POEMS BY THE WAY
FROM THE UPLAND TO THE SEA
OF THE WOOING OF HALLBIORN THE STRONG
A STORY FROM THE LAND-SETTLING BOOK OF ICELAND, CHAPTER XXX.
ECHOES OF LOVE'S HOUSE
THE BURGHERS' BATTLE
HOPE DIETH: LOVE LIVETH
ERROR AND LOSS
THE HALL AND THE WOOD
THE DAY OF DAYS
TO THE MUSE OF THE NORTH
OF THE THREE SEEKERS
LOVE'S GLEANING-TIDE
THE MESSAGE OF THE MARCH WIND
A DEATH SONG
ICELAND FIRST SEEN
THE RAVEN AND THE KING'S DAUGHTER
SPRING'S BEDFELLOW
MEETING IN WINTER
THE TWO SIDES OF THE RIVER
LOVE FULFILLED
THE KING OF DENMARK'S SONS
ON THE EDGE OF THE WILDERNESS
A GARDEN BY THE SEA
MOTHER AND SON
THUNDER IN THE GARDEN
THE GOD OF THE POOR
LOVE'S REWARD
THE FOLK-MOTE BY THE RIVER
THE VOICE OF TOIL
GUNNAR'S HOWE ABOVE THE HOUSE AT LITHEND
THE DAY IS COMING
EARTH THE HEALER, EARTH THE KEEPER
ALL FOR THE CAUSE
PAIN AND TIME STRIVE NOT
DRAWING NEAR THE LIGHT
VERSES FOR PICTURES
FOR THE BRIAR ROSE
ANOTHER FOR THE BRIAR ROSE
THE WOODPECKER
THE LION
THE FOREST
POMONA
FLORA
THE ORCHARD
TAPESTRY TREES
THE FLOWERING ORCHARD
THE END OF MAY
THE HALF OF LIFE GONE
MINE AND THINE
THE LAY OF CHRISTINE
HILDEBRAND AND HELLELIL
THE SON'S SORROW
AGNES AND THE HILL-MAN
KNIGHT AAGEN AND MAIDEN ELSE
HAFBUR AND SIGNY
GOLDILOCKS AND GOLDILOCKS
LOVE IS ENOUGH
OR
THE FREEING OF PHARAMOND
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
| GILES, JOAN, his Wife, | Peasant-folk. | 
| THE EMPEROR. | |
| THE EMPRESS. | |
| THE MAYOR. | |
| A COUNCILLOR. | |
| MASTER OLIVER, King Pharamond's Foster-father. | |
| A NORTHERN LORD. | |
| KING PHARAMOND. | |
| AZALAIS, his Love. | |
| KING THEOBALD. | |
| HONORIUS, the Councillor. | |
| LOVE. | |
LOVE IS ENOUGH
ARGUMENT
This story, which is told by way of a morality set before an Emperor and Empress newly wedded, showeth of a King whom nothing but Love might satisfy, who left all to seek Love, and, having found it, found this also, that he had enough, though he lacked all else.
In the streets of a great town where the people are gathered together thronging to see the Emperor and Empress pass.
Look long, Joan, while I hold you so,
    For the silver trumpets come arow.
O the sweet sound! the glorious sight!
    O Giles, Giles, see this glittering Knight!
Nay 'tis the Marshalls'-sergeant, sweet—
    —Hold, neighbour, let me keep my feet!—
    There, now your head is up again;
    Thus held up have you aught of pain?
Nay, clear I see, and well at ease!
    God's body! what fair Kings be these?
The Emperor's chamberlains, behold
    Their silver shoes and staves of gold.
    Look, look! how like some heaven come down
    The maidens go with girded gown!
Yea, yea, and this last row of them
    Draw up their kirtles by the hem,
    And scatter roses e'en like those
    About my father's garden-close.
Ah! have I hurt you? See the girls
    Whose slim hands scatter very pearls.
Hold me fast, Giles! here comes one
    Whose raiment flashes down the sun.
O sweet mouth! O fair lids cast down!
    O white brow! O the crown, the crown!
How near! if nigher I might stand
    By one ell, I could touch his hand.
Look, Joan! if on this side she were
    Almost my hand might touch her hair.
Ah me! what is she thinking on?
Is he content now all is won?
And does she think as I thought, when
    Betwixt the dancing maids and men,
    Twixt the porch rose-boughs blossomed red
    I saw the roses on my bed?
Hath he such fear within his heart
    As I had, when the wind did part
    The jasmine-leaves, and there within
    The new-lit taper glimmered thin?
THE MUSIC
(As the EMPEROR and EMPRESS enter.)
The spears flashed by me, and the swords swept round,
    And in war's hopeless tangle was I bound,
    But straw and stubble were the cold points found,
    For still thy hands led down the weary way.
Through hall and street they led me as a queen,
    They looked to see me proud and cold of mien,
    I heeded not though all my tears were seen,
    For still I dreamed of thee throughout the day.
Wild over bow and bulwark swept the sea
    Unto the iron coast upon our lee,
    Like painted cloth its fury was to me,
    For still thy hands led down the weary way.
They spoke to me of war within the land,
    They bade me sign defiance and command;
    I heeded not though thy name left my hand,
    For still I dreamed of thee throughout the day.
But now that I am come, and side by side
    We go, and men cry gladly on the bride
    And tremble at the image of my pride,
    Where is thy hand to lead me down the way?
But now that thou art come, and heaven and earth
    Are laughing in the fulness of their mirth,
    A shame I knew not in my heart has birth—
    —Draw me through dreams unto the end of day!
Behold, behold, how weak my heart is grown
    Now all the heat of its desire is known!
    Pearl beyond price I fear to call mine own,
    Where is thy hand to lead me down the way?
Behold, behold, how little I may move!
    Think in thy heart how terrible is Love,
    O thou who know'st my soul as God above—
    —Draw me through dreams unto the end of day!
The stage for the play in another part of the street, and the people thronging all about.
Here, Joan, this is so good a place
    'Tis worth the scramble and the race!
    There is the Empress just sat down,
    Her white hands on her golden gown,
    While yet the Emperor stands to hear
    The welcome of the bald-head Mayor
    Unto the show; and you shall see
    The player-folk come in presently.
    The king of whom is e'en that one,
    Who wandering but a while agone
    Stumbled upon our harvest-home
    That August when you might not come.
    Betwixt the stubble and the grass
    Great mirth indeed he brought to pass.
    But liefer were I to have seen
    Your nimble feet tread down the green
    In threesome dance to pipe and fife.
Thou art a dear thing to my life,
    And nought good have I far to seek—
    But hearken! for the Mayor will speak.
Since your grace bids me speak without stint or sparing
    A thing little splendid I pray you to see:
    Early is the day yet, for we near the dawning
    Drew on chains dear-bought, and gowns done with gold;
    So may ye high ones hearken an hour
    A tale that our hearts hold worthy and good,
    Of Pharamond the Freed, who, a king feared and honoured,
    Fled away to find love from his crown and his folk.
    E'en as I tell of it somewhat I tremble
    Lest we, fearful of treason to the love that fulfils you,
    Should seem to make little of the love that ye give us,
    Of your lives full of glory, of the deeds that your lifetime
    Shall gleam with for ever when we are forgotten.
    Forgive it for the greatness of that Love who compels
    us.—
    Hark! in the minster-tower minish the joy-bells,
    And all men are hushed now these marvels to hear.
We thank your love, that sees our love indeed
    Toward you, toward Love, toward life of toil and need:
    We shall not falter though your poet sings
    Of all defeat, strewing the crowns of kings
    About the thorny ways where Love doth wend,
    Because we know us faithful to the end
    Toward you, toward Love, toward life of war and deed,
    And well we deem your tale shall help our need.
So many hours to pass before the sun
    Shall blush ere sleeping, and the day be done!
    How thinkest thou, my sweet, shall such a tale
    For lengthening or for shortening them avail?
Nay, dreamland has no clocks the wise ones say,
    And while our hands move at the break of day
    We dream of years: and I am dreaming still
    And need no change my cup of joy to fill:
    Let them say on, and I shall hear thy voice
    Telling the tale, and in its love rejoice.
THE MUSIC
(As the singers enter and stand before the curtain, the player-king and player-maiden in the midst.)
Lo you, my sweet, fair folk are one and all
    And with good grace their broidered robes do fall,
    And sweet they sing indeed: but he, the King,
    Look but a little how his fingers cling
    To her's, his love that shall be in the play—
    His love that hath been surely ere to-day:
    And see, her wide soft eyes cast down at whiles
    Are opened not to note the people's smiles
    But her love's lips, and dreamily they stare
    As though they sought the happy country, where
    They two shall be alone, and the world dead.
Most faithful eyes indeed look from the head
    The sun has burnt, and wind and rain has beat,
    Well may he find her slim brown fingers sweet.
    And he—methinks he trembles, lest he find
    That song of his not wholly to her mind.
    Note how his grey eyes look askance to see
    Her bosom heaving with the melody
    His heart loves well: rough with the wind and rain
    His cheek is, hollow with some ancient pain;
    The sun has burned and blanched his crispy hair,
    And over him hath swept a world of care
    And left him careless, rugged, and her own;
    Still fresh desired, still strange and new, though known.
His eyes seem dreaming of the mysteries
    Deep in the depths of her familiar eyes,
    Tormenting and alluring; does he dream,
    As I ofttime this morn, how they would seem
    Loved but unloving?—Nay the world's too sweet
    That we the ghost of such a pain should meet—
    Behold, she goes, and he too, turning round,
    Remembers that his love must yet be found,
    That he is King and loveless in this story
    Wrought long ago for some dead poet's glory.
Enter before the curtain LOVE crowned as a King.
All hail, my servants! tremble ye, my foes!
    A hope for these I have, a fear for those
    Hid in this tale of Pharamond the Freed.
    To-day, my Faithful, nought shall be your need
    Of tears compassionate:—although full oft
    The crown of love laid on my bosom soft
    Be woven of bitter death and deathless fame,
    Bethorned with woe, and fruited thick with shame.
    —This for the mighty of my courts I keep,
    Lest through the world there should be none to weep
    Except for sordid loss; and not to gain
    But satiate pleasure making mock of pain.
    —Yea, in the heaven from whence my dreams go forth
    Are stored the signs that make the world of worth:
    There is the wavering wall of mighty Troy
    About my Helen's hope and Paris' joy:
    There lying neath the fresh dyed mulberry-tree
    The sword and cloth of Pyramus I see:
    There is the number of the joyless days
    Wherein Medea won no love nor praise:
    There is the sand my Ariadne pressed;
    The footprints of the feet that knew no rest
    While o'er the sea forth went the fatal sign:
    The asp of Egypt, the Numidian wine,
    My Sigurd's sword, my Brynhild's fiery bed,
    The tale of years of Gudrun's drearihead,
    And Tristram's glaive, and Iseult's shriek are here,
    And cloister-gown of joyless Guenevere.
Save you, my Faithful! how your loving eyes
    Grow soft and gleam with all these memories!
    But on this day my crown is not of death:
    My fire-tipped arrows, and my kindling breath
    Are all the weapons I shall need to-day.
    Nor shall my tale in measured cadence play
    About the golden lyre of Gods long gone,
    Nor dim and doubtful 'twixt the ocean's moan
    Wail out about the Northern fiddle-bow,
    Stammering with pride or quivering shrill with woe.
    Rather caught up at hazard is the pipe
    That mixed with scent of roses over ripe,
    And murmur of the summer afternoon,
    May charm you somewhat with its wavering tune
    'Twixt joy and sadness: whatsoe'er it saith,
    I know at least there breathes through it my breath
OF PHARAMOND THE FREED
Scene: In the Kings Chamber of Audience.
MASTER OLIVER and many LORDS and COUNCILLORS.
Fair Master Oliver, thou who at all times
    Mayst open thy heart to our lord and master,
    Tell us what tidings thou hast to deliver;
    For our hearts are grown heavy, and where shall we turn to
    If thus the king's glory, our gain and salvation,
    Must go down the wind amid gloom and despairing?
Little may be looked for, fair lords, in my story,
    To lighten your hearts of the load lying on them.
    For nine days the king hath slept not an hour,
    And taketh no heed of soft words or beseeching.
    Yea, look you, my lords, if a body late dead
    In the lips and the cheeks should gain some little colour,
    And arise and wend forth with no change in the eyes,
    And wander about as if seeking its soul—
    Lo, e'en so sad is my lord and my master;
    Yea, e'en so far hath his soul drifted from us.
What say the leeches? Is all their skill left them?
Nay, they bade lead him to hunt and to tilting,
    To set him on high in the throne of his honour
    To judge heavy deeds: bade him handle the tiller,
    And drive through the sea with the wind at its wildest;
    All things he was wont to hold kingly and good.
    So we led out his steed and he straight leapt upon him
    With no word, and no looking to right nor to left,
    And into the forest we fared as aforetime:
    Fast on the king followed, and cheered without stinting
    The hounds to the strife till the bear stood at bay;
    Then there he alone by the beech-trees alighted;
    Barehanded, unarmoured, he handled the spear-shaft,
    And blew up the death on the horn of his father;
    Yet still in his eyes was no look of rejoicing,
    And no life in his lips; but I likened him rather
    To King Nimrod carved fair on the back of the high-seat
    When the candles are dying, and the high moon is streaming
    Through window and luffer white on the lone pavement
    Whence the guests are departed in the hall of the
    palace.—
    —Rode we home heavily, he with his rein loose,
    Feet hanging free from the stirrups, and staring
    At a clot of the bear's blood that stained his green
    kirtle;—
    Unkingly, unhappy, he rode his ways homeward.
Was this all ye tried, or have ye more tidings?
    For the wall tottereth not at first stroke of the ram.
Nay, we brought him a-board the Great Dragon one dawning,
    When the cold bay was flecked with the crests of white
    billows
    And the clouds lay alow on the earth and the sea;
    He looked not aloft as they hoisted the sail,
    But with hand on the tiller hallooed to the shipmen
    In a voice grown so strange, that it scarce had seemed
    stranger
    If from the ship Argo, in seemly wise woven
    On the guard-chamber hangings, some early grey dawning
    Great Jason had cried, and his golden locks wavered.
    Then e'en as the oars ran outboard, and dashed
    In the wind-scattered foam and the sails bellied out,
    His hand dropped from the tiller, and with feet all
    uncertain
    And dull eye he wended him down to the midship,
    And gazing about for the place of the gangway
    Made for the gate of the bulwark half open,
    And stood there and stared at the swallowing sea,
    Then turned, and uncertain went wandering back sternward,
    And sat down on the deck by the side of the helmsman,
    Wrapt in dreams of despair; so I bade them turn shoreward,
    And slowly he rose as the side grated stoutly
    'Gainst the stones of the quay and they cast forth the
    hawser.—
    Unkingly, unhappy, he went his ways homeward.
But by other ways yet had thy wisdom to travel;
    How else did ye work for the winning him peace?
We bade gather the knights for the goodliest tilting,
    There the ladies went lightly in glorious array;
    In the old arms we armed him whose dints well he knew
    That the night dew had dulled and the sea salt had sullied:
    On the old roan yet sturdy we set him astride;
    So he stretched forth his hand to lay hold of the spear
    Neither laughing nor frowning, as lightly his wont was
    When the knights are awaiting the voice of the trumpet.
    It awoke, and back beaten from barrier to barrier
    Was caught up by knights' cries, by the cry of the
    king.—
    —Such a cry as red Mars in the Council-room window
    May awake with some noon when the last horn is winded,
    And the bones of the world are dashed grinding together.
    So it seemed to my heart, and a horror came o'er me,
    As the spears met, and splinters flew high o'er the field,
    And I saw the king stay when his course was at swiftest,
    His horse straining hard on the bit, and he standing
    Stiff and stark in his stirrups, his spear held by the
    midmost,
    His helm cast a-back, his teeth set hard together;
    E'en as one might, who, riding to heaven, feels round him
    The devils unseen: then he raised up the spear
    As to cast it away, but therewith failed his fury,
    He dropped it, and faintly sank back in the saddle,
    And, turning his horse from the press and the turmoil,
    Came sighing to me, and sore grieving I took him
    And led him away, while the lists were fallen silent
    As a fight in a dream that the light breaketh
    through.—
    To the tune of the clinking of his fight-honoured armour
    Unkingly, unhappy, he went his ways homeward.
What thing worse than the worst in the budget yet lieth?
To the high court we brought him, and bade him to hearken
    The pleading of his people, and pass sentence on evil.
    His face changed with great pain, and his brow grew all
    furrowed,
    As a grim tale was told there of the griefs of the lowly;
    Till he took up the word, mid the trembling of tyrants,
    As his calm voice and cold wrought death on ill doers—
    —E'en so might King Minos in marble there carven
    Mid old dreaming of Crete give doom on the dead,
    When the world and its deeds are dead too and buried.—
    But lo, as I looked, his clenched hands were loosened,
    His lips grew all soft, and his eyes were beholding
    Strange things we beheld not about and above him.
    So he sat for a while, and then swept his robe round him
    And arose and departed, not heeding his people,
    The strange looks, the peering, the rustle and whisper;
    But or ever he gained the gate that gave streetward,
    Dull were his eyes grown, his feet were grown heavy,
    His lips crooned complaining, as onward he stumbled;—
    Unhappy, unkingly, he went his ways homeward.
Is all striving over then, fair Master Oliver?
All mine, lords, for ever! help who may help henceforth
    I am but helpless: too surely meseemeth
    He seeth me not, and knoweth no more
    Me that have loved him. Woe worth the while, Pharamond,
    That men should love aught, love always as I loved!
    Mother and sister and the sweetling that scorned me,
    The wind of the autumn-tide over them sweepeth,
    All are departed, but this one, the dear one—
    I should die or he died and be no more alone,
    But God's hatred hangs round me, and the life and the glory
    That grew with my waning life fade now before it,
    And leaving no pity depart through the void.
This is a sight full sorry to see
    These tears of an elder! But soft now, one cometh.
The feet of the king: will ye speak or begone?
I will speak at the least, whoever keeps silence,
    For well it may be that the voice of a stranger
    Shall break through his dreaming better than thine;
    And lo now a word in my mouth is a-coming,
    That the king well may hearken: how sayst thou, fair master,
    Whose name now I mind not, wilt thou have me essay it?
Try whatso thou wilt, things may not be worser. [Enter
    KING.
    Behold, how he cometh weighed down by his woe!
All hail, lord and master! wilt thou hearken a little
    These lords high in honour whose hearts are full heavy
    Because thy heart sickeneth and knoweth no joy?—
Ah, see you! all silent, his eyes set and dreary,
    His lips moving a little—how may I behold it?
May I speak, king? dost hearken? many matters I have
    To deal with or death. I have honoured thee duly
    Down in the north there; a great name I have held thee;
    Rough hand in the field, ready righter of wrong,
    Reckless of danger, but recking of pity.
    But now—is it false what the chapmen have told us,
    And are thy fair robes all thou hast of a king?
    Is it bragging and lies, that thou beardless and tender
    Weptst not when they brought thy slain father before thee,
    Trembledst not when the leaguer that lay round thy city
    Made a light for these windows, a noise for thy pillow?
    Is it lies what men told us of thy singing and laughter
    As thou layst in thy lair fled away from lost battle?
    Is it lies how ye met in the depths of the mountains,
    And a handful rushed down and made nought of an army?
    Those tales of your luck, like the tide at its turning,
    Trusty and sure howso slowly it cometh,
    Are they lies? Is it lies of wide lands in the world,
    How they sent thee great men to lie low at thy footstool
    In five years thenceforward, and thou still a youth?
    Are they lies, these fair tidings, or what see thy lords
    here—
    Some love-sick girl's brother caught up by that sickness,
    As one street beggar catches the pest from his neighbour?
What words are these of lies and love-sickness?
    Why am I lonely among all this brawling?
    O foster-father, is all faith departed
    That this hateful face should be staring upon me?
Lo, now thou awakest; so tell me in what wise
    I shall wend back again: set a word in my mouth
    To meet the folks' murmur, and give heart to the heavy;
    For there man speaks to man that thy measure is full,
    And thy five-years-old kingdom is falling asunder.
Yea, yea, a fair token thy sword were to send them;
    Thou dost well to draw it; (KING brandishes his sword over
    the
lord's head, as if to strike
    him): soft sound is its whistle;
    Strike then, O king, for my wars are well over,
    And dull is the way my feet tread to the grave!
Man, if ye have waked me, I bid you be wary
    Lest my sword yet should reach you; ye wot in your northland
    What hatred he winneth who waketh the shipman
    From the sweet rest of death mid the welter of waves;
    So with us may it fare; though I know thee full faithful,
    Bold in field and in council, most fit for a king.
    —Bear with me. I pray you that to none may be meted
    Such a measure of pain as my soul is oppressed with.
    Depart all for a little, till my spirit grows lighter,
    Then come ye with tidings, and hold we fair council,
    That my countries may know they have yet got a king.
Come, my foster-father, ere thy visage fade from me,
    Come with me mid the flowers some opening to find
    In the clouds that cling round me; if thou canst remember
    Thine old lovingkindness when I was a king.
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain LOVE clad as an image-maker.
How mighty and how fierce a king is here
    The stayer of falling folks, the bane of fear!
    Fair life he liveth, ruling passing well,
    Disdaining praise of Heaven and hate of Hell;
    And yet how goodly to us Great in Heaven
    Are such as he, the waning world that leaven!
    How well it were that such should never die!
    How well it were at least that memory
    Of such should live, as live their glorious deeds!
    —But which of all the Gods think ye it needs
    To shape the mist of Rumour's wavering breath
    Into a golden dream that fears no death?
    Red Mars belike?—since through his field is thrust
    The polished plough-share o'er the helmets' rust!—
    Apollo's beauty?—surely eld shall spare
    Smooth skin, and flashing eyes, and crispy hair!—
    Nay, Jove himself?—the pride that holds the low
    Apart, despised, to mighty tales must grow!—
    Or Pallas?—for the world that knoweth nought,
    By that great wisdom to the wicket brought,
    Clear through the tangle evermore shall see!
    —O Faithful, O Beloved, turn to ME!
    I am the Ancient of the Days that were
    I am the Newborn that To-day brings here,
    I am the Life of all that dieth not;
    Through me alone is sorrow unforgot.
My Faithful, knowing that this man should live,
    I from the cradle gifts to him did give
    Unmeet belike for rulers of the earth;
    As sorrowful yearning in the midst of mirth,
    Pity midst anger, hope midst scorn and hate.
    Languor midst labour, lest the day wax late,
    And all be wrong, and all be to begin.
    Through these indeed the eager life did win
    That was the very body to my soul;
    Yet, as the tide of battle back did roll
    Before his patience: as he toiled and grieved
    O'er fools and folly, was he not deceived,
    But ever knew the change was drawing nigh,
    And in my mirror gazed with steadfast eye.
    Still, O my Faithful, seemed his life so fair
    That all Olympus might have left him there
    Until to bitter strength that life was grown,
    And then have smiled to see him die alone,
    Had I not been.—— Ye know me; I have sent
    A pain to pierce his last coat of content:
    Now must he tear the armour from his breast
    And cast aside all things that men deem best,
    And single-hearted for his longing strive
    That he at last may save his soul alive.
How say ye then, Beloved? Ye have known
    The blossom of the seed these hands have sown;
    Shall this man starve in sorrow's thorny brake?
    Shall Love the faithful of his heart forsake?
In the King's Garden.
KING PHARAMOND, MASTER OLIVER.
In this quiet place canst thou speak, O my King,
    Where nought but the lilies may hearken our counsel?
What wouldst thou have of me? why came we hither?
Dear lord, thou wouldst speak of the woe that weighs on thee.
Wouldst thou bear me aback to the strife and the battle?
    Nay, hang up my banner: 'tis all passed and over!
Speak but a little, lord! have I not loved thee?
Yea,—thou art Oliver: I saw thee a-lying
    A long time ago with the blood on thy face,
    When my father wept o'er thee for thy faith and thy valour.
Years have passed over, but my faith hath not failed me;
    Spent is my might, but my love not departed.
    Shall not love help—yea, look long in my eyes!
    There is no more to see if thou sawest my heart.
Yea, thou art Oliver, full of all kindness!
    Have patience, for now is the cloud passing over—
    Have patience and hearken—yet shalt thou be shamed.
Thou shalt shine through thy shame as the sun through the
    haze
    When the world waiteth gladly the warm day a-coming:
    As great as thou seem'st now, I know thee for greater
    Than thy deeds done and told of: one day I shall know thee:
    Lying dead in my tomb I shall hear the world praising.
Stay thy praise—let me speak, lest all speech depart
    from me.
    —There is a place in the world, a great valley
    That seems a green plain from the brow of the mountains,
    But hath knolls and fair dales when adown there thou goest:
    There are homesteads therein with gardens about them,
    And fair herds of kine and grey sheep a-feeding,
    And willow-hung streams wend through deep grassy meadows,
    And a highway winds through them from the outer world coming:
    Girthed about is the vale by a grey wall of mountains,
    Rent apart in three places and tumbled together
    In old times of the world when the earth-fires flowed forth:
    And as you wend up these away from the valley
    You think of the sea and the great world it washes;
    But through two you may pass not, the shattered rocks shut them.
    And up through the third there windeth a highway,
    And its gorge is fulfilled by a black wood of yew-trees.
    And I know that beyond, though mine eyes have not seen it,
    A city of merchants beside the sea lieth.——
    I adjure thee, my fosterer, by the hand of my father,
    By thy faith without stain, by the days unforgotten,
    When I dwelt in thy house ere the troubles' beginning,
    By thy fair wife long dead and thy sword-smitten children,
    By thy life without blame and thy love without blemish,
    Tell me how, tell me when, that fair land I may come to!
    Hide it not for my help, for my honour, but tell me,
    Lest my time and thy time be lost days and confusion!
O many such lands!—O my master, what ails thee?
    Tell me again, for I may not remember.
    —I prayed God give thee speech, and lo God hath given
    it—
    May God give me death! if I dream not this evil.
Said I not when thou knew'st it, all courage should fail
    thee?
    But me—my heart fails not, I am Pharamond as ever.
    I shall seek and shall find—come help me, my fosterer!
    —Yet if thou shouldst ask for a sign from that country
    What have I to show thee—I plucked a blue milk-wort
    From amidst of the field where she wandered
    fair-footed—
    It was gone when I wakened—and once in my wallet
    I set some grey stones from the way through the forest—
    These were gone when I wakened—and once as I wandered
    A lock of white wool from a thorn-bush I gathered;
    It was gone when I wakened—the name of that
    country—
    Nay, how should I know it?—but ever meseemeth
    'Twas not in the southlands, for sharp in the sunset
    And sunrise the air is, and whiles I have seen it
    Amid white drift of snow—ah, look up, foster-father!
O woe, woe is me that I may not awaken!
    Or else, art thou verily Pharamond my fosterling,
    The Freed and the Freer, the Wise, the World's Wonder?
Why fainteth thy great heart? nay, Oliver, hearken,
    E'en such as I am now these five years I have been.
    Through five years of striving this dreamer and dotard
    Has reaped glory from ruin, drawn peace from destruction.
Woe's me! wit hath failed me, and all the wise counsel
    I was treasuring up down the wind is a-drifting—
    Yet what wouldst thou have there if ever thou find it?
    Are the gates of heaven there? is Death bound there and
    helpless?
Nay, thou askest me this not as one without knowledge,
    For thou know'st that my love in that land is abiding.
Yea—woe worth the while—and all wisdom hath failed
    me:
    Yet if thou wouldst tell me of her, I will hearken
    Without mocking or mourning, if that may avail thee.
Lo, thy face is grown kind—Thou rememberest the even
    When I first wore the crown after sore strife and mourning?
Who shall ever forget it? the dead face of thy father,
    And thou in thy fight-battered armour above it,
    Mid the passion of tears long held back by the battle;
    And thy rent banner o'er thee and the ring of men mail-clad,
    Victorious to-day, since their ruin but a spear-length
    Was thrust away from them.—Son, think of thy glory
    And e'en in such wise break the throng of these devils!
Five years are passed over since in the fresh dawning
    On the field of that fight I lay wearied and sleepless
    Till slumber came o'er me in the first of the sunrise;
    Then as there lay my body rapt away was my spirit,
    And a cold and thick mist for a while was about me,
    And when that cleared away, lo, the mountain-walled country
    'Neath the first of the sunrise in e'en such a spring-tide
    As the spring-tide our horse-hoofs that yestereve trampled:
    By the withy-wrought gate of a garden I found me
    'Neath the goodly green boughs of the apple full-blossomed;
    And fulfilled of great pleasure I was as I entered
    The fair place of flowers, and wherefore I knew not.
    Then lo, mid the birds' song a woman's voice singing.
    Five years passed away, in the first of the sunrise.
God help us if God is!—for this man, I deemed him
    More a glory of God made man for our helping
    Than a man that should die: all the deeds he did surely,
    Too great for a man's life, have undone the doer.
Thou art waiting, my fosterer, till
    I tell of her singing
    And the words that she sang there: time was when I knew
    them;
    But too much of strife is about us this morning,
    And whiles I forget and whiles I remember.
But a night's dream undid him, and he died, and his
    kingdom
    By unheard-of deeds fashioned, was tumbled together,
    By false men and fools to be fought for and ruined.
    Such words shall my ghost see the chronicler writing
    In the days that shall be:—ah—what wouldst thou, my
    fosterling?
    Knowest thou not how words fail us awaking
    That we seemed to hear plain amid sleep and its sweetness?
    Nay, strive not, my son, rest awhile and be silent;
    Or sleep while I watch thee: full fair is the garden,
    Perchance mid the flowers thy sweet dream may find thee,
    And thou shalt have pleasure and peace for a little.—
    (Aside) And my soul shall depart ere thou wak'st
    peradventure.
Yea, thou deemest me mad: a dream
    thou mayst call it,
    But not such a dream as thou know'st of: nay, hearken!
    For what manner of dream then is this that remembers
    The words that she sang on that morning of glory;—
    O love, set a word in my mouth for our meeting;
    Cast thy sweet arms about me to stay my hearts beating!
    Ah, thy silence, thy silence! nought shines on the darkness!
    —O close-serried throng of the days that I see not!
Thus the worse that shall be, the bad that is, bettereth.
    —Once more he is speechless mid evil dreams sunken.
Hold silence, love, speak not of
    the sweet day departed;
    Cling close to me, love, lest I waken sad-hearted!
Thou starest, my fosterer: what strange thing beholdst thou?
    A great king, a strong man, that thou knewest a child once:
    Pharamond the fair babe: Pharamond the warrior;
    Pharamond the king, and which hast thou feared yet?
    And why wilt thou fear then this Pharamond the lover?
    Shall I fail of my love who failed not of my fame?
    Nay, nay, I shall live for the last gain and greatest.
I know not—all counsel and wit is departed,
    I wait for thy will; I will do it, my master.
Through the boughs of the garden I followed the singing
    To a smooth space of sward: there the unknown desire
    Of my soul I beheld,—wrought in shape of a woman.
O ye warders of Troy-walls, join hands through the
    darkness,
    Tell us tales of the Downfall, for we too are with you!
As my twin sister, young of years was she and slender,
    Yellow blossoms of spring-tide her hands had been gathering,
    But the gown-lap that held them had fallen adown
    And had lain round her feet with the first of the singing;
    Now her singing had ceased, though yet heaved her bosom
    As with lips lightly parted and eyes of one seeking
    She stood face to face with the Love that she knew not,
    The love that she longed for and waited unwitting;
    She moved not, I breathed not—till lo, a horn winded,
    And she started, and o'er her came trouble and wonder,
    Came pallor and trembling; came a strain at my heartstrings
    As bodiless there I stretched hands toward her beauty,
    And voiceless cried out, as the cold mist swept o'er me.
    Then again clash of arms, and the morning watch calling,
    And the long leaves and great twisted trunks of the chesnuts,
    As I sprang to my feet and turned round to the trumpets
    And gathering of spears and unfolding of banners
    That first morn of my reign and my glory's beginning.
O well were we that tide though the world was against us.
Hearken yet!—through that whirlwind of danger and
    battle,
    Beaten back, struggling forward, we fought without blemish
    On my banner spear-rent in the days of my father,
    On my love of the land and the longing I cherished
    For a tale to be told when I, laid in the minster,
    Might hear it no more; was it easy of winning,
    Our bread of those days? Yet as wild as the work was,
    Unforgotten and sweet in my heart was that vision,
    And her eyes and her lips and her fair body's fashion
    Blest all times of rest, rent the battle asunder,
    Turned ruin to laughter and death unto dreaming;
    And again and thrice over again did I go there
    Ere spring was grown winter: in the meadows I met her,
    By the sheaves of the corn, by the down-falling apples,
    Kind and calm, yea and glad, yet with eyes of one seeking.
    —Ah the mouth of one waiting, ere all shall be
    over!—
    But at last in the winter-tide mid the dark forest
    Side by side did we wend down the pass: the wind tangled
    Mid the trunks and black boughs made wild music about us,
    But her feet on the scant snow and the sound of her breathing
    Made music much better: the wood thinned, and I saw her,
    As we came to the brow of the pass; for the moon gleamed
    Bitter cold in the cloudless black sky of the winter.
    Then the world drew me back from my love, and departing
    I saw her sweet serious look pass into terror
    And her arms cast abroad—and lo, clashing of armour,
    And a sword in my hand, and my mouth crying loud,
    And the moon and cold steel in the doorway burst open
    And thy doughty spear thrust through the throat of the foeman
    My dazed eyes scarce saw—thou rememberest, my fosterer?
Yea, Theobald the Constable had watched but unduly;
    We were taken unwares, and wild fleeing there was
    O'er black rock and white snow—shall such times come again,
    son?
Yea, full surely they shall; have thou courage, my
    fosterer!—
    Day came thronging on day, month thrust month aside,
    Amid battle and strife and the murder of glory,
    And still oft and oft to that land was I led
    And still through all longing I young in Love's dealings,
    Never called it a pain: though, the battle passed over,
    The council determined, back again came my craving:
    I knew not the pain, but I knew all the pleasure,
    When now, as the clouds o'er my fortune were parting,
    I felt myself waxing in might and in wisdom;
    And no city welcomed the Freed and the Freer,
    And no mighty army fell back before rumour
    Of Pharamond's coming, but her heart bid me thither,
    And the blithest and kindest of kingfolk ye knew me.
    Then came the high tide of deliverance upon us,
    When surely if we in the red field had fallen
    The stocks and the stones would have risen to avenge us.
    —Then waned my sweet vision midst glory's fulfilment,
    And still with its waning, hot waxed my desire:
    And did ye not note then that the glad-hearted Pharamond
    Was grown a stern man, a fierce king, it may be?
    Did ye deem it the growth of my manhood, the hardening
    Of battle and murder and treason about me?
    Nay, nay, it was love's pain, first named and first noted
    When a long time went past, and I might not behold her.
    —Thou rememberest a year agone now, when the legate
    Of the Lord of the Waters brought here a broad letter
    Full of prayers for good peace and our friendship
    thenceforward—
    —He who erst set a price on the lost head of
    Pharamond—
    How I bade him stand up on his feet and be merry,
    Eat his meat by my side and drink out of my beaker,
    In memory of days when my meat was but little
    And my drink drunk in haste between saddle and straw.
    But lo! midst of my triumph, as I noted the feigning
    Of the last foeman humbled, and the hall fell a murmuring,
    And blithely the horns blew, Be glad, spring
    prevaileth,
    —As I sat there and changed not, my soul saw a vision:
    All folk faded away, and my love that I long for
    Came with raiment a-rustling along the hall pavement,
    Drawing near to the high-seat, with hands held out a little,
    Till her hallowed eyes drew me a space into heaven,
    And her lips moved to whisper, 'Come, love, for I weary!'
    Then she turned and went from me, and I heard her feet
    falling
    On the floor of the hall, e'en as though it were empty
    Of all folk but us twain in the hush of the dawning.
    Then again, all was gone, and I sat there a smiling
    On the faint-smiling legate, as the hall windows quivered
    With the rain of the early night sweeping across them.
    Nought slept I that night, yet I saw her without
    sleeping:—
    Betwixt midnight and morn of that summer-tide was I
    Amidst of the lilies by her house-door to hearken
    If perchance in her chamber she turned amid sleeping:
    When lo, as the East 'gan to change, and stars faded
    Were her feet on the stairs, and the door opened softly,
    And she stood on the threshold with the eyes of one seeking,
    And there, gathering the folds of her gown to her girdle,
    Went forth through the garden and followed the highway,
    All along the green valley, and I ever beside her,
    Till the light of the low sun just risen was falling
    On her feet in the first of the pass—and all faded.
    Yet from her unto me had gone forth her intent,
    And I saw her face set to the heart of that city,
    And the quays where the ships of the outlanders come to,
    And I said: She is seeking, and shall I not seek?
    The sea is her prison wall; where is my prison?
    —Yet I said: Here men praise me, perchance men may love
    me
    If I live long enough for my justice and mercy
    To make them just and merciful—one who is master
    Of many poor folk, a man pity moveth
    Love hath dealt with in this wise, no minstrel nor dreamer.
    The deeds that my hand might find for the doing
    Did desire undo them these four years of fight?
    And now time and fair peace in my heart have begotten
    More desire and more pain, is the day of deeds done with?
    Lo here for my part my bonds and my prison!—
    Then with hands holding praise, yet with fierce heart belike
    Did I turn to the people that I had delivered—
    And the deeds of this year passed shall live peradventure!
    But now came no solace of dreams in the night-tide
    From that day thenceforward; yet oft in the council,
    Mid the hearkening folk craving for justice or mercy,
    Mid the righting of wrongs and the staying of ruin,
    Mid the ruling a dull folk, who deemed all my kingship
    A thing due and easy as the dawning and sunset
    To the day that God made once to deal with no further—
    —Mid all these a fair face, a sad face, could I
    fashion,
    And I said, She is seeking, and shall I not seek?
    —Tell over the days of the year of hope's waning;
    Tell over the hours of the weary days wearing:
    Tell over the minutes of the hours of thy waking,
    Then wonder he liveth who fails of his longing!
What wouldst thou have, son, wherein I might help thee?
Hearken yet:—for a long time no more I beheld her
    Till a month agone now at the ending of Maytide;
    And then in the first of the morning I found me
    Fulfilled of all joy at the edge of the yew-wood;
    Then lo, her gown's flutter in the fresh breeze of morning,
    And slower and statelier than her wont was aforetime
    And fairer of form toward the yew-wood she wended.
    But woe's me! as she came and at last was beside me
    With sobbing scarce ended her bosom was heaving,
    Stained with tears was her face, and her mouth was yet
    quivering
    With torment of weeping held back for a season.
    Then swiftly my spirit to the King's bed was wafted
    While still toward the sea were her weary feet wending.
    —Ah surely that day of all wrongs that I hearkened
    Mine own wrongs seemed heaviest and hardest to bear—
    Mine own wrongs and hers—till that past year of ruling
    Seemed a crime and a folly. Night came, and I saw her
    Stealing barefoot, bareheaded amidst of the tulips
    Made grey by the moonlight: and a long time Love gave me
    To gaze on her weeping—morn came, and I wakened—
    I wakened and said: Through the World will I wander,
    Till either I find her, or find the World empty.
Yea, son, wilt thou go? Ah thou knowest from of old time
    My words might not stay thee from aught thou wert willing;
    And e'en so it must be now. And yet hast thou asked me
    To go with thee, son, if aught I might help thee?—
    Ah me, if thy face might gladden a little
    I should meet the world better and mock at its mocking:
    If thou goest to find her, why then hath there fallen
    This heaviness on thee? is thy heart waxen feeble?
O friend, I have seen her no more, and her mourning
    Is alone and unhelped—yet to-night or to-morrow
    Somewhat nigher will I be to her love and her longing.
    Lo, to thee, friend, alone of all folk on the earth
    These things have I told: for a true man I deem thee
    Beyond all men call true; yea, a wise man moreover
    And hardy and helpful; and I know thy heart surely
    That thou holdest the world nought without me thy fosterling.
    Come, leave all awhile! it may be as time weareth
    With new life in our hands we shall wend us back hither.
Yea; triumph turns trouble, and all the world changeth,
    Yet a good world it is since we twain are together.
Lo, have I not said it?—thou art kinder than all
    men.
    Cast about then, I pray thee, to find us a keel
    Sailing who recketh whither, since the world is so wide.
    Sure the northlands shall know of the blessings she bringeth,
    And the southlands be singing of the tales that foretold her.
Well I wot of all chapmen—and
    to-night weighs a dromond
    Sailing west away first, and then to the southlands.
    Since in such things I deal oft they know me, but know not
    King Pharamond the Freed, since now first they sail hither.
    So make me thy messenger in a fair-writ broad letter
    And thyself make my scrivener, and this very night sail
    we.—
    O surely thy face now is brightening and blesseth me!
    Peer through these boughs toward the bay and the haven,
    And high masts thou shalt see, and white sails hanging ready.
Dost thou weep now, my darling, and are thy feet wandering
    On the ways ever empty of what thou desirest?
    Nay, nay, for thou know'st me, and many a night-tide
    Hath Love led thee forth to a city unknown:
    Thou hast paced through this palace from chamber to chamber
    Till in dawn and stars' paling I have passed forth before
    thee:
    Thou hast seen thine own dwelling nor known how to name it:
    Thine own dwelling that shall be when love is victorious.
    Thou hast seen my sword glimmer amidst of the moonlight,
    As we rode with hoofs muffled through waylaying murder.
    Through the field of the dead hast thou fared to behold me,
    Seen me waking and longing by the watch-fires' flicker;
    Thou hast followed my banner amidst of the battle
    And seen my face change to the man that they fear,
    Yet found me not fearful nor turned from beholding:
    Thou hast been at my triumphs, and heard the tale's ending
    Of my wars, and my winning through days evil and weary:
    For this eve hast thou waited, and wilt be peradventure
    By the sea-strand to-night, for thou wottest full surely
    That the word is gone forth, and the world is a-moving.
    —Abide me, beloved! to-day and to-morrow
    Shall be little words in the tale of our loving,
    When the last morn ariseth, and thou and I meeting
    From lips laid together tell tales of these marvels.
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain LOVE clad as a maker of Pictured Cloths.
That double life my faithful king has led
    My hand has untwined, and old days are dead
    As in the moon the sails run up the mast.
    Yea, let this present mingle with the past,
    And when ye see him next think a long tide
    Of days are gone by; for the world is wide,
    And if at last these hands, these lips shall meet,
    What matter thorny ways and weary feet?
A faithful king, and now grown wise in love:
    Yet from of old in many ways I move
    The hearts that shall be mine: him by the hand
    Have I led forth, and shown his eyes the land
    Where dwells his love, and shown him what she is:
    He has beheld the lips that he shall kiss,
    The eyes his eyes shall soften, and the cheek
    His voice shall change, the limbs he maketh weak:
    —All this he hath as in a picture wrought—
    But lo you, 'tis the seeker and the sought:
    For her no marvels of the night I make,
    Nor keep my dream-smiths' drowsy heads awake;
    Only about her have I shed a glory
    Whereby she waiteth trembling for a story
    That she shall play in,—and 'tis not begun:
    Therefore from rising sun to setting sun
    There flit before her half-formed images
    Of what I am, and in all things she sees
    Something of mine: so single is her heart
    Filled with the worship of one set apart
    To be my priestess through all joy and sorrow;
    So sad and sweet she waits the certain morrow.
    —And yet sometimes, although her heart be strong,
    You may well think I tarry over-long:
    The lonely sweetness of desire grows pain,
    The reverent life of longing void and vain:
    Then are my dream-smiths mindful of my lore:
    They weave a web of sighs and weeping sore,
    Of languor, and of very helplessness,
    Of restless wandering, lonely dumb distress,
    Till like a live thing there she stands and goes,
    Gazing at Pharamond through all her woes.
    Then forth they fly, and spread the picture out
    Before his eyes, and how then may he doubt
    She knows his life, his deeds, and his desire?
    How shall he tremble lest her heart should tire?
    —It is not so; his danger and his war,
    His days of triumph, and his years of care,
    She knows them not—yet shall she know some day
    The love that in his lonely longing lay.
What, Faithful—do I lie, that overshot
    My dream-web is with that which happeneth not?
    Nay, nay, believe it not!—love lies alone
    In loving hearts like fire within the stone:
    Then strikes my hand, and lo, the flax ablaze!
    —Those tales of empty striving, and lost days
    Folk tell of sometimes—never lit my fire
    Such ruin as this; but Pride and Vain-desire,
    My counterfeits and foes, have done the deed.
    Beware, beloved! for they sow the weed
    Where I the wheat: they meddle where I leave,
    Take what I scorn, cast by what I receive,
    Sunder my yoke, yoke that I would dissever,
    Pull down the house my hands would build for ever.
Scene: In a Forest among the Hills of a Foreign Land.
KING PHARAMOND, MASTER OLIVER.
Stretch forth thine hand, foster-father, I know thee,
    And fain would be sure I am yet in the world:
    Where am I now, and what things have befallen?
    Why am I so weary, and yet have wrought nothing?
Thou hast been sick, lord, but thy sickness abateth.
Thou art sad unto weeping: sorry rags are thy raiment,
    For I see thee a little now: where am I lying?
On the sere leaves thou liest, lord, deep in the wild wood
What meaneth all this? was I not Pharamond,
    A worker of great deeds after my father,
    Freer of my land from murder and wrong,
    Fain of folks' love, and no blencher in battle?
Yea, thou wert king and the kindest under heaven.
Was there not coming a Queen long desired,
    From a land over sea, my life to fulfil?
Belike it was so—but thou leftst it untold of.
Why weepest thou more yet? O me, which are dreams,
    Which are deeds of my life mid the things I remember?
Dost thou remember the great council chamber,
    O my king, and the lords there gathered together
    With drawn anxious faces one fair morning of summer,
    And myself in their midst, who would move thee to speech?
A brawl I remember, some wordy debating,
    Whether my love should be brought to behold me.
    Sick was I at heart, little patience I had.
Hast thou memory yet left thee, how an hour thereafter
    We twain lay together in the midst of the pleasance
    'Neath the lime-trees, nigh the pear-tree, beholding the
    conduit?
Fair things I remember of a long time thereafter—
    Of thy love and thy faith and our gladness together
And the thing that we talked of, wilt thou tell me about it?
We twain were to wend through the wide world together
    Seeking my love—O my heart! is she living?
God wot that she liveth as she hath lived ever.
Then soon was it midnight, and moonset, as we wended
    Down to the ship, and the merchant-folks' babble.
    The oily green waves in the harbour mouth glistened,
    Windless midnight it was, but the great sweeps were run out,
    As the cable came rattling mid rich bales on the deck,
    And slow moved the black side that the ripple was lapping,
    And I looked and beheld a great city behind us
    By the last of the moon as the stars were a-brightening,
    And Pharamond the Freed grew a tale of a singer,
    With the land of his fathers and the fame he had toiled for.
    Yet sweet was the scent of the sea-breeze arising;
    And I felt a chain broken, a sickness put from me
    As the sails drew, and merchant-folk, gathered together
    On the poop or the prow, 'gan to move and begone,
    Till at last 'neath the far-gazing eyes of the steersman
    By the loitering watch thou and I were left lonely,
    And we saw by the moon the white horses arising
    Where beyond the last headland the ocean abode us,
    Then came the fresh breeze and the sweep of the spray,
    And the beating of ropes, and the empty sails' thunder,
    As we shifted our course toward the west in the dawning;
    Then I slept and I dreamed in the dark I was lying,
    And I heard her sweet breath and her feet falling near me,
    And the rustle of her raiment as she sought through the
    darkness,
    Sought, I knew not for what, till her arms clung about me
    With a cry that was hers, that was mine as I wakened.
Yea, a sweet dream it was, as thy dreams were aforetime.
Nay not so, my fosterer: thy hope yet shall fail thee
    If thou lookest to see me turned back from my folly,
    Lamenting and mocking the life of my longing.
    Many such have I had, dear dreams and deceitful,
    When the soul slept a little from all but its search,
    And lied to the body of bliss beyond telling;
    Yea, waking had lied still but for life and its torment.
    Not so were those dreams of the days of my kingship,
    Slept my body—or died—but my soul was not
    sleeping,
    It knew that she touched not this body that trembled
    At the thought of her body sore trembling to see me;
    It lied of no bliss as desire swept it onward,
    Who knows through what sundering space of its prison;
    It saw, and it heard, and it hoped, and was lonely,
    Had no doubt and no joy, but the hope that endureth.
    —Woe's me I am weary: wend we forward to-morrow?
Yea, well it may be if thou wilt but be patient,
    And rest thee a little, while time creepeth onward.
But tell me, has the fourth year gone far mid my sickness?
Nay, for seven days only didst thou lie here a-dying,
    As full often I deemed: God be thanked it is over!
    But rest thee a little, lord; gather strength for the striving.
Yea, for once again sleep meseems cometh to struggle
    With the memory of times past: come tell thou, my fosterer,
    Of the days we have fared through, that dimly before me
    Are floating, as I look on thy face and its trouble.
Rememberest thou aught of the lands where we wended?
Yea, many a thing—as the moonlit warm evening
    When we stayed by the trees in the Gold-bearing Land,
    Nigh the gate of the city, where a minstrel was singing
    That tale of the King and his fate, o'er the cradle
    Foretold by the wise of the world; that a woman
    Should win him to love and to woe, and despairing
    In the last of his youth, the first days of his manhood.
I remember the evening; but clean gone is the story:
    Amid deeds great and dreadful, should songs abide by me?
They shut the young king in a castle, the tale saith,
    Where never came woman, and never should come,
    And sadly he grew up and stored with all wisdom,
    Not wishing for aught in his heart that he had not,
    Till the time was come round to his twentieth birthday.
    Then many fair gifts brought his people unto him,
    Gold and gems, and rich cloths, and rare things and
    dear-bought,
    And a book fairly written brought a wise man among them,
    Called the Praising of Prudence; wherein there was painted
    The image of Prudence:—and that, what but a woman,
    E'en she forsooth that the painter found fairest;—
    Now surely thou mindest what needs must come after?
Yea, somewhat indeed I remember the misery
    Told in that tale, but all mingled it is
    With the manifold trouble that met us full often,
    E'en we ourselves. Of nought else hast thou memory?
Of many such tales that the Southland folk told us,
    Of many a dream by the sunlight and moonlight;
    Of music that moved me, of hopes that my heart had;
    The high days when my love and I held feast together.
    —But what land is this, and how came we hither?
Nay, hast thou no memory of our troubles that were many?
    How thou criedst out for Death and how near Death came to
    thee?
    How thou needs must dread war, thou the dreadful in battle?
    Of the pest in the place where that tale was told to us;
    And how we fled thence o'er the desert of horror?
    How weary we wandered when we came to the mountains,
    All dead but one man of those who went with us?
    How we came to the sea of the west, and the city,
    Whose Queen would have kept thee her slave and her lover,
    And how we escaped by the fair woman's kindness,
    Who loved thee, and cast her life by for thy welfare?
    Of the waste of thy life when we sailed from the Southlands,
    And the sea-thieves fell on us and sold us for servants
    To that land of hard gems, where thy life's purchase seemed
    Little better than mine, and we found to our sorrow
    Whence came the crown's glitter, thy sign once of glory:
    Then naked a king toiled in sharp rocky crannies,
    And thy world's fear was grown but the task-master's whip,
    And thy world's hope the dream in the short dead of night?
    And hast thou forgotten how again we fled from it,
    And that fight of despair in the boat on the river,
    And the sea-strand again and white bellying sails;
    And the sore drought and famine that on ship-board fell on
    us,
    Ere the sea was o'erpast, and we came scarcely living
    To those keepers of sheep, the poor folk and the kind?
    Dost thou mind not the merchants who brought us thence
    northward,
    And this land that we made in the twilight of dawning?
    And the city herein where all kindness forsook us,
    And our bitter bread sought we from house-door to house-door.
As the shadow of clouds o'er the
    summer sea sailing
    Is the memory of all now, and whiles I remember
    And whiles I forget; and nought it availeth
    Remembering, forgetting; for a sleep is upon me
    That shall last a long while:—there thou liest, my
    fosterer,
    As thou lay'st a while since ere that twilight of dawning;
    And I woke and looked forth, and the dark sea, long
    changeless,
    Was now at last barred by a dim wall that swallowed
    The red shapeless moon, and the whole sea was rolling,
    Unresting, unvaried, as grey as the void is,
    Toward that wall 'gainst the heavens as though rest were behind
    it.
    Still onward we fared and the moon was forgotten,
    And colder the sea grew and colder the heavens,
    And blacker the wall grew, and grey, green-besprinkled,
    And the sky seemed to breach it; and lo at the last
    Many islands of mountains, and a city amongst them.
    White clouds of the dawn, not moving yet waning,
    Wreathed the high peaks about; and the sea beat for ever
    'Gainst the green sloping hills and the black rocks and
    beachless.
    —Is this the same land that I saw in that dawning?
    For sure if it is thou at least shalt hear tidings,
    Though I die ere the dark: but for thee, O my fosterer,
    Lying there by my side, I had deemed the old vision
    Had drawn forth the soul from my body to see her.
    And with joy and fear blended leapt the heart in my bosom,
    And I cried, "The last land, love; O hast thou abided?"
    But since then hath been turmoil, and sickness, and slumber,
    And my soul hath been troubled with dreams that I knew not.
    And such tangle is round me life fails me to rend it,
    And the cold cloud of death rolleth onward to hide me.—
    —O well am I hidden, who might not be happy!
    I see not, I hear not, my head groweth heavy.
—O Son, is it sleep that upon thee is fallen?
    Not death, O my dear one!—speak yet but a little!
O be glad, foster-father! and those troubles past
    over,—
    Be thou thereby when once more I remember
    And sit with my maiden and tell her the story,
    And we pity our past selves as a poet may pity
    The poor folk he tells of amid plentiful weeping.
    Hush now! as faint noise of bells over water
    A sweet sound floats towards me, and blesses my slumber:
    If I wake never more I shall dream and shall see her.
    [Sleeps.
Is it swooning or sleeping? in what wise shall he waken?
    —Nay, no sound I hear save the forest wind wailing.
    Who shall help us to-day save our yoke-fellow Death?
    Yet fain would I die mid the sun and the flowers;
    For a tomb seems this yew-wood ere yet we are dead.
    And its wailing wind chilleth my yearning for time past,
    And my love groweth cold in this dusk of the daytime.
    What will be? is worse than death drawing anear us?
    Flit past, dreary day! come, night-tide and resting!
    Come, to-morrow's uprising with light and new tidings!
    —Lo, Lord, I have borne all with no bright love before
    me;
    Wilt thou break all I had and then give me no blessing?
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain LOVE, with a cup of bitter drink and his hands bloody.
O Pharamond, I knew thee brave and strong,
    And yet how might'st thou live to bear this wrong?
    —A wandering-tide of three long bitter years,
    Solaced at whiles by languor of soft tears,
    By dreams self-wrought of night and sleep and sorrow,
    Holpen by hope of tears to be to-morrow:
    Yet all, alas, but wavering memories;
    No vision of her hands, her lips, her eyes,
    Has blessed him since he seemed to see her weep,
    No wandering feet of hers beset his sleep.
Woe's me then! am I cruel, or am I grown
    The scourge of Fate, lest men forget to moan?
    What!—is there blood upon these hands of mine?
    Is venomed anguish mingled with my wine?
    —Blood there may be, and venom in the cup;
    But see, Beloved, how the tears well up
    From my grieved heart my blinded eyes to grieve,
    And in the kindness of old days believe!
    So after all then we must weep to-day—
    —We, who behold at ending of the way,
    These lovers tread a bower they may not miss
    Whose door my servant keepeth, Earthly Bliss:
    There in a little while shall they abide,
    Nor each from each their wounds of wandering hide,
    But kiss them, each on each, and find it sweet,
    That wounded so the world they may not meet.
    —Ah, truly mine! since this your tears may move,
    The very sweetness of rewarded love!
    Ah, truly mine, that tremble as ye hear
    The speech of loving lips grown close and dear;
    —Lest other sounds from other doors ye hearken,
    Doors that the wings of Earthly Anguish darken.
Scene: On a Highway in a Valley near the last, with a Mist over all things.
KING PHARAMOND, MASTER OLIVER.
Hold a while, Oliver! my limbs are
    grown weaker
    Than when in the wood I first rose to my feet.
    There was hope in my heart then, and now nought but
    sickness;
    There was sight in my eyes then, and now nought but
    blindness.
    Good art thou, hope, while the life yet tormenteth,
    But a better help now have I gained than thy goading.
    Farewell, O life, wherein once I was merry!
    O dream of the world, I depart now, and leave thee
    A little tale added to thy long-drawn-out story.
    Cruel wert thou, O Love, yet have thou and I conquered.
    —Come nearer, O fosterer, come nearer and kiss me,
    Bid farewell to thy fosterling while the life yet is in me,
    For this farewell to thee is my last word meseemeth.
O my king, O my son! Ah, woe's me
    for my kindness,
    For the day when thou drew'st me and I let thee be drawn
    Into toils I knew deadly, into death thou desiredst!
    And woe's me that I die not! for my body made hardy
    By the battles of old days to bear every anguish!
    —Speak a word and forgive me, for who knows how long
    yet
    Are the days of my life, and the hours of my loathing!
    He speaks not, he moves not; yet he draweth breath softly:
    I have seen men a-dying, and not thus did the end come.
    Surely God who made all forgets not love's rewarding,
    Forgets not the faithful, the guileless who fear not.
    Oh, might there be help yet, and some new life's beginning!
    —Lo, lighter the mist grows: there come sounds through its
    dulness,
    The lowing of kine, or the whoop of a shepherd,
    The bell-wether's tinkle, or clatter of horse-hoofs.
    A homestead is nigh us: I will fare down the highway
    And seek for some helping: folk said simple people
    Abode in this valley, and these may avail us—
    If aught it avail us to live for a little.
    —Yea, give it us, God!—all the fame and the
    glory
    We fought for and gained once; the life of well-doing,
    Fair deed thrusting on deed, and no day forgotten;
    And due worship of folk that his great heart had
    holpen;—
    All I prayed for him once now no longer I pray for.
    Let it all pass away as my warm breath now passeth
    In the chill of the morning mist wherewith thou hidest
    Fair vale and grey mountain of the land we are come to!
    Let it all pass away! but some peace and some pleasure
    I pray for him yet, and that I may behold it.
    A prayer little and lowly,—and we in the old time
    When the world lay before us, were we hard to the lowly?
    Thou know'st we were kind, howso hard to be beaten;
    Wilt thou help us this last time? or what hast thou hidden
    We know not, we name not, some crown for our striving?
    —O body and soul of my son, may God keep thee!
    For, as lone as thou liest in a land that we see not
    When the world loseth thee, what is left for its losing?
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain, LOVE clad as a Pilgrim.
Alone, afar from home doth Pharamond lie,
    Drawn near to death, ye deem—or what draws nigh?
    Afar from home—and have ye any deeming
    How far may be that country of his dreaming?
    Is it not time, is it not time, say ye,
    That we the day-star in the sky should see?
Patience, Beloved; these may come to live
    A life fulfilled of all I have to give,
    But bare of strife and story; and ye know well
    How wild a tale of him might be to tell
    Had I not snatched away the sword and crown;
    Yea, and she too was made for world's renown,
    And should have won it, had my bow not been;
    These that I love were very king and queen;
    I have discrowned them, shall I not crown too?
    Ye know, Beloved, what sharp bitter dew,
    What parching torment of unresting day
    Falls on the garden of my deathless bay:
    Hands that have gathered it and feet that came
    Beneath its shadow have known flint and flame;
    Therefore I love them; and they love no less
    Each furlong of the road of past distress.
    —Ah, Faithful, tell me for what rest and peace,
    What length of happy days and world's increase,
    What hate of wailing, and what love of laughter,
    What hope and fear of worlds to be hereafter,
    Would ye cast by that crown of bitter leaves?
And yet, ye say, our very heart it grieves
    To see him lying there: how may he save
    His life and love if he more pain must have?
    And she—how fares it with her? is not earth
    From winter's sorrow unto summer's mirth
    Grown all too narrow for her yearning heart?
    We pray thee, Love, keep these no more apart.
Ye say but sooth: not long may he
    endure:
    And her heart sickeneth past all help or cure
    Unless I hasten to the helping—see,
    Am I not girt for going speedily?
    —The journey lies before me long?—nay, nay,
    Upon my feet the dust is lying grey,
    The staff is heavy in my hand.—Ye too,
    Have ye not slept? or what is this ye do,
    Wearying to find the country ye are in?
Look, look! how sun and morn at last do win
    Upon the shifting waves of mist! behold
    That mountain-wall the earth-fires rent of old,
    Grey toward the valley, sun-gilt at the side!
    See the black yew-wood that the pass doth hide!
    Search through the mist for knoll, and fruited tree,
    And winding stream, and highway white—and see,
    See, at my feet lies Pharamond the Freed!
    A happy journey have we gone indeed!
Hearken, Beloved, over-long, ye deem,
    I let these lovers deal with hope and dream
    Alone unholpen.—Somewhat sooth ye say:
    But now her feet are on this very way
    That leadeth from the city: and she saith
    One beckoneth her back hitherward—even Death—
    And who was that, Beloved, but even I?
    Yet though her feet and sunlight are drawn nigh
    The cold grass where he lieth like the dead,
    To ease your hearts a little of their dread
    I will abide her coming, and in speech
    He knoweth, somewhat of his welfare teach.
LOVE goes on to the Stage and stands at PHARAMOND's head.
HEARKEN, O Pharamond, why camest thou hither?
I came seeking Death; I have found him belike.
In what land of the world art thou lying, O Pharamond?
In a land 'twixt two worlds: nor long shall I dwell there.
Who am I, Pharamond, that stand here beside thee?
The Death I have sought—thou art welcome; I greet thee.
Such a name have I had, but another name have I.
Art thou God then that helps not until the last season?
Yea, God am I surely: yet another name have I.
Methinks as I hearken, thy voice I should wot of.
I called thee, and thou cam'st from thy glory and kingship.
I was King Pharamond, and love overcame me.
Pharamond, thou say'st it.—I am Love and thy master.
Sooth didst thou say when thou call'dst thyself Death.
Though thou diest, yet thy love and thy deeds shall I quicken.
Be thou God, be thou Death, yet I love thee and dread not.
Pharamond, while thou livedst what thing wert thou loving?
A dream and a lie—and my death—and I love it.
Pharamond, do my bidding, as thy wont was aforetime.
What wilt thou have of me, for I wend away swiftly?
Open thine eyes, and behold where thou liest!
It is little—the old dream, the old lie is about me.
Why faintest thou, Pharamond? is love then unworthy?
Then hath God made no world now, nor shall make hereafter.
Wouldst thou live if thou mightst in this fair world, O Pharamond?
Yea, if she and truth were; nay, if she and truth were not.
O long shalt thou live: thou art
    here in the body,
    Where nought but thy spirit I brought in days bygone.
    Ah, thou hearkenest!—and where then of old hast thou heard
    it?
O mock me not, Death; or, Life, hold me no longer!
    For that sweet strain I hear that I heard once a-dreaming:
    Is it death coming nigher, or life come back that brings it?
    Or rather my dream come again as aforetime?
Look up, O Pharamond! canst thou see aught about thee?
Yea, surely: all things as aforetime
    I saw them:
    The mist fading out with the first of the sunlight,
    And the mountains a-changing as oft in my dreaming,
    And the thornbrake anigh blossomed thick with the May-tide.
O my heart!—I am hearkening thee whereso thou wanderest!
Put forth thine hand, feel the dew on the daisies!
So their freshness I felt in the days ere hope perished.
    —O me, me, my darling! how fair the world groweth!
    Ah, shall I not find thee, if death yet should linger,
    Else why grow I so glad now when life seems departing?
    What pleasure thus pierceth my heart unto fainting?
    —O me, into words now thy melody passeth.
MUSIC with singing (from without)
What wilt thou say now of the gifts Love hath given?
Stay thy whispering, O wind of the morning—she speaketh.
THE MUSIC (coming nearer)
Was Love then a liar who fashioned thy dreaming?
O fair-blossomed tree, stay thy rustling—I hearken.
THE MUSIC (coming nearer)
What wouldst thou, Pharamond? why art thou fainting?
And thou diest, fair daylight, now she draweth near me!
THE MUSIC (close outside)
Sleep then, O Pharamond, till her
    kiss shall awake thee,
    For, lo, here comes the sun o'er the tops of the mountains,
    And she with his light in her hair comes before him,
    As solemn and fair as the dawn of the May-tide
    On some isle of mid-ocean when all winds are sleeping.
    O worthy is she of this hour that awaits her,
    And the death of all doubt, and beginning of gladness
    Her great heart shall embrace without fear or amazement.
    —He sleeps, yet his heart's beating measures her
    footfalls;
    And her heart beateth too, as her feet bear her onward:
    Breathe gently between them, O breeze of the morning!
    Wind round them unthought of, sweet scent of the blossoms!
    Treasure up every minute of this tide of their meeting,
    O flower-bedecked Earth! with such tales of my triumph
    Is your life still renewed, and spring comes back for ever
    From that forge of all glory that brought forth my blessing.
    O welcome, Love's darling: Shall this day ever darken,
    Whose dawn I have dight for thy longing triumphant?
A song in my mouth, then? my heart
    full of gladness?
    My feet firm on the earth, as when youth was beginning?
    And the rest of my early days come back to bless me?—
    Who hath brought me these gifts in the midst of the May-tide?
    What!—three days agone to the city I wandered,
    And watched the ships warped to the Quay of the Merchants;
    And wondered why folk should be busy and anxious;
    For bitter my heart was, and life seemed a-waning,
    With no story told, with sweet longing turned torment,
    Love turned to abasement, and rest gone for ever.
    And last night I awoke with a pain piercing through me,
    And a cry in my ears, and Death passed on before,
    As one pointing the way, and I rose up sore trembling,
    And by cloud and by night went before the sun's coming,
    As one goeth to death,—and lo here the dawning!
    And a dawning therewith of a dear joy I know not.
    I have given back the day the glad greeting it gave me;
    And the gladness it gave me, that too would I give
    Were hands held out to crave it——Fair valley, I greet
    thee,
    And the new-wakened voices of all things familiar.
    —Behold, how the mist-bow lies bright on the mountain,
    Bidding hope as of old since no prison endureth.
    Full busy has May been these days I have missed her,
    And the milkwort is blooming, and blue falls the speedwell.
    —Lo, here have been footsteps in the first of the
    morning,
    Since the moon sank all red in the mist now departed.
    —Ah! what lieth there by the side of the highway?
    Is it death stains the sunlight, or sorrow or sickness?
—Not death, for he sleepeth; but beauty sore blemished
    By sorrow and sickness, and for all that the sweeter.
    I will wait till he wakens and gaze on his beauty,
    Lest I never again in the world should behold him.
    —Maybe I may help him; he is sick and needs tending,
    He is poor, and shall scorn not our simpleness surely.
    Whence came he to us-ward—what like has his life
    been—
    Who spoke to him last—for what is he longing?
    —As one hearkening a story I wonder what cometh,
    And in what wise my voice to our homestead shall bid him.
    O heart, how thou faintest with hope of the gladness
    I may have for a little if there he abide.
    Soft there shalt thou sleep, love, and sweet shall thy dreams
    be,
    And sweet thy awaking amidst of the wonder
    Where thou art, who is nigh thee—and then, when thou
    seest
    How the rose-boughs hang in o'er the little loft window,
    And the blue bowl with roses is close to thine hand,
    And over thy bed is the quilt sewn with lilies,
    And the loft is hung round with the green Southland hangings,
    And all smelleth sweet as the low door is opened,
    And thou turnest to see me there standing, and holding
    Such dainties as may be, thy new hunger to stay—
    Then well may I hope that thou wilt not remember
    Thine old woes for a moment in the freshness and pleasure,
    And that I shall be part of thy rest for a little.
    And then—-who shall say—wilt thou tell me thy
    story,
    And what thou hast loved, and for what thou hast striven?
    —Thou shalt see me, and my love and my pity, as thou
    speakest,
    And it may be thy pity shall mingle with mine.
    —And meanwhile—Ah, love, what hope may my heart
    hold?
    For I see that thou lovest, who ne'er hast beheld me.
    And how should thy love change, howe'er the world changeth?
    Yet meanwhile, had I dreamed of the bliss of this minute,
    How might I have borne to live weary and waiting!
Woe's me! do I fear thee? else
    should I not wake thee,
    For tending thou needest—If my hand touched thy hand
I should fear thee the less.—O sweet friend, forgive
    it,
    My hand and my tears, for faintly they touched thee!
    He trembleth, and waketh not: O me, my darling!
    Hope whispers that thou hear'st me through sleep, and wouldst
    waken,
    But for dread that thou dreamest and I should be gone.
    Doth it please thee in dreaming that I tremble and dread
    thee,
    That these tears are the tears of one praying vainly,
    Who shall pray with no word when thou hast awakened?
    —Yet how shall I deal with my life if he love not,
    As how should he love me, a stranger, unheard of?
    —O bear witness, thou day that hast brought my love
    hither!
    Thou sun that burst out through the mist o'er the mountains,
    In that moment mine eyes met the field of his sorrow—
    Bear witness, ye fields that have fed me and clothed me,
    And air I have breathed, and earth that hast borne me—
    Though I find you but shadows, and wrought but for fading,
    Though all ye and God fail me,—my love shall not fail!
    Yea, even if this love, that seemeth such pleasure
    As earth is unworthy of, turneth to pain;
    If he wake without memory of me and my weeping,
    With a name on his lips not mine—that I know not:
    If thus my hand leave his hand for the last time,
    And no word from his lips be kind for my comfort—
    If all speech fail between us, all sight fail me henceforth,
    If all hope and God fail me—my love shall not fail.
—Friend, I may not forbear: we have been here
    together:
    My hand on thy hand has been laid, and thou trembledst.
    Think now if this May sky should darken above us,
    And the death of the world in this minute should part
    us—
    Think, my love, of the loss if my lips had not kissed thee.
    And forgive me my hunger of no hope begotten! [She kisses
    him.
Who art thou? who art thou, that my dream I might tell
    thee?
    How with words full of love she drew near me, and kissed me.
    O thou kissest me yet, and thou clingest about me!
    Ah, kiss me and wake me into death and deliverance!
Speak no rough word, I pray thee, for a little, thou
    loveliest!
    But forgive me, for the years of my life have been lonely,
    And thou art come hither with the eyes of one seeking.
Sweet dream of old days, and her very lips speaking
    The words of my lips and the night season's longing.
    How might I have lived had I known what I longed for!
I knew thou wouldst love, I knew all thy desire—
    Am I she whom thou seekest? may I draw nigh again?
Ah, lengthen no more the years of my seeking,
    For thou knowest my love as thy love lies before me.
O Love, there was fear in thine eyes as thou wakenedst;
    Thy first words were of dreaming and death—but we die
    not.
In thine eyes was a terror as thy lips' touches faded,
    Sore trembled thine arms as they fell away from me;
    And thy voice was grown piteous with words of beseeching,
    So that still for a little my search seemed unended.
    —Ah, enending, unchanging desire fulfils me!
    I cry out for thy comfort as thou clingest about me.
    O joy hard to bear, but for memory of sorrow,
    But for pity of past days whose bitter is sweet now!
    Let us speak, love, together some word of our story,
    That our lips as they part may remember the glory.
O Love, kiss me into silence lest no word avail me;
    Stay my head with thy bosom lest breath and life fail me.
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain LOVE, clad still as a Pilgrim.
How is it with the Fosterer then, when he
    Comes back again that rest and peace to see,
    And God his latest prayer has granted now?—
    Why, as the winds whereso they list shall blow,
    So drifts the thought of man, and who shall say
    To-morrow shall my thought be as to-day?
    —My fosterling is happy, and I too;
    Yet did we leave behind things good to do,
    Deeds good to tell about when we are dead.
    Here is no pain, but rest, and easy bread;
    Yet therewith something hard to understand
    Dulls the crowned work to which I set my hand.
    Ah, patience yet! his longing is well won,
    And I shall die at last and all be done.—
    Such words unspoken the best man on earth
    Still bears about betwixt the lover's mirth;
    And now he hath what he went forth to find,
    This Pharamond is neither dull nor blind,
    And looking upon Oliver, he saith:—
    My friend recked nothing of his life or death,
    Knew not my anguish then, nor now my pleasure,
    And by my crowned joy sets his lessened treasure.
    Is risk of twenty days of wind and sea,
    Of new-born feeble headless enmity,
    I should have scorned once, too great gift to give
    To this most faithful man that he may live?
—Yea, was that all? my faithful, you and I,
    Still craving, scorn the world too utterly,
    The world we want not—yet, our one desire
    Fulfilled at last, what next shall feed the fire?
    —I say not this to make my altar cold;
    Rather that ye, my happy ones, should hold
    Enough of memory and enough of fear
    Within your hearts to keep its flame full clear;
    Rather that ye, still dearer to my heart,
    Whom words call hapless, yet should praise your part,
    Wherein the morning and the evening sun
    Are bright about a story never done;
    That those for chastening, these for joy should cling
    About the marvels that my minstrels sing.
Well, Pharamond fulfilled of love must turn
    Unto the folk that still he deemed would yearn
    To see his face, and hear his voice once more;
    And he was mindful of the days passed o'er,
    And fain had linked them to these days of love;
    And he perchance was fain the world to move
    While love looked on; and he perchance was fain
    Some pleasure of the strife of old to gain.
    Easy withal it seemed to him to land,
    And by his empty throne awhile to stand
    Amid the wonder, and then sit him down
    While folk went forth to seek the hidden crown.
Or else his name upon the same wind borne
    As smote the world with winding of his horn,
    His hood pulled back, his banner flung abroad,
    A gleam of sunshine on his half-drawn sword.
    —Well, he and you and I have little skill
    To know the secret of Fate's worldly will;
    Yet can I guess, and you belike may guess,
    Yea, and e'en he mid all his lordliness,
    That much may be forgot in three years' space
    Outside my kingdom.—Gone his godlike face,
    His calm voice, and his kindness, half akin
    Amid a blind folk to rebuke of sin,
    Men 'gin to think that he was great and good,
    But hindered them from doing as they would,
    And ere they have much time to think on it
    Between their teeth another has the bit,
    And forth they run with Force and Fate behind.
    —Indeed his sword might somewhat heal the blind,
    Were I not, and the softness I have given;
    With me for him have hope and glory striven
    In other days when my tale was beginning;
    But sweet life lay beyond then for the winning,
    And now what sweetness?—blood of men to spill
    Who once believed him God to heal their ill:
    To break the gate and storm adown the street
    Where once his coming flower-crowned girls did greet:
    To deem the cry come from amidst his folk
    When his own country tongue should curse his stroke—
    Nay, he shall leave to better men or worse
    His people's conquered homage and their curse.
So forth they go, his Oliver and he,
    One thing at least to learn across the sea,
    That whatso needless shadows life may borrow
    Love is enough amidst of joy or sorrow.
Love is enough—My Faithful, in your eyes
    I see the thought, Our Lord is overwise
    Some minutes past in what concerns him not,
    And us no more: is all his tale forgot?
    —Ah, Well-beloved, I fell asleep e'en now,
    And in my sleep some enemy did show
    Sad ghosts of bitter things, and names unknown
    For things I know—a maze with shame bestrown
    And ruin and death; till e'en myself did seem
    A wandering curse amidst a hopeless dream.
    —Yet see! I live, no older than of old,
    What tales soe'er of changing Time has told.
    And ye who cling to all my hand shall give,
    Sorrow or joy, no less than I shall live.
Scene: Before KING PHARAMOND'S Palace.
A long time it seems since this morn
    when I met them,
    The men of my household and the great man they honour:
    Better counsel in king-choosing might I have given
    Had ye bided my coming back hither, my people:
    And yet who shall say or foretell what Fate meaneth?
    For that man there, the stranger, Honorius men called him,
    I account him the soul to King Theobald's body,
    And the twain are one king; and a goodly king may be
    For this people, who grasping at peace and good days,
    Careth little who giveth them that which they long for.
    Yet what gifts have I given them; I who this even
    Turn away with grim face from the fight that should try me?
    It is just then, I have lost: lie down, thou supplanter,
    In thy tomb in the minster when thy life is well over,
    And the well-carven image of latten laid o'er thee
    Shall live on as thou livedst, and be worthy the praising
    Whereby folk shall remember the days of thy plenty.
    Praising Theobald the Good and the peace that he brought
    them,
    But I—I shall live too, though no graven image
    On the grass of the hillside shall brave the storms' beating;
    Though through days of thy plenty the people remember
    As a dim time of war the past days of King Pharamond;
    Yet belike as time weareth, and folk turn back a little
    To the darkness where dreams lie and live on for ever,
    Even there shall be Pharamond who failed not in battle,
    But feared to overcome his folk who forgot him,
    And turned back and left them a tale for the telling,
    A song for the singing, that yet in some battle
    May grow to remembrance and rend through the ruin
    As my sword rent it through in the days gone for ever.
    So, like Enoch of old, I was not, for God took me.
    —But lo, here is Oliver, all draws to an ending—
Well met, my Oliver! the clocks strike the due minute,
    What news hast thou got?—thou art moody of visage.
In one word, 'tis battle; the days we begun with
    Must begin once again with the world waxen baser.
Ah! battle it may be: but surely no river
    Runneth back to its springing: so the world has grown wiser
    And Theobald the Constable is king in our stead,
    And contenteth the folk who cried, "Save us, King Pharamond!"
Hast thou heard of his councillor men call Honorius?
    Folk hold him in fear, and in love the tale hath it.
Much of him have I heard: nay, more, I have seen him
    With the men of my household, and the great man they honour.
    They were faring afield to some hunt or disporting,
    Few faces were missing, and many I saw there
    I was fain of in days past at fray or at feasting;
    My heart yearned towards them—but what—days have
    changed them,
    They must wend as they must down the way they are driven.
Yet e'en in these days there remaineth a remnant
    That is faithful and fears not the flap of thy banner.
And a fair crown is faith, as thou knowest, my father;
    Fails the world, yet that faileth not; love hath begot it,
    Sweet life and contentment at last springeth from it;
    No helping these need whose hearts still are with me,
    Nay, rather they handle the gold rod of my kingdom.
Yet if thou leadest forth once more as aforetime
    In faith of great deeds will I follow thee, Pharamond,
    And thy latter end yet shall be counted more glorious
    Than thy glorious beginning; and great shall my gain be
    If e'en I must die ere the day of thy triumph.
Dear is thy heart mid the best and the brightest,
    Yet not against these my famed blade will I bare.
Nay, what hast thou heard of their babble and baseness?
Full enough, friend—content thee, my lips shall not
    speak it,
    The same hour wherein they have said that I love thee.
    Suffice it, folk need me no more: the deliverance,
    Dear bought in the days past, their hearts have forgotten,
    But faintly their dim eyes a feared face remember,
    Their dull ears remember a stern voice they hated.
    What then, shall I waken their fear and their hatred,
    And then wait till fresh terror their memory awaketh,
    With the semblance of love that they have not to give me?
    Nay, nay, they are safe from my help and my justice,
    And I—I am freed, and fresh waxeth my manhood.
It may not be otherwise since thou wilt have it,
    Yet I say it again, if thou shake out thy banner,
    Some brave men will be borne unto earth peradventure,
    Many dastards go trembling to meet their due doom,
    And then shall come fair days and glory upon me
    And on all men on earth for thy fame, O King Pharamond.
Yea, I was king once; the songs sung o'er my cradle,
    Were ballads of battle and deeds of my fathers:
    Yea, I was King Pharamond; in no carpeted court-room
    Bore they the corpse of my father before me;
    But on grass trodden grey by the hoofs of the war-steeds
    Did I kneel to his white lips and sword-cloven bosom,
    As from clutch of dead fingers his notched sword I caught;
    For a furlong before us the spear-wood was glistening.
    I was king of this city when here where we stand now
    Amidst a grim silence I mustered all men folk
    Who might yet bear a weapon; and no brawl of kings was it
    That brought war on the city, and silenced the markets
    And cumbered the haven with crowd of masts sailless,
    But great countries arisen for our ruin and downfall.
    I was king of the land, when on all roads were riding
    The legates of proud princes to pray help and give
    service—
    Yea, I was a great king at last as I sat there,
    Peace spread far about me, and the love of all people
    To my palace gates wafted by each wind of the heavens.
    —And where sought I all this? with what price did I buy
    it?
    Nay, for thou knowest that this fair fame and fortune
    Came stealing soft-footed to give their gifts to me:
    And shall I, who was king once, grow griping and weary
    In unclosing the clenched fists of niggards who hold them,
    These gifts that I had once, and, having, scarce heeded?
    Nay, one thing I have sought, I have sought and have found
    it,
    And thou, friend, hast helped me and seest me made happy.
Farewell then the last time, O land of my fathers!
    Farewell, feeble hopes that I once held so mighty.
    Yet no more have I need of but this word that thou sayest,
    And nought have I to do but to serve thee, my master.
    In what land of the world shall we dwell now henceforward?
In the land where my love our returning abideth,
    The poor land and kingless of the shepherding people,
    There is peace there, and all things this land are unlike to.
Before the light waneth will I seek for a passage,
    Since for thee and for me the land groweth perilous:
    Yea, o'er sweet smell the flowers, too familiar the folk
    seem,
    Fain I grow of the salt seas, since all things are over here.
I am fain of one hour's farewell in the twilight,
    To the times I lament not: times worser than these times,
    To the times that I blame not, that brought on times
    better—
    Let us meet in our hostel—be brave mid thy kindness,
    Let thy heart say, as mine saith, that fair life awaits us.
Yea, no look in thy face is of ruin,
    O my master;
    Thou art king yet, unchanged yet, nor is my heart changing;
    The world hath no chances to conquer thy glory.
Full fair were the world if such
    faith were remembered.
    If such love as thy love had its due, O my fosterer.
    Forgive me that giftless from me thou departest,
    With thy gifts in my hands left. I might not but take them;
    Thou wilt not begrudge me, I will not forget thee.—
    —Long fall the shadows and night draws on apace now,
    Day sighs as she sinketh back on to her pillow,
    And her last waking breath is full sweet with the rose.
    —In such wise depart thou, O daylight of life,
    Loved once for the shadows that told of the dreamtide;
    Loved still for the longing whereby I remember
    That I was lone once in the world of thy making;
    Lone wandering about on thy blind way's confusion,
    The maze of thy paths that yet led me to love.
    All is passed now, and passionless, faint are ye waxen,
    Ye hours of blind seeking full of pain clean forgotten.
    If it were not that e'en now her eyes I behold not.
    That the way lieth long to her feet that would find me,
    That the green seas delay yet her fair arms enfolding,
    That the long leagues of air will not bear the cry hither
    Wherewith she is crying. Come, love, for I love thee.
Hark! O days grown a dream of the dream ye have won me,
    Do ye draw forth the ghosts of old deeds that were nothing,
    That the sound of my trumpet floats down on the even?
    What shows will ye give me to grace my departure?
    Hark!—the beat of the horse-hoofs, the murmur of men
    folk!
    Am I riding from battle amidst of my faithful,
    Wild hopes in my heart of the days that are coming;
    Wild longing unsatisfied clinging about me;
    Full of faith that the summer sun elsewhere is ripening
    The fruit grown a pain for my parched lips to think of?
    —Come back, thou poor Pharamond! come back for my pity!
    
    Far afield must thou fare before the rest cometh;
    In far lands are they raising the walls of thy prison,
    Forging wiles for waylaying, and fair lies for lulling,
    The faith and the fire of the heart the world hateth.
    In thy way wax streams fordless, and choked passes pathless,
    Fever lurks in the valley, and plague passeth over
    The sand of the plain, and with venom and fury
    Fulfilled are the woods that thou needs must wend through:
    In the hollow of the mountains the wind is a-storing
    Till the keel that shall carry thee hoisteth her sail;
    War is crouching unseen round the lands thou shalt come to,
    With thy sword cast away and thy cunning forgotten.
    Yea, and e'en the great lord, the great Love of thy fealty,
    He who goadeth thee on, weaveth nets to cast o'er thee.
    —And thou knowest it all, as thou ridest there lonely,
    With the tangles and toils of to-morrow's uprising
    Making ready meanwhile for more days of thy kingship.
    Faithful heart hadst thou, Pharamond, to hold fast thy
    treasure!
    I am fain of thee: surely no shame hath destained thee;
    Come hither, for thy face all unkissed would I look on!
    —Stand we close, for here cometh King Theobald from the
    hunting.
Enter KING THEOBALD, HONORIUS, and the people.
A fair day, my folk, have I had in your fellowship,
    And as fair a day cometh to-morrow to greet us,
    When the lord of the Golden Land bringeth us tribute:
    Grace the gifts of my good-hap with your presence, I pray you.
God save Theobald the Good, the king of his people!
Yea, save him! and send the Gold
    lords away satisfied,
    That the old sword of Pharamond, lying asleep there
    In the new golden scabbard, will yet bite as aforetime!
Troop past in the twilight, O pageant that served me,
    Pour through the dark archway to the light that awaits you
    In the chamber of daïs where I once sat among you!
    Like the shadows ye are to the shadowless glory
    Of the banquet-hall blazing with gold and light go ye:
    There blink for a little at your king in his bravery,
    Then bear forth your faith to the blackness of night-tide,
    And fall asleep fearless of memories of Pharamond,
    And in dim dreams dream haply that ye too are kings
    —For your dull morrow cometh that is as to-day is.
Pass on in contentment, O king, I discerned not
    Through the cloak of your blindness that saw nought beside
    thee,
    That feared for no pain and craved for no pleasure!
    Pass on, dead-alive, to thy place! thou art worthy:
    Nor shalt thou grow wearier than well-worshipped idol
    That the incense winds round in the land of the heathen,
    While the early and latter rains fall as God listeth,
    And on earth that God loveth the sun riseth daily.
    —Well art thou: for wert thou the crown of all rulers,
    No field shouldst thou ripen, free no frost-bounden river,
    Loose no heart from its love, turn no soul to salvation,
    Thrust no tempest aside, stay no plague in mid ocean,
    Yet grow unto thinking that thou wert God's brother,
    Till loveless death gripped thee unloved, unlamented.
    —Pass forth, weary King, bear thy crown high to-night!
    Then fall asleep, fearing no cry from times bygone,
    But in dim dreams dream haply that thou art desired,—
    —For thy dull morrow cometh, and is as to-day is.
Ah, hold! now there flashes a link in the archway,
    And its light falleth full on thy face, O Honorius,
    And I know thee the land's lord, and far away fadeth
    My old life of a king at the sight, O thou stranger!
    For I know thee full surely the foe the heart hateth
    For that barren fulfilment of all that it lacketh.
    I may turn away praising that those days long departed
    Departed without thee—how long had I piped then
    Or e'er thou hadst danced, how long were my weeping
    Ere thou hadst lamented!—What dear thing desired
    Would thy heart e'er have come to know why I craved for!
    To what crime I could think of couldst thou be consenting?
    Yet thou—well I know thee most meet for a ruler—
    —Thou lovest not mercy, yet shalt thou be merciful;
    Thou joy'st not in justice, yet just shall thy dooms be;
    No deep hell thou dreadest, nor dream'st of high heaven;
    No gleam of love leads thee: no gift men may give thee;
    For no kiss, for no comfort the lone way thou wearest,
    A blind will without life, lest thou faint ere the end come.
    —Yea, folly it was when I called thee my foeman;
    From thee may I turn now with sword in the scabbard
    Without shame or misgiving, because God hath made thee
    A ruler for manfolk: pass on then unpitied!
    There is darkness between us till the measure's fulfilment.
    Amidst singing thou hear'st not, fair sights that thou seest
    not,
    Think this eve on the deeds thou shalt set in men's hands
    To bring fair days about for which thou hast no blessing.
    Then fall asleep fearless of dead days that return not;
    Yet dream if thou may'st that thou yet hast a hope!
    —For thy dull morrow cometh and is as to-day is.
O sweet wind of the night, wherewith now ariseth
    The red moon through the garden boughs frail, overladen,
    O faint murmuring tongue of the dream-tide triumphant,
    That wouldst tell me sad tales in the times long passed over,
    If somewhat I sicken and turn to your freshness,
    From no shame it is of earth's tangle and trouble,
    And deeds done for nought, and change that forgetteth;
    But for hope of the lips that I kissed on the sea-strand,
    But for hope of the hands that clung trembling about
    me,—
    And the breast that was heaving with words driven backward,
    By longing I longed for, by pain of departing,
    By my eyes that knew her pain, my pain that might speak
    not—
    Yea, for hope of the morn when the sea is passed over,
    And for hope of the next moon the elm-boughs shall tangle;
    And fresh dawn, and fresh noon, and fresh night of desire
    Still following and changing, with nothing forgotten;
    For hope of new wonder each morn, when I, waking
    Behold her awaking eyes turning to seek me;
    For hope of fresh marvels each time the world changing
    Shall show her feet moving in noontide to meet me;
    For hope of fresh bliss, past all words, half forgotten,
    When her voice shall break through the hushed blackness of
    night.
    —O sweet wind of the summer-tide, broad moon
    a-whitening,
    Bear me witness to Love, and the world he has fashioned!
    It shall change, we shall change, as through rain and through
    sunshine
    The green rod of the rose-bough to blossoming changeth:
    Still lieth in wait with his sweet tale untold of
    Each long year of Love, and the first scarce beginneth,
    Wherein I have hearkened to the word God hath whispered,
    Why the fair world was fashioned mid wonders uncounted.
    Breathe soft, O sweet wind, for surely she speaketh:
    Weary I wax, and my life is a-waning;
    Life lapseth fast, and I faint for thee, Pharamond,
    What are thou lacking if Love no more sufficeth?
    —Weary not, sweet, as I weary to meet thee;
    Look not on the long way but my eyes that were weeping
    Faint not in love as thy Pharamond fainteth!—
    —Yea, Love were enough if thy lips were not lacking.
THE MUSIC
Enter before the curtain, LOVE, holding a crown and palm-branch.
If love be real, if I whom ye behold
    Be aught but glittering wings and gown of gold,
    Be aught but singing of an ancient song
    Made sweet by record of dead stingless wrong,
    How shall we part at that sad garden's end
    Through which the ghosts of mighty lovers wend?
    How shall ye faint and fade with giftless hands
    Who once held fast the life of all the lands?
    —Beloved, if so much as this I say,
    I know full well ye need it not to-day,
    As with full hearts and glorious hope ablaze
    Through the thick veil of what shall be ye gaze,
    And lacking words to name the things ye see
    Turn back with yearning speechless mouths to me.—
    —Ah, not to-day—and yet the time has been
    When by the bed my wings have waved unseen
    Wherein my servant lay who deemed me dead;
    My tears have dropped anigh the hapless head
    Deep buried in the grass and crying out
    For heaven to fall, and end despair or doubt:
    Lo, for such days I speak and say, believe
    That from these hands reward ye shall receive.
    —Reward of what?—Life springing fresh
    again.—
    Life of delight?—I say it not—Of pain?
    It may be—Pain eternal?—Who may tell?
    Yet pain of Heaven, beloved, and not of Hell.
    —What sign, what sign, ye cry, that so it is?
    The sign of Earth, its sorrow and its bliss,
    Waxing and waning, steadfastness and change;
    Too full of life that I should think it strange
    Though death hang over it; too sure to die
    But I must deem its resurrection nigh.
    —In what wise, ah, in what wise shall it be?
    How shall the bark that girds the winter tree
    Babble about the sap that sleeps beneath,
    And tell the fashion of its life and death?
    How shall my tongue in speech man's longing wrought
    Tell of the things whereof he knoweth nought?
    Should I essay it might ye understand
    How those I love shall share my promised land!
    Then must I speak of little things as great,
    Then must I tell of love and call it hate,
    Then must I bid you seek what all men shun,
    Reward defeat, praise deeds that were not done.
Have faith, and crave and suffer, and all ye
    The many mansions of my house shall see
    In all content: cast shame and pride away,
    Let honour gild the world's eventless day,
    Shrink not from change, and shudder not at crime,
    Leave lies to rattle in the sieve of Time!
    Then, whatsoe'er your workday gear shall stain,
    Of me a wedding-garment shall ye gain
    No God shall dare cry out at, when at last
    Your time of ignorance is overpast;
    A wedding garment, and a glorious seat
    Within my household, e'en as yet be meet.
Fear not, I say again; believe it true
    That not as men mete shall I measure you:
    This calm strong soul, whose hidden tale found out
    Has grown a spell to conquer fear and doubt,
    Is he not mine? yea, surely—mine no less
    This well mocked clamourer out of bitterness:
    The strong one's strength, from me he had it not;
    Let the world keep it that his love forgot;
    The weak one's weakness was enough to save,
    Let the world hide it in his honour's grave!
    For whatso folly is, or wisdom was
    Across my threshold naked all must pass.
Fear not; no vessel to dishonour born
    Is in my house; there all shall well adorn
    The walls whose stones the lapse of Time has laid.
    Behold again; this life great stories made;
    All cast aside for love, and then and then
    Love filched away; the world an adder-den,
    And all folk foes: and one, the one desire—
    —How shall we name it?—grown a poisoned fire,
    God once, God still, but God of wrong and shame
    A lying God, a curse without a name.
    So turneth love to hate, the wise world saith.
    —Folly—I say 'twixt love and hate lies death,
    They shall not mingle: neither died this love,
    But through a dreadful world all changed must move
    With earthly death and wrong, and earthly woe
    The only deeds its hand might find to do.
    Surely ye deem that this one shall abide
    Within the murmuring palace of my pride.
But lo another, how shall he have praise?
    Through flame and thorns I led him many days
    And nought he shrank, but smiled and followed close,
    Till in his path the shade of hate arose
    'Twixt him and his desire: with heart that burned
    For very love back through the thorns he turned,
    His wounds, his tears, his prayers without avail
    Forgotten now, nor e'en for him a tale;
    Because for love's sake love he cast aside.
    —Lo, saith the World, a heart well satisfied
    With what I give, a barren love forgot—
    —Draw near me, O my child, and heed them not!
    The world thou lovest, e'en my world it is,
    Thy faithful hands yet reach out for my bliss,
    Thou seest me in the night and in the day
    Thou canst not deem that I can go astray.
No further, saith the world 'twixt Heaven and Hell
    Than 'twixt these twain.—My faithful, heed it well!
    For on the great day when the hosts are met
    On Armageddon's plain by spears beset,
    This is my banner with my sign thereon,
    That is my sword wherewith my deeds are done.
    But how shall tongue of man tell all the tale
    Of faithful hearts who overcome or fail,
    But at the last fail nowise to be mine.
    In diverse ways they drink the fateful wine
    Those twain drank mid the lulling of the storm
    Upon the Irish Sea, when love grown warm
    Kindled and blazed, and lit the days to come,
    The hope and joy and death that led them home.
    —In diverse ways; yet having drunk, be sure
    The flame thus lighted ever shall endure,
    So my feet trod the grapes whereby it glowed.
Lo, Faithful, lo, the door of my abode
    Wide open now, and many pressing in
    That they the lordship of the World may win!
    Hark to the murmuring round my bannered car,
    And gird your weapons to you for the war!
    For who shall say how soon the day shall be
    Of that last fight that swalloweth up the sea?
    Fear not, be ready! forth the banners go,
    And will not turn again till every foe
    Is overcome as though they had not been.
    Then, with your memories ever fresh and green,
    Come back within the House of Love to dwell;
    For ye—the sorrow that no words might tell,
    Your tears unheeded, and your prayers made nought
    Thus and no otherwise through all have wrought,
    That if, the while ye toiled and sorrowed most
    The sound of your lamenting seemed all lost,
    And from my land no answer came again,
    It was because of that your care and pain
    A house was building, and your bitter sighs
    Came hither as toil-helping melodies,
    And in the mortar of our gem-built wall
    Your tears were mingled mid the rise and fall
    Of golden trowels tinkling in the hands
    Of builders gathered wide from all the lands.—
    —Is the house finished? Nay, come help to build
    Walls that the sun of sorrow once did gild
    Through many a bitter morn and hopeless eve,
    That so at last in bliss ye may believe;
    Then rest with me, and turn no more to tears,
    For then no more by days and months and years,
    By hours of pain come back, and joy passed o'er
    We measure time that was—and is no more.
The afternoon is waxen grey
    Now these fair shapes have passed away;
    And I, who should be merry now
    A-thinking of the glorious show,
    Feel somewhat sad, and wish it were
    To-morrow's mid-morn fresh and fair
    About the babble of our stead.
Content thee, sweet, for nowise dead
    Within our hearts the story is;
    It shall come back to better bliss
    On many an eve of happy spring,
    Or midst of summer's flourishing.
    Or think—some noon of autumn-tide
    Thou wandering on the turf beside
    The chestnut-wood may'st find thy song
    Fade out, as slow thou goest along,
    Until at last thy feet stay there
    As though thou bidedst something fair,
    And hearkenedst for a coming foot;
    While down the hole unto the root
    The long leaves flutter loud to thee
    The fall of spiky nuts shall be,
    And creeping wood-wale's noise above;
    For thou wouldst see the wings of Love.
Or some November eve belike
    Thou wandering back with bow and tyke
    From wolf-chase on the wind-swept hill
    Shall find that narrow vale and still,
    And Pharamond and Azalais
    Amidmost of that grassy place
    Where we twain met last year, whereby
    Red-shafted pine-trunks rise on high,
    And changeless now from year to year,
    What change soever brought them there,
    Great rocks are scattered all around:
    —Wouldst thou be frightened at the sound
    Of their soft speech? So long ago
    It was since first their love did grow.
Maybe: for e'en now when he turned,
    His heart's scorn and his hate outburned,
    And love the more for that ablaze,
    I shuddered, e'en as in the place
    High up the mountains, where men say
    Gods dwelt in time long worn away.
At Love's voice did I tremble too,
    And his bright wings, for all I knew
    He was a comely minstrel-lad,
    In dainty golden raiment clad.
Yea, yea; for though to-day he spake
    Words measured for our pleasure's sake,
    From well-taught mouth not overwise,
    Yet did that fount of speech arise
    In days that ancient folk called old.
    O long ago the tale was told
    To mighty men of thought and deed,
    Who kindled hearkening their own need,
    Set forth by long-forgotten men,
    E'en as we kindle: praise we then
    Tales of old time, whereby alone
    The fairness of the world is shown.
A longing yet about me clings,
    As I had hearkened half-told things;
    And better than the words make plain
    I seem to know these lovers twain.
    Let us go hence, lest there should fall
    Something that yet should mar it all.
Hist—Master Mayor is drawn anigh;
    The Empress speaketh presently.
May it please you, your Graces, that I be forgiven,
    Over-bold, over-eager to bear forth my speech,
    In which yet there speaketh the Good Town, beseeching
    That ye tell us of your kindness if ye be contented
    With this breath of old tales, and shadowy seemings
    Of old times departed.—Overwise for our pleasure
    May the rhyme be perchance; but rightly we knew not
    How to change it and fashion it fresh into fairness.
    And once more, your Graces, we pray your forgiveness
    For the boldness Love gave us to set forth this story;
    And again, that I say, all that Pharamond sought for,
    Through sick dreams and weariness, now have ye found,
    Mid health and in wealth, and in might to uphold us;
    Midst our love who shall deem you our hope and our treasure.
    Well all is done now; so forget ye King Pharamond,
    And Azalais his love, if we set it forth foully,
    That fairly set forth were a sweet thing to think of
    In the season of summer betwixt labour and sleeping.
Fair Master Mayor, and City well beloved,
    Think of us twain as folk no little moved
    By this your kindness; and believe it not
    That Pharamond the Freed shall be forgot,
    By us at least: yea, more than ye may think,
    This summer dream into our hearts shall sink.
    Lo, Pharamond longed and toiled, nor toiled in vain,
    But fame he won: he longed and toiled again,
    And Love he won: 'twas a long time ago,
    And men did swiftly what we now do slow,
    And he, a great man full of gifts and grace,
    Wrought out a twofold life in ten years' space.
    Ah, fair sir, if for me reward come first,
    Yet will I hope that ye have seen the worst
    Of that my kingcraft, that I yet shall earn
    Some part of that which is so long to learn.
    Now of your gentleness I pray you bring
    This knife and girdle, deemed a well-wrought thing;
    And a king's thanks, whatso they be of worth,
    To him who Pharamond this day set forth
    In worthiest wise, and made a great man live,
    Giving me greater gifts than I may give.
And therewithal I pray you, Master Mayor,
    Unto the seeming Azalais to bear
    This chain, that she may wear it for my sake,
    The memory of my pleasure to awake. [Exit MAYOR.
Gifts such as kings give, sweet! Fain had I been
    To see him face to face and his fair Queen,
    And thank him friendly; asking him maybe
    How the world looks to one with love left free:
    It may not be, for as thine eyes say, sweet,
    Few folk as friends shall unfreed Pharamond meet.
    So is it: we are lonelier than those twain,
    Though from their vale they ne'er depart again.
Shall I lament it, love, since thou and I
    By all the seeming pride are drawn more nigh?
    Lo, love, our toil-girthed garden of desire,
    How of its changeless sweetness may we tire,
    While round about the storm is in the boughs
    And careless change amid the turmoil ploughs
    The rugged fields we needs must stumble o'er,
    Till the grain ripens that shall change no more.
Yea, and an omen fair we well may deem
    This dreamy shadowing of ancient dream,
    Of what our own hearts long for on the day
    When the first furrow cleaves the fallow grey.
O fair it is! let us go forth, my sweet,
    And be alone amid the babbling street;
    Yea, so alone that scarce the hush of night
    May add one joy unto our proved delight.
Fair lovers were they: I am fain
    To see them both ere long again;
    Yea, nigher too, if it might be.
Too wide and dim, love, lies the sea,
    That we should look on face to face
    This Pharamond and Azalais.
    Those only from the dead come back
    Who left behind them what they lack.
Nay, I was asking nought so strange,
    Since long ago their life did change:
    The seeming King and Queen I meant.
    And e'en now 'twas my full intent
    To bid them home to us straightway,
    And crown the joyance of to-day.
    He may be glad to see my face,
    He first saw mid that waggon race
    When the last barley-sheaf came home.
A great joy were it, should they come.
    They are dear lovers, sure enough.
    He deems the summer air too rough
    To touch her kissed cheek, howsoe'er
    Through winter mountains they must fare,
    He would bid spring new flowers to make
    Before her feet, that oft must ache
    With flinty driftings of the waste.
    And sure is she no more abased
    Before the face of king and lord,
    Than if the very Pharamond's sword
    Her love amid the hosts did wield
    Above the dinted lilied shield:
    O bid them home with us, and we
    Their scholars for a while will be
    In many a lesson of sweet lore
    To learn love's meaning more and more.
And yet this night of all the year
    Happier alone perchance they were,
    And better so belike would seem
    The glorious lovers of the dream:
    So let them dream on lip to lip:
    Yet will I gain his fellowship
    Ere many days be o'er my head,
    And they shall rest them in our stead;
    And there we four awhile shall dwell
    As though the world were nought but well,
    And that old time come back again
    When nought in all the earth had pain.
    The sun through lime-boughs where we dine
    Upon my father's cup shall shine;
    The vintage of the river-bank,
    That ten years since the sunbeams drank,
    Shall fill the mazer bowl carved o'er
    With naked shepherd-folk of yore.
    Dainty should seem worse fare than ours
    As o'er the close-thronged garden flowers
    The wind comes to us, and the bees
    Complain overhead mid honey-trees.
Wherewith shall we be garlanded?
For thee the buds of roses red.
For her white roses widest blown.
The jasmine boughs for Pharamond's crown.
And sops-in-wine for thee, fair love.
Surely our feast shall deeper move
    The kind heart of the summer-tide
    Than many a day of pomp and pride;
    And as by moon and stars well lit
    Our kissing lips shall finish it,
    Full satisfied our hearts shall be
    With that well-won felicity.
Ah, sweetheart, be not all so sure:
    Love, who beyond all worlds shall dure,
    Mid pleading sweetness still doth keep
    A goad to stay his own from sleep;
    And I shall long as thou shalt long
    For unknown cure of unnamed wrong
    As from our happy feast we pass
    Along the rose-strewn midnight grass—
    —Praise Love who will not be forgot!
Yea, praise we Love who sleepeth not!
    —Come, o'er much gold mine eyes have seen,
    And long now for the pathway green,
    And rose-hung ancient walls of grey
    Yet warm with sunshine gone away.
Yea, full fain would I rest thereby,
    And watch the flickering martins fly
    About the long eave-bottles red
    And the clouds lessening overhead:
    E'en now meseems the cows are come
    Unto the grey gates of our home,
    And low to hear the milking-pail:
    The peacock spreads abroad his tail
    Against the sun, as down the lane
    The milkmaids pass the moveless wain,
    And stable door, where the roan team
    An hour agone began to dream
    Over the dusty oats.—
    Come, love,
    Noises of river and of grove
    And moving things in field and stall
    And night-birds' whistle shall be all
    Of the world's speech that we shall hear
    By then we come the garth anear:
    For then the moon that hangs aloft
    These thronged streets, lightless now and soft,
    Unnoted, yea, e'en like a shred
    Of yon wide white cloud overhead,
    Sharp in the dark star-sprinkled sky
    Low o'er the willow boughs shall lie;
    And when our chamber we shall gain
    Eastward our drowsy eyes shall strain
    If yet perchance the dawn may show.
    —O Love, go with us as we go,
    And from the might of thy fair hand
    Cast wide about the blooming land
    The seed of such-like tales as this!
    —O Day, change round about our bliss,
    Come, restful night, when day is done!
    Come, dawn, and bring a fairer one!
Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & Co.
Edinburgh & London