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- NEW delights to our desire
- The singers of the past can yield.
- I lift mine eyes to hill and field,
- And see in them your yet dumb lyre,
- poets unborn and unrevealed.
- Singers to come, what thoughts will start
- To song? What words of yours be sent
- Through man's soul, and with earth be blent?
- These words of nature and the heart
- Await you like an instrument.
- Who knows what musical flocks of words
- Upon these pine-tree tops will light,
- And crown these towers in circling flight,
- And cross these seas like summer birds,
- And give a voice to the day and night?
- Something of you already is ours;
- Some mystic part of you belongs
- To us whose dream of your future throngs,
- Who look on hills, and trees, and flowers,
- Which will mean so much in your songs.
- I wonder, like the maid who found,
- And knelt to lift, the lyre supreme
- Of Orpheus from the Thracian stream.
- She dreams on its sealed past profound;
- On a deep future sealed I dream.
- She bears it in her wanderings
- Within her arms, and has not pressed
- Her unskilled fingers but her breast
- Upon those silent sacred strings;
- I, too, clasp mystic strings at rest.
- For I, i' the world of lands and seas,
- The sky of wind and rain and fire,
- And in man's world of long desire--
- In all that is yet dumb in these--
- Have found a mysterious lyre.
- Alice Meynell

- FAREWELL has long been said; I have forgone thee;
- I never name thee even.
- But how shall I learn virtues and yet shun thee?
- For thou art so near Heaven
- That Heavenward meditations pause upon thee.
- Thou dost beset the path to every shrine;
- My trembling thoughts discern
- Thy goodness in the good for which I pine;
- And, if I turn from but one sin, I turn
- Unto a smile of thine.
- How shall I thrust thee apart
- Since all my growth tends to thee night and day--
- To thee faith, hope, and art?
- Swift are the currents setting all one way;
- They draw my life, my life, out of my heart.
- Alice Meynell

- B E H O L D,
- The time is now! Bring back, bring back
- Thy flocks of fancies, wild of whim.
- O lead them from the mountain-track,
- Thy frolic thoughts untold.
- O bring them in--the fields grow dim--
- And let me be the fold.
- Behold,
- The time is now! Call in, O call
- Thy pasturing kisses gone astray
- For scattered sweets; gather them all
- To shelter from the cold.
- Throng them together, close and gay,
- And let me be the fold!
- Alice Meynell

- THE Lady Poverty was fair:
- But she has lost her looks of late,
- With change of times and change of air.
- Ah slattern! She neglects her hair,
- Her gown, her shoes; she keeps no state
- As once when her pure feet were bare.
- Or--almost worse, if worse can be--
- She scolds in parlours, dusts and trims,
- Watches and counts. O is this she
- Whom Francis met, whose step was free,
- Who with Obedience carolled hymns,
- In Umbria walked with Chastity?
- Where is her ladyhood? Not here,
- Not among modern kinds of men;
- But in the stony fields, where clear
- Through the thin trees the skies appear,
- In delicate spare soil and fen,
- And slender landscape and austere.
- Alice Meynell

- THE child not yet is lulled to rest.
- Too young a nurse, the slender Night
- So laxly holds him to her breast
- That throbs with flight.
- He plays with her, and will not sleep.
- For other playfellows she sighs;
- An unmaternal fondness keep
- Her alien eyes.
- Alice Meynell

In Kensington Gardens
- ALONG the graceless grass of town
- They rake the rows of red and brown--
- Dead leaves, unlike the rows of hay
- Delicate, touched with gold and grey,
- Raked long ago and far away.
- A narrow silence in the park,
- Between the lights a narrow dark.
- One street rolls on the north; and one,
- Muffled, upon the south doth run;
- Anid the mist the work is done.
- A futile crop!--for it the fire
- Smoulders, and, for a stack, a pyre.
- So go the town's lives on the breeze,
- Even as the sheddings of the trees;
- Bosom nor barn is filled with these.
- Alice Meynell

[editor's note: 'the Master' refers to George Meredith]
- DEAR are some hidden things
- My soul has sealed in silence; past delights;
- Hope unconfessed; desires with hampered wings,
- Remembered in the nights.
- But my best treasures are
- Ignoble, undelightful, abject, cold;
- Yet O! profounder hoards oracular
- No reliquaries hold.
- There lie my trespasses,
- Abjured but not disowned. I'll not accuse
- Determinism, nor, as the Master says,
- Charge even 'the poor Deuce'.
- Under my hand they lie,
- My very own, my proved iniquities;
- And though the glory of my life go by
- I hold and garner these.
- How else, how otherwhere,
- How otherwise, shall I discern and grope
- For lowliness? How hate, how love, how dare,
- How weep, how hope?
- Alice Meynell

- A VOICE peals in this end of night
- A phrase of notes resembling stars,
- Single and spiritual notes of light.
- What call they at my window-bars?
- The South, the past, the day to be,
- An ancient infelicity.
- Darkling, deliberate, what sings
- This wonderful one, alone, at peace?
- What wilder things than song, what things
- Sweeter than youth, clearer than Greece?
- Drearer than Italy, untold
- Delight, and freshness centuries old?
- And first first-loves, a multitude,
- The exhultation of their pain;
- Ancestral childhood long renewed;
- And midnights of invisible rain;
- And gardens, gardens, night and day,
- Gardens and childhood all the way.
- What Middle Ages passionate,
- O passionless voice! What distant bells
- Lodged in the hills, what palace state
- Illyrian! For it speaks, it tells,
- Without desire, without dismay,
- Some marrow and some yesterday.
- All-natural things! But more--Whence came
- This yet remoter mystery?
- How do these starry notes proclaim
- A graver still divinity?
- This hope, this sanctity of fear?
- O innocent throat! O human ear!
- Alice Meynell

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