Complete poems of S. Weir Mitchell [electronic text]
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- Title
- Complete poems of S. Weir Mitchell [electronic text]
- Author
- Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914
- Publication
- New York: The Century Co.
- 1914
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAP5347.0001.001
- Cite this Item
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"Complete poems of S. Weir Mitchell [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAP5347.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 24, 2025.
Pages
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THE MOTHER
"I will incline mine ear to the parable, and show my darkspeech upon the harp."
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OF DEATH AND OF ONE WHO FELL ON THE WAY
DEATH'S but one more to-morrow. Thou art gray With many a death of many a yesterday. O yearning heart that lacked the athlete's force And, stumbling, fell upon the beaten course, And looked, and saw with ever glazing eyes Some lower soul that seemed to win the prize! Lo, Death, the just, who comes to all alike, Life's sorry scales of right anew shall strike. Forth, through the night, on unknown shores to win The peace of God unstirred by sense of sin! There love without desire shall, like a mist At evening precious to the drooping flower, Possess thy soul in ownership, and kissed By viewless lips, whose touch shall be a dower Of genius and of winged serenity,Page 268
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OF THE REMEMBERED DEAD
THERE is no moment when our dead lose power; Unsignalled, unannounced they visit us. Who calleth them! know not. Sorrowful, They haunt reproachfully some venal hour In days of joy, or when the world is near, And for a moment scourge with memories The money-changers of the temple-soul. In the dim space between two gulfs of sleep, Or in the stillness of the lonely shore, They rise for balm or torment, sweet or sad, And most are mine where, in the kindly woods, Beside the childlike joy of summer streams, The stately sweetness of the pine hath power To call their kindred comforting anew. Use well thy dead. They come to ask of thee What thou hast done with all this buried love, The seed of purer life? Or has it fallen unused In stony ways and brought thy life no gain? Wilt thou with gladness in another world Say it has grown to forms of duty done And ruled thee with a conscience not thine own? Another world! How shall we find our dead? What forceful law shall bring us face to face? Another world! What yearnings there shall guide? Will love souls twinned of love bring near again? And that one common bond of duty held This living and that dead, when life was theirs? Or shall some stronger soul, in life revered, Bring both to touch, with nature's certainty,Page 270
E. D. M.
THERE is a heart I knew in other days, Not ever far from any one day's thought; One pure as are the purest. All the years Of battle or of peace, of joy or grief, Take him no further from me. Oftentimes, When the sweet tenderness of some glad girl Disturbs with tears, full suddenly I know It is because one memory ever dear Is matched a moment with its living kin. Or when at hearing of some gallant deed My throat fills, and I may not dare to say The quick praise in me, then I know, alas! 'T is by this dear dead nobleness my soul is stirred. He lived, he loved, he died. Brief epitaph! What hour of duty in the long grim wards Poisoned his life, I know not. Painfully He sickened, yearning for the strife of War That went its thunderous way unhelped of him; And then he died. A little duty done; A little love for many, much for me, And that was all beneath this earthly sun.Page 271
PAINED UNTO DEATH
E. K. M.
ONE life I knew was a psalm, a terrible psalm of pain, Dark with disaster of torment, body and brain Racked as if God were not, and hope a dream Some demon wrought to bid this soul blaspheme All life's remembered sweetness. "Peace, be still," I hear her spirit whisper. "His the will That from some unseen bow of purpose sped Thy sorrow and my torture." God of dread! The long sad years that justify the dead, The long sad years at last interpreted: Serene as clouds that over stormy seas At sunset rise with mystery of increase, One with the passionate deep that gave them birth, Her gentled spirit rose on wings of peace, And was and was not of this under earth.THE WHOLE CREATION GROANETH
ART glad with the gladness of youth in thy veins,In thy hands, for the spending, earth's joy and its gains? Lo! winged with storm shadows the torturers come, And to-night, or to-morrow, thy lips shall be dumb, Thy hands wet with pain-thrills, thy nerves, that were strung To fineness of sense by earth's pleasure, be wrungPage 272
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IN THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW
THE CENTURION
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A CANTICLE OF TIME
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LINCOLN
CHAINED by stern duty to the rock of State, His spirit armed in mail of rugged mirth, Ever above, though ever near to earth, Yet felt his heart the cruel tongues that sate Base appetites, and foul with slander, wait Till the keen lightnings bring the awful hour When wounds and suffering shall give them power. Most was he like to Luther, gay and great, Solemn and mirthful, strong of heart and limb. Tender and simple too; he was so near To all things human that he cast out fear, And, ever simpler, like a little child, Lived in unconscious nearness unto Him Who always on earth's little ones hath smiled.Page 280
COLERIDGE AT CHAMOUNY
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TENNYSON
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CERVANTES
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OF A POET
HERNDON
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THE TOMBS OF THE REGICIDES
LUDLOW AND BROUGHTON
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KEARSARGE
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HOW THE CUMBERLAND WENT DOWN
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MY CASTLES IN SPAIN
Ho, joyous friend with beard of brown! A half-hour back 't was gray; A half-hour back you wore a frown, But now the world looks gay. For here the mirror's courtly grace Cheats you with a youthful face, And here the poet clock of time Each happy minute counts in rhyme; And here the roses never die, And "Yes" is here Love's sole reply. Gladder land can no man gain Than my mystic realm of Spain.Page 291
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DREAMLAND
Up Anchor! Up anchor! Set sail and away! The ventures of dreamland:Are thine for a day. Yo, heave ho! Aloft and alow Elf sailors are singing, Yo, heave ho! The breeze that is blowing So sturdily strong Shall fill up thy sailWith the breath of a song. A fay at the mast-head Keeps watch o'er the sea; Blown amber of tresses Thy banner shall be; Thy freight the lost laughterPage 295
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THE QUAKER LADY
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THE QUAKER GRAVEYARD
DOMINIQUE DE GOURGUES
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THE WRECK OF THE EMMELINE
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A PSALM OF THE WATERS
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EVENING, AFTER A STORM ON THE RISTIGOUCHE RIVER
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RAIN IN CAMP
THE camp-fire smoulders and will not burn, And a sulky smoke from the blackened logs Lazily swirls through the dank wood caves; And the laden leaves with a quick relief Let fall their loads, as the pool beyond Leaps'neath the thin gray lash of the rain,And is builded thick with silver bells. But I lie on my back in vague despair, Trying it over thrice and again, To see if my words will say the thing. But the sodden moss, and the wet black wood, And the shining curves of the dancing leaves, The drip and drop, and tumble and patter, The humming roar in the sturdy pines, Alas, shall there no man paint or tell.ELK COUNTY
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A CAMP IN THREE LIGHTS
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LAKE NIPIGON
HIGH-SHOULDERED and ruddy and sturdy,Like droves of pre-Adanite monsters, The vast mounded rocks of red basalt Lie basking round Nipigon's waters; And still lies the lake, as if fearing To trouble their centuried slumber; And heavy o'er lake and in heaven A dim veil of smoke tells of forests Ablaze in the far lonely Northland: And over us, blood-red and sullen, The sun shines on gray-shrouded islands, And under us, blood-red and sullen!The sun in the dark umber water Looks up at the gray, murky heaven, While one lonely loon on the water Is wailing his mate, and beside us Two shaggy-haired Chippewa children In silence watch sadly the white man.EVENING STORM—NIPIGON
UPON the beach, with low, quick, mournful sob, The weary waters shudder to our feet; And far beyond the sunset's golden light, Forever brighter in its lessening span, Shares not the sadness of yon dark wood-wall,Page 323
NOONDAY WOODS—NIPIGON
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AFTER SUNSET—LAKE WEELOKENE-BAKOK
AT twilight Azescohos standeth With domes that are builded of color: Its deep-wrinkled strata and boulders, Its sombre-leaved greenness of noonday, Fade, lost in the blue misty splendor That seems like the soul of a color; While far, far away to the eastward One vast fading glory of scarlet— A color that seems as if living— Possesses the sky like a passion, And higher and higher in heaven Fades out in the soft bluish greenness That climbs to the zenith above us. Below, far below, as if thinking, At rest lies the sensitive lake; and Like one who sings but to her own heart Such thoughts as a loving lip whispers, Thus deep in the waters are pictured The beauty of sunset and hillside. For the blue that was blue on the mountain, Seen deep in the heart of the water, Hath the touch of some blessing upon it,—Some strangeness of purity in it, Like color that shall be in heaven. This water-held vision of sunset, Ablaze in the depths of the darkness, Is it but for the sight? Canst not hear it, This prophet of color, to tell usPage 326
THE ROMAN CAMPAGNA
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THE GRAVE OF KEATS
"Here lies one whose name was writ in water."
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ROMA
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VENICE
I AM Venezia, that Sad Magdalen, Who with her lovers' arms the turbaned East Smote, and through lusty centuries of gain Lived a wild queen of battle and of feast. I netted, in gold meshes of my hair, The great of soul; painter and poet, priest, Bent at my will with picture, song, and prayer, And ever love of me their fame increased, Till I, queen, became the slave of slaves, And, like the ghost-kings of the Urnbrian plain, Saw from my centuries torn, as from their graves,Page 332
VENICE TO ITALY
O ITALY, my fateful mistress-land, That, like Delilah, won with deathful bliss Each conquering foe who wooed thy wanton kiss, And sheared thy lovers' strength with certain hand, And gave them to Philistia's bonds of vice; Smiling to see the strong limbs waste away, The manly vigor crippled by decay, Usurious years exact the minute's price. Ah! when my great were greatest, ever glad, I thanked them with the hope of nobler deeds. Statesman and poet, painter, sculptor, knight,— These my dear lovers were ere days grew sad, And them I taught how mightily exceeds All other love the love that holds God's light.THE DECAY OF VENICE
THE glowing pageant of my story lies, A shaft of light, across the stormy years, When, 'mid the agony of blood and tears, Or pope or kaizer won the mournful prize,Page 333
PISA: THE DUOMO
Lo, this is like a song writ long ago, Born of the easy strength of simpler days, Filled with the life of man, his joy, his praise, Marriage and childhood, love, and sin, and woe, Defeat and victory, and all men know Of passionate remorses, and the stays That help the weary on life's rugged ways. A dreaming seraph felt this beauty grow In sleep's pure hour, and with joy grown bold Set the fair crystal in the thought of man; And Time, with antique tints of ivory wan, And gentle industries of rain and light, Its stones rejoiced, and o'er them crumbled gold Won from the boundaries of day and night.Page 334
THE VESTAL'S DREAM
AH, Venus, white-limbed mother of delight, Why shouldst thou tease her with a dream so dear?Winged tenderness of kisses, hovering near, Her gentle longings cheat. Forbidden sight Of eager eyes doth through the virgin night Perplex her innocence with cherished fear. O cruel thou, with sweets to ripen here.In wintry cloisters what can know but blight. Wilt leave her now to scorn? The lictors' blows To-morrow shall be merciless. The light Dies on the altar! Nay, swift through the night, Comes pitiful the queen of young desire, That reddened in a dream this chaste white rose, And lights with silver torch the fallen fire.AFTER RUYSDAEL
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AFTER ALBERT CUYP
A SUNSET silence holds the patient land; Against the sun the stolid cattle stand; Framed hazy, in the gold that slips Between the sails of lazy ships, And floods with level, yellow light The broad, green meadow grasses bright.Page 336
NEAR AMSTERDAM
AFTER ALBERT CUYP
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AFTER TENIERS
MILAN
DA VINCI'S CHRIST
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BRUGES: QUAI DES AUGUSTINS
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THE WAVES AT MIDNIGHT
THE CLIFFS, NEWPORT
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THE RISING TIDE
EVENING BY THE SEA
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BEAVER-TAIL ROCKS
CANONICUT
FARE forth my soul, fare forth, and take thine own; The silver morning and the golden eve Wait, as the virgins waited to receive The bridegroom and the bride, with roses strown; Fare forth and lift her veil,—the bride is joy alone! To thee the friendly hours with her shall bring The changeless trust that bird and poet sing; Her dower to-day shall be the asters sown On breezy uplands; hers the vigor brought Upon the north wind's wing, and hers for thee A stately heritage of land and sea, And all that nature hath, and all the great have thought, While low she whispers like a sea-born shell Things that thy love may hear but never tell.Page 343
THE CARRY
NIPIGON
BLUE is the sky overhead, Blue with the northland's pallor, Never a cloud in sight, Naught but the moon's gray sickle; And ever around me, gray, Ashes, and rock, and lichen. Far as the sick eye searches Ghastly trunks, that were trees once, Up to their bony branches Carry the gray of ruin. Lo! where across the mountain Swept the scythe of the wind-fall, Moss of a century's making Lies on this death-swath lonely, Where in grim heaps the wood sachems, Like to the strange dead of battle, Stay, with their limbs ever rigid Set in the doom-hour of anguish. Far and away o'er this waste land Wanders a trail through gray boulders, Brown to the distant horizon.Page 344
IDLENESS
THERE is no dearer lover of lost hours Than I. I can be idler than the idlest flowers; More idly lie Than noonday lilies languidly afloat, And water pillowed in a windless moat. And I can be Stiller than some gray stone That hath no motion known. It seems to me That my still idleness doth make my own All magic gifts of joy's simplicity.THE LOST PHILOPENA
TO M. G. M.
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GOOD-NIGHT
COME IN
"COME in." I stand, and know in thought The honest kiss, the waiting word, The love with friendship interwrought, The face serene by welcome stirred.Page 346
LOSS
LIFE may moult many feathers, yet delight To soar and circle in a heaven of joy; The pinion robbed must learn more swift employ, Till the thinned feathers end our eager flight.A GRAVEYARD
As beats the unrestful sea some ice-clad isle Set in the sorrowful night of arctic seas, Some lorn domain of endless silences, So, echoless, unanswered, falleth here; The great voiced city's roar of fretful life.OCTOBER
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SEPTEMBER
SIR GOLDENROD stands by and grieves Where Queen September goeth by: Her viewless feet disturb the leaves, And with her south the thrushes fly, Or loiter 'mid the rustling sheaves, And search and fail, and wonder why. The burgher cat-tails stiffly bow Beside the marsh. The asters cast Their purple coronets, and below The brown ferns shiver in the blast, And all the fretted pool aglow Repeats the cold, clear, yellow sky. The dear, loved summer days are past, And tranquil goes the Queen to die.YOU AND I
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THE CHRIST OF THE SNOWS
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ST. CHRISTOPHER
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LINES TO A DESERTED STUDY
HUSH! Feel ye not around us teem The shapes that haunted Goethe's dream? When lifted genius mused apart, And taste inspired the soul of art; Young first Love, coy with trembling wings, And Hope, the lark that soaring sings, And boyhood friendships prone to fade Through pleasant zones of sun and shade; With many a phantom born of youth, The trust in honor, faith, and truth That fails in after years; The perfect pearls of life's young dream Dissolved in manhood's tears. Through Time's swift loom our joys and griefs In braided strands together run; To weave about this world of ours Wild tapestries of shade and sun. And seems it not as if to-night, Dear, dusty, many-memoried room, Our souls had lost the threads of light, And like the eve kept gathering gloom? Ay, and for one of us the hour Must have, methinks, a double power, As backwards turns his saddened look, To view again those many scenes, When life was like an uncut book, And Joy was in her rosy teens, Yes, even we who later knew The home of friendship and of taste,Page 354
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AN OLD MAN TO AN OLD MADEIRA
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ADAM
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TO THE FORGET-ME-NOTS
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TO A MAGNOLIA FLOWER
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ON A BOY'S FIRST READING OF THE PLAY OF "KING HENRY THE FIFTH"
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GUIDARELLO GUIDARELLI
I
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II
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III
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A WAR SONG OF TYROL
(1792-1858)
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THE "TEXAS"
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THE SEA-GULL
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EGYPT
I SAW two vultures, gray they were and gorged: One on a mosque sat high, asleep he seemed, Claw-stayed within the silver crescent's curve; Not far away, another, gray as he, As full content and somnolent with food, Clutched with instinctive grip the golden cross High on the church an alien creed had built. Yon in the museum mighty Rameses sleeps, For some new childhood swaddled like a babe. Osiris and Jehovah, Allah, Christ, This land hath known, and, in the dawn of time, The brute-god-creature crouching in the sand, Ere Rameses worshipped and ere Seti died. How much of truth to each new faith He gave Who is the very father of all creeds,Page 372
GIBRALTAR AT DAWN
UP and over the sea we came, And saw the dayspring leap to flame. Full in face Gibraltar lay, Crouching, lion-like, at bay, Stern and still and battle-scarred, Grimly keeping watch and ward. Hark, and hear the morning gun Salute time's admiral, the sun, While the bleak old storied keep, That hath never known to sleep, Golden 'neath the morning lies, Sentinelled with memories, Heard when, rolling from afar, The hoarse waves thunder, "Trafalgar!"Page 373
STORM-WAVES AND FOG ON DORR'S POINT, BAR HARBOR
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THE BIRTHDAY OF WASHINGTON
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FLORENCE
WHICH?
Birth-day or Earth-dayWhich the true mirth-day? Earth-day or birth-day, Which the well-worth day?JEKYL ISLAND
INDIAN SUMMER
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FRIENDSHIP
No wail of grief can equal answer win: Love's faltering echo may but ill express The grief for grief, nor more than faintly mock The primal cry of some too vast distress. Or is it for fair company of joy We ask an equal echo from the heart? A certain loneliness is ever ours, And friendship mourns her still imperfect art.LOVE
"For I have always loved you for many reasons and in many ways."
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INNOGEN
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PRAYER
THE ANGELS OF PRAYER
YE to whom my prayer is given, Gentle couriers of heaven, Sailing through the world of space 'Neath the sun of Mary's face, To the joy of Mary's grace, Let it seem a little child, Such as came when Jesu smiled.A CHILD'S PRAYER
HOLY MOTHER! Holy Mother! In the dark I fear. Light me with thy shining eyes, Be thou ever near.Page 382
LINES GIVEN TO M. AT CHRISTMAS
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THE PURE OF HEART
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THE COMFORT OF THE HILLS
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AN ODE OF BATTLES
GETTYSBURG AND SANTIAGO
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Notes
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1.1
This monumental recumbent statue is now in the museum at Ravenna.
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1.2
Here the Tyrolese defeated Marshal Lefebvre and the Saxon auxiliaries of France.
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1.3
Except the last two lines, which I failed to capture, the rest of these verses I composed while asleep. I have many times seemed to make verses in sleep; only thrice could I recall them on waking. The four lines called "Which" were also made in sleep. The psychological interest of this sleep product may excuse this personal statement.