Foliage: Various Poems






RETURN TO NATURE

     My song is of that city which
     Has men too poor and men too rich;
     Where some are sick, too richly fed,
     While others take the sparrows' bread:
     Where some have beds to warm their bones,
     While others sleep on hard, cold stones
     That suck away their bodies' heat.
     Where men are drunk in every street;
     Men full of poison, like those flies
     That still attack the horses' eyes.
     Where some men freeze for want of cloth,
     While others show their jewels' worth
     And dress in satin, fur or silk;
     Where fine rich ladies wash in milk,
     While starving mothers have no food
     To make them fit in flesh and blood;
     So that their watery breasts can give
     Their babies milk and make them live.
     Where one man does the work of four,
     And dies worn out before his hour;
     While some seek work in vain, and grief
     Doth make their fretful lives as brief.
     Where ragged men are seen to wait
     For charity that's small and late;
     While others haunt in idle leisure,
     Theatre doors to pay for pleasure.
     No more I'll walk those crowded places
     And take hot dreams from harlots' faces;
     I'll know no more those passions' dreams,
     While musing near these quiet streams;
     That biting state of savage lust
     Which, true love absent, burns to dust.
     Gold's rattle shall not rob my ears
     Of this sweet music of the spheres.
     I'll walk abroad with fancy free;
     Each leafy, summer's morn I'll see
     The trees, all legs or bodies, when
     They vary in their shapes like men.
     I'll walk abroad and see again
     How quiet pools are pricked by rain;
     And you shall hear a song as sweet
     As when green leaves and raindrops meet.
     I'll hear the Nightingale's fine mood,
     Rattling with thunder in the wood,
     Made bolder by each mighty crash;
     Who drives her notes with every flash
     Of lightning through the summer's night.
     No more I'll walk in that pale light
     That shows the homeless man awake,
     Ragged and cold; harlot and rake,
     That have their hearts in rags, and die
     Before that poor wretch they pass by.
     Nay, I have found a life so fine
     That every moment seems divine;
     By shunning all those pleasures full,
     That bring repentance cold and dull.
     Such misery seen in days gone by,
     That, made a coward, now I fly
     To green things, like a bird. Alas!
     In days gone by I could not pass
     Ten men but what the eyes of one
     Would burn me for no kindness done;
     And wretched women I passed by
     Sent after me a moan or sigh.
     Ah, wretched days: for in that place
     My soul's leaves sought the human face,
     And not the Sun's for warmth and light—
     And so was never free from blight.
     But seek me now, and you will find
     Me on some soft green bank reclined;
     Watching the stately deer close by,
     That in a great deep hollow lie
     Shaking their tails with all the ease
     That lambs can. First, look for the trees,
     Then, if you seek me, find me quick.
     Seek me no more where men are thick,
     But in green lanes where I can walk
     A mile, and still no human folk
     Tread on my shadow. Seek me where
     The strange oak tree is, that can bear
     One white-leaved branch among the green—
     Which many a woodman has not seen.
     If you would find me, go where cows
     And sheep stand under shady boughs;
     Where furious squirrels shake a tree
     As though they'd like to bury me
     Under a leaf shower heavy, and
     I laugh at them for spite, and stand.
     Seek me no more in human ways—
     Who am a coward since those days
     My mind was burned by poor men's eyes,
     And frozen by poor women's sighs.
     Then send your pearls across the sea,
     Your feathers, scent and ivory,
     You distant lands—but let my bales
     Be brought by Cuckoos, Nightingales,
     That come in spring from your far shores;
     Sweet birds that carry richer stores
     Than men can dream of, when they prize
     Fine silks and pearls for merchandise;
     And dream of ships that take the floods
     Sunk to their decks with such vain goods;
     Bringing that traitor silk, whose soft
     Smooth tongue persuades the poor too oft
     From sweet content; and pearls, whose fires
     Make ashes of our best desires.
     For I have heard the sighs and whines
     Of rich men that drink costly wines
     And eat the best of fish and fowl;
     Men that have plenty, and still growl
     Because they cannot like kings live—
     "Alas!" they whine, "we cannot save."
     Since I have heard those rich ones sigh,
     Made poor by their desires so high,
     I cherish more a simple mind;
     That I am well content to find
     My pictures in the open air,
     And let my walls and floors go bare;
     That I with lovely things can fill
     My rooms, whene'er sweet Fancy will.
     I make a fallen tree my chair,
     And soon forget no cushion's there;
     I lie upon the grass or straw,
     And no soft down do I sigh for;
     For with me all the time I keep
     Sweet dreams that, do I wake or sleep,
     Shed on me still their kindly beams;
     Aye, I am richer with my dreams
     Than banks where men dull-eyed and cold
     Without a tremble shovel gold.
     A happy life is this. I walk
     And hear more birds than people talk;
     I hear the birds that sing unseen,
     On boughs now smothered with leaves green;
     I sit and watch the swallows there,
     Making a circus in the air;
     That speed around straight-going crow,
     As sharks around a ship can go;
     I hear the skylark out of sight,
     Hid perfectly in all this light.
     The dappled cows in fields I pass,
     Up to their bosoms in deep grass;
     Old oak trees, with their bowels gone,
     I see with spring's green finery on.
     I watch the buzzing bees for hours,
     To see them rush at laughing flowers—
     And butterflies that lie so still.
     I see great houses on the hill,
     With shining roofs; and there shines one,
     It seems that heaven has dropped the sun.
     I see yon cloudlet sail the skies,
     Racing with clouds ten times its size.
     I walk green pathways, where love waits
     To talk in whispers at old gates;
     Past stiles—on which I lean, alone—
     Carved with the names of lovers gone;
     I stand on arches whose dark stones
     Can turn the wind's soft sighs to groans.
     I hear the Cuckoo when first he
     Makes this green world's discovery,
     And re-creates it in my mind,
     Proving my eyes were growing blind.
     I see the rainbow come forth clear
     And wave her coloured scarf to cheer
     The sun long swallowed by a flood—
     So do I live in lane and wood.
     Let me look forward to each spring
     As eager as the birds that sing;
     And feed my eyes on spring's young flowers
     Before the bees by many hours,
     My heart to leap and sing her praise
     Before the birds by many days.
     Go white my hair and skin go dry—
     But let my heart a dewdrop lie

     As fresh as when my life was young.




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