A Shropshire Lad and Other Poems

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A Shropshire Lad and Other Poems Page 8

by A. E. Housman


  Be sure it shall not save.

  Thou, when the night falls deep,

  Thou, though the mount be won,

  High heart, thou shalt but sleep

  The sleep denied to none.

  Others, or ever thou,

  To scale those heights were sworn;

  And some achieved, but now

  They never see the morn.

  How shouldst thou keep the prize?

  Thou wast not born for aye.

  Content thee if thine eyes

  Behold it in thy day.

  O youth that wilt attain,

  On, for thine hour is short.

  It may be thou shalt gain

  The hell-defended fort.

  V

  Diffugere Nives

  Horace: Odes iv 7

  The snows are fled away, leaves on the shaws

  And grasses in the mead renew their birth,

  The river to the river-bed withdraws,

  And altered is the fashion of the earth.

  The Nymphs and Graces three put off their fear

  And unapparelled in the woodland play.

  The swift hour and the brief prime of the year

  Say to the soul, Thou wast not born for aye.

  Thaw follows frost; hard on the heel of spring

  Treads summer sure to die, for hard on hers

  Comes autumn, with his apples scattering;

  Then back to wintertide, when nothing stirs.

  But oh, whate’er the sky-led seasons mar,

  Moon upon moon rebuilds it with her beams:

  Come we where Tullus and where Ancus are,

  And good Aeneas, we are dust and dreams.

  Torquatus, if the gods in heaven shall add

  The morrow to the day, what tongue has told?

  Feast then thy heart, for what thy heart has had

  The fingers of no heir will ever hold.

  When thou descendest once the shades among,

  The stern assize and equal judgment o’er,

  Not thy long lineage nor thy golden tongue,

  No, nor thy righteousness, shall friend thee more.

  Night holds Hippolytus the pure of stain,

  Diana steads him nothing, he must stay;

  And Theseus leaves Pirithöus in the chain

  The love of comrades cannot take away.

  VI

  I to my perils

  Of cheat and charmer

  Came clad in armour

  By stars benign.

  Hope lies to mortals

  And most believe her,

  But man’s deceiver

  Was never mine.

  The thoughts of others

  Were light and fleeting,

  Of lovers’ meeting

  Or luck or fame.

  Mine were of trouble,

  And mine were steady;

  So I was ready

  When trouble came.

  VII

  Stars, I have seen them fall,

  But when they drop and die

  No star is lost at all

  From all the star-sown sky.

  The toil of all that be

  Helps not the primal fault;

  It rains into the sea

  And still the sea is salt.

  VIIIA

  Give me a land of boughs in leaf,

  A land of trees that stand;

  Where trees are fallen, there is grief;

  I love no leafless land.

  VIIIB

  Alas, the country whence I fare,

  It is where I would stay;

  And where I would not, it is there

  That I shall be for aye.

  VIIIC

  And one remembers, and one forgets,

  But ’tis not found again,

  Not though they hale in crimsoned nets

  The sunset from the main.

  IX

  When green buds hang in the elm like dust

  And sprinkle the lime like rain,

  Forth I wander, forth I must

  And drink of life again.

  Forth I must by hedgerow bowers

  To look at the leaves uncurled

  And stand in the fields where cuckoo-flowers

  Are lying about the world.

  X

  The weeping Pleiads wester,

  And the moon is under seas;

  From bourn to bourn of midnight

  Far sighs the rainy breeze:

  It sighs from a lost country

  To a land I have not known;

  The weeping Pleiads wester,

  And I lie down alone.

  XI

  The rainy Pleiads wester,

  Orion plunges prone,

  The stroke of midnight ceases,

  And I lie down alone.

  The rainy Pleiads wester

  And seek beyond the sea

  The head that I shall dream of,

  And ’twill not dream of me.

  XII

  I promise nothing: friends will part;

  All things may end, for all began;

  And truth and singleness of heart

  Are mortal even as is man.

  But this unlucky love should last

  When answered passions thin to air;

  Eternal fate so deep has cast

  Its sure foundation of despair.

  XIII

  I lay me down and slumber

  And every morn revive.

  Whose is the night-long breathing

  That keeps a man alive?

  When I was off to dreamland

  And left my limbs forgot,

  Who stayed at home to mind them,

  And breathed when I did not?

  [

  ]

  For oh, ’twas never I.

  If I were you, young fellow,

  I’d save what breath I had,

  For sleepers cut the waking:

  Oh, spare your pains, my lad.

  – I waste my time in talking,

  No heed at all takes he,

  My kind and foolish comrade

  That breathes all night for me.

  XIV

  The farms of home lie lost in even,

  I see far off the steeple stand;

  West and away, from here to heaven,

  Still is the land.

  There if I go no girl will greet me,

  No comrade hollo from the hill,

  No dog run down the yard to meet me:

  The land is still.

  The land is still by farm and steeple,

  And still for me the land may stay:

  There I was friends with perished people,

  [And] there lie they.

  XV

  Tarry, delight; so seldom met,

  So sure to perish, tarry still.

  Forbear to cease or languish yet,

  Though soon you must and will.

  By Sestos town, in Hero’s tower,

  On Hero’s heart Leander lies;

  The signal torch has burned its hour

  And sputters as it dies.

  Beneath him, in the nighted firth,

  Between two continents complain

  The seas he swam from earth to earth

  And he must swim again.

  XVI

  How clear, how lovely bright,

  How beautiful to sight

  Those beams of morning play,

  How heaven laughs out with glee

  Where, like a bird set free,

  Up from the eastern sea

  Soars the delightful day.

  To-day I shall be strong,

  No more shall yield to wrong,

  Shall squander life no more;

  Days lost I know not how,

  I shall retrieve them now;

  Now I shall keep the vow

  I never kept before.

  —Ensanguining the skies

  How heavily it dies

  Into the west away;

  Past touch and sight and sound,

/>   Not further to be found,

  How hopeless under ground

  Falls the remorseful day.

  XVII

  Bells in tower at evening toll,

  And the day forsakes the soul;

  Soon will evening’s self be gone

  And the whispering night come on.

  Blame not thou the faulting light

  Nor the whispers of the night:

  Though the whispering night were still,

  Yet the heart would counsel ill.

  XVIII

  Delight it is in youth and May

  To see the morn arise,

  And more delight, or so they say,

  To read in lovers’ eyes.

  Oh maiden, let your distaff be,

  And pace the flowery meads with me,

  And I will tell you lies.

  ’Tis blithe to see the sunshine fail,

  And hear the land grow still

  And listen till the nightingale

  Is heard beneath the hill.

  Oh follow me where she is flown

  Into the leafy woods alone,

  And I will work you ill.

  XIX

  The mill-stream, now that noises cease,

  Is all that does not hold its peace;

  Under the bridge it murmurs by,

  And here are night and hell and I.

  Who made the world I cannot tell:

  ’Tis made, and here am I in hell.

  My hand, though now my knuckles bleed,

  I never soiled with such a deed.

  And so, no doubt, in time gone by,

  Some have suffered more than I,

  Who only spend the night alone

  And strike my fist upon the stone.

  XX

  Like mine, the veins of these that slumber

  Leapt once with dancing fires divine;

  The blood of all this noteless number

  Ran red like mine.

  How still, with every pulse in station,

  Frost in the founts that used to leap,

  The thralls of night, the perished nation,

  How sound they sleep!

  These too, these veins which life convulses,

  Wait but a while, shall cease to bound;

  I with the ice in all my pulses

  Shall sleep as sound.

  XXI

  The world goes none the lamer,

  For aught that I can see,

  Because this cursed trouble

  Has struck my days and me.

  The stars of heaven are steady,

  The founded hills remain,

  Though I to earth and darkness

  Return in blood and pain.

  Farewell to all belongings

  I won or bought or stole;

  Farewell, my lusty carcass,

  Farewell, my aery soul.

  Oh worse remains for others

  And worse to fear had I

  Than so at four-and-twenty

  To lay me down and die.

  XXII

  Ho, everyone that thirsteth

  And hath the price to give,

  Come to the stolen waters,

  Drink and your soul shall live.

  Come to the stolen waters,

  And leap the guarded pale,

  And pull the flower in season

  Before desire shall fail.

  It shall not last for ever,

  No more than earth and skies;

  But he that drinks in season

  Shall live before he dies.

  June suns, you cannot store them

  To warm the winter’s cold,

  The lad that hopes for heaven

  Shall fill his mouth with mould.

  XXIII

  Crossing alone the nighted ferry

  With the one coin for fee,

  Whom, on the far quayside in waiting,

  Count you to find? not me.

  The fond lackey to fetch and carry,

  The true, sick-hearted slave,

  Expect him not in the just city

  And free land of the grave.

  XXIV

  Stone, steel, dominions pass,

  Faith too, no wonder;

  So leave alone the grass

  That I am under.

  All knots that lovers tie

  Are tied to sever.

  Here shall your sweetheart lie

  Untrue for ever.

  XXV

  Yon flakes that fret the eastern sky

  Lead back my day of birth;

  The far, wide-wandered hour when I

  Came crying upon earth.

  Then came I crying, and to-day,

  With heavier cause to plain,

  Depart I into death away,

  Not to be born again.

  XXVI

  I Counsel You Beware

  Good creatures, do you love your lives

  And have you ears for sense?

  Here is a knife like other knives,

  That cost me eighteen pence.

  I need but stick it in my heart

  And down will come the sky,

  And earth’s foundations will depart

  And all you folk will die.

  XXVII

  To stand up straight and tread the turning mill,

  To lie flat and know nothing and be still,

  Are the two trades of man; and which is worse

  I know not, but I know that both are ill.

  XXVIII

  He, standing hushed, a pace or two apart,

  Among the bluebells of the listless plain,

  Thinks, and remembers how he cleansed his heart

  And washed his hands in innocence in vain.

  XXIX

  From the wash the laundress sends

  My collars home with ravelled ends:

  I must fit, now these are frayed,

  My neck with new ones, London-made.

  Homespun collars, homespun hearts,

  Wear to rags in foreign parts.

  Mine at least’s as good as done,

  And I must get a London one.

  XXX

  Shake hands, we shall never be friends; give over:

  I only vex you the more I try.

  All’s wrong that ever I’ve done and said,

  And nought to help it in this dull head:

  Shake hands, goodnight, goodbye.

  But if you come to a road where danger

  Or guilt or anguish or shame’s to share,

  Be good to the lad that loves you true

  And the soul that was born to die for you,

  And whistle and I’ll be there.

  XXXI

  Because I liked you better

  Than suits a man to say,

  It irked you, and I promised

  I’d throw the thought away.

  To put the world between us

  We parted stiff and dry:

  ‘Farewell,’ said you, ‘forget me.’

  ‘Fare well, I will,’ said I.

  If e’er, where clover whitens

  The dead man’s knoll, you pass,

  And no tall flower to meet you

  Starts in the trefoiled grass,

  Halt by the headstone shading

  The heart you have not stirred,

  And say the lad that loved you

  Was one that kept his word.

  XXXII

  Their seed the sowers scatter

  Behind them as they go.

  Poor lads, ’tis little matter

  How many sorts they sow,

  For only one will grow.

  The charlock on the fallow

  Will take the traveller’s eyes,

  And gild the ploughland sallow

  With flowers before it dies,

  But twice ’twill not arise.

  The stinging-nettle only

  Will aye be found to stand:

  The numberless, the lonely,

  The filler of the land,

  The leaf that h
urts the hand.

  That thrives, come sun, come showers;

  Blow east, blow west, it springs;

  It peoples towns, and towers

  About the courts of Kings,

  And touch it and it stings.

  XXXIII

  On forelands high in heaven,

  ’Tis many a year gone by,

  Amidst the fall of even

  Would stand my friends and I.

  Before our foolish faces

  Lay lands we did not see;

  Our eyes were in the places

  Where we should never be.

  ‘Oh, the pearl seas are yonder,

  The gold and amber shore;

  Shires where the girls are fonder,

  Towns where the pots hold more.

  And here fust we and moulder

  By grange and rick and shed

  And every moon are older,

  And soon we shall be dead.’

  Heigho, ’twas true and pity;

  But there we lads must stay.

  Troy was a steepled city,

  But Troy was far away.

  And home we turned lamenting

  To plains we longed to leave

  And silent hills indenting

  The orange band of eve.

  I see the air benighted

  And all the dusking dales,

  And lamps in England lighted,

  And evening wrecked on Wales.

  And starry darkness paces

  The road from sea to sea,

  And blots the foolish faces

  Of my poor friends and me.

  XXXIV

  Young is the blood that yonder

  Strides out the dusty mile

  And breasts the hill-side highway

  And whistles loud the while

  And vaults the stile.

  Yet backs, I think, have burdens

  And shoulders carry care:

  So fell to flesh its portion

  When I and not my heir

  Was young and there.

  On miry meads in winter

  The football sprang and fell,

  May stuck the land with wickets:

 

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