Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Garden of Cymodoce by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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The Garden of Cymodoce

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Sea, and bright wind, and heaven of ardent air,
    More dear than all things earth-born; O to me
    Mother more dear than love's own longing, sea,
    More than love's eyes are, fair,
    Be with my spirit of song as wings to bear,
    As fire to feel and breathe and brighten; be
    A spirit of sense more deep of deity,
    A light of love, if love may be, more strong
    In me than very song.
    For song I have loved with second love, but thee,
    Thee first, thee, mother; ere my songs had breath,
    That love of loves, whose bondage makes man free,
    Was in me strong as death.
    And seeing no slave may love thee, no, not one
    That loves not freedom more,
    And more for thy sake loves her, and for hers
    Thee; or that hates not, on whate'er thy shore
    Or what thy wave soever, all things done
    Of man beneath the sun
    In his despite and thine, to cross and curse
    Your light and song that as with lamp and verse
    Guide safe the strength of our sphered universe,
    Thy breath it was, thou knowest, and none but thine,
    That taught me love of one thing more divine.

Str. 1.
    Ah, yet my youth was old
    Its first years dead and cold
    As last year's autumn's gold,
    And all my spirit of singing sick and sad and sere,
    Or ever I might behold
    The fairest of thy fold
    Engirt, enringed, enrolled,
    In all thy flower-sweet flock of islands dear and near.

Str. 2.
    Yet in my heart I deemed
    The fairest things, meseemed,
    Truth, dreaming, ever dreamed,
    Had made mine eyes already like a god's to see:
    Of all sea-things that were
    Clothed on with water and air,
    That none could live more fair
    Than thy sweet love long since had shown for love to me.

Ant. 1.
    I knew not, mother of mine,
    That one birth more divine
    Than all births else of thine
    That hang like flowers or jewels on thy deep soft breast
    Was left for me to shine
    Above thy girdling line
    Of bright and breathing brine,
    To take mine eyes with rapture and my sense with rest.

Ant.2.
    That this was left for me,
    Mother, to have of thee,
    To touch, to taste, to see,
    To feel as fire fulfilling all my blood and breath,
    As wine of living fire
    Keen as the heart's desire
    That makes the heart its pyre
    And on its burning visions burns itself to death.
    For here of all thy waters, here of all
    Thy windy ways the wildest, and beset
    As some beleaguered city's war-breached wall
    With deaths enmeshed all round it in deep net,
    Thick sown with rocks deadlier than steel, and fierce
    With loud cross-countering currents, where the ship
    Flags, flickering like a wind-bewildered leaf,
    The densest weft of waves that prow may pierce
    Coils round the sharpest warp of shoals that dip
    Suddenly, scarce well under for one brief
    Keen breathing-space between the streams adverse,
    Scarce showing the fanged edge of one hungering lip
    Or one tooth lipless of the ravening reef;
    And midmost of the murderous water's web
    All round it stretched and spun,
    Laughs, reckless of rough tide and raging ebb,
    The loveliest thing that shines against the sun.

Str. 3.
    O flower of all wind-flowers and sea-flowers,
    Made lovelier by love of the sea
    Than thy golden own field-flowers, or tree-flowers
    Like foam of the sea-facing tree!
    No foot but the seamew's there settles
    On the spikes of thine anthers like horns,
    With snow-coloured spray for thy petals,
    Black rocks for thy thorns.

Ant. 3.
    Was it here, in the waste of his waters,
    That the lordly north wind, when his love
    On the fairest of many king's daughters
    Bore down for a spoil from above,
    Chose forth of all farthest far islands
    As a haven to harbour her head,
    Of all lowlands on earth and all highlands,
    His bride-worthy bed?

Str. 4.
    Or haply, my sea-flower, he found thee
    Made fast as with anchors to land,
    And broke, that his waves might be round thee,
    Thy fetters like rivets of sand?
    And afar by the blast of him drifted
    Thy blossom of beauty was borne,
    As a lark by the heart in her lifted
    To mix with the morn?

Ant. 4.
    By what rapture of rage, by what vision
    Of a heavenlier heaven than above,
    Was he moved to devise thy division
    From the land as a rest for his love?
    As a nest when his wings would remeasure
    The ways where of old they would be,
    As a bride-bed upbuilt for his pleasure
    By sea-rock and sea?
    For in no deeps of midmost inland May
    More flowerbright flowers the hawthorn, or more sweet
    Swells the wild gold of the earth for wandering feet;
    For on no northland way
    Crowds the close whin-bloom closer, set like thee
    With thorns about for fangs of sea-rock shown
    Through blithe lips of the bitter brine to lee;
    Nor blithelier landward comes the sea-wind blown,
    Nor blithelier leaps the land-wind back to sea:
    Nor louder springs the living song of birds
    To shame our sweetest words.
    And in the narrowest of thine hollowest hold
    For joy thine aspens quiver as though for cold,
    And many a self-lit flower-illumined tree
    Outlaughs with snowbright or with rosebright glee
    The laughter of the fields whose laugh is gold.
    Yea, even from depth to height,
    Even thine own beauty with its own delight
    Fulfils thine heart in thee an hundredfold
    Beyond the larger hearts of islands bright
    With less intense contraction of desire
    Self-satiate, centred in its own deep fire;
    Of shores not self-enchanted and entranced
    By heavenly severance from all shadow of mirth
    Or mourning upon earth:
    As thou, by no similitude enhanced,
    By no fair foil made fairer, but alone
    Fair as could be no beauty save thine own,
    And wondrous as no world-beholden wonder:
    Throned, with the world's most perilous sea for throne,
    And praised from all its choral throats of thunder.

Str. 5.
    Yet one praise hast thou, holier
    Than praise of theirs may be,
    To exalt thee, wert thou lowlier
    Than all that take the sea
    With shores whence waves ebb slowlier
    Than these fall off from thee;

Ant. 5.
    That One, whose name gives glory,
    One man whose life makes light,
    One crowned and throned in story
    Above all empire's height,
    Came, where thy straits run hoary,
    To hold thee fast in sight;

Str. 6.
    With hallowing eyes to hold thee,
    With rapturous heart to read,
    To encompass and enfold thee
    With love whence all men feed,
    To brighten and behold thee,
    Who is mightiest of man's seed:

Ant. 6.
    More strong than strong disaster,
    For fate and fear too strong;
    Earth's friend, whose eyes look past her,
    Whose hands would purge of wrong;
    Our lord, our light, our master,
    Whose word sums up all song.

Str. 7.
    Be it April or September
    That plays his perfect part,
    Burn June or blow December,
    Thou canst not in thine heart
    But rapturously remember,
    All heavenlike as thou art,

Ant. 7.
    Whose footfall made thee fairer,
    Whose passage more divine,
    Whose hand, our thunder-bearer,
    Held fire that bade thee shine
    With subtler glory and rarer
    Than thrills the sun's own shrine.
    Who knows how then his godlike banished gaze
    Turned haply from its goal of natural days
    And homeward hunger for the clear French clime,
    Toward English earth, whereunder now the Accursed
    Rots, in the hate of all men's hearts inhearsed,
    A carrion ranker to the sense of time
    For that sepulchral gift of stone and lime
    By royal grace laid on it, less of weight
    Than the load laid by fate,
    Fate, misbegotten child of his own crime,
    Son of as foul a bastard-bearing birth
    As even his own on earth;
    Less heavy than the load of cursing piled
    By loyal grace of all souls undefiled
    On one man's head, whose reeking soul made rotten
    The loathed live corpse on earth once misbegotten?
    But when our Master's homeless feet were here
    France yet was foul with joy more foul than fear,
    And slavery chosen, more vile by choice of chance
    Than dull damnation of inheritance
    From Russian year to year
    Alas fair mother of men, alas my France,
    What ailed thee so to fall, that wert so dear
    For all men's sake to all men, in such trance,
    Plague-stricken? Had the very Gods, that saw
    Thy glory lighten on us for a law,
    Thy gospel go before us for a guide,
    Had these waxed envious of our love and awe,
    Or was it less their envy than thy pride
    That bared thy breast for the obscene vulture-claw,
    High priestess, by whose mouth Love prophesied
    That fate should yet mean freedom? Howsoever,
    That hour, the helper of men's hearts, we praise,
    Which blots out of man's book of after days
    The name above all names abhorred for ever.
    And His name shall we praise not, whom these flowers,
    These rocks and ravening waters bound for girth
    Round this wild starry spanlong plot of earth,
    Beheld, the mightier for those heavier hours
    That bowed his heart not down
    Nor marred one crowning blossom of his crown?
    For surely, might we say,
    Even from the dark deep sea-gate that makes way
    Through channelled darkness for the darkling day
    Hardly to let men's faltering footfall win
    The sunless passage in,
    Where breaks a world aflower against the sun,
    A small sweet world of wave-encompassed wonder
    Kept from the wearier landward world asunder
    With violence of wild waters, and with thunder
    Of many winds as one,
    To where the keen sea-current grinds and frets
    The black bright sheer twin flameless Altarlets
    That lack no live blood-sacrifice they crave
    Of shipwreck and the shrine-subservient wave,
    Having for priest the storm-wind, and for choir
    Lightnings and clouds whose prayer and praise are fire,
    All the isle acclaimed him coming; she, the least
    Of all things loveliest that the sea's love hides
    From strange men's insult, walled about with tides
    That bid strange guests back from her flower-strewn feast,
    Set all her fields aflower, her flowers aflame,
    To applaud him that he came.
    Nor surely flashed not something of delight
    Through that steep strait of rock whose twin-cliffed height
    Links crag with crag reiterate, land with land,
    By one sheer thread of narrowing precipice
    Bifront, that binds and sunders
    Abyss from hollower imminent abyss
    And wilder isle with island, blind for bliss
    Of sea that lightens and of wind that thunders;
    Nor pealed not surely back from deep to steep
    Reverberate acclamation, steep to deep
    Inveterately reclaiming and replying
    Praise, and response applausive; nor the sea,
    For all the sea-wind's crying,
    Knew not the song her sister, even as she
    Thundering, or like her confluent spring-tides brightening,
    And like her darkness lightening;
    The song that moved about him silent, now
    Both soundless wings refolded and refurled
    On that Promethean brow,
    Then quivering as for flight that wakes the world.

Str. 8.
    From the roots of the rocks underlying the gulfs that engird it around
    Was the isle not enkindled with light of him landing, or thrilled not with sound?
    Yea, surely the sea like a harper laid hand on the shore as a lyre,
    As the lyre in his own for a birthright of old that was given of his sire,
    And the hand of the child was put forth on the chords yet alive and aflame
    From the hand of the God that had wrought it in heaven; and the hand was the same.
    And the tongue of the child spake, singing; and never a note that he sang,
    But the strings made answer unstricken, as though for the God they rang.
    And the eyes of the child shone, lightening; and touched as by life at his nod,
    They shuddered with music, and quickened as though from the glance of the God.
    So trembled the heart of the hills and the rocks to receive him, and yearned
    With desirous delight of his presence and love that beholding him burned.
    Yea, down through the mighty twin hollows where never the sunlight shall be,
    Deep sunk under imminent earth, and subdued to the stress of the sea,
    That feel when the dim week changes by change of their tides in the dark,
    As the wave sinks under within them, reluctant, removed from its mark,
    Even there in the terror of twilight in bloom with its blossoms ablush,
    Did a sense of him touch not the gleam of their flowers with a fierier flush?
    Though the sun they behold not for ever, yet knew they not over them One
    Whose soul was the soul of the morning, whose song was the song of the sun?
    But the secrets inviolate of sunlight in hollows untrodden of day,
    Shall he dream what are these who beholds not? or he that hath seen, shall he say?
    For the path is for passage of sea-mews; and he that hath glided and leapt
    Over sea-grass and sea-rock, alighting as one from a citadel crept
    That his foemen beleaguer, descending by darkness and stealth, at the last
    Peers under, and all is as hollow to hellward, agape and aghast.

Ant. 8.
    But afloat and afar in the darkness a tremulous colour subsides
    From the crimson high crest of the purple-peaked roof to the soft-coloured sides
    That brighten as ever they widen till downward the level is won
    Of the soundless and colourless water that knows not the sense of the sun:
    From the crown of the culminant arch to the floor of the lakelet abloom,
    One infinite blossom of blossoms innumerable aflush through the gloom.
    All under the deeps of the darkness are glimmering; all over impends
    An immeasurable infinite flower of the dark that dilates and descends,
    That exults and expands in its breathless and blind efflorescence of heart
    As it broadens and bows to the wave-ward, and breathes not, and hearkens apart.
    As a beaker inverse at a feast on Olympus, exhausted of wine,
    But inlaid as with rose from the lips of Dione that left it divine:
    From the lips everliving of laughter and love everlasting, that leave
    In the cleft of his heart who shall kiss them a snake to corrode it and cleave.
    So glimmers the gloom into glory, the glory recoils into gloom,
    That the eye of the sun could not kindle, the lip not of Love could relume.
    So darkens reverted the cup that the kiss of her mouth set on fire:
    So blackens a brand in his eyeshot asmoulder awhile from the pyre.
    For the beam from beneath and without it refrangent again from the wave
    Strikes up through the portal a ghostly reverse on the dome of the cave,
    On the depth of the dome ever darkling and dim to the crown of its arc:
    That the sun-coloured tapestry, sunless for ever, may soften the dark.
    But within through the side-seen archway a glimmer again from the right
    Is the seal of the sea's tide set on the mouth of the mystery of night.
    And the seal on the seventh day breaks but a little, that man by its mean
    May behold what the sun hath not looked on, the stars of the night have not seen.
    Even like that hollow-bosomed rose, inverse
    And infinite, the heaven of thy vast verse,
    Our Master, over all our souls impends,
    Imminent; we, with heart-enkindled eyes
    Upwondering, search the music-moulded skies
    Sphere by sweet sphere, concordant as it blends
    Light of bright sound, sound of clear light, in one,
    As all the stars found utterance through the sun.
    And all that heaven is like a rose in bloom,
    Flower-coloured, where its own sun's fires illume
    As from one central and imperious heart
    The whole sky's every part:
    But lightening still and darkling downward, lo
    The light and darkness of it,
    The leaping of the lamping levin afar
    Between the full moon and the sunset star,
    The war-song of the sounding skies aglow,
    That have the herald thunder for their prophet:
    From north to south the lyric lights that leap,
    The tragic sundawns reddening east and west
    As with bright blood from one Promethean breast,
    The peace of noon that strikes the sea to sleep,
    The wail over the world of all that weep,
    The peace of night when death brings life on rest.
    Goddess who gatherest all the herded waves
    Into thy great sweet pastureless green fold,
    Even for our love of old,
    I pray thee by thy power that slays and saves,
    Take thou my song of this thy flower to keep
    Who hast my heart in hold;
    And from thine high place of thy garden-steep,
    Where one sheer terrace oversees thy deep
    From the utmost rock-reared height
    Down even to thy dear depths of night and light,
    Take my song's salutation; and on me
    Breathe back the benediction of thy sea.


    Between two seas the sea-bird's wing makes halt,
    Wind-weary; while with lifting head he waits
    For breath to reinspire him from the gates
    That open still toward sunrise on the vault
    High-domed of morning, and in flight's default
    With spreading sense of spirit anticipates
    What new sea now may lure beyond the straits
    His wings exulting that her winds exalt
    And fill them full as sails to seaward spread,
    Fulfilled with fair speed's promise. Pass, my song,
    Forth to the haven of thy desire and dread,
    The presence of our lord, long loved and long
    Far off above beholden, who to thee
    Was as light kindling all a windy sea.



Extra Info:
From "Songs of the Springtides and Birthday Ode"
Taken from The Collected Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne - Vol. III


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