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 145

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  They spat on the name they despised and adored as a sign and a spell.

  “Lord Christ, thou art God, and a liar: they were children of wrath, not of grace,

  Unbaptized, unredeemed from the fire they were born for, who smiled in thy face.”

  Of such is the kingdom — he said it — of heaven: and the heavenly word

  Shall live when religion is dead, and when falsehood is dumb shall be heard.

  And the message of James and of John was as Christ’s and as love’s own call:

  But wrath passed sentence thereon when Annas replied in Paul.

  The dark old God who had slain him grew one with the Christ he slew,

  And poison was rank in the grain that with growth of his gospel grew.

  And the blackness of darkness brightened: and red in the heart of the flame

  Shone down, as a blessing that lightened, the curse of a new God’s name.

  Through centuries of burning and trembling belief as a signal it shone,

  Till man, soul-sick of dissembling, bade fear and her frauds begone.

  God Cerberus yelps from his throats triune: but his day, which was night,

  Is quenched, with its stars and the notes of its night-birds, in silence and light.

  The flames of its fires and the psalms of their psalmists are darkened and dumb:

  Strong winter has withered the palms of his angels, and stricken them numb.

  God, father of lies, God, son of perdition, God, spirit of ill,

  Thy will that for ages was done is undone as a dead God’s will.

  Not Mahomet’s sword could slay thee, nor Borgia’s or Calvin’s praise:

  But the scales of the spirit that weigh thee are weighted with truth, and it slays.

  The song of the day of thy fury, when nature and death shall quail,

  Rings now as the thunders of Jewry, the ghost of a dead world’s tale.

  That day and its doom foreseen and foreshadowed on earth, when thou,

  Lord God, wast lord of the keen dark season, are sport for us now.

  Thy claws were clipped and thy fangs plucked out by the hands that slew

  Men, lovers of man, whose pangs bore witness if truth were true.

  Man crucified rose again from the sepulchre builded to be

  No grave for the souls of the men who denied thee, but, Lord, for thee.

  When Bruno’s spirit aspired from the flames that thy servants fed,

  The spirit of faith was fired to consume thee and leave thee dead.

  When the light of the sunlike eyes whence laughter lightened and flamed

  Bade France and the world be wise, faith saw thee naked and shamed.

  When wisdom deeper and sweeter than Rabelais veiled and revealed

  Found utterance diviner and meeter for truth whence anguish is healed,

  Whence fear and hate and belief in thee, fed by thy grace from above,

  Fall stricken, and utmost grief takes light from the lustre of love,

  When Shakespeare shone into birth, and the world he beheld grew bright,

  Thy kingdom was ended on earth, and the darkness it shed was light.

  In him all truth and the glory thereof and the power and the pride,

  The song of the soul and her story, bore witness that fear had lied.

  All hope, all wonder, all trust, all doubt that knows not of fear,

  The love of the body, the lust of the spirit to see and to hear,

  All womanhood, fairer than love could conceive or desire or adore,

  All manhood, radiant above all heights that it held of yore,

  Lived by the life of his breath, with the speech of his soul’s will spake,

  And the light lit darkness to death whence never the dead shall wake.

  For the light that lived in the sound of the song of his speech was one

  With the light of the wisdom that found earth’s tune in the song of the sun;

  His word with the word of the lord most high of us all on earth,

  Whose soul was a lyre and a sword, whose death was a deathless birth.

  Him too we praise as we praise our own who as he stand strong;

  Him, Æschylus, ancient of days, whose word is the perfect song.

  When Caucasus showed to the sun and the sea what a God could endure,

  When wisdom and light were one, and the hands of the matricide pure,

  A song too subtle for psalmist or prophet of Jewry to know,

  Elate and profound as the calmest or stormiest of waters that flow,

  A word whose echoes were wonder and music of fears overcome,

  Bade Sinai bow, and the thunder of godhead on Horeb be dumb.

  The childless children of night, strong daughters of doom and dread,

  The thoughts and the fears that smite the soul, and its life lies dead,

  Stood still and were quelled by the sound of his word and the light of his thought,

  And the God that in man lay bound was unbound from the bonds he had wrought.

  Dark fear of a lord more dark than the dreams of his worshippers knew

  Fell dead, and the corpse lay stark in the sunlight of truth shown true.

  VII

  Time, and truth his child, though terror set earth and heaven at odds,

  See the light of manhood rise on the twilight of the Gods.

  Light is here for souls to see, though the stars of faith be dead:

  All the sea that yearned and trembled receives the sun instead.

  All the shadows on the spirit when fears and dreams were strong,

  All perdition, all redemption, blind rain-stars watched so long,

  Love whose root was fear, thanksgiving that cowered beneath the rod,

  Feel the light that heals and withers: night weeps upon her God.

  All the names wherein the incarnate Lord lived his day and died

  Fade from suns to stars, from stars into darkness undescried.

  Christ the man lives yet, remembered of man as dreams that leave

  Light on eyes that wake and know not if memory bid them grieve.

  Fire sublime as lightning shines, and exults in thunder yet,

  Where the battle wields the name and the sword of Mahomet.

  Far above all wars and gospels, all ebb and flow of time,

  Lives the soul that speaks in silence, and makes mute earth sublime.

  Still for her, though years and ages be blinded and bedinned,

  Mazed with lightnings, crazed with thunders, life rides and guides the wind.

  Death may live or death may die, and the truth be light or night:

  Not for gain of heaven may man put away the rule of right.

  A NEW YEAR’S EVE

  CHRISTINA ROSSETTI DIED DECEMBER 29, 1894

  The stars are strong in the deeps of the lustrous night,

  Cold and splendid as death if his dawn be bright;

  Cold as the cast-off garb that is cold as clay,

  Splendid and strong as a spirit intense as light.

  A soul more sweet than the morning of new-born May

  Has passed with the year that has passed from the world away.

  A song more sweet than the morning’s first-born song

  Again will hymn not among us a new year’s day.

  Not here, not here shall the carol of joy grown strong

  Ring rapture now, and uplift us, a spell-struck throng,

  From dream to vision of life that the soul may see

  By death’s grace only, if death do its trust no wrong.

  Scarce yet the days and the starry nights are three

  Since here among us a spirit abode as we,

  Girt round with life that is fettered in bonds of time,

  And clasped with darkness about as is earth with sea.

  And now, more high than the vision of souls may climb,

  The soul whose song was as music of stars that chime,

  Clothed round with life as of dawn and the mounting sun,
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  Sings, and we know not here of the song sublime.

  No word is ours of it now that the songs are done

  Whence here we drank of delight as in freedom won,

  In deep deliverance given from the bonds we bore.

  There is none to sing as she sang upon earth, not one.

  We heard awhile: and for us who shall hear no more

  The sound as of waves of light on a starry shore

  Awhile bade brighten and yearn as a father’s face

  The face of death, divine as in days of yore.

  The grey gloom quickened and quivered: the sunless place

  Thrilled, and the silence deeper than time or space

  Seemed now not all everlasting. Hope grew strong,

  And love took comfort, given of the sweet song’s grace.

  Love that finds not on earth, where it finds but wrong,

  Love that bears not the bondage of years in throng

  Shone to show for her, higher than the years that mar,

  The life she looked and longed for as love must long.

  Who knows? We know not. Afar, if the dead be far,

  Alive, if the dead be alive as the soul’s works are,

  The soul whose breath was among us a heavenward song

  Sings, loves, and shines as it shines for us here a star.

  IN A ROSARY

  Through the low grey archway children’s feet that pass

  Quicken, glad to find the sweetest haunt of all.

  Brightest wildflowers gleaming deep in lustiest grass,

  Glorious weeds that glisten through the green sea’s glass,

  Match not now this marvel, born to fade and fall.

  Roses like a rainbow wrought of roses rise

  Right and left and forward, shining toward the sun.

  Nay, the rainbow lit of sunshine droops and dies

  Ere we dream it hallows earth and seas and skies;

  Ere delight may dream it lives, its life is done.

  Round the border hemmed with high deep hedges round

  Go the children, peering over or between

  Where the dense bright oval wall of box inwound,

  Reared about the roses fast within it bound,

  Gives them grace to glance at glories else unseen.

  Flower outlightening flower and tree outflowering tree

  Feed and fill the sense and spirit full with joy.

  Nought awhile they know of outer earth and sea:

  Here enough of joy it is to breathe and be:

  Here the sense of life is one for girl and boy.

  Heaven above them, bright as children’s eyes or dreams,

  Earth about them, sweet as glad soft sleep can show

  Earth and sky and sea, a world that scarcely seems

  Even in children’s eyes less fair than life that gleams

  Through the sleep that none but sinless eyes may know.

  Near beneath, and near above, the terraced ways

  Wind or stretch and bask or blink against the sun.

  Hidden here from sight on soft or stormy days

  Lies and laughs with love toward heaven, at silent gaze,

  All the radiant rosary — all its flowers made one.

  All the multitude of roses towering round

  Dawn and noon and night behold as one full flower,

  Fain of heaven and loved of heaven, curbed and crowned,

  Raised and reared to make this plot of earthly ground

  Heavenly, could but heaven endure on earth an hour.

  Swept away, made nothing now for ever, dead,

  Still the rosary lives and shines on memory, free

  Now from fear of death or change as childhood, fled

  Years on years before its last live leaves were shed:

  None may mar it now, as none may stain the sea.

  THE HIGH OAKS

  BARKING HALL, JULY 19TH, 1896

  Fourscore years and seven

  Light and dew from heaven

  Have fallen with dawn on these glad woods each day

  Since here was born, even here,

  A birth more bright and dear

  Than ever a younger year

  Hath seen or shall till all these pass away,

  Even all the imperious pride of these,

  The woodland ways majestic now with towers of trees.

  Love itself hath nought

  Touched of tenderest thought

  With holiest hallowing of memorial grace

  For memory, blind with bliss,

  To love, to clasp, to kiss,

  So sweetly strange as this,

  The sense that here the sun first hailed her face,

  A babe at Her glad mother’s breast,

  And here again beholds it more beloved and blest.

  Love’s own heart, a living

  Spring of strong thanksgiving,

  Can bid no strength of welling song find way

  When all the soul would seek

  One word for joy to speak,

  And even its strength makes weak

  The too strong yearning of the soul to say

  What may not be conceived or said

  While darkness makes division of the quick and dead.

  Haply, where the sun

  Wanes, and death is none,

  The word known here of silence only, held

  Too dear for speech to wrong,

  May leap in living song

  Forth, and the speech be strong

  As here the silence whence it yearned and welled

  From hearts whose utterance love sealed fast

  Till death perchance might give it grace to live at last.

  Here we have our earth

  Yet, with all the mirth

  Of all the summers since the world began,

  All strengths of rest and strife

  And love-lit love of life

  Where death has birth to wife,

  And where the sun speaks, and is heard of man:

  Yea, half the sun’s bright speech is heard,

  And like the sea the soul of man gives back his word.

  Earth’s enkindled heart

  Bears benignant part

  In the ardent heaven’s auroral pride of prime:

  If ever home on earth

  Were found of heaven’s grace worth

  So God-beloved a birth

  As here makes bright the fostering face of time,

  Here, heaven bears witness, might such grace

  Fall fragrant as the dewfall on that brightening face.

  Here, for mine and me,

  All that eyes may see

  Hath more than all the wide world else of good,

  All nature else of fair:

  Here as none otherwhere

  Heaven is the circling air,

  Heaven is the homestead, heaven the wold, the wood:

  The fragrance with the shadow spread

  From broadening wings of cedars breathes of dawn’s bright bed.

  Once a dawn rose here

  More divine and dear,

  Rose on a birth-bed brighter far than dawn’s,

  Whence all the summer grew

  Sweet as when earth was new

  And pure as Eden’s dew:

  And yet its light lives on these lustrous lawns,

  Clings round these wildwood ways, and cleaves

  To the aisles of shadow and sun that wind unweaves and weaves.

  Thoughts that smile and weep,

  Dreams that hallow sleep,

  Brood in the branching shadows of the trees,

  Tall trees at agelong rest

  Wherein the centuries nest,

  Whence, blest as these are blest,

  We part, and part not from delight in these;

  Whose comfort, sleeping as awake,

  We bear about within us as when first it spake.

  Comfort as of song

  Grown with time more strong,

  Made perfect and prophetic as the
sea,

  Whose message, when it lies

  Far off our hungering eyes,

  Within us prophesies

  Of life not ours, yet ours as theirs may be

  Whose souls far off us shine and sing

  As ere they sprang back sunward, swift as fire might spring.

  All this oldworld pleasance

  Hails a hallowing presence,

  And thrills with sense of more than summer near,

  And lifts toward heaven more high

  The song-surpassing cry

  Of rapture that July

  Lives, for her love who makes it loveliest here;

  For joy that she who here first drew

  The breath of life she gave me breathes it here anew.

  Never birthday born

  Highest in height of morn

  Whereout the star looks forth that leads the sun

  Shone higher in love’s account,

  Still seeing the mid noon mount

  From the eager dayspring’s fount

  Each year more lustrous, each like all in one;

  Whose light around us and above

  We could not see so lovely save by grace of love.

  BARKING HALL: A YEAR AFTER

  Still the sovereign trees

  Make the sundawn’s breeze

  More bright, more sweet, more heavenly than it rose,

  As wind and sun fulfil

  Their living rapture: still

  Noon, dawn, and evening thrill

  With radiant change the immeasurable repose

  Wherewith the woodland wilds lie blest

  And feel how storms and centuries rock them still to rest.

  Still the love-lit place

  Given of God such grace

  That here was born on earth a birth divine

  Gives thanks with all its flowers

  Through all their lustrous hours,

  From all its birds and bowers

  Gives thanks that here they felt her sunset shine

  Where once her sunrise laughed, and bade

  The life of all the living things it lit be glad.

  Soft as light and strong

  Rises yet their song

 

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