- flung pinions to run Through the heavens wide in an eddying tide ever duskier, wings upon wings. The strong wind stopped as in awe, and the dark-faced* heavens were dumb. Mute was the hill, and the valley still, and silence over the seas. Silence, as if upon nature a speechless sorrow were come ; Heard in the hush was the far stream's rush, and a scarce-felt shiver of trees. Then out of the silence, tears, till between the earth and the skies The air grew light with the flying white, white tears from a darkness deep. Tears that feather-like fell without sound of sobbing or sighs. And fallen lay still in the hollows chill or clung to the sunless steep. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 31 Then after the weeping, smiles, and a sweet sun-gleam on the snow. Diamonds a-light in the field's wide white, and gold on the failing flake. Till the tears had end, and in heaven the clear blue laughed, and below, The grass-point was risen o'er its melting prison, and the bare twig glanced in the brake. Then thought I who had watched the shapes of the great cloud-host Gather and pass on the sky and the grass till they faded out of my sight, Lo, thus do the great generations of men roll by to be lost, Sunk in the glooms of forgotten tombs and the silence of endless night. Suddenly out of the deep, and the dark that no man knows, Eddying crowds, more thick than the clouds, they come and they cover the earth. 32 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Bright for a while in their strength, then lost at last as the snows, Passing away like a dying day that sets on the land of its birth. Yea, and weeping is theirs, for if gaudy of outward hue. The garment of life they weave in the strife of their few and fervent years Glows like a summer garden with scarlet and purple and blue. Under the bright is the wan and the white, and the secret channel of tears. The tears of men are warm, but grief far down in the heart Chills life's flood at the founts of the blood and makes it cold as the snow. And lips may smile with the smile of the stoiie that is shapen of art. Ash of the fire and dust of desire in the frozen soul below. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 33 Yet were they beautiful tears that the great soft snowclouds wept, Caught by the sun ere the storm was done, and melting in crystal and gold ; And sweet gleams lighted the grief of the men that have long since slept. Rainbow dyes on the rain of the eye's that melted with sorrows of old. For tears are beloved of God, and a beauty there is of grief, Tints on the foam as the tide shifts home, a beauty of that which will die ; And not the sunbeam alone, but the raindrop blesses the leaf, Blinding showers, then gold on the flowers, from this world's April sky. Courage ! the beauty that glimpses in tears is a beauty of hope. Life in the light, then the grave and the night, and it seems but little we know ; 34 IDYLS OF THOUGHT The world's way wearily winds at the foot of a cloud-crowned slope, But the top cloud's gloom has a tender bloom like the burst of a rosy glow. And never in vain, perchance, has a single mourner wept ; Fallen snows live though they vanish, and give green life to the faded sod ; Dead men's griefs are forgotten on earth, yet sure there is kept Room for the tears of a million years in the infinite heart of God. IDYL VI A MYSTERY OF MORNING The sun is in the dew ; One heaven of snowy stars with golden eyes, The daisy-sward all shining lies, And tiny jets of gold-dust rise Where the wild bee flew ; Though o'er the lowland dim The idle mists yet swim, On this high down that stands apart The light is full, and light my spirit fills, As deep into my heart Passes the beauty of the morning hills. Yet seems it, while I gaze. Not of this morn the loveliness alone, But blent with some soft undertone Of dreamy beauty, not its own. From the far-off days^ 35 36 IDYLS OP THOUGHT The glisten and the glow Some sweeter memories know Of clear dawns faded from the earth, Or else some hope of sunbeams yet unborn : When will their light have birth ? When wilt thou break, O bright ideal morn ? O surely not for nought Comes that strange gleam that haunts all lovely things, That undersong the spirit sings, When through the eye rich beauty wings To the deeps of thought ! Lo, I who fain would rest Content with nature's best. Which all my life I chiefly love, Rest not, but feel, when nature's best I see. Dark cravings in me move, For something past and lost, or yet to be. Holds then my heart to-day A bygone bliss, of some bright moment born, Some far-off mother's marriage-morn, With may-bloom on the sunny thorn IDYLS OF THOUGHT 37 In an old-world May ? Can in the memory rise Delights of other eyes ? Is this strange note that haunts my mood, Remembered pleasure, heirloom of the race, Still throbbing in my blood, As when it flushed my dead forefather's face ? Strange echoes too, more near. Call me, from childhood's half-remembered hours, Mixed with the sweet faint scent of flowers. With lights half-caught from lilac bowers. Or a still pool clear ; The conscious brain no trace Keeps of their time or place, Save when the under-self awakes, That lies, as hidden waters, deep below. And silent record makes. Creeps aught of these athwart the morning glow ? From childhood, or before, Sound on, ye echoes sweet, and thrill my soul ! I count you sweet, but not the whole. That vague unrest has further goal. 38 IDYLS OF THOUGHT For it makes thought soar Far up, beyond the span Of earth, and mortal man. Where, with its time-robe all outworn. My new-winged spirit strong shall, after night, See glories of the morn Break the gold clouds, on some eternal height. IDYL VII SHORE THOUGHTS I Betwixt the wood and the sea Is a meditative place ; For a song goes out from the tree To the water's upturned face, And the wave that wanders free Sings back from its rocky base, II Wood-song, when the leaves are young, and the mild wind-whispers creep, Wave-song, when the great sea dreams, and the ripples are smiles in his sleep. Two songs blended in one, through the sun- thrilled ether of spring, From the bare sea's border of flowers, and the flowery earth's foam-ring ; 39 40 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Two songs blended and sad, when the leaves are a yellow rain, And the ripples are lost in the dark of the wind- lashed mountainous main, Wave-wail, when the breakers roar, and the sea- bird shrieks in his flight. Wood-moan, when the long long wind lays siege to the branch all night. Ill Two songs, sympathy-bound. Of two worlds side by side. Wood-world fixed to its ground. Wave-world wandering wide, With an undersong profound From the deep that both worlds hide. IV Wood-world, where the vigour of earth mounts up through fibre and cell, Till the slow-wrought miracle stands, firm-rooted and fashioned well, IDYLS OF THOUGHT 41 The tall tree gentle and strong, brow-bound in the glory of leaves, A hero in dawn's wind-battle, a spirit in solemn eves. Wood-world, temple of trees, dark-pillared, odorous-aisled, Marvellous, melody-haunted, adorable, shadowy, wild. Where rises the chaos of columns, o'er-marbled with sunbeam-glows. Baseless from mists of the bracken ; where cloistered blossoms repose In windless solemn arcades ; where many a mid- wood niche Lies roofed like a shadow-shrine from the sun in a gloom so rich, That the gnats seem tiny stars when their dance whirls by it a;t noon. And the great white butterfly fares through the dusk like a crumpled moon. 42 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Wave^world, restless of face, deep-hearted ; mirror of skies ; Rocked on the broad and wheel-swift bosom of earth as she flies, And sucking, in many a soft-curved bay, the sweets of the land, Where the sundering river-mouth pours, through the bar of boulder and sand, The tremulous treasure of rills, and the freshness of reedy wells. And the crystal that bubbled cold out of moon- beam-smitten fells. Wave-world, out of the wastes of whose wander- ing wilderness The shoreward-shouldering long foam-helmeted legions press To the margin-touch, then back to the murmur- ing gardens gray, Where the breeze, like a lone day-lily, grows balmy and fades away, IDYLS OF THOUGHT 43 Where the great space shudders and shrieks to the might of the unknown storm, And the vaporous ranges of gold at the limit of evening form, And the starry walls of the night, with the star- dome canopied o'er. Leap sheer from the ebon expanse of the silvery- flashing floor. VI Deep of the deep, wherefrom, like a couple of neighbour flowers, Wave-world blossoms in foam, and wood-world opens its bowers, Sister-worlds to the eye, but to thought on her wonder-wings. Just two flowers in the measureless meadow of lovely things. Deep whence beauty on beauty upquivering, birth upon birth. Build for ever the beauty of sea and the beauty of earth, 44 IDYLS OF THOUGHT Where the thronging shapes come up from the void, like the coming of mist, Where the gulfs are a dim forever of infinite amethyst. And the inner nothingness blooms into outlines speakingly fair, Colours that sing in the leaf, and sounds that silver the air, And marvels of motion and breath, soul-tenanted, daintily wrought. Rare cups for the rubied brimming of life and love and thought. Deep, the despair of the eye and the ear, to the musing mind In quiet solitudes known, like the lapse of a noiseless wind, In the mood that listens and leans and loves, and can almost hear The roving breeze of beginning astir in the ether clear. And the rustle of new-winged joys with their primal dawn-dews pearled, And the gush of the atom-streams from the hidden wells of the world. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 45 VII Wild song, for ear too deep, Which the beautiful silence sings, Which comes like a music in sleep To my heart from the heart of things, While the ripple-shimmers upcreep To the leaf's green quiverings ; World-song, filling the place Where the woodland shadows the sea, With the voice of the infinite space And the voices of wave and of tree. Till the music of nature's face Makes music of mind in me. VIII Thought-world, song of the mind, which she chants in her lonely seat. Poised in the azure abyss, where the stranger world-winds meet. 46 IDYLS OF THOUGHT And o'er it the white clouds float, that change with the changing day Rift and vista and breach, yet roll not ever away ; Chants from her centre of life, where she, to herself unknown. Woke like a startled child that wakes in a crowd alone ; Woke and wondered and sang, and painted a world in her song. Painted her dream of things, and her vision of right and wrong. Fashioned fragment-wise with odour and sound and hue Her gleam-built fabric of thought, and trusted her thought was true. And somewhere in all her songs is the sound of a shadowy shore. Where tides of the great unknown make music for evermore • On narrow sands of the known, and voices over the bar Quiver with clear^winged hope, like a tremulous lucid star. IDYLS OF THOUGHT 47 For world is mated to world, as the wood looks over the sea ; And when thought reaches the marge of the things that seem to be, And sings of the sister-world she craves with a pure desire, The soul of her melody burns like the flame of a silver fire. IX To stand where the time-waves roll, For the infinite truth to long, One part in the mighty whole, Immortal, prescient, strong, This is the song of my soul, And is it only a song ? LYRICAL PIECES LYRICAL PIECES ROSE BIRTH White wild-rose bud, half awake, Out of thy sunny cradle peer, In swaying green above the brake, And from thine opening eyelid shake The dewdrop tear. Thy little life unfolds to bliss, Thy first friend is the morning sun. What birth could be more fair than this ? The breezes bring thee thy first kiss. Thou tender one. Awake, spread out thy hds of pearl. And let the willing sunbeam's light Make sparkles on the golden whorl Within ; no more thy petals furl Until to-night. 52 LYRICAL PIECES The bee will, as he hies along, Dip down to touch thee on the face ; Lighthearted birds the whole day long Will make the soft air sweet with song About thy place. Above thee, wide-eyed innocent. All day the balmy brooding blue Will hang, and when the light is spent, The evening breezes gathering scent For thine will sue. Live through to-day, while gently creep The dial-hands from hour to hour. Thy life that never needs to weep ; Then fold thee to thy starhght sleep. Thou happy flower THE ELM On the frozen meadow-slope, The elm, a frozen giant, stands, Like a tomb of summer's hope Towering o'er the mournful lands. When the eastwind cuts at noon. Patient of its bitter breath, Patient, when the blinded moon Sinks in rushing sleet ta death ; Dumb, unless the nightbird wail. Shivering, from its branches bare. Or the fierce and flying gale Blow an icy trumpet there. Yet there wakes an April dawn, When the sunbeam, opening slow On the green and living lawn. Finds its monarch elm aglow. 53 54 LYRICAL PIECES From the trembling topmost sprays Downward through the mighty pile, To the vast and knotted base, Deepening spreads a giant smile. Myriads shining in the sun Burst the little leaf-buds new, Burst and laugh, and every one Bears its own bright pearl of dew. Soon the full mid-summer pride Of the leafage shall be stirred By mid-summer winds, and hide While he sings, the happy bird. Gaze and hope, O man of grief. In thy winter of despair ! Joy will break, as breaks the leaf. From the frozen heart of care. THE SCOTCH FIR Close to the cloven vapour-streams That bar the blue with pearly strips, A dusky cloud, the treetop dreams ; And while, above, it swims and towers. Its base the rosy column dips In tumbling seas of grass and flowers. A charm there is, that baffles words, About its lifted head, the place Of sunbeams and of singing-birds ; A plot of earthly green, that yet To heavenward seems a little space Caught up, and on a pillar set. It turns a sad eye bright, to view The dark-green masses poise and shake Their clustered needles in the blue ; 55 S6 LYRICAL PIECES To see the sunshaft, striking them, A thousand glints and glimmers make ; And O the blush upon the stem ! Such stems, dividing distance, lend The land romance that has no name ; Edge sleeping plains with colour, send Warm pink athwart the shadowy grays, Set richly the dim hills, and frame With rosy bars the light-blue haze. In winter when the world is bare, Let ne'er so faint a ray of sun Touch, tremulous in the misty air. The trunk, and catch the sea-green spines,- Across wan fields and fallows dun A painted gleam the fir-tree shines. But most of all the charm I own. When after frosty close of day, Through orange vapours, paler grown. Peers the first diamond eye of even Close o'er the tree, — that seems to say ' Look up, and climb by me to heaven/ ARBOR PONTICA With richest clusters, o'er its own Dark depths of leafage starlike sown, The purple-throated rhododendron Blooms in the glade alone. No leaf, nor other flower is there, Nor sward ; the one growth everywhere. On sides, and level midst, and summit, Cast as a mantle fair. One softly-woven harmony, The rhododendrons and the sky ; A lonely isle in nature's ocean, Fit for a lonely eye. Here might one dream content, and doubt The worth of the broad world without. Watching the still, consummate beauty Compass the glen about ; S7 S8 LYRICAL PIECES Or on forgetful forehead feel The Anatolian breezes steal, — So lost the belt of English woodland Seems, which the banks conceal. For not seed-laden winds, but men Wooed the dark-foliaged alien From thick-grown coppice-haunts of Pontus, Bride for an English glen. Nor native grace is here alone ; The sweetness has a distant tone, A fragrancy of far remembrance. Over the wide waves blown : Like banished love that burneth long ; Or captive genius shining strong ; Or Israel's harp by old Euphrates, Tuned to a deathless song. A CHARACTER A SETTLED quiet, void of change, A cloud that moves not from her face. Is hers, through all her daily range Of household work from place to place ; She works as in a dream, and yet No little task does she forget. Not with clear light, but sadly glow The deep dark lustres of her eyes, The reflex of some inward woe ; She looks as if no flush could rise Through the fixed whiteness of her cheeks, And yet she brightens when she speaks. If some light chance should call a smile About her tender lips to play, It lingers not, but just awhile It lives, as on a changeful day In gleamy gardens comes and goes The sun upon a snow-white rose. 59 6o LYRICAL PIECES She works ; within her quiet soul She sees one sight and only one, — Green waves for ever toss and roll About a ship, that still doth run, Bearing through calms and stormy breeze Her life's one light across the seas. Yet for herself she never weeps ; For griefs of others, great or small, Her pitying heart and tears she keeps ; She knows that God is over all. So flowers, by plucking half undone. Still try to smile, and face the sun. A POTENT MEMORY Blue eyes, that turned As sped the wheels away, Blue eyes, that burned And burn my soul alway, Come when I wake To my long day forlorn ; My daylight make. Before the eyes of morn. When noon shines glad. Its crown of gladness be ; If eve wax sad, Look through her gloom at me. Look up from flowers, Be bright in driving rain. Look from gray towers, And golden fields of grain ; 6z 62 LYRICAL PIECES To all I see, Let your twin wells of blue Like jewels be, Set foremost in the view ; Magicians twain, To wake my heart to song, To conquer pain. And stay my hands from wrong. But when still night Breaks off the world's control, Make loveliest light In silence of my soul. ROUGH WINDS AT NIGHT I HEARD them wailing, wailing, Above the midnight town, I heard them rushing, roaring, Over the long bare down ; With a whistle through the shivering bent, A moan in the waving pine, Away to the broad dark main they went, To madden the tossing brine. Why fare ye on, ye mad winds, Upon such furious wings. Where floats the farthest sea-weed. And the last seabird sings. Beyond the last cloud's gloomy bars. Rimmed with the moonbeam bright. Far forward, under silent stars. Into the great dim night ? 63 64 LYRICAL PIECES O somewhere, wildly rushing, Your swift breath, upward borne Against an eastern hilltop, Will strike into the morn. And meet in shadowy belts of palm That sparkle with the dew, The newborn sunshine golden-calm. Climbing the quiet blue ! And there your maenad music That shrieked along the wave. Hushed by the bright-eyed morning. Shall cease at last to rave ; As some hard man that stormed and strove In moody anger wild, Met by a sudden glance of love, Grows gentle as a child. There shall your breath, grown gentle, The sunny leaves among. Just stir the small bird's feathers, That sings his matin song ; LYRICAL PIECES 65 And she that doth her pitcher bear Down to the dipping-place, Shall feel you soft about her hair, And fresh against her face. A GARDEN There is a lovely lawn, that rests Upon the shoulder of a steep ; About it rise the hilly crests, Yet with the vale it seems to keep Communion too, as if its love Went half below and half above. The far blue mountains on the right Mix with the clouds, but leftward seen The forest flings from height to height Its sunny-glinting mantle green, And where its lowest shadow sleeps. By curving banks the river creeps. In front, the cedars half retire. And show, beneath a sheltering ridge, LYRICAL PIECES 67 A little town, with one tall spire, That stretches toward a dusky bridge. Where under three dark arches gleam The silver eddies of the stream. And pacing on that lawn at eve, I hear a hundred voices call, From forests that the sunbeams leave, And from the purpling mountain-wall. And from the water, glimmering down Through twilight shadows to the town. voices sweet, I do you wrong ; With such a spell my heart is drawn From you, to one who lingers long In yonder house beside the lawn : With straining ear, and heart astir, 1 watch the garden-door for her. A CITY SIGH The idle breeze at evening That roameth ever and ever away, Through a land of shadows, quiet and gray, Ever, by hill and by hollow. Faring on to the dreamy west. To far-off misty meadows of rest, — Had I but wings to follow. At waning of weary day ! Had I but wings to follow, For day lies heavy over the town. And, dropped through still air slowly down, Like darts from a tired Apollo, Upon the redhot miles of brick The stagnant sunbeams swelter thick ; And ever emptier seems. To men who toil in house or street, The labour of brain and hands and feet, A noisy nothing in noontide heat, A wrangle of dying dreams, 68 LYRICAL PIECES 69 That wear the heart and dim the sight ; And as they toil in lessening light, Choked with the city's breath like blight, The day burns out to smouldering night. But, far away, The idle breeze, the light breeze Is up and roaming at eventide, Stirring the reeds at the riverside, Skimming the pool like a swallow. Catching a bar from the song of the rill. To drop in the ear of the drowsy hill. And dipping down to the hollow. Where darkening ferns hang, dewy and deep, And still, tall spires of foxglove sleep. And twilight mysteries creep ; O'er lonely fields that the willows skirt, By farms and hamlets orchard-girt, And pastures where the cattle rest, And long dales dimly winding west, A wayward air, for ever astray. Through a land of shadows, quiet and gray. Had I but wings to follow. At waning of weary day ! BY A GRAVE Lilies in the valley, Harebells on the hill, And in the meadow buttercups. And wild-rose by the rill ; But only daisies in the turf. Where my love lies still. Overhead the heaven. Where the skylarks soar. And round about, the waving boughs As sunny as before ; But the sun that lit this life for me Is set for evermore. DISTANCE Like one, who, gazing under lifted hand Beyond the salt breadth of an ocean-strait. Views a fair unknown coast, disconsolate, And loves the distant land ; So my eyes watch, to wistful steps denied. The purple-dented misty mountain-mass, To whose gray feet, far off, the lowland-tide Rolls her dim woods and desolate morass ; Dreaming of cool and cataract-voiced ravines Too far for sight ; and many a heavenward lawn. Light's forefront at the dawn ; And each noon-shadowing rock that downward leans ; And all the hamlet-nursing valley-folds, With peasant peace and low-eaved quiet filled. When streaks of sunset gild What hanging red the laden orchard holds. 7' 7» LYRICAL PIECES II So too, when o'er thfe lustrous dreamy deeps, Shoreless, star-islanded, a moving net Stranded of cloud, by fisher night-winds set. With mesh inconstant creeps. While, haloed on its shifting pearl, the moon Burns bronze, and radiant quietude descends Even to the incensed blossom-sleep of June That compasses my feet ; a hunger blends With joy of night's high loveliness. The cloud Calls me ; the bright moon beckons ; and the wind Sighs, leaving me behind ; The very gleams are voices, and grow loud ; And far beyond the film-bar's drift, the spheres, Where isled in deep lagoons, they glimmer through The fleecy-broidered blue, Sound out a silver clarion in my ears. * III Yet, could I by desiring melt the chains Of fleshly life's condition, and take wing To the utmost jewel of the utmost ring Earth-centred sight attains. LYRICAL PIECES 73 That seems a spark, though far remote it flares A great orb glory-vestured ; even such flight Would cradle newborn longing. As who dares By dizzy paths upclimb an isthmus-height, The gulf's rock-girdle, finds the further side As great a world of waves ; so that high place Would look on rolling space, Whereto this whole star-spangled region wide, Whose multitudinous miles are as the sand, Is but the gate : where universes vain Sink like the drops of rain In yawning fields by timorous thought unspanned. IV Out of the virgin deeps forever rise New siren-songs ; and, like thought's nemesis. The looming of the unbeheld abyss Round each horizon lies. From narrow 'now' and 'here,' fast-bound in flowers Or thorn-beset, the argus-visioned soul Takes outlook ; sees millenniums brief as hours, A finger's breadth the space from pole to pole, 74 LYRICAL PIECES And either way the ranging infinite Within the greater and the less grow dim ; And alway, like a hymn, Upwells the longing for far-off delight. For life is as a boat that sees no shore ; Yet shall they find the freedom of the land, And leap upon the strand. Who now must tend the rudder and the oar. AT AN OPEN WINDOW The stars are awake, The flowers asleep ; The odorous airs In the night-hush deep, Through the jasmine-garlanded casement creep. The silvery shafts On the clasped hands shine Of a kneeling girl, And her hair divine. As she prays in her scented, starlit shrine. The starlight rains pure ; Sweet incense is blown ; But the sweet, pure thoughts Are winging alone. Through a star-bloomed firmament, all their own. 75 WAVING GRASS When tired thought flags and the hfe burns low, And wearier waxes the world of men, There is virtue of healing where green things grow, And the quiet of fields is a power, then ; But most, — to wander and watch at will The ripple of grass on a windy hill. A witchery lives in the swaying stems, A riddle of motion, an anodyne Of voiceless paeans and requiems, That waken the heart like a wizard wine ; Yet no man fathoms the spell of the grass. That flutters and bends when the young winds pass. 76 LYRICAL PIECES 77 Does the trace of the travelled winds beget A mind fresh-visioned and burden-free ? The dream of their fairy footprints, set In the surge of the thousand-bladed sea ? And the pulse of their unspent wings, new- born In a golden dew at the gates of the morn ? Is it charm of the grass-stalk, lithe and lush, From its downward-dipping gusty swing Recoiling, at lull of the light wind's rush, To its sunward poise, with a pliant spring, Uprearing straight from the stem - thronged ground A spear-host, tremulous, blossom-crowned ? Or is it the ripple-tide, rhythmic, strong, Yet changeful as tongues of the flickering fire, The wave-chant, the sinuous shudder-song Of the many-bending, green-robed choir, A music of motion whose tones are curves. As its serpentine melody slides and swerves ? 78 LYRICAL PIECES Be it music, freshness, or unseen wind, That fancy may name the enchanter's power, The fugitive mystery lurks behind, Like a honey-fount hid in the heart of a flower. Let the tired eyes drink, and the barren brain ! They search for the secret source in vain. THE TURNING FROM THE GRAVE Like a last cloud, that fills The last blue space, Ere the rain hides the hills. Dimming earth's face, One moment, sad, supreme, Comes at grief's height, Waking from sorrow's dream To sorrow's night. Bitter, the faint farewell Helpless to hear ! Bitter, the slow-swung bell, The slow-borne bier ! Yet, to be doing stole Part of grief's ill ; The last rite brings the soul Bitterer still, 8o LYRICAL PIECES When he whose love and trust Lie there below, Last, from the graveside must Turn him to go. II To go, — what matter where ? Homeless is grief. The field-flowers may be fair, Sunlit the leaf ; Pearl-cup and jewel-bell, And starry gold ; Birdsong in primrose dell ; Cloudlet's soft fold ; Painfully beautiful ! Now grown, to him. One picture, blurred and dull. Distantly dim. Ill He is not of it ! No, Let the world lie Fettered in frozen snow. While the winds cry. LYRICAL PIECES 8i Where in the iron dell Lies the bird dead, Where the shrill sleet-cloud's swell Slings overhead, Where falls the icy dark The flower-graves o'er : — The change his eye might mark ; Grief were not more. Summer-bloom, winter-gloom To him all one ; One season at the tomb Endless begun. IV To go, — no matter where ! Down the dim street ; Through the smoke-stifled air; Where the stones meet Over the flower-stript earth, Their prison old, Crushing its blossom-birth With lordship cold ; 82 LYRICAL PIECES The thronging crowd to thread, Outlived of stones Whereon to-day they tread ; The myriad tones Of the great city-soul, Heedless, to hear, To watch its life-wheels roll. Nor feel them near ; Cast with that stranger crowd A space, soon fled ! Do they too feel the shroud ? Have they their dead ? Homeward ? nay, ' home ' no more, Only a place, Where once an opening door Showed a bright face ! Where, — was it years ago ? Nested love smiled ; Winds through the nest-rifts blow Chill, now, and wild ! LYRICAL PIECES 83 Back to that ghost of home ? But for life's need, Better o'er wilds to roam Till the feet bleed ; Better one wandering Home of unrest, Till the last shadows bring Love repossessed. Back ? to the chamber lone, The untrodden stair ? Where for the wonted tone Listens the air, Where from the barren walls Memories steal ; There, as night's silence falls. The truth to feel ? VI The truth ? ah, vain to wait Earthly relief ! The graveside is the gate Of lonely grief. 84 LYRICAL PIECES Enter, and face despair ! Best is home's blank. Watch the faint traces there Where the sun sank ! Duty makes sober light Where shadows are : Homeward ! to truth the night, And faith the star. A SPRING FANCY The light May-breeze is gone to sleep, And sunny stillness holds the glen, In sheets of bluebells lying deep, Far from the ways of men. The mute copse has a listening air ; As if in deepest hush alone The faint bell-blossoms rang ; a rare And hyacinthine tone. Some silver chimes in all that crowd Of sapphire belfries washed with dew Must sure be falling, low or loud. Had I but hearing true ! At daybreak did no dainty peal Wake up the drowsy bee ? To-night Will ne'er a fragrant curfew steal To shut the glow-worm's light ? 86 LYRICAL PIECES Even now, when sleeps without a sound The silence of the scented blue, The perfume from the loaded ground So strikes my senses through, I scarce believe mere odour sweet So rich a joy of soul could bring, Or make in one sensation meet All raptures of the spring. Comes not this sunshine at my heart In the still, azure-sheeted dell, From music, like the tears that start At some far wind-borne bell ? Then let me follow fancy's bent. And dream this little dream of spring. That in the wafting of the scent I hear the bluebells ring ! LYRICAL PIECES 87 Four zones in yonder evening sky Each over other, blended lie. The first is level amethyst, Where the sea sleeps in folded mist ; Orange the next, that dreams of red, With olive cloudlets overspread ; The third is the void saffron, clear As April drops that dint the mere ; Last, glistens in pale phantom-blue Arcturus faint, like trembling devi^. Printed by Ballantvne, Hanson ^f' Co. Edinburgh £r» London