Ardours and Endurances - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Ardours and Endurances Part 7 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
III.--THANKSGIVING
Amazement fills my heart to-night, Amaze and awful fears; I am a s.h.i.+p that sees no light, But blindly onward steers.
Flung toward heaven's toppling rage, Sunk between steep and steep, A lost and wondrous fight I wage With the embattled deep.
I neither know nor care at length Where drives the storm about; Only I summon all my strength And swear to ride it out.
Yet give I thanks; despite these wars, My s.h.i.+p--though blindly blown, Long lost to sun or moon or stars-- Still stands up alone.
I need no trust in borrowed spars; My strength is yet my own.
IV.--ANNIHILATED
Upon the sweltering sea's enormous round, Asmoke, adazzle, brown and brown and gold, A hushed light falls....
Then clouds without a sound Darken the sea within their curtain's fold.
The sombre clouds through which the sick sun climbs Smoke slowly on. Below there is no breath.
The long black beach turns livid.
The sea chimes.
I taste the fulness of my spirit's death.
V.--SHUT OF NIGHT
The sea darkens. Waves roar and rush.
The wind rises. The last birds haste.
One star over eve's bitter flush Spills on the spouting waste.
Loud and louder the darkened sea.
The wind shrills on a monotone.
Sky and deep, wrecked confusedly, Travail and cry as one.
Long I look on the deepening sky, The chill star, the forlorn sea breaking; For what does my spirit cry?
For what is my heart so aching?
Is it home? but I have no home.
Is it tears? but I no more weep.
Is it love? love went by dumb.
Is it sleep? but I would not sleep.
Must I fare, then, in fear and fever On a journey become thrice far-- Whose sun has gone down for ever, Whose night brings no guiding star?
The wind roars, and an ashen beam Waving up shrinks away in haste.
The waves crash. The star's trickling gleam Travels the warring waste.
I look up. In the windy height The lone orb, serene and afar, Shakes with excess of her light....
Beauty, be thou my star!
VI.--THE FULL HEART
Alone on the sh.o.r.e in the pause of the night-time I stand and I hear the long wind blow light; I view the constellations quietly, quietly burning; I hear the wave fall in the hush of the night.
Long after I am dead, ended this bitter journey, Many another whose heart holds no light Shall your solemn sweetness, hush, awe, and comfort, O my companions, Wind, Waters, Stars, and Night.
NEAR GOLD CAP, 1916.
VII.--SONNET: OUR DEAD
They have not gone from us. O no! they are The inmost essence of each thing that is Perfect for us; they flame in every star; The trees are emerald with their presences.
They are not gone from us; they do not roam The flaw and turmoil of the lower deep, But have now made the whole wide world their home, And in its loveliness themselves they steep.
They fail not ever; theirs is the diurn Splendour of sunny hill and forest grave; In every rainbow's glittering drop they burn; They dazzle in the ma.s.sed clouds' architrave; They chant on every wind, and they return In the long roll of any deep blue wave.
VIII.--DELIVERANCE
Out of the Night! out of the Night I come: Free at last: the whole world is my home: I have lost self: I look not on myself again, But if I do I see a man among men.
Out of the Night! out of the Night, O Flesh: Soul I know not from Body within thy mesh: Accepting all that is, I cannot divide the same: I accept the smoke because I accept the flame.
Out of the Night! out of the Night, O Friends: O all my dead, think ye our friends.h.i.+p ends?
Harold, Kenneth, d.i.c.k, many hearts that were true, While I breathe breath, I am breathing you.
Out of the Night! out of the Night, O Power: Many a fight to be won, many an awful hour; Many an hour to wish death ere I go to death, Many an hour to bless breath ere I cease from breath.
Out of the Night! out of the Night, O Soul: Give thanks to the Night: Night and Day are the Whole.
I count mere life-breath nothing now I know Life's worth Lies all in spending! that known, love Life and Earth.
BOOK II
A FAUN'S HOLIDAY
TO MY BROTHER PHILIP NICHOLS
'_O Fantaisie, emporte-moi sur tes ailes pour desennuyer ma tristesse!_'