Whitney Helen Hay

Sonnets and Songs


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      Sonnets and Songs

      SONNETS

IAve atque Vale

      As a blown leaf across the face of Time

      Your name falls emptily upon my heart.

      In this new symmetry you have no part,

      No lot in my fair life. The stars still chime

      Autumn and Spring in ceaseless pantomime.

      I play with Beauty, which is kin to Art,

      Forgetting Nature. Nor do pulses start

      To hear your soul remembered in a rhyme.

      You may not vex me any more. The stark

      Terror of life has passed, and all the stress.

      Winds had their will of me, and now caress,

      Blown from bland groves I know. Time dreams, and I,

      As on a mirror, see the days go by

      In nonchalant procession to the dark.

II“Chaque baiser vaut un roman.”

      I, living love and laughter, have forgot

      The way the heart has uttered melody.

      As sobbing, plaintive cadence of the sea

      A poet’s soul should rest, remembering not

      The inland paths of green, the flowers, the spot

      Where fairies ring. In hermit ecstasy

      Music is born, and gay or wofully

      Lovers of Poesy share her lonely lot.

      For you and me, Beloved, crowned with Spring,

      Catching Love’s flowers from off the lap of Time,

      What are the songs my voice has scorned to sing?

      Ghostly they hover round my heart-wise lips;

      Into a kiss I fold my rose of Rhyme,

      Laid like a martyr on your finger-tips.

IIIAs a Pale Child

      As a pale child, hemmed in by windy rain,

      Patiently turns to touch his well-known toys,

      Playing as children play who make no noise,

      Yet happy in a way; then sighs again,

      To watch the world across the storm-dim pane,

      And sees with wistful eyes glad girls and boys

      Who romp beneath the rain’s unlicensed joys,

      And feels wild longings sweep his gentle brain.

      So I, contented with my flowers for stars,

      Stroll in my fair, walled garden happily,

      Knowing no gladder game till, shrill and sweet,

      I hear life’s cry ring down the silent street,

      And press my face against the sunlit bars

      To watch the joyous spirits who are free.

IVFlower of the Clove

      Ah, Love, have pity!—I am but a child;

      I ask but light and laughter, and the tears

      Darken the sunlight of my fairest years.

      By love made desolate, by love beguiled,

      I waste the Spring. Love’s harvest wains are piled

      With poppies and gold grain—I glean but fears

      Of empty hands, grim hunger, and the jeers

      Of happy wives whose loves are reconciled.

      But mine! Ah, mine is like a tattered leaf

      Upon a turbid stream. I have no pride,

      No life, but love, which is a bitter grief.

      As a lost star I wander down your sky.

      Give me your heart. Open it wide—so wide!

      I must have love and laughter, or I die.

VToo Late

      Upon your stone the wine of my desire

      Is spilled. Your poppy lips have grown too pale

      From fasting. Your white hands will not avail

      The cold eyes of your heart to light the fire.

      I did not think my prayers could ever tire.

      Now, like doomed ships, they flutter without sail.

      Lost in a calm which held no rock, no gale—

      Now, when your chilly smile bids me aspire!

      So, without history, my soul is slain—

      Woman of barren love; the wine was red—

      Beautiful for your spending. Not again

      Will the bud blossom where the frost has sped.

      Timid, you dared not hark when angels sang.

      All, all is lost, without one saving pang.

VIThe Supreme Sacrifice

      Better than life, better than sea and morn,

      And all the sun-stained fragments of the day—

      Ah! more than breeze, than purple clouds that stray

      Across dim twilights—I, the tempest-torn,

      Fighting the stars for glory, who must scorn

      Heart-drops bespread along love’s cruel way

      Like scattered petals on the breast of May—

      Better than life I love you, I forlorn.

      Better than death—the sleeping and the peace

      When warm within the breast of brooding Earth

      My weary heart should give its woes release,

      The pitiful dark remembering not my loss,

      The calm, wise years restoring joy for dearth—

      Better than death, my love, my burning cross.

VIIMalua

      Out of the purple treasuries of night

      Came the dark wind of evening silver-starred—

      Stirred on his cheek. The forest keeping ward

      Breathed with a tremulous silence, and the bright,

      Bare moon crowned his adoring brow with light.

      The exquisite dream of beauty held him hard

      In a great love, a forest love, unmarred—

      Still unprofaned—by human nature’s sight.

      Guarding the temple gates of peace he stood,

      Statue of bronze with pagan heart of stone.

      Sudden, a dazzling glory lit the wood—

      Moon in his soul that dimmed the moon above.

      Life was revealed, a Spring-sweet maid, alone—

      Beauty was woman, and the woman—Love.

VIIILove’s Legacy

      As one who looks too long upon the sun

      When he must turn to earth from flame-shot skies

      Sees all else dark through his bereaved eyes,

      And yet may watch the rainbow ribbons run

      Athwart the gravity of gray and dun,

      He holds the darkness dearer for the prize

      Wherein his only pledge of radiance lies

      When