IV

Waiting,

Like grey cloud-giants climbing the hills of Heaven

Carrying vast burdens over the crags of chaos—

Waiting,

Like trees that hear the far-off moan of winds,

Like listening trees that hug their branches round them,

Their leaves whispering lividly the rumour of storms,

Waiting like a vast arch of quietness

Through which a screaming messenger shall dart—

Like a dense hood of silence

Pierced by a sword of music—

Waiting, like the deathly stillness of a pool

Reflecting the diver poised before he plunges....

1919


[SMOKE]

Now is the evening dipped knee-deep in blood

And the dun hills stand fearful in their places.

Cunning in sin, we shuffle down the streets

With burdens of vainglory on our backs,

Spinning with spider-hands the miser's web

Or sitting placid, gay and fat with ease.

But out beyond, the armies of the world

March doomwards to the rhythm of the drum

Under the thirsting sun. Death holds his state:

His skeleton hands are filled with scarlet spoil:

He stands on flaming ramparts, waving high

The ensign of decay. All his bones are dressed

With livid roses; all his pillars black

Are girt in ashen poppies, and on dust

He raises up his awful golden throne.

Oh! your fierce shrieks have fainted on deaf ears;

Your tears have flowed on feet of carven stone;

Your blood is spilt for the boiling-pot of God

Where good and evil mix; and all your rage

Is but a thin smoke wafted in His face.

1914


Blow upon blow they bruise the daylight wan,

Scar upon scar they rend the quiet shore;

They ride on furious, leaving every man

Crushed like a maggot by the hoofs of war:

Gods that grow tired of paradisial water

And fill their cups with steaming wine of slaughter.

I fear a thing more terrible than death:

The glamour of the battle grips us yet—

As crowds before a fire that hold their breath

Watching the burning houses, and forget

All they will lose, but marvel to behold

Its dazzling strength, the glamour of its gold.

I fear the time when slow the flame expires,

When this kaleidoscope of roaring color

Fades, and rage faints; and of the funeral-fires

That shone with battle, nothing left of valour

Save chill ignoble ashes for despair

To strew with widowed hands upon her hair.

Livid and damp unfolds the winding-sheet,

Hiding the mangled body of the Earth:

The slow grey aftermath, the limping feet

Of days that shall not know the sound of mirth,

But pass in dry-eyed patience, with no trust

Save to end living and be heaped with dust.

That stillness that must follow where Death trod,

The sullen street, the empty drinking-hall,

The tuneless voices cringing praise to God,

Deaf gods, that did not heed the anguished call,

Now to be soothed with humbleness and praise,

With fawning kisses for the hand that slays.

Across the world from out the fevered ground

Decay from every pore exhales its breath;

A cloak of penance winding close around

The bright desire of spring. And unto Death,

As to a conquering king, we yield the keys

Of Beauty's gates upon our bended knees.

The maiden loverless shall go her ways,

And child unfathered feed on crust and husk;

The sun that was the glory of our days

Shining as tinsel till the moody dusk

Into our starving outstretched arms shall lay

Her silent sleep, the only boon we pray.

1914


A ragged drummer rides along the street,

And at his coming

The silence fills with tunes and rustling feet

And voices humming.

He rode a year ago from far away,

On charger prancing,

With bright new buttons and with ribbons gay,

And banners dancing.

Oh, he was fatter than the bursting drum

He bore so proudly,

His roaring music woke the silence dumb

To thunder loudly.

And by his side the old men and the young

Had followed cheering

Into the sunset smiling as they sung,

Nor thought of fearing.

They left their lovers and their mothers' lap,

Their homes demolish,

"For, look, I have a ribbon for my cap,

A sword to polish!"

And so the town was silent once again,

Though tunes of battle

Beat fearful in the wind, or in the rain

Ghost drums would rattle.

But at the chuckling dice or careful loom,

Or candled churches

A few forgot or prayed or followed doom

With drunken lurches....

Now loom and bar and church disgorge the throng,

In huddled masses

They stand aghast to hear the drummer's song

As back he passes—

Palsied and drear and bent he turns alone

In rags and tatters,

And on a soundless barrel with a bone

He beats and batters.

"Where march your feet so gaily, careless crowd,

That we may kiss them?

Where sound your little songs that rang so loud

To us that miss them?"

There are no songs, no happy marching feet,

No favours flying:

The drummer passes ... on the quiet street

The sun is dying.

Sun that must bleed to death so red and brave!...

Have done with weeping,

But put your ribbons on a soldier's grave

As he lies sleeping.

1914


[ZEPPELINS]

MIDNIGHT

Suddenly

Shutting our lips upon a jest

As we are sipping thoughts from little glasses,

A gun bursts thunder and the echoing streets

Quiver with startled terrors—

How swift runs fear: quicksilver that is free!

Now every muscle weakens, every pulse

Is set at gallop-pace and every nerve

Stretched taut with horror and a wild revolt....

How sweetly spins the world to noise of music,

How sweet to live life's arrogant adventure!

Live in a vain world wracked with a thousand pangs,

Limp in a dull street housed with crumbling dreams,

To breathe and eat and sleep and love and sigh

A little longer, oh a little year!

Forgotten prayers rise up in resurrection,

And resolutions of new wondrous lives

Choke up our hearts and fling us to our knees....

Worms creep in dreadful hunger from the ground,

The lurid silent people loved by death,

And peer into our eyes with sly forebodings

To drag our body's glory from the light.

Though all the world should fall into their cells

And lie within their larders shelf on shelf—

Yet will I toss the sheets of dust away,

Yet will I be the mistress of the sun!

* * * * *

1 A. M.

Look how they struggle in a mist of fire,

Those hunchbacked chimneys and distorted domes—

Now gloat on Hell, the colour seems to roar,

An army fierce upon its own destruction,

A famished monster tearing in its claws

Gigantic foods to glut its lean desire

Digesting all the world!...

Look at the eager people open-mouthed

That stand as foolish rabbits hypnotised

By the uncoiling rhythm of a snake,

Their earth adoring senses caught awhile

In the red whirlwind of ascending wings;

Their spirits straining upward upon strings

Like kites and air balloons, but more grotesque,

Lacking the ephemeral beauty of a toy—

Yet for an hour

Dyed with the colour that their drabness fears

They kiss the feet of beauty as she passes

Starwards, tremendous in a coat of fire.

* * * * *

3 A. M.

The dawn seems drained of blood so colourless—

Slowly the river moves as though in sleep

While silent barges

Slide from the mist like dreams;

The intricate patterns of the scaffolding

Are drawn against the sky

More delicate than lace.

All the shimmering lights

Have shrunk away from morning

As a blue peacock sheaves his starry tail....

I am alone, most utterly alone,

More lonely than the last man in the world

Straying amid the dust of vanished lives.

More lonely than a spirit stolen from heaven

Who stands beside that nebulous cold river

Dividing sleep from death,

Eternity from time....

Nothing disturbs the white peace of the dawn,

She brings no feverous memories of night

And sheds no tears.

Only two hours ago

Fire walked in crimson armour through the city

Piercing the night's black tent with glittering javelins,

While shrieks and whispered omens flew like bats

Among the silver foliage of the stars....

But rage has left no furrow in the sky,

No wake of sparks across the placid water....

This is the ominous and sacred hour

When priest-like the world kneels

Bowed low toward the empty throne of day—

Soon will the herald trumpet-blast be heard

And the flamingo messengers will come

Flocking from out the burnished cage of sunrise....

This is the hour of nothing,

Colourless and chill

Oblivion's hands are folded on the world,

As sits an idol holding in his fingers

A scentless lotus carven out of stone.

* * * * *

4 A. M.

Leaving the dun river with hurried tapping feet

And up the long uncomfortable street

With eyes uninterested yet forced to see and read

The dingy notices once sharp and bright with greed,

Now drear with want, that swear the Queen's Hotel

And Brown's Hotel and King's are doing well—

A soldier and a beggar mock me as I go,

The light steals after me, emerging slow

And pale from the dim alleys shadow-crouched.

I hurried by the drunkard as he slouched

From lamp-post unto lamp-post.... Then I saw

Caught in the mirror of a tailor's door

My own reflection as I hurried past,

My flaring colours and my face aghast—

The scarlet tassel of my hat that hung

Limp as a spent flame, and my skirt that clung

About my knees and fluttered at the back:

An injured moth, with sulphur stripes and black,

My bag flamboyant as a pillar-box;

My frayed gilt fringe of hair and tarnished locks.

Jagged and crude and swift I seemed to pass

Painted too brightly on that temperate glass.

... An omnibus from sudden corner reels:

Silence lies mangled underneath the wheels.

1915


O flattery, imposture, battle show,

What banners have you woven from the parted raiment,

What crimes from Calvary, what endless flow

Of blood from blood, revenge, exacted payment!

How have you turned the simple truth to lies

Made capital from creeds and missed their beauty,

Exalted vainly with self-pitying sighs

The wrongs enacted in the name of duty.

And ever quoting God for your excuse,

Bribing divinity to cloak your shame,

You train the spirit for material use,

You sacrifice men's hearts to feed your flame.

When shall the world be rid of these bald priests,

Pig-snouted with their gilded wolfish ears,

The scarlet cardinals of drunken feasts

Whose hands are washed in blood, whose feet in tears?

1916


What will happen to the beggar, and the sinner, and the sad,

And the drunk that drinks for sorrow, and the maimed, and mad;

What will happen to the starving, and the rebel run from drilling,

Cowardly, afraid of fighting, and the child who stole a shilling?

They shall go to prison black

With a striped shirt on the back,

Feast on bread and water there

In a cell, without a care.

They shall learn at least their duty,

Never tempted more of beauty—

They shall walk in rows and praise the Lord,

And one or two shall hang upon a cord—

And two or three shall die of grief alone—

(And this is well, for sinners should atone,)

And five or six shall curse the God that made them,

(And this is wicked, for the priests forbade them,)

And those that grew from dust shall go to dust

Downtrodden. Saith the preacher:—"God is just."

1917


If I were what I would be, and could break

The buttressed fortress of stupidity

Where laws are sentinels, and lies the masonry,

Surrounded with inertia, weedy lake,

Where centuries of mud lie curdled, and the fake

Grandeur of cardboard turrets, solemn puppetry—

The gods are blinking at us sleepily,

Tired of our games, the muddles that we make,

The bloodshed, idol worshipping, the chess

Of king, queen, castle, bishop, knight and pawn—

The rigid squares of black and white, they dress

With their perpetual challenge—faded, worn,

Are all the creeds and praises you profess

To weary gods that stretch themselves and yawn.

1917


[HOLY RUSSIA]

The ghostly blood of thee is in my veins,

Back through the centuries of death and birth,

Sometime I thrilled with thy gigantic pains,

My kin lie somewhere covered with thine earth.

And ever as in dreams I seem to see

Those streets and people with their colours cold;

Thou hast the singing hungers of the sea,

The tides of restless passion ages old.

I know thy humours and their contradiction,

I know thy fevers and hallucinations,

I see beneath the painted mask of fiction

Thy face of fierce and weary exaltations.

And art thou come to gaze with wakened eyes

Into the sick world's travail and her grief,

Dost thou from thy long battling surmise

The end of battle and the world's relief?

While we are creeping in our crooked ways

Along the crumbling roads of worn-out creeds

Where Ignorance walks royally through days

That smell of death, decay and bloody deeds.

While we still cry to God for strength to kill,

Reminding Him that Britain rules the waves,

And grind young bones for the commercial mill,

And build munition works among the graves.

Still crying "Honour," "Country" and "The Flag,"

"The last heroic fight in Freedom's name!"

Though Kings make mouths at Kings, and Prelates brag—

They boast of murder and they reek of shame!...

Thou that hast touched the mystic wounds of God,

And strewn with broken hearts the Virgin's feet,

Feeling beneath the burden and the rod

His justice and Her pity in the street.

Justice and Pity, crying in the wind—

We only hear the guns that never cease,

The flapping of our flags has made us blind!

We may not see the sacred gods of peace.

But thou dost build fanatic temples for them,

And thou dost pave the road with sanity,

And all the train of bitter ghosts adore them,

Who died to puff a monarch's vanity.

I hear thy orchestras of holy cheers,

The drum that life has snatched away from death,

And all the sighing rhythm of thy tears,

And the brave laughter of thy trumpet-breath.

Peace! But a cynic whispered in my ear

How kings like worms still wrangled for a crown

That lay amid the dust—and I could hear

A hum of money-changing in the town.

I feared that afterwards, when all is won,

We shall forget the meaning of thy deed—

And man will creep as he has always done

Along the little gutters of his greed.

1917


How deeply nurtured is your foolishness,

Calling destruction great and slaughter brave,

Making large triumph of a little grave,

Imperial purple of a mourning dress,

The gun an emblem of your godliness—

A fluttering ribbon or a banner's wave,

A medal or a bayonet, or rave

Of singing, marching in the forward press

Of hatred to the banging of a band;

Your country's honour and the world's release.

Are they not strong in courage who withstand

The armies of your folly and shall cease

To tarnish with spilt life their motherland?

Cowards—or martyrs—crucified for peace.

1917


Of all who died in silence far away

Where sympathy was busy with other things,

Busy with worlds, inventing how to slay,

Troubled with rights and wrongs and governments and kings.

The little dead who knew so large a love,

Whose lives were sweet unto themselves a shepherding

Of hopes, ambitions, wonders in a drove

Over the hills of time, that now are graves for burying.

Of all the tenderness that flowed to them,

A milky way streaming from out their mother's breast,

Stars were they to her night, and she the stem

From which they flowered—now barren and left unblessed.

Of all the sparkling kisses that they gave

Spangling a secret radiance on adoring hands,

Now stifled in the darkness of a grave

With kiss of loneliness and death's embracing bands.

No more!—And we, the mourners, dare not wear

The black that folds our hearts in secrecy of pain,

But must don purple and bright standards bear,

Vermilion of our honour, a bloody train.

We dare not weep who must be brave in battle—

"Another death—another day—another inch of land—

The dead are cheering and the ghost drums rattle" ...

The dead are deaf and dumb and cannot understand....

Of all who died in darkness far away

Nothing is left of them but LOVE, who triumphs now,

His arms held crosswise to the budding day,

The passion-red roses clustering his brow.

1917


And afterwards, when honour has made good,

And all you think you fight for shall take place,

A late rejoicing to a crippled race;

The bulldog's teeth relax and snap for food,

The eagles fly to their forsaken brood,

Within the ravaged nest. When no disgrace

Shall spread a blush across the haggard face

Of anxious Pride, already flushed with blood.

In victory will you have conquered Hate,

And stuck old Folly with a bayonet

And battered down the hideous prison gate?

Or will the fatted gods be gloried yet,

Glutted with gold and dust and empty state,

The incense of our anguish and our sweat?

1917


Pity the slain that laid away their lives,

Pity the prisoners mangled with gyves,

Thin little children and widowed wives,

And the broken soldier who survives.

Pity the woman whose body was sold

For a little bread or a little gold,

And a little fire to keep out the cold,

So tired, and fearful of growing old.

Pity the people in the grey street

Before the dawn trooping with listless feet

Down to their work in the dust and the heat,

For a little bread and a little meat.

Pity the criminal sentenced to die,

Loving life so, with the world in his eye,

In his ears and his heart, with the passionate cry

Of love that will call when he may not reply.

Pity them all, the imperative faces

That peer through the dark where we sleep in our laces,

Where we skulk among cushions in opulent places,

With indolent postures and frivolous graces.

Eyes that prick the darkness, fingers thin

Tearing at hypocrisy, and Sin

That batters the door and staggers in....

The streets surround with clamour and din,

Drowning our flutes, till the cries of the city

Flurry us, flutter us, force us to pity,

Force us to sigh and arrange a committee,

Tea-party charity danced to a ditty....

The scarlet ribbons flutter and wave,

A rebel flag on a rebel grave,

But to us the strong alone are brave,

And only the rich are worthy to save!

Yet who shall blame us, plaited and curled,

Where silk banners fly and the red flags are furled,

Flags that blow where the dead are hurled,

Tattered and dripping with blood of the world!

1918


[FLAME]

You have understood so little of me, and my adoration

That shone upon my forehead, like a crown of curious stones,

You turned into a cap and bells for Folly's coronation

And made a foolish tinkling from my laughter and my

moans.

You have led me through the market like an ass upon the halter,

You have fed me upon thistles; I was driven by the crowd;

But my faith in what I am, my conceit, you cannot alter;

I was proud in pomp and purple, as a clown I leave you proud!

A greater pride than sits upon a throne for mere adorning,

A fiercer strength than in the gods of wood that cannot bow;

I tore my purple into rags and knelt to bear your scorning,

And I am rebel leader to a band of beggars now.

In the twilight of my love I stand and strew the bitter ashes;

They are blown into my eyes again, the fires that shone for you;

In the blushing of the sunset their ghostly fervour flashes

As they sink for everlasting in the darkness and the dew.

Your heart is as a moonstone hieroglyphed with secret letters;

You have never read my passion, as I never learnt their sign,

But I praise your haunting beauty and I bear the bruise of fetters

And I reel from your remembrance as I spill the ancient wine.

All those women I have envied with their pink and foolish faces,

Moths that have out-distanced me in circling round your head,

For the strangeness of your kisses and the curse of your embraces

And the frenzy of pursuing where your despot feet have led.

I will shout, and tear the darkness; I will snuff the candles sacred

With the rage of my abasement, with the blast of my farewell;

I will smile with cynic softness, but my tears are dropping acrid

And sizzling in a gutter down the white-hot streets of Hell!

1914


Lulled are the dazzling colours of the day,

And mild the heavens, burnt out like an ash.

Hungry and strange along the shadowed dusk

Walks Melancholy, and with bitter mouth

Sucks the last juices from the sun's ripe fruit.

Now can I sing the sickly lines of love

And of love's failure, spell my sorrows out

In the sad spaces of the gloaming night,

And stooping, huddled, hide me in the dark.

My words were fireless in the flaming sun,

And all the throats of flowers from their content

Puffed back my pinings proudly in my face

And bade me give them tunes to make them dance....

Lean, hungry, like my love the moon looks down

From the white solitudes of Heaven. All aghast

And sterile as the arms of my desire

She flings her light despairing on the sky.

The night is strange and still, for dropping tears,

Or burying hatred in a deep-dug grave.

1914


Washed at my feet by the curded foam of sluggish waves,

As the rain splinters and the mud gleams with malicious light,

Like a frail shell, million tinged and quaintly wrought

The thought of you, which held against mine ear

Hums all the echoed melodies of your soul;

The sigh of wearied life, the ebbing sweet of love,

The little tunes of wine mixed with the chants of death,

The following of beauty's fugitive limbs

Whose classic feet, and rapturous pale breast

Gleam on the clouds and foam,

Call to her lovers.—

Thus standing in the blasting of the wind,

And numb with ceaseless drip of moments from the cloud

Of lowering hours, I toy with this strange relic of the sea,

Turned with such perfectness from her tumultuous wheels,

Thoughts of you million tinged and quaintly wrought.

1916


My poems cannot laugh. They are the voice

Of birds that mourn and cry above the sea,

And this wild joy my love has brought to me

Lies dumb and knows not how it shall rejoice.

I am most weary of the petulant songs I sing,

Most tired of tunes that only learn to weep,

And long to turn my dreams from their pale sleep

Into a gentle minstrelsy with harp of silver string;

To fashion for my love one perfect verse

Symmetrically threaded by beauty word on word,

Flowing and flashing like the luted laughter of a bird

To bless the soul with music which I ravished with a curse.

But as a coward in the general gloom

I mimic fortune with my tunes of ill,

Nor pipe despite her wistful mirth and trill

Of love that moves with music into Doom;

Of love that thrills with joy the graveyard cold,

And like a gay canary in a cage

Mocks at his prison, and with flippant rage

Flaunts his bright wing to fill the gloom with gold.

1916


On the hill there is a tavern, long-loved, well-remembered,

Where all the sleepy afternoon the little tables dream,

And the cool green bottles ranged, laugh and gleam with golden highlights,

And the waiters wrangle, and the flies, with murmurs merged and mixed.

We will go there, you and I, to wake the nodding contentment,

And toast our fancies reverently with red wine and with white wine,

And with eyes mesmerised to the horizon gazing,

Dream our iridescent dreams and sigh our shadowy sighs.

1916


Oh canst thou not hear in my heart all its whispering fears

Whose wind-like voices

Flutter the leaves of my hope and bow them with tears

While the body rejoices.

Till all the pomp and beauty of day, the Cardinal Sun

Trailing his scarlet vesture

Leaves after light the pale hills sullen and dun,

Turns with a gesture

Colour and glory to smoke that is deathly and grey.

I follow the shadows of sorrow

That press so close to the dancing heels of the day

And darken the morrow.

The world turns pale and cold, for I seem to see

Beyond its golden visor

The leering skull that derides at our lives and me

Being older than life and wiser....

I hear the cry of the world that writhes to the lash of the whip

Beyond the sound of the treetops singing

To the wind's persuasive violins and bells of dews that drip,

Or rush of feathers winging....

Dost thou fear death as I? Ah no, but thy lips are against my cheek

Murmuring tenderly

The perfumed lies stolen from spring that wistfully through the bleak

Windows of frost so slenderly

Steals her little ghost's flute. Thou tellest of things that might be

If life were as kind as a lover,

If we were beloved of the world and the world of we.

Thy white words hover

Dove-like in rose leaf evenings over the nest

Silvering heaven

With rustle of lovers that nestle together for rest.

If I could have given

My tired lips to kisses and my body to sleep and to thee,

Ah then and then only

The dust were as gentleness mingling thy beauty with me

And death were not lonely.

1916


As in the silence the clear moonlight drips

Among the fields that love her drowsily,

These passionate moments trickle on through time,

From soul to languorous soul.

Like mad musicians upon fretted harps,

The senses play upon the poignant nerves,—

And colours clothe our mood

As smoke against the light, as shimmering prisms

Irised with pallors of an opal's heart

In which the glittered pattern of desire

Smoulders and changes....

O love, thou nightingale-throated singer,

Thread on thy jewelled chords from start to star

And keep thy silver delicate delight

Out of the flush and lustre that makes mad.

Let thy fairy feet

Go tripping down a scarcely scented path,

Between an avenue of breathless flowers.

The hours glide by as swans across a lake,

Across the luminous waters of desire,

And beat as wings the rustle of soft words,

As love bends down,

Breathing his adoration on a fainting mouth.

1917


I can but give thee unsubstantial things

Wrapt as in rose-leaves between thought and thought,

No gems or garments marvellously wrought

On ivory spools with rare embroiderings.

Nor for thy fingers precious, fabled rings

That cardinals have worn, and queens have bought

With blood and beauty. I have only sought

A song that hovers on illusive wings.

Accept from me a dream that hath no art,

I give my empty hands for thee to hold,

Take thou the gift of silence for my part,

With all the deeper things I have not told.

Yet if thou canst, decipher in my heart

Its passions writ in hieroglyphs of gold.

1917


[I]

I have no other friend but thee,

But while I tell thee all my thought

Thine ears are buzzing with gossip of dreams,

Soothsayings and sighs, and little things—

How canst thou listen to me?