PS Boot,-, ft ( , i H\ Z GopyrigMl^?- X51I COPYRIGHT DEPOSm MAUNA ROA AND OTHER POEMS MAUNA ROA AND OTHER POEMS BY AMES BROOKS PRINCETON PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS LONDON: HUMPHREY MILFORD OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1922 Copyright 1922, by Princetan University Press Publisiied 1922 By the Princeton University Press Printed in the United States of America DEC -9 1^22 CiA690535 .._ /TiAJb^. 1 TO MY MOTHER IN Her Own Spirit OF Eternal Youth CONTENTS PAGE Mauna Roa 9 To Omar 14 The Wanderers 15 Rondeau 16 Coronel 17 Sleep 20 Hymn to Persephone 21 The Last Voyage 23 Rhine Maiden 26 Kitchener ,2"] To Gather and to Spend 29 Contradictions 30 Lament for Alcimus 31 The Lorelei .' 32 Homer 35 Chickamauga 36 Mona Lisa Speaks "S* Keats in Rome 39 Courage 40 Ballad 41 Glastonbury Tor 44 From My Window -45 Salisbury Close 46 The Knight and the Lady 47 Ballad of Earl Bowinge 48 The Seafarer 51 Friendship 52 An Epitaph 53 7 MAUNA ROA All day, along the mountains by the Gate, The ocean mists lay like a battle-cloud, Rolling their formless phantoms through the strait, Wrapping the white-walled city in a shroud. All day at anchor in the roads we stood, Watching the circling sea-gulls wheel and scream, Where Sausalito hangs above the flood, Dreaming all day her rapt Italian dream. Thus we set sail. The harbor heads sank low, The iron coast-line where the sea-birds veered; The waves took up their music round the bow. And south and west into the mists we steered. A fearful sea — uncharted — without path — Calm with the calm that knows nor gale nor snows, Bearing the terror of an hidden wrath. Majestic in its terrible repose. Shoreless and lone — illimitable — ^vast — Where all the wastes of ocean take their toll Of desolate wave-lashed reef, of alien mast. From Honuapo to the austral pole. Out of the south, dripping with damp and dew, The haunting trade-winds drove the heaving seas; The magic of the equatorial blue Purpling their flanks — and seaweed on their knees. On — on — southward and south again we bore, The isles of gold and summer almost won; The old world-wonder there — so close before — As still our dripping prow went thundering on. «)£ 3fC SfC 3|C ^ 5{« Sf« Glory! the Voices send, Life! Life and Glory! Romance is never dead, Your days, nor all their story! Beyond this dreaming tide. So still as you depart. Some haven must abide For each adventurous heart! 9|c :^ j): :): ^ ^ 3|; We came to rest among the Thundering Isles, Where wayworn ships put in, with courses furled. Where wan sea-summits rise, a thousand miles Beyond the utmost echoes of the world. Enchanted island-mountains, rimmed with sand, Shorelands of moving waters and of cloud ; A world of fronded palms and faery strand, And peaks of sunset, mist-capped, thunder- browed. 10 Down from those vapory cliffs and heights of dawn, By crag and precipice of livid green, The murmurous cataract of filmy lawn. Dissolved its music through the rifts between; To flow, at length, through flower-bordered meads, Where still the honey-hearted lotus blooms, Which wanderers eat of still— whose pathway leads Downward to Lethe and a thousand dooms. And Ah ! the haunting light of afternoon Flooding that world with far-flung mists of gold, As though all life were stilled into a swoon, Become a legend, and forever old ; As though there played across the purple vales The nameless beauty for which dreamers pine, As though all tender, dim-remembered tales. And all sad things, found here their anodyne. ***** Jis ^ The mild sea-island people on the beach Crowned us with scented wreaths of deathless flowers. We heard the prattle of melodious speech Drowning the passage of the languorous hours, The flashing breakers on the distant reefs, The wild sea-music beating in our ears; And dim grew all the memories of our griefs, And all we had been in the vanished years. II Languid and heavy-lidded, half asleep, Beneath the shadows of the clambering vine, We ate the purple fei, and drained deep The ^az^a-bowl, which ran with Circe's wine. We tasted all the pleasures of the feast, Song and the wanton dance, and wine again ; We revelled in the raptures of the beast, 'Til we forgot the gods that made us men ; Forgot the hearths we had been reared beside, The white, clean women who had been our wives, Honor and fame, nobility and pride. All that had been immortal in our lives. * * * H= * * * Then we set sail again — a ship of dream — Drifting below that coastline weird and dim, A ship asleep upon a drowsy stream, Scarce moving toward that lonely ocean rim. In frail canoes under the looming land Our island friends lay tossing on the swell. Waving with mystic play of arm and hand. Their blossom-laden branches in farewell. The songs they sang — a chorus-chant of ghosts — Half-heard and distant, passed us like a dirge All day, until at last their phantom coasts Lay but a tenuous shadow on the verge. 3fC ^ 5|6 ^ ^ 3)C ^ 12 Enough! the Voices said, Of Life and Glory; You slumber with the dead, And, with you, all your story. Then rest, and so outlast The sighing of the deep, And let the lotus cast O'er all its poppied sleep! ******* Then we awoke — ''Ah, lookout, from the mast, "Gaze south again 1 Ah ! Captain, trim the sail ! *Turn back," we cried, "the tempest rises fast; "Turn back ! Turn back ! before the compass fail !" "Our voyage is past; what do we on this deep? *'Give us once more our slumber in the sun; "Give us forgetfulness and honied sleep; "Give us our ease again *til life be done !" We swung the vessel in the fading light; Shook out each yard of canvas which hung furled ; And thus returning through the tropic night, We beached her as the morning smote the world. 13 TO OMAiR Singer of life and joy and love unsleeping! Preacher of rest, of noontide and the sun ! Where art thou, now that yesterdays are done ? Does Time still haunt thee, some tomorrow creep- ing Into thy dream? Or art thou, rather, steeping Body and soul in slumber, hardly won? Tell us, since all thy thread of years was spun. What pleasant country hath thee in its keeping? Some gentle haven, sunlit and forsaken. Perchance thou holdest for us wanderers, Brother ; Some harbor-valley by no wild winds shaken, When we shall rest in earth, the common mother ; When nevermore shall trump nor tumult waken, Nor Love, nor Sleep, nor Death, nor any other. 14 THE WANDERERS The rushing wave is white with foam, Leagues, leagues behind — our island home; For aye distressed, unsatisfied, We tempt again the western tide Where'er the winds our bark shall bear; Yet Avalon, O Avalon, Perchance we may cast anchor there ! Her vales sleep in the western sea, Where all the haunts of dreamers be ; Her marts gleam distant, like a star, Where Ogier and where Arthur are; Where lovers linger on the stair; O Avalon, O Avalon, Could we but come to harbor there! Our day is dark, we may not see, Though there the night as day may be; The sunset dies beyond the deep. The labor first and then the sleep; The gifts of gods are all too rare; Yet Avalon, O Avalon, Could we but dream for ever there! 15 RONDEAU Poor autumn leaves ! The winds will roam Awhile above your forest tomb, Lost in the shadows and the dew; Then Earth, the mother that you knew, Will ope her arms and take you home. For you must die — lie withered — numb, Yet will you never sigh in some Wild longing for when Spring was new, Poor autumn leaves? I shall, I know, when earthly hum Shall fade afar and I be dumb, These verses fail and yet come true. And I at length be one of you. Alas ! alas ! that death must come. Poor autumn leaves ! i6 CORONEL ''So the scales of fate descended against Ad- miral Craddock, who, sailing north from the Horn, on Sunday, November first, ran with his three cruisers into Von Spee's squadron of five, off Coronet on the coast of Chili" — Admiralty Report. North from the Horn he sailed On the long Pacific swell, While the rising storm-wind wailed O'er the deeps of Coronel; Those vast, unsounded deeps, Which mark the Chilean main, Where the wild sea-wind sweeps Up to the Andes' chain. Under those iron coasts, Looming like fate, there lay, A silent line of ghosts, The cruisers of Von Spee. "Canopus,'* far astern. Flashed through the dying day: ''Hold them awhile and turn ; **Hold them an hour at bay! "You are but three to five — "Outranged by *Gneisenau\" (The radio seemed alive) "I shall engage them now." 17 *1 shall engage them now." (Old sea-dogs of the main! Drake, have you kept your vow? Sail you the seas again? Ah, galleons of Cathay! The Dutchman and the Don! But when had ye such a day As this to die upon?) Out of the blood-red West The seething combers ran, Burying 'neath each crest Turret and top and man. Main batteries all awash From tumble-home to rail, Drowning with surge and crash, The shrieking of the gale. Out-gunned, out-steamed, out-manned, He closed with the Prussian crew, Closed with a brief command. Closed as the English do. The Chilean coast looms dark Where the Cordillera runs, And the spotters had no mark Save the flash of German guns. A moment — three — "Good Hope," Aflame from keel to deck. Swerved from the line agrope, A plunging, drifting wreck. i8 Her magazines are gone, "Monmouth" is sinking fast; Shattered and rent, alone, "Glasgow" turns south at last. And there is no more day, Nor any left to fight The victors three: Von Spee, The hurricane and night. Fathom on fathom deep "Good Hope" and "Monmouth" lie, Where English sailors sleep That glory shall not die; That faith be kept with Thee That willed it, and hast said That every utmost sea Should coffin England's dead. Grenville and Hood and Blake, Again the story tell ! Brother-in-arms of Drake, Craddock at Coronel ! 19 SLEEP ''Sleep, Twin Brother of Death'' — Hesiod. Strange that thou would'st deceive us, gentle sleep, For thou thyself art full of lightsome rest; Yet hast thou a twin brother sably drest, And yet so like thee that men ofttimes weep, Seeing him in thee, when thou art cold and deep. He brings the chilling winds and, in his breast, Pale immortality ; but thou art best, Thou breath from lands that deathless lovers keep ! Yet oft, when in wan dreams my bark doth go, Silent along some dim Hesperian shore, Half knowing I must wake again to woe, I often drift, all careless of the oar. And think — and think — until I cannot know " H I do love thee or thy brother more. 20 HYMN TO PERSEPHONE Ad/JL ^ap€^ Il€pa€6va^ rbv ijuibv irdffip iacrl ydp aurd noX\6v ifwv Kp€(Tut courage. Kings have tried, Caesars and popes and lesser men than these, With pomp and power, through the centuries, To cheat old death and darkness by their pride And so to escape. Not thus the martyrs died, Lincoln and Wycliffe, Stephen and Socrates, But facing, though with doubt and bended knees, The fears the human spirit has defied. There is no test but courage. When for me The purple twilight curtain shall draw back, I shall go out unflinching from the day, If but some splendid thought my soul shall stay : High admirals going down in glorious wrack, And long-lost sailors sleeping in the sea. 40 BALLAD Out of the Summer, out of the South There rode Sir Belvidere; And the song of love was in his mouth, In the spring-time of the year. * 5{: ;Jt * ^ "Lo, I have seven castles old Afar in Sicily, And thrice three hundred w^arriors bold That ride to war with me. "Along the laughing southern sands My barks at anchor lie; But I will see the northern lands Before I come to die. "Full twenty summers have I seen Go by like mountain rills, Yet never saw I aught but green Upon the western hills. "So I will see your winds that blow, Your chill November skies, Will walk your purple moors and know Your twilight in my eyes." * * :J: * :|c Thus in his will the knight abode, Nor suffered change at all; By many a storied stream he rode, By many a tower and tall; 41 By many a city's busy shade, By many a fair demesne; Through many a sunlit woodland glade, Where fairy folk are seen. While, as he rode uiK)n his way, The clouds came down apace, And Summer sweet with Autumn gray Died in a last embrace. Yet softly did the good knight sing Of love and summer dear; I wis he heard not anything Of moaning in the year. S^ 3|C ^ Jf^ ^ And now in northern tower and hall Passed tale and ruddy cup. And song: and laughed the warriors all Whenas the horns blew up. But all without the wind sang low, In no autumnal moan, Of days and loves of long ago And other autumns flown. The wind among the withered sheaves. Ah, that was passing drear, As rustling of old autumn leaves. Along a moonlit mere. 42 And yet one voice, o'er lands forlorn, Rang out as blithe and clear, As lark's on early summer morn, Singing that God may hear. And closer still his mantle drew The good knight on his way, And still it seemed no storm that blew Might drown his endless lay; 'Til the last songster of the Spring And summer upland wide, Came fluttering, like a dying thing, Across his path— and died. '*** ^ *f* n* ^ Into the Summer, into the South There rode Sir Belvidere: And the song of Spring was in his mouth At the dying of the year. 43 GLASTONBURY TOR Henry of England was a puissant lord; He dreamed by the Book, but he lived by the sword ; He fell upon Glastonbury in his holy war And he hanged the last abbot on Glastonbury Tor. Winds that blow soft from the shores of Severn Sea, Larks in the hedgerows, shadows on the lea; Gay Anne Boleyn and Catherine Parr, And the last abbot hanging on Glastonbury Tor! Crumbling arches dreaming in the sun, Centuries coming and centuries done; Launcelot riding on the farther shore. And the last abbot swinging on Glastonbury Tor ! Sunshine and roses in the Vale of Avalon, And the sweetest country-side mine eyes have looked upon; Arthur and Guinevere and all the nevermore. And the last abbot sleeping on Glastonbury Tor ! 44 FROM MY WINDOW On summer eves when I am most uncertain Of truth, and what we are, Into my ken, beyond my western curtain, Swims the lone evening star. Symbol of all things sad and tender-hearted, And loves that cannot stay; Measure of high romance, now long departed. And vanished from the day! Slowly, without, the busy city's humming Fades into night. O gleam That led me once, now fading, and becoming An alien to my dream ! I may be over given to repining, For I have travelled far; And yet, for me, another Greece is shining Beyond that sunset star. 45 SALISBURY CLOSE *'He gave his earthly life for such matter as he set great store by — the honor of his country and his homey — Tennant Memorial, Salisbury Cathe- dral. Long shadows on this old cathedral green — Silence — and Time asleep, or in a trance; These thousand years of sacred circumstance Breathing, half -felt, over this still demesne The living evidence of things not seen. God! that war's foul and agonizing dance And all the trampled, bloody fields of France Should touch a world withdrawn thus and serene ! Ah, to have lived thus with him, and to pass Thus out of life lived thus complete and whole, The legend and the glory — drums and brass — Then, like a dawn, the closing of the scroll; Eternal sunshine on this English grass, And his celestial quiet of the soul. 46 THE KNIGHT AND THE LADY The Knight he followed the Lady fair, By the castle crags toward the haunted dale, He followed the gleam of her golden hair And he bore in his bosom a wisp of veil. The Huntsman cried: "Ride not that way, For Death in the valley is waiting for thee!" But the Knight rode on and he heard him say : "Good Sir, thou never hast ridden with me." And the good Knight came to the haunted dell. And he kissed the fluttering wisp of veil; He paused, — ^breathed deep of the asphodel, And he followed the Lady into the dale. 47 BALLAD OF EARL BOWINGE The flags hung tattered, The walls were battered, And stained with gore; The Danish foemen. King 01af*s yeomen, Pressed at the door. Then spake Earl Walter; "Upon the altar "Of their god Thor, "Must die one being "Of us, so freeing us "From this war." The shouts grew stronger, The shadows longer, Across the floor; Then spake Earl Bowinge: "Be mine this going "That comes no more." "Of all my brothers Me, ere the others, My mother bore, Yet have I broken That birth-right token. And cost them sore; I was forsaken And, outlawed, taken, Times a score." 48 "I never minded Your subtly-blinded Makers of lore, For all my lovers Were the sea-rovers, And to soar Over tumbling surges, Singing dirges, To their roar" ; "Pulling together. Through northern w^eather, The flashing oar; And all to follow The gray sea-swallow. That fled before." *T never hearkened. When shadows darkened On Bowinge Tor, To whispered stories Of all the glories Of which Christ swore"; "I heard the sighing Of the Norns, crying By the lone sea-shore. And in the thunder I called in wonder On Father Thor." 40 "Then, brothers, marry Why should I tarry? (Or you deplore?) For though they slay me, Yet this shall stay me, (My soul restore) Being me man's debtor, To have died better Than lived of yore/' "And though on laughter, And days hereafter, I set no store, Yet for my living I yield thanksgiving From my heart's core." "And I shall slumber. And shall not number The seasons o'er. Having descended Where light is ended, And life no more." 50 THE SEAFARER (From the Anglo Saxon.) Then he awakes again, Friendless mortal, To see, spread before him, The Avan sea pathway. The sea birds soaring, Spreading their wings, Rime and snow falling, Mingling with hail. Then weigh the heavier All his heart's sorrows, Drear after dreaming. Sorrow revives When memories of friends Come crowding to mind. He greets them with gladness, Warm is his welcome; But his warrior comrades Melt misty away: And the souls of these sea-farers Bear with them hither No message remembered. 51 FRIENDSHIP Meseemed I passed, when days were at an end, Hard by the Tree of Life, along a stream Whose course far, far away as in a dream With glistening city walls did meet and blend; Whither a white-robed throng did with me wend, Happy with gazing there, each eye agleam. And one to stop and smile on me did seem, And clasp my shadowy hand and call me friend. He spoke. His voice rang hollow in mine ears. I stood as one that watches by the sea For the lost ship that bears him son or wife, (Hearing and dreaming more than that he hears) : *'Hast thou forgot the crust thou sharedst with me, "The cup of water in that other life?" 52 AN EPITAPH Not his the will to gather What others may have sown, In other years, but rather, To fight his fight alone. To tread the path of duty, As soldier, priest and sage; And trim the lamp of Beauty, In a material age. 53 ill! i " i ^^l