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            <title type="main">April Twilights</title>
            <title type="sub">electronic edition</title>
            <author>Cather, Willa, 1873-1947</author>
            <principal xml:id="awj">Jewell, Andrew, 1975-</principal>
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               <name xml:id="aa_hi">Aaron Hillyer</name>
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            <respStmt>
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            <edition>Revised edition, <date when="2010">2010</date>
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               <name>Andrew Jewell</name>
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            <authority>The Willa Cather Archive</authority>
            <address>
               <addrLine>http://cather.unl.edu</addrLine>
            </address>
            <publisher>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</publisher>
            <distributor>
               <name>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities</name>
               <address>
                  <addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>http://cdrh.unl.edu</addrLine>
               </address>
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            <date>2010</date>
            <availability>
               <p>The Willa Cather Archive is freely distributed by the Center for
                                    Digital Research in the Humanities at the University of
                                    Nebraska-Lincoln and licensed under a Creative Commons
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                                    License</p>
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            <bibl>
               <title level="m">April Twilights</title>
               <author>Willa Sibert Cather</author>
               <publisher>Richard G. Badger</publisher>
               <publisher>The Gorham Press</publisher>
               <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
               <date when="1903">1903</date>
            </bibl>
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            <p>Text created for online distribution on the Willa Cather Archive
                                (http://cather.unl.edu).</p>
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               <p>End-of-line hyphenation silently removed where appropriate.</p>
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            <language ident="fr">French</language>
            <language ident="de">German</language>
            <language ident="la">Latin</language>
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      <revisionDesc>
          <change when="2011-08-22" who="#awj">Corrected a typo in "On Cyndus"; "mild-white" revised
to "milk-white"</change>
<change when="2011-01-04" who="#awj">Corrected a typo in "Sonnet."</change>
         <change when="2010-06-30" who="#awj">Conversion of markup from TEI P4 to TEI
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   <text>
      <front>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.000"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.001"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.002"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.003"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.004"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.005"/>
         <titlePage>
            <figure>
               <graphic url="cat.0005.fig2"/>
               <figDesc>Seven decorative flowers</figDesc>
            </figure>
            <docTitle>
               <titlePart>APRIL<lb/>TWILIGHTS</titlePart>
            </docTitle>
            <lb/>
            <byline>POEMS BY <docAuthor>
                  <hi rend="italic">Willa Sibert Cather</hi>
               </docAuthor>
            </byline>
            <lb/>
            <figure>
               <graphic url="cat.0005.fig1"/>
               <figDesc>Badger/Gorham Press insignia</figDesc>
            </figure>
            <docImprint>
               <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>: 
<publisher>Richard G. Badger</publisher>
               <lb/>
               <publisher>The Gorham Press</publisher>: 

<docDate when="1903">1903</docDate>
            </docImprint>
            <figure>
               <graphic url="cat.0005.fig2"/>
               <figDesc>Seven decorative flowers</figDesc>
            </figure>
         </titlePage>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.006"/>
         <titlePage>
            <docImprint>Copyright <date when="1903">1903</date> by Willa Sibert Cather<lb/>
               <hi rend="italic">All Rights Reserved<lb/>
Printed at<lb/>
The Gorham Press<lb/>
Boston, U.S.A.</hi>
            </docImprint>
         </titlePage>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.007"/>
         <div1>
            <lg type="poem">
               <head type="main" rend="center">DEDICATORY</head>
               <head type="sub" rend="center">To R.C.C. <hi rend="smallcaps">AND</hi> C.D.C.</head>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Somewhere, sometime, in an April twilight,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">When the hills are hid in violet shadows</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">When meadow brooks are still and hushed for wonder,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">At the ring dove's call as at a summons,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Let us gather from the world's fair quarters,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Stealing from the trackless dusk like shadows,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Meet to wait the moon, and greet in silence.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">When she swims above the April branches,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Rises clear of naked oak and beeches,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Sit with me beneath the snowy orchard,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Where the white moth hangs with wings entranced,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Drunken with the still perfume of blossoms.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Then, for that the moon was ours of olden,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Let it work again its old enchantment.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Let it, for an April night, transform us</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">From our grosser selves to happy shadows</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Of the three who lay and planned at moonrise,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">On an island in a western river,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Of the conquest of the world together.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Let us pour our amber wine and drink it</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">To the memory of our vanished kingdom,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">To our days of war and ocean venture,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Brave with brigandage and sack of cities;</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">To the Odysseys of summer mornings,</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Starry wonder-tales of nights in April.</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
         </div1>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.008"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.009"/>
         <div1 type="contents">
            <table rend="italic">
               <head type="main" rend="center">Contents</head>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="grandmither">"Grandmither, Think Not I Forget"</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data"> 9</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="inrosetime">In Rose Time</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">10</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="asphodel">Asphodel</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">12</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="millsofmontmartre">Mills of Montmartre</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">13</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="arcadianwinter">Arcadian Winter</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">15</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thehawthorntree">The Hawthorn Tree</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">17</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="sleepminstrelsleep">Sleep, Minstrel, Sleep</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">18</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="fidesspes">Fides, Spes</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">19</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thetavern">The Tavern</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">20</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="inmediavita">In Media Vita</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">22</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="antinous">Antinous</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">21</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="paradox">Paradox</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">23</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="provencallegend">Provençal Legend</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">24</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="winteratdelphi">Winter at Delphi</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">26</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="oncyndus">On Cyndus</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">27</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thenamesake">The Namesake</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">28</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="lamentformarsyas">Lament for Marsyas</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">30</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="whitebirchinwyoming">White Birch in Wyoming</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">31</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="isoughtthewoodinwinter">I Sought the Wood in Winter</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">32</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="eveningsong">Evening Song</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">34</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="eurydice">Eurydice</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">35</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="theencore">The Encore</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">36</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="londonroses">London Roses</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">37</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thenightexpress">The Night Express</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">38</cell>
               </row>
            </table>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.010"/>
            <table rend="italic">
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="prairiedawn">Prairie Dawn</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">40</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="aftermath">Aftermath</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">40</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thineadvocate">Thine Advocate</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">41</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="poppiesonludlowcastle">Poppies on Ludlow Castle</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">42</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="sonnet">Sonnet</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">44</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thouartthepearl">Thou Art the Pearl</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">45</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="fromthevalley">From the Valley</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">46</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="ihavenohouseforlovetoshelterhim">I Have No House For Love to Shelter Him</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">47</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="thepoorminstrel">The Poor Minstrel</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">48</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="paris">Paris</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">50</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="song">Song</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">51</cell>
               </row>
               <row>
                  <cell role="label">
                     <ref type="editorial" target="lenvoi">L'envoi</ref>
                  </cell>
                  <cell role="data">52</cell>
               </row>
            </table>
         </div1>
      </front>
      <pb facs="cat.0005.011"/>
      <body>
         <head type="main" rend="center">
            <hi rend="italic">APRIL TWILIGHTS</hi>
         </head>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.012"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.013" n="9"/>
         <lg xml:id="grandmither" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">"GRANDMITHER, THINK NOT I FORGET"</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Grandmither, think not I forget, when I come back to<lb/>town,</l>
               <l>An' wander the old ways again an' tread them up an'<lb/>down.</l>
               <l>I never smell the clover bloom, nor see the swallows<lb/>pass,</l>
               <l>Without I mind how good ye were unto a little lass.</l>
               <l>I never hear the winter rain a-pelting all night through,</l>
               <l>Without I think and mind me of how cold it falls on you.</l>
               <l>And if I come not often to your bed beneath the thyme,</l>
               <l>Mayhap 't is that I'd change wi' ye, and gie my bed for<lb/>thine,</l>
               <l rend="indented2">Would like to sleep in thine.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>I never hear the summer winds among the roses blow,</l>
               <l>Without I wonder why it was ye loved the lassie so.</l>
               <l>Ye gave me cakes and lollipops and pretty toys a score,&#8212;</l>
               <l>I never thought I should come back and ask ye now for<lb/>more.</l>
               <l>Grandmither, gie me your still, white hands, that lie<lb/>upon your breast,</l>
               <l>For mine do beat the dark all night and never find me<lb/>rest;</l>
               <l>They grope among the shadows an' they beat the cold<lb/>black air,</l>
               <l>They go seekin' in the darkness, an' they never find him<lb/>there,</l>
               <l rend="indented2">As They never find him there.</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.014" n="10"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Grandmither, gie me your sightless eyes, that I may<lb/>never see</l>
               <l>His own a-burnin' full o' love that must not shine for<lb/>me.</l>
               <l>Grandmither, gie me your peaceful lips, white as the<lb/>kirkyard snow,</l>
               <l>For mine be red wi' burnin' thirst an' he must never<lb/>know.</l>
               <l>Grandmither, gie me your clay-stopped ears, that I may<lb/>never hear</l>
               <l>My lad a-singin' in the night when I am sick wi' fear;</l>
               <l>A-singin' when the moonlight over a' the land is white &#8212;</l>
               <l>Aw God! I'll up an' go to him a-singin' in the night,</l>
               <l rend="indented2">A-callin' in the night.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Grandmither, gie me your clay-cold heart that has forgot<lb/>to ache,</l>
               <l>For mine be fire within my breast and yet it cannot break.</l>
               <l>It beats an' throbs forever for the things that must not<lb/>be,&#8212;</l>
               <l>An' can ye not let me creep in an' rest awhile by ye?</l>
               <l>A little lass afeard o' dark slept ye years agone &#8212;</l>
               <l>Ah, she has found what night can hold 'twixt sunset an' <lb/>the dawn!</l>
               <l>So when I plant the rose an' rue above your grave for<lb/>ye,</l>
               <l>Ye'll know it's under rue an' rose that I would like to<lb/>be,</l>
               <l rend="indented2">That I would like to be.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.015" n="11"/>
         <lg xml:id="inrosetime" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">IN ROSE TIME</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Oh this is the joy of the rose;</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">That it blows,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented2">
                  <hi rend="italic">And goes.</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Winter lasts a five-month</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Spring-time stays but one;</l>
               <l>Yellow blow the rye-fields</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When the rose is done.</l>
               <l>Pines are clad at Yuletide</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When the birch is bare,</l>
               <l>And the holly's greenest</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In the frosty air.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Sorrow keeps a stone house</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Builded grim and gray;</l>
               <l>Pleasure hath a straw thatch</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Hung with lanterns gay.</l>
               <l>On her petty savings</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Niggard Prudence thrives;</l>
               <l>Passion, ere the moonset,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Bleeds a thousand lives.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Virtue hath a warm hearth&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Folly's dead and drowned;</l>
               <l>Friendship hath her own when
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Love is underground.</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.016" n="12"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ah! for me the madness</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of the spendthrift flower,</l>
               <l>Burning myriad sunsets</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In a single hour.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">For this is the joy of the rose;</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">That it blows,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented2">
                  <hi rend="italic">And goes.</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <lg xml:id="asphodel" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">ASPHODEL</head>
            <l>As some pale shade in glorious battle slain,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">On beds of rue, beside the silent streams,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Recalls outworn delights in happy dreams;</l>
            <l>The play of oars upon the flashing main,</l>
            <l>The speed of runners, and the swelling vein,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And toil in pleasant upland field that teems</l>
            <l rend="indented1">With vine and gadding gourd&#8212;until he seems</l>
            <l>To feel wan memories of the sun again</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And scent the vineyard slopes when dawn is wet,</l>
            <l>But feels no ache within his loosened knees</l>
            <l rend="indented1">To join the runners where the course is set,</l>
            <l>Nor smite the billows of the fruitless seas,&#8212;</l>
            <l rend="indented1">So I recall our day of passion yet,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">With sighs and tenderness, but no regret.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.017" n="13"/>
         <lg xml:id="millsofmontmartre" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">MILLS OF MONTMARTRE</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Upon the hill above the town&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The old town pale and gray&#8212;</l>
               <l>In other days went up and down</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The country lasses gay.</l>
               <l>Below the humming  mills it shone,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Across the fields of flowers,</l>
               <l>The city, dreamlike, far away,&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The island, stream and towers.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The merry mills were going,</l>
               <l>The country winds were blowing,</l>
               <l>And brave the miller sings;</l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">"Bring in, bring in your yellow grain,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">My weight is never light;</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">(Oh tall my mill and swift her wings!)</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Bring in, bring in your yellow grain</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">And I will give you white.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">White is my hopper for your grist,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">My mill-stones you may trust:</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Bring in your harvest when you list</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">And I will give you dust."</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Upon the hill above the town</l>
               <l rend="indented1">They grind the corn no more;</l>
               <l>The girls go tripping up and down</l>
               <l rend="indented1">From idle door to door.</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.018" n="14"/>
               <l>The nights are terrible with mirth,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The days ashamed for song;</l>
               <l>Against the sky the crimson sails</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Turn all the night-time long.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The merry mills are going,</l>
               <l>The country winds are blowing</l>
               <l>And brave the miller sings:</l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">"Bring in, bring in your yellow grain,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">My weight is never light;</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">(Oh tall my mill and swift her wings!)</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Bring in, bring in your yellow grain,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">And I will give you white.</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">White is my hopper for your grist,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">My mill-stones you may trust:</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Bring in your harvest when you list,</hi>
               </l>
               <l rend="indented1">
                  <hi rend="italic">And I will give you dust."</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <note type="authorial" xml:id="fn2">[Montmartre, the new Latin Quarter, celebrated through the Moulin Rouge and other resorts of a similar character, was once the milling suburb of Paris.  Several of the old wind mills have been converted into cafes and dance halls.]</note>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.019" n="15"/>
         <lg xml:id="arcadianwinter" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">ARCADIAN WINTER</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Woe is me to tell it thee,</l>
               <l>Winter winds in Arcady!</l>
               <l>Scattered is thy flock and fled</l>
               <l>From the glades where once it fed,</l>
               <l>And the snow lies drifted white</l>
               <l>In the bower of our delight,</l>
               <l>Where the beech threw gracious shade</l>
               <l>On the cheek of boy and maid;</l>
               <l>And the bitter blasts make roar</l>
               <l>Through the fleshless sycamore.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>White enchantment holds the spring,</l>
               <l>Where thou once wert wont to sing,</l>
               <l>And the cold hath cut to death</l>
               <l>Reeds melodious of thy breath.</l>
               <l>He, the rival of thy lyre,</l>
               <l>Nightingale with note of fire,</l>
               <l>Sings no more; but far away,</l>
               <l>From the windy hill-side gray,</l>
               <l>Calls a broken note forlorn</l>
               <l>From an aged shepherd's horn.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Still about the fire they tell</l>
               <l>How it long ago befell</l>
               <l>That a shepherd maid and lad</l>
               <l>Met and trembled and were glad;
</l>
               <l>When the swift spring waters ran,</l>
               <l>And the wind to boy or man</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.020" n="16"/>
               <l>Brought the aching of his sires,&#8212;</l>
               <l>Song and love and all desires.
</l>
               <l>Ere the starry dogwoods fell</l>
               <l>They were lovers, so they tell.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Woe is me to tell it thee,</l>
               <l>Winter winds in Arcady!</l>
               <l>Broken pipes and vows forgot;</l>
               <l>Scattered flocks returning not;</l>
               <l>Frozen brook and drifted hill;</l>
               <l>Ashen sun and song-birds still;</l>
               <l>Songs of summer and desire</l>
               <l>Crooned about the winter fire;</l>
               <l>Shepherd lads with silver hair,</l>
               <l>Shepherd maids no longer fair.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.021" n="17"/>
         <lg xml:id="thehawthorntree" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE HAWTHORN TREE</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Across the shimmering meadows&#8212;
</l>
               <l>Ah, when he came to me!</l>
               <l>In the spring time,</l>
               <l>In the night time,</l>
               <l>In the starlight,</l>
               <l>Beneath the hawthorn tree.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Up from the misty marsh land&#8212;</l>
               <l>Ah, when he climbed to me!</l>
               <l>To my white bower,</l>
               <l>To my sweet rest,</l>
               <l>To my warm breast,</l>
               <l>Beneath the hawthorn tree.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ask of me what the birds sang,</l>
               <l>High in the hawthorn tree;</l>
               <l>What the breeze tells,</l>
               <l>What the rose smells,</l>
               <l>What the stars shine&#8212;</l>
               <l>Not what he said to me!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.022" n="18"/>
         <lg xml:id="sleepminstrelsleep" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">SLEEP, MINSTREL, SLEEP</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Sleep, minstrel, sleep: the winter wind's awake,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And yellow April's buried deep and cold.</l>
               <l>The wood is black, and songful things forsake</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The haunted forest when the year is old.</l>
               <l>Above the drifted snow, the aspens quake,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The scourging clouds the shrunken moon enfold,
</l>
               <l>Denying all that nights of summer spake
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And swearing false the summer's globe of gold.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Sleep, minstrel, sleep; in such a bitter night</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thin azure song would seek the stars in vain;</l>
               <l>Thy rose and roundelay the winter's spite</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Would scarcely spare-O never wake again!</l>
               <l>These leaden skies do not thy masques invite,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thy sunny breath would warm not their disdain;</l>
               <l>How shouldst thou sing to boughs with winter dight,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Or gather marigolds in winter rain?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Sleep, minstrel, sleep; we do not grow more kind;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Your cloak was thin, your wound was wet and deep;</l>
               <l>More bitter breath there was than winter wind,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And hotter tears than now thy lovers weep.</l>
               <l>Upon the world-old breast of comfort find</l>
               <l rend="indented1">How gentle Darkness thee will gently keep.</l>
               <l>Thou wert the summer's, and thy joy declined</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When winter winds awoke.  Sleep, minstrel, sleep.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.023" n="19"/>
         <lg xml:id="fidesspes" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">FIDES, SPES</head>
            <l>Joy is come to the little</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Everywhere;</l>
            <l>Pink to the peach and pink to the apple,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">White to the pear.</l>
            <l>Stars are come to the dogwood,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Astral, pale;</l>
            <l>Mists are pink on the red-bud,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Veil after veil.</l>
            <l>Flutes for the feathery locusts,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Soft as spray;</l>
            <l>Tongues of the lovers for chestnuts, poplars,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Babbling May.</l>
            <l>Yellow plumes for the willows'</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Wind-blown hair;</l>
            <l>Oak trees and sycamores only</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Comfortless, bare.</l>
            <l>Sore from steel and the watching,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Somber and old,&#8212;</l>
            <l>Wooing robes for the beeches, larches,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Splashed with gold;</l>
            <l>Breath o' love to the lilac,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Warm with noon.&#8212;</l>
            <l>Great hearts cold when the little</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Beat mad so soon.</l>
            <l>What is their faith to bear it</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Till it come,</l>
            <l>Waiting with rain-cloud and swallow,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Frozen, dumb?</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.024" n="20"/>
         <lg xml:id="thetavern" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE TAVERN</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>In the tavern of my heart</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Many a one has sat before,</l>
               <l>Drunk red wine and sung a stave,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And, departing, come no more.</l>
               <l>When the night was cold without</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the ravens croaked of storm,</l>
               <l>They have sat them at my hearth,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Telling me my house was warm.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>As the lute and cup went round,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">They have rhymed me well in lay;&#8212;</l>
               <l>When the hunt was on at morn,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Each, departing, went his way.</l>
               <l>On the walls, in compliment,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Some would scrawl a verse or two,</l>
               <l>Some have hung a willow branch,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Or a wreath of corn flowers blue.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ah! my friend, when thou dost go,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Leave no wreath of flowers for me;</l>
               <l>Not pale daffodils nor rue,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Violets nor rosemary.</l>
               <l>Spill the wine upon the lamps,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Tread the fire, and bar the door;</l>
               <l>So defile the wretched place</l>
               <l rend="indented1">None will come, forevermore.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.025" n="21"/>
         <lg xml:id="inmediavita" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">IN MEDIA VITA</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Streams of the spring a-singing,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Winds o' the May that blow,</l>
               <l>Birds from the Southland winging,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Buds in the grasses below.</l>
               <l>Clouds that speed hurrying over,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the climbing rose by the wall,</l>
               <l>Singing of bees in the clover,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the dead, under all!</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Lads and their sweethearts lying</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In the cleft o' the windy hill;</l>
               <l>Hearts that hushed of their sighing,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Lips that are tender and still.</l>
               <l>Stars in the purple gloaming,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Flowers that suffuse and fall,</l>
               <l>Twitter of bird-mates homing,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the dead, under all!</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Herdsman abroad with his collie,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Girls on their way to the fair,</l>
               <l>Hot lads a-chasing their folly,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Parsons a-praying their prayer.</l>
               <l>Children their kites a-flying,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Grandsires that nod by the wall,</l>
               <l>Mothers soft lullabies sighing,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the dead, under all!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.026" n="22"/>
         <lg xml:id="antinous" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">ANTINOUS</head>
            <l>With attributes of gods they sculptured him,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Hermes, Osiris, but were never wise</l>
            <l>To lift the level, frowning brow of him</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Or dull the mortal misery in his eyes;</l>
            <l>The scornful weariness of every limb,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">The dust begotten doubt that never dies,</l>
            <l>Antinous, beneath thy lids, though dim,</l>
            <l>The curling smoke of alters rose to thee,</l>
            <l>Conjuring thee to comfort and content.</l>
            <l rend="indented1">An emperor sent his galleys wide and far</l>
            <l>To seek thy healing for thee.  Yea, and spent</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Honor and treasure and red fruits of war</l>
            <l rend="indented1">To lift thy heaviness, least thou should'st mar</l>
            <l>The head that was an empire's glory, bent</l>
            <l>A little, as the heavy poppies are.</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Did the perfection of thy beauty pain</l>
            <l>Thy limbs to bear it?  Did it ache to be,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">As song hath ached in men, or passion vain?</l>
            <l>Or lay it like some heavy robe on thee?</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Was thy sick soul drawn from thee like the rain,</l>
            <l>Or drunk up as the dead are drunk, each hour</l>
            <l>To feed the color of some tulip flower?</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.027" n="23"/>
         <lg xml:id="paradox" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">PARADOX</head>
            <l>I knew them both upon Miranda's isle,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Which is of youth a sea-bound seigniory:</l>
            <l>Misshapen Caliban, so seeming vile,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And Ariel, proud prince of mintrelsy,</l>
            <l>Who did forsake the sunset for my tower</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And like a star above my slumber burned.</l>
            <l>The night was held in silver chains by power</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Of melody, in which all longings yearned&#8212;</l>
            <l>Star-grasping youth in one wild strain expressed,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Tender as dawn, insistant as the tide;</l>
            <l>The heart of night and summer stood confessed.</l>
            <l rend="indented1">I rose aglow and flung the lattice wide&#8212;</l>
            <l>Ah jest of art, what mockery and pang!</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Alack, it was poor Caliban who sang.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.028" n="24"/>
         <lg xml:id="provencallegend" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">PROVENÇAL LEGEND</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>On his little grave and wild,</l>
               <l>Faustinus, the martyr child,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Candytuft and mustards grow.</l>
               <l>Ah, how many a June has smiled</l>
               <l rend="indented1">On the turf he lies below.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ages gone they laid him there,</l>
               <l>Quit of sun and wholesome air,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Broken flesh and tortured limb;</l>
               <l>Leaving all his faith the heir</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of his gentle hope and him.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Yonder, under pagan skies,</l>
               <l>Bleached by rains, the circus lies,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Where they brought him from his play.</l>
               <l>Comeliest his of sacrifice,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Youth and tender April day.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"Art thou not the shepherd's son?&#8212;
</l>
               <l>There the hills thy lambkins run?&#8212;
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">These the fields thy brethren keep?"
</l>
               <l>"On a higher hill than yon</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Doth my Father lead His sheep."</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"Bring thy ransom, then," they say,</l>
               <l>"Gold enough to pave the way</l>
               <l rend="indented1">From the temple to the Rhone."</l>
               <l>When he came, upon his day,
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Slender, tremulous, alone,</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.029" n="25"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Mustard flowers like these he pressed,</l>
               <l>Golden, flame-like, to his breast,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Blooms the early weanlings eat.</l>
               <l>When his Triumph brought him rest,
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Yellow bloom lay at his feet.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Golden play days came: the air</l>
               <l>Called him, weanlings bleated there,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Roman boys ran fleet with spring;</l>
               <l>Shorn of youth and usage fair,
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Hope nor hilltop days they bring.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>But the shepherd children still</l>
               <l>Come at Easter, warm or chill,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Come with violets gathered wild</l>
               <l>From his sloping pasture hill,</l>
               <l>Playfellows who would fulfil</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Playtime to that martyr child.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.030" n="26"/>
         <lg xml:id="winteratdelphi" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">WINTER AT DELPHI</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Cold are the stars of the night,
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Wild is the tempest crying,</l>
               <l>Fast through the velvet dark
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Little white flakes are flying.</l>
               <l>Still is the House of Song,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">But the fire on the hearth is burning;</l>
               <l>And the lamps are trimmed and the cup</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Is full for his day of returning.</l>
               <l>His watchers are fallen asleep,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">They wait but his call to follow,</l>
               <l>Ay, to the ends of the earth&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">But Apollo, the god, Apollo?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Sick is the heart in my breast,
</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Mine eyes are blinded with weeping;</l>
               <l>The god who never comes back,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The watch that forever is keeping.</l>
               <l>Service of gods is hard;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Deep lies the snow on my pillow.</l>
               <l>For him the laurel and song,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Weeping for me and the willow:</l>
               <l>Empty my arms and cold</l>
               <l rend="indented1">As the nest forgot of the swallow:</l>
               <l>Birds will come back with the spring,&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">But Apollo, the god, Apollo?</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.031" n="27"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Hope will come back with the spring,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Joy with the lark's returning;</l>
               <l>Love must awake betimes,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When crocus buds are a-burning.</l>
               <l>Hawthorns will follow the snow,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The robin his tryst be keeping;</l>
               <l>Winds will blow in the May,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Waking the pulses a-sleeping.</l>
               <l>Snowdrops will whiten the hills,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Violets hide in the hollow:</l>
               <l>Pan will be drunken and rage&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">But Apollo, the god, Apollo?</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <lg xml:id="oncyndus" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">ON CYNDUS</head>
            <l>The dream of all the world was at his feet:</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Her eyes were heavy with the night of fate,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">When, from the purple couch whereon she sate,</l>
            <l>She rose, and took a jewel that was meet</l>
            <l>For a queen's breast, where royal pulses beat&#8212;</l>
            <l rend="indented1">A milk-white pearl, her milk-white bosom's mate,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Dropped in the golden chalice at his plate,</l>
            <l>And to his lips held up the nectar sweet</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And bade him drink the cup of destiny.</l>
            <l>How shall he pledge again? by what emprise</l>
            <l rend="indented1">A chalice find that holds a kingdom's fee?</l>
            <l>Perchance in that charmed liquor he decries</l>
            <l rend="indented1">A madman, raving while his galleys flee,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Who casts a world into the wine-dark sea.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.032" n="28"/>
         <lg xml:id="thenamesake" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE NAMESAKE</head>
            <head type="sub" rend="center">TO W.S.B., OF THE THIRTY-THIRD VIRGINIA</head>
            <head type="sub" rend="center">
               <foreign xml:lang="la" rend="italic">Vigesimum post annum in obscurum correpto lucem
    vigesimi<lb/>gaudens percipisse</foreign>
            </head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Two by two and three by three</l>
               <l>Missouri lies by Tennessee;</l>
               <l>Row on row, and hundred deep,</l>
               <l>Maryland and Georgia sleep;</l>
               <l>Wistfully the poplars sigh</l>
               <l>Where Virginia's thousands lie.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Somewhere there among the stones,</l>
               <l>All alike, that mark their bones,</l>
               <l>Lies a lad beneath the pine</l>
               <l>Who once bore a name like mine,&#8212;</l>
               <l>Flung his splendid life away</l>
               <l>Long before I saw the day.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Often have they told me how</l>
               <l>Hair like mine grew on his brow.</l>
               <l>He was twenty to a day</l>
               <l>When he got his jacket gray&#8212;</l>
               <l>He was barely twenty-one</l>
               <l>When they found him by his gun.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Tell me, Uncle by the pine,</l>
               <l>Had you such a girl as mine,</l>
               <l>When you put her arms away</l>
               <l>Riding to the wars that day?</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.033" n="29"/>
               <l>Were her lips so cold, instead</l>
               <l>You must need to kiss the lead?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Had the bugle, lilting gay,</l>
               <l>Sweeter things than she to say?</l>
               <l>Were there no gay fellows then,</l>
               <l>You must seek these silent men?</l>
               <l>Was your luck so bad at play</l>
               <l>You must game your bones away?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ah! you lad with hair like mine,</l>
               <l>Sleeping by the Georgia pine,</l>
               <l>I'd be quick to quit the sun</l>
               <l>Just to help you hold your gun,</l>
               <l>And I'd leave my girl to share</l>
               <l>Your still bed of glory there.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Proud it is I am to know</l>
               <l>In my veins there still must flow,</l>
               <l>There to burn and bite away,</l>
               <l>That proud blood you threw away;</l>
               <l>And I'll be winner at the game</l>
               <l>Enough for two who bore the name.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.034" n="30"/>
         <lg xml:id="lamentformarsyas" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">LAMENT FOR MARSYAS
</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Marsyas sleeps.  Oh, never wait,</l>
               <l>Maidens, by the city gate,</l>
               <l>Till he come to plunder gold</l>
               <l>Of the daffodils you hold,</l>
               <l>Or your branches white with May;</l>
               <l>He is whiter gone than they.</l>
               <l>He will startle you no more</l>
               <l>When along the river shore</l>
               <l>Damsels beat the linen clean.</l>
               <l>Nor when maidens play at ball</l>
               <l>Will he catch it where it fall:</l>
               <l>Though ye wait for him and call</l>
               <l>He will answer not, I ween.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Happy Earth to hold him so,</l>
               <l>Still and satisfied and low,</l>
               <l>Giving him his will&#8212;ah more</l>
               <l>Than a woman could before!</l>
               <l>Still forever holding up</l>
               <l>To his parted lips the cup</l>
               <l>Which hath eased him, when to bless</l>
               <l>All who loved where powerless.</l>
               <l>Ah! for that too-lovely head,</l>
               <l>Low among the laureled dead,</l>
               <l>Many a rose earth oweth yet;</l>
               <l>Many a yellow jonquil brim,</l>
               <l>Many a hyacinth dewey-dim,</l>
               <l>For the singing breath of him&#8212;</l>
               <l>Sweeter than the violet.</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.035" n="31"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Marsyas sleeps: Ah! well-a-day,</l>
               <l>He was wise who did not stay</l>
               <l>Until hands unworthy bore</l>
               <l>Prizes that were his before,</l>
               <l>Him the god hath put for long</l>
               <l>With the elder choir of song&#8212;</l>
               <l>They who turned them from the sun</l>
               <l>Ere their singing days were done,</l>
               <l>Or the lips of praise were chill.</l>
               <l>Whether summer come or go,</l>
               <l>April bud or winter blow,</l>
               <l>He will never heed or know</l>
               <l>Underneath the daffodil.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <lg xml:id="whitebirchinwyoming" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">WHITE BIRCH IN WYOMING</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Stark as a Burne-Jones vision of despair,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Amid the painted glare of sand and sky,</l>
               <l>She stands, so naked seeming to the air,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Where heat has drunk the living water dry.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The tender color of the verdant North,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The waterfall and streaming mists I know,</l>
               <l>Were, from the winding valleys trooping forth,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Her Valkyr sisters hurry toward the snow.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Queen warrior women, silver mailed and white,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">From mountain fastness which they command,</l>
               <l>Bemoan her through the starry Northern night,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Brunhilda, girdled by the burning sand.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.036" n="32"/>
         <lg xml:id="isoughtthewoodinwinter" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">I SOUGHT THE WOOD IN WINTER</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>I sought the wood in summer</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When every twig was green;</l>
               <l>The rudest boughs were tender</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And buds were pink between.</l>
               <l>Light-fingered aspens trembled</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In fitful sun and shade,</l>
               <l>And daffodils were golden</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In every starry glade.</l>
               <l>The brook sang like a robin&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">My hand could check him where</l>
               <l>The lissome maiden willows</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Shook out their yellow hair.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"How frail a thing is Beauty,"</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I said, "when every breath</l>
               <l>She gives the vagrant summer</l>
               <l rend="indented1">But swifter woos her death.</l>
               <l>For his the star dust troubles,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">For this have ages rolled;</l>
               <l>To deck the wood for bridal</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And slay her with the cold."</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>I sought the wood in winter</l>
               <l rend="indented1">When every leaf was dead;</l>
               <l>Behind the wind-whipped branches</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The winter sun set red.</l>
               <l>The coldest star was rising</l>
               <l rend="indented1">To greet that bitter air,</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.037" n="33"/>
               <l>The oaks were writhen giants;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Nor bud nor bloom was there.</l>
               <l>The birches, white and slender,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">In deathless marble stood,</l>
               <l>The brook, a white immortal,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Slept silent in the wood.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"How sure a thing is Beauty,"</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I cried.  "No bolt can slay,</l>
               <l>No wave nor shock despoil her,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">No ravishers dismay.</l>
               <l>Her warriors are the angels</l>
               <l rend="indented1">That cherish from afar,</l>
               <l>Her warders people Heaven</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And watch from every star.</l>
               <l>The granite hills are slighter,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The sea more like to fail;</l>
               <l>Behind the rose the planet,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The Law behind the veil."</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.038" n="34"/>
         <lg xml:id="eveningsong" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">EVENING SONG</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Dear love, what thing of all the things that be</l>
               <l>Is ever worth one thought from you or me,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Save only Love,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Save only Love?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>The days so short, the nights so quick to flee,</l>
               <l>The world so wide, so deep and dark the sea,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">So dark the sea;</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>So far the suns and every listless star,</l>
               <l>Beyond their light&#8212;Ah! dear, who knows how far,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Who knows how far?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>One thing of all dim things I know is true,</l>
               <l>The heart within me knows, and tells it you,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And tells it you.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>So blind is life, so long at last is sleep,</l>
               <l>And none but Love to bid us laugh or weep,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And none but Love,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And none but Love.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.039" n="35"/>
         <lg xml:id="eurydice" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">EURYDICE</head>
            <l>A bitter doom they did upon her place:</l>
            <l>She might not touch his hand nor see his face</l>
            <l>The while he led her up from death and dreams</l>
            <l>Into his world of bright Arcadian streams.</l>
            <l>For all of him she yearned to touch and see,</l>
            <l>Only the sweet ghost of his melody;</l>
            <l>For all of him she yearned to have and hold,</l>
            <l>Only the wraith of song, sweet, sweet and cold.</l>
            <l>With only song to stop her ears by day</l>
            <l>And hold above her frozen heart alway,</l>
            <l>And strain within her arms and glad her sight,</l>
            <l>With only song to feed her lips by night,</l>
            <l>To lay within her bosom only song&#8212;</l>
            <l>Sweetheart!  The way from Hell's so long, so long!</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.040" n="36"/>
         <lg xml:id="theencore" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE ENCORE</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>No garlands in the winter time,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">No trumpets in the night!</l>
               <l>The song ye praise was done lang syne,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And was its own delight.</l>
               <l>O' God's name take the wreath away,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Since now the music's sped;</l>
               <l>Ye never cry "Long live the king!"</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Until the king is dead.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>When I came piping through the land,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">One morning in the spring,</l>
               <l>With cockle burrs upon my coat,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">'Twas then I was a king:</l>
               <l>A mullein sceptre in my hand,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">My order daisies three,</l>
               <l>With song's first freshness on my lips&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And then ye pitied me!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.041" n="37"/>
         <lg xml:id="londonroses" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">LONDON ROSES</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"Rowses, Rowses! Penny a bunch!" they tell you&#8212;</l>
               <l>Slattern girls in Trafalgar, eager to sell you.</l>
               <l>Roses, roses, red in the Kensington sun,</l>
               <l>Holland Road, High Street, Bayswater, see you and<lb/>smell you&#8212;</l>
               <l>Roses of London town, red till the summer is done.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Roses, roses, locust and lilac, perfuming</l>
               <l>West End, East End, wondrously budding and blooming</l>
               <l>Out of the black earth, rubbed in a million hands,</l>
               <l>Foot-trod, sweat-sour over and under, entombing</l>
               <l>Highway of darkness, deep gutted with iron bands.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>"Rowses, rowses!  Penny a bunch!" they tell you,</l>
               <l>Ruddy blooms of corruption, see you and smell you,</l>
               <l>Born of stale earth, fallowed with squalor and tears&#8212;</l>
               <l>North shire, south shire, none are like these, I tell you,</l>
               <l>Roses of London perfumed with a thousand years.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.042" n="38"/>
         <lg xml:id="thenightexpress" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE NIGHT EXPRESS</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>From out the mist-clad meadows, along the river shore,</l>
               <l>The night express-train whistles with eye of fire before.</l>
               <l>A trail of smoke behind her enclouds the rising moon</l>
               <l>That gilds the sighing poplars and floods the wide lagoon.</l>
               <l>Through yellow fields of harvest and waving fields of corn</l>
               <l>The night express-train rumbles with whistle low and<lb/>lorn.</l>
               <l>The silent village harkens the sound it knows so well,</l>
               <l>And boys wait on the siding to hear the engine-bell,</l>
               <l>While lads who used to loiter with wistful steps and slow,</l>
               <l>Await to-night a comrade who comes, but will not go.</l>
               <l>The train that brings to mothers the news of sons who<lb/>roam</l>
               <l>Shoots red from out the marshes to bring a rover home.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>With restless heart of boyhood we watched that head-<lb/>light when</l>
               <l>The whistle seemed to call us to dare the world of men;</l>
               <l>To leave the plow and herd-whip for lads with hearts of<lb/>clay,</l>
               <l>And while our blood was leaping be up and fare away;</l>
               <l>To find the great world somewhere, to wander wide and<lb/>see</l>
               <l>If men of coast or mountain were better men than we.</l>
               <l>We heard the hoarse throat whistle, we heard the engine-<lb/>bell,</l>
               <l>We saw the red eye blazing, we knew the hot heart well.</l>
               <l>But little could we reckon, gay-hearted boys at play,</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.043" n="39"/>
               <l>The horse that took us out to men would bring us home<lb/>one day;</l>
               <l>That took us out at morning, with shining wheels ahum,</l>
               <l>Would bring us home at evening, when we are glad to<lb/>come.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ah! let my fight be fiercer, the little time before</l>
               <l>They bring me still and weary along the river shore.</l>
               <l>Then may the wheels turn swiftly behind the eye of fire,</l>
               <l>And may the bell ring gaily that brings me my desire.</l>
               <l>The boys I used to watch with will all be there to see,</l>
               <l>When I come home to rest me in the ground that nurtured<lb/>me.</l>
               <l>To earth I digged in boyhood, through fields I used to<lb/>keep,</l>
               <l>The lads who wrought beside me shall bear me home to<lb/>sleep.</l>
               <l>From out the mist clad marshes, along the river shore,</l>
               <l>With trail of smoke behind me and eye of fire before;</l>
               <l>And youths will watch with burning to seek the world of<lb/>men,</l>
               <l>And thrill to hear the whistle that brings me home again.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.044" n="40"/>
         <lg xml:id="prairiedawn" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">PRAIRIE DAWN</head>
            <l>A crimson fire that vanquishes the stars;</l>
            <l>A pungent odor from the dusty sage;</l>
            <l>A sudden stirring of the huddled herds;</l>
            <l>A breaking of the distant table-lands</l>
            <l>Through purple mists ascending, and the flare</l>
            <l>Of water ditches silver in the light;</l>
            <l>A swift, bright lance hurled low across the world;</l>
            <l>A sudden sickness for the hills of home.</l>
         </lg>
         <lg xml:id="aftermath" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">AFTERMATH</head>
            <l>Can'st thou conjure a vanished morn of spring,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Or bid the ashes of the sunset glow</l>
            <l>Again to redness?  Are we strong to wring</l>
            <l rend="indented1">From trodden grapes the juice drunk long ago?</l>
            <l>Can leafy longings stir in Autumn's blood,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Or can I wear a pearl dissolved in wine,</l>
            <l>Or go a-Maying in a winter wood,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Or paint with youth thy wasted cheek, or mine?</l>
            <l>What bloom, then, shall abide, since ours hath sped?</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Thou art more lost to me than they who dwell</l>
            <l>In Egypt's sepulchres, long ages fled;</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And would I touch&#8212;Ah me!  I might as well</l>
            <l>Covet the gold of Helen's vanished head,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Or kiss back Cleopatra from the dead!</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.045" n="41"/>
         <lg xml:id="thineadvocate" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THINE ADVOCATE</head>
            <l>When this swarthy body, in revolt and pain,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Erreth against thy love's sweet majesty,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Doing thee wrong that is more wrong to me,</l>
            <l>And from its dearest usage would refrain,</l>
            <l>And soweth hate where our clasped hands have lain</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And discord where accord was wont to be,&#8212;</l>
            <l rend="indented1">Turning thy breath to bitterness in thee,</l>
            <l>Which, doubly bitter, stingeth me again,&#8212;</l>
            <l rend="indented1">My golden harper, sickened of the sun,</l>
            <l>Wild-eyed and tearful through his wind-blown hair,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">The psalmist of thy beauty, who is one</l>
            <l>With it, then fleeth up his narrow stair</l>
            <l rend="indented1">And weepeth for thee till the stars are come,</l>
            <l rend="indented1">As David sometime mourned for Absalom.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.046" n="42"/>
         <lg xml:id="poppiesonludlowcastle" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">POPPIES ON LUDLOW CASTLE<ref type="authorial" xml:id="a1" target="fn1"/>
            </head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Through halls of vanished pleasure,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And hold of vanished power,</l>
               <l>And crypt of faith forgotten,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I came to Ludlow tower.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>A-top of arch and stairway,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of crypt, and donjon cell,</l>
               <l>Of council hall, and chamber,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of wall, and ditch, and well.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>High over grated turrets</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Where clinging ivys run,</l>
               <l>A thousand scarlet poppies</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Enticed the rising sun.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Upon the topmost tower,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">With death and damp below,&#8212;</l>
               <l>Three hundred years of spoilage,&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The crimson poppies grow.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>&#8212;This hall it was that bred him,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">These hills that knew him brave,</l>
               <l>The gentlest English singer</l>
               <l rend="indented1">That fills an English grave.&#8212;</l>
            </lg>
            <pb facs="cat.0005.047" n="43"/>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>How have they heart to blossom</l>
               <l rend="indented1">So cruel gay and red,</l>
               <l>When beauty so hath perished</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And valor so hath sped?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>When knights so fair are rotten,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And captains true asleep,</l>
               <l>And singing lips are dust-stopped</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Six English earth-feet deep?</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>When ages old remind me</l>
               <l rend="indented1">How much hath gone for naught,</l>
               <l>What wretched ghost remaineth</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of all that flesh hath wrought;</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Of love and song and warring,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of adventure and play,</l>
               <l>Of art and comely building,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of faith and form and fray,</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>I'll mind the flowers of pleasure,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Of short-lived youth and sleep,</l>
               <l>That drank the sunny weather</l>
               <l rend="indented1">A-top of Ludlow keep.</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <note type="authorial" xml:id="fn1">*Ludlow Castle, in Shropshire, was the seat where Sir Philip Sidney spent a part of his youth, when his father was governor of the Welsh border.</note>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.048" n="44"/>
         <lg xml:id="sonnet" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">SONNET</head>
            <l>Alas, that June should come when thou didst go;</l>
            <l>I think you passed each other on the way;</l>
            <l>And seeing thee, the Summer loved thee so</l>
            <l>That all her loveliness she gave away;</l>
            <l>Her rare perfumes, in hawthorn boughs distilled,</l>
            <l>Blushing, she in thy sweeter bosom left,</l>
            <l>Thine arms with all her virgin roses filled,</l>
            <l>Yet felt herself the richer for thy theft;</l>
            <l>Beggared herself of morning for thine eyes,</l>
            <l>Hung on the lips of every bird the tune,</l>
            <l>Breathed on thy cheek her soft vermilion dyes,</l>
            <l>And in thee set the singing heart of June.</l>
            <l>And so, not only do I mourn thy flight,</l>
            <l>But Summer comes despoiled of her delight.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.049" n="45"/>
         <lg xml:id="thouartthepearl" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THOU ART THE PEARL</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>I read of knights who laid their armor down,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And left the tourney's prize for other hands,</l>
               <l>And clad them in a pilgrim's somber gown,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">To seek a holy cup in desert lands.</l>
               <l>For them no more the torch of victory;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">For them lone vigils and the starlight pale,</l>
               <l>So they in dreams the Blessed Cup may see&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thou art the Grail!</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>An Eastern king once smelled a rose in sleep,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And on the morrow laid his scepter down.</l>
               <l>His heir his titles and his lands might keep,&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">The rose was sweeter wearing than the crown.</l>
               <l>Nor cared he that its life was but an hour,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">A breath that from the crimson summer blows,</l>
               <l>Who gladly paid a kingdom for a flower&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thou art the Rose!</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>A merchant man, who knew the worth of things,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Beheld a pearl more priceless than a star;</l>
               <l>And straight returning, all he hath he brings</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And goes upon his way, Ah, richer far!</l>
               <l>Laughter of merchants of the market place,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Nor taunting gibe nor scornful lips that curl,</l>
               <l>Can ever cloud the rapture of his face&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thou art the Pearl!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.050" n="46"/>
         <lg xml:id="fromthevalley" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">FROM THE VALLEY</head>
            <l>Toward the heights the pines climb row on row,</l>
            <l>Processional guardians of the vestal snow,</l>
            <l>Steel clad and somber, with their lances set</l>
            <l>Against my heart, and like an old regret</l>
            <l>For life unlived and love that could not be</l>
            <l>Fall darkness, and the mountain's mystery.</l>
            <l>Between the peaks, with line inviolate,</l>
            <l>The arch of some vast wreck of Titan state</l>
            <l>Yawns wide and cold, and empty galleries lie</l>
            <l>Reverberating silence like a cry.</l>
            <l>From ledges lifting skyward, tier on tier,</l>
            <l>The elder gods, implacable, austere,</l>
            <l>In their imperishable seats and high,</l>
            <l>Behold the valley where our days go by</l>
            <l>Like shining water, coming not again.</l>
            <l>The solemn ministries of love and pain,</l>
            <l>The runner fallen and the strong brought low,</l>
            <l>And hands bound hard by sins of long ago.</l>
            <l>But when the pines to twilight stars complain,</l>
            <l>They drop the misty curtains of the rain,&#8212;</l>
            <l>Whether from pity we can never know,</l>
            <l>Or languor at the dullness of the show.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.051" n="47"/>
         <lg xml:id="ihavenohouseforlovetoshelterhim" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">I HAVE NO HOUSE FOR LOVE TO<lb/>SHELTER HIM</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Since thou came'st not at morn, come not at even;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Let night close peaceful where it hath begun.</l>
               <l>Affrighten not the restful stars from heaven</l>
               <l rend="indented1">With futile after-glimpses of the sun.</l>
               <l>My heart inclines me, but my lands are wasted,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">My treasure spent, and evening closes dim;</l>
               <l>Spring's fair demense the chilling frost hath tasted&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I have no house for Love to shelter him.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>No raiment fair to clothe his limbs so tender;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">No spicéd wines to cool his burning lip;</l>
               <l>No garlands wherewithal to crown his splendor;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">No lute to tune to songful fellowship.</l>
               <l>No pillow for the twilights of his dreaming;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">No roses on these brows, with winter grim,</l>
               <l>Wherewith to strew his couch, as were beseeming&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I have no house for Love to shelter him.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Ride on, and tarry not, O kingly stranger!</l>
               <l rend="indented1">This darkened chamber is a house of prayer;</l>
               <l>A place of vigils, and to youth a danger&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">'Twas fair at morning, but thou wert not there.</l>
               <l>Who woos the sapless winter for his lover,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Or hangs his garlands at a cloister grim?</l>
               <l>Oh! Bid me not my nakedness discover,&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">I have no house for Love to shelter him!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.052" n="48"/>
         <lg xml:id="thepoorminstrel" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">THE POOR MINSTREL</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Does the darkness cradle thee</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Than mine arms more tenderly?</hi>
               </l>
               <l>Do the angels God hath put</l>
               <l rend="indented1">There to guard thy lonely sleep&#8212;</l>
               <l>One at head and one at foot&#8212;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Watch more fond and constant keep?</l>
               <l>When the black-bird sings in May,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the Spring is in the wood,</l>
               <l>Would you never trudge the way</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Over hilltops, if you could?</l>
               <l>Was my harp so hard a load</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Even on the sunny morns</l>
               <l>When the pluméd huntsmen rode</l>
               <l rend="indented1">To the music of their horns?</l>
               <l>Hath the love that lit the stars,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Fills the sea and moulds the flowers,</l>
               <l>Whose completeness nothing mars,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Made forgot what once was ours?</l>
               <l>Christ hath perfect rest to give;</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Stillness and perpetual peace;</l>
               <l>You, who found it hard to live,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Sleep and sleep, without surcease.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Christ hath stars to light thy porch,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Silence after fevered song;&#8212;</l>
               <l>I had but a minstrel's torch</l>
               <l rend="indented1">And the way was wet and long.</l>
               <l>Sleep.  Nor more on winter nights,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Harping at some castle gate,</l>
               <pb facs="cat.0005.053" n="49"/>
               <l>Thou must see the revel lights</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Stream upon our cold estate.</l>
               <l>Bitter was the bread of song</l>
               <l rend="indented1">While you tarried in my tent,</l>
               <l>And the jeering of the throng</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Hurt you, as it came and went.</l>
               <l>When you slept upon my breast</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Grief had wed me long ago:</l>
               <l>Christ hath his perpetual rest</l>
               <l rend="indented1">For thy weariness.  But Oh!</l>
               <l>When I sleep beside the road,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Thanking God thou liest not so,</l>
               <l>Brother to the owl and toad,</l>
               <l rend="indented1">Could'st thou, Dear, but let me know,</l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Does the darkness cradle thee</hi>
               </l>
               <l>
                  <hi rend="italic">Than mine arms more tenderly?</hi>
               </l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.054" n="50"/>
         <lg xml:id="paris" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">PARIS</head>
            <l>Behind the arch of glory sets the day;</l>
            <l>The river lies in curves of silver light,</l>
            <l>The Fields Elysian glitter in a spray</l>
            <l>Of golden dust; the gilded dome is bright,</l>
            <l>The towers of Notre Dame cut clean and gray</l>
            <l>The evening sky, and pale from left to right</l>
            <l>A hundred bridges leap from either quay.</l>
            <l>Pillared with pride, the city of delight</l>
            <l>Sits like an empress by her silver Seine,</l>
            <l>Heavy with jewels, all her splendid dower</l>
            <l>Flashing upon her, won from shore and main</l>
            <l>By shock of combat, sacked from town and tower.</l>
            <l>Wherever men have builded hall or fane</l>
            <l>Red war hath gleaned for her and men have slain</l>
            <l>To deck her loveliness.  I feel again</l>
            <l>That joy which brings her art to faultless flower,</l>
            <l>That passion of her kings, who, reign on reign,</l>
            <l>Arrayed her star by star with pride and power.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.055" n="51"/>
         <lg xml:id="song" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">SONG</head>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Troubador, when you were gay,</l>
               <l>You wooed with rose and roundelay,</l>
               <l>Singing harpstrings, sweet as May.</l>
               <l>From beneath the crown of bay</l>
               <l>Fell the wild, abundant hair.</l>
               <l>Scent of cherry bloom and pear</l>
               <l>With you from the south did fare,</l>
               <l>Buds of myrtle for your wear.</l>
               <l>Soft as summer stars thine eyes,</l>
               <l>Planets pale in violet skies;</l>
               <l>Summer wind that sings and dies</l>
               <l>Was the music of thy sighs.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Troubador, one winter's night,</l>
               <l>When the pasture lands were white</l>
               <l>And the cruel stars were bright,</l>
               <l>Fortune held thee in despite.</l>
               <l>Then beneath my tower you bore</l>
               <l>Rose nor rondel as of yore,</l>
               <l>But a heavy grief and sore</l>
               <l>Laid in silence at my door.</l>
               <l>April yearneth, April goes;</l>
               <l>Not for me her violet blows,</l>
               <l>I have done for long with those.</l>
               <l>At my breast thy sorrow grows,</l>
               <l>Nearer to my heart, God knows,</l>
               <l>Than ever roundelay or rose!</l>
            </lg>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.056" n="52"/>
         <lg xml:id="lenvoi" type="poem">
            <head type="main" rend="center">L'ENVOI</head>
            <l>Where are the loves that we had loved before</l>
            <l>When once we are alone, and shut the door?</l>
            <l>No matter whose the arms that held me fast,</l>
            <l>The arms of Darkness hold me at the last.</l>
            <l>No matter down what primrose path I tend,</l>
            <l>I kiss the lips of Silence in the end.</l>
            <l>No matter on what heart I found delight,</l>
            <l>I come again unto the breast of Night.</l>
            <l>No matter when or how love did befall,</l>
            <l>'Tis Loneliness that loves me best of all,</l>
            <l>And in the end she claims me, and I know</l>
            <l>That she will stay, though all the rest may go.</l>
            <l>No matter whose the eyes that I would keep</l>
            <l>Near in the dark, 'tis in the eyes of Sleep</l>
            <l>That I must look and look forever more,</l>
            <l>When once I am alone, and shut the door.</l>
         </lg>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.057"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.058"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.059"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.060"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.061"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.062"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.063"/>
         <pb facs="cat.0005.064"/>
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