Various

Poems of To-Day: an Anthology


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me sleep in mist and light and calm

        Cities of Lebanon, dream-shadow-dim,

        Where Kings of Tyre and Kings of Tyre did rule

        In ancient days in endless dynasty,

        And all around the snowy mountains swim

        Like mighty swans, afloat in heaven's pool.

        But I will walk upon the wooded hill

        Where stands a grove, O pines, of sister pines,

        And when the downy twilight droops her wing

        And no sea glimmers and no mountain shines

        My heart shall listen still.

        For pines are gossip pines the wide world through

        And full of runic tales to sigh or sing.

        'Tis ever sweet through pines to see the sky

        Blushing a deeper gold or darker blue.

        'Tis ever sweet to lie

        On the dry carpet of the needles brown,

        And though the fanciful green lizard stir

        And windy odours light as thistledown

        Breathe from the lavdanon and lavender,

        Half to forget the wandering and pain,

        Half to remember days that have gone by,

        And dream and dream that I am home again!

James Elroy Flecker.

      25. A LYKE-WAKE CAROL

        Grow old and die, rich Day,

          Over some English field—

        Chartered to come away

          What time to Death you yield!

        Pass, frost-white ghost, and then

        Come forth to banish'd men!

        I see the stubble's sheen,

          The mist and ruddled leaves,

        Here where the new Spring's green

          For her first rain-drops grieves.

        Here beechen leaves drift red

        Last week in England dead.

        For English eyes' delight

          Those Autumn ghosts go free—

        Ghost of the field hoar-white,

          Ghost of the crimson tree.

        Grudge them not, England dear,

        To us thy banished here!

Arthur Shearly Cripps.

      26. A REFRAIN

        Tell the tune his feet beat

        On the ground all day—

        Black-burnt ground and green grass

        Seamed with rocks of grey—

        "England," "England," "England,"

        That one word they say.

        Now they tread the beech-mast,

        Now the ploughland's clay,

        Now the faery ball-floor of her fields in May.

        Now her red June sorrel, now her new-turned hay,

        Now they keep the great road, now by sheep-path stray,

        Still it's "England," "England,"

        "England" all the way!

Arthur Shearly Cripps.

      27. WHERE A ROMAN VILLA STOOD, ABOVE FREIBURG

        On alien ground, breathing an alien air,

        A Roman stood, far from his ancient home,

        And gazing, murmured, "Ah, the hills are fair,

        But not the hills of Rome!"

        Descendant of a race to Romans-kin,

        Where the old son of Empire stood, I stand.

        The self-same rocks fold the same valley in,

        Untouched of human hand.

        Over another shines the self-same star,

        Another heart with nameless longing fills,

        Crying aloud, "How beautiful they are,

        But not our English hills!"

Mary E. Coleridge.

      28. HEIGHTS AND DEPTHS

        He walked in glory on the hills;

          We dalesmen envied from afar

        The heights and rose-lit pinnacles

          Which placed him nigh the evening star.

        Upon the peaks they found him dead;

          And now we wonder if he sighed

        For our low grass beneath his head,

          For our rude huts, before he died.

William Canton.

      29. IN THE HIGHLANDS

        In the highlands, in the country places,

        Where the old plain men have rosy faces,

          And the young fair maidens

            Quiet eyes;

        Where essential silence cheers and blesses,

        And for ever in the hill-recesses

          Her more lovely music

            Broods and dies.

        O to mount again where erst I haunted;

        Where the old red hills are bird-enchanted,

          And the low green meadows

            Bright with sward;

        And when even dies, the million-tinted,

        And the night has come, and planets glinted,

          Lo, the valley hollow

            Lamp-bestarred!

        O to dream, O to awake and wander

        There, and with delight to take and render,

          Through the trance of silence,

            Quiet breath;

        Lo! for there, among the flowers and grasses,

        Only the mightier movement sounds and passes;

          Only winds and rivers,

            Life and death.

Robert Louis Stevenson.

      30. IN CITY STREETS

        Yonder in the heather there's a bed for sleeping,

          Drink for one athirst, ripe blackberries to eat;

        Yonder in the sun the merry hares go leaping,

          And the pool is clear for travel-wearied feet.

        Sorely throb my feet, a-tramping London highways,

          (Ah! the springy moss upon a