Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series)

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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) Page 91

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  Till the stars break off the music of their mirth,

  What among the sons of men was this man’s glory,

  What the vesture of his soul revealed on earth.

  EUTHANATOS

  IN MEMORY OF MRS. THELLUSSON

  Forth of our ways and woes,

  Forth of the winds and snows,

  A white soul soaring goes,

  Winged like a dove:

  So sweet, so pure, so clear,

  So heavenly tempered here,

  Love need not hope or fear her changed above:

  Ere dawned her day to die,

  So heavenly, that on high

  Change could not glorify

  Nor death refine her:

  Pure gold of perfect love,

  On earth like heaven’s own dove,

  She cannot wear, above, a smile diviner.

  Her voice in heaven’s own quire

  Can sound no heavenlier lyre

  Than here: no purer fire

  Her soul can soar:

  No sweeter stars her eyes

  In unimagined skies

  Beyond our sight can rise than here before.

  Hardly long years had shed

  Their shadows on her head:

  Hardly we think her dead,

  Who hardly thought her

  Old: hardly can believe

  The grief our hearts receive

  And wonder while they grieve, as wrong were wrought her.

  But though strong grief be strong

  No word or thought of wrong

  May stain the trembling song,

  Wring the bruised heart,

  That sounds or sighs its faint

  Low note of love, nor taint

  Grief for so sweet a saint, when such depart.

  A saint whose perfect soul,

  With perfect love for goal,

  Faith hardly might control,

  Creeds might not harden:

  A flower more splendid far

  Than the most radiant star

  Seen here of all that are in God’s own garden.

  Surely the stars we see

  Rise and relapse as we,

  And change and set, may be

  But shadows too:

  But spirits that man’s lot

  Could neither mar nor spot

  Like these false lights are not, being heavenly true.

  Not like these dying lights

  Of worlds whose glory smites

  The passage of the nights

  Through heaven’s blind prison:

  Not like their souls who see,

  If thought fly far and free,

  No heavenlier heaven to be for souls rerisen.

  A soul wherein love shone

  Even like the sun, alone,

  With fervour of its own

  And splendour fed,

  Made by no creeds less kind

  Toward souls by none confined,

  Could Death’s self quench or blind, Love’s self were dead.

  February 4, 1881.

  FIRST AND LAST

  Upon the borderlands of being,

  Where life draws hardly breath

  Between the lights and shadows fleeing

  Fast as a word one saith,

  Two flowers rejoice our eyesight, seeing

  The dawns of birth and death.

  Behind the babe his dawn is lying

  Half risen with notes of mirth

  From all the winds about it flying

  Through new-born heaven and earth:

  Before bright age his day for dying

  Dawns equal-eyed with birth.

  Equal the dews of even and dawn,

  Equal the sun’s eye seen

  A hand’s breadth risen and half withdrawn:

  But no bright hour between

  Brings aught so bright by stream or lawn

  To noonday growths of green.

  Which flower of life may smell the sweeter

  To love’s insensual sense,

  Which fragrance move with offering meeter

  His soothed omnipotence,

  Being chosen as fairer or as fleeter,

  Borne hither or borne hence,

  Love’s foiled omniscience knows not: this

  Were more than all he knows

  With all his lore of bale and bliss,

  The choice of rose and rose,

  One red as lips that touch with his,

  One white as moonlit snows.

  No hope is half so sweet and good,

  No dream of saint or sage

  So fair as these are: no dark mood

  But these might best assuage;

  The sweet red rose of babyhood,

  The white sweet rose of age.

  LINES ON THE DEATH OF EDWARD JOHN TRELAWNY

  Last high star of the years whose thunder

  Still men’s listening remembrance hears,

  Last light left of our fathers’ years,

  Watched with honour and hailed with wonder

  Thee too then have the years borne under,

  Thou too then hast regained thy peers.

  Wings that warred with the winds of morning,

  Storm-winds rocking the red great dawn,

  Close at last, and a film is drawn

  Over the eyes of the storm-bird, scorning

  Now no longer the loud wind’s warning,

  Waves that threaten or waves that fawn.

  Peers were none of thee left us living,

  Peers of theirs we shall see no more.

  Eight years over the full fourscore

  Knew thee: now shalt thou sleep, forgiving

  All griefs past of the wild world’s giving,

  Moored at last on the stormless shore.

  Worldwide liberty’s lifelong lover,

  Lover no less of the strength of song,

  Sea-king, swordsman, hater of wrong,

  Over thy dust that the dust shall cover

  Comes my song as a bird to hover,

  Borne of its will as of wings along.

  Cherished of thee were this brief song’s brothers

  Now that follows them, cherishing thee.

  Over the tides and the tideless sea

  Soft as a smile of the earth our mother’s

  Flies it faster than all those others,

  First of the troop at thy tomb to be.

  Memories of Greece and the mountain’s hollow

  Guarded alone of thy loyal sword

  Hold thy name for our hearts in ward:

  Yet more fain are our hearts to follow

  One way now with the southward swallow

  Back to the grave of the man their lord.

  Heart of hearts, art thou moved not, hearing

  Surely, if hearts of the dead may hear,

  Whose true heart it is now draws near?

  Surely the sense of it thrills thee, cheering

  Darkness and death with the news now nearing —

  Shelley, Trelawny rejoins thee here.

  ADIEUX À MARIE STUART

  I

  Queen, for whose house my fathers fought,

  With hopes that rose and fell,

  Red star of boyhood’s fiery thought,

  Farewell.

  They gave their lives, and I, my queen,

  Have given you of my life,

  Seeing your brave star burn high between

  Men’s strife.

  The strife that lightened round their spears

  Long since fell still: so long

  Hardly may hope to last in years

  My song.

  But still through strife of time and thought

  Your light on me too fell:

  Queen, in whose name we sang or fought,

  Farewell.

  II

  There beats no heart on either border

  Wherethrough the north blasts blow

  But keeps your memory as a warder

  His beacon-fire aglow.

  Long since
it fired with love and wonder

  Mine, for whose April age

  Blithe midsummer made banquet under

  The shade of Hermitage.

  Soft sang the burn’s blithe notes, that gather

  Strength to ring true:

  And air and trees and sun and heather

  Remembered you.

  Old border ghosts of fight or fairy

  Or love or teen,

  These they forgot, remembering Mary

  The Queen.

  III

  Queen once of Scots and ever of ours

  Whose sires brought forth for you

  Their lives to strew your way like flowers.

  Adieu.

  Dead is full many a dead man’s name

  Who died for you this long

  Time past: shall this too fare the same,

  My song?

  But surely, though it die or live,

  Your face was worth

  All that a man may think to give

  On earth.

  No darkness cast of years between

  Can darken you:

  Man’s love will never bid my queen

  Adieu.

  IV

  Love hangs like light about your name

  As music round the shell:

  No heart can take of you a tame

  Farewell.

  Yet, when your very face was seen,

  Ill gifts were yours for giving:

  Love gat strange guerdons of my queen

  When living.

  O diamond heart unflawed and clear,

  The whole world’s crowning jewel!

  Was ever heart so deadly dear

  So cruel?

  Yet none for you of all that bled

  Grudged once one drop that fell:

  Not one to life reluctant said

  Farewell.

  V

  Strange love they have given you, love disloyal,

  Who mock with praise your name,

  To leave a head so rare and royal

  Too low for praise or blame.

  You could not love nor hate, they tell us,

  You had nor sense nor sting:

  In God’s name, then, what plague befell us

  To fight for such a thing?

  “Some faults the gods will give,” to fetter

  Man’s highest intent:

  But surely you were something better

  Than innocent!

  No maid that strays with steps unwary

  Through snares unseen,

  But one to live and die for; Mary,

  The Queen.

  VI

  Forgive them all their praise, who blot

  Your fame with praise of you:

  Then love may say, and falter not,

  Adieu.

  Yet some you hardly would forgive

  Who did you much less wrong

  Once: but resentment should not live

  Too long.

  They never saw your lip’s bright bow,

  Your swordbright eyes,

  The bluest of heavenly things below

  The skies.

  Clear eyes that love’s self finds most like

  A swordblade’s blue,

  A swordblade’s ever keen to strike,

  Adieu.

  VII

  Though all things breathe or sound of fight

  That yet make up your spell,

  To bid you were to bid the light

  Farewell.

  Farewell the song says only, being

  A star whose race is run:

  Farewell the soul says never, seeing

  The sun.

  Yet, wellnigh as with flash of tears,

  The song must say but so

  That took your praise up twenty years

  Ago.

  More bright than stars or moons that vary,

  Sun kindling heaven and hell,

  Here, after all these years, Queen Mary,

  Farewell.

  HERSE

  When grace is given us ever to behold

  A child some sweet months old,

  Love, laying across our lips his finger, saith,

  Smiling, with bated breath,

  Hush! for the holiest thing that lives is here,

  And heaven’s own heart how near!

  How dare we, that may gaze not on the sun,

  Gaze on this verier one?

  Heart, hold thy peace; eyes, be cast down for shame;

  Lips, breathe not yet its name.

  In heaven they know what name to call it; we,

  How should we know? For, see!

  The adorable sweet living marvellous

  Strange light that lightens us

  Who gaze, desertless of such glorious grace,

  Full in a babe’s warm face!

  All roses that the morning rears are nought,

  All stars not worth a thought,

  Set this one star against them, or suppose

  As rival this one rose.

  What price could pay with earth’s whole weight of gold

  One least flushed roseleaf’s fold

  Of all this dimpling store of smiles that shine

  From each warm curve and line,

  Each charm of flower-sweet flesh, to reillume

  The dappled rose-red bloom

  Of all its dainty body, honey-sweet

  Clenched hands and curled-up feet,

  That on the roses of the dawn have trod

  As they came down from God,

  And keep the flush and colour that the sky

  Takes when the sun comes nigh,

  And keep the likeness of the smile their grace

  Evoked on God’s own face

  When, seeing this work of his most heavenly mood,

  He saw that it was good?

  For all its warm sweet body seems one smile,

  And mere men’s love too vile

  To meet it, or with eyes that worship dims

  Read o’er the little limbs,

  Read all the book of all their beauties o’er,

  Rejoice, revere, adore,

  Bow down and worship each delight in turn,

  Laugh, wonder, yield, and yearn.

  But when our trembling kisses dare, yet dread,

  Even to draw nigh its head,

  And touch, and scarce with touch or breath surprise

  Its mild miraculous eyes

  Out of their viewless vision — O, what then,

  What may be said of men?

  What speech may name a new-born child? what word

  Earth ever spake or heard?

  The best men’s tongue that ever glory knew

  Called that a drop of dew

  Which from the breathing creature’s kindly womb

  Came forth in blameless bloom.

  We have no word, as had those men most high,

  To call a baby by.

  Rose, ruby, lily, pearl of stormless seas —

  A better word than these,

  A better sign it was than flower or gem

  That love revealed to them:

  They knew that whence comes light or quickening flame,

  Thence only this thing came,

  And only might be likened of our love

  To somewhat born above,

  Not even to sweetest things dropped else on earth,

  Only to dew’s own birth.

  Nor doubt we but their sense was heavenly true,

  Babe, when we gaze on you,

  A dew-drop out of heaven whose colours are

  More bright than sun or star,

  As now, ere watching love dare fear or hope,

  Lips, hands, and eyelids ope,

  And all your life is mixed with earthly leaven.

  O child, what news from heaven?

  TWINS

  AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED TO W. M. R. AND L. R.

  April, on whose wings

  Ride all gracious things,

  Like the star that brings


  All things good to man,

  Ere his light, that yet

  Makes the month shine, set,

  And fair May forget

  Whence her birth began,

  Brings, as heart would choose,

  Sound of golden news,

  Bright as kindling dews

  When the dawn begins;

  Tidings clear as mirth,

  Sweet as air and earth

  Now that hail the birth,

  Twice thus blest, of twins.

  In the lovely land

  Where with hand in hand

  Lovers wedded stand

  Other joys before

  Made your mixed life sweet:

  Now, as Time sees meet,

  Three glad blossoms greet

  Two glad blossoms more.

  Fed with sun and dew,

  While your joys were new,

  First arose and grew

  One bright olive-shoot:

  Then a fair and fine

  Slip of warm-haired pine

  Felt the sweet sun shine

  On its leaf and fruit.

  And it wore for mark

  Graven on the dark

  Beauty of its bark

  That the noblest name

  Worn in song of old

  By the king whose bold

  Hand had fast in hold

  All the flower of fame.

  Then, with southern skies

  Flattered in her eyes,

  Which, in lovelier wise

  Yet, reflect their blue

  Brightened more, being bright

  Here with life’s delight,

  And with love’s live light

  Glorified anew,

  Came, as fair as came

  One who bore her name

  (She that broke as flame

  From the swan-shell white),

  Crowned with tender hair

  Only, but more fair

  Than all queens that were

  Themes of oldworld fight,

  Of your flowers the third

 

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