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THE FORTUNATE ISLANDS

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A DREAM IN JUNE

In twilight of the longest day

   I lingered over Lucian,

Till ere the dawn a dreamy way

   My spirit found, untrod of man,

Between the green sky and the grey.


Amid the soft dusk suddenly

   More light than air I seemed to sail,

Afloat upon the ocean sky,

   While through the faint blue, clear and pale,

I saw the mountain clouds go by:

   My barque had thought for helm and sail,

And one mist wreath for canopy.


Like torches on a marble floor

   Reflected, so the wild stars shone,

Within the abysmal hyaline,

   Till the day widened more and more,

And sank to sunset, and was gone,

And then, as burning beacons shine

   On summits of a mountain isle,

      A light to folk on sea that fare,

   So the sky’s beacons for a while

      Burned in these islands of the air.


Then from a starry island set

   Where one swift tide of wind there flows,

Came scent of lily and violet,

   Narcissus, hyacinth, and rose,

Laurel, and myrtle buds, and vine,

So delicate is the air and fine:

And forests of all fragrant trees

   Sloped seaward from the central hill,

And ever clamorous were these


With singing of glad birds; and still

   Such music came as in the woods

Most lonely, consecrate to Pan,

   The Wind makes, in his many moods,

Upon the pipes some shepherd Man,

   Hangs up, in thanks for victory!

On these shall mortals play no more,

   But the Wind doth touch them, over and o’er,

And the Wind’s breath in the reeds will sigh.


Between the daylight and the dark

   That island lies in silver air,

And suddenly my magic barque

   Wheeled, and ran in, and grounded there;

And by me stood the sentinel

   Of them who in the island dwell;

      All smiling did he bind my hands,

      With rushes green and rosy bands,

They have no harsher bonds than these

   The people of the pleasant lands

Within the wash of the airy seas!


Then was I to their city led:

   Now all of ivory and gold

The great walls were that garlanded

The temples in their shining fold,

   (Each fane of beryl built, and each

   Girt with its grove of shadowy beech,)

And all about the town, and through,

There flowed a River fed with dew,

   As sweet as roses, and as clear

      As mountain crystals pure and cold,

And with his waves that water kissed

The gleaming altars of amethyst

   That smoke with victims all the year,

And sacred are to the Gods of old.


There sat three Judges by the Gate,

   And I was led before the Three,

And they but looked on me, and straight

   The rosy bonds fell down from me

   Who, being innocent, was free;

And I might wander at my will

About that City on the hill,

   Among the happy people clad

      In purple weeds of woven air

Hued like the webs that Twilight weaves

At shut of languid summer eves

   So light their raiment seemed; and glad

Was every face I looked on there!


There was no heavy heat, no cold,

   The dwellers there wax never old,

      Nor wither with the waning time,

But each man keeps that age he had

      When first he won the fairy clime.

The Night falls never from on high,

   Nor ever burns the heat of noon.

But such soft light eternally

   Shines, as in silver dawns of June

Before the Sun hath climbed the sky!


Within these pleasant streets and wide,

   The souls of Heroes go and come,

Even they that fell on either side

   Beneath the walls of Ilium;

And sunlike in that shadowy isle

The face of Helen and her smile

   Makes glad the souls of them that knew

Grief for her sake a little while!

And all true Greeks and wise are there;

And with his hand upon the hair

   Of Phaedo, saw I Socrates,

About him many youths and fair,

   Hylas, Narcissus, and with these

Him whom the quoit of Phoebus slew

   By fleet Eurotas, unaware!


All these their mirth and pleasure made

   Within the plain Elysian,

      The fairest meadow that may be,

With all green fragrant trees for shade

   And every scented wind to fan,

      And sweetest flowers to strew the lea;

The soft Winds are their servants fleet

   To fetch them every fruit at will

   And water from the river chill;

And every bird that singeth sweet

   Throstle, and merle, and nightingale

   Brings blossoms from the dewy vale, —

Lily, and rose, and asphodel —

   With these doth each guest twine his crown

   And wreathe his cup, and lay him down

      Beside some friend he loveth well.


There with the shining Souls I lay

When, lo, a Voice that seemed to say,

   In far-off haunts of Memory,

Whoso death taste the Dead Men’s bread,

Shall dwell for ever with these Dead,

   Nor ever shall his body lie

Beside his friends, on the grey hill

Where rains weep, and the curlews shrill

   And the brown water wanders by!


Then did a new soul in me wake,

The dead men’s bread I feared to break,

Their fruit I would not taste indeed

Were it but a pomegranate seed.

Nay, not with these I made my choice

To dwell for ever and rejoice,

For otherwhere the River rolls

That girds the home of Christian souls,

And these my whole heart seeks are found

On otherwise enchanted ground.


Even so I put the cup away,

   The vision wavered, dimmed, and broke,

   And, nowise sorrowing, I woke

While, grey among the ruins grey

Chill through the dwellings of the dead,

   The Dawn crept o’er the Northern sea,

Then, in a moment, flushed to red,

   Flushed all the broken minster old,

   And turned the shattered stones to gold,

And wakened half the world with me!


L’Envoi

To E. W. G

(Who also had rhymed on the Fortune Islands of Lucian)

Each in the self-same field we glean

The field of the Samosatene,

Each something takes and something leaves

   And this must choose, and that forego

In Lucian’s visionary sheaves,

   To twine a modern posy so;

But all any gleanings, truth to tell,

Are mixed with mournful asphodel,

While yours are wreathed with poppies red,

   With flowers that Helen’s feet have kissed,

With leaves of vine that garlanded

   The Syrian Pantagruelist,

The sage who laughed the world away,

   Who mocked at Gods, and men, and care,

More sweet of voice than Rabelais,

   And lighter-hearted than Voltaire.


THE NEW MILLENIUM

(THE UNFORTUNATE ISLANDS.)

A VISION IN THE STRAND

The jaded light of late July

   Shone yellow down the dusty Strand,

The anxious people bustled by,

Policeman, Pressman, you and I,

   And thieves, and judges of the land.


So swift they strode they had not time

   To mark the humours of the Town,

But I, that mused an idle rhyme,

   Looked here and there, and up and down,

And many a rapid cart I spied

   That drew, as fast as ponies can,

The Newspapers of either side,

   These joys of every Englishman!


The Standard here, the Echo there,

And cultured ev’ning papers fair,

With din and fuss and shout and blare

Through all the eager land they bare,

   The rumours of our little span.


’Midst these, but ah, more slow of speed,

   A biggish box of sanguine hue

Was tugged on a velocipede,

   And in and out the crowd, and through,

An earnest stripling urged it well

Perched on a cranky tricycle!


A seedy tricycle he rode,

   Perchance some three miles in the hour,

But, on the big red box that glowed

   Behind him, was a name of Power,

Justice, (I read it e’er I wist,)

The Organ of the Socialist!


The paper carts fled fleetly by

   And vanished up the roaring Strand,

And eager purchasers drew nigh

   Each with his penny in his hand,

But Justice, scarce more fleet than I,

   Began to permeate the land,

And dark, methinks, the twilight fell,

   Or ever Justice reached Pall Mall.


Oh Man, (I stopped to moralize,)

   How eager thou to fight with Fate,

To bring Astraea from the skies;

   Yet ah, how too inadequate

The means by which thou fain wouldst cope

With Laws and Morals, King and Pope!

Justice!” – how prompt the witling’s sneer, —

“Justice!  Thou wouldst have Justice here!

And each poor man should be a squire,

Each with his competence a year,

Each with sufficient beef and beer,

   And all things matched to his desire,

While all the Middle Classes should

   With every vile Capitalist

Be clean reformed away for good,

   And vanish like a morning mist!


“Ah splendid Vision, golden time,

An end of hunger, cold, and crime.

An end of Rent, an end of Rank,

An end of balance at the Bank,

An end of everything that’s meant

To bring Investors five per cent!”


How fair doth Justice seem, I cried,

   Yet oh, how strong the embattled powers

That war against on every side

   Justice, and this great dream of ours,

And what have we to plead our cause

’Gainst Masters, Capital, and laws,

What but a big red box indeed,

With copies of a weekly screed,

   That’s slowly jolted, up and down,

Behind an old velocipede

   To clamour Justice through the town:

How touchingly inadequate

These arms wherewith we’d vanquish Fate!


Nay, the old Order shall endure

   And little change the years shall know,

And still the Many shall be poor,

   And still the Poor shall dwell in woe;

Firm in the iron Law of things

   The strong shall be the wealthy still,

And (called Capitalists or Kings)

   Shall seize and hoard the fruits of skill.

Leaving the weaker for their gain,

   Leaving the gentler for their prize

Such dens and husks as beasts disdain, —

   Till slowly from the wrinkled skies

The fireless frozen Sun shall wane,

Nor Summer come with golden grain;

   Till men be glad, mid frost and snow

To live such equal lives of pain

   As now the hutted Eskimo!

Then none shall plough nor garner seed,

   Then, on some last sad human shore,

Equality shall reign indeed,

   The Rich shall be with us no more,

Thus, and not otherwise, shall come

The new, the true Millennium!


Rhymes a la Mode

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