Trilby

O living image of eternal youth! Wrought with such large simplicity of truth That, now the pattern’s made and on the shelf, Each vows he might have cut it for himself; Nor marvels that we sang of empty days, Of rank-grown laurel and unprunëd bays, While yet, in all this lonely Crusoe land, The Trilby footprint had not touched the sand. Here ’s a new carelessness of Titan play. Here ’s Ariel’s witchery to lead the way In such sweet artifice of dainty wit That men shall die with imitating it. Now every man’s old grief turns in its bed, And bleeds a drop or two, divinely red; Fair baby joys do rouse them, one by one, Dancing a lightsome round, though love be done; And Memory takes off her frontlet dim To bind a bit of tinsel round the rim. Dreams come to life, and faint foreshadowings Flutter anear us on reluctant wings. But not one pang, nay, though ’t were gall of bliss, And not one such awakening would we miss. O comrades, here ’s true stuff! ours to adore, And swear we ’ll carve our cherry-stones no more.

Collection: 

More from Poet

  • withdraw thee, soul, from strife. Enter thine unseen bark, And sail across the dark, The silent sea of life. Leave Care and Grief, feared now no more, To wave and beckon from the shore. Thy tenement is bare. Shut are the burning eyes, Ears deaf against surprise, Limbs in...

  • What, comrade of a night, No sooner meet than fight? Before the word, the blow? Well, be it so. Yet think not Thou I yield, Lost on a lonely field. Lo! to my fainting breath, My champion, Death!

  • Seal thou the window! Yea, shut out the light And bar my door to all the airs of spring. Yet in my cell, concealed from curious sight, Here will I sit and sing. Deaf, blind, and wilt Thou have me dumb, also, Telling in silence these sad beads of days? So let it be: though no sweet numbers flow,...

  • O living image of eternal youth! Wrought with such large simplicity of truth That, now the pattern’s made and on the shelf, Each vows he might have cut it for himself; Nor marvels that we sang of empty days, Of rank-grown laurel and unprunëd bays, While yet, in all this lonely Crusoe land, The...

  • o hearken, all ye little weeds That lie beneath the snow, (So low, dear hearts, in poverty so low!) The sun hath risen for royal deeds, A valiant wind the vanguard leads; Now quicken ye, lest unborn seeds Before ye rise and blow. O furry living things, adream On Winter’s...