To the end of the trail / Richard Hovey [electronic text]

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Title
To the end of the trail / Richard Hovey [electronic text]
Author
Hovey, Richard, 1864-1900.
Publication
New York: Duffield & Company
1908
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAH7960.0001.001
Cite this Item
"To the end of the trail / Richard Hovey [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAH7960.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 17, 2024.

Pages

Page 131

VI

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Page 133

PARTING

GONE, and I spoke no word to bid her stay! Gone, and I sit benumbed and scarce can rise; — Gone with the light of new love in her eyes, The splendid promise of the fervent day. She loves me, Ocean, loves me! And I may Not lisp the whisper of my great surprise, Save to the waves and pebbles and the skies And to the sea-gulls circling in the spray. She loves me! Till she went I did not know Her soul. This is a mystery which no art Can picture and no wisdom understand. And she is gone and I beheld her go, With so much awe at sight of her pure heart I dared not kiss the fingers of her hand.

KRONOS

As one of those huge monsters of the sky, Fierce with the flame of fiery floating hair, Falls from the zenith through the upper air, Threatening the planets from their paths on high, Jarring creation from its harmony, Spreading on earth destruction and despair, Affrighting men to temples and vain prayer, So from the summit of his majesty

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He falls, and heaven is shaken as flame. Zeus reigns, Usurping; and no matter what is left — How smooth or tangled grows his god-life's weft — With how swift footing or how slow the years Speed on, for him forever there remains A thunder and a chaos in the spheres.
1883.

TO PROF. C. F. RICHARDSON

(For the dedication of a book.)
SUCH as the seashore gathers from the sea — Shells whose glad opal sunlight makes more glad, And dead men's bones by bitter seaweed clad — Teacher and friend, these songs I send to thee. Gay things and ghastly mingled, seem to me Here are alike; the merry and the sad, The trivial and tragic, good and bad, For so I find the ways of life to be. Evil and good are woven upon the loom Of fate in such inextricable wise That no man may be bold to judge and say, "This thing is good, that evil," till the day When God shall blazon on regenerate skies The justice of His pardon and His doom.

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A YOUTHFUL POET TO HIS CRITICS

METHINKS I hear those dull men murmuring on: "Not half bad, — really, rather melodious, —But then he sighs too much, is ominous, All minor-keyed, the pathos overdrawn. There's woe enough i' the world" —this with a yawn —"Why must our songs be likewise dolorous? No nightingales! The lark's the bird for us!" Ah, my poor fellows, it is night. When dawn Clarions in the east and waits an answering word, Then shall you hear the loud-resounding lark, —Yea, Israfel, passioning like the Arabian bird Whose heart of flame bore fruit of ancient tales, Shall thrill the very seraphim to hark. But now — content you with the nightingales.
May, 1888.

DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI

GONE art thou, then, O mystical musician! Pure thoughted singer of these sinful years! No more shall dreams and doubts and hopes and fears Pass and re-pass before thy stricken vision;

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No more from thine high sorrowing position Shall fall thy song — irradiated tears; Alas! no more against our listening ears Shall new lays ring from thy lone lute Elysian. For unto thee at last has rest been given, Whether in sleep eternal by the shore
Of Time's wide ocean, or in song without Or break or flaw, by the gold bar of that heaven, From which the blessed Damosel leaned out, Sighing for thee in the sad days of yore.

TO SWINBURNE
I

POET! thou art to me a faery king Dwelling in some weird place of witchery, Some garden where unnumbered roses vie In color with the hollyhocks that spring On every side in scarlet wantoning And lilies 'neath the gaudier herbage lie And violets unclose their leaves near by While stately sunflowers guard each opening. And in that garden-realm magnificent I often see thee walking — stopping now To list to hollow murmurs, now to scent Some flower's subtile perfume, wherein pent, A rich, rare pleasance lies that none but thou And thy strange fellow-bard, the wind, can know.

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TO SWINBURNE
II

OFT, too, I see thee on the rocky shore, Worshiping all the infinitely strong Grand godhead that to ocean doth belong, Or prostrate with uncovered head before The sun, whom even Ocean doth adore, Who giveth speech to every poet's tongue, Who is the only king and god of song, From whom all bards receive their secret lore. For thou art brother of the elements; There is a spirit of kinship that compels Thy feet to stray in paths where nothing dwells Save the triune power that knows nor death nor birth But sways all nature in omnipotence — Sea, wind and sun, the gods who rule the earth.

PER ASPERA AD ASTRA

TO AMÉLIE RIVES.
THERE is no heart that sorrows not. The higher The path winds for our feet o'er shards and stones The sharper cuts the stinging wind that moans

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And wails for rage of unattained desire. They that are struggling in the lower mire, For all their sorrowing, never know the groans, The Mutius-agony, the dread monotones Of Golgotha, that whoso would aspire Must shudder with throughout earth's period. Crowned Poet! read God's message through the storm; "Yea, there shall pierce thine own heart, too, a sword; For Art, like Mary, handmaid of the Lord, Tears out of her own quivering flesh the form To clothe the unseen and living Word of God.
WASHINGTON, 1888.

A REMNANT REMAINETH

TO AMÉLIE REVES.
AMID this clamor of the silly throng Who boast that they have wrought true counterpart Of Nature's face — ah me, they miss her heart! — Who scoff at them that for God's music long And for the love of beauty suffer wrong,Who would turn Helicon into a mart And smite with Cromwell-stroke the throat of Art

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And slay with Judas-kiss the lips of Song, My heart leaps up when I behold afar A new hand stretched to take the torch of Truth, Which seer and saint pass down from age to youth To light the future Temple's inner shrines. Across the dusk I see and name a star; Pray God that Phosphor and not Hesper shines.
WASHINGTON, 1888.

MATTHEW ARNOLD

THERE was a poet in him. But his art Grew too faint hearted to withstand the strain And turmoil of the age. He sought to gain Peace only; all the passion of his heart He slew, that, a little space apart For quiet of his soul he might attain; And so the poet in him fell self-slain, Sang its own swan-song and was not. O heart! He has found a deeper peace than he pursued And his worn eyes at last behold the ways That open for man's limitless up-leaping; And God's voice softly wakes his poethoodAnew, as the Master bent of old to raise The dust that loved him, saying: "Not dead, but sleeping."

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