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Complete Poetical Works of a E Housman

Page 10

by A E Housman


  And wilt cast forth no more.

  XLVIII. Parta Quies

  Good-night; ensured release,

  Imperishable peace,

  Have these for yours,

  While sea abides, and land,

  And earth’s foundations stand,

  And heaven endures.

  When earth’s foundations flee,

  Nor sky nor land nor sea

  At all is found,

  Content you, let them burn:

  It is not your concern;

  Sleep on, sleep sound.

  ADDITIONAL POEMS

  CONTENTS

  I. Atys

  II.

  III.

  IV.

  V.

  VI.

  VII.

  VIII.

  IX.

  X.

  XI.

  XI.A

  XII.

  XIII.

  XIV.

  XV.

  XVI.

  XVII.

  XVIII.

  XIX. The Defeated

  XX.

  XXI. New Year’s Eve

  XXII. R. L. S.

  XXIII. The Olive

  I. Atys

  “Lydians, lords of Hermus river,

  Sifters of the golden loam,

  See you yet the lances quiver

  And the hunt returning home?”

  “King, the star that shuts the even

  Calls the sheep from Tmolus down;

  Home return the doves from heaven,

  And the prince to Sardis town.”

  From the hunting heavy laden

  Up the Mysian road they ride;

  And the star that mates the maiden

  Leads his son to Croesus’ side.

  “Lydians, under stream and fountain

  Finders of the golden vein,

  Riding from Olympus mountain,

  Lydians, see you Atys plain?”

  “King, I see the Phrygian stranger

  And the guards in hunter’s trim,

  Saviours of thy son from danger;

  Them I see. I see not him.”

  “Lydians, as the troop advances,

  — It is eve and I am old —

  Tell me why they trail their lances,

  Washers of the sands of gold.

  “I am old and day is ending

  And the wildering night comes on;

  Up the Mysian entry wending,

  Lydians, Lydians, what is yon?”

  Hounds behind their master whining,

  Huntsmen pacing dumb beside,

  On his breast the boar-spear shining,

  Home they bear his father’s pride.

  II.

  Oh were he and I together,

  Shipmates on the fleeted main,

  Sailing through the summer weather

  To the spoil of France or Spain.

  Oh were he and I together,

  Locking hands and taking leave,

  Low upon the trampled heather

  In the battle lost at eve.

  Now are he and I asunder

  And asunder to remain;

  Kingdoms are for others’ plunder,

  And content for other slain.

  III.

  When Adam walked in Eden young

  Happy, ’tis writ, was he,

  While high the fruit of knowledge hung

  Unbitten on the tree.

  Happy was he the livelong day:

  I doubt ’tis written wrong:

  The heart of man, for all they say,

  Was never happy long.

  And now my feet are tired of rest

  And here they will not stay

  And the soul fevers in my breast

  And aches to be away.

  IV.

  It is no gift I tender,

  A loan is all I can;

  But do not scorn the leader;

  Man gets no more from man.

  Oh, mortal man may borrow

  What mortal man can lend,

  And ‘twill not end tomorrow

  Though sure enough ‘twill end.

  If death and time are stronger

  A love may yet be strong;

  The world will last for longer

  But this will last for long.

  V.

  Here are the skies, the planets seven,

  And all the starry train:

  Content you with the mimic heaven,

  And on the earth remain.

  VI.

  Ask me no more, for fear I should reply;

  Others have held their tongues, and so can I,

  Hundreds have died, and told no tale befoer:

  Ask me no more, for fear I should reply —

  How one was true and one was clean of stain

  And one was braver than the heavens are high,

  And one was fond of me: and all are slain.

  Ask me no more, for fear I should reply.

  VII.

  He would not stay for me; and who can wonder?

  He would not stay for me to stand and gaze.

  I shook his hand and tore my heart in sunder

  And went with half my life about my ways.

  VIII.

  Now to her lap the incestuous earth

  The son she bore has ta’en,

  And other sons brings to birth

  But not my friend again.

  IX.

  When the bells justle in the tower

  The hollow night amid,

  Then on my tongue the taste is sour

  Of all I ever did.

  X.

  Oh on my breast in days hereafter

  Light the earth should lie,

  Such weight to bear is now the air,

  So heavy hangs the sky.

  XI.

  Morning up the eastern stair

  Marches, azuring the air,

  And the foot of twilight still

  Is stolen toward the western sill.

  Blithe the maids go milking, blithe

  Men in hayfields stone the scythe,

  All the land’s alive around

  Except the churchyard’s idle ground.

  — There’s empty acres west and east

  But aye ’tis God’s that bears the least:

  This hopeless garden that they sow

  With the seeds that never grow.

  XI.A

  — They shall have breath that never were,

  But he that was shall have it ne’er;

  The unconcieved and unbegot

  Shall look on heaven, but he shall not.

  — The heart with many wildfires lit,

  Ice is not so cold as it.

  The thirst that rivers could not lay

  A little dust has quenched for aye;

  And in a fathom’s compass lie

  Thoughts much wider than the sky.

  XII.

  Stay, if you list, O passer by the way;

  Yet night approaches: better not to stay.

  I never sigh, nor flush, nor knit the brow,

  Nor frieve to think how ill God made me, now.

  Here, with one balm for many fevers found,

  Whole of an ancient evil, I sleep sound.

  XIII.

  Oh turn not in from marching

  To taverns on the way:

  The drought and thirst and parching

  A little dust will lay

  And take desire away.

  Oh waste no words a wooing

  The soft sleep to your bed;

  She is not worth pursuing,

  You will so soon be dead

  And death will serve instead.

  XIV.

  “Oh is it the jar of nations,

  The noise of a world run mad,

  The fleeing of earth’s foundations?”

  Yes, yes; lie quiet, my lad.

  “Oh is it my country calling,

  And whom will my country find

  To shore up the sky from falling?”

  My b
usiness; never you mind.

  “Oh is it the newsboys crying

  Lost battle, retreat, despair,

  And honour and England dying?”

  Well, fighting cock, what if it were?

  The devil this side of the darnels

  Is having a dance with man,

  And quarrelsome chaps in charnels

  Must bear it as best they can.

  XV.

  ’Tis five years since, “An end,” said I,

  “I’ll march no further, time to die.

  All’s lost; no worse has heaven to give.”

  Worse it has given, and yet I live.

  I shall not die today, no fear:

  I shall live yet for many a year,

  And see worse ills and worse again,

  And die of age and not of pain.

  The stark steel splintered from the thrust,

  The basalt mountain sprang to dust,

  The blazing pier of diamond flawed

  In shards of rainbows all abroad.

  What found he that the heavens stand fast?

  What pillar proven firm at last

  Bears up so light that world-seen span?

  The heart of man, the heart of man.

  XVI.

  Some can gaze and not be sick

  But I could never learn the trick.

  There’s this to say for blood and breath,

  They give a man a taste for death.

  XVII.

  The stars have not dealt me the worst they could do:

  My pleasures are plenty, my troubles are two.

  But oh, my two troubles they reave me of rest,

  The brains in my head and the heart in my breast.

  Oh, grant me the ease that is granted so free,

  The birthright of multitudes, give it to me,

  That relish their victuals and rest on their bed

  With flint in the bosom and guts in the head.

  XVIII.

  Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists?

  And what has he been after that they groan and shake their fists?

  And wherefore is he wearing such a conscience-stricken air?

  Oh they’re taking him to prison for the colour of his hair.

  ’Tis a shame to human nature, such a head of hair as his;

  In the good old time ’twas hanging for the colour that it is;

  Though hanging isn’t bad enough and flaying would be fair

  For the nameless and abominable colour of his hair.

  Oh a deal of pains he’s taken and a pretty price he’s paid

  To hide his poll or dye it of a mentionable shade;

  But they’ve pulled the beggar’s hat off for the world to see and stare,

  And they’re haling him to justice for the colour of his hair.

  Now ’tis oakum for his fingers and the treadmill for his feet

  And the quarry-gang on Portland in the cold and in the heat,

  And between his spells of labour in the time he has to spare

  He can curse the God that made him for the colour of his hair.

  XIX. The Defeated

  In battles of no renown

  My fellows and I fall down,

  And over the dead men roar

  The battles they lost before.

  The thunderstruck flagstaffs fall,

  The earthquake breaches the wall,

  The far-felled steeples resound,

  And I lie under the ground.

  O soldiers, saluted afar

  By them that have seen your star,

  In conquest and freedom and pride

  Remember your friends that died.

  Amidst rejoicing and song

  Remember, my lads, how long,

  How deep the innocent trod

  The grapes of the anger of God.

  XX.

  I shall not die for you,

  Another fellow may;

  Good lads are left and true

  Thought one departs away.

  But he departs to-day

  And leaves his work to do,

  For I was luckless aye

  And shall not die for you.

  XXI. New Year’s Eve

  The end of the year fell chilly

  Between a moon and a moon;

  Thorough the twilight shrilly

  The bells rang, ringing no tune.

  The windows stained with story,

  The walls with miracle scored,

  Were full of weeping and laughter

  And song and saying good-bye.

  There stood in the holy places

  A multitude none could name,

  Ranks of dreadful faces

  Flaming, transfigured in flame.

  Crown and tiar and mitre

  Were starry with gold and gem;

  Christmas never was whiter

  Then fear on the face of them.

  In aisles that emperors vaulted

  For a faith the world confessed,

  Abasing the Host exalted,

  They worshipped towards the west.

  They brought with laughter oblation;

  They prayed, not bowing the head;

  They made without tear lamentation,

  And rendered me answer and said:

  “O thou that seest our sorrow,

  It fares with us even thus:

  To-day we are gods, to-morrow

  Hell have mercy on us.

  “Lo, morning over our border

  From out of the west comes cold;

  Down ruins the ancient order

  And empire builded of old.

  “Our house at even is queenly

  With psalm and censers alight:

  Look thou never so keenly

  Thou shalt not find us to-night.

  “We are come to the end appointed

  With sands not many to run:

  Divinities disanointed

  And kings whose kingdom is done.

  “The peoples knelt down at our portal,

  All kindreds under the sky;

  We were gods and implored and immortal

  Once; and to-day we die.”

  They turned them again to theri praying,

  They worshipped and took no rest

  Singing old tunes and saying

  ”We have seen his star in the west,”

  Old tunes of the sacred psalters,

  Set to wild farewells;

  And I left them there at their altars

  Ringing their own dead knells.

  XXII. R. L. S.

  Home is the sailor, home from sea:

  Her far-borne canvas furled,

  The ship pours shining on the quay

  The plunder of the world.

  Home is the hunter from the hill:

  Fast in the boundless snare

  All flesh lies taken at his will

  And every fowl of air.

  ’Tis evening on the moorland free,

  The starlit wave is still:

  Home is the sailor from the sea,

  The hunter from the hill.

  XXIII. The Olive

  The olive in its orchard

  Should now be rooted sure,

  To cast abroad its branches

  And flourish and endure.

  Aloft amid the trenches

  Its dressers dug and died

  The olive in its orchard

  Should prosper and abide.

  Close should the fruit be clustered

  And light the leaf should wave,

  So deep the root is planted

  In the corrupting grave.

  NOTEBOOK FRAGMENTS

  CONTENTS

  I.

  II.

  III.

  IV.

  V. The Rights of Men

  VI.

  VII.

  VIII.

  IX.

  X.

  XI.

  XII.

  XIII.

  XIV.

  XV
.

  XVI.

  XVII.

  XVIII.

  XIX.

  XX.

  XXI.

  XXII.

  XXIII.

  XXIV.

  XXV.

  XXVI.

  XXVII.

  XXVIII.

  XXIX.

  XXX.

  XXXI.

  XXXII.

  XXXIII.

  XXXIV.

  XXXV.

  XXXVI.

  XXXVII.

  XXXVIII.

  XXXIX.

  XL.

  XLI.

  XLII.

  XLIII.

  XLIV

  XLV. Christmas Carol

  XLVI.

  I.

  Nor break my hear with hoping any more,

  Tomorrow you shall have the grave to wife:

  Now, in the accepted time, make friends with life.

  To have missed no chances when you come to die

  Haste, for the heaven is westered since you came:

 

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