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.
Branches creaked and old winds howled
Sick for home. 
All the night I saw the river,
As a girl that sees beside her
Love, between fear and fear
Riding, and is dumb. 
The white horse turned to cross the river,
But the waters like a wall
Rose and hung dark over all;
And as they fell the river wider
Wider grew, and sky was bare
Save of the sick candle’s stare. 
Death the divider
Glittered cold and dark and deep
Under banks of fear. 
  But that rider
Trembling, bright, rode on,
Trembling and bright rode on
Through green lanes of sleep.

TO THE HEAVENLY POWER

When this burning flesh
Burns down in Time’s slow fire to a glowing ash;
When these lips have uttered
The last word, and the ears’ last echoes fluttered;
And crumbled these firm bones
As in the chemic air soft blackened stones;
When all that was mortal made
Owns its mortality, proud yet afraid;

Then when I stumble in
The broad light, from this twilight weak and thin,
What of me will change,
What of that brightness will be new and strange? 
Shall I indeed endure
New solitude in that high air and pure,
Aching for these fingers
On which my assured hand now shuts and lingers?

Now when I look back
On manhood’s and on childhood’s far-stretched track,
I see but a little child
In a green sunny world-home; there enisled
By another, cloudy world
Of unsailed waters all around him curled,
And he at home content
With the small sky of wonders over him bent:—­

Lonely, yet not alone
Since all was friendly being all unknown;
To-day yesterday forgetting,
And never with to-morrow’s sorrow fretting;
Not seeing good from ill
Since but to breathe and run and sleep was well;
Asking nor fearing nought
Since the body’s nerves and veins held all his thought....

Such a child again shall I
Stray in some valley of infinity,
Where infinite finite seems
And nothing more immortal than my dreams? 
Where earthly seasons play
Still with their snows and blossoms and night and day,
And no unsetting sun
Brightens the white cloud and awakes the moon?

In such half-life’s half-light
To cloak with mortal an immortal sight? 
With uninformed desire,
Shorn passion, gentle mind, contented fire,
Ignorant love; to run
But with the little journeys of the sun,
And at evening sleep
With birds and beasts, and stars rocked in the deep?

But maybe this man’s mind
Will leave not its maturity behind,
And nothing will forget
Of all that teased or eased it here, while yet
A mortal dress it wore;
And these quick-darting thoughts and probings sore
More sharply then will turn;
And lonelier and yet hungrier the heart burn.

O, I would not forget
Earth is too rich, too dark, too sour, too sweet:—­
Nor be divorced quite
From the late tingling of the nerves’ delight. 
Less I would never be
Than the deep-graving years have made of me—­
A memory, pulse, mind,
Seed and harvest, a reaper and sower blind.

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