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The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 2

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The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 2
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George MacDonald

The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 2




PARABLES




THE MAN OF SONGS







            "Thou wanderest in the land of dreams,


              O man of many songs!


            To thee what is, but looks and seems;


              No realm to thee belongs!"








            "Seest thou those mountains, faint and far,


              O spirit caged and tame?"


            "Blue clouds like distant hills they are,


              And like is not the same."








            "Nay, nay; I know each mountain well,


              Each cliff, and peak, and dome!


            In that cloudland, in one high dell,


              Nesteth my little home."










THE HILLS







            Behind my father's cottage lies


              A gentle grassy height


            Up which I often ran—to gaze


              Back with a wondering sight,


            For then the chimneys I thought high


              Were down below me quite!








            All round, where'er I turned mine eyes,


              Huge hills closed up the view;


            The town 'mid their converging roots


              Was clasped by rivers two;


            From, one range to another sprang


              The sky's great vault of blue.








            It was a joy to climb their sides,


              And in the heather lie!


            A joy to look at vantage down


              On the castle grim and high!


            Blue streams below, white clouds above,


              In silent earth and sky!








            And now, where'er my feet may roam,


              At sight of stranger hill


            A new sense of the old delight


              Springs in my bosom still,


            And longings for the high unknown


              Their ancient channels fill.








            For I am always climbing hills,


              From the known to the unknown—


            Surely, at last, on some high peak,


              To find my Father's throne,


            Though hitherto I have only found


              His footsteps in the stone!








            And in my wanderings I did meet


              Another searching too:


            The dawning hope, the shared quest


              Our thoughts together drew;


            Fearless she laid her band in mine


              Because her heart was true.








            She was not born among the hills,


              Yet on each mountain face


            A something known her inward eye


              By inborn light can trace;


            For up the hills must homeward be,


              Though no one knows the place.








            Clasp my hand close, my child, in thine—


              A long way we have come!


            Clasp my hand closer yet, my child,


              Farther we yet must roam—


            Climbing and climbing till we reach


              Our heavenly father's home.










THE JOURNEY



I







            Hark, the rain is on my roof!


            Every murmur, through the dark,


            Stings me with a dull reproof


            Like a half-extinguished spark.


            Me! ah me! how came I here,


            Wide awake and wide alone!


            Caught within a net of fear,


            All my dreams undreamed and gone!








            I will rise; I will go forth.


            Better dare the hideous night,


            Better face the freezing north


            Than be still, where is no light!


            Black wind rushing round me now,


            Sown with arrowy points of rain!


            Gone are there and then and now—


            I am here, and so is pain!








            Dead in dreams the gloomy street!


            I will out on open roads.


            Eager grow my aimless feet—


            Onward, onward something goads!


            I will take the mountain path,


            Beard the storm within its den;


            Know the worst of this dim wrath


            Harassing the souls of men.








            Chasm 'neath chasm! rock piled on rock!


            Roots, and crumbling earth, and stones!


            Hark, the torrent's thundering shock!


            Hark, the swaying pine tree's groans!


            Ah! I faint, I fall, I die,


            Sink to nothingness away!—


            Lo, a streak upon the sky!


            Lo, the opening eye of day!








II







            Mountain summits lift their snows


            O'er a valley green and low;


            And a winding pathway goes


            Guided by the river's flow;


            And a music rises ever,


            As of peace and low content,


            From the pebble-paven river


            Like an odour upward sent.








            And the sound of ancient harms


            Moans behind, the hills among,


            Like the humming of the swarms


            That unseen the forest throng.


            Now I meet the shining rain


            From a cloud with sunny weft;


            Now against the wind I strain,


            Sudden burst from mountain cleft.








            Now a sky that hath a moon


            Staining all the cloudy white


            With a faded rainbow—soon


            Lost in deeps of heavenly night!


            Now a morning clear and soft,


            Amber on the purple hills;


            Warm blue day of summer, oft


            Cooled by wandering windy rills!








            Joy to travel thus along


            With the universe around!


            Every creature of the throng,


            Every sight and scent and sound


            Homeward speeding, beauty-laden,


            Beelike, to its hive, my soul!


            Mine the eye the stars are made in!


            Mine the heart of Nature's whole!








III







            Hills retreating on each hand


            Slowly sink into the plain;


            Solemn through the outspread land


            Rolls the river to the main.


            In the glooming of the night


            Something through the dusky air


            Doubtful glimmers, faintly white,


            But I know not what or where.








            Is it but a chalky ridge


            Bared of sod, like tree of bark?


            Or a river-spanning bridge


            Miles away into the dark?


            Or the foremost leaping waves


            Of the everlasting sea,


            Where the Undivided laves


            Time with its eternity?








            Is it but an eye-made sight,


            In my brain a fancied gleam?


            Or a faint aurora-light


            From the sun's tired smoking team?


            In the darkness it is gone,


            Yet with every step draws nigh;


            Known shall be the thing unknown


            When the morning climbs the sky!








            Onward, onward through the night


            Matters it I cannot see?


            I am moving in a might


            Dwelling in the dark and me!


            End or way I cannot lose—


            Grudge to rest, or fear to roam;


            All is well with wanderer whose


            Heart is travelling hourly home.








IV







            Joy! O joy! the dawning sea


            Answers to the dawning sky,


            Foretaste of the coming glee


            When the sun will lord it high!


            See the swelling radiance growing


            To a dazzling glory-might!


            See the shadows gently going


            'Twixt the wave-tops wild with light!








            Hear the smiting billows clang!


            See the falling billows lean


            Half a watery vault, and hang


            Gleaming with translucent green,


            Then in thousand fleeces fall,


            Thundering light upon the strand!—


            This the whiteness which did call


            Through the dusk, across the land!








            See, a boat! Out, out we dance!


            Fierce blasts swoop upon my sail!


            What a terrible expanse—


            Tumbling hill and heaving dale!


            Stayless, helpless, lost I float,


            Captive to the lawless free!


            But a prison is my boat!


            Oh, for petrel-wings to flee!








            Look below: each watery whirl


            Cast in beauty's living mould!


            Look above: each feathery curl


            Dropping crimson, dropping gold!—


            Oh, I tremble in the flush


            Of the everlasting youth!


            Love and awe together rush:


            I am free in God, the Truth!










THE TREE'S PRAYER







            Alas, 'tis cold and dark!


            The wind all night hath sung a wintry tune!


            Hail from black clouds that swallowed up the moon


            Beat, beat against my bark.








            Oh! why delays the spring?


            Not yet the sap moves in my frozen veins;


            Through all my stiffened roots creep numbing pains,


            That I can hardly cling.








            The sun shone yester-morn;


            I felt the glow down every fibre float,


            And thought I heard a thrush's piping note


            Of dim dream-gladness born.








            Then, on the salt gale driven,


            The streaming cloud hissed through my outstretched arms,


            Tossed me about in slanting snowy swarms,


            And blotted out the heaven.








            All night I brood and choose


            Among past joys. Oh, for the breath of June!


            The feathery light-flakes quavering from the moon


            The slow baptizing dews!








            Oh, the joy-frantic birds!—


            They are the tongues of us, mute, longing trees!


            Aha, the billowy odours! and the bees


            That browse like scattered herds!








            The comfort-whispering showers


            That thrill with gratefulness my youngest shoot!


            The children playing round my deep-sunk root,


            Green-caved from burning hours!








            See, see the heartless dawn,


            With naked, chilly arms latticed across!


            Another weary day of moaning loss


            On the thin-shadowed lawn!








            But icy winter's past;


            Yea, climbing suns persuade the relenting wind:


            I will endure with steadfast, patient mind;


            My leaves

will

 come at last!










WERE I A SKILFUL PAINTER







            Were I a skilful painter,


            My pencil, not my pen,


            Should try to teach thee hope and fear,


            And who would blame me then?—


            Fear of the tide of darkness


            That floweth fast behind,


            And hope to make thee journey on


            In the journey of the mind.








            Were I a skilful painter,


            What should I paint for thee?—


            A tiny spring-bud peeping out


            From a withered wintry tree;


            The warm blue sky of summer


            O'er jagged ice and snow,


            And water hurrying gladsome out


            From a cavern down below;








            The dim light of a beacon


            Upon a stormy sea,


            Where a lonely ship to windward beats


            For life and liberty;


            A watery sun-ray gleaming


            Athwart a sullen cloud


            And falling on some grassy flower


            The rain had earthward bowed;








            Morn peeping o'er a mountain,


            In ambush for the dark,


            And a traveller in the vale below


            Rejoicing like a lark;


            A taper nearly vanished


            Amid the dawning gray,


            And a maiden lifting up her head,


            And lo, the coming day!








            I am no skilful painter;


            Let who will blame me then


            That I would teach thee hope and fear


            With my plain-talking pen!—


            Fear of the tide of darkness


            That floweth fast behind,


            And hope to make thee journey on


            In the journey of the mind.










FAR AND NEAR

.



I







            Blue sky above, blue sea below,


              Far off, the old Nile's mouth,


            'Twas a blue world, wherein did blow


              A soft wind from the south.








            In great and solemn heaves the mass


              Of pulsing ocean beat,


            Unwrinkled as the sea of glass


              Beneath the holy feet.








            With forward leaning of desire


              The ship sped calmly on,


            A pilgrim strong that would not tire


              Or hasten to be gone.








II







            List!—on the wave!—what can they be,


              Those sounds that hither glide?


            No lovers whisper tremulously


              Under the ship's round side!








            No sail across the dark blue sphere


              Holds white obedient way;


            No far-fled, sharp-winged boat is near,


              No following fish at play!








            'Tis not the rippling of the wave,


              Nor sighing of the cords;


            No winds or waters ever gave


              A murmur so like words;








            Nor wings of birds that northward strain,


              Nor talk of hidden crew:


            The traveller questioned, but in vain—


              He found no answer true.








III







            A hundred level miles away,


              On Egypt's troubled shore,


            Two nations fought, that sunny day,


              With bellowing cannons' roar.








            The fluttering whisper, low and near,


              Was that far battle's blare;


            A lipping, rippling motion here,


              The blasting thunder there.








IV







            Can this dull sighing in my breast


              So faint and undefined,


            Be the worn edge of far unrest


              Borne on the spirit's wind?








            The uproar of high battle fought


              Betwixt the bond and free,


            The thunderous roll of armed thought


              Dwarfed to an ache in me?










MY ROOM





To G. E. M.

 









              'Tis a little room, my friend—


            Baby walks from end to end;


            All the things look sadly real


            This hot noontide unideal;


            Vaporous heat from cope to basement


            All you see outside the casement,


            Save one house all mud-becrusted,


            And a street all drought-bedusted!


            There behold its happiest vision,


            Trickling water-cart's derision!


            Shut we out the staring space,


            Draw the curtains in its face!








              Close the eyelids of the room,


            Fill it with a scarlet gloom:


            Lo, the walls with warm flush dyed!


            Lo, the ceiling glorified,


            As when, lost in tenderest pinks,


            White rose on the red rose thinks!


            But beneath, a hue right rosy,


            Red as a geranium-posy,


            Stains the air with power estranging,


            Known with unknown clouding, changing.


            See in ruddy atmosphere


            Commonplaceness disappear!


            Look around on either hand—


            Are we not in fairyland?








              On that couch, inwrapt in mist


            Of vaporized amethyst,


            Lie, as in a rose's heart:


            Secret things I would impart;


            Any time you would believe them—


            Easier, though, you will receive them


            Bathed in glowing mystery


            Of the red light shadowy;


            For this ruby-hearted hue,


            Sanguine core of all the true,


            Which for love the heart would plunder


            Is the very hue of wonder;


            This dissolving dreamy red


            Is the self-same radiance shed


            From the heart of poet young,


            Glowing poppy sunlight-stung:


            If in light you make a schism


            'Tis the deepest in the prism.








              This poor-seeming room, in fact


            Is of marvels all compact,


            So disguised by common daylight


            By its disenchanting gray light,


            Only eyes that see by shining,


            Inside pierce to its live lining.


            Loftiest observatory


            Ne'er unveiled such hidden glory;


            Never sage's furnace-kitchen


            Magic wonders was so rich in;


            Never book of wizard old


            Clasped such in its iron hold.








              See that case against the wall,


            Darkly-dull-purpureal!—


            A piano to the prosy,


            But to us in twilight rosy—


            What?—A cave where Nereids lie,


            Naiads, Dryads, Oreads sigh,


            Dreaming of the time when they


            Danced in forest and in bay.


            In that chest before your eyes


            Nature self-enchanted lies;—


            Lofty days of summer splendour;


            Low dim eves of opal tender;


            Airy hunts of cloud and wind;


            Brooding storm—below, behind;


            Awful hills and midnight woods;


            Sunny rains in solitudes;


            Babbling streams in forests hoar;


            Seven-hued icebergs; oceans frore.—


            Yes; did I not say

enchanted

,


            That is, hid away till wanted?


            Do you hear a low-voiced singing?


            'Tis the sorceress's, flinging


            Spells around her baby's riot,


            Binding her in moveless quiet:—


            She at will can disenchant them,


            And to prayer believing grant them.








              You believe me: soon will night


            Free her hands for fair delight;


            Then invoke her—she will come.


            Fold your arms, be blind and dumb.


            She will bring a book of spells


            Writ like crabbed oracles;


            Like Sabrina's will her hands


            Thaw the power of charmed bands.


            First will ransomed music rush


            Round thee in a glorious gush;


            Next, upon its waves will sally,


            Like a stream-god down a valley,


            Nature's self, the formless former,


            Nature's self, the peaceful stormer;


            She will enter, captive take thee,


            And both one and many make thee,


            One by softest power to still thee,


            Many by the thoughts that fill thee.—


            Let me guess three guesses where


            She her prisoner will bear!








              On a mountain-top you stand


            Gazing o'er a sunny land;


            Shining streams, like silver veins,


            Rise in dells and meet in plains;


            Up yon brook a hollow lies


            Dumb as love that fears surprise;


            Moorland tracts of broken ground


            O'er it rise and close it round:


            He who climbs from bosky dale


            Hears the foggy breezes wail.


            Yes, thou know'st the nest of love,


            Know'st the waste around, above!


            In thy soul or in thy past,


            Straight it melts into the vast,


            Quickly vanishes away


            In a gloom of darkening gray.








              Sinks the sadness into rest,


            Ripple like on water's breast:


            Mother's bosom rests the daughter—


            Grief the ripple, love the water;


            And thy brain like wind-harp lies


            Breathed upon from distant skies,


            Till, soft-gathering, visions new


            Grow like vapours in the blue:


            White forms, flushing hyacinthine,


            Move in motions labyrinthine;


            With an airy wishful gait


            On the counter-motion wait;


            Sweet restraint and action free


            Show the law of liberty;


            Master of the revel still


            The obedient, perfect will;


            Hating smallest thing awry,


            Breathing, breeding harmony;


            While the god-like graceful feet,


            For such mazy marvelling meet,


            Press from air a shining sound,


            Rippling after, lingering round:


            Hair afloat and arms aloft


            Fill the chord of movement soft.








              Gone the measure polyhedral!


            Towers aloft a fair cathedral!


            Every arch—like praying arms


            Upward flung in love's alarms,


            Knit by clasped hands o'erhead—


            Heaves to heaven a weight of dread;


            In thee, like an angel-crowd,


            Grows the music, praying loud,


            Swells thy spirit with devotion


            As a strong wind swells the ocean,


            Sweeps the visioned pile away,


            Leaves thy heart alone to pray.








              As the prayer grows dim and dies


            Like a sunset from the skies,


            Glides another change of mood


            O'er thy inner solitude:


            Girt with Music's magic zone,


            Lo, thyself magician grown!


            Open-eyed thou walk'st through earth


            Brooding on the aeonian birth


            Of a thousand wonder-things


            In divine dusk of their springs:


            Half thou seest whence they flow,


            Half thou seest whither go—


            Nature's consciousness, whereby


            On herself she turns her eye,


            Hoping for all men and thee


            Perfected, pure harmony.








              But when, sinking slow, the sun


            Leaves the glowing curtain dun,


            I, of prophet-insight reft,


            Shall be dull and dreamless left;


            I must hasten proof on proof,


            Weaving in the warp my woof!








              What are those upon the wall,


            Ranged in rows symmetrical?


            Through the wall of things external


            Posterns they to the supernal;


            Through Earth's battlemented height


            Loopholes to the Infinite;


            Through locked gates of place and time,


            Wickets to the eternal prime


            Lying round the noisy day


            Full of silences alway.








              That, my friend? Now, it is curious


            You should hit upon the spurious!


            'Tis a door to nowhere, that;


            Never soul went in thereat;


            Lies behind, a limy wall


            Hung with cobwebs, that is all.








              Do not open that one yet,


            Wait until the sun is set.


            If you careless lift its latch


            Glimpse of nothing will you catch;


            Mere negation, blank of hue,


            Out of it will stare at you;


            Wait, I say, the coming night,


            Fittest time for second sight,


            Then the wide eyes of the mind


            See far down the Spirit's wind.


            You may have to strain and pull,


            Force and lift with cunning tool,


            Ere the rugged, ill-joined door


            Yield the sight it stands before:


            When at last, with grating sweep,


            Wide it swings—behold, the deep!








              Thou art standing on the verge


            Where material things emerge;


            Hoary silence, lightning fleet,


            Shooteth hellward at thy feet!


            Fear not thou whose life is truth,


            Gazing will renew thy youth;


            But where sin of soul or flesh


            Held a man in spider-mesh,


            It would drag him through that door,


            Give him up to loreless lore,


            Ages to be blown and hurled


            Up and down a deedless world.








              Ah, your eyes ask how I brook


            Doors that are not, doors to look!


            That is whither I was tending,


            And it brings me to good ending.








              Baby is the cause of this;


            Odd it seems, but so it is;—


            Baby, with her pretty prate


            Molten, half articulate,


            Full of hints, suggestions, catches,


            Broken verse, and music snatches!


            She, like seraph gone astray,


            Must be shown the homeward way;


            Plant of heaven, she, rooted lowly,


            Must put forth a blossom holy,


            Must, through culture high and steady,


            Slow unfold a gracious lady;


            She must therefore live in wonder,


            See nought common up or under;


            She the moon and stars and sea,


            Worm and butterfly and bee,


            Yea, the sparkle in a stone,


            Must with marvel look upon;


            She must love, in heaven's own blueness,


            Both the colour and the newness;


            Must each day from darkness break,


            Often often come awake,


            Never with her childhood part,


            Change the brain, but keep the heart.








              So, from lips and hands and looks,


            She must learn to honour books,


            Turn the leaves with careful fingers,


            Never lean where long she lingers;


            But when she is old enough


            She must learn the lesson rough


            That to seem is not to be,


            As to know is not to see;


            That to man or book,

appearing


            Gives no title to revering;


            That a pump is not a