Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II..

Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II..

An all-sufficient world,
And as it seems an undiscovered world,
So very few the folk that come to look. 
Yet one has heard of towns; but they are far
The world is undiscovered, and the child
Is undiscovered that with stealthy joy
Goes gathering like a bee who in dark cells
Hideth sweet food to live on in the cold. 
What matters to the child, it matters not
More than it mattered to the moons of Mars,
That they for ages undiscovered went
Marked not of man, attendant on their king.

A shallow line of sand curved to the cliff,
There dwelt the fisherfolk, and there inland
Some scattered cottagers in thrift and calm,
Their talk full oft was of old days,—­for here
Was once a fosse, and by this rock-hewn path
Our wild fore-elders as ’t is said would come
To gather jetsam from some Viking wreck,
Like a sea-beast wide breasted (her snake head
Reared up as staring while she rocked ashore)
That split, and all her ribs were on their fires
The red whereof at their wives’ throats made bright
Gold gauds which from the weed they picked ere yet
The tide had turned.

‘Many,’ methought, ’and rich
They must have been, so long their chronicle. 
Perhaps the world was fuller then of folk,
For ships at sea are few that near us now.’

Yet sometimes when the clouds were torn to rags,
Flying black before a gale, we saw one rock
In the offing, and the mariner folk would cry,
’Look how she labours; those aboard may hear
Her timbers creak e’en as she’d break her heart.’

’Twas then the grey gulls blown ashore would light
In flocks, and pace the lawn with flat cold feet.

And so the world was sweet, and it was strange,
Sweet as a bee-kiss to the crocus flower,
Surprising, fresh, direct, but ever one. 
The laughter of glad music did not yet
In its echo yearn, as hinting ought beyond,
Nor pathos tremble at the edge of bliss
Like a moon halo in a watery sky,
Nor the sweet pain alike of love and fear
In a world not comprehended touch the heart—­
The poetry of life was not yet born. 
’T was a thing hidden yet that there be days
When some are known to feel ‘God is about,’
As if that morn more than another morn
Virtue flowed forth from Him, the rolling world
Swam in a soothed calm made resonant
And vital, swam as in the lap of God
Come down; until she slept and had a dream
(Because it was too much to bear awake),
That all the air shook with the might of Him
And whispered how she was the favourite world
That day, and bade her drink His essence in.

’Tis on such days that seers prophesy
And poets sing, and many who are wise
Find out for man’s wellbeing hidden things
Whereof the hint came in that Presence known
Yet unknown.  But a seer—­what is he? 
A poet is a name of long ago.

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Project Gutenberg
Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.