Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson

Home > Fiction > Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson > Page 441
Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson Page 441

by Robert Louis Stevenson


  An Alp enchanted. All the day

  You hear the exuberant wind at play,

  In vast, unbroken voice uplift,

  In roaring tree, round whistling clift.

  AIR OF DIABELLI’S

  Call it to mind, O my love.

  Dear were your eyes as the day,

  Bright as the day and the sky;

  Like the stream of gold and the sky above,

  Dear were your eyes in the grey.

  We have lived, my love, O, we have lived, my love!

  Now along the silent river, azure

  Through the sky’s inverted image,

  Softly swam the boat that bore our love,

  Swiftly ran the shallow of our love

  Through the heaven’s inverted image,

  In the reedy mazes round the river.

  See along the silent river,

  See of old the lover’s shallop steer.

  Berried brake and reedy island,

  Heaven below and only heaven above.

  Through the sky’s inverted image

  Swiftly swam the boat that bore our love.

  Berried brake and reedy island,

  Mirrored flower and shallop gliding by.

  All the earth and all the sky were ours,

  Silent sat the wafted lovers,

  Bound with grain and watched by all the sky,

  Hand to hand and eye to . . . eye.

  Days of April, airs of Eden,

  Call to mind how bright the vanished angel hours,

  Golden hours of evening,

  When our boat drew homeward filled with flowers.

  O darling, call them to mind; love the past, my love.

  Days of April, airs of Eden.

  How the glory died through golden hours,

  And the shining moon arising;

  How the boat drew homeward filled with flowers.

  Age and winter close us slowly in.

  Level river, cloudless heaven,

  Islanded reed mazes, silver weirs;

  How the silent boat with silver

  Threads the inverted forest as she goes,

  Broke the trembling green of mirrored trees.

  O, remember, and remember

  How the berries hung in garlands.

  Still in the river see the shallop floats.

  Hark! Chimes the falling oar.

  Still in the mind

  Hark to the song of the past!

  Dream, and they pass in their dreams.

  Those that loved of yore, O those that loved of yore!

  Hark through the stillness, O darling, hark!

  Through it all the ear of the mind

  Knows the boat of love. Hark!

  Chimes the falling oar.

  O half in vain they grew old.

  Now the halcyon days are over,

  Age and winter close us slowly round,

  And these sounds at fall of even

  Dim the sight and muffle all the sound.

  And at the married fireside, sleep of soul and sleep of fancy,

  Joan and Darby.

  Silence of the world without a sound;

  And beside the winter faggot

  Joan and Darby sit and dose and dream and wake —

  Dream they hear the flowing, singing river,

  See the berries in the island brake;

  Dream they hear the weir,

  See the gliding shallop mar the stream.

  Hark! in your dreams do you hear?

  Snow has filled the drifted forest;

  Ice has bound the . . . stream.

  Frost has bound our flowing river;

  Snow has whitened all our island brake.

  Berried brake and reedy island,

  Heaven below and only heaven above azure

  Through the sky’s inverted image

  Safely swam the boat that bore our love.

  Dear were your eyes as the day,

  Bright ran the stream, bright hung the sky above.

  Days of April, airs of Eden.

  How the glory died through golden hours,

  And the shining moon arising,

  How the boat drew homeward filled with flowers.

  Bright were your eyes in the night:

  We have lived, my love;

  O, we have loved, my love.

  Now the . . . days are over,

  Age and winter close us slowly round.

  Vainly time departs, and vainly

  Age and winter come and close us round.

  Hark the river’s long continuous sound.

  Hear the river ripples in the reeds.

  Lo, in dreams they see their shallop

  Run the lilies down and drown the weeds

  Mid the sound of crackling faggots.

  So in dreams the new created

  Happy past returns, to-day recedes,

  And they hear once more,

  From the old years,

  Yesterday returns, to-day recedes,

  And they hear with aged hearing warbles

  Love’s own river ripple in the weeds.

  And again the lover’s shallop;

  Lo, the shallop sheds the streaming weeds;

  And afar in foreign countries

  In the ears of aged lovers.

  And again in winter evens

  Starred with lilies . . . with stirring weeds.

  In these ears of aged lovers

  Love’s own river ripples in the reeds.

  EPITAPHIUM EROTII

  Here lies Erotion, whom at six years old

  Fate pilfered. Stranger (when I too am cold,

  Who shall succeed me in my rural field),

  To this small spirit annual honours yield!

  Bright be thy hearth, hale be thy babes, I crave

  And this, in thy green farm, the only grave.

  DE M. ANTONIO

  Now Antoninus, in a smiling age,

  Counts of his life the fifteenth finished stage.

  The rounded days and the safe years he sees,

  Nor fears death’s water mounting round his knees.

  To him remembering not one day is sad,

  Not one but that its memory makes him glad.

  So good men lengthen life; and to recall

  The past is to have twice enjoyed it all.

  AD MAGISTRUM LUDI

  (Unfinished Draft.)

  Now in the sky

  And on the hearth of

  Now in a drawer the direful cane,

  That sceptre of the . . . reign,

  And the long hawser, that on the back

  Of Marsyas fell with many a whack,

  Twice hardened out of Scythian hides,

  Now sleep till the October ides.

  In summer if the boys be well.

  AD NEPOTEM

  O Nepos, twice my neigh(b)our (since at home

  We’re door by door, by Flora’s temple dome;

  And in the country, still conjoined by fate,

  Behold our villas standing gate by gate),

  Thou hast a daughter, dearer far than life —

  Thy image and the image of thy wife.

  Thy image and thy wife’s, and be it so!

  But why for her, [ neglect the flowing / O Nepos, leave the ] can

  And lose the prime of thy Falernian?

  Hoard casks of money, if to hoard be thine;

  But let thy daughter drink a younger wine!

  Let her go rich and wise, in silk and fur;

  Lay down a [ bin that shall / vintage to ] grow old with her;

  But thou, meantime, the while the batch is sound,

  With pleased companions pass the bowl around;

  Nor let the childless only taste delights,

  For Fathers also may enjoy their nights.

  IN CHARIDEMUM

  You, Charidemus, who my cradle swung,

  And watched me all the days that I was young;

  You, at whose step the laziest slaves awake,

  And both the bailiff
and the butler quake;

  The barber’s suds now blacken with my beard,

  And my rough kisses make the maids afeared;

  But with reproach your awful eyebrows twitch,

  And for the cane, I see, your fingers itch.

  If something daintily attired I go,

  Straight you exclaim: “Your father did not so.”

  And fuming, count the bottles on the board

  As though my cellar were your private hoard.

  Enough, at last: I have done all I can,

  And your own mistress hails me for a man.

  DE LIGURRA

  You fear, Ligurra — above all, you long —

  That I should smite you with a stinging song.

  This dreadful honour you both fear and hope —

  Both all in vain: you fall below my scope.

  The Lybian lion tears the roaring bull,

  He does not harm the midge along the pool.

  Lo! if so close this stands in your regard,

  From some blind tap fish forth a drunken barn,

  Who shall with charcoal, on the privy wall,

  Immortalise your name for once and all.

  IN LUPUM

  Beyond the gates thou gav’st a field to till;

  I have a larger on my window-sill.

  A farm, d’ye say? Is this a farm to you,

  Where for all woods I spay one tuft of rue,

  And that so rusty, and so small a thing,

  One shrill cicada hides it with a wing;

  Where one cucumber covers all the plain;

  And where one serpent rings himself in vain

  To enter wholly; and a single snail

  Eats all and exit fasting to the pool?

  Here shall my gardener be the dusty mole.

  My only ploughman the . . . mole.

  Here shall I wait in vain till figs be set,

  And till the spring disclose the violet.

  Through all my wilds a tameless mouse careers,

  And in that narrow boundary appears,

  Huge as the stalking lion of Algiers,

  Huge as the fabled boar of Calydon.

  And all my hay is at one swoop impresst

  By one low-flying swallow for her nest,

  Strip god Priapus of each attribute

  Here finds he scarce a pedestal to foot.

  The gathered harvest scarcely brims a spoon;

  And all my vintage drips in a cocoon.

  Generous are you, but I more generous still:

  Take back your farm and stand me half a gill!

  AD QUINTILIANUM

  O chief director of the growing race,

  Of Rome the glory and of Rome the grace,

  Me, O Quintilian, may you not forgive

  Before from labour I make haste to live?

  Some burn to gather wealth, lay hands on rule,

  Or with white statues fill the atrium full.

  The talking hearth, the rafters sweet with smoke,

  Live fountains and rough grass, my line invoke:

  A sturdy slave, not too learned wife,

  Nights filled with slumber, and a quiet life.

  DE HORTIS JULII MARTIALIS

  My Martial owns a garden, famed to please,

  Beyond the glades of the Hesperides;

  Along Janiculum lies the chosen block

  Where the cool grottos trench the hanging rock.

  The moderate summit, something plain and bare,

  Tastes overhead of a serener air;

  And while the clouds besiege the vales below,

  Keeps the clear heaven and doth with sunshine glow.

  To the June stars that circle in the skies

  The dainty roofs of that tall villa rise.

  Hence do the seven imperial hills appear;

  And you may view the whole of Rome from here;

  Beyond, the Alban and the Tuscan hills;

  And the cool groves and the cool falling rills,

  Rubre Fidenæ, and with virgin blood

  Anointed once Perenna’s orchard wood.

  Thence the Flaminian, the Salarian way,

  Stretch far broad below the dome of day;

  And lo! the traveller toiling towards his home;

  And all unheard, the chariot speeds to Rome!

  For here no whisper of the wheels; and tho’

  The Mulvian Bridge, above the Tiber’s flow,

  Hangs all in sight, and down the sacred stream

  The sliding barges vanish like a dream,

  The seaman’s shrilling pipe not enters here,

  Nor the rude cries of porters on the pier.

  And if so rare the house, how rarer far

  The welcome and the weal that therein are!

  So free the access, the doors so widely thrown,

  You half imagine all to be your own.

  AD MARTIALEM

  Go(d) knows, my Martial, if we two could be

  To enjoy our days set wholly free;

  To the true life together bend our mind,

  And take a furlough from the falser kind.

  No rich saloon, nor palace of the great,

  Nor suit at law should trouble our estate;

  On no vainglorious statues should we look,

  But of a walk, a talk, a little book,

  Baths, wells and meads, and the veranda shade,

  Let all our travels and our toils be made.

  Now neither lives unto himself, alas!

  And the good suns we see, that flash and pass

  And perish; and the bell that knells them cries:

  “Another gone: O when will ye arise?”

  IN MAXIMUM

  Wouldst thou be free? I think it not, indeed;

  But if thou wouldst, attend this simple rede:

  [When quite contented / Thou shall be free when] thou canst dine at home

  And drink a small wine of the march of Rome;

  When thou canst see unmoved thy neighbour’s plate,

  And wear my threadbare toga in the gate;

  When thou hast learned to love a small abode,

  And not to choose a mistress à la mode:

  When thus contained and bridled thou shalt be,

  Then, Maximus, then first shalt thou be free.

  AD OLUM

  Call me not rebel, though [ here at every word / in what I sing ]

  If I no longer hail thee [ King and Lord / Lord and King ]

  I have redeemed myself with all I had,

  And now possess my fortunes poor but glad.

  With all I had I have redeemed myself,

  And escaped at once from slavery and pelf.

  The unruly wishes must a ruler take,

  Our high desires do our low fortunes make:

  Those only who desire palatial things

  Do bear the fetters and the frowns of Kings;

  Set free thy slave; thou settest free thyself.

  DE CŒNATIONE MICÆ

  Look round: You see a little supper room;

  But from my window, lo! great Cæsar’s tomb!

  And the great dead themselves, with jovial breath

  Bid you be merry and remember death.

  DE EROTIO PUELLA

  This girl was sweeter than the song of swans,

  And daintier than the lamb upon the lawns

  Or Curine oyster. She, the flower of girls,

  Outshone the light of Erythræan pearls;

  The teeth of India that with polish glow,

  The untouched lilies or the morning snow.

  Her tresses did gold-dust outshine

  And fair hair of women of the Rhine.

  Compared to her the peacock seemed not fair,

  The squirrel lively, or the phoenix rare;

  Her on whose pyre the smoke still hovering waits;

  Her whom the greedy and unequal fates

  On the sixth dawning of her natal day,

  My child-love and my playmate — snatcht away.

  AD PISCA
TOREM

  For these are sacred fishes all

  Who know that lord that is the lord of all;

  Come to the brim and nose the friendly hand

  That sways and can beshadow all the land.

  Nor only so, but have their names, and come

  When they are summoned by the Lord of Rome.

  Here once his line an impious Lybian threw;

  And as with tremulous reed his prey he drew,

  Straight, the light failed him.

  He groped, nor found the prey that he had ta’en.

  Now as a warning to the fisher clan

  Beside the lake he sits, a beggarman.

  Thou, then, while still thine innocence is pure,

  Flee swiftly, nor presume to set thy lure;

  Respect these fishes, for their friends are great;

  And in the waters empty all thy bait.

  The Poems

  The house on Saranac Lake, New York State, where Stevenson spent the winter of 1887-88, and where he worked on ‘The Master of Ballantrae’.

  LIST OF POEMS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER

  TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM

  BED IN SUMMER

  A THOUGHT

  AT THE SEASIDE

  YOUNG NIGHT THOUGHT

  WHOLE DUTY OF CHILDREN

  RAIN

  PIRATE STORY

  FOREIGN LANDS

  WINDY NIGHTS

  TRAVEL

  SINGING

  LOOKING FORWARD

  A GOOD PLAY

  WHERE GO THE BOATS?

  AUNTIE’S SKIRTS

  THE LAND OF COUNTERPANE

  THE LAND OF NOD

  MY SHADOW

  SYSTEM

  A GOOD BOY

  ESCAPE AT BEDTIME

  MARCHING SONG

  THE COW

  HAPPY THOUGHT

  THE WIND

  KEEPSAKE MILL

  GOOD AND BAD CHILDREN

  FOREIGN CHILDREN

  THE SUN’S TRAVELS

  THE LAMPLIGHTER

  MY BED IS A BOAT

  THE MOON

  THE SWING

  TIME TO RISE

  LOOKING-GLASS RIVER

  FAIRY BREAD

  FROM A RAILWAY CARRIAGE

  WINTER-TIME

  THE HAYLOFT

  FAREWELL TO THE FARM

  GOOD NIGHT

  SHADOW MARCH

  IN PORT

  THE UNSEEN PLAYMATE

 

‹ Prev