Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Memorial by John Collings Squire, Sir
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A Memorial

    By John Collings Squire, Sir




        (F.T.)


        The cord broke, and the tent
        Slipped, and the silken roof
        Lay prone beneath the viewless hoof
        Of the deliberate firmament.
        Yet cared we not; how should we care?
        Knowing that labourless now he breathes
        A golden paradisal air
        Where with more certain craft he wreathes
        Bright braids of words more wise and fair
        Than ever his earthly fabrics were,
        That his unwavering eyes made fresh,
        Purged and regarbed in fadeless flesh,
        What he then darkly guessed behold,
        And watch with an abiding joy
            The eternal mysteries unfold
        Which do his now transfigured songs evermore employ.

            Brother, yet great thy power;
            Thou stood'st as on a tower
        Small 'neath the stars yet high above the fields;
            In thy alembic song
            Imagination strong
        Distilled what essences the quest to mortals yields.
            This thy reward well-won,
            For every morning's sun
        Found thy heart's firm allegiance still unshaken;
            No temporal ache or smart
            Drave Beauty from thy heart,
        And by thy mighty mistress never wast forsaken.

            Yes; for though stringent was the test,
            When that thy trial was bitterest,
        Steadfast thou did'st remain; unshod
        The harrows of Pain thy feet once trod,
        Humiliate as thy sad song tells
        Before the vault's white sentinels.
        Friendless and faint thou sojourned'st there,
        A bowed, brave, timid wanderer,
        A lonely nomad of the spirit,
        Who did a triple curse inherit,
        Hunger, regret and memory.
        Yet never did they vanquish thee;
        When nighest broken, most alone,
        Thy unassuagèd thoughts could clamber
        To beauty on her ageless throne;
        Thou wert as one in torture chamber
        Who sees the blue through an open casement
        And hammers his soul to endure the time
        Of his corporeal abasement;
        Nor writhed'st at thine or others' fault,
            But with grim tenderness did salt
            Thy cicatrices with a rhyme.
            Not the most sable flame of gloom
            Could penetrate thy inmost room;
            But through the walls thy spirit sucked
            Into that cloistral hermitage
            Stray lovely things, moonbeams and snows
            The far sky shed into thy cage,
            And, from the very gutter plucked,
            A lost and mired campestral rose.

        Ended that purgatorial period,
        Filled was thy wallet and thy feet were shod,
        The leaden weights were moved, the rack withdrawn,
        Thou didst traverse the dewy fields of dawn,
        Watch sunsets blazoning over upland turf,
        Pull poppies from the frontiers of the surf,
            Dwelled'st with love and human eyes
            Vigilant, calm and wise.
            But still as when thy bark did ride
            Derelict on the city's tide,
            As then for penury now for pride
            Thy bodily senses were denied;
            Though they cried out and would not sleep,
            Ascetic thou didst armour them
        Lest acid pleasure should eat thine art's pure gem.
            Hourly the tempter's ambuscades
            But thou didst guard the gates and keep
            Thy senses' hungry colonnades
        Accessible but to Beauty's ministers,
        Unlit by any ruby flame but hers.
            Immuring so thy spirit eager
            Within a body frail and meagre,
        Far from the meads of earthly milk and honey,
        Yet franchised of more wondrous territories,
        Like those poor Bedouin of Arabia the Stony
        Who roam spare-fed and hollow-eyed but free
        By day to wander and by night to camp
            In vast serenity,
            Compassed by God's great silent glories
        The sun's gold splendour and the moon's white lamp,
            Folded and safe from harm
        Beneath the mighty sky's protecting arm.

            Ha! but the Titan's ardour
            Wherewith thou scour'dst the vast,
            To spoil the starry larder
            Of fruits of heavenly taste!
            Urania's fiercest servant,
            With thirst as furnace fervent
            And serene burning brow,
            Worthy of thy great lineage, thou
            Drankest without a shudder
            In proud humility
            Milk from that vast primæval udder
            That swells for such as thee,
        Milk from the fountains of the Universe
        That cowards deem infected with a curse,
            That flushes him who drinks
                Nor shrinks
        The exalted anguish of diurnal draughts
        To a clear vision, more intolerable
        In its blissful pain, than love's most ardent shafts,
            Of the seats where she doth dwell,
            She, whom thou didst confess
                Enticed
            Thee hot to her throne to press
            For the greater glory of Christ
        To uplift the curtains of her closed eyes.

            Not all was for thy learning
            Nor any mortal's else;
            Only for thy discerning
            Sporadic syllables
            Of those supernal glances
        Coffer of which her marble countenance is,
            Yet vain was not the adventure,
            Reluctant though the prize,
            Thou gainedst a debenture
            On the fringe of Beauty's eyes;
            Such fragmentary trophy
            As some cross-tunic'd knight
            From Saladin or Sophy
            May have won in sword's despite,
            Not the dear polar shrines
            Held captive by the Paynim
            But still as fruit of wars
            Some stone from Sion's lines,
            Some relic that might sain him
            Of life's uncounted scars.

            Self-dedicated anchorite,
            Never disdainful of the dust,
        But conscious of the overcoming night
        That must engulph the blooms and berries of lust,
        And unforgetful of the enveloping day beyond;
        Though a sweet show was spread for thy delight
        Resolved not to be so fond
        As, in ephemeral gauds caparisoned,
        To station feet upon a world of vapour
        Soft as a dream and fleeting as a taper;
        Thou thoughtest nevertheless that thou shouldst occupy
        Thyself, as it seemed to thee, most worthily
        Until the rapid hour when thou shouldst die;
            So, in a world of seemings,
            Of shadows and of dreamings,
        Busied thyself to fashion and record
        Unto the greater glory of thy Lord,
            For thy proud lady Beauty His
        Most excellent and humble handmaid is.
        Says one thy service was too ceremonial,
        Thy vestments irised overmuch, thy ritual
        Too elaborate and thy rubric too obscure,
        Therefore thy gift of chant and orison
        Beneath the perfect service men have done.
            O but thy notes were pure,
        And in a day like this we now endure
        No fault it was in thee to set thy camp
            Remote, aloof, aloof,
            In a far fastness proof
        'Gainst the mephitic odours of the swamp.
            Which being so, no gain
            'Twere to explain
        An exquisiteness too meticulous;
            Let us but say it pleased thee thus,
        Dowered with imagination heavy-fruited,
        To raise a column garlanded and fluted
            For Him thy heavenly abacus.
            This was thine offering thou didst make
            In founded hope that He
            The craftsman's best would take
        Well knowing its unobscure sincerity.

            The cord broke and the tent
            Slipped and the silken roof
            Lay prone beneath the viewless hoof
            Of the deliberate firmament.
            We still in this terrene abode
            Forlorn must tread the difficult road,
            And all meek thanks and all belief
            Hardly suffice to rampart grief.
        For gone is Beauty's votary apostolic
        And are her temples now delivered over
        To blindworms and libidinous goats that frolic
        In places hallowed by that celestial lover.
            Save only two or three
            With undivided minds like thee,
            None now remains that girds
            The peregrinal loin,
        None reverent of Beauty's holy tongue,
        But counterfeiters of her imaged coin,
        Iconoclasts, breakers of carven words,
        Seekers of worthless treasure in the dung,
        Mock mages and cacophonous charlatans,
            And pismire artisans
            Labouring to make
        Such mirrored replicas of Nature's face
        As might the surface of a stagnant lake.

            Yet we should anger not,
            Nor let that be forgot,
            The testament of stateliest worth
            He left us when he fled the earth.
            The mausoleum made of rhyme,
            Fair in its unfrequented field,
            Which shall invulnerably shield
            His memory to the end of Time;
            The house with curtain-flaming halls
            And roof of gold and jewelled walls
            For which the fisher sank his net
            Into the deepest pools of speech,
            Scooping rich conchs and ribbons wet
            That a less venturous could not reach,
            The hunter tracked the metaphor
            On many a foamy silver coast
            A hundred leagues beyond the most
            Fabulous Tellurian shore.

            Magnificent he was and mild,
            Glad to be still and glad to speak,
            Daring yet delicate as a child,
            Faithful, compassionate and holy,
            And, being human, strong and weak,
            And full of hope and melancholy.
            No more than we, able to shed
            Man's nature he inherited,
            Neither sin's garrison to kill,
        Yet at the last with constancy so great
        As the world's vanities to abnegate,
        Sternly to will the sacrifice of will
        Upon the altars of the Uncreate,
            So that he lived before he died
        As one who hourly to himself denied
            All joys save those that cannot pall,
        Who having nothing yet had all.



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