Public Domain Poetry And Stories - On The Cliffs by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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On The Cliffs

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Between the moondawn and the sundown here
    The twilight hangs half starless; half the sea
    Still quivers as for love or pain or fear
    Or pleasure mightier than these all may be
    A man's live heart might beat
    Wherein a God's with mortal blood should meet
    And fill its pulse too full to bear the strain
    With fear or love or pleasure's twin-born, pain.
    Fiercely the gaunt woods to the grim soil cling
    That bears for all fair fruits
    Wan wild sparse flowers of windy and wintry spring
    Between the tortive serpent-shapen roots
    Wherethrough their dim growth hardly strikes and shoots
    And shews one gracious thing
    Hardly, to speak for summer one sweet word
    Of summer's self scarce heard.
    But higher the steep green sterile fields, thick-set
    With flowerless hawthorn even to the upward verge
    Whence the woods gathering watch new cliffs emerge
    Higher than their highest of crowns that sea-winds fret,
    Hold fast, for all that night or wind can say,
    Some pale pure colour yet,
    Too dim for green and luminous for grey.
    Between the climbing inland cliffs above
    And these beneath that breast and break the bay,
    A barren peace too soft for hate or love
    Broods on an hour too dim for night or day.
    O wind, O wingless wind that walk'st the sea,
    Weak wind, wing-broken, wearier wind than we,
    Who are yet not spirit-broken, maimed like thee,
    Who wail not in our inward night as thou
    In the outer darkness now,
    What word has the old sea given thee for mine ear
    From thy faint lips to hear?
    For some word would she send me, knowing not how.
    Nay, what far other word
    Than ever of her was spoken, or of me
    Or all my winged white kinsfolk of the sea
    Between fresh wave and wave was ever heard,
    Cleaves the clear dark enwinding tree with tree
    Too close for stars to separate and to see
    Enmeshed in multitudinous unity?
    What voice of what strong God hath stormed and stirred
    The fortressed rock of silence, rent apart
    Even to the core Night's all-maternal heart?
    What voice of God grown heavenlier in a bird,
    Made keener of edge to smite
    Than lightning yea, thou knowest, O mother Night,
    Keen as that cry from thy strange children sent
    Wherewith the Athenian judgment-shrine was rent,
    For wrath that all their wrath was vainly spent,
    Their wrath for wrong made right
    By justice in her own divine despite
    That bade pass forth unblamed
    The sinless matricide and unashamed?
    Yea, what new cry is this, what note more bright
    Than their song's wing of words was dark of flight,
    What word is this thou hast heard,
    Thine and not thine or theirs, O Night, what word
    More keen than lightning and more sweet than light?
    As all men's hearts grew godlike in one bird
    And all those hearts cried on thee, crying with might,
    Hear us, O mother Night.
    Dumb is the mouth of darkness as of death:
    Light, sound and life are one
    In the eyes and lips of dawn that draw the sun
    To hear what first child's word with glimmering breath
    Their weak wan weanling child the twilight saith;
    But night makes answer none.
    God, if thou be God, bird, if bird thou be,
    Do thou then answer me.
    For but one word, what wind soever blow,
    Is blown up usward ever from the sea.
    In fruitless years of youth dead long ago
    And deep beneath their own dead leaves and snow
    Buried, I heard with bitter heart and sere
    The same sea's word unchangeable, nor knew
    But that mine own life-days were changeless too
    And sharp and salt with unshed tear on tear
    And cold and fierce and barren; and my soul,
    Sickening, swam weakly with bated breath
    In a deep sea like death,
    And felt the wind buffet her face with brine
    Hard, and harsh thought on thought in long bleak roll
    Blown by keen gusts of memory sad as thine
    Heap the weight up of pain, and break, and leave
    Strength scarce enough to grieve
    In the sick heavy spirit, unmanned with strife
    Of waves that beat at the tired lips of life.
    Nay, sad may be man's memory, sad may be
    The dream he weaves him as for shadow of thee,
    But scarce one breathing-space, one heartbeat long,
    Wilt thou take shadow of sadness on thy song.
    Not thou, being more than man or man's desire,
    Being bird and God in one,
    With throat of gold and spirit of the sun;
    The sun whom all our souls and songs call sire,
    Whose godhead gave thee, chosen of all our quire,
    Thee only of all that serve, of all that sing
    Before our sire and king,
    Borne up some space on time's world-wandering wing,
    This gift, this doom, to bear till time's wing tire
    Life everlasting of eternal fire.
    Thee only of all; yet can no memory say
    How many a night and day
    My heart has been as thy heart, and my life
    As thy life is, a sleepless hidden thing,
    Full of the thirst and hunger of winter and spring,
    That seeks its food not in such love or strife
    As fill men's hearts with passionate hours and rest.
    From no loved lips and on no loving breast
    Have I sought ever for such gifts as bring
    Comfort, to stay the secret soul with sleep.
    The joys, the loves, the labours, whence men reap
    Rathe fruit of hopes and fears,
    I have made not mine; the best of all my days
    Have been as those fair fruitless summer strays,
    Those water-waifs that but the sea-wind steers,
    Flakes of glad foam or flowers on footless ways
    That take the wind in season and the sun,
    And when the wind wills is their season done.
    For all my days as all thy days from birth
    My heart as thy heart was in me as thee,
    Fire; and not all the fountains of the sea
    Have waves enough to quench it, nor on earth
    Is fuel enough to feed,
    While day sows night and night sows day for seed.
    We were not marked for sorrow, thou nor I,
    For joy nor sorrow, sister, were we made,
    To take delight and grief to live and die,
    Assuaged by pleasures or by pains affrayed
    That melt men's hearts and alter; we retain
    A memory mastering pleasure and all pain,
    A spirit within the sense of ear and eye,
    A soul behind the soul, that seeks and sings
    And makes our life move only with its wings
    And feed but from its lips, that in return
    Feed of our hearts wherein the old fires that burn
    Have strength not to consume
    Nor glory enough to exalt us past our doom.
    Ah, ah, the doom (thou knowest whence rang that wail)
    Of the shrill nightingale!
    (From whose wild lips, thou knowest, that wail was thrown)
    For round about her have the great gods cast
    A wing-borne body, and clothed her close and fast
    With a sweet life that hath no part in moan.
    But me, for me (how hadst thou heart to hear?)
    Remains a sundering with the two-edged spear.
    Ah, for her doom! so cried in presage then
    The bodeful bondslave of the king of men,
    And might not win her will.
    Too close the entangling dragnet woven of crime,
    The snare of ill new-born of elder ill,
    The curse of new time for an elder time,
    Had caught, and held her yet,
    Enmeshed intolerably in the intolerant net,
    Who thought with craft to mock the God most high,
    And win by wiles his crown of prophecy
    From the Sun's hand sublime,
    As God were man, to spare or to forget.
    But thou, the gods have given thee and forgiven thee
    More than our master gave
    That strange-eyed spirit-wounded strange-tongued slave
    There questing houndlike where the roofs red-wet
    Reeked as a wet red grave.
    Life everlasting has their strange grace given thee,
    Even hers whom thou wast wont to sing and serve
    With eyes, but not with song, too swift to swerve;
    Yet might not even thine eyes estranged estrange her,
    Who seeing thee too, but inly, burn and bleed
    Like that pale princess-priest of Priam's seed,
    For stranger service gave thee guerdon stranger;
    If this indeed be guerdon, this indeed
    Her mercy, this thy meed
    That thou, being more than all we born, being higher
    Than all heads crowned of him that only gives
    The light whereby man lives,
    The bay that bids man moved of God's desire
    Lay hand on lute or lyre,
    Set lip to trumpet or deflowered green reed
    If this were given thee for a grace indeed,
    That thou, being first of all these, thou alone
    Shouldst have the grace to die not, but to live
    And lose nor change one pulse of song, one tone
    Of all that were thy lady's and thine own,
    Thy lady's whom thou criedst on to forgive,
    Thou, priest and sacrifice on the altar-stone
    Where none may worship not of all that live,
    Love's priestess, errant on dark ways diverse;
    If this were grace indeed for Love to give,
    If this indeed were blessing and no curse.
    Love's priestess, mad with pain and joy of song,
    Song's priestess, mad with joy and pain of love,
    Name above all names that are lights above,
    We have loved, praised, pitied, crowned and done thee wrong,
    O thou past praise and pity; thou the sole
    Utterly deathless, perfect only and whole
    Immortal, body and soul.
    For over all whom time hath overpast
    The shadow of sleep inexorable is cast,
    The implacable sweet shadow of perfect sleep
    That gives not back what life gives death to keep;
    Yea, all that lived and loved and sang and sinned
    Are all borne down death's cold sweet soundless wind
    That blows all night and knows not whom its breath,
    Darkling, may touch to death:
    But one that wind hath touched and changed not, one
    Whose body and soul are parcel of the sun;
    One that earth's fire could burn not, nor the sea
    Quench; nor might human doom take hold on thee;
    All praise, all pity, all dreams have done thee wrong,
    All love, with eyes love-blinded from above;
    Song's priestess, mad with joy and pain of love,
    Love's priestess, mad with pain and joy of song.
    Hast thou none other answer then for me
    Than the air may have of thee,
    Or the earth's warm woodlands girdling with green girth
    Thy secret sleepless burning life on earth,
    Or even the sea that once, being woman crowned
    And girt with fire and glory of anguish round,
    Thou wert so fain to seek to, fain to crave
    If she would hear thee and save
    And give thee comfort of thy great green grave?
    Because I have known thee always who thou art,
    Thou knowest, have known thee to thy heart's own heart,
    Nor ever have given light ear to storied song
    That did thy sweet name sweet unwitting wrong,
    Nor ever have called thee nor would call for shame,
    Thou knowest, but inly by thine only name,
    Sappho because I have known thee and loved, hast thou
    None other answer now?
    As brother and sister were we, child and bird,
    Since thy first Lesbian word
    Flamed on me, and I knew not whence I knew
    This was the song that struck my whole soul through,
    Pierced my keen spirit of sense with edge more keen,
    Even when I knew not, even ere sooth was seen,
    When thou wast but the tawny sweet winged thing
    Whose cry was but of spring.
    And yet even so thine ear should hear me yea,
    Hear me this nightfall by this northland bay,
    Even for their sake whose loud good word I had,
    Singing of thee in the all-beloved clime
    Once, where the windy wine of spring makes mad
    Our sisters of Majano, who kept time
    Clear to my choral rhyme.
    Yet was the song acclaimed of these aloud
    Whose praise had made mute humbleness misproud,
    The song with answering song applauded thus,
    But of that Daulian dream of Itylus.
    So but for love's love haply was it nay,
    How else? that even their song took my song's part,
    For love of love and sweetness of sweet heart,
    Or god-given glorious madness of mid May
    And heat of heart and hunger and thirst to sing,
    Full of the new wine of the wind of spring.
    Or if this were not, and it be not sin
    To hold myself in spirit of thy sweet kin,
    In heart and spirit of song;
    If this my great love do thy grace no wrong,
    Thy grace that gave me grace to dwell therein;
    If thy gods thus be my gods, and their will
    Made my song part of thy song even such part
    As man's hath of God's heart
    And my life like as thy life to fulfil;
    What have our gods then given us? Ah, to thee,
    Sister, much more, much happier than to me,
    Much happier things they have given, and more of grace
    Than falls to man's light race;
    For lighter are we, all our love and pain
    Lighter than thine, who knowest of time or place
    Thus much, that place nor time
    Can heal or hurt or lull or change again
    The singing soul that makes his soul sublime
    Who hears the far fall of its fire-fledged rhyme
    Fill darkness as with bright and burning rain
    Till all the live gloom inly glows, and light
    Seems with the sound to cleave the core of night.
    The singing soul that moves thee, and that moved
    When thou wast woman, and their songs divine
    Who mixed for Grecian mouths heaven's lyric wine
    Fell dumb, fell down reproved
    Before one sovereign Lesbian song of thine.
    That soul, though love and life had fain held fast,
    Wind-winged with fiery music, rose and past
    Through the indrawn hollow of earth and heaven and hell,
    As through some strait sea-shell
    The wide sea's immemorial song, the sea
    That sings and breathes in strange men's ears of thee
    How in her barren bride-bed, void and vast,
    Even thy soul sang itself to sleep at last.
    To sleep? Ah, then, what song is this, that here
    Makes all the night one ear,
    One ear fulfilled and mad with music, one
    Heart kindling as the heart of heaven, to hear
    A song more fiery than the awakening sun
    Sings, when his song sets fire
    To the air and clouds that build the dead night's pyre?
    O thou of divers-coloured mind, O thou
    Deathless, God's daughter subtle-souled lo, now,
    Now too the song above all songs, in flight
    Higher than the day-star's height,
    And sweet as sound the moving wings of night!
    Thou of the divers-coloured seat behold,
    Her very song of old!
    O deathless, O God's daughter subtle-souled!
    That same cry through this boskage overhead
    Rings round reiterated,
    Palpitates as the last palpitated,
    The last that panted through her lips and died
    Not down this grey north sea's half sapped cliff-side
    That crumbles toward the coastline, year by year
    More near the sands and near;
    The last loud lyric fiery cry she cried,
    Heard once on heights Leucadian, heard not here.
    Not here; for this that fires our northland night,
    This is the song that made
    Love fearful, even the heart of love afraid,
    With the great anguish of its great delight.
    No swan-song, no far-fluttering half-drawn breath,
    No word that love of love's sweet nature saith,
    No dirge that lulls the narrowing lids of death,
    No healing hymn of peace-prevented strife,
    This is her song of life.
    I loved thee, hark, one tenderer note than all
    Atthis, of old time, once one low long fall,
    Sighing one long low lovely loveless call,
    Dying one pause in song so flamelike fast
    Atthis, long since in old time overpast
    One soft first pause and last.
    One, then the old rage of rapture's fieriest rain
    Storms all the music-maddened night again.
    Child of God, close craftswoman, I beseech thee,
    Bid not ache nor agony break nor master,
    Lady, my spirit
    O thou her mistress, might her cry not reach thee?
    Our Lady of all men's loves, could Love go past her,
    Pass, and not hear it?
    She hears not as she heard not; hears not me,
    O treble-natured mystery, how should she
    Hear, or give ear? who heard and heard not thee;
    Heard, and went past, and heard not; but all time
    Hears all that all the ravin of his years
    Hath cast not wholly out of all men's ears
    And dulled to death with deep dense funeral chime
    Of their reiterate rhyme.
    And now of all songs uttering all her praise,
    All hers who had thy praise and did thee wrong,
    Abides one song yet of her lyric days,
    Thine only, this thy song.
    O soul triune, woman and god and bird,
    Man, man at least has heard.
    All ages call thee conqueror, and thy cry
    The mightiest as the least beneath the sky
    Whose heart was ever set to song, or stirred
    With wind of mounting music blown more high
    Than wildest wing may fly,
    Hath heard or hears, even Æschylus as I.
    But when thy name was woman, and thy word
    Human, then haply, surely then meseems
    This thy bird's note was heard on earth of none,
    Of none save only in dreams.
    In all the world then surely was but one
    Song; as in heaven at highest one sceptred sun
    Regent, on earth here surely without fail
    One only, one imperious nightingale.
    Dumb was the field, the woodland mute, the lawn
    Silent; the hill was tongueless as the vale
    Even when the last fair waif of cloud that felt
    Its heart beneath the colouring moonrays melt,
    At high midnoon of midnight half withdrawn,
    Bared all the sudden deep divine moondawn.
    Then, unsaluted by her twin-born tune,
    That latter timeless morning of the moon
    Rose past its hour of moonrise; clouds gave way
    To the old reconquering ray,
    But no song answering made it more than day;
    No cry of song by night
    Shot fire into the cloud-constraining light.
    One only, one Æolian island heard
    Thrill, but through no bird's throat,
    In one strange manlike maiden's godlike note,
    The song of all these as a single bird.
    Till the sea's portal was as funeral gate
    For that sole singer in all time's ageless date
    Singled and signed for so triumphal fate,
    All nightingales but one in all the world
    All her sweet life were silent; only then,
    When her life's wing of womanhood was furled,
    Their cry, this cry of thine was heard again,
    As of me now, of any born of men.
    Through sleepless clear spring nights filled full of thee,
    Rekindled here, thy ruling song has thrilled
    The deep dark air and subtle tender sea
    And breathless hearts with one bright sound fulfilled.
    Or at midnoon to me
    Swimming, and birds about my happier head
    Skimming, one smooth soft way by water and air,
    To these my bright born brethren and to me
    Hath not the clear wind borne or seemed to bear
    A song wherein all earth and heaven and sea
    Were molten in one music made of thee
    To enforce us, O our sister of the shore,
    Look once in heart back landward and adore?
    For songless were we sea-mews, yet had we
    More joy than all things joyful of thee more,
    Haply, than all things happiest; nay, save thee,
    In thy strong rapture of imperious joy
    Too high for heart of sea-borne bird or boy,
    What living things were happiest if not we?
    But knowing not love nor change nor wrath nor wrong,
    No more we knew of song.
    Song, and the secrets of it, and their might,
    What blessings curse it and what curses bless,
    I know them since my spirit had first in sight,
    Clear as thy song's words or the live sun's light,
    The small dark body's Lesbian loveliness
    That held the fire eternal; eye and ear
    Were as a god's to see, a god's to hear,
    Through all his hours of daily and nightly chime,
    The sundering of the two-edged spear of time:
    The spear that pierces even the sevenfold shields
    Of mightiest Memory, mother of all songs made,
    And wastes all songs as roseleaves kissed and frayed
    As here the harvest of the foam-flowered fields;
    But thine the spear may waste not that he wields
    Since first the God whose soul is man's live breath,
    The sun whose face hath our sun's face for shade,
    Put all the light of life and love and death
    Too strong for life, but not for love too strong,
    Where pain makes peace with pleasure in thy song,
    And in thine heart, where love and song make strife,
    Fire everlasting of eternal life.



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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