Complete works of willia.., p.459

Complete Works of William Morris, page 459

 

Complete Works of William Morris
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  Hither and thither, on such things intent

  As fit the snatcher-forth of victory;

  And then, much wondering how such things could be,

  That aught but love could move a man at all,

  Into a dreamless slumber did he fall,

  Wherefrom the trumpet roused him in the morn,

  Almost before the summer sun was born;

  And midst the new-born longings of his heart,

  From that fair place now must he needs depart

  Unguarded and unholpen to his fate.

  Nought happed to him ‘twixt palace-court and gate

  Of the fair city; thronged it was e’en then

  With anxious, weeping women and pale men,

  But unto him all faces empty were

  But one, that nowise might he now see there:

  Or ere he passed the great gate back he gazed’

  To where the palace its huge pile upraised

  Unto the fresh and windy morning sky,

  As seeking if he might e’en now espy

  That which he durst not raise his eyes unto

  When ‘neath its walls he went a while ago.

  So through the gate the last man strode, and they

  Who in the city seemed so great a stay

  Unto that people, as the country-side

  About their moving ranks spread bleak and wide,

  Showed like a handful, and the town no less

  Seemed given up to utter helplessness.

  SEVEN days of fear wore by; Philonoë

  Must vex her heart with all that yet might be,

  And oft would curse herself that she it was

  Through whom such death as his should come to pass,

  And weep to think of all her life made lone.

  But on the eighth day, at the stroke of noon,

  A little band of stained and battered men

  Passed through the gate into the town again,

  And left glad hearts as well as anxious ones

  Behind them, as they clattered o’er the stones

  Unto the palace: there the King they found

  Set on his throne, with ancient lords around,

  And cried to him, “O King, rejoice! at last

  Raised is thy banner, that ill men had cast

  Unto the ground; as safely mayst thou lie

  Within the city of the Solymi

  As in this house thou buildedst for thy bliss,

  For all things there are thine now, e’en as this.”

  Then the King rose, and filled a cup with wine,

  And said, “All praise be unto things divine!

  Yet ere I pour, how goes it with our folk?

  Did many die before they laid the yoke

  On these proud necks? when will they come again?”

  “O King,” they said, “though they fell not in vain,

  Yet many fell; but now upon the way

  Our fellows are: I think on the third day

  They will be here, and needs must they be slow,

  Because they have with them a goodly show;

  Wains full of spoil, arms, and most fair attire,

  Wrought gold that seven times o’er has felt the fire;

  And men and women of thy stubborn foes

  E’en as thou wilt their lives to keep or lose.”

  “What sayst thou next about Bellerophon,”

  The King said, “that this day for me hath won?

  Is he alive yet?”

  Then the man waxed pale,

  And said, “He liveth, and of small avail

  Man’s weapons are against him; on the wall

  He stood alone, for backward did we fall

  Before the fury of the Solymi,

  Because we deemed ourselves brought there to die,,

  And might not bear it: then it was as though

  A clear bright light about his head did glow

  Amidst the darts and clamour, and he turned

  A face to us that with such glory burned

  That those behind us drave us back again,

  And cried aloud to die there in the pain

  Rather than leave him, and with such a wave

  Of desperate war swept up, they scarce could save

  Their inmost citadel from us that tide,

  Who at the first with mocks had bidden us bide

  A little longer in a freeman’s land,

  Until their slaves had got their whips in hand

  To drive us thence.”

  Now as he spake, at first

  The King like one, who heareth of the worst,

  And must not heed it, hearkened, but when he

  Had heard his servant’s tale out, suddenly

  The wine he poured, and cried, “Jove, take thou this

  In token of the greatness of our bliss,

  In earnest of the gifts that thou shalt have,

  Who thus our name, our noble friends didst save.”

  So spake he, looking downward, and his heart

  In what his lips said, had perchance, some part,

  However, driven on by long-sworn oath,

  He dealt in things that sore he needs must loathe:

  And he who erst had told him of the thing

  Seemed fain to linger, as if yet the King

  Had something more to say; but no fresh word

  He had for him, but with great man and lord

  Made merry, praising wind and wave

  That brought Bellerophon their fame to save.

  But joyous was the town to hear of this,

  For in that place, midst all that men call bliss,

  Cold fear was mingled; such a little band

  They seemed, but clinging to a barbarous land,

  With strange things round about them; if the earth

  Should open not to swallow up their mirth

  And them together, they must deem it good;

  Or if the kennels ran not with their blood,

  While a poor remnant, driven forth with whips,

  Must sit beneath the hatchways of strange ships,

  Of such account as beasts. So there dwelt they,

  Trembling amidst their wealth from day to day,

  Afraid of god and man, and earth and sky.

  Judge, therefore, if they thought not joyously

  Of this one fallen amongst them, who could make

  The rich man risk his life for honour’s sake,

  The trembling slave remember what he was,

  The poor man hope for what might come to pass.

  So when the day carne when the gates were flung

  Back on their hinges, and the people hung

  About the pageant of their folk returned,

  And many an eager face about him burned

  With new and high desires they scarce could name,

  He wondered how such glory on him came,

  And why folk gazed upon him as a god,

  And would have kissed the ground whereon he trod.

  A little thing it seemed to him to fight

  Against hard things, that he might see the light

  A little longer and rejoice therein,

  A little thing that he should strive to win

  More time for love; and even therewithal

  Into a dreamy musing did he fall

  Amidst the shouts and glitter, and scarce knew

  What things they were that he that day did do,

  Only the time seemed long and long and long,

  The noise and many men still seemed to wrong

  The daintiness of his heart-piercing love, —

  As through a world of shadows did he move.

  Think then how fared his love Philonoë

  Amid the din of that festivity!

  For if while joy hung betwixt hope and fear

  Life seemed a hateful thing to her and drear,

  And all men hateful; if herself she cursed,

  The hatefullest of all things and the worst;

  If rest had grown a name for something gone

  And not remembered; if herself alone

  Seemed no more one, but made of many things

  All wretched and at strife; if sudden stings

  Of fresh pain made her start up from her place,

  And set to some strange unknown goal her face,

  And she must stifle wails with bitterest pain —

  If all this was, ought she not now to gain

  A little rest? now, when she heard the voice

  Of triumph and the people’s maddening noise

  Round her returning love; still did she bear

  Her grinding dread if with a wearier,

  Yet with a calmer face, than now she bore

  Desire so quickened by that fear past o’er.

  She in her garden wandered through the day,

  And heavy seemed the hours to pass away.

  Her colour came and went, she trembled when

  She heard some louder shout of joyous men;

  She could not hear the things her maidens spake,

  Nor aught could she seem gracious for their sake;

  The sweetest snatch of some familiar song

  She might not hearken; she abode not long

  Within the shadow; weary of the sun

  She grew full soon; the glassy brook did run

  In vain across her feet; the ice-cold well

  Quenched not her thirst; the half-blown roses’ smell

  Was not yet sweet enough: the sun sank low,

  And then she murmured that the day must go

  That should have been so happy: wearily

  She laid her down that night, but nought slept she;

  Yet in the morn the new sun seemed to bring

  A joy to her, and some unnamed dear thing

  Better than rest or peace; for in her heart

  She knew that he in all her thoughts had part;

  Yea, and she thought how dreamlike he would ride

  Amidst his glory, and how ill abide

  The clamour of the feast; yea, and would not

  That night to him belike be dull and hot,

  And that dawn hopeful?

  ‘Neath the wall there was

  A place where dewy was the daisied grass

  E’en nigh the noon; a high tower great and round

  Cast a long shadow o’er that spot of ground,

  And blind it was of window or of door,

  For, wrought by long-dead men of ancient lore,

  No part it was of that stone panoply

  That girt the town; so lilies grew thereby,

  And woodbine, and the odorous virgin’s-bower

  Hung in great heaps about that undyked tower,

  And lone and silent was the pleasance there.

  Thither Love led Philonoë the fair,

  And well she knew of him, and still her heart

  At every little sound and sight would start,

  And still her palms were tingling for the touch

  Of other hands, and ever over-much

  Her feet seemed light.

  But when the bushes gleamed

  With something more than the low sun that streamed

  Athwart their blossoms, and a clear voice rung

  Above the ousel’s; then with terror stung,

  She leaned her slim and perfect daintiness

  ‘Gainst the grey tower, and even like distress

  Her great joy seemed. Green clad he was that morn,

  And to his side there hung a glittering horn,

  A mighty unbent bow was in his hand,

  And o’er his shoulders did the feathers stand

  Of his long arrows; in his gleaming eyes

  Such joy there was as he beheld the prize,

  That in that shadow now he seemed to be

  A piece of sunlight fallen down suddenly.

  So face to yearning face they stood awhile,

  And every word at first seemed poor and vile,

  None better than another; nor durst they

  Lips upon lips or palm to fingers lay,

  More than if many people stood around,

  With such strange fear and shame doth love abound.

  At last she spake: “Thou comest, then, to say

  How thou wilt now be wise and go away,

  E’en as I bade; the prey has ‘scaped the net;

  Be wise, the fowler other wiles hath yet!”

  “Yea,” said he, “then thy word it was indeed

  That needs must think about me in my need:

  Strange, then, that now thou biddest me begone!

  Belike thou know’st not of folk left alone,

  And what life grows to them: yet art thou kind —

  Thou deemest other friends I yet may find.

  Alas, life goeth fast; not every day

  Do we behold folk standing in the way

  With outstretched hands to meet us.”

  “Ah,” she said,

  “How sweet thou art! Wand yet the dead are dead,

  The absent are but dead a little while.

  Then get thee gone from midst of wrong and guile,

  And we shall meet once more in happier days,

  When death lurks not amidst of rosy ways —

  — Ah, wilt thou slay me, then? — I knew not erst

  How poor a life I had, and how accurst,

  Before I felt thy lips — what thing is this

  That makes me faint amidst of new-born bliss?”

  “Rest in mine arms, O well-beloved,” said he;

  “I faint not, neither shall death come on me

  While thus thou art: nay, nay, I think if I,

  Hacked with an hundred swords, should come to lie,

  Yet without thee I should not then depart.”

  “O love, alas! the sorer is my heart

  The more I love,” she said, “we are alone;

  Our loving life is not for any one

  But for our own selves — ah, deem all I said

  Before those lips of thine on mine were laid

  As said again and yet again! Some hate

  Is round thee here, some undeserved strange fate

  Awaits thee here in Lycia — yea, full sure

  The hungry swords here may we twain endure;

  But what then? — Of the dead what hast thou heard

  That maketh thee so rash and unafeared?

  Can the dead love, or is there any space

  In their long sleep when they lay face to face

  Soft as we do now? can their pale lips plead

  The pleas of love? or can their fixed eyes lead

  Heart unto heart? or hast thou heard that they

  Can wait from weary day to weary day,

  And hope, as I will, while thou gatherest fame?

  Can they have pleasure there e’en in a name,

  A memory? is their pain a pleasure there,

  Are tears sweet, and the longing sobs that wear

  The hours away, where life and hope are gone?

  “How can I any longer be alone?

  Can I forget thee now? the while I live?

  O my beloved, must I strive and strive,

  And move thee not? How sweet thou art to me!

  How dull the coming day that knows not thee!”

  “Fear not,” he said; “not yet my days are done!

  When on the deadly wall I stood alone,

  And back the traitors fell from me, I felt

  As though within me such a life there dwelt

  As scarce could end — Lo now, if I depart

  I lack the safeguard of thy faithful heart,

  And meet new dangers that thou know’st not of.

  Yea, listen, nor rebuke me — This our love;

  Hast thou not heard how love may grow a-cold

  Before the lips that called thereon wax old?

  Ah, listen! seas betwixt us, and great pain,

  And death of days that shall not be again;

  And yearning life within us, and desire

  That changes hearts as fire will quench the fire.

  These are the engines of the Gods, lest we,

  Through constant love, Gods too should come to be.

  A little pain, a little fond regret,

  A little shame, and we are living yet,

  While love that should out-live us lieth dead —

  “Ah, my beloved, lift that glorious head

  And look upon me! put away the thought

  Of time and death, and let all things be nought

  But this love of to-day! and think of me

  As if for ever I should seem to thee

  As I am now — I will not go away,

  Nor sow my love, to reap some coming day

  I know not what: be merry, we shall live

  To see our love high o’er all danger thrive.”

  For now she wept, but, starting midst her tears,

  She stopped and listened like a bird that hears

  A danger on the wind: the round tower’s shade

  A lesser patch upon the daisies made,

  And all about the place ‘gan folk to stir:

  She turned and girt her loosened gown to her,

  And with one sob, and a long faithful look,

  The gathering tears from out her eyes she shook,

  Nor bade farewell, but swiftly gat her gone.

  But he beneath the tower so left alone

  Stooped down and kissed her foot-prints in the grass,

  And then with swift steps through the place did pass,

  Thinking high things; nor knew he till that hour

  How sweet life was, or love its fruit and flower.

  So passed the days, nor often might it be

  That such sweet hours as this the twain might see;

  And they must watch that folk might not surprise

  Their hearts’ love through the windows of their eyes

  When midst of folk they met: but glorious days

  Were for Bellerophon, and love and praise

  From all folk, though the great end lingered yet

  When he sweet life, or glorious death, should get.

  NOW on a day was held of most and least

  Unto Diana sacrifice and feast,

  And on that tide the market empty was,

  And through the haven might no dromund pass;

  And then the wont was they should bear about

  The goddess wrought in gold, with song and shout

  And winding of great horns, amidst a band

  Of bare-kneed maidens, bended bow in hand

  And quiver at the back; and these should take,

 

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