Collected Poems: Volume Two. Alfred Noyes

Collected Poems: Volume Two - Alfred Noyes


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Backward, her sad white face

       Lifted up to Sawara

       Once, in that lonely place,

       White as a drifting blossom

       Under his wondering eyes,

       Slowly he gathered and held her

       Under the drifting skies.

      "Others are happy," she whispered,

       "Maidens and men I have seen:

       Be happy, be happy, Sawara!

       The other—shall be—your queen!

       Kiss me one kiss for parting."

       Trembling she lifted her head,

       Then like a broken blossom

       It fell on his arm. She was dead.

      VIII

      Much impressed, Sawara straight

       (Though the hour was growing late)

       Made a sketch of Kimi lying

       By the lonely, sighing sea,

       Brought it back to Tenko.

       Tenko looked it over crying

       (Under the silvery willow-tree).

       "You have burst the golden gate!

       You have conquered Time and Fate!

       Hokusai is not so great!

       This is Art," said Tenko!

       Table of Contents

      I

      I remember—

       a breath, a breath

       Blown thro' the rosy gates of birth,

       A morning freshness not of the earth

       But cool and strange and lovely as death

       In Paradise, in Paradise,

       When, all to suffer the old sweet pain

       Closing his immortal eyes

       Wonder-wild an angel lies

       With wings of rainbow-tinctured grain

       Withering till—ah, wonder-wild,

       Here on the dawning earth again

       He wakes, a little child.

      II

      I remember—

       a gleam, a gleam

       Of sparkling waves and warm blue sky

       Far away and long ago,

       Or ever I knew that youth could die;

       And out of the dawn, the dawn, the dawn,

       Into the unknown life we sailed

       As out of sleep into a dream,

       And, as with elfin cables drawn In dusk of purple over the glowing

       Wrinkled measureless emerald sea,

       The light cloud shadows larger far

       Than the sweet shapes which drew them on,

       Elfin exquisite shadows flowing

       Between us and the morning star

       Chased us all a summer's day,

       And our sail like a dew-lit blossom shone

       Till, over a rainbow haze of spray

       That arched a reef of surf like snow

       —Far away and long ago—

       We saw the sky-line rosily engrailed

       With tufted peaks above a smooth lagoon

       Which growing, growing, growing as we sailed

       Curved all around them like a crescent moon;

       And then we saw the purple-shadowed creeks,

       The feathery palms, the gleaming golden streaks

       Of sand, and nearer yet, like jewels of fire

       Streaming between the boughs, or floating higher

       Like tiny sunset-clouds in noon-day skies,

       The birds of Paradise.

      III

      The island floated in the air,

       Its image floated in the sea:

       Which was the shadow? Both were fair:

       Like sister souls they seemed to be;

       And one was dreaming and asleep,

       And one bent down from Paradise

       To kiss with radiance in the deep

       The darkling lips and eyes.

      And, mingling softly in their dreams,

       That holy kiss of sea and sky

       Transfused the shadows and the gleams

       Of Time and of Eternity:

       The dusky face looked up and gave

       To heaven its golden shadowed calm;

       The face of light fulfilled the wave

       With blissful wings and fans of palm.

      Above, the tufted rosy peaks

       That melted in the warm blue skies,

       Below, the purple-shadowed creeks

       That glassed the birds of Paradise—

       A bridal knot, it hung in heaven;

       And, all around, the still lagoon

       From bloom of dawn to blush of even

       Curved like a crescent moon.

      And there we wandered evermore

       Thro' boyhood's everlasting years,

       Listening the murmur of the shore

       As one that lifts a shell and hears

       The murmur of forgotten seas

       Around some lost Broceliande,

       The sigh of sweet Eternities

       That turn the world to fairy-land,

      That turned our isle to a single pearl

       Glowing in measureless waves of wine!

       Above, below, the clouds would curl,

       Above, below, the stars would shine

       In sky and sea. We hung in heaven!

       Time and space were but elfin-sweet

       Rock-bound pools for the dawn and even

       To wade with their rosy feet.

      Our pirate cavern faced the West:

       We closed its door with screens of palm,

       While some went out to seek the nest

       Wherein the Phœnix, breathing balm,

       Burns and dies to live for ever

       (How should we dream we lived to die?)

       And some would fish in the purple river

       That thro' the hills brought down the sky.

      And some would dive in the lagoon

       Like sunbeams, and all round our isle

       Swim thro' the lovely crescent moon,

       Glimpsing, for breathless mile on mile, The wild sea-woods that bloomed below,

       The rainbow fish, the coral cave

       Where vanishing swift as


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