Astrophel and Other Poems/An Autumn Vision
AN AUTUMN VISION.
October 31, 1889.
Ζεφύρου γίγαντος αὔρᾳ
I.
October on earth?
Can the year, when his heart is fulfilled with desire of
the days of his mirth,
Redeem them, recall, or remember?
For a memory recalling the rapture of earth, and
redeeming the sky,
Shines down from the heights to the depths: will the
watchword of dawn be July
When to-morrow acclaims November?
The stern salutation of sorrow to death or repentance to
shame
Was all that the season was wont to accord her of grace
or acclaim;
No lightnings of love and of laughter.
But here, in the laugh of the loud west wind from
around and above,
In the flash of the waters beneath him, what sound or
what light but of love
Rings round him or leaps forth after?
II.
that blow,
Wind whose might in fight was England's on her
mightiest warrior day,
South-west wind, whose breath for her was life, and fire
to scourge her foe,
Steel to smite and death to drive him down an
unreturning way,
Well-beloved and welcome, sounding all the clarions of
the sky,
Rolling all the marshalled waters toward the charge
that storms the shore,
We receive, acclaim, salute thee, we who live and dream
and die,
As the mightiest mouth of song that ever spake
acclaimed of yore.
We that live as they that perish praise thee, lord of
cloud and wave,
Wind of winds, clothed on with darkness whence as
lightning light comes forth,
We that know thee strong to guard and smite, to scatter
and to save,
We to whom the south-west wind is dear as Athens
held the north.
He for her waged war as thou for us against all powers
defiant,
Fleets full-fraught with storm from Persia, laden deep
with death from Spain:
Thee the giant god of song and battle hailed as god and
giant,
Yet not his but ours the land is whence thy praise
should ring and rain;
Rain as rapture shed from song, and ring as trumpets
blown for battle,
Sound and sing before thee, loud and glad as leaps
and sinks the sea:
Yea, the sea's white steeds are curbed and spurred of
thee, and pent as cattle,
Yet they laugh with love and pride to live, subdued
not save of thee.
Ears that hear thee hear in heaven the sound of
widening wings gigantic,
Eyes that see the cloud-lift westward see thy
darkening brows divine;
Wings whose measure is the limit of the limitless
Atlantic,
Brows that bend, and bid the sovereign sea submit
her soul to thine.
III.
Lord of storm, that a storm-bow shone
Higher than sweeps thy sublime dark wing,
Fair as dawn is and sweet like spring?
Never dawn in the deep wide east
Spread so splendid and strange a feast,
Whence the soul as it drank and fed
Felt such rapture of wonder shed.
Never spring in the wild wood's heart
Felt such flowers at her footfall start,
Born of earth, as arose on sight
Born of heaven and of storm and light.
Stern and sullen, the grey grim sea
Swelled and strove as in toils, though free,
Free as heaven, and as heaven sublime,
Clear as heaven of the toils of time.
IV.
sky and the sea,
Sprang from the darkness alive as a vision of life to be
Glory triune and transcendent of colour afar and afire,
Arching and darkening the darkness with light as of
dream or desire.
Heaven, in the depth of its height, shone wistful and
wan from above:
Earth from beneath, and the sea, shone stricken and
breathless with love.
As a shadow may shine, so shone they; as ghosts of the
viewless blest,
That sleep hath sight of alive in a rapture of sunbright
rest,
The green earth glowed and the grey sky gleamed for a
wondrous while;
And the storm's full frown was crossed by the light of its
own deep smile.
As the darkness of thought and of passion is touched by
the light that gives
Life deathless as love from the depth of a spirit that sees
and lives,
From the soul of a seer and a singer, wherein as a scroll
unfurled
Lies open the scripture of light and of darkness, the
word of the world,
So, shapeless and measureless, lurid as anguish and
haggard as crime,
Pale as the front of oblivion and dark as the heart of
time,
The wild wan heaven at its height was assailed and
subdued and made
More fair than the skies that know not of storm and
endure not shade.
The grim sea-swell, grey, sleepless, and sad as a soul
estranged,
Shone, smiled, took heart, and was glad of its wrath:
and the world's face changed.
V.
Even to heaven's transcendent height,
Clothed with massive cloud, and seeming
All one fortress reared of night,
Down to where the deep sea, dreaming
Angry dreams, lay dark and white,
White as death and dark as fate,
Heaving with the strong wind's weight,
Sad with stormy pride of state,
One full rainbow shone elate.
Up from inmost memory's dwelling
Where the light of life abides,
Where the past finds tongue, foretelling
Time that comes and grace that guides,
Power that saves and sways, compelling
Souls that ebb and flow like tides,
Shone or seemed to shine and swim
Through the cloud-surf great and grim,
Thought's live surge, the soul of him
By whose light the sun looks dim.
In what synod were they sitting,
All the gods and lords of time,
Whence they watched as fen-fires flitting
Years and names of men sublime,
When their counsels found it fitting
One should stand where none might climb--
None of man begotten, none
Born of men beneath the sun
Till the race of time be run,
Save this heaven-enfranchised one?
With what rapture of creation
Was the soul supernal thrilled,
With what pride of adoration
Was the world's heart fired and filled,
Heaved in heavenward exaltation
Higher than hopes or dreams might build,
Grave with awe not known while he
Was not, mad with glorious glee
As the sun-saluted sea,
When his hour bade Shakespeare be?
VI.
The sea beheld his likeness set in heaven.
The shadow of his spirit full in sight
Shone: for the shadow of that soul is light.
Nor heaven alone bore witness: earth avowed
Him present, and acclaimed of storm aloud.
From the arching sky to the ageless hills and sea
The whole world, visible, audible, was he:
Each part of all that wove that wondrous whole
The raiment of the presence of his soul.
The sun that smote and kissed the dark to death
Spake, smiled, and strove, like song's triumphant breath;
The soundless cloud whose thunderous heart was dumb
Swelled, lowered, and shrank to feel its conqueror come.
Yet high from heaven its empire vast and vain
Frowned, and renounced not night's reluctant reign.
The serpentine swift sounds and shapes wherein
The stainless sea mocks earth and death and sin,
Crawls dark as craft, or flashes keen as hate,
Subdued and insubmissive, strong like fate
And weak like man, bore wrathful witness yet
That storms and sins are more than suns that set;
That evil everlasting, girt for strife
Eternal, wars with hope as death with life.
The dark sharp shifting wind that bade the waves
Falter, lose heart, bow down like foes made slaves,
And waxed within more bitter as they bowed,
Baffling the sea, swallowing the sun with cloud,
Devouring fast as fire on earth devours
And hungering hard as frost that feeds on flowers,
Clothed round with fog that reeked as fume from hell,
And darkening with its miscreative spell
Light, glad and keen and splendid as the sword
Whose heft had known Othello's hand its lord,
Spake all the soul that hell drew back to greet
And felt its fire shrink shuddering from his feet.
Far off the darkness darkened, and recoiled,
And neared again, and triumphed: and the coiled
Colourless cloud and sea discoloured grew
Conscious of horror huge as heaven, and knew
Where Goneril's soul made chill and foul the mist,
And all the leprous life in Regan hissed.
Fierce homeless ghosts, rejected of the pit,
From hell to hell of storm fear watched them flit.
About them and before, the dull grey gloom
Shuddered, and heaven seemed hateful as the tomb
That shrinks from resurrection; and from out
That sullen hell which girt their shades about
The nether soul that lurks and lowers within
Man, made of dust and fire and shame and sin,
Breathed: all the cloud that felt it breathe and blight
Was blue as plague or black as thunderous night.
Elect of hell, the children of his hate
Thronged, as to storm sweet heaven's triumphal gate.
The terror of his giving rose and shone
Imminent: life had put its likeness on.
But higher than all its horrent height of shade
Shone sovereign, seen by light itself had made,
Above the woes of all the world, above
Life, sin, and death, his myriad-minded love.
From landward heights whereon the radiance leant
Full-fraught from heaven, intense and imminent,
To depths wherein the seething strengths of cloud
Scarce matched the wrath of waves whereon they bowed,
From homeborn pride and kindling love of home
To the outer skies and seas of fire and foam,
From splendour soft as dew that sundawn thrills
To gloom that shudders round the world it fills,
From midnights murmuring round Titania's ear
To midnights maddening round the rage of Lear,
The wonder woven of storm and sun became
One with the light that lightens from his name.
The music moving on the sea that felt
The storm-wind even as snows of springtide melt
Was blithe as Ariel's hand or voice might make
And bid all grief die gladly for its sake.
And there the soul alive in ear and eye
That watched the wonders of an hour pass by
Saw brighter than all stars that heaven inspheres
The silent splendour of Cordelia's tears,
Felt in the whispers of the quickening wind
The radiance of the laugh of Rosalind,
And heard, in sounds that melt the souls of men
With love of love, the tune of Imogen.
VII.
slay the divine south-west,
And the darkness is less than the light that it darkens,
and dies in reluctant rest.
It hovers and hangs on the labouring and trembling
ascent of the dawn from the deep,
Till the sun's eye quicken the world and the waters, and
smite it again into sleep.
Night, holy and starry, the fostress of souls, with the
fragrance of heaven in her breath,
Subdues with the sense of her godhead the forces and
mysteries of sorrow and death.
Eternal as dawn's is the comfort she gives: but the mist
that beleaguers and slays
Comes, passes, and is not: the strength of it withers,
appalled or assuaged by the day's.
Faith, haggard as Fear that had borne her, and dark as
the sire that begat her, Despair,
Held rule on the soul of the world and the song of it
saddening through ages that were;
Dim centuries that darkened and brightened and darkened
again, and the soul of their song
Was great as their grief, and sublime as their suffering,
and strong as their sorrows were strong.
It knew not, it saw not, but shadows triune, and evoked
by the strength of their spell
Dark hell, and the mountain of anguish, and heaven that
was hollower and harder than hell.
These are not: the womb of the darkness that bare them
rejects them, and knows them no more:
Thought, fettered in misery and iron, revives in the light
that it lived in of yore.
For the soul that is wisdom and freedom, the spirit of
England redeemed from her past,
Speaks life through the lips of the master and lord of her
children, the first and the last.
Thought, touched by his hand and redeemed by his
breath, sees, hears, and accepts from above
The limitless lightnings of vision and passion, the
measureless music of love.