Whitney Helen Hay

Sonnets and Songs


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we who play with rainbows, having seen

      The sun’s own face. We may not hold the west,

      Which burns against the bosom of the night,

      But in the after-glow, with eyes serene,

      We still may find, dear heart, the sun’s bequest,

      An echoed glory of our passionate light.

IXHow we would Live!

      How we would live! We’d drink the years like wine,

      With all to-morrows hid behind the veil,

      Which is your hair; between two lilies pale—

      Your slender hands—my heart should lie and shine,

      A crimson rose. We’d catch the wind and twine

      The evening stars—a chaplet musical—

      To crown our folly, lure the nightingale

      To sing the bliss your lips should teach to mine.

      And if the sage, declaring life is vain,

      Should frown upon the flower of all our days

      And chide the sun that knows no tears of rain,

      He should not tease our heart with cynic eye—

      The soul’s vast altar stands beyond his gaze

      When two have lived—then shall they fear to die?

XIn Extremis

      Nay, touch me not, nor even with your eyes

      Hold mine, for I would speak you, thus afar,

      Aloof and chill and lonely as a star.

      The hands that urge, the hungry heart that cries,

      Have wrapped my love with love’s elusive lies;

      The lips that burn have laid a ruddy scar

      Against the truth that stands without the bar,

      And blinded faith with passion’s mysteries.

      Night holds a single moon, day one desire—

      Her golden sun; and life a love supreme,

      Wherein one moment poises, crowned with fire,

      White with the naked truth. Beyond control,

      ’Tis here, my Sun, in love’s last hour extreme,

      I hold aloft my bare, adoring soul.

XIThe Forgiveness

      If I might see you dead, Beloved—dead—

      Your false eyes closed forever to the light,

      Your false smile stilled upon my aching sight;

      If I might know that nevermore your head,

      Cruelly fair, could lie upon the bed

      Of my torn heart; if I beheld the night

      Free from your living thought—ah! if I might,

      Then could my desolate soul be comforted.

      For this is worst of all the woes you gave—

      My heart may not forgive. The tired years go

      And leave the great love weeping for a grave,

      Scorned and unburied, ’neath the open sky.

      I could not love you less, to see you so.

      Loving you more, I might forgive—and die.

XIIWith Music

      Dear, did we meet in some dim yesterday?

      I half remember how the birds were mute

      Among green leaves and tulip-tinted fruit,

      And on the grass, beside a stream, we lay

      In early twilight; faintly, far away,

      Came lovely sounds adrift from silver lute,

      With answered echoes of an airy flute,

      While Twilight waited tiptoe, fain to stay.

      Her violet eyes were sweet with mystery.

      You looked in mine, the music rose and fell

      Like little, lisping laughter of the sea;

      Our souls were barks, wind-wafted from the shore—

      Gold cup, a rose, a ruby, who can tell?

      Soft—music ceases—I recall no more.

XIIIAlpha and Omega

      I died to-day, and yet upon my eyes

      A glamour of the gorgeous summer green

      Still wavers, and my brain has kept a keen,

      Sweet bird-song. Glad with light, the summer skies

      Are sapphire, and a purple shadow lies

      Across the hills—no change is on the scene

      Since happy yesterday. Ah! can it mean

      The body lives when stricken spirit dies?

      The blow has fallen, yet I can recall

      The first of days when this dead heart drew breath—

      A wondrous moon-flower waking of a heart.

      Strange—then as now the moment seemed to part

      Body from soul, so like are birth and death;

      So did I gain, and so I lost my all.

XIVFlowers of Ice

      The lights within the ice-floes are our flowers,

      Lily and daffodil and violet.

      Beneath these monstrous suns that never set

      Tremble soft rainbows, young as Earth’s first hours,

      Ancient as Time. No balm of gentle showers

      Make for their growth; for them, gigantic, met

      The immemorial ice and sun, to get

      Such blossoms—pledge of Beauty’s bravest powers.

      Violet and pale grass-green, the Spring-time dies

      In the soft South. To us, in this grim world,

      Daring with frozen heart and tearless eyes

      The North’s white sanctity, Fate idly throws

      These alms—a deathless Spring of ice enfurled,

      And over all, far flung, the sunset rose.

XVLove and Death

      I can believe that my Beloved dies,

      That all her virtue, all her youth shall fail,

      And life, her rosy life, grow cold and pale,

      To bloom again in braver Paradise.

      I must believe that death shall close her eyes,

      And hold her heart beyond a heavy veil,

      Where silences surround her spirit frail

      And waste the form where all my loving lies.

      Ah, God! but no. And is my love so weak?

      Her heart may pause, may falter and grow still,

      But not her laugh, the color in her cheek—

      That may not fade; the catch that lifts her breath,

      Sobbing against my heart. Essay your will—

      These are too dear to fill your grave, O Death!

XVIThe Message

      When one has heard the message of the Rose,

      For what