Title : A Prelude
Creator : Francis Sherman
Release date : June 2, 2013 [eBook #39797]
Language : English
Credits : Produced by Al Haines
A PRELUDE
Francis Sherman
Privately Printed
at Christmas
1897
A Prelude
Watching the tremulous flicker of the greenAgainst the open quiet of the sky,I hear my ancient way-fellows conveneIn the great wood behind me. Where I lieThey may not see me; for the grasses growAs though no foot save June's had wandered by;Yet I, who am well-hidden, surely know,As I have waited them, they yearn for meTo lead them whither they are fain to go.Weary as I, are they, O Time, of thee!Yea, we, who once were glad only of Spring,Gather about thy wall and would be free!With wounded feet we cease from wandering,And with vain hands beat idly at thy gate;And thou,—thou hast no thought of opening,And from thy peace are we still separate.
Yet, comrades, though ye come together there,And search across the shadows for my face,Until the pines murmur of your despair,I think I shall not tell my hiding-place,For ye know not the path ye would pursue,And it is late our footsteps to retrace.Too weak am I, and now not one of you—So weary are ye of each ancient way—Retaineth strength enough to seek a new;And ye are blind—knowing not night from day;Crying at noontime, "Let us see the sun!"And with the even, "O for rest, we pray!"O Blind and fearful! Shall I, who have wonAt last this little portion of content,Yield all to be with you again undone?Because ye languish in your prisonmentMust I now hearken to your bitter cry?Must I forego, as ye long since forewent,My vision of the far-off open sky?Nay! Earth hath much ungiven she yet may give;And though to-day your laboring souls would die,From earth my soul gaineth the strength to live.
O covering grasses! O Unchanging trees!Is it not good to feel the odorous windCome down upon you with such harmoniesOnly the giant hills can ever find?O little leaves, are ye not glad to be?Is not the sunlight fair, the shadow kind,That falls at noon-time over you and me?O gleam of birches lost among the firs,Let your high treble chime in silverlyAcross the half-imagined wind that stirsA muffled organ-music from the pines!Earth knows to-day that not one note of hersIs minor. For, behold, the loud sun shinesTill the young maples are no longer gray,And stronger grow their faint, uncertain linesEach violet takes a deeper blue to-day,And purpler swell the cones hung overhead,Until the sound of their far feet whoAbout the wood, fades from me; and, instead,I hear a robin singing—not as oneThat calls unto his mate, uncomforted—But as one sings a welcome to the sun.
Not among men, or near men-fashioned things,In the old years found I this present ease,Though I have known the fellowship of kingsAnd tarried long in splendid palaces.The worship of vast peoples has been mine,The homage of uncounted pageantries.Sea-offerings, and fruits of field and vineHave humble folk been proud to bring to me;And woven cloths of wonderful designHave lain untouched in far lands over-sea,Till the rich traffickers beheld my sails.Long caravans have toiled on wearily—Harassed yet watchful of their costly bales—Across wide sandy places, glad to bearStrange oils and perfumes strained in Indian vales,Great gleaming rubies torn from some queen's hair,Yellow, long-hoarded coin and golded dust,Deeming that I would find their offerings fair.—O fairness quick to fade! Ashes and rustAnd food for moths! O half-remembered thingsOnce altar-set!—I think when one is thrustFar down in the under-world, where the worm clingsClose to the newly-dead, among the deadNot one awakes to ask what gift she brings.The color of her eyes, her hair outspreadIn the moist wind that stifles ere it blows,Falls on unwatching eyes; and no man knowsThe gracious odors that her garments shed.
And she, unwearied yet and not grown wise,Follows a little while her devious wayAcross the twilight; where no voice repliesWhen her voice calls, bravely; and where to-dayIs even as yesterday and all days were.Great houses loom up swiftly, out of the gray.Knocking at last, the gradual echoes stirThe hangings of unhaunted passages;Until she surely knows only for herHas this House hoarded up its silencesSince the beginning of the early years,And that this night her soul shall dwell at easeAnd grow forgetful of its ancient fearsIn some long-kept, unviolated room.And so the quiet city no more hearsHer footsteps, and the streets their dust resume.
But what have I to do with her and deathWho hold these living grasses in my hands,—With her who liveth not, yet sorroweth?(For it shall chance, however close the bandsOf sleep be drawn about her, neverthelessShe must remember alway the old landsShe wandered in, and their old hollowness.)—Awaiting here the strong word of the trees,My soul leans over to the wind's caress,One with the flowers; far off, it hears the sea'sRumor of large, unmeasured things, and yetIt has no yearning to remix with these.For the pines whisper, lest it may forget,Of the near pool; and how the shadow liesOn it forever; and of its edges, setWith maiden-hair; and how, in guardian-wise,The alder trees bend over, until oneForgets the color of the unseen skiesAnd loses all remembrance of the sun.No echo there of the sea's loss and pain;Nor sound of little rivers, even, that runWhere with the wind the hollow reeds complain;Nor the soft stir of marsh-waters, when dawnComes in with quiet covering of rain:Only, all day, the shadow of peace uponThe pool's gray breast; and with the fall of even,The noiseless gleam of scattered stars—withdrawnFrom the unfathomed treasuries of heaven.
And as the sea has not the strength to winBack to its love my soul, O Comrades, ye—In the wood lost, and seeking me therein—Are not less impotent than all the sea!My soul at last its ultimate house hath won,And in that house shall sleep along with me.Yea, we shall slumber softly, out of the sun,To day and night alike indifferent,Aware and unaware if Time be done.Yet ere I go, ere yet your faith be spent,For our old love I pass Earth's message on:"In me, why shouldst thou not find thy content?"Are not my days surpassing fair, from dawnTo sunset, and my nights fulfilled with peace?Shall not my strength remain when thou art gone"The way of all blown dust? Shall Beauty ceaseUpon my face because thy face grows gray?Behold, thine hours, even now, fade and decrease,"And thou hast got no wisdom; yet I sayThis thing there is to learn ere thou must go:Have no sad thoughts of me upon the way" Thou takest home coming; for thy soul shall knowThe old glad things and sorrowful its shareUntil at last Time's legions overthrowThe House thy days have builded unaware. "
Now therefore am I joyful who have heardEarth's message plain to-day, and so I cryAloud to you, O Comrades, her last word,That ye may be as wise and glad as I,And the long grasses, and the broad green leavesThat beat against the far, unclouded sky:Who worships me alway, who alway cleavesClose unto me till his last call rings clearAcross the pathless wood,—his soul receivesMy peace continually and shall not fear.
A PRELUDE WRITTEN BY FRANCIS
SHERMAN IS PRIVATELY PRINTED FOR
HIM AND FOR HERBERT COPELAND
AND F. H. DAY AND THEIR FRIENDS
CHRISTMAS M D CCC XCVII
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PRELUDE ***