John Masefield
Back to D.H. Lawrence
Forward to Harold Monro
- When I am buried, all my thoughts and acts
- Will be reduced to lists of dates and facts,
- And long before this wandering flesh is rotten
- The dates which made me will be all forgotten;
- And none will know the gleam there used to be
- About the feast days freshly kept by me,
- But men will call the golden hour of bliss
- 'About this time,' or 'shortly after this.'
- Men do not heed the rung by which men climb
- Those glittering steps, those milestones upon time,
- Those tombstones of dead selves, those hours of birth,
- Those moments of the soul in years of earth.
- They mark the height achieved, the main result,
- The power of freedom in the perished cult,
- The power of boredom in the dead man's deeds
- Not the bright moments of the sprinkled seeds.
- By many waters and on many ways
- I have known golden instants and bright days;
- The day on which, beneath an arching sail,
- I saw the Cordilleras and gave hail;
- The summer day on which in heart's delight
- I saw the Swansea Mumbles bursting white,
- The glittering day when all the waves wore flags
- And the ship Wanderer came with sails in rags;
- That curlew-calling time in Irish dusk
- When life became more splendid than its husk,
- When the rent chapel on the brae at Slains
- Shone with a doorway opening beyond brains;
- The dawn when, with a brace-block's creaking cry,
- Out of the mist a little barque slipped by,
- Spilling the mist with changing gleams of red,
- Then gone, with one raised hand and one turned head;
- The howling evening when the spindrift's mists
- Broke to display the four Evangelists,
- Snow-capped, divinely granite, lashed by breakers,
- Wind-beaten bones of long-since-buried acres;
- The night alone near water when I heard
- All the sea's spirit spoken by a bird;
- The English dusk when I beheld once more
- (With eyes so changed) the ship, the citied shore,
- The lines of masts, the streets so cheerly trod
- In happier seasons, and gave thanks to God.
- All had their beauty, their bright moments' gift,
- Their something caught from Time, the ever-swift.
- All of those gleams were golden; but life's hands
- Have given more constant gifts in changing lands;
- And when I count those gifts, I think them such
- As no man's bounty could have bettered much:
- The gift of country life, near hills and woods
- Where happy waters sing in solitudes,
- The gift of being near ships, of seeing each day
- A city of ships with great ships under weigh,
- The great street paved with water, filling with shipping,
- And all the world's flags flying and seagulls dipping.
- Yet when I am dust my penman may not know
- Those water-trampling ships which made me glow,
- But think my wonder mad and fail to find,
- Their glory,even dimly, from my mind,
- And yet they made me:
- not alone the ships
- But men hard-palmed from tallying-on to whips,
- The two close friends of nearly twenty years
- Sea-followers both, sea-wrestlers and sea-peers,
- Whose feet with mine wore many a bolthead bright
- Treading the decks beneath the riding light.
- Yet death will make that warmth of friendship cold,
- And who'll know what one said and what one told,
- Our hearts' communion, and the broken spells
- When the loud call blew at the strike of bells?
- No one, I know, yet let me be believed --
- A soul entirely known is life achieved.
- Years blank with hardship never speak a word
- Live in the soul to make the being stirred;
- Towns can be prisons where the spirit dulls
- Away from mates and ocean-wandering hulls,
- Away from all bright water and great hills
- And sheep-walks where the curlews cry their fills;
- Away in towns, where eyes have nought to see
- But dead museums and miles of misery
- And floating life un-rooted from man's need
- And miles of fish-hooks baited to catch greed
- And life made wretched out of human ken
- And miles of shopping women served by men.
- So, if the penman sums my London days,
- Let him but say that there were holy ways,
- Dull Bloomsbury streets of dull brick mansions old
- With stinking doors where women stood to scold
- And drunken waits at Christmas with their horn
- Droning the news, in snow, that Christ was born;
- And windy gas lamps and the wet roads shining
- And that old carol of the midnight whining,
- And that old room above the noisy slum
- Where there was wine and fire and talk with some
- Under strange pictures of the wakened soul
- To whom this earth was but burnt-out coal.
- O Time, bring back those midnights and those friends,
- Those glittering moments that a spirit lends,
- That all may be imagined from the flash,
- The cloud-hid god-game through the lightning gash;
- Those hours of stricken sparks from which men took
- Light to send out to men in song or book;
- Those freinds who heard St. Pancras' bells strike two,
- Yet stayed until the barber's cockerel crew,
- Talking of noble styles, the Frenchman's best,
- The thought beyond great poets not expressed,
- The glory of mood where human frailty failed,
- The forts of human light not yet assailed,
- Till the dim room had mind and seemed to brood,
- Binding our wills to mental brotherhood;
- Till we became a college, and each night
- Was discipline and manhood and delight;
- Till our farewells and winding down the stairs
- At each gray dawn had meaning that Time spares
- That we, so linked, should roam the whole world round
- Teaching the ways our brooding minds had found,
- Making that room our Chapter, our one mind
- Where all that this world soiled should be refined.
- Often at night I tread those streets again
- And see the alleys glimmering in the rain,
- Yet now I miss that sign of earlier tramps,
- A house with shadows of plane-boughs under lamps,
- The secret house where once a beggar stood,
- Trembling and blind, to show his woe for food.
- And now I miss that friend who used to walk
- Home to my lodgings with me, deep in talk
- Wearing the last of night out in still streets
- Trodden by us and policemen on their beats
- And cats, but else deserted; now I miss
- That lively mind and gutteral laugh of his
- And that strange way he had of making gleam,
- Like something real, the art we used to dream.
- London has been my prison; but my books
- Hills and great waters, labouring men and brooks,
- Ships and deep friendships and remembered days
- Which even now set all my mind ablaze --
- As that June day when, in the red bricks' chinks
- I saw the old Roman ruins white with pinks
- And felt the hillside haunted even then
- By not dead memory of the Roman men;
- And felt the hillside thronged by souls unseen
- Who knew the interest in me, and were keen
- That man alive should understand man dead
- So many centuries since the blood was shed,
- And quickened with strange hush because this comer
- Sensed a strange soul alive behind the summer.
- That other day on Ercall when the stones
- Were sunbleached white, like long unburied bones,
- While the bees droned and all the air was sweet
- From honey buried underneath my feet,
- Honey of purple heather and white clover
- Sealed in its gummy bags till summer's over.
- Then in other days by water, by bright sea,
- Clear as clean glass, and my bright friend with me;
- The cove clean bottomed where we saw the brown
- Red spotted plaice go skimming six feet down,
- And saw the long fronds waving, white with shells,
- Waving, unfolding, drooping, to the swells;
- That sadder day when we beheld the great
- And terrible beauty of a Lammas spate
- Roaring white-mouthed in all the great cliff's gaps,
- Headlong, tree-tumbling fury of collapse,
- While drenching clouds drove by and every sense
- Was water roaring or rushing or in offence,
- And mountain sheep stood huddled and blown gaps gleamed
- Where torn white hair of torrents shook and streamed.
- That saddder day when we beheld again
- A spate going down in sunshine after rain
- When the blue reach of water leaping bright
- Was one long ripple and clatter, flecked with white.
- And that far day, that never blotted page
- When youth was bright like flowers about old age,
- Fair generations bringing thanks for life
- To that old kindly man and trembling wife
- After their sixty years: Time never made
- A better beauty since the Earth was laid,
- Than that thanksgiving given to grey hair
- For the great gift of life which brought them there.
- Days of endeavour have been good; the days
- Racing in cutters for the comrade's praise.
- The day they led my cutter at the turn,
- Yet could not keep the lead, and dropped astern;
- The moment in the spurt when both boats' oars
- Dipped in each other's wash, and throats grew hoarse,
- And teeth ground into teeth, and both strokes quickened
- Lashing the sea, and gasps came, and hearts sickened,
- And coxswains damned us, dancing, banking stroke,
- To put our weights on, though our hearts were broke,
- And both boats seemed to stick and sea seemed glue,
- The tide a mill race we were struggling through;
- And every quick recover gave us squints
- Of them still there, and oar-tossed water-glints,
- And cheering came, our friends, our foemen cheering,
- A long, wild, rallying murmur on the hearing,
- 'Port Fore!' and 'Starboard Fore!' 'Port Fore,' 'Port Fore,'
- 'Up with her,' 'Starboard'; and at that each oar
- Lightened, though arms were bursting, and eyes shut,
- And the oak stretchers grunted in the strut,
- And the curse quickened from the cox, our bows
- Crashed, and drove talking water, we made vows,
- Chastity vows and temperence; in our pain
- We numbered things we'd never eat again
- If we could only win; then came the yell
- 'Starboard,' 'Port Fore,' and then a beaten bell
- Rung as for fire to cheer us. 'Now.' Oars bent,
- Soul took the looms now body's bolt was spent,
- 'Damn it, come on now,' 'On now,' 'On now,' 'Starboard.'
- 'Port Fore,' 'Up with her, Port'; each cutter harboured
- Ten eye-shut painsick strugglers, 'Heave, oh heave,'
- Catcalls waked echoes like a shrieking sheave.
- 'Heave,' and I saw a back, then two. 'Port Fore,'
- 'Starboard,' 'Come on'; I saw the midship oar,
- And knew whe had done them. 'Port Fore,' 'Starboard,' 'Now.'
- I saw bright water spurting at their bow,
- Their cox's full face an instant. They were done.
- The watchers' cheering almost drowned the gun.
- We had hardly strength to toss our oars; our cry
- Cheering the losing cutter was a sigh.
- Other bright days of action have seemed great:
- Wild days in a pampero off the Plate;
- Good swimming days, at Hog Back or the Coves
- Which the young gannet and the corbie loves;
- Surf-swimming between rollers, catching breath
- Between the advancing grave and breaking death,
- Then shooting up into the sunbright smooth
- To watch the advancing roller bare her tooth;
- And days of labour also, loading, hauling;
- Long days at winch or capstan, heaving, pawling;
- The days with oxen, dragging stone from blasting,
- And dusty days in mills, and hot days masting.
- Trucking on dust-dry deckings smooth like ice,
- And hunts in mighty wool-racks after mice;
- Mornings with buckwheat when the fields did blanch
- With White Leghorns come from the chicken ranch;
- Days near the spring upon the sunburnt hill,
- Plying the maul or gripping tight the drill;
- Delights of work most real, delights that change
- The headache life of towns to rapture strange
- Not known by townsmen, nor imagined; health
- That puts new glory upon mental wealth
- And makes the poor man rich.
- But that ends, too.
- Health, with its thoughts of life; and that bright view,
- That sunny landscape from life's peak, that glory,
- And all a glad man's comments on life's story,
- And thoughts of marvellous towns and living men,
- And what pens tell, and all beyond the pen,
- End, and are summed in words so truly dead
- They raise no image of the heart and head,
- The life, the man alive, the friend we knew,
- The minds ours argued with or listened to,
- None; but are dead, and all life's keenness, all,
- Is dead as print before the funeral;
- Even deader after, when the dates are sought,
- And cold minds disagree with what we thought.
- This many-pictured world of many passions
- Wears out the nations as a woman's fashions,
- And what life is is much to very few;
- Men being so strange, so mad, and what men do
- So good to watch or share; but when men count
- Those hours of life that were a bursting fount
- Sparkling the dusty heart with living springs,
- There seems a world, beyond our earthly things,
- Gated by golden moments, each bright time
- Opening to show the city white like lime,
- High-towered and many-peopled. This made sure,
- Work that obscures those moments seems impure
- Making our not-returning time of breath
- Dull with the ritual and records of death,
- That frost of fact by which our wisdom gives
- Correctly stated death to all that lives.
- Best trust the happy moments. What they gave
- Makes man less fearful of the certain grave,
- And gives his work compassion and new eyes.
- The days that make us happy make us wise.
Back to D.H. Lawrence
Forward to T. Sturge Moore