P.C. Home Page . Recent Additions

Poets:
A B . C D .
E F . G H .
I J . K L .
M N . O P .
Q R . S T .
U V . W X .
Y Z

- I HAVE a little kinsman
- Whose earthly summers are but three,
- And yet a voyager is he
- Greater than Drake or Frobisher,
- Than all their peers together!
- He is a brave discoverer,
- And, far beyond the tether
- Of them who seek the frozen Pole,
- Has sailed where the noiseless surges roll.
- Ay, he has travelled whither
- A winged pilot steered his bark
- Through the portals of the dark,
- Past hoary Mimir's well and tree,
- Across the unknown sea.
- Suddenly, in his fair young hour,
- Came one who bore a flower,
- And laid it in his dimpled hand
- With this command:
- "Henceforth thou art a rover!
- Thou must make a voyage far
- Sail beneath the evening star,
- And a wondrous land discover."
- --With his sweet smile innocent
- Our little kinsman went.
- Since that time no word
- From the absent has been heard.
- Who can tell
- How he fares, or answer well
- What the little one has found
- Since he left us, outward bound?
- Would that he might return!
- Then we should learn
- By the pricking of his chart
- How the skyey roadways part.
- Hush! does not the baby this way bring,
- To lay beside this severed curl,
- Some starry offering
- Of chrysolite or pearl?
- Ah, no! not so!
- We may follow on his track,
- But he comes not back.
- And yet I dare aver
- He is a brave discoverer
- Of climes his elders do not know.
- He has more learning than appears
- On the scroll of twice three thousand years,
- More than in the groves is taught,
- Or from furthest Indies brought;
- He knows, perchance, how spirits fare,--
- What shapes the angels wear,
- What is their guise and speech
- In those lands beyond our reach,--
- And his eyes behold
- Things that shall never, never be to mortal hearers told.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- THAT year? Yes, doubtless I remember still,--
- Though why take count of every wind that blows!
- 'T was plain, men said, that Fortune used me ill
- That year,--the self-same year I met with Rose.
- Crops failed; wealth took a flight; house, treasure, land,
- Slipped from my hold--thus plenty comes and goes.
- One friend I had, but he too loosed his hand
- (Or was it I?) the year I met with Rose.
- There was a war, I think; some rumor, too,
- Of famine, pestilence, fire, deluge, snows;
- Things went awry. My rivals, straight in view,
- Throve, spite of all; but I,--I met with Rose.
- That year my white-faced Alma pined and died:
- Some trouble vexed her quiet heart,--who knows?
- Not I, who scarcely missed her from my side,
- Or aught else gone, the year I met with Rose.
- Was there no more? Yes, that year life began:
- All life before a dream, false joys, light woes,--
- All after-life compressed within the span
- Of that one year,--the year I met with Rose!
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- A. D. 1692
- SOE, Mistress Anne, faire neighbour myne,
- How rides a witche when nighte-winds blowe?
- Folk saye that you are none too goode
- To joyne the crewe in Salem woode,
- When one you wot of gives the signe:
- Righte well, methinks, the pathe you knowe.
- In Meetinge-time I watched you well,
- Whiles godly Master Parris prayed:
- Your folded hands laye on your booke;
- But Richard answered to a looke
- That fain would tempt him unto hell,
- Where, Mistress Anne, your place is made.
- You looke into my Richard's eyes
- With evill glances shamelesse growne;
- I found about his wriste a hair,
- And guesse what fingers tyed it there:
- He shall not lightly be your prize--
- Your Master firste shall take his owne.
- 'T is not in nature he should be
- (Who loved me soe when Springe was greene)
- A childe, to hange upon your gowne!
- He loved me well in Salem Towne
- Until this wanton witcherie
- His hearte and myne crept dark betweene.
- Last Sabbath nighte, the gossips saye,
- Your goodman missed you from his side.
- He had no strength to move, untill
- Agen, as if in slumber still,
- Beside him at the dawne you laye.
- Tell, nowe, what meanwhile did betide.
- Dame Anne, mye hate goe with you fleete
- As driftes the Bay fogg overhead--
- Or over yonder hill-topp, where
- There is a tree ripe fruite shall bear
- When, neighbour myne, your wicked feet
- The stones of Gallowes Hill shall tread.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- MUTE, sightless visitant,
- From what uncharted world
- Hast voyaged into Life's rude sea,
- With guidance scant;
- As if some bark mysteriously
- Should hither glide, with spars aslant
- And sails all furled!
- In what perpetual dawn,
- Child of the spotless brow,
- Hast kept thy spirit far withdrawn--
- Thy birthright undefiled?
- What views to thy sealed eyes appear!
- What voices mayst thou hear
- Speak as we know not how!
- Of grief and sin hast thou,
- O radiant child,
- Even thou, a share? Can mortal taint
- Have power on thee unfearing
- The woes our sight, our hearing,
- Learn from Earth's crime and plaint?
- Not as we see
- Earth, sky, insensate forms, ourselves,
- Thou seest,--but vision-free
- Thy fancy soars and delves,
- Albeit no sounds to us relate
- The wondrous things
- Thy brave imaginings
- Within their starry night create.
- Pity thy unconfined
- Clear spirit, whose enfranchised eyes
- Use not their grosser sense?
- Ah, no! thy bright intelligence
- Hath its own Paradise,
- A realm wherein to hear and see
- Things hidden from our kind.
- Not thou, not thou--'t is we
- Are deaf, are dumb, are blind!
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- WHEN the veil from the eyes is lifted
- The seer's head is gray;
- When the sailor to shore has drifted
- The sirens are far away.
- Why must the clearer vision,
- The wisdom of Life's late hour,
- Come, as in Fate's derision,
- When the hand has lost its power?
- Is there a rarer being,
- Is there a fairer sphere
- Where the strong are not unseeing,
- And the harvests are not sere:
- Where, ere the seasons dwindle,
- They yield their due return;
- Where the lamps of knowledge kindle
- While the flames of youth still burn?
- O, for the young man's chances!
- O, for the old man's will!
- Those flee while this advances,
- And the strong years cheat us still.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- GIVE me to die unwitting of the day,
- And stricken in Life's brave heat, with senses clear:
- Not swathed and couched until the lines appear
- Of Death's wan mask upon this withering clay,
- But as that old man eloquent made way
- From Earth, a nation's conclave hushed anear;
- Or as the chief whose fates, that he may hear
- The victory, one glorious moment stay.
- Or, if not thus, then with no cry in vain,
- No ministrant beside to ward and weep,
- Hand upon helm I would my quittance gain
- In some wild turmoil of the waters deep,
- And sink content into a dreamless sleep
- (Spared grave and shroud) below the ancient main.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- THOU,--whose endearing hand once laid in sooth
- Upon thy follower, no want thenceforth,
- Nor toil, nor joy nor pain, nor waste of years
- Filled with all cares that deaden and subdue,
- Can make thee less to him--can make thee less
- Than sovereign queen, his first liege, and his last
- Remembered to the unconscious dying hour,--
- Return and be thou kind, bright Spirit of song,
- Thou whom I yet loved most, loved most of all
- Even when I left thee--I, now so long strayed
- From thy beholding! And renew, renew
- Thy gift to me fain clinging to thy robe!
- Still be thou kind, for still thou wast most dear.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

- JUST where the Treasury's marble front
- Looks over Wall Street's mingled nations;
- Where Jews and Gentiles most are wont
- To throng for trade and last quotations;
- Where, hour by hour, the rates of gold
- Outrival, in the ears of people,
- The quarter-chimes, serenely tolled
- From Trinity's undaunted steeple,--
- Even there I heard a strange, wild strain
- Sound high above the modern clamor,
- Above the cries of greed and gain,
- The curbstone war, the auction's hammer;
- And swift, on Music's misty ways,
- It led, from all this strife for millions,
- To ancient, sweet-do-nothing days
- Among the kirtle-robed Sicilians.
- And as it stilled the multitude,
- And yet more joyous rose, and shriller,
- I saw the minstrel, where he stood
- At ease, against a Doric pillar:
- One hand a droning organ played,
- The other held a Pan's-pipe (fashioned
- Like those of old) to lips that made
- The reeds give out that strain impassioned.
- 'T was Pan himself had wandered here
- A-strolling through this sordid city,
- And piping to the civic ear
- The prelude of some pastoral ditty!
- The demigod had crossed the seas,--
- From haunts of shepherd, nymph, and satyr,
- And Syracusan times,--to these
- Far shores and twenty centuries later.
- A ragged cap was on his head;
- But--hidden thus--there was no doubting
- That, all with crispy locks o'erspread,
- His gnarled horns were somewhere sprouting;
- His club-feet, cased in rusty shoes,
- Were crossed, as on some frieze you see them,
- And trousers, patched of divers hues,
- Concealed his crooked shanks beneath them.
- He filled the quivering reeds with sound,
- And o'er his mouth their changes shifted,
- And with his goat's-eyes looked around
- Where'er the passing current drifted;
- And soon, as on Trinacrian hills
- &nbps;The nymphs and herdsmen ran to hear him,
- Even now the tradesmen from their tills,
- With clerks and porters, crowded near him.
- The bulls and bears together drew
- From Jauncey Court and New Street Alley,
- As erst, if pastorals be true,
- Came beasts from every wooded valley;
- The random passers stayed to list,--
- A boxer Aegon, rough and merry,
- A Broadway Daphnis, on his tryst
- With Nais at the Brooklyn Ferry.
- A one-eyed Cyclops halted long
- In tattered cloak of army pattern,
- And Galatea joined the throng,--
- A blowsy, apple-vending slattern;
- While old Silenus staggered out
- From some new-fangled lunch-house handy,
- And bade the piper, with a shout,
- To strike up "Yankee Doodle Dandy!"
- A newsboy and a peanut-girl
- Like little Fauns began to caper:
- His hair was all in tangled curl,
- Her tawny legs were bare and taper;
- And still the gathering larger grew,
- And gave its pence and crowded nigher,
- While aye the shepherd-minstrel blew
- His pipe, and struck the gamut higher.
- O heart of Nature, beating still
- With throbs her vernal passion taught her,--
- Even here, as on the vine-clad hill,
- Or by the Arethusan water!
- New forms may fold the speech, new lands
- Arise within these ocean-portals,
- But Music waves eternal wands,--
- Enchantress of the souls of mortals!
- So thought I,--but among us trod
- A man in blue, with legal baton,
- And scoffed the vagrant demigod,
- And pushed him from the step I sat on.
- Doubting I mused upon the cry,
- "Great Pan is dead!"--and all the people
- Went on their ways:--and clear and high
- The quarter sounded from the steeple.
- Edmund Clarence Stedman

Poets' Corner .
H O M E .
E-mail