THE POET’S VISION.


BY MARY A. LATHBURY.


My Lady Lily, the waters sleep,

And the winds are among the clover;

Would I could hear the tale you told

The Poet once, till with voice of gold

Singing it over and over

He came to the court and cried, “O king,

My song of thy state and glory

Is dead on my lips! I am done with strife,

And courts, and conquests. A song of life

I have learned from a water lily.”

“Carol us then thy pretty song,

Sir Poet!” the king cried, sneering;

So standing stateliest of them all

The length of the royal banquet hall,

And flinging a look unfearing,

Full on the king and his court, who sat

Smiling in fine derision,

He sang or chanted as chants a seer

When sense is fading, and draweth near

The high beatific vision.

He sang of life in the soil of death,

A seed of a heavenly sowing;

Asleep in the murk and mire of earth,

In silence waiting its wondrous birth,

Of death or of life unknowing.

He sang of the Sun of Life—His quest

In our death-deeps dark and chilly;

Of love that quickens to life the dead,

As the sun rays seek in the river-bed

The germ of the water lily.

He sang of Faith—of the eye that seeks

With a sightless aspiration

The source of Love and the fount of Light,

Till far in the folds of the utmost night,

Storm-swept with fierce temptation,

A light breaks through like a faint white star,

That grows and grows like the dawning,

Till, veiled in vapors, it hangs above

The wakened soul as the face of Love,

And Life has begun its morning.

He sang of Life in the spring o’ day,

Of patience, and truth, and duty,—

The narrow ways to the full release,

When, lapped in light and a dream of peace,

It bursts as a flower to beauty.

He sang—and his words fell thick and fast—

Of the resurrection glory;

Of good from evil, of life from death,

And then, with hesitant, bated breath,

The God-man’s marvelous story.

Then silence fell on the king and court,

And out through the open portal

The poet passed with a solemn stride

Into the midnight spaces wide,

Or into the life immortal.

My Lady Lily, you will not wake,

Wrapped in your dreams Elysian,

But this is the mystic tale you hold,

Deep in your tremulous heart of gold;

And this was the Poet’s vision.