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Title: The Black Riders and Other Lines
Author: Stephen Crane
Release Date: September 17, 2012 [EBook #40786]
[Last updated: October 13, 2020]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLACK RIDERS AND OTHER LINES ***
Produced by Al Haines.
THE BLACK RIDERS AND
OTHER LINES
BY STEPHEN CRANE
PRIVATELY REPRINTED
BY COURTESY OF SMALL,
MAYNARD & COMPANY
Copyright, 1905, by Copeland & Day
I
Black Riders came from the sea.There was clang and clang of spear and shield,And clash and clash of hoof and heel,Wild shouts and the wave of hairIn the rush upon the wind:Thus the ride of Sin.
II
Three little birds in a rowSat musing.A man passed near that place.Then did the little birds nudge each other.They said, "He thinks he can sing."They threw back their heads to laugh,With quaint countenancesThey regarded him.They were very curious,Those three little birds in a row.
III
In the desertI saw a creature, naked, bestial,Who, squatting upon the ground,Held his heart in his hands,And ate of it.I said, "Is it good, friend?""It is bitter--bitter," he answered;"But I like itBecause it is bitter,And because it is my heart."
IV
Yes, I have a thousand tongues,And nine and ninety-nine lie.Though I strive to use the one,It will make no melody at my will,But is dead in my mouth.
V
Once there came a manWho said,"Range me all men of the world in rows."And instantlyThere was terrific clamor among the peopleAgainst being ranged in rows.There was a loud quarrel, world-wide.It endured for ages;And blood was shedBy those who would not stand in rows,And by those who pined to stand in rows,Eventually, the man went to death, weeping.And those who staid in bloody scuffleKnew not the great simplicity.
VI
God fashioned the ship of the world carefullyWith the infinite skill of an All-MasterMade He the hull and the sails,Held He the rudderReady for adjustment.Erect stood He, scanning his work proudly.Then--at fateful time--a Wrong called,And God turned, heeding.Lo, the ship, at this opportunity, slipped slyly,Making cunning noiseless travel down the ways.So that, forever rudderless, it went upon the seasGoing ridiculous voyages,Making quaint progress,Turning as with serious purposeBefore stupid winds.And there were many in the skyWho laughed at this thing.
VII
Mystic Shadow, bending near me,Who art thou?Whence come ye?And--tell me--is it fairOr is the truth bitter as eaten fire?Tell me!Fear not that I should quaver,For I dare--I dare.Then, tell me!
VIII
I looked here;I looked there;Nowhere could I see my love.And--this time--She was in my heart.Truly, then, I have no complaint,For though she be fair and fairer,She is none so fair as sheIn my heart.
IX
I stood upon a high place,And saw, below, many devilsRunning, leaping,And carousing in sin.One looked up, grinning,And said, "Comrade! Brother!"
X
Should the wide world roll away,Leaving black terror,Limitless night,Nor God, nor man, nor place to standWould be to me essential,If thou and thy white arms were there,And the fall to doom a long way.
XI
In a lonely place,I encountered a sageWho sat, all still,Regarding a newspaper.He accosted me:"Sir, what is this?"Then I saw that I was greater,Aye, greater than this sage.I answered him at once,"Old, old man, it is the wisdom of the age."The sage looked upon me with admiration.
XII
"and the sins of the fathers shall bevisited upon the heads of the children,even unto the third and fourthgeneration of them that hate me."Well, then, I hate thee, Unrighteous Picture;Wicked Image, I hate thee;So, strike with thy vengeanceThe heads of those little menWho come blindly.It will be a brave thing.
XIII
If there is a witness to my little life,To my tiny throes and struggles,He sees a fool;And it is not fine for gods to menace fools.
XIV
There was crimson clash of war.Lands turned black and bare;Women wept;Babes ran, wondering.There came one who understood not these things.He said, "Why is this?"Whereupon a million strove to answer him.There was such intricate clamor of tongues,That still the reason was not.
XV
"Tell brave deeds of war."Then they recounted tales,--"There were stern stands"And bitter runs for glory."Ah, I think there were braver deeds.
XVI
Charity, thou art a lie,A toy of women,A pleasure of certain men.In the presence of justice,Lo, the walls of the templeAre visibleThrough thy form of sudden shadows.
XVII
There were many who went in huddled procession,They knew not whither;But, at any rate, success or calamityWould attend all in equality.There was one who sought a new road.He went into direful thickets,And ultimately he died thus, alone;But they said he had courage.
XVIII
In Heaven,Some little blades of grassStood before God."What did you do?"Then all save one of the little bladesBegan eagerly to relateThe merits of their lives.This one stayed a small way behind,Ashamed.Presently, God said,"And what did you do?"The little blade answered, "Oh, my Lord,"Memory is bitter to me,"For, if I did good deeds,"I know not of them."Then God, in all His splendor,Arose from His throne."Oh, best little blade of grass!" He said.
XIX
A god in wrathWas beating a man;He cuffed him loudlyWith thunderous blowsThat rang and rolled over the earth.All people came running.The man screamed and struggled,And bit madly at the feet of the god.The people cried,"Ah, what a wicked man!"And--"Ah, what a redoubtable god!"
XX
A learned man came to me once.He said, "I know the way,--come."And I was overjoyed at this.Together we hastened.Soon, too soon, were weWhere my eyes were useless,And I knew not the ways of my feetI clung to the hand of my friend;But at last he cried, "I am lost."
XXI
There was, before me,Mile upon mileOf snow, ice, burning sand.And yet I could look beyond all this,To a place of infinite beauty;And I could see the loveliness of herWho walked in the shade of the trees.When I gazed,All was lostBut this place of beauty and her.When I gazed,And in my gazing, desired,Then came againMile upon mile,Of snow, ice, burning sand.
XXII
Once I saw Mountains angry,And ranged in battle-front.Against them stood a little man;Aye, he was no bigger than my finger.I laughed, and spoke to one near me,"Will he prevail?""Surely," replied this other;"His grandfathers beat them many times."Then did I see much virtue in grandfathers,--At least, for the little manWho stood against the Mountains.
XXIII
Places among the stars,Soft gardens near the sun,Keep your distant beauty;Shed no beams upon my weak heart.Since she is hereIn a place of blackness,Not your golden daysNor your silver nightsCan call me to you.Since she is hereIn a place of blackness,Here I stay and wait.
XXIV
I saw a man pursuing the horizon;Round and round they sped.I was disturbed at this;I accosted the man."It is futile," I said,"You can never"--"You lie," he cried,And ran on.
XXV
Behold, the grave of a wicked man,And near it, a stern spirit.There came a drooping maid with violets,But the spirit grasped her arm."No flowers for him," he said.The maid wept:"Ah, I loved him."But the spirit, grim and frowning:"No flowers for him."Now, this is it--If the spirit was just,Why did the maid weep?
XXVI
There was set before me a mighty hill,And long days I climbedThrough regions of snow.When I had before me the summit-view,It seemed that my laborHad been to see gardensLying at impossible distances.
XXVII
A youth in apparel that glitteredWent to walk in a grim forest.There he met an assassinAttired all in garb of old days;He, scowling through the thickets,And dagger poised quivering,Rushed upon the youth."Sir," said this latter,"I am enchanted, believe me,"To die, thus,"In this medieval fashion,"According to the best legends;"Ah, what joy!"Then took he the wound, smiling,And died, content.
XXVIII
"Truth," said a traveller,"Is a rock, a mighty fortress;"Often have I been to it,"Even to its highest tower,"From whence the world looks black.""Truth," said a traveller,"Is a breath, a wind,"A shadow, a phantom;"Long have I pursued it,"But never have I touched"The hem of its garment."And I believed the second traveller;For truth was to meA breath, a wind,A shadow, a phantom,And never had I touchedThe hem of its garment.
XXIX
Behold, from the land of the farther sunsI returned.And I was in a reptile-swarming place,Peopled, otherwise, with grimaces,Shrouded above in black impenetrableness.I shrank, loathing,Sick with it.And I said to him,"What is this?"He made answer slowly,"Spirit, this is a world;"This was your home."
XXX
Supposing that I should have the courageTo let a red sword of virtuePlunge into my heart,Letting to the weeds of the groundMy sinful blood,What can you offer me?A gardened castle?A flowery kingdom?What? A hope?Then hence with your red sword of virtue.
XXXI
Many workmenBuilt a huge ball of masonryUpon a mountain-top.Then they went to the valley below,And turned to behold their work."It is grand," they said;They loved the thing.Of a sudden, it moved:It came upon them swiftly;It crushed them all to blood.But some had opportunity to squeal.
XXXII
Two or three angelsCame near to the earth.They saw a fat church.Little black streams of peopleCame and went in continually.And the angels were puzzledTo know why the people went thus,And why they stayed so long within.
XXXIII
There was one I met upon the roadWho looked at me with kind eyes.He said, "Show me of your wares."And this I did,Holding forth one.He said, "It is a sin."Then held I forth another;He said, "It is a sin."Then held I forth another;He said, "It is a sin."And so to the end;Always he said, "It is a sin."And, finally, I cried out,"But I have none other."Then did he look at meWith kinder eyes."Poor soul!" he said.
XXXIV
I stood upon a highway,And, behold, there cameMany strange pedlers.To me each one made gestures.Holding forth little images, saying,"This is my pattern of God."Now this is the God I prefer."But I said, "Hence!"Leave me with mine own,"And take you yours away;"I can't buy of your patterns of God,"The little Gods you may rightly prefer."
XXXV
A man saw a ball of gold in the sky;He climbed for it,And eventually he achieved it--It was clay.Now this is the strange part:When the man went to the earthAnd looked again,Lo, there was the ball of gold.Now this is the strange part:It was a ball of gold.Aye, by the Heavens, it was a ball of gold.
XXXVI
I met a seer.He held in his handsThe book of wisdom."Sir," I addressed him,"Let me read.""Child--" he began."Sir," I said,"Think not that I am a child,"For already I know much"Of that which you hold."Aye, much."He smiled.Then he opened the bookAnd held it before me.--Strange that I should have grown so suddenly blind.
XXXVII
On the horizon the peaks assembled;And as I looked,The march of the mountains began.As they marched, they sang,"Aye! We come! We come!"
XXXVIII
The ocean said to me once,"Look!"Yonder on the shore"Is a woman, weeping."I have watched her."Go you and tell her this,--"Her lover I have laid"In cool green hall."There is wealth of golden sand"And pillars, coral-red;"Two white fish stand guard at his bier."Tell her this"And more,--"That the king of the seas"Weeps too, old, helpless man."The bustling fates"Heap his hands with corpses"Until he stands like a child,"With surplus of toys."
XXXIX
The livid lightnings flashed in the clouds;The leaden thunders crashed.A worshipper raised his arm."Hearken! Hearken! The voice of God!""Not so," said a man."The voice of God whispers in the heart"So softly"That the soul pauses,"Making no noise,"And strives for these melodies,"Distant, sighing, like faintest breath,"And all the being is still to hear."
XL
And you love me?I love you.You are, then, cold coward.Aye; but, beloved,When I strive to come to you,Man's opinions, a thousand thickets,My interwoven existence,My life,Caught in the stubble of the worldLike a tender veil,--This stays me.No strange move can I makeWithout noise of tearing.I dare not.If love loves,There is no worldNor word.All is lostSave thought of loveAnd place to dream.You love me?I love you.You are, then, cold coward.Aye; but beloved--
XLI
Love walked alone.The rocks cut her tender feet,And the brambles tore her fair limbs.There came a companion to her,But, alas, he was no help,For his name was Heart's Pain.
XLII
I walked in a desert.And I cried,"Ah, God, take me from this place!"A voice said, "It is no desert."I cried, "Well, but--"The sand, the heat, the vacant horizon."A voice said, "It is no desert."
XLIII
There came whisperings in the winds"Good bye! Good bye!"Little voices called in the darkness:"Good bye! Good bye!"Then I stretched forth my arms."No--no--"There came whisperings in the wind:"Good bye! Good bye!"Little voices called in the darkness:"Good bye! Good bye!"
XLIV
I was in the darkness;I could not see my wordsNor the wishes of my heart.Then suddenly there was a great light--"Let me into the darkness again."
XLV
Tradition, thou art for suckling children,Thou art the enlivening milk for babes;But no meat for men is in thee.Then--But, alas, we all are babes.
XLVI
Many red devils ran from my heartAnd out upon the page,They were so tinyThe pen could mash them.And many struggled in the ink.It was strangeTo write in this red muckOf things from my heart.
XLVII
"Think as I think," said a man,"Or you are abominably wicked;"You are a toad."And after I had thought of it,I said, "I will, then, be a toad."
XLVIII
Once there was a man,--Oh, so wise!In all drinkHe detected the bitter,And in all touchHe found the sting.At last he cried thus:"There is nothing,--"No life,"No joy,"No pain,--"There is nothing save opinion,"And opinion be damned."
XLIX
I stood musing in a black world,Not knowing where to direct my feet.And I saw the quick stream of menPouring ceaselessly,Filled with eager faces,A torrent of desire.I called to them,"Where do you go? What do you see?"A thousand voices called to me.A thousand fingers pointed."Look! Look! There!"I know not of it.But, lo! in the far sky shone a radianceIneffable, divine,--A vision painted upon a pall;And sometimes it was,And sometimes it was not.I hesitated.Then from the streamCame roaring voices,Impatient:"Look! Look! There!"So again I saw,And leaped, unhesitant,And struggled and fumedWith outspread clutching fingers.The hard hills tore my flesh;The ways bit my feet.At last I looked again.No radiance in the far sky,Ineffable, divine;No vision painted upon a pall;And always my eyes ached for the light.Then I cried in despair,"I see nothing! Oh, where do I go?"The torrent turned again its faces:"Look! Look! There!"And at the blindness of my spiritThey screamed,"Fool! Fool! Fool!"
L
You say you are holy,And thatBecause I have not seen you sin.Aye, but there are thoseWho see you sin, my friend.
LI
A man went before a strange god,--The god of many men, sadly wise.And the deity thundered loudly,Fat with rage, and puffing,"Kneel, mortal, and cringe"And grovel and do homage"To my particularly sublime majesty."The man fled.Then the man went to another god,--The god of his inner thoughts.And this one looked at himWith soft eyesLit with infinite comprehension,And said, "My poor child!"
LII
Why do you strive for greatness, fool?Go pluck a bough and wear it.It is as sufficing.My lord, there are certain barbariansWho tilt their nosesAs if the stars were flowers,And thy servant is lost among their shoe-buckles.Fain would I have mine eyes even with their eyes.Fool, go pluck a bough and wear it.
LIII
I
Blustering god,Stamping across the skyWith loud swagger,I fear you not.No, though from your highest heavenYou plunge your spear at my heart,I fear you not.No, not if the blowIs as the lightning blasting a tree,I fear you not, puffing braggart.
II
If thou can see into my heartThat I fear thee not,Thou wilt see why I fear thee not,And why it is right.So threaten not, thou, with thy bloody spears,Else thy sublime ears shall hear curses.
III
Withal, there is one whom I fear;I fear to see grief upon that face.Perchance, Friend, he is not your god;If so, spit upon him.By it you will do no profanity.But I--Ah, sooner would I dieThan see tears in those eyes of my soul.
LIV
"It was wrong to do this," said the angel."You should live like a flower,"Holding malice like a puppy,"Waging war like a lambkin.""Not so," quoth the manWho had no fear of spirits;"It is only wrong for angels"Who can live like the flowers,"Holding malice like the puppies,"Waging war like the lambkins."
LV
A man toiled on a burning road,Never resting.Once he saw a fat, stupid assGrinning at him from a green place.The man cried out in rage,"Ah! Do not deride me, fool!"I know you--"All day stuffing your belly,"Burying your heart"In grass and tender sprouts:"It will not suffice you."But the ass only grinned at him from the green place.
LVI
A man feared that he might find an assassin;Another that he might find a victim.One was more wise than the other.
LVII
With eye and with gestureYou say you are holy.I say you lie;For I did see youDraw away your coatsFrom the sin upon the handsOf a little child.Liar!
LVIII
The sage lectured brilliantly.Before him, two images:"Now this one is a devil,"And this one is me."He turned away.Then a cunning pupilChanged the positions.Turned the sage again:"Now this one is a devil,"And this one is me."The pupils sat, all grinning,And rejoiced in the game.But the sage was a sage.
LIX
Walking in the sky,A man in strange black garbEncountered a radiant form.Then his steps were eager;Bowed he devoutly."My Lord," said he.But the spirit knew him not.
LX
Upon the road of my life,Passed me many fair creatures,Clothed all in white, and radiant.To one, finally, I made speech:"Who art thou?"But she, like the others,Kept cowled her face,And answered in haste, anxiously,"I am Good Deed, forsooth;"You have often seen me.""Not uncowled," I made reply.And with rash and strong hand,Though she resisted,I drew away the veilAnd gazed at the features of VanityShe, shamefaced, went on;And after I had mused a time,I said of myself,"Fool!"
LXI
I
There was a man and a womanWho sinned.Then did the man heap the punishmentAll upon the head of her,And went away gayly.
II
There was a man and a womanWho sinned.And the man stood with her.As upon her head, so upon his,Fell blow and blow,And all people screaming, "Fool!"He was a brave heart.
III
He was a brave heart.Would you speak with him, friend?Well, he is dead,And there went your opportunity.Let it be your griefThat he is deadAnd your opportunity gone;For, in that, you were a coward.
LXII
There was a man who lived a life of fire.Even upon the fabric of time,Where purple becomes orangeAnd orange purple,This life glowed,A dire red stain, indelible;Yet when he was dead,He saw that he had not lived.
LXIII
There was a great cathedral.To solemn songs,A white processionMoved toward the altar.The chief man thereWas erect, and bore himself proudly.Yet some could see him cringe,As in a place of danger,Throwing frightened glances into the air,A-start at threatening faces of the past.
LXIV
Friend, your white beard sweeps the ground,Why do you stand, expectant?Do you hope to see itIn one of your withered days?With your old eyesDo you hope to seeThe triumphal march of Justice?Do not wait, friendTake your white beardAnd your old eyesTo more tender lands.
LXV
Once, I knew a fine song,--It is true, believe me,--It was all of birds,And I held them in a basket;When I opened the wicket,Heavens! They all flew away.I cried, "Come back, little thoughts!"But they only laughed.They flew onUntil they were as sandThrown between me and the sky.
LXVI
If I should cast off this tattered coat,And go free into the mighty sky;If I should find nothing thereBut a vast blue,Echoless, ignorant,--What then?
LXVII
God lay dead in Heaven;Angels sang the hymn of the end;Purple winds went moaning,Their wings drip-drippingWith bloodThat fell upon the earth.It, groaning thing,Turned black and sank.Then from the far cavernsOf dead sinsCame monsters, livid with desire.They fought,Wrangled over the world,A morsel.But of all sadness this was sad,--A woman's arms tried to shieldThe head of a sleeping manFrom the jaws of the final beast.
LXVIII
A spirit spedThrough spaces of night;And as he sped, he called,"God! God!"He went through valleysOf black death-slime,Ever calling,"God! God!"Their echoesFrom crevice and cavernMocked him:"God! God! God!"Fleetly into the plains of spaceHe went, ever calling,"God! God!"Eventually, then, he screamed,Mad in denial,"Ah, there is no God!"A swift hand,A sword from the sky,Smote him,And he was dead.
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLACK RIDERS AND OTHER LINES ***