Complete Works of Lewis Carroll (129 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Lewis Carroll
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PREFACE.

 

Nearly the whole of this volume is a reprint of the serious portion of
Phantasmagoria and other Poems
, which was first published in 1869 and has long been out of print.
“The Path of Roses” was written soon after the Crimean War, when the name of Florence Nightingale had already become a household-word.
“Only a Woman’s Hair” was suggested by a circumstance mentioned in
The Life of Dean Swift
, viz., that, after his death, a small packet was found among his papers, containing a single lock of hair and inscribed with those words.
“After Three Days” was written after seeing Holman Hunt’s picture,
The Finding of Christ in the Temple
.

The two poems, “Far Away” and “A Song of Love”, are reprinted from
Sylvie and Bruno
and
Sylvie and Bruno Concluded
, books whose high price (made necessary by the great cost of production) has, I fear, put them out of the reach of most of my readers.
“A Lesson in Latin” is reprinted from
The Jabberwock
, a Magazine got up among the Members of “The Girls’ Latin School, Boston, U.S.A.”
The only poems, here printed for the first time, are put together under the title of “Puck Lost and Found,” having been inscribed in two books—
Fairies
, a poem by Allingham, illustrated by Miss E.
Gertrude Thomson, and
Merry Elves
, a story-book, by whom written I do not know, illustrated by C.
O.
Murray—which were presented to a little girl and boy, as a sort of memento of a visit paid by them to the author one day, on which occasion he taught them the pastime—dear to the hearts of children—of folding paper-“pistols,” which can be made to imitate, fairly well, the noise of a real one.

Jan., 1898.

 

 

 

 

THREE SUNSETS.

 

He saw her once, and in the glance,

A moment’s glance of meeting eyes,

His heart stood still in sudden trance:

He trembled with a sweet surprise—

All in the waning light she stood,

The star of perfect womanhood.

 

That summer-eve his heart was light:

With lighter step he trod the ground:

And life was fairer in his sight,

And music was in every sound:

He blessed the world where there could be

So beautiful a thing as she.

 

There once again, as evening fell

And stars were peering overhead,

Two lovers met to bid farewell:

The western sun gleamed faint and red,

Lost in a drift of purple cloud

That wrapped him like a funeral-shroud.

 

Long time the memory of that night—

The hand that clasped, the lips that kissed,

The form that faded from his sight

Slow sinking through the tearful mist—

In dreamy music seemed to roll

Through the dark chambers of his soul.

 

So after many years he came

A wanderer from a distant shore:

The street, the house, were still the same,

But those he sought were there no more:

His burning words, his hopes and fears,

Unheeded fell on alien ears.

 

Only the children from their play

Would pause the mournful tale to hear,

Shrinking in half-alarm away,

Or, step by step, would venture near

To touch with timid curious hands

That strange wild man from other lands.

 

He sat beside the busy street,

There, where he last had seen her face:

And thronging memories, bitter-sweet,

Seemed yet to haunt the ancient place:

Her footfall ever floated near:

Her voice was ever in his ear.

 

He sometimes, as the daylight waned

And evening mists began to roll,

In half-soliloquy complained

Of that black shadow on his soul,

And blindly fanned, with cruel care,

The ashes of a vain despair.

 

The summer fled: the lonely man

Still lingered out the lessening days;

Still, as the night drew on, would scan

Each passing face with closer gaze—

Till, sick at heart, he turned away,

And sighed “she will not come to-day.”

 

So by degrees his spirit bent

To mock its own despairing cry,

In stern self-torture to invent

New luxuries of agony,

And people all the vacant space

With visions of her perfect face.

 

Then for a moment she was nigh,

He heard no step, but she was there;

As if an angel suddenly

Were bodied from the viewless air,

And all her fine ethereal frame

Should fade as swiftly as it came.

 

So, half in fancy’s sunny trance,

And half in misery’s aching void

With set and stony countenance

His bitter being he enjoyed,

And thrust for ever from his mind

The happiness he could not find.

 

As when the wretch, in lonely room,

To selfish death is madly hurled,

The glamour of that fatal fume

Shuts out the wholesome living world—

So all his manhood’s strength and pride

One sickly dream had swept aside.

 

Yea, brother, and we passed him there,

But yesterday, in merry mood,

And marveled at the lordly air

That shamed his beggar’s attitude,

Nor heeded that ourselves might be

Wretches as desperate as he;

 

Who let the thought of bliss denied

Make havoc of our life and powers,

And pine, in solitary pride,

For peace that never shall be ours,

Because we will not work and wait

In trustful patience for our fate.

 

And so it chanced once more that she

Came by the old familiar spot:

The face he would have died to see

Bent o’er him, and he knew it not;

Too rapt in selfish grief to hear,

Even when happiness was near.

 

And pity filled her gentle breast

For him that would not stir nor speak

The dying crimson of the west,

That faintly tinged his haggard cheek,

Fell on her as she stood, and shed

A glory round the patient head.

 

Ah, let him wake!
The moments fly:

This awful tryst may be the last.

And see, the tear, that dimmed her eye,

Had fallen on him ere she passed—

She passed: the crimson paled to gray:

And hope departed with the day.

 

The heavy hours of night went by,

And silence quickened into sound,

And light slid up the eastern sky,

And life began its daily round—

But light and life for him were fled:

His name was numbered with the dead.

 

Nov., 1861.
 

 

 

 

THE PATH OF ROSES.

 

 In the dark silence of an ancient room,

Whose one tall window fronted to the West,

Where, through laced tendrils of a hanging vine,

The sunset-glow was fading into night,

Sat a pale Lady, resting weary hands

Upon a great clasped volume, and her face

Within her hands.
Not as in rest she bowed,

But large hot tears were coursing down her cheek,

And her low-panted sobs broke awefully

Upon the sleeping echoes of the night.

Soon she unclasp’d the volume once again,

And read the words in tone of agony,

As in self-torture, weeping as she read:—

 

“He crowns the glory of his race:

He prayeth but in some fit place

To meet his foeman face to face:

 

“And, battling for the True, the Right,

From ruddy dawn to purple night,

To perish in the midmost fight:

 

“Where hearts are fierce and hands are strong,

Where peals the bugle loud and long,

Where blood is dropping in the throng:

 

“Still, with a dim and glazing eye,

To watch the tide of victory,

To hear in death the battle-cry:

 

“Then, gathered grandly to his grave,

To rest among the true and brave,

In holy ground, where yew-trees wave:

 

“Where, from church-windows sculptured fair,

Float out upon the evening air

The note of praise, the voice of prayer:

 

“Where no vain marble mockery

Insults with loud and boastful lie

The simple soldier’s memory:

 

“Where sometimes little children go,

And read, in whisper’d accent slow,

The name of him who sleeps below.”

 

Her voice died out: like one in dreams she sat.

“Alas!”
she sighed.
“For what can Woman do?

Her life is aimless, and her death unknown:

Hemmed in by social forms she pines in vain.

Man has his work, but what can Woman do?”

And answer came there from the creeping gloom,

The creeping gloom that settled into night:

“Peace!
For thy lot is other than a man’s:

His is a path of thorns: he beats them down:

He faces death: he wrestles with despair.

Thine is of roses, to adorn and cheer

His lonely life, and hide the thorns in flowers.”

She spake again: in bitter tone she spake:

“Aye, as a toy, the puppet of an hour,

Or a fair posy, newly plucked at morn,

But flung aside and withered ere the night.”

And answer came there from the creeping gloom,

The creeping gloom that blackened into night:

“So shalt thou be the lamp to light his path,

What time the shades of sorrow close around.”

And, so it seemed to her, an awful light

Pierced slowly through the darkness, orbed, and grew,

Until all passed away—the ancient room—

The sunlight dying through the trellised vine—

The one tall window—all had passed away,

And she was standing on the mighty hills.

Beneath, around, and far as eye could see,

Squadron on squadron, stretched opposing hosts,

Ranked as for battle, mute and motionless.

Anon a distant thunder shook the ground,

The tramp of horses, and a troop shot by—

Plunged headlong in that living sea of men—

Plunged to their death: back from that fatal field

A scattered handful, fighting hard for life,

Broke through the serried lines; but, as she gazed,

They shrank and melted, and their forms grew thin—

Grew pale as ghosts when the first morning ray

Dawns from the East—the trumpet’s brazen blare

Died into silence—and the vision passed—

Passed to a room where sick and dying lay

In long, sad line—there brooded Fear and Pain—

Darkness was there, the shade of Azrael’s wing.

But there was one that ever, to and fro,

Moved with light footfall: purely calm her face,

And those deep steadfast eyes that starred the gloom:

Still, as she went, she ministered to each

Comfort and counsel; cooled the fevered brow

With softest touch, and in the listening ear

Of the pale sufferer whispered words of peace.

The dying warrior, gazing as she passed,

Clasped his thin hands and blessed her.
Bless her too,

Thou, who didst bless the merciful of old!

So prayed the Lady, watching tearfully

Her gentle moving onward, till the night

Had veiled her wholly, and the vision passed.

Then once again the solemn whisper came:

“So in the darkest path of man’s despair,

Where War and Terror shake the troubled earth,

Lies woman’s mission; with unblenching brow

To pass through scenes of horror and affright

Where men grow sick and tremble: unto her

All things are sanctified, for all are good.

Nothing so mean, but shall deserve her care:

Nothing so great, but she may bear her part.

No life is vain: each hath his place assigned:

Do thou thy task, and leave the rest to God.”

And there was silence, but the Lady made

No answer, save one deeply-breathed “Amen.”

And she arose, and in that darkening room

Stood lonely as a spirit of the night—

Stood calm and fearless in the gathered night—

And raised her eyes to heaven.
There were tears

Upon her face, but in her heart was peace,

Peace that the world nor gives nor takes away!

 

April 10, 1856.

 

 

 

BOOK: Complete Works of Lewis Carroll
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