An Epic of Women, and Other Poems by Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy - HTML preview

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SERAPHITUS.

 

ALAS! that we should not have known,

For all his strange ethereal calm,

And thoughts so little like our own

And presence like a shed-forth balm,

He was some Spirit from a zone

Of light, and ecstasy, and psalm,

Radiant and near about God’s throne:

Now he hath flown!

 

The heaven did cleave on him alway;

And for what thing he chose to dwell

In a mere tenement of clay

With mortal seeming—who can tell?

But there in some unearthly way

He wrought, and, with an inner spell,

Miraculously did array

That house of clay.

 

The very walls were in some sort

Made beautiful, with many a fresque

Or carven filigree of Thought,

Now seen a clear and statuesque

Accomplishment of dreams—now sought

Through many a lovely arabesque

And metaphor, that seemed to sport

With what it taught.

 

Most bright and marvellously fair

Those things did seem to all mankind;

And some indeed, with no cold stare

Beholding them, could lift their mind

Through sweet transfigurement to share

Their inward light: the rest were blind,

And wondered much, yet had small care

Whence such things were.

 

And, day by day, he did invent

—As though nought golden were enough,

In manner of an ornament—

Some high chivalrous deed, above

All price, whereof the element

Was the most stainless ore of Love;

A boundless store of it he spent

With lavishment.

 

And when therewith that house became

All in a strange sort glorified;

For through whole beauty, as of flame,

Those things, resplendent far and wide,

Did draw unto them great acclaim;

Lo, many a man there was who tried

With base alloys to do the same,

And gat men’s shame.

 

But all about that house he set

A wondrous flowering thing—his speech,

That without ceasing did beget

Such fair unearthly blossoms, each

Seemed from some paradise, and wet

As with an angel’s tears, and each

Gave forth some long perfume to let

No man forget.

 

A new delicious music erred

For ever through the devious ways

Tangled with blooming of each word;

As though in that enchanted maze

Some sweet and most celestial bird

Were caught, and, hid from every gaze,

Did there pour forth such song as stirred

All men who heard.

 

Before him was perpetual birth

Of flowers whereof, aye, more and more,

The world begetteth a sad dearth;

And those rare balms man searcheth for,

Fair ecstasy, and the soul’s mirth:

Half grudgingly the angels bore

That one should waste on a lost earth

Things of such worth.

 

It may be, with a strange delight,

After an age of gazing through

That mirror of things infinite

That well nigh burns the veil of blue

Drawn down between it and our sight—

It may be, with a joy all new,

He sought the darkness and the light

Of day and night.

 

It may be, that, upon some wave

Which through the incense-laden skies

Scarce forced its ripple, there once clave

A thin earth-fragrance—in such wise

It smote his sense and made him crave

For that strange sweet: maybe, likewise,

The leaves their subtle perfume gave

Up from some grave:

 

And pleasant did it seem to heap

About the heart dim spells that lull

Profoundly between death and sleep,

To feel mid earthly soothings, dull

And sweet, upon the whole sense creep

The dream—life-long and wonderful,

That hath all souls of men to keep

Lest they should weep.

 

But often, when there seemed to fall

Bright shadows of half-blindness, thin,

And like fine films wrought over all

The flashing sights of Heaven within;

While that fair perishable wall

Of flesh so barred and shut him in

That scarce a silver spirit-call

Reached him at all—

 

O then the Earth failed not to bring,

Indeed through many a day and eve—

The strength of all her flowering

About him; nor forgot to weave,

With soft perpetual murmuring,

Her spells, that such a sweet way grieve,

And hold the heart to each fair thing,

Yea, with a sting:

 

And, sometimes, with strange prevalence

He felt those dim enchantments float

Most soothingly upon his sense;

While faint in memory remote,

Brought down the heart knew not from whence,

The thought of heaven within him smote—

And many a yearning did commence

Vague and intense—

 

Fair part of that unknown disease

Of dull material love, whereby

The luring flower-semblances

Of earthliness and death would try

To bind his heart beyond release

To each fair mortal sympathy,

That Death at length might wholly seize

Him with all these.

 

And, surely, on some shining bed

Of flowers in full summer’s gleam;

Or when the autumn time had shed

Its wealth of perfume and its dream

On some rich eve—no thing of dread

To all his spirit did it seem,

To dream on, feeling sweet earth spread

Over his head.

 

* * *

 

But, one long twilight—hushed and dim—

The blue unfathomable clime

Of heaven seemed wholly to o’erbrim

With presence of the Lord—sublime;

And voices of the Seraphim

Fell through the ether like a chime:

He rose: his past way seemed to him

Like a child’s whim.