Poems New and Old eBook

John Freeman (Georgian poet)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about Poems New and Old.

Poems New and Old eBook

John Freeman (Georgian poet)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about Poems New and Old.

Come, come back to the everlasting garden,
To that green heaven, and the blue heaven above. 
Come back to the time when time brought no burden
And love was unconscious, knowing not love.

II

THE ANSWER

O, my feet have worn a track
Deep and old in going back. 
Thought released turns to its home
As bees through tangling thickets come. 
One way of thought leads to the vast
Desert of the mind, and there is lost,
But backward leads to a dancing light
And myself there, stiff with delight. 
  O, well my thought has trodden a way
From this brief day to that long day.

III

THE FIRST HOUSE

That is the earliest thing that I remember—­
The narrow house in the long narrow street,
Dark rooms within and darkness out of doors
Where grasses in the garden lift in the wind,
Long grasses clinging round unsteady feet. 
The sunlight through one narrow passage pours,
As through the keyhole into a dusty room,
Striking with a golden rod the greening gloom. 
The tall, tall timber-stacks have yet been kind,
Letting the sun fling his rod clear between,
Lest there should be no gold upon the green,
And no light then for a child to dream upon,
And day be of day’s brightness all forlorn. 
I saw those timber piles first dark and tall,
And then men clambered up, and stumbled down,
Each with a heavy and long timber borne
Upon broad shoulders, leather-covered, bent. 
Hour after hour, day after day they went,
Until the piles were gone and a new sky
Stretched high and white above the garden wall. 
And then fresh piles crept slowly up and up,
The strong men staggering, more cruelly bowed,
Till at last they lay idle on the top
Looking down from their height on things so small,
While I looked wondering and fearful up
At the strong men at rest on the new-built cloud. 
  But there was other gold than the sun’s sparse gold—­
Florence’s hair, its brightness lying still
Upon my mind as then upon the grass. 
Now the grass covers it and I am old,
Remembering but her hair and that long grass,
And the great wood-stacks threatening to fall—­
When all dark things will.

IV

THE OTHER HOUSE

That other house, in the same crowded street,
One red-tiled floor had, answering to my feet,
And a bewildering garden all of light and heat.

Only that red floor and garden now remain,
One glowing firelike in my glowing brain,
One with smell, colour, sun and cloud revived again.

Yet in the garden the sky was very small,
Closed by some darkness beyond the low brown wall;
But from the west the gold could long unhindered fall.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Poems New and Old from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.