Fair now is the
springtide, now earth lies beholding
With the eyes of a lover the face of the sun;
Long lasteth the daylight, and hope is enfolding
The green-growing acres with increase begun.
Now sweet, sweet it is through the land to be
straying
Mid the birds and the blossoms and the beasts of the
field;
Love mingles with love, and no evil is weighing
On thy heart or mine, where all sorrow is
healed.
From township to township, o’er down and
by tillage
Far, far have we wandered and long was the day,
But now cometh eve at the end of the village,
Where over the grey wall the church riseth grey.
There is wind in the twilight; in the white
road before us
The straw from the ox-yard is blowing about;
The moon’s rim is rising, a star glitters o’er us,
And the vane on the spire-top is swinging in
doubt.
Down there dips the highway, toward the bridge
crossing over
The brook that runs on to the Thames and the sea.
Draw closer, my sweet, we are lover and lover;
This eve art thou given to gladness and me.
p.
4Shall we be glad always? Come closer and
hearken:
Three fields further on, as they told me down
there,
When the young moon has set, if the March sky should darken,
We might see from the hill-top the great
city’s glare.
Hark, the wind in the elm-boughs! From
London it bloweth,
And telling of gold, and of hope and unrest;
Of power that helps not; of wisdom that knoweth,
But teacheth not aught of the worst and the
best.
Of the rich men it telleth, and strange is the
story
How they have, and they hanker, and grip far and
wide;
And they live and they die, and the earth and its glory
Has been but a burden they scarce might abide.
Hark! the March wind again of a people is
telling;
Of the life that they live there, so haggard and
grim,
That if we and our love amidst them had been dwelling
My fondness had faltered, thy beauty grown dim.
This land we have loved in our love and our
leisure
For them hangs in heaven, high out of their
reach;
The wide hills o’er the sea-plain for them have no
pleasure,
The grey homes of their fathers no story to
teach.
The singers have sung and the builders have
builded,
The painters have fashioned their tales of
delight;
For what and for whom hath the world’s book been gilded,
When all is for these but the blackness of
night?
p.
5How long and for what is their patience abiding?
How oft and how oft shall their story be told,
While the hope that none seeketh in darkness is hiding
And in grief and in sorrow the world groweth
old?
Come back to the
inn, love, and the lights and the fire,
And the fiddler’s old tune and the shuffling
of feet;
For there in a while shall be rest and desire,
And there shall the morrow’s uprising be
sweet.
Yet, love, as we wend the wind bloweth behind
us
And beareth the last tale it telleth to-night,
How here in the spring-tide the message shall find us;
For the hope that none seeketh is coming to
light.
Like the seed of midwinter, unheeded,
unperished,
Like the autumn-sown wheat ’neath the snow
lying green,
Like the love that o’ertook us, unawares and
uncherished,
Like the babe ’neath thy girdle that groweth
unseen,
So the hope of the people now buddeth and
groweth—
Rest fadeth before it, and blindness and fear;
It biddeth us learn all the wisdom it knoweth;
It hath found us and held us, and biddeth us
hear:
For it beareth the message: “Rise up on
the morrow
And go on your ways toward the doubt and the
strife;
Join hope to our hope and blend sorrow with sorrow,
And seek for men’s love in the short days of
life.”
p.
6But lo, the old inn, and the lights and the fire,
And the fiddler’s old tune and the shuffling
of feet;
Soon for us shall be quiet and rest and desire,
And to-morrow’s uprising to deeds shall be
sweet.
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