with rage,
Rage elate with desire and great with pride that
tempest and storm
assuage;
So their chime in the ear of time has rung from age to
rekindled
age.
Fair and dear is the land's face here, and fair man's work as a
man's may be:
Dear and fair as the sunbright air is here the record
that speaks
him free;
Free by birth of a sacred earth, and regent ever of all the
sea.
AN AUTUMN VISION
OCTOBER 31, 1889
+Zephyrou gigantos aura+
I
Is it Midsummer here in the heavens that illumine October on earth?
Can the year, when his heart is fulfilled with desire of the days
of his mirth,
Redeem them, recall, or remember?
For a memory
recalling the rapture of earth, and redeeming the sky, Shines down from
the heights to the depths: will the watchword of
dawn be July
When to-morrow acclaims November?
The stern
salutation of sorrow to death or repentance to shame Was all that the
season was wont to accord her of grace or acclaim;
No lightnings of love and of laughter.
But here, in the laugh of the
loud west wind from around and above, In the flash of the waters
beneath him, what sound or what light
but of love
Rings round him or leaps forth after?
II
Wind beloved of earth and sky and sea beyond all winds that blow,
Wind whose might in fight was England's on her mightiest warrior
day,
South-west wind, whose breath for her was life, and fire to
scourge
her foe,
Steel to smite and death to drive him down an unreturning
way, Well-beloved and welcome, sounding all the clarions of the sky,
Rolling all the marshalled waters toward the charge that storms
the shore,
We receive, acclaim, salute thee, we who live and dream
and die, As the mightiest mouth of song that ever spake acclaimed of
yore. We that live as they that perish praise thee, lord of cloud and
wave,
Wind of winds, clothed on with darkness whence as lightning
light
comes forth,
We that know thee strong to guard and smite, to scatter
and to
save,
We to whom the south-west wind is dear as Athens held the
north. He for her waged war as thou for us against all powers defiant,
Fleets full-fraught with storm from Persia, laden deep with death
from Spain:
Thee the giant god of song and battle hailed as god and
giant, Yet not his but ours the land is whence thy praise should ring
and rain;
Rain as rapture shed from song, and ring as trumpets blown
for
battle,
Sound and sing before thee, loud and glad as leaps and sinks
the
sea:
Yea, the sea's white steeds are curbed and spurred of thee, and
pent as cattle,
Yet they laugh with love and pride to live, subdued not
save of
thee.
Ears that hear thee hear in heaven the sound of widening wings
gigantic,
Eyes that see the cloud-lift westward see thy darkening
brows
divine;
Wings whose measure is the limit of the limitless Atlantic,
Brows that bend, and bid the sovereign sea submit her soul to
thine.
III
Twelve days since is it--twelve days gone,
Lord of storm, that a
storm-bow shone
Higher than sweeps thy sublime dark wing,
Fair
as dawn is and sweet like spring?
Never dawn in the deep wide east
Spread so splendid and strange a
feast,
Whence the soul as it drank and fed
Felt such rapture of
wonder shed.
Never spring in the wild wood's heart
Felt such flowers at her footfall
start,
Born of earth, as arose on sight
Born of heaven and of storm
and light.
Stern and sullen, the grey grim sea
Swelled and strove as in toils,
though free,
Free as heaven, and as heaven sublime,
Clear as
heaven of the toils of time.
IV
Suddenly, sheer from the heights to the depths of the sky and the
sea,
Sprang from the darkness alive as a vision of life to be Glory
triune and transcendent of colour afar and afire, Arching and darkening
the darkness with light as of dream or
desire.
Heaven, in the depth of its height, shone wistful and wan from
above:
Earth from beneath, and the sea, shone stricken and breathless
with
love.
As a shadow may shine, so shone they; as ghosts of the viewless
blest,
That sleep hath sight of alive in a rapture of sunbright rest, The
green earth glowed and the grey sky gleamed for a wondrous
while;
And the storm's full frown was crossed by the light of its own
deep
smile.
As the darkness of thought and of passion is touched by the
light
that gives
Life deathless as love from the depth of a spirit that sees
and
lives,
From the soul of a seer and a singer, wherein as a scroll
unfurled Lies open the scripture of light and of darkness, the word of
the
world,
So, shapeless and measureless, lurid as anguish and haggard as
crime,
Pale as the front of oblivion and dark as the heart of
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.