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Poem by Philip James Bailey Festus - 6 Our next Adventure seems to promise fair, for be there One scene, in life whence evil may be ruled Absent, 'tis sure pure early love. But not Love sole, with the world untried before one's eye, Eager to search all being, though of gross cares Freed, and in easefullest obscurity lapped, Can make soul happy. Doubts of things divine,-- Generate spontaneously, or thought inborne By rumour of the world, as pestful seeds Mist--sown, or of spirit in self--forced fellowship Colleagued, from far conveyed; as dominant soul Remote Seer's tranced intelligence shakes,--distract. But see love's star now rise, which, ere it set, Shall, many a mischance bettered, perfect life, And lead to heavenward; hear of holy ends, Goaded into man's heart; and worth of faith. Alcove--Lawn and Garden. Festus and Clara. Festus. Days are to me of light when I rejoice In earth, man, all things round me, and strong faith Rules, as a prevalent wind the world, my mind; The stars instil their virtues in the schemes I muse, so much doth generous reason joy In rich forecasts of full--orbed happiness; And the all--fatherly Deity smiles. Anon, Come surging from afar, dark doubts like wrecks Of fore--spent storms we deemed we had done with. Wave On wave of darkness, like the shadowy tides Of that tenebrous sea which billowing breaks Soundless, on lunar shores, o'erfloods my soul; And nothing satisfies. All ends seem mixed With means that make for evil, and if I see God's hand, it is everywhere distinct from things; Moulding them not, nor guiding. Clara. How! Life's goods, Heaven's gifts, health, beauty; earth's, wealth, culture, love, Are means, not ends. A mind absorbed in means Means but a mind that's mean, which, endless, errs. Festus. It may be, nay, 'tis probable. Say it's true. Clara. Let us do more than this. Have noblest ends: Ends which will bear the eye of God, nor flinch. Festus. But this means strife. Why should I strive with men? No ends have I to gain that man can give. Clara. But thou, I thought, hadst highest intents, and these It was that drew my soul to thine, resolved, I deemed, to head the advance of men. And now, Wouldst note at ease the bubble of fountains rise, Or count the May--thorn's bloomlets as they fall, Fragrant, in faëry showers? Shall I attune Mine harp--strings strained into their subtense beam, Luminous and hollow as is a golden flame, To songs commemorative of perfect bliss Earth now enjoys; of war, of woe extinct, Sin, ignorance, penury? Or are all these Ills, yet to be o'ermastered? Festus. These be thoughts Do scare the spirit that rouses them. Clara. May be. And sometimes self--love scared is self--love cured. Festus. Turn for the hour to things that leave us not Inconsolable i' the end; to know the day Is filling up with feelings that will last Memorially, all life. Clara. All time, I hope. Festus. Hope, and its lunes, its tides to their very heart, Ebbed out, with me are at dead water. Come! Let us consider deeplier, things that be. What happy things, to wit, are youth, love, sunshine; How sweet to feel the sun upon the heart; To know it is lighting up the rosy blood; And with all joyous feelings making shine The dark breast, like a grot with prismy spar. Clara. Yes, there are feelings so serene and sweet, Plumed as with musical lightness, that they more Than make amends for their passingness, and God's Condition balance to surcease for aye; As yon light fleecy cloudlet, floating along, Like golden down from some high angel's wing, So breaks and beautifies the blue, we lose Just reckoning of its imminent end. And love Hath some such very semblance, or I err At large. I wonder if I could ever love Another. How I should start to see on the sward A shadow not thine own, arm--linked with mine. Festus. Thou art happy, I doubt not. I, if nothing else, I have renewed my youth. Clara. When wert thou deemed Aged? Festus. Oh! thou knowest not then, how old I am. Know in my brain I bear each several age Whose spirit I have by study absorbed, and so Assimilated, that morally we are one. If not yet accurately defined my years, I am of full age; I have come into mine own, By grief--right. Take me, peer of want and woe; Proud thrall of doubt, my liege. Clara. Be not so sad. See, here's a garland I have bound for thee. Festus. Nay, crown thyself: it will suit thee better, love. Place wreaths of everlasting flowers on tombs, And deck with fading beauties forms that fade. Put it away, I will no crown save this; And could the line of dust which here I trace Upon my brow, but warrant dust beneath,-- Nor more, for aye; or could this bubble frame Informed with soul, lashed from the stream of life By its own impetus, but burst at once And vanish, part on high and part below, I would be happy, nor would envy death: Could I, like heaven's bolt, earthing, quench myself, This moment would I burn me out a grave. Clara. What canst thou mean? Festus. Mean, is there not a future? Passed, present, coming, be accursèd, each? Clara. Oh say not so. The future sure is filled With promises, are not even promises sweet From one we love and trust, of bliss. And we, Shall we not ever live and love, as now? Festus. For love, I know not: live I fear we must. Clara. And love, because we then are happiest, love; We shall lack nothing having love; and we, We must be happy everywhere, we twain. Life spiritual, changeless even as is the sea In essence, though of variablest aspect,-- Rolling the same through all earth's ages, now O'er mountain tops where only snow abides, And the sunbeam hurries coldly by, or, o'er The vales, ship guesting now, of some old world, Older than ancient man's,--is ever great, Clear, self--continuative, reflecting heaven: So then with us. Our natures raised, refined From these poor forms, our days shall pass in peace And love; no thought of human littleness Shall cross our high calm souls, shining and pure As the gold gates of heaven. Like some deep lake Upon a mountain summit they shall rest High above cloud and storm of life like this, All peace and power and passionless purity. Or, if a thought of other troublous times Like a chance raindrop, ruffle but for a moment Their heavenward face, it shall regardless pass, Recordless, momentary. Festus. Oh! who so wise As thou in things incredible, things unknown? Clara. I love to meditate upon bliss to come. Not that I am unhappy here, but given To hope more perfect bliss may rectify The lower feeling we enjoy now. Earth, This world, this life is not enough for us; They are nothing to our amplitude of mind; For place we must have space, for time must have Eternity, and for a spirit godhood. Festus. Mind means not happiness; power not good. Clara. True bliss In holy life seek, charity menwards, love To God. Why should such duties cease, such powers Decay, of nature spiritual, boundless scope, And worthy of high uplifted life for ever? Man, like the airborn eagle who remains On earth only to feed and sleep and die; But whose delight is on his lonely wing, Wide--sweeping as a mind, to force the skies High as the light--fall, ere, begirt with clouds It dash this nether world, immortal man, If measuring not with equal mind the All, His aspirations yet by nought below Divinity coped, up rushes, aye, towards heaven, As his essential home. O faith! most pure Of things; the world's sole honour! Festus. Come, what's faith? Let us make believe like children; faith? A tower Reared of round boulders on fear's quakeful bog; A belfry built of dominoes on the palm A pulse's throb o'erthrows;--that's my faith. Thine? Proceed; past doubt thy faith works miracles. Work one in me now. Granted I have sinned, Sin would I not for ever. I repent. I would again be blameless. Hear, Lord. Speak To me thy child in thine invisible likeness, The wind, as once of yore. Let me be pure; Let me be once more as an innocent child! As ere the clear could trouble me; when life Was sweet and calm as is a sister's kiss; And not the wild and whirlwind touch of passion Which though it scarcely 'light upon the lips, With breathless swiftness sucks the soul out of sight, So that we lose all thought of it. Speaks he? No! Though meanest of all possible miracles, The vast inviolate silence answers, No. Clara. Dost thou dictate to God? Festus. Now God forbid; But faith and all its promises and forms,-- And save religion's forms what know men,--show On heaven's part, most divine indifference. Clara. True faith nor biddeth nor abideth form. Knee bended, eye uplift, with heart prostrate; Is all man need to render, all God asks. What to the faith are forms? A passing speck, A crow upon the sky. God's worship is That only he inspires! and his bright words Writ in the red--leaved volume of the heart, Return to him in prayer, as dew to heaven. We quit the right way wantonly, and life Call error: truth we shun, court soulless wit; And say it is ignorance to adore. Our peace, Our proper good we rarely seek or make, Mindless of soul's beneficent powers and end Immortal, as the pearl is of its worth, The rose its scent, the wave its purity. Festus. My soul is like to die of unproved ends. Clara. But helps not here thy friend the spirit to arm With proofs irrefutable of God's good rule Life deathless, conquered ill? Festus. With proof of nothing. He hath a dispensation, but of doubt, Which umbers all my days. Spheres are, he avers, And souls migrate in death to other stars-- Where contraries exist not; well's not well, Nor ill ill; verity proveable not. Clara. The false one. Truth is the same in every world as here. Festus. Quit we these saddening themes. My mind too long Hath been begloomed by them. Sing then; for I love Thy singing sacred as the sound of hymns, On some bright sabbath morning, mid the moor, Where all is still save praise, of rustic saints Gathered beneath some wide--branched oak; high heaven Sheds on the spirit its kindred calm; hard by, The ripening grain its bright beard shakes i' the sun; The wild bee hums more solemnly; the deep sky, The fresh green grass, the sunny brook, the sun, All look as if they knew the day, the hour, And felt with man the need and joy of thanks. Clara. I cannot sing love's lightsome lays; thou knowst Who can; but none who love as I; for I Thy soul love, and would save it, Festus. Listen: Is heaven a place where pearly streams Glide over silver sand? Like childhood's rosy dazzling dreams Of some far faëry land? Is heaven a clime where diamond dews Glitter on fadeless flowers? And mirth and music ring aloud From amaranthine bowers? Ah no; not such, not such is heaven! Surpassing far all these; Such cannot be the guerdon given Man's wearied soul to please. For saint and sinner here below Such vain to be have proved: And the pure spirit will despise Whate'er the sense hath loved. There we shall dwell with Sire and Son, And with the mother--maid, And with the Holy Spirit, one! In glory like arrayed: And not to one created thing Shall our embrace be given; But all our joy shall be in God: For only God is heaven. Festus. I know that thou dost love me. I, in vain Strive to love aught of earth or heaven but thee, My first, last, only love: nor shall another Tempt even my steadfast heart. Like far--off stars, A thousand, sweet and bright and wondrous fair, A thousand deathless miracles of beauty, They shall e'er pass at all but eyeless distance, And never mix with thy love, but be lost, All meanly in its moonlike lustrousness. Clara. How still the air: the tree--tops stir no leaf, But stand and peer on heaven's bright face as though It slept, and they were loving it: they would not Have the skies see them move, for summers, would they? See that sweet cloud. It is watching us I am certain. What have we here to make thee stay one second? Away! thy sisters wait thee in the west, The blushing bridesmaids of the sun and sea. Would I were like thee, little cloud, to live Ever in heaven; or, seeking earth, let fall My spirit down only in droplets bright of love; Sleep on night's dewy lap; and the next dawn, Back with the sun to heaven; and so for aye, Sweet cloudlet! Senseless seeming things there are, One must, almost, count happy. Oft have I watched A gossamer line sighing itself along The air, as it seemed, and so thin, thin and bright, Like a stray threadlet woven in light's gay loom, I have envied it, a moment, followed: oft Eye--tracked the sea--bird's down, blown o'er the wave, Now touching it, spirited again, aloft, Now out of sight, now nigh, till in some bright fringe Of streamy foam, as in a cage, at last, A playful death it dies;--and mourned its death. Festus. Surely thou camest straightwise from the stars, And instantly from heaven: thy calm bright thought, Pure as the roseate snow on polar plains, In starlike flakelets falling, stamped with proof Of its high geniture, suits and soothes my mind. O well thou deemest of celestial things, And high--born duties dedicate to earth. To dignify the day with deeds of good, And eve constellate with all holy thoughts, This is to live, and let our lives narrate, In a new version, solemn and sublime, The grand old legend of humanity. But think'st thou now the future is a state Like positive with this, or e'er can be aught Than another present, toilsome, full of cares, Duties, perhaps; that soul will e'er be nigher To God than now, save as may seem by mind's Debility, as from weakness of the eye, And the illusions matter forms, yon sun Shows, hot and wearied, resting upon the hill? It would be well I think to live as though Nought more were to be looked for; to be good Because it is best here; and leave hope and fear For lives below ourselves. If earth persuades not That I owe prayer and praise and love to God, While all I have he gives, will heaven? will hell? No, neither, never. Clara. I think not all with thee. Festus. And how, unless worst ills revive, how live? Shall all defects of mind and fallacies Of feeling be immortalised? All needs, All joys, all sorrows, be again gone through? Shall heaven but be old earth created new? Or earth, tree--like, transplanted into heaven, To flourish by the waters of life; we, still, Within its shade cropping the fruit life--cored? Clara. Not so! Man's nature bodily, soul--wise, both, Shall be changed throughout, exalted, glorified; And all shall be alike, like God; and all Unlike each other, and themselves. The earth Shall vanish from the thoughts of those she bore, As have the idols of the olden time From men's hearts of the present. All delight And all desire shall be with heavenly things, And the new nature God bestowed on man. Festus. Then man shall be no more man; but an angel. Clara. Have I not heard thee hint of spirit friends, Other than him thou spakest of now? Festus. Thou hast heard. Clara. Where are they now? Festus. Ah close, mayhap, at hand. And since now other miracles lack, observe! I have a might immortal, and can ken With angels. Neither sky, nor night, nor earth, Hinders me. Through the forms of things I see Their essences; and thus, even now, behold-- But where I cannot show to thee--far round, Nature herself--the whole effect of God. Mind, matter, motion, heat, time, love, and life, And death, and immortality--those chief And first--born giants all are there--all parts, All limbs of her their mother: she is all. Clara. And what does she? Festus. Produce: it is her life. The three I named last, life, death, deathlessness, Glide in elliptic path round all things made-- For none save God can fill the perfect whole; And are but to eternity as is The horizon to the world. At certain points Each seems the other; now the three are one; Now, all invisible; and now, as first, Moving in measured round. To me there seems A mocking, flickering likeness in their mien, To some I know. Not seldom all I see, Or mix with, seems a fleeting masque prepared By some obsequious tyrant, bent on fraud; Some despot servile to necessity; who, For his own ends, plants before our inward eyes, The eternal phantom of the universe, And bids us call it real. Clara. How look these beings? Festus. Ah! Life looks gaily and gloomily in turns; With a brow chequered like the sward, by leaves, Between which the light glints; and she, careless wears A wreath of flowers; part faded and part fresh. And death is beautiful; and sad; and still. She seems too happy; happier far than life-- In but one feeling, apathy: and on Her chill white brow frosts bright a braid of snow. Clara. And immortality? Festus. She looks alone; As though she would not know her sisterhood. And on her brow a diadem of fire, Matched by the conflagration of her eye, Outflaming even that eye which in my sleep Beams close upon me till it bursts from sheer O'erstrainedness of sight, burns. Clara. What do they? Festus. Each strives to win me to herself. Clara. How? Festus. Death Opens her sweet white arms and whispers, peace! Come say thy sorrows in this bosom! This Will never close against thee; and my heart, Though cold, cannot be colder much than man's. Come! All this soon must end; and soon the world Shall perish leaf by leaf, and land by land; Flower by flower; flood by flood; and hill By hill away. Oh! come, come! Let us die. Clara. Say that thou wilt not die! Festus. Nay, I love death. But Immortality, with finger spired, Points to a distant, giant world--and says There, there is my home. Live along with me! Clara. Canst see that world? Festus. Just--a huge shadowy shape; It looks a disembodied orb; the ghost Of some great sphere which God hath stricken dead. Or like a world which God hath thought--not made. Clara. Follow her, Festus! Does she speak again? Festus. She never speaks but once: and now, in scorn, Points to this dim, dwarfed, misbegotten sphere. Clara. Why let her pass? Festus. That is the great world--question. Life would not part with me; and from her brow Tearing her wreath of passion flowers, she flung it Around my neck, and dared me struggle then. I never could destroy a flower; and none But fairest hands like thine grace even with me The culling of a rose. And Life, sweet Life, Vowed she would crop the world for me, and lay it Herself before my feet even as a flower. And when I felt that flower contained thyself, One drop within its nectary kept for me, I lost all count of those strange sisters three, And where they be I know not. But I see One who is more to me. Clara. I know not how Thou hast this power and knowledge; I but hope It comes from good hands, be it not thine own Force, simply of mind. Festus. Consider man's employ So many years, and his few minutes' thought On heaven, and own 'tis less even, what we do, Than what we think, that fits us for the future. Clara. I would we had a little world to ourselves With none but we two on it. Festus. And if God Gave us a star, what could we do with it But what we can, without it? Wish it not. Clara. I'll not wish then for stars; but I could love Some peaceful spot where we might dwell unknown; Where home--born joys might nestle round our hearts As swallows 'neath our roofs, and rustic peace, With blessings of the lowly, innocent aims, And kindliest neighbour charities, blend their sweets, As dewy tangled flowerets midst one bed, In pure and unimpassioned life. Festus. A cot I know, rose--roofed, by myrtle masked, with porch Twixt vine and honeysuckle embowered; near by, A rill, heath--braided, crowned with flowering fern, Repeats the silvery tattle of the hills To rocks, less garrulous, maybe; pleasance, grove, Silent, while song--birds sleep, with pensive gloom, With florid gaiety, each in turn lure. There, Summer's wild roselet scents the unthoughtful step That stills its pleading fragrance; see, the head Pardoning, peeps up, unharmed. The comforting hum Of bees is always audible; allwhere seen Fruit sweetly eagering, that not cloys. There, backed By every sunset, ocean, in his heart, Changeful, but charmful aye, heaven's glories now Liberally redoubles; now conceals in's breast, Rivallous and agitated. There, friendliest morn Wakes you through latticed jasmin; eve, retiring, Breathes of dew--beaded eglantine; and night Her luminous forces, starwise, oft deploys, To unveil, for sage,--so much as sage to unveil May list, the fates premonitory of men. Clara. That spot thou knowest? Festus. Oh yes, my feet could find it, Eyes had I none. Sometime, when leisure calls, In virtue's vacancies, we will search it out. Clara. Sometime may never come. But look! Day dies Surely, of too much beauty, which becomes In its intensity holy; and we fear. See how yon cloudlet climbs the welkin, lone, Like lambling strayed from some gold--fleeced flock Low folded by the sun; now, dimmer grown Upon the aëry mountain's side, and now, High in the infinite heavens, it disappears, Saint--like updrawn to God's invisible breast, Wherein is rest for all things; thunder, there, Nor the blue flashing levin, dread seraphim And cherubim of storms, complain no more; But hushed to silence, and their eyes, tearblind, Crushed to his fatherly bosom who now bids forth The elements, now recalls them, sleep in peace. Peace, how divine; peace love I more than love. Festus. The sweetest joy, the wildest woe is love. Earth's taints, the odours of the skies are in't. Would man were aught but that he seems, the mean Of all extremes. Brute's death, the deathlessness Of fiend or angel better shows than all The doubtful prospects of our painted dust. And all morality can teach is, bear; And all religion can inspire is, hope. Clara. It is enough. Fruition of the fruit Of the great tree of life, is not for earth. Stars are its fruit, its lightest leaf is life. The heart hath many a sorrow beside love, Yea, many as are the veins which visit it. The love of aught on earth is not its chief, Nor should be. Festus. True; inclusive of them all There is the one main sorrow, life: for what Can spirit, dissevered from the great one, God, Feel but a grievous longing to rejoin Its infinite, its author, and its end? Clara. And yet is life a thing to be beloved, And honoured holily, and bravely borne. A man's life may be all ease, and his death By some dark chance unthought of agony; Or, life may be all suffering, and decease A flower--like sleep; or both be full of woe; Or each comparatively painless. Heaven Blame not for inequalities like these, They may be justified; how canst thou know? They may be only seeming; canst thou judge? They may be done away with utterly By loving, knowing, fearing God the truth. Nor should love's self be grievous; but so blent With the world's dues, life's future, nature's claims, As it is, all woes their dolorous kinship prove With it. Nor deem then aught ill remediless. In all distress of spirit, grief of heart, In bodily agony, or in mental woe, Rebuffs and vain assumptions of the world, Or the poor spite of weak and wicked souls, Joy even in thine own anguish. Suffering Assimilates thee to him, not less than good. Think upon what thou shalt be. Think on God. Then ask thyself what is the world? What time? And all their mountainous inequalities? What? Are not all equal as dust atomies strewn On heaven's bright concave? Festus. What is, thou hast not Power to persuade me of? Clara. I now go. Farewell! For the night darkens fast, and the dews are falling. Remember what thou saidst about the stars. Festus. Oh, yes. I ofttimes think of them and thee Together. Clara. True? Festus. Star of my life art thou. Clara. Another night, and thou wilt tell me more Of wonders thou canst see? Festus. Ay, thou shalt view Thyself celestial marvels. Clara. Nay, I dread. But hap me weal or woe, I am thine. Festus. Farewell! Clara. Grant me but heaven, that I this soul incline, Though mine go void of joy, to thy good ends. Philip James Bailey Philip James Bailey's other poems: 1431 Views |
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