Read Ebook: Collected Poems: Volume Two by Noyes Alfred
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TALES OF THE MERMAID TAVERN
I A KNIGHT OF THE OCEAN-SEA 274
II A COINER OF ANGELS 285
V THE COMPANION OF A MILE 340
VI BIG BEN 351
A WATCHWORD OF THE FLEET 434
NEW WARS FOR OLD 435
THE PRAYER FOR PEACE 436
THE SWORD OF ENGLAND 438
THE DAWN OF PEACE 438
THE BRINGERS OF GOOD NEWS 440
THE LONELY SHRINE 442
TO A FRIEND OF BOYHOOD LOST AT SEA 443
OUR LADY OF THE TWILIGHT 444
THE HILL-FLOWERS 445
THE CAROL OF THE FIR-TREE 447
LAVENDER 450
COLLECTED POEMS
THE ENCHANTED ISLAND AND OTHER POEMS
MIST IN THE VALLEY
Mist in the valley, weeping mist Beset my homeward way. No gleam of rose or amethyst Hallowed the parting day; A shroud, a shroud of awful grey Wrapped every woodland brow, And drooped in crumbling disarray Around each wintry bough.
Mist in the valley, mist no less Within my groping mind! The stile swam out: a wilderness Rolled round it, grey and blind. A yard in front, a yard behind, So strait my world was grown, I stooped to win once more some kind Glimmer of twig or stone.
I crossed and lost the friendly stile And listened. Never a sound Came to me. Mile on mile on mile It seemed the world around Beneath some infinite sea lay drowned With all that e'er drew breath; Whilst I, alone, had strangely found A moment's life in death.
Mist in the valley, mist no less That muffled every cry Across the soul's grey wilderness Where faith lay down to die; Buried beyond all hope was I, Hope had no meaning there: A yard above my head the sky Could only mock at prayer.
E'en as I groped along, the gloom Suddenly shook at my feet! O, strangely as from a rending tomb In resurrection, sweet Swift wings tumultuously beat Away! I paused to hark-- O, birds of thought, too fair, too fleet To follow across the dark!
Yet, like a madman's dream, there came One fair swift flash to me Of distances, of streets a-flame With joy and agony, And further yet, a moon-lit sea Foaming across its bars, And further yet, the infinity Of wheeling suns and stars,
And further yet ... O, mist of suns I grope amidst your light, O, further yet, what vast response From what transcendent height? Wild wings that burst thro' death's dim night I can but pause and hark; For O, ye are too swift, too white, To follow across the dark!
Mist in the valley, yet I saw, And in my soul I knew The gleaming City whence I draw The strength that then I drew, My misty pathway to pursue With steady pulse and breath Through these dim forest-ways of dew And darkness, life and death.
A SONG OF THE PLOUGH
Idle, comfortless, bare, The broad bleak acres lie: The ploughman guides the sharp ploughshare Steadily nigh.
The big plough-horses lift And climb from the marge of the sea, And the clouds of their breath on the clear wind drift Over the fallow lea.
Streaming up with the yoke, Brown as the sweet-smelling loam, Thro' a sun-swept smother of sweat and smoke The two great horses come.
Up thro' the raw cold morn They trample and drag and swing; And my dreams are waving with ungrown corn In a far-off spring.
It is my soul lies bare Between the hills and the sea: Come, ploughman Life, with thy sharp ploughshare, And plough the field for me.
Over the darkening plain As the stars regain the sky, Steals the chime of an unseen rein Steadily nigh.
Lost in the deepening red The sea has forgotten the shore: The great dark steeds with their muffled tread Draw near once more.
To the furrow's end they sweep Like a sombre wave of the sea, Lifting its crest to challenge the deep Hush of Eternity.
Still for a moment they stand, Massed on the sun's red death, A surge of bronze, too great, too grand, To endure for more than a breath.
Only the billow and stream Of muscle and flank and mane Like darkling mountain-cataracts gleam Gripped in a Titan's rein.
Once more from the furrow's end They wheel to the fallow lea, And down the muffled slope descend To the sleeping sea.
And the fibrous knots of clay, And the sun-dried clots of earth Cleave, and the sunset cloaks the grey Waste and the stony dearth!
O, broad and dusky and sweet, The sunset covers the weald; But my dreams are waving with golden wheat In a still strange field.
My soul, my soul lies bare, Between the hills and the sea; Come, ploughman Death, with thy sharp ploughshare, And plough the field for me.
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