John Drinkwater
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- Beyond my window in the night
- Is but a drab inglorious street,
- Yet there the frost and clean starlight
- As over Warwick woods are sweet.
- Under the grey drift of the town
- The crocus works among the mould
- As eagerly as those that crown
- The Warwick spring in flame and gold.
- And when the tramway down the hill
- Across the cobbles moans and rings,
- There is about my window-sill
- The tumult of a thousand wings.
(To those who live there)
- For peace, than knowledge more desireable,
- Into your Sussex quietness I came,
- When summer's green and gold and azure fell
- Over the world in flame.
- And peace upon your pasture lands I found,
- Where grazing flocks drift on continually,
- As little clouds that travel with no sound
- Across a windless sky.
- Out of your oaks the birds call to their mates
- That brood among the pines, where hidden deep
- From curious eyes a world's adventure waits
- In columned choirs of sleep.
- Under the calm ascension of the night
- We heard the mellow lapsing and return
- Of night-owls purring in their groundless flight
- Through lanes of darkling fern.
- Unbroken peace when all the stars were drawn
- Back to their lairs of light, and ranked along
- From shire to shire the downs out of the dawn
- Were risen in golden song.
. . . . . . . . .
- I sing of peace who have known the large unrest
- Of men bewildered in their travelling,
- And I have known the bridal earth unblest
- By the brigades of spring.
- I have known that loss. And now the broken thought
- Of nations marketing in death I know,
- The very winds to threnodies are wrought
- That on your downlands blow.
- I sing of peace. Was it but yesterday
- I came among your roses and your corn?
- Then momently amid this wrath I pray
- For yesterday reborn.
- He was a man with wide and patient eyes,
- Grey, like the drift of twitch-fires blown in June,
- That, without fearing, searched if any wrong
- Might threaten from your heart. Grey eyes he had
- Under a brow was drawn because he knew
- So many seasons to so many pass
- Of upright service, loyal, unabased
- Before the world seducing, and so, barren
- Of good words praising and thought that mated his.
- He carved in stone. Out of his quiet life
- He watched as any faithful seaman charged
- With tidings of the myriad faring sea,
- And thoughts and premonitions through his mind
- Sailing as ships from strange and storied lands
- His hungry spirit held, till all they were
- Found living witness in the chiselled stone.
- Slowly out of the dark confusion, spread
- By life's innumerable venturings
- Over his brain, he would triumph into the light
- Of one clear mood, unblemished of the blind
- Legions of errant thought that cried about
- His rapt seclusion: as a pearl unsoiled,
- Nay, rather washed to lonelier chastity,
- In gritty mud. And then would come a bird,
- A flower, or the wind moving upon a flower,
- A beast at pasture, or a clustered fruit,
- A peasant face as were the saints of old,
- The leer of custom, or the bow of the moon
- Swung in miraculous poise -- some stray from the world
- Of things created by the eternal mind
- In joy articulate. And his perfect mood
- Would dwell about the token of God's mood,
- Until in bird or flower or moving wind
- Or flock or shepherd or the troops of heaven
- It sprang in one fierce moment of desire
- To visible form.
- Then would his chisel work among the stone,
- Persuading it of petal or of limb
- Or starry curve, till risen anew there sang
- Shape out of chaos, and again the vision
- Of one mind single from the world was pressed
- Upon the daily custom of the sky
- Or field or the body of man.
- His people
- Had many gods for worship. The tiger-god,
- The owl, the dewlapped bull, the running pard,
- The camel, and the lizard of the slime,
- The ram with quivering fleece and fluted horn,
- The crested eagle and the doming bat
- Were sacred. And the king and his high priests
- Decreed a temple, wide on columns huge,
- Should top the cornlands to the sky's far line.
- They bade the carvers carve along the walls
- Images of their gods, each one to carve
- As he desired, his choice to name his god. . . .
- And many came; and he among them, glad
- Of three leagues' travel through the singing air
- Of dawn among the boughs yet bare of green,
- The eager flight of the spring leading his blood
- Into swift lofty channels of the air,
- Proud as an eagle riding to the sun. . . .
- An eagle, clean of pinion -- there's his choice.
- Daylong they worked under the growing roof,
- One at his leapard, one the staring ram,
- And he winning his eagle from the stone,
- Until each man had carved one image out,
- Arow beyond the portal of the house.
- They stood arow, the company of gods,
- Camel and bat, lizard and bull and ram,
- The pard and owl, dead figures on the wall,
- Figures of habit driven on the stone
- By chisels governed by no heat of the brain
- But drudges of hands that moved by easy rule.
- Proudly recorded mood was none, no thought
- Plucked from the dark battalions of the mind
- And throned in everlasting sight. But one
- God of them all was witness of belief
- And large adventure dared. His eagle spread
- Wide pinions on the cloudless ground of heaven,
- Glad with the heart's high courage of that dawn
- Moving upon the ploughlands newly sown,
- Dead stone the rest. He looked, and knew it so.
- Then came the king with prists and counsellors
- And many chosen of the people, wise
- With words weary of custom, and eyes askew
- That watched their neighbour face for any news
- Of the best way of judgment, till, each sure
- None would determine with authority,
- All spoke in prudent praise. One liked the owl
- Because an owl blinked on the beam of his barn.
- One, hoarse with crying gospels in the street,
- Priased most the ram, because the common folk
- Wore breeches made of ram's wool. One declared
- the tiger pleased him best, -- the man who carved
- The tiger-god was halt out of th womb --
- A man to praise, being so pitiful.
- And one, whose eyes dwelt in a distant void,
- With spell and omen pat upon his lips,
- And a purse for any crystal prophet ripe,
- A zealot of the mist, gazed at the bull --
- A lean ill-shapen bull of meagre lines
- That scarce the steel had graved upon the stone --
- Saying that here was very mystery
- And truth, did men but know. And one there was
- Who priased his eagle, but remembering
- The lither pinion of the swift, the curve
- That liked him better of the mirrored swan.
- And they who carved the tiger-god and ram,
- The camel and the pard, the owl and bull,
- And lizard, listened greedily, and made
- Humble denial of their worthiness,
- And when the king his royal judgement gave
- That all had fashioned well, and bade that each
- Re-shape his chosen god along the walls
- Till all the temple boasted of their skill,
- The bowed themselves in token that as this
- Never had carvers been so fortunate.
- Only the man with wide and patient eyes
- Made no denial, neither bowed his head.
- Already while they spoke his thoughts had gone
- Far from his eagle, leaving it for a sign
- Loyally wrought of one deep breath of life,
- And played about the image of a toad
- That crawled among his ivy leaves. A queer
- Puff-bellied toad, with eyes that always stared
- Sidelong at heaven and saw no heaven there,
- Weak-hammed, and with a throttle somehow twisted
- Beyond full wholesome draughts of air, and skin
- Of wrinkled lips, the only zest or will
- The little flashing tongue searching the leaves.
- The king and priest, chosen and counsellor,
- Babbling out of their thin and jealous brains,
- Seemed strangely one; a queer enormous toad
- Panting under giant leaves of dark,
- Sunk in the loins, peering into the day.
- Their judgment wry he counted not for wrong
- More than the fabled poison of the toad
- Striking at simple wits; how should their thought
- Or word in praise or blame come near the peace
- That shone in seasonable hours above
- The patience of his spirit's husbandry?
- They foolish and not seeing, how should he
- Spend anger there or fear -- great ceremonies
- Equal for none save great antagonists?
- The grave indifference of his heart before them
- Was moved by laughter innocent of hate,
- Chastising clean of spite, that moulded them
- Into the antic likeness of his toad
- Bidding for laughter underneath the leaves.
- He bowed not, nor disputed, but saw
- Those ill-created joyless gods, and loathed,
- And saw them creeping, creeping round the walls,
- Death breeding death, wile witnessing to wile,
- And sickened at the dull iniquity
- Should be rewarded, and for ever breathe
- Contagion on the folk gathered in prayer.
- His truth should not be doomed to march among
- This falsehood to the ages. He was called,
- And he must labour there; if so the king
- Would grant it, where the pillars bore the roof
- A galleried way of meditation nursed
- Secluded time, with wall of ready stone
- In panels for the carver set between
- The windows -- there his chisel should be set, --
- It was his plea. And the king spoke of him,
- Scorning, as one lack-fettle, among all these
- Eager to take the riches of renown;
- One fearful of the light of knowing nothing
- Of light's dimension, a witling who would thro
- Honour aside and priase spoken aloud
- All men of heart should covet. Let him go
- Grubbing out of the sight of those who knew
- The worth of subtance; there was his proper trade.
- A squat and curious toad indeed. . . . The eyes,
- Patient and grey, were dumb as were the lips,
- That, fixed and governed, hoarded from them all
- The larger laughter lifting in his heart.
- Straightway about his gallery he moved,
- Measured the windows and the virgin stone,
- Til all was weighed and patterned in his brain.
- Then first where most the shadows struck the wall,
- Under the sills, and centre of the base,
- From floor to sill out of the stone was wooed
- Memorial folly, as from the chisel leapt
- His chastening laughter searching priest and king --
- A huge and wrinkled toak, with legs asplay,
- And belly loaded, leering with great eyes
- Busily fixed upon the void.
- All days
- His chisel was the first to ring across
- The temple's quiet; and at fall of dusk
- Passing among the carvers homeward, they
- Would speak of him as mad, or weak against
- The challenge of the world, and let him go
- Lonely, as was his will, under the night
- Of stars or cloud or summer's folded sun,
- Through crop and wood and pastureland to sleep.
- None took the narrow stair as wondering
- How did his chisel prosper in the stone,
- Unvisited his labour and forgot.
- And times when he would lean out of his height
- And watch the gods growing along the walls,
- The row of carvers in their linen coats
- Took in his vision a virtue that alone
- Carving they had not nor the thing they carved.
- Knowing the health that flowed about his close
- Imagining, the daily quiet won
- From process of his clean and supple craft,
- Those carvers there, far on the floor below,
- Would haply be transfigured in his thought
- Into a gallant company of men
- Glad of the strict and loyal reckoning
- That proved in the just presence of the brain
- Each chisel-stroke. How surely would he prosper
- In pleasant talk at easy hours with men
- So fashioned if it might be -- and his eyes
- Would pass again to those dead gods that grew
- In spreading evil round the temple walls;
- And, one dead pressure made, the carvers moved
- Along the wall to mould and mould again
- The self-same god, their chisels on the stone
- Tapping in dull precision as before,
- And he would turn, back to his lonely truth.
- He carved apace. And first his people's gods,
- About the toad, out of their sterile time,
- Under his hand thrilled and were recreate.
- The bull, the pard, the camel and the ram,
- Tiger and owl and bat -- all were the signs
- Visibly made body on the stone
- Of sightless thought adventuring the host
- That is mere spirit; these the bloom achieved
- By secret labour in the flowing wood
- Of rain and air and wind and continent sun. . . .
- His tiger, lithe, immobile in the stone,
- A swift destruction for a moment leashed,
- Sprang crying from the jealous stealth of men
- Opposed in cunning watch, with engines hid
- Of torment and calamitous desire.
- His leapard, swift on lean and paltry limbs,
- Was fear in flight before accusing faith.
- His bull, with eyes that often in the dusk
- Would lift from the sweet meadow grass to watch
- Him homeward passing, bore on massy beam
- The burden of the patient of the earth.
- His camel bore the burden of the damned,
- Being gaunt, with eyes aslant along the nose.
- He had a friend, who hammered bronze and iron
- And cupped the moonstone on a silver ring,
- One constant like himself, would come at night
- Or bid him as a guest, when they would make
- Their poets touch a starrier height, or search
- Together with an unparsimonious mind
- The crowded harbours of mortality.
- And there were jests, wholesome as harvest ale,
- Of homely habit, bred of hearts that dared
- Judgment of laughter under the eternal eye:
- This frolic wisdom was his carven owl.
- His ram was lordship on the lonely hills,
- Alert and fleet, content only to know
- The wind mightily pouring on his fleece,
- With yesterday and all unrisen suns
- Poorer than disinherited ghosts. His bat
- Was ancient envy made a mockery,
- Cowering below the newer eagle carved
- Above the arches with wide pinion spread,
- His faith's dominion of that happy dawn.
-
- And so he wrought the gods upon the wall,
- Living and crying out of his desire,
- Out of his patient incorruptible thought,
- Wrought them in joy was wages to his faith.
- And other than the gods he made. The stalks
- Of bluebells heavy with the news of spring,
- The vine loaded with plenty of the year,
- And swallows, merely tenderness of thought
- Bidding the stone to small and fragile flight;
- Leaves, the thin relics of autumnal boughs,
- Or massed in June. . . .
- All from their native pressure bloomed and sprang
- Under his shaping hand into a proud
- And governed image of the central man, --
- And all were deftly ordered, duly set
- Between the windows, underneath the sills,
- And roofward, as a motion rightly planned,
- Till on the wall, out of the sullen stone,
- A glory blazed, his vision manifest,
- His wonder captive. And he was content.
- And when the builders and the carvers knew
- Their labours done, and high the temple stood
- Over the cornlands, king and counsellor
- And prist and chosen of the people came
- Among a ceremonial multitude
- To dedication. And, below the thrones
- Where king and archpriest ruled above the throng,
- Highest among the ranked artificers
- The carvers stood. And when, the temple vowed
- To holy use, tribute and choral praise
- Given as was ordained, the king looked down
- Upon the gathered folk, and bade them see
- The comely gods fashioned about the walls,
- And keep in honour men whose precious skill
- Could so adorn the sessions of their worship,
- Gravely the carvers bowed them to the ground.
- Only the man with wide and patient eyes
- Stood not among them; nor did any come
- To count his labour, where he watched alone
- Above the coloured throng. He heard, and looked
- Again upon his work, and knew it good,
- Smiled on his toad, passed down the stair unseen,
- And sang across the teeming meadow home.
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