E-text prepared by Marius Masi, Juliet Sutherland,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
THE LORD OF MISRULE
AND OTHER POEMS
| BY THE SAME AUTHOR Drake: An English Epic The Enchanted Island and Other Poems Sherwood Tales of the Mermaid Tavern The Wine-Press Collected Poems. 2 Vols. A Belgian Christmas Eve (Rada) |
Come up, come in with streamers!
Come in with boughs of May!
Page 1.
THE LORD OF
MISRULE
AND OTHER POEMS
BY
ALFRED NOYES
WITH FRONTISPIECE IN COLOURS BY
SPENCER BAIRD NICHOLS
NEW YORK
FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
PUBLISHERS
Copyright, 1915, by
Frederick A. Stokes Company
All rights reserved, including that of translation
into foreign languages
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| The Lord of Misrule | [1] |
| The Repeal | [7] |
| The Search-lights | [9] |
| Forward | [11] |
| A Spell | [13] |
| Crimson Sails | [18] |
| Blind Moone of London | [22] |
| Old Grey Squirrel | [28] |
| The Great North Road | [31] |
| The River of Stars | [34] |
| A Knight of Old Japan | [43] |
| Beyond Death | [44] |
| The Strange Guest | [46] |
| Ghosts | [49] |
| The Day of Remembrance | [51] |
| On the Embankment | [53] |
| The Iron Crown | [58] |
| The Old Debate | [59] |
| A Song of Hope | [60] |
| The Hedge-rose Opens | [62] |
| The May-tree | [63] |
| Old Letters | [64] |
| Lamps | [66] |
| At Eden Gates | [68] |
| The Psyche of Our Day | [70] |
| Paraclete | [73] |
| After Rain | [75] |
| The Death of a Great Man | [76] |
| The Roman Way | [78] |
| The Inner Passion | [80] |
| A Country Lane in Heaven | [82] |
| To the Destroyers | [84] |
| The Trumpet-call | [85] |
| The Heart of Canada | [89] |
| The Return of the Home-born | [91] |
| A Salute from the Fleet | [93] |
| In Memory of a British Aviator | [103] |
| The Waggon | [105] |
| The Sacred Oak | [107] |
| The World’s Wedding | [120] |
| In Memoriam: Samuel Coleridge-Taylor | [123] |
| Inscription | [126] |
| Values | [127] |
| The Heroic Dead | [128] |
| The Cry in the Night | [130] |
| Astrid | [133] |
| The Inimitable Lovers | [136] |
| The Crags | [143] |
| The Ghost of Shakespeare, 1914 | [147] |
| The White Cliffs | [152] |
| On the South Coast | [154] |
| Older than the Hills | [156] |
| The Torch | [158] |
| The Outlaw | [161] |
| The Young Friar | [163] |
| A Forest Song | [167] |
| The Trumpet of the Law | [169] |
| Thrice-armed | [180] |
| The Song-tree | [182] |
THE LORD OF MISRULE
“On May days the wild heads of the parish would choose a Lord of Misrule, whom they would follow even into the church, though the minister were at prayer or preaching, dancing and swinging their may-boughs about like devils incarnate.”—Old Puritan Writer.
THE REPEAL
THE SEARCH-LIGHTS
“Political morality differs from individual morality because there is no power above the state.”
FORWARD
A SPELL
(An Excellent Way to get a Fairy)
CRIMSON SAILS
BLIND MOONE OF LONDON
OLD GREY SQUIRREL
THE GREAT NORTH ROAD
THE RIVER OF STARS
(A tale of Niagara)
A KNIGHT OF OLD JAPAN
| MAKE me a stave of song, the Master said, On yonder cherry-bough, whose white and red Hangs in the sunset over those green seas. The young knight looked upon his untried blade, Then shrugged his wings of gold and blue brocade: How should a warrior play with thoughts like these? Fresh from the battle, in that self-same hour, A mail-clad warrior watched each delicate flower Close in that cloud of beauty against the West. Drinking the last deep light, he watched it long. He raised his face as if to pray. The strong, The Master whispered, are the tenderest. |
BEYOND DEATH
THE STRANGE GUEST
GHOSTS
THE DAY OF REMEMBRANCE
ON THE EMBANKMENT
THE IRON CROWN
| NOT memory of a vanished bliss, But suddenly to know, I had forgotten! This, O this With iron crowned my woe: To know that on some midnight sea Whence none could lift the pall A drowning hand was waved to me, Then—swept beyond recall. |
THE OLD DEBATE
| HIS angels fell, and myriads grope In doubt, for this dark cause alone,— That God hath given them room for hope, And made their struggling wills their own. In the same breath, they plead for chains And freedom; pray for ordered spheres, Then murmur that the sun retains Its course, unchecked by smiles or tears. “The Omnipotent would grant us this, Or else He is not good,” they say; But O, the Power withholds their bliss Till they agree what prayer to pray. |
A SONG OF HOPE
THE HEDGE-ROSE OPENS
| HOW passionately it opens after rain, And O, how like a prayer To those great shining skies! Do they disdain A bride so small and fair? See the imploring petals, how they part And utterly lay bare The perishing treasures of that piteous heart In wild surrender there. What? Would’st thou, too, drink up the Eternal bliss, Ecstatically dare, O, little bride of God, to invoke His kiss?— But O, how like a prayer! |
THE MAY-TREE
| THE May-tree on the hill Stands in the night So fragrant and so still, So dusky white. That, stealing from the wood In that sweet air, You’d think Diana stood Before you there. If it be so, her bloom Trembles with bliss. She waits across the gloom Her shepherd’s kiss. Touch her. A bird will start From those pure snows,— The dark and fluttering heart Endymion knows. |
OLD LETTERS
LAMPS
AT EDEN GATES
THE PSYCHE OF OUR DAY
PARACLETE
AFTER RAIN
| LISTEN! On sweetening air The blackbird growing bold Flings out, where green boughs glisten, Three splashes of wild gold. Daughter of April, hear; And hear, O barefoot boy! That carol of wild sweet water Has washed the world with joy. Glisten, O fragrant earth Assoiled by heaven anew, And O, ye lovers, listen, With eyes that glisten, too. |
THE DEATH OF A GREAT MAN
THE ROMAN WAY
THE INNER PASSION
A COUNTRY LANE IN HEAVEN
TO THE DESTROYERS
| YES. You have shattered many an ancient wrong, And we were with you, heart and mind and soul, But there are fools who cast away control In life and thought and art; because the Strong— We dare to say it—have now destroyed so long, That careless minds forget the unchanging goal— The nobler Order which shall make us whole, The Service which is freedom, beauty, song. We shall be stoned as traitors to your cause While the real traitors that you did not know, Chaos and Vice, trumpet themselves as free. Pray God that, loyal to the Eternal laws, A little remnant, mauled by friend and foe, Save you through Truth, and bring you Liberty. |
THE TRUMPET-CALL
THE HEART OF CANADA
July 1912
THE RETURN OF THE HOME-BORN
A SALUTE FROM THE FLEET
IN MEMORY OF A BRITISH AVIATOR
THE WAGGON
THE SACRED OAK
(A Song of Britain)
THE WORLD’S WEDDING
“Et quid curae nobis de generibus et speciebus? Ex uno Verbo omnia, et unum loquuntur omnia. Cui omnia unum sunt, quique ad unum omnia trahit et omnia in uno videt, potest stabilis corde esse.”—Thomas à Kempis.
IN MEMORIAM: SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR
INSCRIPTION
(For the Grave of Coleridge-Taylor)
| SLEEP, crowned with fame; fearless of change or time. Sleep, like remembered music in the soul, Silent, immortal; while our discords climb To that great chord which shall resolve the whole. Silent with Mozart on that solemn shore; Secure where neither waves nor hearts can break; Sleep—till the Master of the World, once more, Touch the remembered strings, and bid thee wake.... Touch the remembered strings, and bid thee wake. |
VALUES
| THE moon that sways the rhythmic seas, The wheeling earth, the marching sky,— I ask not whence the order came That moves them all as one. These are your chariots. Nor shall these Appal me with immensity; I know they carry one heart of flame More precious than the sun. |
THE HEROIC DEAD
(On the loss of the Titanic)
THE CRY IN THE NIGHT
ASTRID
(An Experiment in Initial Rhymes)
THE INIMITABLE LOVERS
THE CRAGS
(In memory of Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
THE GHOST OF SHAKESPEARE
1914
THE WHITE CLIFFS
ON THE SOUTH COAST
OLDER THAN THE HILLS
THE TORCH
(Sussex Landscape)
THE OUTLAW
THE YOUNG FRIAR
A FOREST SONG
THE TRUMPET OF THE LAW
(Phi Beta Kappa Poem, Harvard, 1915)