trace behind!
Back to confession at thy mother’s knee,
Back to the question and the childlike mind!
Then start afresh, but toward unending end,
The goal o’er which hangs thy own star all night;
So shalt thou need no footprints to befriend,
Child-heart and shining star will guide thee right.
Tell Me
“Traveller, what lies over the hill?
Traveller, tell to me:
Tip-toe-high on the window-sill
Over I cannot see.”
“My child, a valley green lies there,
Lovely with trees, and shy;
And a tiny brook that says, ‘Take care,
Or I’ll drown you by and by!’ ”
“And what comes next?”—“A little town,
And a towering hill again;
More hills and valleys up and down,
And a river now and then.”
“And what comes next?”—“A lonely moor
Without one beaten way,
And slow clouds drifting dull before
A wind that will not stay.”
“And then?”—“Dark rocks and yellow sand,
Blue sea and a moaning tide.”
“And then?”—“More sea, and then more land,
With rivers deep and wide.”
“And then?”—“Oh, rock and mountain and vale,
Ocean and shores and men,
Over and over, a weary tale,
And round to your home again!”
“And is that all? From day to day,
Like one with a long chain bound,
Should I walk and walk and not get away,
But go always round and round?”
“No, no; I have not told you the best,
I have not told you the end:
If you want to escape, away in the west
You will see a stair ascend,
“Built of all colours of lovely stones,
A stair up into the sky
Where no one is weary, and no one moans,
Or wishes to be laid by.”
“Is it far away?”—“I do not know:
You must fix your eyes thereon,
And travel, travel through thunder and snow,
Till the weary way is gone.
“All day, though you never see it shine,
You must travel nor turn aside,
All night you must keep as straight a line
Through moonbeams or darkness wide.”
“When I am older!”—“Nay, not so!”
“I have hardly opened my eyes!”
“He who to the old sunset would go,
Starts best with the young sunrise.”
“Is the stair right up? is it very steep?”
“Too steep for you to climb;
You must lie at the foot of the glorious heap
And patient wait your time.”
“How long?”—“Nay, that I cannot tell.”
“In wind, and rain, and frost?”
“It may be so; and it is well
That you should count the cost.
“Pilgrims from near and from distant lands
Will step on you lying there;
But a wayfaring man with wounded hands
Will carry you up the stair.”
Brother Artist!
Brother artist, help me; come!
Artists are a maimed band:
I have words but not a hand;
Thou hast hands though thou art dumb.
Had I thine, when words did fail—
Vassal-words their hasting chief,
On the white awaiting leaf
Shapes of power should tell the tale.
Had I hers of music-might,
I would shake the air with storm
Till the red clouds trailed enorm
Boreal dances through the night.
Had I his whose foresight rare
Piles the stones with lordliest art,
From the quarry of my heart
Love should climb a heavenly stair!
Had I his whose wooing slow
Wins the marble’s hidden child,
Out in passion undefiled
Stood my Psyche, white as snow!
Maimed, a little help I pray;
Words suffice not for my end;
Let thy hand obey thy friend,
Say for me what I would say.
Draw me, on an arid plain
With hoar-headed mountains nigh,
Under a clear morning sky
Telling of a night of rain,
Huge and half-shaped, like a block
Chosen for sarcophagus
By a Pharaoh glorious,
One rude solitary rock.
Cleave it down along the ridge
With a fissure yawning deep
To the heart of the hard heap,
Like the rent of riving wedge.
Through the cleft let hands appear,
Upward pointed with pressed palms
As if raised in silent psalms
For salvation come anear.
Turn thee now—’tis almost done!—
To the near horizon’s verge:
Make the smallest arc emerge
Of the forehead of the sun.
One thing more—I ask too much!—
From a brow which hope makes brave
Sweep the shadow of the grave
With a single golden touch.
Thanks, dear painter; that is all.
If thy picture one day should
Need some words to make it good,
I am ready to thy call.
Sir Lark and King Sun
“Good morrow, my lord!” in the sky alone
Sang the lark as the sun ascended his throne.
“Shine on me, my lord: I only am come,
Of all your servants, to welcome you home!
I have shot straight up, a whole hour, I swear,
To catch the first gleam of your golden hair.”
“Must I thank you then,” said the king, “sir Lark,
For flying so high and hating the dark?
You ask a full cup for half a thirst:
Half was love of me, half love to be first.
Some of my subjects serve better my taste:
Their watching and waiting means more than your haste.”
King Sun wrapt his head in a turban of cloud;
Sir Lark stopped singing, quite vexed and cowed;
But higher he flew, for he thought, “Anon
The wrath of the king will be over and gone;
And, scattering his head-gear manifold,
He will change my brown feathers to a glory of gold!”
He flew, with the strength of a lark he flew,
But as he rose the cloud rose too;
And not one gleam of the flashing hair
Brought signal of favour across the air;
And his wings felt withered and worn and old,
For their feathers had had no chrism of gold.
Outwearied at length, and throbbing sore,
The strong sun-seeker could do no more;
He faltered and sank, then dropped like a stone
Beside his nest, where, patient, alone,
Sat his little wife on her little eggs,
Keeping them warm with wings and legs.
Did I say alone? Ah, no such thing!
There was the cloudless, the ray-crowned king!
“Welcome, sir Lark!—You look tired!” said he;
“Up is not always the best way to me:
While you have been racing my turban gray,
I have been shining where you would not stay!”
He had set a coronet round the nest;
Its radiance foamed on the wife’s little breast;
And so glorious was she in russet gold
That sir Lark for wonder and awe grew cold;
He popped his head under her wing, and lay
As still as a