Preludes 1921-1922 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 44 pages of information about Preludes 1921-1922.

Preludes 1921-1922 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 44 pages of information about Preludes 1921-1922.

O Love, and now is earth my friend,
Telling me all, until the end
When I shall in the earth be laid
With all my maps and fancies made,
And you, Love, were the secret earth
Of my blind following from birth.

O Love, you happy wayfarer,
Be still my fond interpreter,
Of all the glory that can be
As once on starlit Winchelsea,
Finding upon my pilgrim way
A burning bush for every day.

TO MY SON

(Aged sixteen)

Dear boy unborn:  the son but of my dream,
  Promise of yet unrisen day,
Come, sit beside me; let us talk, and seem
  To take such cares and courage for your way,
  As some year yet we may.

As some year yet, when you, my son to be,
  Look out on life, and turn to go,
And I, grown grey, shall wish you well, and see
  Myself imprinted as but she could know
  To make amendment so.

I see you then, your sixteen years alight
  With limbs all true and golden hair,
And you, unborn, I will, this April night,
  Tell of the faith and honour you must wear
  For love, whose light you bear.

Beauty you have; as, mothered so, could face
  Or limbs or hair be otherwise? 
Years gone, dear boy, there was a virgin grace
  Worth Homer’s laurel under western skies
  To wander and devise.

Beauty you have.  Cherish it as divine,
  Wash it with dews of diligence,
Not vainly, but because it is the sign
  Of inward light, the spirit’s excellence
  Made visible to sense.

Athlete be you; strong runner to the goal,
  Glad though the game be lost or won: 
Fleet limbs that chronicle a fleeter soul,
  In every winter valiantly to run,
  Till the last race be done.

Love wisdom that is suited in a rhyme,
  And be in all your learning known
Old minstrels chanting out of faded time,
  Since he who counts all years gone by alone
  Makes any year his own.

And when one day you are a lover too,
  Come back to her who bore you, dear,
Tell out your tale; you shall the better woo
  For every word that from her lips you hear,
  For she made love most clear.

Most clear for him who sits beside you now;
  There was a certain frost that fell
Before its time upon a summer bough,—­
  And how at last that reckoning was well,
  She for your love shall tell.

Labour to build your house, but ever keep
  That greater garden fresh in mind,
That England with its bird-song buried deep
  In cool great woods where chivalry can find
  The province of its kind.

Be great or little your inheritance,
  Know there shall number in that dower
No treasure from the treasuries of chance
  So rare as that you came the perfect flower
  Of love’s most perfect hour.

Go now, my son.  Be all I might have been. 
  (Ask her.  She knows, and none but she.)
Her beauty and her wisdom weathered clean
  Some part of me in you, that you might be
  Her own eternity.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Preludes 1921-1922 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.