The New Morning: Poems. Alfred Noyes

The New Morning: Poems - Alfred Noyes


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      No ghosts in Salem town

      With silver buckled shoon?

      No lovely witch to drown

      Or burn beneath the moon?

      Not even a whiff of tea,

      On Boston's glimmering quay.

      O, ghostly Spanish walls,

      Where brown Franciscans glide,

      Is there no voice that calls

      Across the Great Divide,

      To pilgrims on their way

      Along the Santa Fe?

      Then let your Pullman cars

      Go roaring to the West,

      Till, watched by lonelier stars,

      The cactus lifts its crest.

      There, on that painted plain,

      One ghost will rise again.

      Majestic and forlorn,

      Wreck of a dying race,

      The Red Man, half in scorn,

      Shall raise his haughty face,

      Inscrutable as the sky,

      To watch our ghosts go by.

      What? Is earth dreaming still?

      Shall not the night disgorge

      The ghosts of Bunker Hill

      The ghosts of Valley Forge,

      Or, England's mightiest son,

      The ghost of Washington?

      No ghosts where Lincoln fell?

      No ghosts for seeing eyes?

      I know an old cracked bell

      Shall make ten million rise

      When one immortal ghost

      Calls to the slumbering host.

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      (New Jersey, 1918)

      ITS quiet graves were made for peace till Gabriel blows his horn.

      Those wise old elms could hear no cry

      Of all that distant agony—

      Only the red-winged blackbird, and the rustle of thick ripe corn.

      The blue jay, perched upon that bronze, with bright unweeting eyes,

      Could never read the names that signed

      The noblest charter of mankind;

      But all of them were names we knew beneath our English skies.

      And on the low gray headstones, with their crumbling weather-stains,

      —Though cardinal birds, like drops of blood,

      Flickered across the haunted wood—

      The names you'd see were names that woke like flowers in English lanes.

      John Applegate was fast asleep; and Temperance Olden, too.

      And David Worth had quite forgot

      If Hannah's lips were red or not;

      And Prudence veiled her eyes at last, as Prudence ought to do.

      And when, across that patch of heaven, that small blue leaf-edged space

      At times, a droning airplane went,

      No flicker of astonishment

      Could lift the heavy eyelids on one gossip's up-turned face.

      For William Speakman could not tell—so thick the grasses grow—

      If that strange humming in the sky

      Meant that the Judgment Day were nigh,

      Or if 'twas but the summer bees that blundered to and fro.

      And then, across the breathless wood, a Bell began to sound,

      The only Bell that wakes the dead,

      And Stockton Signer raised his head,

      And called to all the deacons in the ancient burial-ground.

      "The Bell, the Bell is ringing! Give me back my rusty sword.

      Though I thought the wars were done,

      Though I thought our peace was won,

      Yet I signed the Declaration, and the dead must keep their word.

      "There's only one great ghost I know could make that 'larum ring.

      It's the captain that we knew

      In the ancient buff and blue,

      It's our Englishman, George Washington, who fought the German king!"

      So the sunset saw them mustering beneath their brooding boughs,

      Ancient shadows of our sires,

      Kindling with the ancient fires,

      While the old cracked Bell to southward shook the ancient meeting house.

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      (1917)

      The first four lines of this poem were written for inscription on the first joint memorial to the American and British soldiers who fell in the Revolutionary War. This memorial was recently dedicated at Princeton.

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      HERE Freedom stood, by slaughtered friend and foe,

      And ere the wrath paled or that sunset died,

      Looked through the ages: then, with eyes aglow,

      Laid them, to wait that future, side by side.

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