Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Christina Rossetti

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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Christina Rossetti Page 17

by Christina Rossetti


  The earth was green, the sky was blue:

  I saw and heard one sunny morn

  A skylark hang between the two,

  A singing speck above the corn;

  A stage below, in gay accord,

  White butterflies danced on the wing,

  And still the singing skylark soared

  And silent sank, and soared to sing.

  The cornfield stretched a tender green

  To right and left beside my walks;

  I knew he had a nest unseen

  Somewhere among the million stalks:

  And as I paused to hear his song

  While swift the sunny moments slid,

  Perhaps his mate sat listening long,

  And listened longer than I did.

  A BRIDE SONG

  Through the vales to my love!

  To the happy small nest of home

  Green from basement to roof;

  Where the honey-bees come

  To the window-sill flowers,

  And dive from above,

  Safe from the spider that weaves

  Her warp and her woof

  In some outermost leaves.

  Through the vales to my love!

  In sweet April hours

  All rainbows and showers,

  While dove answers dove, —

  In beautiful May,

  When the orchards are tender

  And frothing with flowers, —

  In opulent June,

  When the wheat stands up slender

  By sweet-smelling hay,

  And half the sun’s splendour

  Descends to the moon.

  Through the vales to my love!

  Where the turf is so soft to the feet,

  And the thyme makes it sweet,

  And the stately foxglove

  Hangs silent its exquisite bells;

  And where water wells

  The greenness grows greener,

  And bulrushes stand

  Round a lily to screen her.

  Nevertheless, if this land,

  Like a garden to smell and to sight,

  Were turned to a desert of sand,

  Stripped bare of delight,

  All its best gone to worst,

  For my feet no repose,

  No water to comfort my thirst,

  And heaven like a furnace above, —

  The desert would be

  As gushing of waters to me,

  The wilderness be as a rose,

  If it led me to thee,

  O my love!

  CONFLUENTS

  As rivers seek the sea,

  Much more deep than they,

  So my soul seeks thee

  Far away:

  As running rivers moan

  On their course alone

  So I moan

  Left alone.

  As the delicate rose

  To the sun’s sweet strength

  Doth herself unclose,

  Breadth and length:

  So spreads my heart to thee

  Unveiled utterly,

  I to thee

  Utterly.

  As morning dew exhales

  Sunwards pure and free,

  So my spirit fails

  After thee:

  As dew leaves not a trace

  On the green earth’s face;

  I, no trace

  On thy face.

  Its goal the river knows,

  Dewdrops find a way,

  Sunlight cheers the rose

  In her day:

  Shall I, lone sorrow past,

  Find thee at the last?

  Sorrow past,

  Thee at last?

  THE LOWEST ROOM

  Like flowers sequestered from the sun

  And wind of summer, day by day

  I dwindled paler, whilst my hair

  Showed the first tinge of grey.

  “Oh, what is life, that we should live?

  Or what is death, that we must die?

  A bursting bubble is our life:

  I also, what am I?”

  “What is your grief? now tell me, sweet,

  That I may grieve,” my sister said;

  And stayed a white embroidering hand

  And raised a golden head:

  Her tresses showed a richer mass,

  Her eyes looked softer than my own,

  Her figure had a statelier height,

  Her voice a tenderer tone.

  “Some must be second and not first;

  All cannot be the first of all:

  Is not this, too, but vanity?

  I stumble like to fall.

  “So yesterday I read the acts

  Of Hector and each clangorous king

  With wrathful great Aeacides: —

  Old Homer leaves a sting.”

  The comely face looked up again,

  The deft hand lingered on the thread

  “Sweet, tell me what is Homer’s sting,

  Old Homer’s sting?” she said.

  “He stirs my sluggish pulse like wine,

  He melts me like the wind of spice,

  Strong as strong Ajax’ red right hand,

  And grand like Juno’s eyes.

  “I cannot melt the sons of men,

  I cannot fire and tempest-toss: —

  Besides, those days were golden days,

  Whilst these are days of dross.”

  She laughed a feminine low laugh,

  Yet did not stay her dexterous hand:

  “Now tell me of those days,” she said,

  “When time ran golden sand.”

  “Then men were men of might and right,

  Sheer might, at least, and weighty swords;

  Then men in open blood and fire

  Bore witness to their words, —

  “Crest-rearing kings with whistling spears;

  But if these shivered in the shock

  They wrenched up hundred-rooted trees,

  Or hurled the effacing rock.

  “Then hand to hand, then foot to foot,

  Stern to the death-grip grappling then,

  Who ever thought of gunpowder

  Amongst these men of men?

  “They knew whose hand struck home the death,

  They knew who broke but would not bend,

  Could venerate an equal foe

  And scorn a laggard friend.

  “Calm in the utmost stress of doom,

  Devout toward adverse powers above,

  They hated with intenser hate

  And loved with fuller love.

  “Then heavenly beauty could allay

  As heavenly beauty stirred the strife:

  By them a slave was worshipped more

  Than is by us a wife.”

  She laughed again, my sister laughed;

  Made answer o’er the laboured cloth:

  “I rather would be one of us

  Than wife, or slave, or both.”

  “Oh better then be slave or wife

  Than fritter now blank life away:

  Then night had holiness of night,

  And day was sacred day.

  “The princess laboured at her loom,

  Mistress and handmaiden alike;

  Beneath their needles grew the field

  With warriors armed to strike.

  “Or, look again, dim Dian’s face

  Gleamed perfect through the attendant night:

  Were such not better than those holes

  Amid that waste of white?

  “A shame it is, our aimless life;

  I rather from my heart would feed

  From silver dish in gilded stall

  With wheat and wine the steed —

  “The faithful steed that bore my lord

  In safety through the hostile land,

  The faithful steed that arched his neck

  To fondle with my hand.”

  Her needle erred; a moment’s pause,

  A moment’s patience,
all was well.

  Then she: “But just suppose the horse,

  Suppose the rider fell?

  “Then captive in an alien house,

  Hungering on exile’s bitter bread, —

  They happy, they who won the lot

  Of sacrifice,” she said.

  Speaking she faltered, while her look

  Showed forth her passion like a glass:

  With hand suspended, kindling eye,

  Flushed cheek, how fair she was!

  “Ah well, be those the days of dross;

  This, if you will, the age of gold:

  Yet had those days a spark of warmth,

  While these are somewhat cold —

  “Are somewhat mean and cold and slow,

  Are stunted from heroic growth:

  We gain but little when we prove

  The worthlessness of both.”

  “But life is in our hands,” she said;

  “In our own hands for gain or loss:

  Shall not the Sevenfold Sacred Fire

  Suffice to purge our dross?

  “Too short a century of dreams,

  One day of work sufficient length:

  Why should not you, why should not I,

  Attain heroic strength?

  “Our life is given us as a blank,

  Ourselves must make it blest or curst:

  Who dooms me I shall only be

  The second, not the first?

  “Learn from old Homer, if you will,

  Such wisdom as his books have said:

  In one the acts of Ajax shine,

  In one of Diomed.

  “Honored all heroes whose high deeds

  Through life, through death, enlarge their span

  Only Achilles in his rage

  And sloth is less than man.”

  “Achilles only less than man?

  He less than man who, half a god,

  Discomfited all Greece with rest,

  Cowed Ilion with a nod?

  “He offered vengeance, lifelong grief

  To one dear ghost, uncounted price:

  Beasts, Trojans, adverse gods, himself,

  Heaped up the sacrifice.

  “Self-immolated to his friend,

  Shrined in world’s wonder, Homer’s page,

  Is this the man, the less than men

  Of this degenerate age?”

  “Gross from his acorns, tusky boar

  Does memorable acts like his;

  So for her snared offended young

  Bleeds the swart lioness.”

  But here she paused; our eyes had met,

  And I was whitening with the jeer;

  She rose: “I went too far,” she said;

  Spoke low: “Forgive me, dear.

  “To me our days seem pleasant days,

  Our home a haven of pure content;

  Forgive me if I said too much,

  So much more than I meant.

  “Homer, though greater than his gods,

  With rough-hewn virtues was sufficed

  And rough-hewn men: but what are such

  To us who learn of Christ?”

  The much-moved pathos of her voice,

  Her almost tearful eyes, her cheek

  Grown pale, confessed the strength of love

  Which only made her speak.

  For mild she was, of few soft words,

  Most gentle, easy to be led,

  Content to listen when I spoke,

  And reverence what I said:

  I elder sister by six years;

  Not half so glad, or wise, or good:

  Her words rebuked my secret self

  And shamed me where I stood.

  She never guessed her words reproved

  A silent envy nursed within,

  A selfish, souring discontent

  Pride-born, the devil’s sin.

  I smiled, half bitter, half in jest:

  “The wisest man of all the wise

  Left for his summary of life

  ‘Vanity of vanities.’

  “Beneath the sun there’s nothing new:

  Men flow, men ebb, mankind flows on:

  If I am wearied of my life,

  Why, so was Solomon.

  “Vanity of vanities he preached

  Of all he found, of all he sought:

  Vanity of vanities, the gist

  Of all the words he taught.

  “This in the wisdom of the world,

  In Homer’s page, in all, we find:

  As the sea is not filled, so yearns

  Man’s universal mind.

  “This Homer felt, who gave his men

  With glory but a transient state:

  His very Jove could not reverse

  Irrevocable fate.

  “Uncertain all their lot save this —

  Who wins must lose, who lives must die:

  All trodden out into the dark

  Alike, all vanity.”

  She scarcely answered when I paused,

  But rather to herself said: “One

  Is here,” low-voiced and loving, “Yea,

  Greater than Solomon.”

  So both were silent, she and I:

  She laid her work aside, and went

  Into the garden-walks, like spring,

  All gracious with content:

  A little graver than her wont,

  Because her words had fretted me;

  Not warbling quite her merriest tune

  Bird-like from tree to tree.

  I chose a book to read and dream:

  Yet half the while with furtive eyes

  Marked how she made her choice of flowers

  Intuitively wise,

  And ranged them with instinctive taste

  Which all my books had failed to teach;

  Fresh rose herself, and daintier

  Than blossom of the peach.

  By birthright higher than myself,

  Though nestling of the self-same nest:

  No fault of hers, no fault of mine,

  But stubborn to digest.

  I watched her, till my book unmarked

  Slid noiseless to the velvet floor;

  Till all the opulent summer-world

  Looked poorer than before.

  Just then her busy fingers ceased,

  Her fluttered colour went and came:

  I knew whose step was on the walk,

  Whose voice would name her name.

  * * * * *

  Well, twenty years have passed since then:

  My sister now, a stately wife

  Still fair, looks back in peace and sees

  The longer half of life —

  The longer half of prosperous life,

  With little grief, or fear, or fret:

  She, loved and loving long ago,

  Is loved and loving yet.

  A husband honorable, brave,

  Is her main wealth in all the world:

  And next to him one like herself,

  One daughter golden-curled:

  Fair image of her own fair youth,

  As beautiful and as serene,

  With almost such another love

  As her own love has been.

  Yet, though of world-wide charity,

  And in her home most tender dove,

  Her treasure and her heart are stored

  In the home-land of love.

  She thrives, God’s blessed husbandry;

  Most like a vine which full of fruit

  Doth cling and lean and climb toward heaven,

  While earth still binds its root.

  I sit and watch my sister’s face:

  How little altered since the hours

  When she, a kind, light-hearted girl,

  Gathered her garden flowers:

  Her song just mellowed by regret

  For having teased me with her talk;

  Then all-forgetful as she heard

  One step upon the walk.

  While I? I sat alo
ne and watched;

  My lot in life, to live alone

  In mine own world of interests,

  Much felt, but little shown.

  Not to be first: how hard to learn

  That lifelong lesson of the past;

  Line graven on line and stroke on stroke:

  But, thank God, learned at last.

  So now in patience I possess

  My soul year after tedious year,

  Content to take the lowest place,

  The place assigned me here.

  Yet sometimes, when I feel my strength

  Most weak, and life most burdensome,

  I lift mine eyes up to the hills

  From whence my help shall come:

  Yea, sometimes still I lift my heart

  To the Archangelic trumpet-burst,

  When all deep secrets shall be shown,

  And many last be first.

  DEAD HOPE

  Hope new born one pleasant morn

  Died at even;

  Hope dead lives nevermore,

  No, not in heaven.

  If his shroud were but a cloud

  To weep itself away;

  Or were he buried underground

  To sprout some day!

  But dead and gone is dead and gone

  Vainly wept upon.

  Nought we place above his face

  To mark the spot,

  But it shows a barren place

  In our lot.

  A DAUGHTER OF EVE

  A fool I was to sleep at noon,

  And wake when night is chilly

  Beneath the comfortless cold moon;

  A fool to pluck my rose too soon,

  A fool to snap my lily.

  My garden-plot I have not kept;

  Faded and all-forsaken,

 

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