Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Moon by John Collings Squire, Sir
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The Moon

    By John Collings Squire, Sir




        (To Maurice Baring)

        I waited for a miracle to-night.
        Dim was the earth beneath a star-swept sky,
        Her boughs were vague in that phantasmal light,
        Her current rippled past invisibly.
        No stir was in the dark and windless meadows,
        Only the water, whispering in the shadows,
        That darkened nature lived did still proclaim.
        An hour I stood in that defeat of sight,
        Waiting, and then a sudden silver flame
        Burned in the eastern heaven, and she came.

        The Moon, the Summer Moon, surveys the vale:
        The boughs against the dawning sky grow black,
        The shades that hid those whispering waters fail,
        And now there falls a gleaming, lengthening track
        That lies across the wide and tranquil river,
        Burnished and flat, not shaken by a quiver.
        She rises still: the liquid light she spills
        Makes everywhere quick sparkles, patches pale;
        And, as she goes, I know her glory fills
        The air of all our English lakes and hills.

        High over all this England will she ride;
        She silvers all the roofs of folded towns,
        Her brilliance tips the edge of every tide,
        Her shadows make soft caverns in the downs;
        Even now, beyond my tree serenely sailing,
        She clothes far forests with a gauzy veiling,
        And even as here, where now I stare and dream,
        Standing my own transfigured banks beside,
        On many a quiet wandering English stream
        There lies the unshifting image of her beam.

        Yes, calm she mounts, and watching her, I know
        By many a river other eyes than mine
        Turn up to her; and, as of old, they show
        Their inward hearts all naked to her shine:
        Maids, solitaries, sick and happy lovers,
        To whom her dear returning orb discovers
        For each the gift he waits for: soft release,
        The unsealing of imagination's flow,
        Her own sweet pain, or other pain's surcease,
        The friendly benediction of her peace.

        I too am held: as kind she is, as fair,
        As when long since a younger heart drank deep
        From that sweet solace, while, through summer air,
        Her lucid fingers hushed the world to sleep.
        O as I stand this latest moon beholding,
        Her forms unresting memory is moulding;
        Beneath my enchanted eyelids there arise
        Visions again of many moons that were,
        Fair, fleeting moons gathered from faded skies,
        Greeted and lost by these corporeal eyes.

        Unnumbered are those moons of memory
        Stored in the backward chambers of my brain:
        The moons that make bright pathways on the sea,
        The golden harvest moon above the grain;
        The moon that all a sleeping village blanches,
        The woodland moon that roves beyond the branches,
        Filtering through the meshes of the green
        To breast of bird and mossy trunk of tree;
        Moons dimly guessed-at through a cloudy screen,
        The bronze diffusion shed by moons unseen;

        Moons that a thin prismatic halo rings,
        Looking a hurrying fleecy heaven through;
        The fairy moons of luminous evenings,
        Phantoms of palest pink in palest blue;
        Large orange moons on earth's grey verge suspended,
        When trees still slumber from the heat that's ended,
        Erect and heavy, and all waters lie
        Oily, and there is not a bird that sings.
        All these I know, I have seen them born and die,
        And many another moon in many a sky.

        There was a moon that shone above the ground
        Where on a grassy forest height I stood;
        Bright was that open place, and all around
        The dense discovered tree-tops of the wood,
        Line after line, in misty radiance glistened,
        Failing away.    I watched the scene and listened;
        Then, awed and hushed, I turned and saw alone,
        Protruding from the middle of the mound,
        Fringed with close grass, a moonlit mottled stone,
        Rough-carven, of antiquity unknown.

        A night there was, a crowd, a narrow street,
        Torches that reddened faces drunk with dreams,
        An orator exultant in defeat,
        Banners, fierce songs, rough cheering, women's screams;
        My heart was one with those rebellious people,
        Until along a chapel's pointing steeple
        My eyes unwitting wandered to a thin
        Crescent, and clouds a swift and ragged sheet;
        And in my spirit's life all human din
        Died, and eternal Silence stood within.

        And once, on a far evening, warm and still,
        I leant upon a cool stone parapet.
        The quays and houses underneath the hill
        Twinkled with lights; I heard the sea's faint fret;
        And then above the eastern cape's long billow
        Silent there welled a trembling line of yellow,
        A shred that quickened, then a half that grew
        To a full moon, that moved with even will.
        The night was long before her, well she knew,
        And, as she slowly rose into the blue,

        She slowly paled, and, glittering far away,
        Flung on the silken waters like a spear,
        Her crispèd silver shaft of moonlight lay.
        The lighthouse lamp upon the little pier
        Burned wanly by that radiance clear and certain.
        Waiting I knew not what uplifted curtain,
        I watched the unmoving world beneath my feet
        Till, without warning, miles across the bay,
        Into that silver out of shadows beat,
        Dead black, the whole mysterious fishing-fleet.

        These moons I have seen, but these and every one
        Came each so new it seemed to be the first,
        New as the buds that open to the sun,
        New as the songs that to the morning burst.
        The roses die, each day fresh flowers are springing,
        Last year it was another blackbird singing,
        Thou only, marvellous blossom, whose pale flower
        Beyond mankind's conjecture hath begun,
        Retain'st for ever an unwithering power
        That stales the loveliest stranger of an hour.

        But O, had all my infant nights been dark,
        Or almost dark, lit by the stars alone,
        Had never a teller of stories bid me hark
        The promised splendours of that moon unknown:
        How perfect then had been the revelation
        When first her gradual gold illumination
        Broke on a night upon the conscious child:
        My heart had stopped with beauty, seeing her arc
        Climbing the heavens, so far and undefiled,
        So large with light, so even and so mild.

        Most wondrous Light, who bring'st this lovelier earth,
        This world of shadows cool with silver fires,
        Drawing us higher than our human birth:
        To whom our strange twin-natured kind suspires
        Its saddest thoughts, and tenderest and most fragrant
        Tears, and desires unnameable and vagrant:
        Watcher, who leanest quietly from above,
        Saying all mortal wars are nothing worth:
        Friend of the sorrowful, tranquil as the dove,
        Muse of all poets, lamp of all who love.

        Alone and sad, alone and kind and sweet,
        But always peaceful and removed and proud,
        Whether with loveliness revealed complete,
        Or veiling from our vision in a cloud:
        Our souls' eternal listener, could we wonder
        That men who made of sun and storm and thunder
        The awful forms of strong divinity,
        Heard in each storm the noise of travelling feet,
        Should, gazing at thy face with hearts made free,
        Have felt a pure, immortal Power in thee?

        Selene, Cynthia, and Artemis,
        The swift proud goddess with the silver bow,
        Diana, she whose downward-bending kiss
        One only knew, though all men yearned to know;
        The shepherd on a hill his flock was keeping,
        The night's pale huntress came and found him sleeping:
        She stooped: he woke, and saw her hair that shone,
        And lay, drawn up to cool and timeless bliss
        Lapt in her radiant arms, Endymion,
        All the still night, until the night was gone.

        By many names they knew thee, but thy shape
        Was woman's always, transient and white:
        A flashing huntress leaving hinds agape,
        A sweet descent of beauty in the night:
        Yet some, more fierce and more distraught their dreaming,
        Brooded, until they fashioned from thy seeming,
        A lithe and luring queen with fatal breath,
        A witch the man who saw might not escape,
        A snare that gleamed in shadowy groves of death,
        The tall tiaraed Syrian Ashtoreth.

        And even to-night in African forests some
        There are, possessed by such a blasphemy;
        Through branching beams thy fevered votaries come
        To appease their brains' distorted mask of thee.
        There in the glades the drums pulsate and languish,
        Men leap and wail to dim the victim's anguish
        In the sad frenzy of the sacrifice.
        They are slaves to thee, made mad because thou art dumb,
        And dumb thou lookest on them from the skies,
        Above their fires and dances, blood and cries.

        So these; but otherwhere, at such an hour,
        In all the continents, by all the seas,
        Men, naming not the goddess, feel thy power,
        Adoring her with gentler rites than these:
        The thoughts of myriad hearts to thee uplifted
        Rise like a smoke above thine altars drifted,
        Perpetual incense poured before thy throne
        By those whom thou hast given thy secret dower,
        Those in whose kindred eyes thy light is known,
        Whom thou hast signed and sealed for thine own.

        For thee they watch by Asian peaks remote,
        Where thy snows gleam above the pointing pines;
        Entranced on templed lakes is many a boat
        For thee, where clear thy dropt reflection shines;
        On the great seas where nothing else is tender,
        Rising and setting, unto thee surrender
        All lonely hearts in lonely wandering ships;
        And, where their warm far-scattered islands float,
        Through forests many a flower-crowned maiden slips
        To gaze on thee, with parted burning lips.

        O thus they do, and thus they did of old;
        Our hearts were never secret in thy sight;
        Ere our first records were thy shrine was cold
        That speechless eyes went seeking in the night;
        Beyond the compass of our dim traditions
        Thou knewest of men the pitiful ambitions,
        Their loves and their despair; within thy ken
        All our poor history has been unrolled;
        Thou hast seen all races born and die again,
        The climbing and the crumbling towers of men.

        Black were the hollows of that Emperor's eyes
        Who paced with backward arms beyond his tents,
        Lone in the night, and felt above him rise
        The ancient conqueror's sloping, smooth, immense,
        Moon-pointing Pyramid's enduring courses,
        Heard not his sentries, nor his stamping horses,
        But thought of Egypt dead upon that air,
        Fighting with his moon-coloured memories
        Of vanished kings who builded, and the bare
        Sands in the moon before those builders were.

        Restless, he knew that moon who watched him muse,
        Had seen a restless Cæsar brood on fame
        Amid the Pharaohs' broken avenues.
        And, circling round that fixed monition, came
        Woven by moonlight, random, transitory,
        Fragments of all the dim receding story:
        The moonlit water dripping from the oars
        Of triremes in the bay of Syracuse;
        The opposing bivouacs upon the shores,
        That knew dead Hector's and Achilles' wars.

        He saw fall'n Carthage, Alexander's grave,
        The tomb of Moses in the wilderness,
        The moonlight on the Atlantean wave
        That covered all a multitude's distress:
        Cities and hosts and emperors departed
        Under the steady moon.    And sullen-hearted
        He turned away, and, in a little, died,
        Even as he who hunted from his cave
        And struck his foe, and stripped the shaggy hide
        Under the moon, and was not satisfied.

        For in the prime, thy influence was felt;
        When eyes first saw, thy beauty was as this;
        Thy quiet look bade hope, fear, passion melt
        Before men dreamed of empire.    The abyss
        Of thought yawned through their jungle then, as ever
        Dark past, dark future, menaced their endeavour:
        Yet, on thy nights, stood some by hill and sea
        Naked; and blind impulsive spirits knelt,
        Not questioning why they knelt, feeling in thee
        Thought's strangest, sweetest, saddest mystery.

        Still Moon, bright Moon, compassionate Moon above,
        Thou shinedst there ere any life began,
        When of his pain or of his powerless love
        Thou heardest not from heart of any man;
        Though long the earth had shaken off the vapour
        Left by the vanished gleams of fire, the shaper,
        Old, old, her stony wrinkled face did grow
        Whilst only her blind elements did move;
        Dumb, bare, and prayerless thou saw'st her go,
        And afterwards again shalt see her so.

        A time there was when Life had never been,
        A time will be, it will have passed away;
        Still wilt thou shine, still tender and serene,
        When Life which in thy sister's yesterday
        Had never flowered, will have drooped and faded;
        Passed with the clouds that once her bosom shaded.
        She will be barren then as not before,
        Bared of her snows and all her garments green;
        No darkling sea by any earthly shore
        Will take thy rays: thy kin will be no more.

        Pale satellite, old mistress of our fires,
        Who hast seen so much and been so much to men,
        Symbol and goal of all our wild desires,
        Not any voice will cry upon thee then;
        Dreamer and dream, they will have all gone over,
        The sick of heart, the singer and the lover,
        An end there will have been to all their lust,
        Their sorrow, and the sighing of their lyres;
        O all this Life that stained Earth's patient crust,
        Time's dying breath will have blown away like dust.

        Gone from thine eye that brief confusèd stir,
        The rumours and the marching and the strife;
        Earth will be still, and all the face of her
        Swept of the last remains of moving life;
        The last of all men's monuments that defied them,
        Like those his valiant gestures that denied them,
        Into the waiting elements will fade,
        And thou wilt see thy fellow traveller,
        A forlorn round of rocky contours made,
        A glimmering disk of empty light and shade,

        Ah, depth too deep for thought therein to cast;
        The old, the cold companions, you will go,
        Obeying still some long-forgotten past,
        And all our pitiful history none will know;
        Still shining, Moon, still peaceful, wilt thou wander,
        But on that greater ball no heart will ponder
        The thought that rose and nightingale are gone,
        And all sweet things but thou; and only vast
        Ridges of rock remain, and stars and sun;
        O Moon, thou wilt be lovely alone for none.

        And so, pale wanderer, so thou leavest me,
        Passing beyond imagination's range,
        Away into the void where waits for thee
        Thy inconceivable destiny of change;
        And after all the memories I have striven
        To paint, this picture that thyself hast given
        Lives, and I watch, to all those others blind,
        Thy form, gliding into eternity,
        Fading, an unconjectured fate to find,
        The last, most wonderful image of the mind.



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