W.H. Davies
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- Few are my books, but my small few have told
- Of many a lovely dame that lived of old;
- And they have made me see those fatal charms
- Of Helen, which brought Troy so many harms;
- And lovely Venus, when she stood so white
- Close to her husband's forge in its red light.
- I have seen Dian's beauty in my dreams,
- When she had trained her looks in all the streams
- She crossed to Latmos and Endymion;
- And Cleopatra's eyes, that hour they shone
- The brighter for a pearl she drank to prove
- How poor it was compared to her rich love;
- But when I look on thee, love, thou dost give
- Substance to those fine ghosts, and make them live.
- When yon full moon's with her white fleet of stars,
- And but one bird makes music in the grove;
- When you and I are breathing side by side,
- Where our two bodies make one shadow, love;
- Not for her beauty will I praise the moon,
- But that she lights thy purer face and throat;
- The only praise I'll give the nightingale
- Is that she draws from thee a richer note.
-
- For, blinded with thy beauty, I am filled,
- Like Saul fo Tarsus, with a greater light;
- When he had heard that warning voice in Heaven,
- And lost his eyes to find a deeper sight.
- Come, let us sit in that deep silence then,
- Launched on love's rapids, with our passions proud,
- That makes all music hollow -- though the lark
- Raves in his windy heights above a cloud.
- We poets pride ourselves on what
- We feel, and not what we achieve;
- The world may call our children fools,
- Enough for us that we conceive.
- A little wren that loves the grass
- Can be as proud as any lark
- That tumbles in a cloudless sky,
- Up near the sun, till he becomes
- The apple of that shining eye.
- So, lady, I would never dare
- To hear your music ev'ry day;
- With those greeat bursts that send my nerves
- In waves to pound my heart away;
- And those small notes that run like mice
- Bewitched by light; else on these keys --
- My tombs of song -- you should engrave;
- "My music, stongner than his own,
- Has made this poet my dumb slave."
- When our two souls have left this mortal clay.
- And, seeking mine, you think that mine is lost --
- Look for me first in that Elysian glade
- Where Lesbia is, for whom the birds sing most.
- When happy hearts those feathered mortals have,
- That sing so sweet when they'er wet through in spring!
- For in that month of May when leaves are young,
- Birds dream of song, and in their sleep they sing.
- And when the spring has gone and they are dumb,
- Is it not fine to watch them at their play:
- Is it not fine to see a bird that tries
- To stand upon the end of every spray?
- See how they tilt their pretty heads aside;
- When women make that move they always please,
- What cosy homes birds make in leafy walls
- That Nature's love has ruined -- and the trees.
- Oft have I seen in fields the little birds
- Go in between a bullock's legs to eat;
- But what gives me most joy is when I see
- Snow on my doorstep, printed by their feet.
- Oh, sweet content, that turns the labourer's sweat
- To tears of joy, and shines the roughest face;
- How often have I sought you high and low,
- And found you still in some lone quiet place;
- Here, in my room, when full of happy dreams,
- With no life heard beyond that merry sound
- Of moths that on my lighted ceiling kiss
- Their shodows as they dance and dance around;
- Or in a garden, on a summer's night,
- When I have seen the dark and solemn air
- Blink with the blind bats' wings, and heaven's bright face
- Twitch with the stars that shine in thousands there.
- When I sailed out of Baltimore
- With twice a thousand head of sheep,
- They would not eat, they would not drink,
- But bleated o'er the deep.
- Inside the pens we crawled each day,
- To sort the living from the dead;
- And when we reached the Mersey's mouth,
- Had lost five hundred head.
- Yet every night and day one sheep,
- That had no fear of man or sea,
- Stuck through the bars its pleading face,
- And it was stroked by me.
- And to the sheep-men standing near,
- "You see," I said, "this one tame sheep:
- It seems a child has lost her pet,
- And cried herself to sleep.
- So every time we passed it by,
- Sailing to England's slaugher-house,
- Eight ragged sheep-men -- tramps and thieves --
- Would stroke that sheep's black nose.
- We have no grass locked up in ice so fast
- That cattle cut their faces and at last,
- When it is reached, must lie them down and starve,
- With bleeding mouths that freeze too hard to move.
- We have not that delirious state of cold
- That makes men warm and sing when in Death's hold.
- We have no roaring floods whose angry shocks
- Can kill the fishes dashed against their rocks.
- We have no winds that cut down street by street,
- As easy as our scythes can cut down wheat.
- No mountains here to spew their burning hearts
- Into the valleys, on our human parts.
- No earthquakes here, that ring church bells afar,
- A hundred miles from where those earthquakes are.
- We have no cause to set our dreaming eyes,
- Like Arabs, on fresh streams in Paradise.
- We have no wilds to harbour men that tell
- More murders than they can remember well.
- No woman here shall wake from her night's rest,
- To find a snake is sucking at her breast.
- Though I have travelled many and many a mile,
- And had a man to clean my boots and smile
- With teeth that had less bone in them than gold --
- Give me this England now for all my world.
- It is the bell of death I hear,
- Which tells me my own time is near,
- When I must join those quiet souls
- Where nothing lives but worms and moles;
- And not come through the grass again,
- Like worms and moles, for breath or rain;
- Yet let none weep when my life's through,
- For I myself have wept for few.
- The only things that knew me well
- Were children, dogs, and girls that fell;
- I bought poor children cakes and sweets,
- Dogs heard my voice and danced the streets;
- And, gentle to a fallen lass,
- I made her weep for what she was.
- Good men and women know not me,
- Nor love nor hate the mystery.
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