Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series)

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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) Page 149

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  The snake-souled anarch’s fang strikes all the land

  Cold, and all hearts unsundered by the sea.

  June 25, 1894.

  AFTER THE VERDICT

  France, cloven in twain by fire of hell and hate,

  Shamed with the shame of men her meanest born,

  Soldier and judge whose names, inscribed for scorn,

  Stand vilest on the record writ of fate,

  Lies yet not wholly vile who stood so great,

  Sees yet not all her praise of old outworn.

  Not yet is all her scroll of glory torn,

  Or left for utter shame to desecrate.

  High souls and constant hearts of faithful men

  Sustain her perfect praise with tongue and pen

  Indomitable as honour. Storms may toss

  And soil her standard ere her bark win home:

  But shame falls full upon the Christless cross

  Whose brandmark signs the holy hounds of Rome.

  September 1899.

  THE TRANSVAAL

  Patience, long sick to death, is dead. Too long

  Have sloth and doubt and treason bidden us be

  What Cromwell’s England was not, when the sea

  To him bore witness given of Blake how strong

  She stood, a commonweal that brooked no wrong

  From foes less vile than men like wolves set free

  Whose war is waged where none may fight or flee —

  With women and with weanlings. Speech and song

  Lack utterance now for loathing. Scarce we hear

  Foul tongues that blacken God’s dishonoured name

  With prayers turned curses and with praise found shame

  Defy the truth whose witness now draws near

  To scourge these dogs, agape with jaws afoam,

  Down out of life. Strike, England, and strike home.

  October 9, 1899.

  REVERSE

  The wave that breaks against a forward stroke

  Beats not the swimmer back, but thrills him through

  With joyous trust to win his way anew

  Through stronger seas than first upon him broke

  And triumphed. England’s iron-tempered oak

  Shrank not when Europe’s might against her grew

  Full, and her sun drank up her foes like dew,

  And lion-like from sleep her strength awoke.

  As bold in fight as bold in breach of trust

  We find our foes, and wonder not to find,

  Nor grudge them praise whom honour may not bind;

  But loathing more intense than speaks disgust

  Heaves England’s heart, when scorn is bound to greet

  Hunters and hounds whose tongues would lick their feet.

  November 1, 1899.

  THE TURNING OF THE TIDE

  Storm, strong with all the bitter heart of hate,

  Smote England, now nineteen dark years ago,

  As when the tide’s full wrath in seaward flow

  Smites and bears back the swimmer. Fraud and fate

  Were leagued against her: fear was fain to prate

  Of honour in dishonour, pride brought low,

  And humbleness whence holiness must grow,

  And greatness born of shame to be so great.

  The winter day that withered hope and pride

  Shines now triumphal on the turning tide

  That sets once more our trust in freedom free,

  That leaves a ruthless and a truthless foe

  And all base hopes that hailed his cause laid low,

  And England’s name a light on land and sea.

  February 27, 1900.

  ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL BENSON

  Northumberland, so proud and sad to-day,

  Weep and rejoice, our mother, whom no son

  More glorious than this dead and deathless one

  Brought ever fame whereon no time shall prey.

  Nor heed we more than he what liars dare say

  Of mercy’s holiest duties left undone

  Toward whelps and dams of murderous foes, whom none

  Save we had spared or feared to starve and slay.

  Alone as Milton and as Wordsworth found

  And hailed their England, when from all around

  Howled all the recreant hate of envious knaves,

  Sublime she stands: while, stifled in the sound,

  Each lie that falls from German boors and slaves

  Falls but as filth dropt in the wandering waves.

  November 4, 1901.

  ASTRÆA VICTRIX

  England, elect of time,

  By freedom sealed sublime,

  And constant as the sun that saw thy dawn

  Outshine upon the sea

  His own in heaven, to be

  A light that night nor day should see withdrawn,

  If song may speak not now thy praise,

  Fame writes it higher than song may soar or faith may gaze.

  Dark months of months beheld

  Hope thwarted, crossed, and quelled,

  And heard the heartless hounds of hatred bay

  Aloud against thee, glad

  As now their souls are sad

  Who see their hope in hatred pass away

  And wither into shame and fear

  And shudder down to darkness, loth to see or hear.

  Nought now they hear or see

  That speaks or shows not thee

  Triumphant; not as empires reared of yore,

  The imperial commonweal

  That bears thy sovereign seal

  And signs thine orient as thy natural shore

  Free, as no sons but thine may stand,

  Steers lifeward ever, guided of thy pilot hand.

  Fear, masked and veiled by fraud,

  Found shameful time to applaud

  Shame, and bow down thy banner towards the dust,

  And call on godly shame

  To desecrate thy name

  And bid false penitence abjure thy trust:

  Till England’s heart took thought at last,

  And felt her future kindle from her fiery past.

  Then sprang the sunbright fire

  High as the sun, and higher

  Than strange men’s eyes might watch it undismayed:

  But winds athwart it blew

  Storm, and the twilight grew

  Darkness awhile, an unenduring shade:

  And all base birds and beasts of night

  Saw no more England now to fear, no loathsome light.

  All knaves and slaves at heart

  Who, knowing thee what thou art,

  Abhor thee, seeing what none save here may see,

  Strong freedom, taintless truth,

  Supreme in ageless youth,

  Howled all their hate and hope aloud at thee

  While yet the wavering wind of strife

  Bore hard against her sail whose freight is hope and life.

  And now the quickening tide

  That brings back power and pride

  To faith and love whose ensign is thy name

  Bears down the recreant lie

  That doomed thy name to die,

  Sons, friends, and foes behold thy star the same

  As when it stood in heaven a sun

  And Europe saw no glory left her sky save one.

  And now, as then she saw,

  She sees with shamefast awe

  How all unlike all slaves and tyrants born

  Where bondmen champ the bit

  And anarchs foam and flit,

  And day mocks day, and year puts year to scorn,

  Our mother bore us, English men,

  Ashamed of shame and strong in mercy, now as then.

  We loosed not on these knaves

  Their scourge-tormented slaves:

  We held the hand that fain had risen to smite

  The torturer fast, and made

  Justice awhile afraid,

  And righteo
usness forego her ruthless right:

  We warred not even with these as they;

  We bade not them they preyed on make of them their prey.

  All murderous fraud that lurks

  In hearts where hell’s craft works

  Fought, crawled, and slew in darkness: they that died

  Dreamed not of foes too base

  For scorn to grant them grace:

  Men wounded, women, children at their side,

  Had found what faith in fiends may live:

  And yet we gave not back what righteous doom would give.

  No false white flag that fawns

  On faith till murder dawns

  Blood-red from hell-black treason’s heart of hate

  Left ever shame’s foul brand

  Seared on an English hand:

  And yet our pride vouchsafes them grace too great

  For other pride to dream of: scorn

  Strikes retribution silent as the stars at morn.

  And now the living breath

  Whose life puts death to death,

  Freedom, whose name is England, stirs and thrills

  The burning darkness through

  Whence fraud and slavery grew,

  We scarce may mourn our dead whose fame fulfils

  The record where her foes have read

  That earth shall see none like her born ere earth be dead.

  THE FIRST OF JUNE

  Peace and war are one in proof of England’s deathless praise.

  One divine day saw her foemen scattered on the sea

  Far and fast as storm could speed: the same strong day of days

  Sees the imperial commonweal set friends and foemen free.

  Save where freedom reigns, whose name is England, fraud and fear

  Grind and blind the face of men who look on her and lie:

  Now may truth and pride in truth, whose seat of old was here,

  See them shamed and stricken blind and dumb as worms that die.

  Even before our hallowed hawthorn-blossom pass and cease,

  Even as England shines and smiles at last upon the sun,

  Comes the word that means for England more than passing peace,

  Peace with honour, peace with pride in righteous work well done.

  Crowned with flowers the first of all the world and all the year,

  Peace, whose name is one with honour born of war, is here.

  ROUNDEL FROM THE FRENCH OF VILLON

  Death, I would plead against thy wrong,

  Who hast reft me of my love, my wife,

  And art not satiate yet with strife,

  But needs wilt hold me lingering long.

  No strength since then has kept me strong:

  But what could hurt thee in her life,

  Death?

  Twain we were, and our hearts one song,

  One heart: if that be dead, thy knife

  Hath cut me off alive from life,

  Dead as the carver’s figured throng,

  Death!

  A ROUNDEL OF RABELAIS

  Theleme is afar on the waters, adrift and afar,

  Afar and afloat on the waters that flicker and gleam,

  And we feel but her fragrance and see but the shadows that mar

  Theleme.

  In the sun-coloured mists of the sunrise and sunset that steam

  As incense from urns of the twilight, her portals ajar

  Let pass as a shadow the light of the sound of a dream.

  But the laughter that rings from her cloisters that know not a bar

  So kindles delight in desire that the souls in us deem

  He erred not, the seer who discerned on the seas as a star

  Theleme.

  LUCIFER

  Écrasez l’infâme. — VOLTAIRE

  Les prêtres ont raison de l’appeler Lucifer. — VICTOR HUGO

  Voltaire, our England’s lover, man divine

  Beyond all Gods that ever fear adored

  By right and might, by sceptre and by sword,

  By godlike love of sunlike truth, made thine

  Through godlike hate of falsehood’s marshlight shine

  And all the fume of creeds and deeds abhorred

  Whose light was darkness, till the dawn-star soared,

  Truth, reason, mercy, justice, keep thy shrine

  Sacred in memory’s temple, seeing that none

  Of all souls born to strive before the sun

  Loved ever good or hated evil more.

  The snake that felt thy heel upon her head,

  Night’s first-born, writhes as though she were not dead,

  But strikes not, stings not, slays not as before.

  THE CENTENARY OF ALEXANDRE DUMAS

  Sound of trumpets blowing down the merriest winds of morn,

  Flash of hurtless lightnings, laugh of thunders loud and glad,

  Here should hail the summer day whereon a light was born

  Whence the sun grew brighter, seeing the world less dark and sad.

  Man of men by right divine of boyhood everlasting,

  France incarnate, France immortal in her deathless boy,

  Brighter birthday never shone than thine on earth, forecasting

  More of strenuous mirth in manhood, more of manful joy.

  Child of warriors, friend of warriors, Garibaldi’s friend,

  Even thy name is as the splendour of a sunbright sword:

  While the boy’s heart beats in man, thy fame shall find not end:

  Time and dark oblivion bow before thee as their lord.

  Youth acclaims thee gladdest of the gods that gild his days:

  Age gives thanks for thee, and death lacks heart to quench thy praise.

  AT A DOG’S GRAVE

  I

  Good night, we say, when comes the time to win

  The daily death divine that shuts up sight,

  Sleep, that assures for all who dwell therein

  Good night.

  The shadow shed round those we love shines bright

  As love’s own face, when death, sleep’s gentler twin,

  From them divides us even as night from light.

  Shall friends born lower in life, though pure of sin,

  Though clothed with love and faith to usward plight,

  Perish and pass unbidden of us, their kin,

  Good night?

  II

  To die a dog’s death once was held for shame.

  Not all men so beloved and mourned shall lie

  As many of these, whose time untimely came

  To die.

  His years were full: his years were joyous: why

  Must love be sorrow, when his gracious name

  Recalls his lovely life of limb and eye?

  If aught of blameless life on earth may claim

  Life higher than death, though death’s dark wave rise high,

  Such life as this among us never came

  To die.

  III

  White violets, there by hands more sweet than they

  Planted, shall sweeten April’s flowerful air

  About a grave that shows to night and day

  White violets there.

  A child’s light hands, whose touch makes flowers more fair,

  Keep fair as these for many a March and May

  The light of days that are because they were.

  It shall not like a blossom pass away;

  It broods and brightens with the days that bear

  Fresh fruits of love, but leave, as love might pray,

  White violets there.

  THREE WEEKS OLD

  Three weeks since there was no such rose in being;

  Now may eyes made dim with deep delight

  See how fair it is, laugh with love, and seeing

  Praise the chance that bids us bless the sight.

  Three weeks old, and a very rose of roses,

  Bright and sweet as love is sweet and bright.

  Heaven and earth, till a man’s
life wanes and closes,

  Show not life or love a lovelier sight.

  Three weeks past have renewed the rosebright creature

  Day by day with life, and night by night.

  Love, though fain of its every faultless feature,

  Finds not words to match the silent sight.

  A CLASP OF HANDS

  I

  Soft, small, and sweet as sunniest flowers

  That bask in heavenly heat

  When bud by bud breaks, breathes, and cowers,

  Soft, small, and sweet.

  A babe’s hands open as to greet

  The tender touch of ours

  And mock with motion faint and fleet

  The minutes of the new strange hours

  That earth, not heaven, must mete;

  Buds fragrant still from heaven’s own bowers,

  Soft, small, and sweet.

  II

  A velvet vice with springs of steel

  That fasten in a trice

  And clench the fingers fast that feel

  A velvet vice —

  What man would risk the danger twice,

  Nor quake from head to heel?

  Whom would not one such test suffice?

  Well may we tremble as we kneel

  In sight of Paradise,

  If both a babe’s closed fists conceal

  A velvet vice.

  III

  Two flower-soft fists of conquering clutch,

  Two creased and dimpled wrists,

  That match, if mottled overmuch,

  Two flower-soft fists —

  What heart of man dare hold the lists

  Against such odds and such

 

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