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    Narrative Poems

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      And was gone in a glance; then gleaming white10

      Of cloud-castles was unclosed, and the blue

      Of bottomless heav’n, over the blowing waves

      Blessed us returning. Half blind with her speed,

      Foamy-throated, into the flash and salt

      Of the seas rising our ship ran on

      For ten days’ time. Then came a turn of luck.

      On the tenth evening too soon the light

      Over working seas went beneath the sky line,

      Darkness came dripping and the deafening storm

      Upon wild waters, wet days and long,20

      Carried us, and caverned clouds immeasurable

      Harried and hunted like a hare that ship

      Too many days. Men were weary.

      Then was a starless night when storm was worst,

      The man of my mates whom most I loved

      Cried ‘Lost!’ and then he leaped. Alive no more

      Nor dead either the dear-loved face

      Was seen. But soon, after his strange going,

      Worse than the weathers, came the word shouted,

      ‘Breakers ahead of us’, and out of black darkness,30

      Hell-white, appeared horrid torment

      Of water at the walls of a wild country.

      The cliffs were high, cluttered with splinters

      Of basalt at the base, bare-toothed. We found

      Sea-room too small; we must split for sure,

      And I heeded not the helm. Their hearts broke there,

      The men I loved. Mad-faced they ran

      All ways at once, till the waves swallowed

      Many a smart seaman. Myself, I leaped

      And wondered as I went what-like was death,40

      Before the cold clasped me. But there came a sea

      Lifting from under me, so large a wave

      That far above the foam of the first rock-shelves

      It bore me, and far above the spray,

      Upward, upward, into the air’s region,

      Beyond the cliffs into a yawning dark.

      Other echoes, earthlier sounding,

      In closer space, shut out the clamourous waves.

      Then backward drawn with a babble of stones,

      Softly sounding, in its spent fury,50

      A dull, dragging, withdrawing sigh,

      That wave returned into the wastes, its home,

      And would have sucked me back as I sank wearied,

      But that there was grass growing where I gripped the land,

      And roots all rough: so that I wrestled, clinging,

      Against the water’s tug. The wave left me,

      And I grovelled on the ground, greatly wearied.

      How long I lay, lapped in my weariness,

      Memory minds not. To me it seems

      That for one full turn of the wheels above60

      I slept. Certainly when the sleep left me

      There was calm and cool. No crashing of the sea,

      But darkness all about. Dim-shadowed leaves

      In mildest air moved above me,

      And, over all, earth-scented smell

      Sweetly stealing about the sea-worn man,

      And faintly, as afar, fresh-water sounds,

      Runnings and ripplings upon rocky stairs

      Where moss grows most. Amidst it came,

      Unearthly sweet, out of the air it seemed,70

      A voice singing to the vibrant string,

      ‘Forget the grief upon the great water,

      Card and compass and the cruel rain.

      Leave that labour; lilies in the green wood

      Toil not, toil not. Trouble were to weave them

      Coats that come to them without care or toil.

      Seek not the seas again; safer is the green wood,

      Lilies that live there have labour not at all,

      Spin not, spin not. Spent in vain the trouble were

      Beauty to bring them that better comes by kind.’80

      Then I started up and stood, staring in the darkness,

      After the closing strain. The clouds parted

      Suddenly. The seemly, slow-gliding moon

      Swam, as it were in shallows, of the silver cloud,

      Out into the open, and with orb’d splendour

      She gleamed upon the groves of a great forest.

      There were trees taller than the topmost spire

      Of some brave minster, a bishop’s seat;

      There very roots so vast that in

      Their mossy caves a man could hide90

      Under their gnarl’d windings. And nearer hand

      Ferns fathoms high. Flowers tall like trees,

      Trees bright like flowers: trouble it is to me

      To remember much of that mixed sweetness

      The smell and the sight and the swaying plumes

      Green and growing, all the gross riches,

      Waste fecundity of a wanton earth,1

      —Gentle is the genius of that juicy wood,—

      Insatiable the soil. There stood, breast high,

      In flowery foam, under the flame of moon,100

      One not far off, nobly fashioned.

      Her beauty burned in my blood, that, as a fool,

      Falling before her at her feet I prayed,

      Dreaming of druery, and with many a dear craving

      Wooed the woman under the wild forest.

      She laughed when I told my love-business,

      Witch-hearted queen. ‘A worthy thing,

      Traveller, truly, my troth to plight

      With the sea villain that smells of tar

      Horny-handed, and hairy-cheeked.’110

      Then I rose wrathfully; would have ravished the witch

      In her empty isle, under that orb’d splendour.

      But she laughed louder, and a little way

      She went back, beckoning with brows and eyes.

      Like to2 lilies, when she loosed her robe

      Under broad3 moonshine, her breasts appeared,

      No maiden’s breasts, but with milk swelling,

      Like Rhea unrobed, rich in offspring.

      Her sign was not sent to the sea-wanderer:

      Others answered. From the arch’d forest120

      Beasts came baying: the bearded ape,

      The lion, the lamb, the long-sided,

      Padding panther, and the purring cat,

      The snake sliding, and the stepping horse,

      Busy beaver, and the bear jog-trot,

      The scurrying rat, and the squirrel leaping

      On the branch above. Those beasts came all.

      She grudged no grace to those grim ones. I

      Saw how she suckled at her sweet fountains

      The tribes that go dumb. Teeth she feared not,130

      Her nipple was not denied to the nosing worm.

      I thought also that out of the thick foliage

      I saw the branches bend towards her breast, thirsting,

      Creepers climbing and the cups of flowers

      Upward opening—all things that lived,

      As for sap, sucking at her sweet fountains.

      And as the wood milked her, witch-hearted queen,

      I saw that she smiled, softly murmuring

      As if she hushed a child. How long it was

      These marvels stood, memory holds not,140

      —All was gone in a glance. Under the green forest

      We two were alone, as from trance wakened.

      She was far fairer than at the first seeing.

      Then she struck the string and sang clearly

      Another lay. Earth stood silent.

      ‘You are too young in years. My yesterdays,

      Left behind me, are a longer tale

      Than your histories hold. Far hence she lies

      Who would learn gladlier of your love-business.

      Woven in wizardry, wearily she lingers,150

      Stiller and stiller, with the stone in her heart,

      Crying; so cruelly creeps the bitter change on her,

      —Happy the head is that shall ha
    rbour in that breast—

      My dear daughter, that dieth away,

      In the enchanter’s chain. Who chooses best

      Will adventure his life and advance far on

      Into the cruel country. If he comes again

      Bringing that beautiful one, out of bonds redeemed,

      He shall win for reward a winsome love.’

      ‘This quarrel and quest, Queen,’ I answered,160

      ‘I will undertake though I earn my death

      At the wizard’s wiles. But of the way thither,

      The councils, and the kind, of the crafty man,

      Tell me truly.’ When she turned her face

      Her teeth glittered. She tossed her head,

      Nostrils widened, as a noble dame

      In scorn, scoffing, at a shameful thing4—

      ‘Eastward in the island the old one stands

      Working wonders in the woful shade

      Of a grim garden that is growing there170

      Newly planted. That was the navel once

      Of a sweet country, stol’n now from me,

      Where he would be called a king. But he is cold at heart

      And he has wrought ruin in those rich pleasances,

      He has felled forests, put to flight my beasts,

      Chaining with enchantment many a changeful stream,

      Putting into prison all that his power reaches;

      Life is loathsome to 5 that lord; and joy,

      Abomination; and the bed of love

      Eggs him with envy—outcast himself,180

      An old, ugly, ice-hearted wraith.

      If I saw shaking the skin upon his throat,

      Or the rheum dropping from his red eyelids,

      Or his tongue mumbling in the toothless gums,

      By loathing I should lose my life. Strong thief!

      Once amid these waters, well was my country,

      Living lonely in my land, a queen.

      Truly, I cannot tell of a time before

      I was ruling this realm. I am its right lady.

      Ages after, that other came190

      Out of the ocean in an hour of storm,

      Humble and homeless. At my hearth, kneeling,

      Sweetly he besought me to save his life,

      And grant him ground where he might grow his bread.

      All that he asked for, ill-starred I gave,

      Pleased with pity, that I have paid dearly,

      And easily won. But for each acre

      That my bounty gave to the beggar, soon

      He stole a second, till as a strong tyrant

      He holds in his hand one half the land.200

      My flute he has stolen. Flowers loved it well

      And rose upright at the ripple of the note

      Sound-drenched, as if they drank,6 after drought, sweet rain.

      Grass was the greener for it, as at grey evening

      After the sun’s setting of a summer day,

      When dusk comes near, and the dropping, crushed

      Stalks stand once more in the still twilight.

      That reed of delight he ravished away,

      Stole it stealthily. In a strange prison

      It lies unloved; and of my life one half210

      With the flute followed, and I am faded now,

      Mute the music. But a mightier woe

      Followed the first one; with his fine weavings,

      Cobwebby, clinging, and his cruel, thin

      Enchanter’s chains, he has charmed away

      My only child out of my own country,

      Into the grim garden, and will give her to drink

      Heart-changing draughts.7 He that tastes of them

      Shall stand, a stone, till the stars crumble.

      Of that drug drink not, lest, in his danger caught,220

      Moveless as marble thou remain. But take

      This sword, seaman, and strike off his head.

      Hasten, if haply, ere his hard threatenings

      Or his lies’ labyrinth, lapped about her,

      Have driven her to drink that draught, in time,

      You may redeem my dear.’

      Dawn was round me,

      Cool and coloured, and there came a breeze

      Brushing the grasses. Birds were chattering.

      There was I only in the empty wood,230

      The woman away. One time I thought

      It was a dream’s burden; but, amid the dews sprinkled

      At my feet, flashing, that fallow sword

      Lay to my liking. Lingeringly I weighed it,

      Bright and balanced. That was the best weapon

      That ever I owned. I ate in that place

      My full upon the fruits the forest bore.

      Then, among still shadows, slow-paced I went

      Always eastward into the arch’d forest.

      It was at the fifth furlong, forth I issued240

      From the dreaming wood into a down country.

      All the island opened like a picture

      Before my feet. Far-off the hills,

      Long and limber, as it were lean greyhounds,

      With level chines, lay beneath the sunrise.

      Chalk made them pale. Never a church nor a rick

      Nor smoke, nor the smell of a small homestead,

      Rose upon the ridges. The rolling land

      Climbed to the eastward—there was the clearest sky—

      Heaving ever hillward, until high moorland250

      Shut off my seeing. The sorcerer’s home,

      My goal, was there as I guessed. Thither

      I held my way and my heart lightened.

      Over hedge, over ditch, over high, over low,

      By waters and woods I went and ran,

      And swung the sword as I swung my legs.

      Laughing loudly, alone I walked,

      Till many a mile was marched away.

      Half-way in heav’n to his highest throne

      The gold sun glittering had gained above,260

      When I looked and lo!, in the long grasses

      By a brook’s margin a bright thing lay,

      Reflecting the flame of floating sun,

      Drawing my glances. As in danger, aside

      I swerved in my step: a serpent I thought

      Basking its belly in the bright morning

      Lay there below me. But when I looked again,

      Lo it never moved. Nearer gazing,

      I found it was a flute, fashioned delicately,

      Purely golden. When I picked it up270

      I could make with my mouth no music at all

      And with my five fingers, failing always

      Whatever tune I tried, testing that instrument.

      Almost, in anger—for it irked me so—

      I had flung the flute among the flowers and grass,

      Let it lie there by the lapping stream.

      Presently I put it in the pouch I bear

      Set on my shoulder. It was my second thoughts.

      Over hedge, over ditch, over high, over low,

      By waters and woods I went and ran,280

      And swung the sword as I swung my legs.

      Laughing loudly, alone I walked,

      Till many a mile was marched away.

      Bright above me on the bridge of noon

      Sun was standing, shadows dwindled,

      Heat was hovering in a haze that danced

      Upon rocks about my road. I raised my eyes.

      On the green bosom of a8 grassy hill,

      White, like wethers, in a wide circle,

      Stones were standing; as on Salisbury Plain290

      Where wild men made for the worshipt sun

      That old altar. On thither I went

      Marching right among them. Man-shaped they were,

      Now that I was nearer and could know their kind,

      —Awful images, as it were an earlier race,

      Nearer neighbours of the noble gods,

      They were so quiet and cold. Kingly faces

      There hushed my heart from its hard knockings.

      As I walked, wondering, in
    their wide consistory,

      Through and through them, for the throng was great,300

      Fear stopped my breath. I found sitting

      Lonely among the lifeless, but alive, a man,

      His head hanging, and his hands were clasped,

      His arms knotted, and from his eyes there came,

      Sadly, without ceasing, slow tears and large.

      Hunched and hairy was his whole body,

      Durned and dwindled. Dwarflike he seemed,

      But his ears bigger than any other man’s.

      He was grubby as if he had grown from the ground, plantlike,

      Big of belly, and with bandy legs.310

      Shrublike his shape, shocked-headed too,

      As if a great gooseberry could go upon legs,

      Or a mangel be a man. Amazed, I spoke.

      ‘What little wight then, weeping among the stonemen,

      Lives alone here? What is the load of care

      That has dwelled in you, dwarf, and dwined you thus?’

      Then the little man lifted up his eyebrows

      And he spoke sadly. ‘Sorrow it is to me

      To remember my mates. Men they were born

      Who are now stone-silenced in this circle here,320

      By wizard’s wand. Once they beat me,

      Captain kicked me, and cook also,

      Bosun boxed me on both my ears,

      Cabin-boy, carpenter—all the crew of the Well Away—

      Before they fell—she foundered here—

      Into the wizard’s hand. He worked them into stone,

      That they move no more, on the main or on the shore.

      Able seaman of old were they all,

      Ranting and roaring when the rum was in

      Like true British sailors. Trouble it is to me330

      To remember my mates—the men that they were!

      I shall not meet their match. When the mate was drunk

      It took all ten of their toughest men

      In a strange seaport to shut him up.

      Now they are stones, standing. He stopped their life,

      Made them into marble, and of more beauty,

      Fairer faces, and their form nobler,

      Proud and princely. But the price was death.

      They have bought beauty. That broke my heart.’

      ‘I am an enemy to that old sorcerer,340

      Dwarf,’ I answered. ‘Dwelling in the greenwood

      Where the waves westward wash the sea-cliff,

      I found, fairest of all flesh, the Queen

      Who should rule this realm, for she is its right lady.

      I am sent on her side. I shall save the land

      From the enchanter’s chain; so my charge bids me.

      Lead me loyally where that lord dwelleth

      In his ill garden, ice-hearted man.’

      The dwarf answered ‘She who dwells in the wood

      Is the second fear in this strange country.350

      She has a wand also, that woman there;

     


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