At the Granite Gate

There paused to shut the door A fellow called the Wind. With mystery before, And reticence behind, A portal waits me too In the glad house of spring, One day I shall pass through And leave you wondering. It lies beyond the marge Of evening or of prime, Silent and dim and large, The gateway of all time. There troop by night and day My brothers of the field; And I shall know the way Their woodsongs have revealed. The dusk will hold some trace Of all my radiant crew Who vanished to that place, Ephemeral as dew. Into the twilight dun, Blue moth and dragon-fly Adventuring alone,— Shall be more brave than I? There innocents shall bloom And the white cherry tree, With birch and willow plume To strew the road for me. The wilding orioles then Shall make the golden air Heavy with joy again, And the dark heart shall dare Resume the old desire, The exigence of spring To be the orange fire That tips the world’s gray wing. And the lone wood-bird—Hark, The whippoorwill night long Threshing the summer dark With his dim flail of song!— Shall be the lyric lift, When all my senses creep, To bear me through the rift In the blue range of sleep. And so I pass beyond The solace of your hand. But ah, so brave and fond! Within that morrow land, Where deed and daring fail, But joy forevermore Shall tremble and prevail Against the narrow door, Where sorrow knocks too late, And grief is overdue, Beyond the granite gate There will be thoughts of you.

Exit Anima

“Hospes comesque corporis, Quae nunc abitis in loca?” Cease, Wind, to blow And drive the peopled snow, And move the haunted arras to and fro, And moan of things I fear to know Yet would rend from thee, Wind, before I go On the blind pilgrimage. Cease, Wind, to blow. Thy brother too, I leave no print of shoe In all these vasty rooms I rummage through, No word at threshold, and no clue Of whence I come and whither I pursue The search of treasures lost When time was new. Thou janitor Of the dim curtained door, Stir thy old bones along the dusty floor Of this unlighted corridor. Open! I have been this dark way before; Thy hollow face shall peer In mine no more. . . . . Sky, the dear sky! Ah, ghostly house, good-by! I leave thee as the gauzy dragon-fly Leaves the green pool to try His vast ambition on the vaster sky,— Such valor against death Is deity. What, thou too here, Thou haunting whisperer? Spirit of beauty immanent and sheer, Art thou that crooked servitor, Done with disguise, from whose malignant leer Out of the ghostly house I fled in fear? O Beauty, how I do repent me now, Of all the doubt I ever could allow To shake me like the aspen bough; Nor once imagine that unsullied brow Could wear the evil mask And still be thou! Bone of thy bone, Breath of thy breath alone, I dare resume the silence of a stone, Or explore still the vast unknown, Like a bright sea-bird through the morning blown, With all his heart one joy, From zone to zone.

Scituate, June, 1895.


Transcriber’s Note:
One ten-line block of the title poem, beginning

Yet while they last how actual they seem!