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Title: Behind the Arras
       A Book of the Unseen

Author: Bliss Carman

Illustrator: T. B. Meteyard

Release Date: April 24, 2006 [EBook #18242]

Language: English

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Behind the Arras


Behind the Arras
A Book of the
Unseen

By Bliss Carman
With Designs by T. B. Meteyard

publisher's logo: VT CRESCIT

Boston and New York
Lamson, Wolffe, and Company
M·DCCC·XC·V

Copyright, 1895.
by Lamson, Wolffe, & Co.
All rights reserved.

Contents

Behind the Arras 1
Fancy’s Fool 16
The Moondial 19
The Face in the Stream 23
The Cruise of the Galleon 29
A Song before Sailing 32
In the Wings 35
The Red Wolf 37
The Faithless Lover 44
The Crimson House 46
The Lodger 49
Beyond the Gamut 66
The Juggler 81
Hack and Hew 85
The Night Express 87
The Dustman 91
The Sleepers 94
At the Granite Gate 96
Exit Anima 100

small logo


To G. H. B.
“I shut myself in with my soul,
And the shapes come eddying forth.”

 

Behind the Arras

1

Behind the Arras

I like the old house tolerably well,

Where I must dwell

Like a familiar gnome;

And yet I never shall feel quite at home:

I love to roam.

Day after day I loiter and explore

From door to door;

So many treasures lure

The curious mind. What histories obscure

They must immure!

I hardly know which room I care for best;

This fronting west,

With the strange hills in view,

Where the great sun goes,—where I may go too,

When my lease is through,—

Or this one for the morning and the east,

Where a man may feast

His eyes on looming sails,

And be the first to catch their foreign hails

Or spy their bales.

2

Then the pale summer twilights towards the pole!

It thrills my soul

With wonder and delight,

When gold-green shadows walk the world at night,

So still, so bright.

There at the window many a time of year,

Strange faces peer,

Solemn though not unkind,

Their wits in search of something left behind

Time out of mind;

As if they once had lived here, and stole back

To the window crack

For a peep which seems to say,

“Good fortune, brother, in your house of clay!”

And then, “Good day!”

I hear their footsteps on the gravel walk,

Their scraps of talk,

And hurrying after, reach

Only the crazy sea-drone of the beach

In endless speech.

3

And often when the autumn noons are still,

By swale and hill

I see their gipsy signs,

Trespassing somewhere on my border lines;

With what designs?

I forth afoot; but when I reach the place,

Hardly a trace,

Save the soft purple haze

Of smouldering camp-fires, any hint betrays

Who went these ways.

Or tatters of pale aster blue, descried

By the roadside,

Reveal whither they fled;

Or the swamp maples, here and there a shred

Of Indian red.

But most of all, the marvellous tapestry

Engrosses me,

Where such strange things are rife,

Fancies of beasts and flowers, and love and strife,

Woven to the life;

Degraded shapes and splendid seraph forms,

And teeming swarms

4

Of creatures gauzy dim

That cloud the dusk, and painted fish that swim,

At the weaver’s whim;

And wonderful birds that wheel and hang in the air;

And beings with hair,

And moving eyes in the face,

And white bone teeth and hideous grins, who race

From place to place;

They build great temples to their John-a-nod,

And fume and plod

To deck themselves with gold,

And paint themselves like chattels to be sold,

Then turn to mould.

Sometimes they seem almost as real as I;

I hear them sigh;

I see them bow with grief,

Or dance for joy like an aspen leaf;

But that is brief.

They have mad wars and phantom marriages;

5

Nor seem to guess

There are dimensions still,

Beyond thought’s reach, though not beyond love’s will,

For soul to fill.

And some I call my friends, and make believe

Their spirits grieve,

Brood, and rejoice with mine;

I talk to them in phrases quaint and fine

Over the wine;

I tell them all my secrets; touch their hands;

One understands

Perhaps. How hard he tries

To speak! And yet those glorious mild eyes,

His best replies!

I even have my cronies, one or two,

My cherished few.

But ah, they do not stay!

For the sun fades them and they pass away,

As I grow gray.

Yet while they last how actual they seem!

Their faces beam;

I give them all their names,

6

Bertram and Gilbert, Louis, Frank and James,

Each with his aims;

One thinks he is a poet, and writes verse

His friends rehearse;

Another is full of law;

A third sees pictures which his hand can draw

Without a flaw.

Strangest of all, they never rest. Day long

They shift and throng,

Moved by invisible will,

Like a great breath which puffs across my sill,

And then is still;

It shakes my lovely manikins on the wall;

Squall after squall,

Gust upon crowding gust,

It sweeps them willy nilly like blown dust

With glory or lust.

It is the world-ghost, the time-spirit, come

None knows where from,

The viewless draughty tide

7

And wash of being. I hear it yaw and glide,

And then subside,

Along these ghostly corridors and halls

Like faint footfalls;

The hangings stir in the air;

And when I start and challenge, “Who goes there?”

It answers, “Where?”

The wail and sob and moan of the sea’s dirge,

Its plangor and surge;

The awful biting sough

Of drifted snows along some arctic bluff,

That veer and luff,

And have the vacant boding human cry,

As they go by;—

Is it a banished soul

Dredging the dark like a distracted mole

Under a knoll?

Like some invisible henchman old and gray,

Day after day

I hear it come and go,

With stealthy swift unmeaning to and fro,

Muttering low,

8

Ceaseless and daft and terrible and blind,

Like a lost mind.

I often chill with fear

When I bethink me, What if it should peer

At my shoulder here!

Perchance he drives the merry-go-round whose track

Is the zodiac;

His name is No-man’s-friend;

And his gabbling parrot-talk has neither trend,

Beginning, nor end.

A prince of madness too, I’d cry, “A rat!”

And lunge thereat,—

Let out at one swift thrust

The cunning arch-delusion of the dust

I so mistrust,

But that I fear I should disclose a face

Wearing the trace

Of my own human guise,

Piteous, unharmful, loving, sad, and wise,

With the speaking eyes.

9

I would the house were rid of his grim pranks,

Moaning from banks

Of pine trees in the moon,

Startling the silence like a demoniac loon

At dead of noon,

Or whispering his fool-talk to the leaves

About my eaves.

And yet how can I know

’T is not a happy Ariel masking so

In mocking woe?

Then with a little broken laugh I say,

Snatching away

The curtain where he grinned

(My feverish sight thought) like a sin unsinned,

“Only the wind!”

Yet often too he steals so softly by,

With half a sigh,

I deem he must be mild,

Fair as a woman, gentle as a child,

And forest wild.

10

Passing the door where an old wind-harp swings,

With its five strings,

Contrived long years ago

By my first predecessor bent to show

His handcraft so,

He lays his fingers on the æolian wire,

As a core of fire

Is laid upon the blast

To kindle and glow and fill the purple vast

Of dark at last.

Weird wise and low, piercing and keen and glad,

Or dim and sad

As a forgotten strain

Born when the broken legions of the rain

Swept through the plain—

He plays, like some dread veiled mysteriarch,

Lighting the dark,

Bidding the spring grow warm,

The gendering merge and loosing of spirit in form,

Peace out of storm.

11

For music is the sacrament of love;

He broods above

The virgin silence, till

She yields for rapture shuddering, yearning still

To his sweet will.

I hear him sing, “Your harp is like a mesh,

Woven of flesh

And spread within the shoal

Of life, where runs the tide-race of the soul

In my control.

“Though my wild way may ruin what it bends,

It makes amends

To the frail downy clocks,

Telling their seed a secret that unlocks

The granite rocks.

“The womb of silence to the crave sound

Is heaven unfound,

Till I, to soothe and slake

Being’s most utter and imperious ache,

Bid rhythm awake.

12

“If with such agonies of bliss, my kin,

I enter in

Your prison house of sense,

With what a joyous freed intelligence

I shall go hence.”

I need no more to guess the weaver’s name,

Nor ask his aim,

Who hung each hall and room

With swarthy-tinged vermilion upon gloom;

I know that loom.

Give me a little space and time enough,

From ravelings rough

I could revive, reweave,

A fabric of beauty art might well believe

Were past retrieve.

O men and women in that rich design,

Sleep-soft, sun-fine,

Dew-tenuous and free,

A tone of the infinite wind-themes of the sea,

Borne in to me,

Reveals how you were woven to the might

Of shadow and light.

You are the dream of One

13

Who loves to haunt and yet appears to shun

My door in the sun;

As the white roving sea tern fleck and skim

The morning’s rim;

Or the dark thrushes clear

Their flutes of music leisurely and sheer,

Then hush to hear.

I know him when the last red brands of day

Smoulder away,

And when the vernal showers

Bring back the heart to all my valley flowers

In the soft hours.

O hand of mine and brain of mine, be yours,

While time endures,

To acquiesce and learn!

For what we best may dare and drudge and yearn,

Let soul discern.

So, fellows, we shall reach the gusty gate,

Early or late,

And part without remorse,

A cadence dying down unto its source

In music’s course;

14

You to the perfect rhythms of flowers and birds,

Colors and words,

The heart-beats of the earth,

To be remoulded always of one worth

From birth to birth;

I to the broken rhythm of thought and man,

The sweep and span

Of memory and hope

About the orbit where they still must grope

For wider scope,

To be through thousand springs restored, renewed,

With love imbrued,

With increments of will

Made strong, perceiving unattainment still

From each new skill.

Always the flawless beauty, always the chord

Of the Overword,

Dominant, pleading, sure,

No truth too small to save and make endure.

No good too poor!

15

And since no mortal can at last disdain

That sweet refrain,

But lets go strife and care,

Borne like a strain of bird notes on the air,

The wind knows where;

Some quiet April evening soft and strange,

When comes the change

No spirit can deplore,

I shall be one with all I was before,

In death once more.

16

Fancy’s Fool

“Cornel, cornel, green and white,

Spreading on the forest floor,

Whither went my lost delight

Through the silent door?”

“Mortal, mortal, overfond,

How come you at all to know

There be any joys beyond

Blisses here and now?”

“Cornel, cornel, white and cool,

Many a mortal, I’ve heard tell,

Who is only Fancy’s fool

Knows that secret well.”

“Mortal, mortal, what would you

With that beauty once was yours?

Perishable is the dew,

And the dust endures.”

“Cornel, cornel, pierce me not

With your sweet, reserved disdain!

17

Whisper me of things forgot

That shall be again.”

“Mortal, we are kinsmen, led

By a hope beyond our reach.

Know you not the word unsaid

Is the flower of speech?”

All the snowy blossoms faded,

While the scarlet berries grew;

And all summer they evaded

Anything they knew.

“Cornel, cornel, green and red

Flooring for the forest wide,

Whither down the ways of dread

Went my starry-eyed?”

“Mortal, mortal, is there found

Any fruitage half so fair

In the dim world underground

As there grows in air?”

“Wilding cornel, you can guess

Nothing of eternal pain,

Growing there in quietness

In the sun and rain.”

18

“Mortal, where your heart would be

Not a wanderer may go,

But he shares the dark with me

Underneath the snow.”

And the scarlet berries scattered

With the coming on of fall;

Not to one of them it mattered

Anything at all.

19 The Moondial

The Moondial

Iron and granite and rust,

In a crumbling garden old,

Where the roses are paler than dust

And the lilies are green with gold,

Under the racing moon,

Inconscious of war or crime,

In a strange and ghostly noon,

It marks the oblivion of time.

The shadow steals through its arc,

Still as a frosted breath,

20

Fitful, gleaming, and dark

As the cold frustration of death.

But where the shadow may fall,

Whether to hurry or stay,

It matters little at all

To those who come that way.

For this is the dial of them

That have forgotten the world,

No more through the mad day-dream

Of striving and reason hurled.

Their heart as a little child

Only remembers the worth

Of beauty and love and the wild

Dark peace of the elder earth.

It registers the morrows

Of lovers and winds and streams,

And the face of a thousand sorrows

At the postern gate of dreams.

When the first low laughter smote

Through Lilith, the mother of joy,

And died and revived from the throat

Of Helen, the harpstring of Troy,

21

And wandering on through the years,

From the sobbing rain and the sea,

Caught sound of the world’s gray tears

Or sense of the sun’s gold glee,

Whenever the wild control

Burned out to a mortal kiss,

And the shuddering storm-swept soul

Climbed to its acme of bliss,

The green-gold light of the dead

Stood still in purple space,

And a record blind and dread

Was graved on the dial’s face.

And once in a thousand years

Some youth who loved so well

The gods had loosed him from fears

In a vision of blameless hell,

Has gone to the dial to read

Those signs in the outland tongue,

Written beyond the need

Of the simple and the young.

For immortal life, they say,

Were his who, loving so,

22

Could explain the writing away

As a legend written in snow.

But always his innocent eyes

Were frozen into the stone.

From that awful first surprise

His soul must return alone.

In the morning there he lay

Dead in the sun’s warm gold.

And no man knows to this day

What the dim moondial told.

23 The Face in the Stream

The Face in the Stream

The sunburnt face in the willow shade

To the face in the water-mirror said,

“O deep mysterious face in the stream,

Art thou myself or am I thy dream?”

And the face deep down in the water’s side

To the face in the upper air replied,

24

“I am thy dream, them poor worn face,

And this is thy heart’s abiding place.

“Too much in the world, come back and be

Once more my dream-fellow with me,

“In the far-off untarnished years

Before thy furrows were washed with tears,

“Or ever thy serious creature eyes

Were aged with a mist of memories.

“Hast thou forgotten the long ago

In the garden where I used to flow,

“Among the hills, with the maple tree

And the roses blowing over me?—

“I who am now but a wraith of this river,

Forsaken of thee forever and ever,

“Who then was thine image fair, forecast

In the heart of the water rimpling past.

“Out in the wide of the summer zone

I lulled and allured thee apart and alone,

25

“The azure gleam and the golden croon

And the grass with the flaky roses strewn.

“There you would lie and lean above me,

The more you lingered the more to love me,

“Till I became, as the year grew old,

Thy fairest day-dream’s fashion and mould,

“Deep in the water twilight there,

Smiling, elusive, wonderful, fair,

“The beautiful visage of thy clear soul

Set in eternity’s limpid shoal,

“Thy spirit’s countenance, the trace

Of dawning God in the human face.

“And when yellow leaves came down

Through the silent mornings one by one

“To the frosty meadow, as they fell

Thy pondering heart said, ‘All is well;

“‘Aye, all is best, for I stake my life

Beyond the boundaries of strife,’

26

“And then thy feet returned no more,—

While years went over the garden floor,

“With frost and maple, with rose and dew,

In the world thy river wandered through;—

“Came never again to revive and recall

Thy youth from its water burial.

“But now thy face is battle-dark;

The strife of the world has graven a mark

“About the lips that are no more mine,

Too sweet to forget, too strong to repine.

“With the ends of the earth for thy garden now,

What solace and what reward hast thou?”

Then he of the earth’s sun-traversed side

To him of the under-world replied,

“O glad mysterious face in the stream,

My lost illusion, my summer dream,

“Thou fairer self of a fonder time,

A far imperishable clime,

27

“For thy dear sake I have fared alone

And fronted failure and housed with none.

“What youth was that, when the world was green,

In the lovely mythus Greek and clean,

“Was doomed with his flowery kin to bide,

A blown white star by the river side,

“And no more follow the sun, foot free,

Too long enamoured of one like thee?

“Shall God who abides in the patient flower,

The painted dust sustained by his power,

“Refuse to the wing of the dragonfly

His sanction over the open sky,—

“A frail detached and wandering thing

Torn loose from the blossomy life of spring?

“And this is man, the myriad one,

Dust’s flower and time’s ephemeron.

“And I who have followed the wander-list

For a glimpse of beauty, a wraith in the mist,

28

“Shall be spilt at last and return to peace,

As dust which the hands of the wind release.

“This is my solace and my reward,

Who have drained life’s dregs from a broken shard.”

Wise and grave was the water face,

A youth grown man in a little space;

While the wayworn face by the river side

Grew gentler-lipped and shadowy-eyed;

For he heard like a sea-horn summoning him

That sound from the world’s end vast and dim,

Where the river went wandering out so far

Through a gate in the mountain left ajar,

The sea birds love and the land birds flee,

The large bleak voice of the burly sea.

29 The Cruise of the Galleon

The Cruise of the Galleon

This laboring vast, Tellurian Galleon,

Riding at anchor off the orient sun,

Had broken its cable, and stood out to space.

FRANCIS THOMPSON.

Galleon, ahoy, ahoy!

Old earth riding off the sun,

And straining at your cable as you ride

On the tide,

Battered laboring and vast,

In the blast

Of the hurricane that blows between the worlds,

Ahoy!

30

’Morning, shipmates! ’Drift and chartless?

Laded deep and rolling hard?

Never guessed, outworn and heartless,

There was land so close aboard?

Ice on every shroud and eyelet,

Rocking in the windy trough?

No more panic; Man’s your pilot;

Turns the flood, and we are off!

At the story of disaster,

From the continents of sleep,

I am come to be your master

And put out into the deep.

What tide current struck you hither,

Beating up the storm of years?

Where are those who stood to weather

These uncharted gulfs of tears?

Did your fellows all drive under

In the maelstrom of the sun,

While you only, for a wonder,

Rode the wash you could not shun?

We’ll crowd sail across the sea-line,—

Clear this harbor, reef and buoy,

31

Bowling down an open bee-line

For the latitudes of joy;

Till beyond the zones of sorrow,

Past griefs haven in the night,

Some large simpler world shall morrow

This pale region’s northern light.

Not a fear but all the sea-room,

Wherein time is but a bay,

Yet shall sparkle for our lee-room

In the vast Altrurian day.

And the dauntless seaworn spirit

Shall awake to know there are

What dominions to inherit,

Anchored off another star!

32 A Song Before Sailing

A Song Before Sailing

“Cras ingens iterabimus aequor.”

Wind of the dead men’s feet,

Blow down the empty street

Of this old city by the sea

With news for me!

Blow me beyond the grime

And pestilence of time!

I am too sick at heart to war

With failure any more.

Thy chill is in my bones;

The moonlight on the stones

33

Is pale, and palpable, and cold;

I am as one grown old.

I call from room to room

Through the deserted gloom;

The echoes are all words I know,

Lost in some long ago.

I prowl from door to door,

And find no comrade more.

The wolfish fear that children feel

Is snuffing at my heel.

I hear the hollow sound

Of a great ship coming round,

The thunder of tackle and the tread

Of sailors overhead.

That stormy-blown hulloo

Has orders for me, too.

I see thee, hand at mouth, and hark,

My captain of the dark.

O wind of the great East,

By whom we are released

From this strange dusty port to sail

Beyond our fellows’ hail,

34

Under the stars that keep

The entry of the deep,

Thy somber voice brings up the sea’s

Forgotten melodies;

And I have no more need

Of bread, or wine, or creed,

Bound for the colonies of time

Beyond the farthest prime.

Wind of the dead men’s feet,

Blow through the empty street!

The last adventurer am I,

Then, world, good-by!

35

In the Wings

The play is Life; and this round earth,

The narrow stage whereon

We act before an audience

Of actors dead and gone.

There is a figure in the wings

That never goes away,

And though I cannot see his face,

I shudder while I play.

His shadow looms behind me here,

Or capers at my side;

And when I mouth my lines in dread,

Those scornful lips deride.

Sometimes a hooting laugh breaks out,

And startles me alone;

While all my fellows, wondering

At my stage-fright, play on.

I fear that when my Exit comes,

I shall encounter there,

36

Stronger than fate, or time, or love,

And sterner than despair,

The Final Critic of the craft,

As stage tradition tells;

And yet—perhaps ’twill only be

The jester with his bells.

37 The Red Wolf

The Red Wolf

With the fall of the leaf comes the wolf, wolf, wolf,

The old red wolf at my door.

And my hateful yellow dwarf, with his hideous crooked laugh,

Cries “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at my door.

With the still of the frost comes the wolf, wolf, wolf,

The gaunt red wolf at my door.

He’s as tall as a Great Dane, with his grizzly russet mane;

And he haunts the silent woods at my door.

38

The scarlet maple leaves and the sweet ripe nuts,

May strew the forest glade at my door,

But my cringing cunning dwarf, with his slavered kacking laugh,

Cries “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at my door.

The violets may come, the pale wind-flowers blow,

And tremble by the stream at my door;

But my dwarf will never cease, until his last release,

From his “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at the door.

The long sweet April wind may woo the world from grief,

And tell the old tales at my door;

The rainbirds in the rain may plead their far refrain,

In the glad young year at my door;

And in the quiet sun, the silly partridge brood

In the red pine dust by my door;

Yet my squinting runty dwarf, with his lewd ungodly laugh,

Cries “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at my door.

39

I’m his master (and his slave, with his “Wolf, wolf, wolf!”)

As he squats in the sun at my door.

There morn and noon and night, with his cuddled low delight,

He watches for the wolf at my door.

The wind may parch his hide, or freeze him to the bone,

While the wolf walks far from the door;

Still year on year he sits, with his five unholy wits,

And watches for the wolf at the door.

But the fall of the leaf and the starting of the bud

Are the seasons he loves by the door;

Then his blood begins to rouse, this Caliban I house,

And it’s “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at the door.

In the dread lone of the night I can hear him snuff the sill;

Then it’s “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at the door;

His damned persistent bark, like a husky’s in the dark,

His “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at the door.

40

I have tried to rid the house of the misbegotten spawn;

But he skulks like a shadow at my door,

With the same uncanny glee as when he came to me

With his first cry of wolf at my door.

I curse him, and he leers; I kick him, and he whines;

But he never leaves the stone at my door.

Peep of day or set of sun, his croaking’s never done

Of the Red Wolf of Despair at my door.

But when the night is old, and the stars begin to fade,

And silence walks the path by my door,

Then is his dearest hour, his most unbridled power,

And low comes his “Wolf!” at the door.

I turn me in my sleep between the night and day,

While dreams throng the yard at my door.

In my strong soul aware of a grewsome terror there

Soon to knock with command at my door.

41

Is it the hollow voice of the census-taker Time

In his old idle round from door to door?

Or only the north wind, when all the leaves are thinned,

Come at last with his moan to my door?

I cannot guess nor tell; only it comes and comes,

As from a vaster world beyond my door,

From centuries of eld, the death of freedom knelled,

A host of mortal fears at my door.

Then I wake; and joy and youth and fame and love and bliss,

And all the good that ever passed my door,

Grow dim, and faint and fade, with the whole world unmade,

To perish as the summer at my door.

The crouching heart within me quails like a shuddering thing,

As I turn on my pillow to the door;

Then in the chill white dawn, when life is half withdrawn,

Comes the dream-curdling “Wolf!” at my door.

42

Only my yellow dwarf; (my servitor and lord!)

I hear him lift the latch of my door;

I see his wobbling chin and his unrepentant grin,

As he lets his oafship in at the door.

He is low and humped and foul, and shambles like an ape;

And stealthily he barricades the door,

Then lays his goblin head against my lonely bed,

With a “Wolf, wolf, wolf,” at the door!

I loathe him, but I feed him; I’ll tell you how it was

(Hear him now with his “Wolf!” at the door!)

That I ever took him in; he is—he is my kin,

And kin to the wolf at the door!

I loathe him, yet he lives; as God lets Satan live,

I suffer him to slumber at my door,

43

Till that long-looked-for time, that splendid sudden prime,

When Spring shall go in scarlet by my door.

That day I will arise, put my heel upon his throat,

And squirt his yellow blood upon the door;

Then watch him dying there, like a spider in his lair,

With a “Wolf, wolf, wolf!” at my door.

The great white morning sun shall walk the earth again,

And the children return to my door,

I shall hear their merry laugh, and forget my buried dwarf,

As a tale that is told at the door.

Far from the quiet woods the gaunt red wolf shall flee,

As a cur that is stoned from the door;

And God’s great peace come back along the lonely track,

To fill the golden year at my door.

44

The Faithless Lover

I

O Life, dear Life, in this fair house

Long since did I, it seems to me,

In some mysterious doleful way

Fall out of love with thee.

For, Life, thou art become a ghost,

A memory of days gone by,

A poor forsaken thing between

A heartache and a sigh.

And now, with shadows from the hills

Thronging the twilight, wraith on wraith,

Unlock the door and let me go

To thy dark rival Death!

II

O Heart, dear Heart, in this fair house

Why hast thou wearied and grown tired,

45

Between a morning and a night,

Of all thy soul desired?

Fond one, who cannot understand

Even these shadows on the floor,

Yet must be dreaming of dark loves

And joys beyond my door!

But I am beautiful past all

The timid tumult of thy mood,

And thou returning not must still

Be mine in solitude.

46

The Crimson House

Love built a crimson house,

I know it well,

That he might have a home

Wherein to dwell.

Poor Love that roved so far

And fared so ill,

Between the morning star

And the Hollow Hill,

Before he found the vale

Where he could bide,

With memory and oblivion

Side by side.

He took the silver dew

And the dun red clay,

And behold when he was through

How fair were they!

The braces of the sky

Were in its girth,

47

That it should feel no jar

Of the swinging earth;

That sun and wind might bleach

But not destroy

The house that he had builded

For his joy.

“Here will I stay,” he said,

“And roam no more,

And dust when I am dead

Shall keep the door.”

There trooping dreams by night

Go by, go by.

The walls are rosy white

In the sun’s eye.

The windows are more clear

Than sky or sea;

He made them after God’s

Transparency.

It is a dearer place

Than kirk or inn;

Such joy on joy as there

Has never been.

48

There may my longed-for rest

And welcome be,

When Love himself unbars

The door for me!

49 The Lodger

The Lodger

I cannot quite recall

When first he came,

So reticent and tall,

With his eyes of flame.

The neighbors used to say

(They know so much!)

He looked to them half way

Spanish or Dutch.

Outlandish certainly

He is—and queer!

He has been lodged with me

This thirty year;

50

All the while (it seems absurd!)

We hardly have

Exchanged a single word.

Mum as the grave!

Minds only his own affairs,

Goes out and in,

And keeps himself upstairs

With his violin.

Mum did I say? And yet

That talking smile

You never can forget,

Is all the while

Full of such sweet reproofs

The darkest day,

Like morning on the roofs

In flush of May.

Like autumn on the hills;

At four o’clock

The sun like a herdsman spills

For drove and flock

Peace with their provender,

And they are fed.

51

The day without a stir

Lies warm and red.

Ah, sir, the summer land

For me! That is

Like living in God’s hand,

Compared to this.

His smile so quiet and deep

Reminds me of it.

I see it in my sleep,

And so I love it.

An anarchist, say some;

But tush, say I,

When a man’s heart is plumb,

Can his life be awry?

Better than charity

And bigger too,

That heart. You’ve seen the sea?

Of course. To you

’T is common enough, no doubt.

But here in town,

With God’s world all shut out,

Save the leaden frown

52

Of the sky, a slant of rain,

And a straggling star,

Such memories remain

The wonders they are.

Once at the Isles of Shoals,

And it was June . . .

Now hear me dote! He strolls

Across my noon,

Like the sun that day, where sleeps

My soul; his gaze

Goes glimmering down my deeps

Of yesterdays,

Searching and searching, till

Its light consumes

The reluctant shapes that fill

Those purple glooms.

Let others applaud, defame,

And the noise die down;

His voice saying your name,

Is enough renown.

Too patient pitiful,

Too fierce at wrong,

53

To patronize the dull,

Or praise the strong.

And yet he has a soul

Of wrath, though pent

Even when that white ghoul

Comes for his rent.

The landlord? Hush! My God!

I think the walls

Take notes to help him prod

Us up. He galls

My very soul to strife,

With his death’s-head face.

He is foul too in his life,

Some hid disgrace,

Some secret thing he does,

I warrant you,

For all his cheek to us

Is shaved so blue.

He takes good care (by the shade

Of seven wives!)

That the undertaker’s trade

He lives by thrives.

54

Nor chick nor child has he.

So servile smug,

With that cringe in his knee,—

God curse his lug!

But him, you should have seen

Him yesterday;

The landlord’s smirk turned green

At his smile. The way

He served that bloodless fish,

Were like to freeze him.

But meeting elsewhere, pish!

He never sees him.

Yet such a gentleman,

So sure and slow.

The vilest harridan

Is not too low,

If there is pity’s need;

And no man born,

For cruelty or greed

Escapes that scorn.

Most of all things, it seems,

He loves the town.

55

Watching the bright-faced streams

Go up and down,

I have surprised him often

On Tremont street,

And marked the grave face soften,

The mouth grow sweet,

In a brown study over

The men and women.

An unsuspected rover

That, for our Common.

When the first jonquils come,

And spring is sold

On the street corners, some

Of the pretty gold

Is sure to find its way

Home in his hand.

And many a winter day

At some cab-stand,

He’ll watch the cabmen feed

The pigeon flocks,

Or bid some liner speed

From the icy docks.

56

His rooms? I much regret

You cannot see

His rooms, but they were let

With guarantee

Of his seclusion there—

Except myself.

Each morning, table, chair,

Lamp, hearth, and shelf,

I rearrange, refreshen,

Put all to rights,

Then leave him in possession.

Ah, but the nights,

The nights! Sir, if I dared

But once set eye

To keyhole, nor be scared,

From playing Paul Pry,

I doubt not I should learn

A wondrous thing

Or two; and in return

Go blind till spring.

The light under his door

Is glory enough,

57

It outshines any star

That I know of.

Wirrah, my lad, my lad,

’T is fearsome strange,

The hints we all have had

Passing the range

Of science, knowledge, law,

Or what you will,

Whose intangible touch of awe

Makes reason nil.

Many a night I start,

Sudden awake,

Feeling my smothered heart

Flutter and quake;

Like an aspen at dead of noon,

When not a breath

Is stirring to trouble the boon

Valley. A wraith

Or a fetch, it must be, shivers

The soul of the tree

Till every leaf of it quivers.

And so with me.

58

Was it the shuffle of feet

I heard go by,

With muffled drums in the street?

Was it the cry

Of a rider riding the night

Into ashes and dawn,

With news in his nostrils and fright

Where his hoof-beats had gone?

Did the pipes, at “Bonny Dundee,”

Bid regiments form?

Did a renegade’s soul get free

On a wail of the storm?

Did a flock of wild geese honk

As they cleared the hill?

Or only a bittern cronk,

Then all was still?

Was it a night stampede

Of a thousand head?

I know I shook like a reed

There on my bed.

Nameless and void and wild

Was the fear before me,

59

Ere I bethought me and smiled

As the truth flashed o’er me.

Of course, it was only his hand

Freeing the bass

Of his old Amati, grand

In the silence’ face.

Rummaging up and down,

From string to string,

Bidding the discords drown,

The harmonies spring,

Where tides and tide-winds rove

Far out from land,

On the ocean of music a-move

At the will of his hand.

Sobbing and grieving now,

Now glad as a bird,

Thou, thou, thou

Of the joys unheard,

Luminous radiant sea

Of the sounds and time,

Surely, surely by thee

Is eternal prime.

60

Holy and beautiful deep,

Spread down before

The imperial coming of sleep,

Endure, endure!

And sleep, be thou the ranger

Over it wan.

And dream, be thou no stranger

There with the dawn.

Then wings of the sun, go abroad

As a scarlet desire,

Unwearied, unwaning, unawed,

To quest and aspire,

Till the drench of the dusk you drink

In the poppy-field west;

Then veer and settle and sink

As a gull to her nest.

Wind,

Away, away!

And hurry your phantom kind

Through the gates of day,

Or ever the king’s dark cup

With its studs and spars

61

Be inverted, and earth look up

To the shuddering stars.

Blaring and triumphing now,

Now quailing and lone,

Thou, thou, thou

Of the joys unknown!

Unknown and wild, wild,

Where the merrymen be,

Sink to sleep, soul of a child,

Slumber, thou sea!

All this his fiddle plays,

And many a thing

As strange, when his mood so lays

The bow to the string.

Sleepless! He never sleeps

That I can find.

I marvel how he keeps

A bit of his mind.

There is neither sight nor sound

In the world of sense,

But he has fathomed and found

In the silvery tense

62

Keen cords on the amber wood.

As he wrings them thence,

Death smiles at his hardihood

For recompense.

Oh fair they are, so fair!

No tongue can tell

How he sets them chiming there

Clear as a bell.

An orchard of birds in June,

The winds that stream,

The cold sea-brooks that croon,

The storms that scream,

The planets that float and swing

Like buoys on the tide,

The north-going legions in spring,

The hills that abide,

The frigate-bird clouds that range,

The vagabond moon—

That wilful lover of change—

And the workaday sun,

Dying summer and fall,

Seasons and men

63

And herds, he has them all

In his shadowy ken.

He calls and they come, leaving strife,

Leaving discord and death,

Out of oblivion to life,

Though its span be a breath.

There they are, all the beautiful things

I loved and lost sight of

Long since in the far-away springs,

Come back for a night of

New being as good as their old,

Aye, better in fact,

For somehow he gilds their fine gold,—

Gives the one thing they lacked,

The breath, aspiration, desire,

Core, kindle, control,

Memory and rapture and fire,—

The touch of man’s soul.

How know the true master? I know

By my joys and my fears,

For my heart crumbles down like the snow

With spring rain into tears.

64

Now I am a precious one!

With nothing to do

But idle here in the sun

And gossip with you

Of a stranger you have not seen,

As like never will.

I would every soul had a screen,

When the wind sets ill

In the world’s bleak house, like this

Strange lodger of mine.

His presence is worse to miss

Than sun’s best shine.

I put no thought at all

Upon the end,

If only I may call

Such a man friend.

And a friend he is, heart light

With love for heft,

Proud as silence, whose right

Hand ignores his left.

Yes, odd! he gives his name

As Spiritus.

65

But that is vague as a flame

In the wind to us.

And then (but not a breath

Of this!) you see,

All his effects, my faith!

Are marked D.V.

His cape-coat has a rip,

But for all that,

(Folk smile, suggest a dip

In the dyer’s vat,—

Those purple aldermen

Who roll about

In coaches, drive till ten,

And die of gout),

I think he finely shows

How learning’s crumbs

At least can rival those

Of— ’st, here he comes!

66

Beyond the Gamut

Softly, softly, Niccolo Amati!

What can put such fancies in your head?

There, go dream of your blue-skied Cremona,

While I ponder something you have said.

Something in that last low lovely cadence

Piercing the green dusk alone and far,

Named a new room in the house of knowledge,

Waiting unfrequented, door ajar.

While you dream then, let me unmolested

Pass in childish wonder through that door,—

Breathless, touch and marvel at the beauties

Soon my wiser elders must explore.

Ah, my Niccolo, it’s no great science

We shall ever conquer, you and I.

Yet, when you are nestled at my shoulder,

Others guess not half that we descry.

67

As all sight is but a finer hearing,

And all color but a finer sound,

Beauty, but the reach of lyric freedom,

Caught and quivering past all music’s bound;

Life, that faint sigh whispered from oblivion,

Harks and wonders if we may not be

Five small wits to carry one great rhythmus,

The vast theme of God’s new symphony.

As fine sand spread on a disc of silver,

At some chord which bids the motes combine,

Heeding the hidden and reverberant impulse,

Shifts and dances into curve and line,

The round earth, too, haply, like a dust-mote,

Was set whirling her assigned sure way,

Round this little orb of her ecliptic

To some harmony she must obey.

Did the Master try the taut string merely,

Give a touch, and she must throb to time?

Think you how his bow must rouse the echoes,

Quailing triumphing on, secure, sublime!

68

Ah, thought cannot far without the symbol!

Help me, little brother, hold the trend.

Dear good flesh, that keeps the spirit steady,

Lest it faint, grown dizzy at thought’s end!

Waves of sound (Is this your thought, Amati?),

Climbing into treble thin and clear,

Past the silence, change to waves of color,

We must say, when eye takes place of ear?

Not a bird-song, but it has for fellow

Some-wood-flower, its speechless counterpart,

Form and color moulded to one cadence,

To voice something of the wild mute heart.

Thrushes, we’ll suppose, have for their tune-mates

The gold languorous lilies of the glade;

And the whippoorwill, that plaintive dreamer,

Some dark purple flower that loves the shade.

The song-sparrow tells me what the clover

Nods about beneath the gorgeous blue;

69

While the snowballs tell me old love-stories

Thistle-birds half hinted as they flew.

April’s faith, in robin at his vespers,

Breathes a prayer too in my lilac blooms.

What the cloudy asters told the hillside,

My lone rainbird in the dusk resumes.

Bobolink is voice for apple blossom,

Breezy, abundant, good for human joys;

Oriole has touched the burning secret

Poppies hide with their deliberate poise.

Tiny twin-flowers, what are they but fancies,

Subtler than a field-lark can express?

Swallows make the low contented twitter

Lying just beyond the pansies’ guess.

Yellowbird, the hot noon’s warbler, pierces

Sense where tiger-lilies may not pass.

Are not crickets and all field-wise creatures

Brahmins of the universal grass?

Saffron butterflies and mute ephemera,

Doubt not, have their songs too, could we hear.

70

Every raindrop is a sea sonorous

As the great worlds thundering sphere to sphere.

There’s no silence and no dark forever,

Clangoring suns to us are placid stars;

Swift-foot lightning with his henchman thunder

Lags behind these gnomes in Leyden jars.

Peal and flash and thrill and scent and savour

Pulse through rhythm to rapture, and control,—

Who shall say how far along or finely?—

The infinite tectonics of the soul.

Low-bred peoples, Hottentots, Basutos,

Have a taste for scarlet and brass bands.

Our friend Monet, feeling red repulsive,

Sees blue shadows in pale purple lands.

Sees not only, but instructs our seeing;

Taught by him a twelvemonth, we confess

Earth once robed in crude barbaric splendor,

Has put on a softer lovelier dress.

71

Feast my eyes on some old Indian fabric,

Centuries of culture went to weave,

And I grow the fine fastidious artist,

No mere shop-made textile can deceive.

Red the bass and violet the treble,

Soul may pass out where all color ends.

Ends? So we say, meaning where the eyesight

With some yet unborn perception blends.

You, Amati, never saw a sunset,—

Hear tornadoes in a spider’s loom;

I, at my wits’ end, may still develop

Unknown senses in life’s larger room.

Superhuman is not supernatural.

How shall half-way judge of journey done?

Shall this germ and protoplast of being

Rest mid-life and say his race is run?

Softly there, my Niccolo, a moment!

Shall I then discard my simpler joys?

No, for look you, every sense’s impulse

Is a means the master soul employs.

72

Test and use of all things, lowest, highest,

Are alone of import to the soul;

Joys of earth are journey-aids to heaven,

Garb of the new sainthood sane and whole.

Earth one habitat of spirit merely,

I must use as richly as I may,—

Touch environment with every sense-tip,

Drink the well and pass my wander way.

Ah, drink deep and let the parching morrow

Quench what thirst its newer need may bring!

Slake the senses now, that soul hereafter

Go not forth a starved defrauded thing.

Not for sense sake only, but for soul sake;

That when soul must shed the leaves of sense,

Sun and sap may solace and support her,

Stored in those green hours for her defence.

Shall the grub deny himself the rose-leaf

That he may be moth before his time?

Shall the grasshopper repress his drumbeats

For small envy of the kingbird’s chime?

73

Certain half-men, never touched by worship,

Soil the goodly feast they cannot use;

Others, maimed too, holding flesh a hindrance,

Vilify the bounty they refuse.

He’s most man who loves the purple shadows,

Yet must love the flaring autumn too,—

Follow when the skrieling pipes bid forward,

Lie and gaze for hours into the blue.

He would have gone down with Alexander,

Quelling unknown lands beneath the sun;

Watched where Buddha in the Bo tree shadows

Saw this life’s web woven and undone;

Freed his stifled heart in Shakespeare’s people,

Sweet and elemental and serene;

Dared the unknown with Blake and Galileo;

Fronted death with Daulac’s seventeen.

So shall mighty peace possess his spirit

Whom the noonday leads alone apart,

74

Through the wind-clear early Indian summer,

Where no yearning more shall move his heart.

Wise and foot-free, of the tranquil tenor,

He shall wayfare with the homeless tides;

Time enough, when life allures no longer,

To frequent the tavern death provides.

Life be neither hermitage nor revel;

Lent or carnival alone were vain;

Sin and sainthood—Help me, little brother,

With your largo finder-thought again!

Lift, uplift me, higher still and higher!

Climb and pause and tremble and plunge on,

Till I, toiling after you, come breathless

Where the mountain tops are touched with dawn!

Dark this valley world; and drenched with slumber

We have kept the centuries of night.

Cry, Amati, pierce the waiting stillness

Tremulous with forecast of the light!

75

Cry, Amati! Melt the twilight dirges

In “Te Deums” fit for marching men!

“Good,” the days are chorusing, “shall triumph;”

Though the far-off morrows whisper, “When?”

What is good? I hear your soft string answer,

“I am that whereon the round world leans,

I am every man’s poor guess at wisdom;

Evil is the soul’s misuse of means.

“Up through me, with melody and meaning,

Well the floods of being or subside,

The first dim desire of self for selfhood,

The last smile that puts all self aside.

“Hate is discord lessening through the ages;

Anger a false note, fear a slackened string.

Key thy soul up to the wiser manhood,

Gentler lovelier joy from spring to spring!”

Here in turn I help you, little brother,

Half surmise what you have half explained.

Store it by to ripen, and repeat it

Long hereafter as a glimpse you gained,

76

When the nineteenth century was dying,

From a strolling hand that held you dear,—.

Appanage of time put in your keeping

For my far-off heritor to hear.

I imagine how his eye will kindle

When he fondles you as I do now,—

Bends above you wooing like a lover,

While you yield him all your heart knows how.

I shall have been dust a thousand summers,

But my dear unprofitable dreams

Shall be part of all the good that thrills you

In the oversoul’s orchestral themes.

What is good? While God’s unfinished opus

Multitudinous harmony obeys,

Evil is a dissonance not a discord,

Soon to be resolved to happier phrase,—

From time immemorial permitted,

Lest the too sweet melody grow tame,

And, untouched of pathos or of daring,

Hearts should never know what hearts proclaim:

77

The unstained unconquerable valor,

The unflinching loyalties of love.

Or if evil be at worst a blunder

No musician ever could approve,

The mere bungling of a hand that faltered,—

Mine or his who bade the planets poise,—

What a thing unthinkable for smallness

Is your frayed E string one touch destroys.

How that sea-gull out across the bay there

Rows himself at leisure up the blue!

Evil the mere eddy from his wing-sweep,

Good the morning path he must pursue.

Good, you think, and evil live together,

Both persisting on from change to change

Through interminable conservation,—

Primal powers no ruin can derange?

Deed and accident alike unending

By eternal consequence of cause?

No. For good is impetus to Godward;

Evil, but our ignorance of laws.

Say I let you, spite of all endeavor,

Mar some nocturne by a single note;

78

Is there immortality of discord

In your failure to preserve the rote?

When the sound shall pass my sense’s confines,

Melt away to color or thin flame,

Does it still malinger in the prism,

Falsify the crucible with shame?

Hardly. For the melody and marring,

When they put the dear oblivion on,

Are become as fresh clay for the potter,

Neither good nor bad, for use anon.

Blighted rose and perfect shall commingle

In one excellence of garden mould.

Soul transfusing comeliness or blemish

Can alone lend beauty to the old.

While the streams go down among the mountains,

Gathering rills and leaving sand behind,

Till at last the ocean sea receives them,

And they lose themselves among their kind,

79

Man, the joy-born and the sorrow-nurtured,

(One with nothingness though all things be,—

Great lord Sirius and the moving planets

Fleet as fire-germs in the torn-up sea,—)

Linked to all his half-accomplished fellows,

Through unfrontiered provinces to range,

Man is but the morning dream of nature

Roused by some wild cadence weird and strange.

Slowly therefore, Niccolo, and softly,

With more memories than tongue can tell,

Lower me down the slope of life, and leave me

Knowing the hereafter will be well.

Close with, “Love is but the perfect knowledge,

The one thing no failure can befall;

Lovingkindness betters loving credence;

Love and only love is best of all.”

Beauty, beauty, beauty, sense and seeming,

With the soul of truth she calls her lord!

Stars and men the dust upon her garment;

Hope and fear the echoes of her word.

80

How escape we then, the rainbow’s brothers,

Endless being with each blade and sod?

Dust and shadow between whence and whither,

Part of the tranquillity of God.

81 THE JUGGLER

The Juggler

Look how he throws them up and up,

The beautiful golden balls!

They hang aloft in the purple air,

And there never is one that falls.

He sends them hot from his steady hand,

He teaches them all their curves;

And whether the reach be little or long,

There never is one that swerves.

82

Some, like the tiny red one there,

He never lets go far;

And some he has sent to the roof of the tent

To swim without a jar.

So white and still they seem to hang,

You wonder if he forgot

To reckon the time of their return

And measure their golden lot.

Can it be that, hurried or tired out,

The hand of the juggler shook?

O never you fear, his eye is clear,

He knows them all like a book.

And they will home to his hand at last,

For he pulls them by a cord

Finer than silk and strong as fate,

That is just the bid of his word.

Was ever there such a sight in the world?

Like a wonderful winding skein,—

The way he tangles them up together

And ravels them out again!

He has so many moving now,

You can hardly believe your eyes;

83

And yet they say he can handle twice

The number when he tries.

You take your choice and give me mine,

I know the one for me,

It’s that great bluish one low down

Like a ship’s light out at sea.

It has not moved for a minute or more.

The marvel that it can keep

As if it had been set there to spin

For a thousand years asleep!

If I could have him at the inn

All by myself some night,—

Inquire his country, and where in the world

He came by that cunning sleight!

Where do you guess he learned the trick

To hold us gaping here,

Till our minds in the spell of his maze almost

Have forgotten the time of year?

One never could have the least idea.

Yet why be disposed to twit

A fellow who does such wonderful things

With the merest lack of wit?

84

Likely enough, when the show is done

And the balls all back in his hand,

He’ll tell us why he is smiling so,

And we shall understand.

85

Hack and Hew

Hack and Hew were the sons of God

In the earlier earth than now;

One at his right hand, one at his left,

To obey as he taught them how.

And Hack was blind and Hew was dumb,

But both had the wild, wild heart;

And God’s calm will was their burning will,

And the gist of their toil was art.

They made the moon and the belted stars,

They set the sun to ride;

They loosed the girdle and veil of the sea,

The wind and the purple tide.

Both flower and beast beneath their hands

To beauty and speed outgrew,—

The furious fumbling hand of Hack,

And the glorying hand of Hew.

86

Then, fire and clay, they fashioned a man,

And painted him rosy brown;

And God himself blew hard in his eyes:

“Let them burn till they smoulder down!”

And “There!” said Hack, and “There!” thought Hew,

“We’ll rest, for our toil is done.”

But “Nay,” the Master Workman said,

“For your toil is just begun.

“And ye who served me of old as God

Shall serve me anew as man,

Till I compass the dream that is in my heart,

And perfect the vaster plan.”

And still the craftsman over his craft,

In the vague white light of dawn,

With God’s calm will for his burning will,

While the mounting day comes on.

Yearning, wind-swift, indolent, wild,

Toils with those shadowy two,—

The faltering restless hand of Hack,

And the tireless hand of Hew.

87 The Night Express

The Night Express

Out through the hills of midnight,

Hurtling and thundering on,

The night express from the outer world

Speeds for the open of dawn.

Out of the past and gloom-wrack,

Out of the dim and yore,

Freighted as train or caravan

Was never freighted before;

88

Built when the Sphinx’s query

Was new on the lips of peace;

Hurled through the aching and hollow years

Till time shall have release;

Stealing and swift as a shadow,

Sinuous, urging, and blind,

Unpent as a joy or the flight of a bird,

With oblivion behind;

Down to the morrow country

Into the unknown land!

And the Driver grips the throttle-bar;

Our lives are in his hand.

The sleeping hills awake;

A tremor, a dread, a roar;

The terror is flying, is come, is past;

The hills can sleep once more.

A moment the silence throbs,

The dark has a pulse of fire;

And then the wonder of time is gone,

A wraith and a desire.

Demonish, toiling, grim,

In the ruddy furnace flare,

89

While the Driver fingers the throttle-bar,

Who stands at his elbow there?

Can it be, this thing like a shred

Of the firmament torn away,

Is a boarded train that Death and his crew

Consorted to waylay?

His wreckers, grinning and lean,

Are lurking at every curve;

But the Driver plays with the throttle-bar;

He has the iron nerve.

We are travelling safe and warm,

With our little baggage of cares;

Why tease the peril that yet would come

Unbidden and unawares?

The lonely are lonely still;

And the friend has another friend;

Only the idle heart inquires

The distance and the end.

We pant up the climbing grade,

And coast on the tangent mile,

While the Driver toys with the throttle-bar,

And gathers the track in his smile.

90

The dreamer weary of dreams,

The lover by love released,

Stricken and whole, and eager and sad,

Beauty and waif and priest,

All these adventure forth,

Strangers though side by side,

With the tramp of time in the roaring wheels,

And haste in their shadowy stride.

The star that races the hills

Shows yet the night is deep;

But the Driver humors the throttle-bar;

So, you and I may sleep.

For He of the sleepless hand

Will drive till the night is done—

Will watch till morning springs from the sea,

And the rails stand gold in the sun;

Then he will slow to a stop

The tread of the driving-rod,

When the night express rolls into the dawn;

For the Driver’s name is God.

91 The Dustman

The Dustman

“Dustman, dustman!”

Through the deserted square he cries,

And babies put their rosy fists

Into their eyes.

There’s nothing out of No-man’s-land

So drowsy since the world began,

As “Dustman, dustman,

Dustman.”

He goes his village round at dusk

From door to door, from day to day;

92

And when the children hear his step

They stop their play.

“Dustman, dustman!”

Far up the street he is descried,

And soberly the twilight games

Are laid aside.

“Dustman, dustman!”

There, Drowsyhead, the old refrain,

“Dustman, dustman!”

It goes again.

Dustman, dustman,

Hurry by and let me sleep.

When most I wish for you to come,

You always creep.

Dustman, dustman,

And when I want to play some more,

You never then are further off

Than the next door.

“Dustman, dustman!”

He heckles down the echoing curb,

A step that neither hopes nor hates

Ever disturb.

93

“Dustman, dustman!”

He never varies from one pace,

And the monotony of time

Is in his face.

And some day, with more potent dust,

Brought from his home beyond the deep,

And gently scattered on our eyes,

We, too, shall sleep,—

Hearing the call we know so well

Fade softly out as it began,

“Dustman, dustman,

Dustman!”

94

The Sleepers

The tall carnations down the garden walks

Bowed on their stalks.

Said Jock-a-dreams to John-a-nods,

“What are the odds

That we shall wake up here within the sun,

When time is done,

And pick up all the treasures one by one

Our hands let fall in sleep?” “You have begun

To mutter in your dreams,”

Said John-a-nods to Jock-a-dreams,

And they both slept again.

The tall carnations in the sunset glow

Burned row on row.

Said John-a-nods to Jock-a-dreams,

“To me it seems

A thousand years since last you stirred and spoke,

95

And I awoke.

Was that the wind then trying to provoke

His brothers in their blessed sleep?” “They choke,

Who mutter in their nods,”

Said Jock-a-dreams to John-a-nods.

And they both slept again.

The tall carnations only heard a sigh

Of dusk go by.

96 At the Granite Gate

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,

97

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

98

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,

99

Where sorrow knocks too late,

And grief is overdue,

Beyond the granite gate

There will be thoughts of you.

100 Exit Anima

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

101

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,

102

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!
and ending
Without a flaw.
was printed without a stanza break. This may be a typographical error, but it was left as printed.

One illustration was changed for the second edition, issued by a different publisher. Shown are the title page, the new illustration for “Exit Anima”, and the back page.

BEHIND
THE ARRAS

A Book of the Unseen
BY BLISS CARMAN

With Designs By
T. B. Meteyard

publisher's logo: SCIRE QUOD SCIENDVM

BOSTON
SMALL, MAYNARD
AND COMPANY
1899

Exit Anima, illustration from second edition

Printed at
The Everett Press

publisher's back-page logo from second edition

Boston
MDCCCXCIX





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