PULVIS ET UMBRA

There is dust upon my fingers,

Pale gray dust of beaten wings,

Where a great moth came and settled

From the night's blown winnowings.

Harvest with her low red planets

Wheeling over Arrochar;

And the lonely hopeless calling

Of the bell-buoy on the bar,

Where the sea with her old secret

Moves in sleep and cannot rest.

From that dark beyond my doorway,

Silent the unbidden guest

Came and tarried, fearless, gentle,

Vagrant of the starlit gloom,

One frail waif of beauty fronting

Immortality and doom;

Through the chambers of the twilight

Roaming from the vast outland,

Resting for a thousand heart-beats

In the hollow of my hand.

"Did the volley of a thrush-song

Lodge among some leaves and dew

Hillward, then across the gloaming

This dark mottled thing was you?

"Or is my mute guest whose coming

So unheralded befell

From the border wilds of dreamland,

Only whimsy Ariel,

"Gleaning with the wind, in furrows

Lonelier than dawn to reap,

Dust and shadow and forgetting,

Frost and reverie and sleep?

"In the hush when Cleopatra

Felt the darkness reel and cease,

Was thy soul a wan blue lotus

Laid upon her lips for peace?

"And through all the years that wayward

Passion in one mortal breath,

Making thee a thing of silence,

Made thee as the lords of death?

"Or did goblin men contrive thee

In the forges of the hills

Out of thistle-drift and sundown

Lost amid their tawny rills,

"Every atom on their anvil

Beaten fine and bolted home,

Every quiver wrought to cadence

From the rapture of a gnome?

"Then the lonely mountain wood-wind,

Straying up from dale to dale,

Gave thee spirit, free forever,

Thou immortal and so frail!

"Surely thou art not that sun-bright

Psyche, hoar with age, and hurled

On the northern shore of Lethe,

To this wan Auroral world!

"Ghost of Psyche, uncompanioned,

Are the yester-years all done?

Have the oars of Charon ferried

All thy playmates from the sun?

"In thy wings the beat and breathing

Of the wind of life abides,

And the night whose sea-gray cohorts

Swing the stars up with the tides.

"Did they once make sail and wander

Through the trembling harvest sky,

Where the silent Northern streamers

Change and rest not till they die?

"Or from clouds that tent and people

The blue firmamental waste,

Did they learn the noiseless secret

Of eternity's unhaste?

"Where learned they to rove and loiter,

By the margin of what sea?

Was it with outworn Demeter,

Searching for Persephone?

"Or did that girl-queen behold thee

In the fields of moveless air?

Did these wings which break no whisper

Brush the poppies in her hair?

"Is it thence they wear the pulvil—

Ash of ruined days and sleep,

And the two great orbs of splendid

Melting sable deep on deep!

"Pilot of the shadow people,

Steering whither by what star

Hast thou come to hapless port here,

Thou gray ghost of Arrochar?"

For man walks the world with mourning

Down to death, and leaves no trace,

With the dust upon his forehead,

And the shadow in his face.

Pillared dust and fleeing shadow

As the roadside wind goes by,

And the fourscore years that vanish

In the twinkling of an eye.

Beauty, the fine frosty trace-work

Of some breath upon the pane;

Spirit, the keen wintry moonlight

Flashed thereon to fade again.

Beauty, the white clouds a-building

When God said and it was done;

Spirit, the sheer brooding rapture

Where no mid-day brooks no sun.

So. And here, the open casement

Where my fellow-mate goes free;

Eastward, the untrodden star-road

And the long wind on the sea.

What's to hinder but I follow

This my gypsy guide afar,

When the bugle rouses slumber

Sounding taps on Arrochar?

"Where, my brother, wends the by-way,

To what bourne beneath what sun,

Thou and I are set to travel

Till the shifting dream be done?

"Comrade of the dusk, forever

I pursue the endless way

Of the dust and shadew kindred,

Thou art perfect for a day.

"Yet from beauty marred and broken,

Joy and memory and tears,

I shall crush the clearer honey

In the harvest of the years.

"Thou art faultless as a flower

Wrought of sun and wind and snow,

I survive the fault and failure.

The wise Fates will have it so.

"For man walks the world in twilight,

But the morn shall wipe all trace

Of the dust from off his forehead,

And the shadow from his face.

"Cheer thee on, my tidings-bearer!

All the valor of the North

Mounts as soul from flesh escaping

Through the night, and bids thee forth.

"Go, and when thou hast discovered

Her whose dark eyes match thy wings,

Bid that lyric heart beat lighter

For the joy thy beauty brings."

Then I leaned far out and lifted

My light guest up, and bade speed

On the trail where no one tarries

That wayfarer few will heed.

Pale gray dust upon my fingers;

And from this my cabined room

The white soul of eager message

Racing seaward in the gloom.

Far off shore, the sweet low calling

Of the bell-buoy on the bar,

Warning night of dawn and ruin

Lonelily on Arrochar.