Author's Poems


Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
in Poems (Author's Poems)
Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,
No birth, identity, form--no object of the world.
Nor life, nor force, nor any visible thing;
Appearance must not foil, nor shifted sphere confuse thy brain.
Ample are time and space--ample the fields of Nature.
The body, sluggish, aged, cold--the embers left from earlier fires,
The light in the eye grown dim, shall duly flame again;
The sun now low in the west rises for mornings and for noons continual;
To frozen clods ever the spring's invisible law returns,
With grass and flowers and summer fruits and corn.
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    Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
    in Poems (Author's Poems)
    He was - As motionless as lay,
    First mingled with the dead,
    The relics of the senseless clay,
    Whence such a soul had fled, -
    The Earth astounded holds her breath,
    Struck with the tidings of his death:
    She pauses the last hour to see
    Of the dread Man of Destiny;
    Nor knows she when another tread,
    Like that of the once mighty dead,
    Shall such a footprint Leave impressed
    As his, in blood, upon her breast.
    I saw him blazing on his throne,
    Yet hailed him not: by restless fate
    Hurled from the giddy summit down;
    Resume again his lofty state:
    Saw him at last for ever fall,
    Still mute amid the shouts of all:
    Free from base flattery, when he rose;
    From baser outrage, when he fell:
    Now his career has reached its close,
    My voice is raised, the truth to tell,
    And o'er his exiled urn will try
    To pour a strain that shall not die.
    From Alps to Pyramids were thrown
    His bolts from Scylla to the Don,
    From Manzanares to the Rhine,
    From sea to sea, unerring hurled;
    And ere the flash had ceased to shine,
    Burst on their aim, - and shook the world.
    Was this true glory? - The high doom
    Must be pronounced by times to come:
    For us, we bow before His throne,
    Who willed, in gifting mortal clay
    With such a spirit, to display
    A grander impress of his own.
    His was the stormy, fierce delight
    To dare adventure's boldest scheme;
    The soul of fire, that burned for might,
    And could of naught but empire dream;
    And his the indomitable will
    That dream of empire to fulfil,
    And to a greatness to attain
    'T were madness to have hoped to gain:
    All these were his; nor these alone; -
    Flight, victory, exile, and the throne; -
    Twice in the dust by thousands trod,
    Twice on the altar as a god.
    Two ages stood in arms arrayed,
    Contending which should victor be:
    He spake: - his mandate they obeyed,
    And bowed to hear their destiny.
    He stepped between them, to assume
    The mastery, and pronounce their doom;
    Then vanished, and inactive wore
    Life's remnant out on that lone shore.
    What envy did his palmy state,
    What pity his reverses move,
    Object of unrelenting hate,
    And unextinguishable love!
    As beat innumerable waves
    O'er the last floating plank that saves
    One sailor from the wreck, whose eye
    Intently gazes o'er the main,
    Far in the distance to descry
    Some speck of hope, - but all in vain;
    Did countless waves of memory roll
    Incessant, thronging on his soul:
    Recording, for a future age,
    The tale of his renown,
    How often on the immortal page
    His hand sank weary down!
    Oft on some sea beat cliff alone
    He stood, - the lingering daylight gone,
    And pensive evening come at last, -
    With folded arms, and eyes declined;
    While, O, what visions on his mind
    Came rushing - of the past!
    The rampart stormed, - lie tented field, -
    His eagles glittering far and wide, -
    His columns never taught to yield, -
    His cavalry's resistless tide,
    Watching each motion of his hand,
    Swift to obey the swift command.
    Such thoughts, perchance, last filled his breast,
    And his departing soul oppressed,
    To tempt it to despair;
    Till from on high a hand of might
    In mercy came to guide its flight
    Up to a purer air,
    Leading it, o'er hope's path of flowers,
    To the celestial plains,
    Where greater happiness is ours
    Than even fancy feigns,
    And where earth's fleeting glories fade
    Into the shadow of a shade.
    Immortal, bright, beneficent,
    Faith, used to victories, on thy roll
    Write this with joy; for never bent
    Beneath death's hand a haughtier soul;
    Thou from the worn and pallid clay
    Chase every bitter word away,
    That would insult the dead:
    His holy crucifix, whose breath
    Has power to raise and to depress,
    Send consolation and distress,
    Lay by him on that lowly bed
    And hallowed it in death.
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      Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
      in Poems (Author's Poems)
      The fountains mingle with the river,
      And the rivers with the ocean;
      The winds of heaven mix forever
      With a sweet emotion;
      Nothing in the world is single;
      All things by a law divine
      In another's being mingle--
      Why not I with thine?
      See, the mountains kiss high heaven,
      And the waves clasp one another;
      No sister flower could be forgiven
      If it disdained its brother;
      And the sunlight clasps the earth,
      And the moonbeams kiss the sea;--
      What are all these kissings worth,
      If thou kiss not me?
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        Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
        in Poems (Author's Poems)
        Here, on the arid ridge
        Of dead Vesuvius,
        Exterminator terrible,
        That by no other tree or flower is cheered,
        Thou scatterest thy lonely leaves around,
        O fragrant flower,
        With desert wastes content. Thy graceful stems
        I in the solitary paths have found,
        The city that surround,
        That once was mistress of the world;
        And of her fallen power,
        They seemed with silent eloquence to speak
        Unto the thoughtful wanderer.
        And now again I see thee on this soil,
        Of wretched, world-abandoned spots the friend,
        Of ruined fortunes the companion, still.
        These fields with barren ashes strown,
        And lava, hardened into stone,
        Beneath the pilgrim's feet, that hollow sound,
        Where by their nests the serpents coiled,
        Lie basking in the sun,
        And where the conies timidly
        To their familiar burrows run,
        Were cheerful villages and towns,
        With waving fields of golden grain,
        And musical with lowing herds;
        Were gardens, and were palaces,
        That to the leisure of the rich
        A grateful shelter gave;
        Were famous cities, which the mountain fierce,
        Forth-darting torrents from his mouth of flame,
        Destroyed, with their inhabitants.
        Now all around, one ruin lies,
        Where thou dost dwell, O gentle flower,
        And, as in pity of another's woe,
        A perfume sweet thou dost exhale,
        To heaven an offering,
        And consolation to the desert bring.
        Here let him come, who hath been used
        To chant the praises of our mortal state,
        And see the care,
        That loving Nature of her children takes!
        Here may he justly estimate
        The power of mortals, whom
        The cruel nurse, when least they fear,
        With motion light can in a moment crush
        In part, and afterwards, when in the mood,
        With motion not so light, can suddenly,
        And utterly annihilate.
        Here, on these blighted coasts,
        May he distinctly trace
        'The princely progress of the human race!'
        Here look, and in a mirror see thyself,
        O proud and foolish age!
        That turn'st thy back upon the path,
        That thought revived
        So clearly indicates to all,
        And this, thy movement retrograde,
        Dost _Progress_ call.
        Thy foolish prattle all the minds,
        Whose cruel fate thee for a father gave,
        Besmear with flattery,
        Although, among themselves, at times,
        They laugh at thee.
        But I will not to such low arts descend,
        Though envy it would be for me,
        The rest to imitate,
        And, raving, wilfully,
        To make my song more pleasing to thy ears:
        But I will sooner far reveal,
        As clearly as I can, the deep disdain
        That I for thee within my bosom feel;
        Although I know, oblivion
        Awaits the man who holds his age in scorn:
        But this misfortune, which I share with thee,
        My laughter only moves.
        Thou dream'st of liberty,
        And yet thou wouldst anew that thought enslave,
        By which alone we are redeemed, in part,
        From barbarism; by which alone
        True progress is obtained,
        And states are guided to a nobler end.
        And so the truth of our hard lot,
        And of the humble place
        Which Nature gave us, pleased thee not;
        And like a coward, thou hast turned thy back
        Upon the light, which made it evident;
        Reviling him who does that light pursue,
        And praising him alone
        Who, in his folly, or from motives base,
        Above the stars exalts the human race.
        A man of poor estate, and weak of limb,
        But of a generous, truthful soul,
        Nor calls, nor deems himself
        A Croesus, or a Hercules,
        Nor makes himself ridiculous
        Before the world with vain pretence
        Of vigor or of opulence;
        But his infirmities and needs
        He lets appear, and without shame,
        And speaking frankly, calls each thing
        By its right name.
        I deem not _him_ magnanimous,
        But simply, a great fool,
        Who, born to perish, reared in suffering,
        Proclaims his lot a happy one,
        And with offensive pride
        His pages fills, exalted destinies
        And joys, unknown in heaven, much less
        On earth, absurdly promising to those
        Who by a wave of angry sea,
        Or breath of tainted air,
        Or shaking of the earth beneath,
        Are ruined, crushed so utterly,
        As scarce to be recalled by memory.
        But truly noble, wise is _he_,
        Who bids his brethren boldly look
        Upon our common misery;
        Who frankly tells the naked truth,
        Acknowledging our frail and wretched state,
        And all the ills decreed to us by Fate;
        Who shows himself in suffering brave and strong,
        Nor adds unto his miseries
        Fraternal jealousies and strifes,
        The hardest things to bear of all,
        Reproaching man with his own grief,
        But the true culprit
        Who, in our birth, a mother is,
        A fierce step-mother in her will.
        _Her_ he proclaims the enemy,
        And thinking all the human race
        Against her armed, as is the case,
        E'en from the first, united and arrayed,
        All men esteems confederates,
        And with true love embraces all,
        Prompt and efficient aid bestowing, and
        Expecting it, in all the pains
        And perils of the common war.
        And to resent with arms all injuries,
        Or snares and pit-falls for a neighbor lay,
        Absurd he deems, as it would be, upon
        The field, surrounded by the enemy,
        The foe forgetting, bitter war
        With one's own friends to wage,
        And in the hottest of the fight,
        With cruel and misguided sword,
        One's fellow soldiers put to flight.
        When truths like these are rendered clear,
        As once they were, unto the multitude,
        And when that fear, which from the first,
        All mortals in a social band
        Against inhuman Nature joined
        Anew shall guided be, in part,
        By knowledge true, then social intercourse,
        And faith, and hope, and charity
        Will a far different foundation have
        From that which silly fables give,
        By which supported, public truth and good
        Must still proceed with an unstable foot,
        As all things that in error have their root.
        Oft, on these hills, so desolate,
        Which by the hardened flood,
        That seems in waves to rise,
        Are clad in mourning, do I sit at night,
        And o'er the dreary plain behold
        The stars above in purest azure shine,
        And in the ocean mirrored from afar,
        And all the world in brilliant sparks arrayed,
        Revolving through the vault serene.
        And when my eyes I fasten on those lights,
        Which seem to them a point,
        And yet are so immense,
        That earth and sea, with them compared,
        Are but a point indeed;
        To whom, not only man,
        But this our globe, where man is nothing, is
        Unknown; and when I farther gaze upon
        Those clustered stars, at distance infinite,
        That seem to us like mist, to whom
        Not only man and earth, but all our stars
        At once, so vast in numbers and in bulk,
        The golden sun himself included, are
        Unknown, or else appear, as they to earth,
        A point of nebulous light, what, then,
        Dost _thou_ unto my thought appear,
        O race of men?
        Remembering thy wretched state below,
        Of which the soil I tread, the token bears;
        And, on the other hand,
        That thou thyself hast deemed
        The Lord and end of all the Universe;
        How oft thou hast been pleased
        The idle tale to tell,
        That to this little grain of sand, obscure,
        The name of earth that bears,
        The Authors of that Universe
        Have, at thy call, descended oft,
        And pleasant converse with thy children had;
        And how, these foolish dreams reviving, e'en
        This age its insults heaps upon the wise,
        Although it seems all others to excel
        In learning, and in arts polite;
        What can I think of thee
        Thou wretched race of men?
        What thoughts discordant then my heart assail,
        In doubt, if scorn or pity should prevail!
        As a small apple, falling from a tree
        In autumn, by the force
        Of its own ripeness, to the ground,
        The pleasant homes of a community
        Of ants, in the soft clod
        With careful labor built,
        And all their works, and all the wealth,
        Which the industrious citizens
        Had in the summer providently stored,
        Lays waste, destroys, and in an instant hides;
        So, falling from on high,
        To heaven forth-darted from
        The mountain's groaning womb,
        A dark destructive mass
        Of ashes, pumice, and of stones,
        With boiling streams of lava mixed,
        Or, down the mountain's side
        Descending, furious, o'er the grass,
        A fearful flood
        Of melted metals, mixed with burning sand,
        Laid waste, destroyed, and in short time concealed
        The cities on yon shore, washed by the sea,
        Where now the goats
        On this side browse, and cities new
        Upon the other stand, whose foot-stools are
        The buried ones, whose prostrate walls
        The lofty mountain tramples under foot.
        Nature no more esteems or cares for man,
        Than for the ant; and if the race
        Is not so oft destroyed,
        The reason we may plainly see;
        Because the ants more fruitful are than we.
        Full eighteen hundred years have passed,
        Since, by the force of fire laid waste,
        These thriving cities disappeared;
        And now, the husbandman,
        His vineyards tending, that the arid clod,
        With ashes clogged, with difficulty feeds,
        Still raises a suspicious eye
        Unto that fatal crest,
        That, with a fierceness not to be controlled,
        Still stands tremendous, threatens still
        Destruction to himself, his children, and
        Their little property.
        And oft upon the roof
        Of his small cottage, the poor man
        All night lies sleepless, often springing up,
        The course to watch of the dread stream of fire
        That from the inexhausted womb doth pour
        Along the sandy ridge,
        Its lurid light reflected in the bay,
        From Mergellina unto Capri's shore.
        And if he sees it drawing near,
        Or in his well
        He hears the boiling water gurgle, wakes
        His sons, in haste his wife awakes,
        And, with such things as they can snatch,
        Escaping, sees from far
        His little nest, and the small field,
        His sole resource against sharp hunger's pangs,
        A prey unto the burning flood,
        That crackling comes, and with its hardening crust,
        Inexorable, covers all.
        Unto the light of day returns,
        After its long oblivion,
        Pompeii, dead, an unearthed skeleton,
        Which avarice or piety
        Hath from its grave unto the air restored;
        And from its forum desolate,
        And through the formal rows
        Of mutilated colonnades,
        The stranger looks upon the distant, severed peaks,
        And on the smoking crest,
        That threatens still the ruins scattered round.
        And in the horror of the secret night,
        Along the empty theatres,
        The broken temples, shattered houses, where
        The bat her young conceals,
        Like flitting torch, that smoking sheds
        A gloom through the deserted halls
        Of palaces, the baleful lava glides,
        That through the shadows, distant, glares,
        And tinges every object round.
        Thus, paying unto man no heed,
        Or to the ages that he calls antique,
        Or to the generations as they pass,
        Nature forever young remains,
        Or at a pace so slow proceeds,
        She stationary seems.
        Empires, meanwhile, decline and fall,
        And nations pass away, and languages:
        She sees it not, or _will_ not see;
        And yet man boasts of immortality!
        And thou, submissive flower,
        That with thy fragrant foliage dost adorn
        These desolated plains,
        Thou, too, must fall before the cruel power
        Of subterranean fire,
        Which, to its well-known haunts returning, will
        Its fatal border spread
        O'er thy soft leaves and branches fine.
        And thou wilt bow thy gentle head,
        Without a struggle, yielding to thy fate:
        But not with vain and abject cowardice,
        Wilt thy destroyer supplicate;
        Nor wilt, erect with senseless haughtiness,
        Look up unto the stars,
        Or o'er the wilderness,
        Where, not from choice, but Fortune's will,
        Thy birthplace thou, and home didst find;
        But wiser, far, than man,
        And far less weak;
        For thou didst ne'er, from Fate, or power of thine,
        Immortal life for thy frail children seek.
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          Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
          in Poems (Author's Poems)
          Speech after long silence; it is right,
          All other lovers being estranged or dead,
          Unfriendly lamplight hid under its shade,
          The curtains drawn upon unfriendly night,
          That we descant and yet again descant
          Upon the supreme theme of Art and Song:
          Bodily decrepitude is wisdom; young
          We loved each other and were ignorant.
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            Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
            in Poems (Author's Poems)
            Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
            Thou art more lovely and more temperate.
            Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
            And summer's lease hath all too short a date.
            Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
            And often is his gold complexion dimmed;
            And every fair from fair sometime declines,
            By chance, or nature's changing course, untrimmed;
            But thy eternal summer shall not fade,
            Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st,
            Nor shall death brag thou wand'rest in his shade,
            When in eternal lines to Time thou grow'st.
            So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
            So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
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              Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
              in Poems (Author's Poems)
              Driver drive faster and make a good run
              Down the Springfield Line under the shining sun.
              Fly like an aeroplane, don't pull up short
              Till you brake for Grand Central Station, New York.
              For there in the middle of the waiting-hall
              Should be standing the one that I love best of all.
              If he's not there to meet me when I get to town
              I'll stand on the side-walk with tears rolling down.
              For he is the one that I love to look on,
              The acme of kindness and perfection.
              He presses my hand and he says he loves me,
              Which I find a admirable peculiarity.
              The woods are bright green on both sides of the line,
              The trees have their loves though they're different from mine.
              But the poor fat old banker in the sun-parlour car
              Has no one to love him except his cigar.
              If I were the Head of the Church or the State,
              I'd powder my nose and just tell them to wait.
              For love's more important and powerful than
              Ever a priest or a politician.
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                Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
                in Poems (Author's Poems, Love)
                Lay your sleeping head, my love
                Human on my faithless arm;
                Time and fevers burn away
                Individual beauty from
                Thoughtful children, and the grave
                Proves the child ephemeral;
                But in my arms till break of day
                Let the living creature lie:
                Mortal, guilty, but to me
                The entirely beautiful.
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                  Posted by: Silvana Stremiz
                  in Poems (Author's Poems)
                  Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
                  Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
                  Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
                  Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.

                  Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead
                  Scribbling on the sky the message He Is Dead,
                  Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves,
                  Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.

                  He was my North, my South, my East and West,
                  My working week and my Sunday rest,
                  My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
                  I thought that love would last for ever: I was wrong.

                  The stars are not wanted now: put out every one;
                  Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun;
                  Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood.
                  For nothing now can ever come to any good.
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