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 146

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  And thrills with pride the cedar-crested lawn

  And every brooding dove.

  But she, beloved above

  All utterance known of love,

  Abides no more the change of night and dawn,

  Beholds no more with earth-born eye

  These woods that watched her waking here where all things die.

  Not the light that shone

  When she looked thereon

  Shines on them or shall shine for ever here.

  We know not, save when sleep

  Slays death, who fain would keep

  His mystery dense and deep,

  Where shines the smile we held and hold so dear.

  Dreams only, thrilled and filled with love,

  Bring back its light ere dawn leave nought alive above.

  Nought alive awake

  Sees the strong dawn break

  On all the dreams that dying night bade live.

  Yet scarce the intolerant sense

  Of day’s harsh evidence

  How came their word and whence

  Strikes dumb the song of thanks it bids them give,

  The joy that answers as it heard

  And lightens as it saw the light that spake the word.

  Night and sleep and dawn

  Pass with dreams withdrawn:

  But higher above them far than noon may climb

  Love lives and turns to light

  The deadly noon of night.

  His fiery spirit of sight

  Endures no curb of change or darkling time.

  Even earth and transient things of earth

  Even here to him bear witness not of death but birth.

  MUSIC: AN ODE

  I

  Was it light that spake from the darkness, or music that shone from the word,

  When the night was enkindled with sound of the sun or the first-born bird?

  Souls enthralled and entrammelled in bondage of seasons that fall and rise,

  Bound fast round with the fetters of flesh, and blinded with light that dies,

  Lived not surely till music spake, and the spirit of life was heard.

  II

  Music, sister of sunrise, and herald of life to be,

  Smiled as dawn on the spirit of man, and the thrall was free.

  Slave of nature and serf of time, the bondman of life and death,

  Dumb with passionless patience that breathed but forlorn and reluctant breath,

  Heard, beheld, and his soul made answer, and communed aloud with the sea.

  III

  Morning spake, and he heard: and the passionate silent noon

  Kept for him not silence: and soft from the mounting moon

  Fell the sound of her splendour, heard as dawn’s in the breathless night,

  Not of men but of birds whose note bade man’s soul quicken and leap to light:

  And the song of it spake, and the light and the darkness of earth were as chords in tune.

  THE CENTENARY OF THE BATTLE OF THE NILE

  AUGUST 1898

  ‘Horatio Nelson — Honor est a Nilo’

  A hundred years have lightened and have waned

  Since ancient Nile by grace of Nelson gained

  A glory higher in story now than time

  Saw when his kings were gods that raged and reigned.

  The day that left even England more sublime

  And higher on heights that none but she may climb

  Abides above all shock of change-born chance

  Where hope and memory hear the stars keep chime.

  The strong and sunbright lie whose name was France

  Arose against the sun of truth, whose glance

  Laughed large from the eyes of England, fierce as fire

  Whence eyes wax blind that gaze on truth askance.

  A name above all names of heroes, higher

  Than song may sound or heart of man aspire,

  Rings as the very voice that speaks the sea

  To-day from all the sea’s enkindling lyre.

  The sound that bids the soul of silence be

  Fire, and a rapturous music, speaks, and we

  Hear what the sea’s heart utters, wide and far:

  “This was his day, and this day’s light was he.”

  O sea, our sea that hadst him for thy star,

  A hundred years that fall upon thee are

  Even as a hundred flakes of rain or snow:

  No storm of battle signs thee with a scar.

  But never more may ship that sails thee show,

  But never may the sun that loves thee know,

  But never may thine England give thee more,

  A man whose life and death shall praise thee so.

  The Nile, the sea, the battle, and the shore,

  Heard as we hear one word arise and soar,

  Beheld one name above them tower and glow —

  Nelson: a light that time bows down before.

  TRAFALGAR DAY

  Sea, that art ours as we are thine, whose name

  Is one with England’s even as light with flame,

  Dost thou as we, thy chosen of all men, know

  This day of days when death gave life to fame?

  Dost thou not kindle above and thrill below

  With rapturous record, with memorial glow,

  Remembering this thy festal day of fight,

  And all the joy it gave, and all the woe?

  Never since day broke flowerlike forth of night

  Broke such a dawn of battle. Death in sight

  Made of the man whose life was like the sun

  A man more godlike than the lord of light.

  There is none like him, and there shall be none.

  When England bears again as great a son,

  He can but follow fame where Nelson led.

  There is not and there cannot be but one.

  As earth has but one England, crown and head

  Of all her glories till the sun be dead,

  Supreme in peace and war, supreme in song,

  Supreme in freedom, since her rede was read,

  Since first the soul that gave her speech grew strong

  To help the right and heal the wild world’s wrong,

  So she hath but one royal Nelson, born

  To reign on time above the years that throng.

  The music of his name puts fear to scorn,

  And thrills our twilight through with sense of morn:

  As England was, how should not England be?

  No tempest yet has left her banner torn.

  No year has yet put out the day when he

  Who lived and died to keep our kingship free

  Wherever seas by warring winds are worn

  Died, and was one with England and the sea.

  October 21, 1895.

  CROMWELL’S STATUE

  What needs our Cromwell stone or bronze to say

  His was the light that lit on England’s way

  The sundawn of her time-compelling power,

  The noontide of her most imperial day?

  His hand won back the sea for England’s dower;

  His footfall bade the Moor change heart and cower;

  His word on Milton’s tongue spake law to France

  When Piedmont felt the she-wolf Rome devour.

  From Cromwell’s eyes the light of England’s glance

  Flashed, and bowed down the kings by grace of chance,

  The priest-anointed princes; one alone

  By grace of England held their hosts in trance.

  The enthroned Republic from her kinglier throne

  Spake, and her speech was Cromwell’s. Earth has known

  No lordlier presence. How should Cromwell stand

  With kinglets and with queenlings hewn in stone?

  Incarnate England in his warrior hand

  Smote, and as fire devours the blackening brand

  Made ashes of their strengths who wrought her wrong,

  And
turned the strongholds of her foes to sand.

  His praise is in the sea’s and Milton’s song;

  What praise could reach him from the weakling throng

  That rules by leave of tongues whose praise is shame —

  Him, who made England out of weakness strong?

  There needs no clarion’s blast of broad-blown fame

  To bid the world bear witness whence he came

  Who bade fierce Europe fawn at England’s heel

  And purged the plague of lineal rule with flame.

  There needs no witness graven on stone or steel

  For one whose work bids fame bow down and kneel;

  Our man of men, whose time-commanding name

  Speaks England, and proclaims her Commonweal.

  June 20, 1895.

  A WORD FOR THE NAVY

  I

  Queen born of the sea, that hast borne her

  The mightiest of seamen on earth,

  Bright England, whose glories adorn her

  And bid her rejoice in thy birth

  As others made mothers

  Rejoice in births sublime,

  She names thee, she claims thee,

  The lordliest child of time.

  II

  All hers is the praise of thy story,

  All thine is the love of her choice

  The light of her waves is thy glory,

  The sound of thy soul is her voice.

  They fear it who hear it

  And love not truth nor thee:

  They sicken, heart-stricken,

  Who see and would not see.

  III

  The lords of thy fate, and thy keepers

  Whose charge is the strength of thy ships,

  If now they be dreamers and sleepers,

  Or sluggards with lies at their lips,

  Thy haters and traitors,

  False friends or foes descried,

  Might scatter and shatter

  Too soon thy princely pride.

  IV

  Dark Muscovy, reptile in rancour,

  Base Germany, blatant in guile,

  Lay wait for thee riding at anchor

  On waters that whisper and smile.

  They deem thee or dream thee

  Less living now than dead,

  Deep sunken and drunken

  With sleep whence fear has fled.

  V

  And what though thy song as thine action

  Wax faint, and thy place be not known,

  While faction is grappling with faction,

  Twin curs with thy corpse for a bone?

  They care not, who spare not

  The noise of pens or throats;

  Who bluster and muster

  Blind ranks and bellowing votes.

  VI

  Let populace jangle with peerage

  And ministers shuffle their mobs;

  Mad pilots who reck not of steerage

  Though tempest ahead of them throbs.

  That throbbing and sobbing

  Of wind and gradual wave

  They hear not and fear not

  Who guide thee toward thy grave.

  VII

  No clamour of cries or of parties

  Is worth but a whisper from thee,

  While only the trust of thy heart is

  At one with the soul of the sea.

  In justice her trust is

  Whose time her tidestreams keep;

  They sink not, they shrink not,

  Time casts them not on sleep.

  VIII

  Sleep thou: for thy past was so royal,

  Love hardly would bid thee take heed

  Were Russia not faithful and loyal

  Nor Germany guiltless of greed.

  No nation, in station

  Of story less than thou,

  Re-risen from prison,

  Can stand against thee now.

  IX

  Sleep on: is the time not a season

  For strong men to slumber and sleep,

  And wise men to palter with treason?

  And that they sow tares, shall they reap?

  The wages of ages

  Wherein men smiled and slept,

  Fame fails them, shame veils them,

  Their record is not kept.

  X

  Nay, whence is it then that we know it,

  What wages were theirs, and what fame?

  Deep voices of prophet and poet

  Bear record against them of shame.

  Death, starker and darker

  Than seals the graveyard grate,

  Entombs them and dooms them

  To darkness deep as fate.

  XI

  But thou, though the world should misdoubt thee,

  Be strong as the seas at thy side;

  Bind on but thine armour about thee,

  That girds thee with power and with pride.

  Where Drake stood, where Blake stood,

  Where fame sees Nelson stand,

  Stand thou too, and now too

  Take thou thy fate in hand.

  XII

  At the gate of the sea, in the gateway,

  They stood as the guards of thy gate;

  Take now but thy strengths to thee straightway,

  Though late, we will deem it not late.

  Thy story, thy glory,

  The very soul of thee,

  It rose not, it grows not,

  It comes not save by sea.

  NORTHUMBERLAND

  Between our eastward and our westward sea

  The narrowing strand

  Clasps close the noblest shore fame holds in fee

  Even here where English birth seals all men free —

  Northumberland.

  The sea-mists meet across it when the snow

  Clothes moor and fell,

  And bid their true-born hearts who love it glow

  For joy that none less nobly born may know

  What love knows well.

  The splendour and the strength of storm and fight

  Sustain the song

  That filled our fathers’ hearts with joy to smite,

  To live, to love, to lay down life that right

  Might tread down wrong.

  They warred, they sang, they triumphed, and they passed,

  And left us glad

  Here to be born, their sons, whose hearts hold fast

  The proud old love no change can overcast,

  No chance leave sad.

  None save our northmen ever, none but we,

  Met, pledged, or fought

  Such foes and friends as Scotland and the sea

  With heart so high and equal, strong in glee

  And stern in thought.

  Thought, fed from time’s memorial springs with pride,

  Made strong as fire

  Their hearts who hurled the foe down Flodden side,

  And hers who rode the waves none else durst ride —

  None save her sire.

  O land beloved, where nought of legend’s dream

  Outshines the truth,

  Where Joyous Gard, closed round with clouds that gleam

  For them that know thee not, can scarce but seem

  Too sweet for sooth,

  Thy sons forget not, nor shall fame forget,

  The deed there done

  Before the walls whose fabled fame is yet

  A light too sweet and strong to rise and set

  With moon and sun.

  Song bright as flash of swords or oars that shine

  Through fight or foam

  Stirs yet the blood thou hast given thy sons like wine

  To hail in each bright ballad hailed as thine

  One heart, one home.

  Our Collingwood, though Nelson be not ours,

  By him shall stand

  Immortal, till those waifs of oldworld hours,

  Forgotten, leave uncrowned with bays and flowers

  Northumberland.

&n
bsp; STRATFORD-ON-AVON

  JUNE 27, 1901

  Be glad in heaven above all souls insphered,

  Most royal and most loyal born of men,

  Shakespeare, of all on earth beloved or feared

  Or worshipped, highest in sight of human ken.

  The homestead hallowed by thy sovereign birth,

  Whose name, being one with thine, stands higher than Rome,

  Forgets not how of all on English earth

  Their trust is holiest, there who have their home.

  Stratford is thine and England’s. None that hate

  The commonweal whose empire sets men free

  Find comfort there, where once by grace of fate

  A soul was born as boundless as the sea.

  If life, if love, if memory now be thine,

  Rejoice that still thy Stratford bears thy sign.

  BURNS: AN ODE

  A fire of fierce and laughing light

  That clove the shuddering heart of night

  Leapt earthward, and the thunder’s might

  That pants and yearns

  Made fitful music round its flight:

  And earth saw Burns.

  The joyous lightning found its voice

  And bade the heart of wrath rejoice

  And scorn uplift a song to voice

  The imperial hate

  That smote the God of base men’s choice

  At God’s own gate.

  Before the shrine of dawn, wherethrough

  The lark rang rapture as she flew,

  It flashed and fired the darkling dew:

  And all that heard

  With love or loathing hailed anew

  A new day’s word.

 

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