Maurice Baring
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(Auberon Herbert, Captain Lord Lucas, R.F.C killed November 3, 1916)
- The wind had blown away the rain
- That all day long had soaked the level plain.
- Against the horizon's fiery wrack,
- The sheds loomed black.
- And higher, in their tumultuous concourse met,
- The streaming clouds, shot-riddled banners, wet
- With the flickering storm
- Drifted and smouldered, warm
- With flashes sent
- From the lower firmament.
- And they concealed --
- They only here and there through rifts revealed
- A hidden sanctuary of fire and light,
- A city of chrysolite.
- We looked and laughed and wondered, and I said:
- That orange sea, those oriflammes outspread
- Were like the fanciful imaginings
- That the young painter flings
- Upon the canvas bold,
- Such as the sage and the old
- Make mock at, saying it could never be;
- And you assented also, laughingly.
- I wondered what they meant,
- That flaming firmament,
- Those clouds so grey so gold, so wet so warm,
- So much of glory and so much of storm,
- The end of the world, or the end
- Of the war -- remoter still to me and you, my friend.
- Alas! it meant not this, it meant not that:
- It meant that now the last time you and I
- Should look at the golden sky,
- And the dark fields large and flat,
- And smell the evening weather,
- And laugh and talk and wonder both together.
- The last, last time. We nevermore should meet
- In France or London street,
- Or fields of home. The desolated space
- Of life shall nevermore
- Be what it was before.
- No one shall take your place.
- No other face
- Can fill that empty frame.
- There is no answer when we call your name.
- We cannot hear your step upon the stair.
- We turn to speak and find a vacant chair.
- Something is broken which we cannot mend.
- God has done more than take away a friend
- In taking you; for all that we have left
- Is bruised and irremediably bereft.
- There is none like you. Yet not that alone
- Do we bemoan;
- But this; that you were greater than the rest,
- And better than the best.
- O liberal heart fast-rooted to the soil,
- O lover of ancient freedom and proud toil,
- Friend of the gipsies and all wandering song,
- The forest's nursling and the favoured child
- Of woodlands wild --
- O brother to the birds and all things free,
- Captain of liberty!
- Deep in your heart the restless seed was sown;
- The vagrant spirit fretted in your feet;
- We wondered could you tarry long,
- And brook for long the cramping street,
- Or would you one day sail for shores unknown,
- And shake from you the dust of towns, and spurn
- The crowded market-place -- and not return?
- You found a sterner guide;
- You heard the guns. Then, to their distant fire,
- Your dreams were laid aside;
- And on that day, you cast your heart's desire
- Upon a burning pyre;
- You gave your service to the exalted need,
- Until at last from bondage freed,
- At liberty to serve as you loved best,
- You chose the noblest way. God did the rest.
- So when the spring of the world shall shrive our stain,
- After the winter of war,
- When the poor world awakes to peace once more,
- After such night of ravage and of rain,
- You shall not come again.
- You shall not come to taste the old spring weather,
- To gallop through the soft untrampled heather,
- To bathe and bake your body on the grass.
- We shall be there, alas!
- But not with you. When Spring shall wake the earth,
- And quicken the scarred fields to the new birth,
- Our grief shall grow. For what can Spring renew
- More fiercely for us than the need of you?
- That night I dreamt they sent for me and said
- That you were missing, 'missing, missing -- dead':
- I cried when in the morning I awoke,
- And all the world seemed shrouded in a cloak;
- But when I saw the sun,
- And knew another day had just begun,
- I brushed the dream away, and quite forgot
- The nightmare's ugly blot.
- So was the dream forgot. The dream came true.
- Before the night I knew
- That you had flown away into the air
- For ever. Then I cheated my despair.
- I said
- That you were safe -- or wounded -- but not dead.
- Alas! I knew
- Which was the false and true.
- And after days of watching, days of lead,
- There came the certain news that you were dead.
- You had died fighting, fighting against odds,
- Such as in war the gods
- Æthereal dared when all the world was young;
- Such fighting as blind Homer never sung,
- Nor Hector nor Achilles never knew,
- High in the empty blue.
- High, high, above the clouds, against the setting sun,
- The fight was fought, and your great task was done.
- Of all your brave adventures this the last
- The bravest was and best;
- Meet ending to a long embattled past,
- This swift, triumphant, fatal quest,
- Crowned with the wreath that never perisheth,
- And diadem of honourable death;
- Swift Death aflame with offering supreme
- And mighty sacrifice,
- More than all mortal dream;
- A soaring death, and near to Heaven's gate;
- Beneath the very walls of Paradise.
- Surely with soul elate,
- You heard the destined bullet as you flew,
- And surely your prophetic spirit knew
- That you had well deserved that shining fate.
- Here is no waste,
- No burning Might-have-been,
- No bitter after-taste,
- None to censure, none to screen,
- Nothing awry, nor anything misspent;
- Only content, content beyond content,
- Which hath not any room for betterment.
- God, Who had made you valiant, strong and swift,
- And maimed you with a bullet long ago,
- And cleft your riotous ardour with a rift,
- And checked your youth's tumultuous overflow,
- Gave back your youth to you,
- And packed in moments rare and few
- Achievements manifold
- And happiness untold,
- And bade you spring to Death as to a bride,
- In manhood's ripeness, power and pride,
- And on your sandals the strong wings of youth.
- He let you leave a name
- To shine on the entablatures of truth,
- For ever:
- To sound for ever in answering halls of fame.
- For you soared onwards to that world which rags
- Of clouds, like tattered flags,
- Concealed; you reached the walls of Chrysolite,
- The mansions white;
- And losing all, you gained the civic crown
- Of that eternal town,
- Wherein you passed a rightful citizen
- Of that bright commonwealth ablaze beyond our ken.
- Surely you found companions meet for you
- In that high place;
- You met there face to face
- Those you had never known, but whom you knew:
- Knights of the Table Round,
- And all the very brave, the very true,
- With chivalry crowned;
- The captains rare,
- Courteous and brave beyond our human air;
- Those who had loved and suffered overmuch,
- Now free from the world's touch.
- And with them were the friends of yesterday,
- Who went before and pointed you the way;
- And in that place of freshness, light and rest,
- Where Lancelot and Tristram vigil keep
- Over their King's long sleep,
- Surely they made a place for you,
- Their long-expected guest,
- Among the chosen few,
- And welcomed you, their brother and their friend,
- To that companionship which hath no end.
- And in the portals of the sacred hall
- You hear the trumpet's call,
- At dawn upon the silvery battlement,
- Re-echo through the deep
- And bid the sons of God to rise from sleep,
- And with a shout to hail
- The sunrise on the city of the Grail:
- The music that proud Lucifer in Hell
- Missed more than all the joys that he forwent.
- You hear the solemn bell
- At vespers, when the oriflammes are furled;
- And then you know that somewhere in the world,
- That shines far-off beneath you like a gem,
- They think of you, and when you think of them
- You know that they will wipe away their tears,
- And cast aside their fears;
- That they will have it so,
- And in no otherwise;
- That it is well with them because they know,
- With faithful eyes,
- Fixed forward and turned upwards to the skies,
- That it is well with you,
- Among the chosen few,
- Among the very brave, the very true.
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