Divine Adventures
A BOOK OF VERSE
BY
JOHN NIENDORFF
BOSTON
RICHARD G. BADGER
The Gorham Press
1907
Copyright 1907 by John Niendorff
All Rights Reserved
Printed at
THE GORHAM PRESS
Boston, U. S. A.
CONTENTS
| Page | |
| Cupid and Psyche | [7] |
| A Toast | [25] |
| Whisper to My Love | [25] |
| Ode to a Rural Scene | [27] |
| Ode to a Bee | [29] |
| To Death | [31] |
| A Dirge | [33] |
| Time and Rhime | [34] |
| The Poet and the World | [35] |
| The Guerdon | [36] |
| A Song | [37] |
| To X | [38] |
| On a Festal Night | [38] |
| To X | [39] |
| Wandering Willie | [39] |
| My Lady of Dreams | [40] |
| To a Mocking Bird | [46] |
| The Mystery | [48] |
| Fame | [48] |
| Good Night My Love | [49] |
| My South | [49] |
| To Lloyd Mifflin | [50] |
| Keats | [51] |
| A Poet | [51] |
| The Critics | [52] |
| Availability | [52] |
| A Portrait | [53] |
| On the Death of a Young Lady | [53] |
| To My Love | [54] |
| The Storm King | [55] |
| The Birth of Fancy | [56] |
| Despair | [57] |
| The Magazines | [58] |
| The Sphinx | [59] |
| A Shell | [60] |
| To the Traveller | [61] |
| Song to Death | [61] |
| The Magical Ring | [63] |
DIVINE ADVENTURES
A BOOK OF VERSE
CUPID AND PSYCHE
(The Spirit of the Tale)
To M.
A TOAST
To R. G. B.
|
My Soul! 'Tis a beaker of wine, And the bubbles that flash to the brim, Are the nameless, wild songs of mine, And the ruby is sparkling with them. Ah! The beaker is sparkling and brimming!— We die, but there's life in the bowl, While the bubbles are rising and swimming— Camerado, I pledge thee my soul! |
WHISPER TO MY LOVE
ODE TO A RURAL SCENE
ODE TO A BEE
TO DEATH
A DIRGE
TIME AND RHIME
THE POET AND THE WORLD
THE GUERDON
A SONG
|
What is so rare as a pearly cloud, With a burning sun behind it? And this is the jewel I wear on my heart, With a dream to bind it— This is the treasure you sought from the start, Forgetting to find it. What is so sweet as the song of a bird, That wakens the fancy that hears it? And this is the music I hear in my heart Whose heaven enspheres it— This is the heaven you sought from the start Forgetting to pierce it. What is so glad as the heart of a child, That gambols as careless as Maytime? And this is the pleasure I hold to my heart, Acalling it daytime— This is the pleasure you sought from the start, Forgetting the playtime. |
TO X
|
Boast not, poor man, that thou hast measured time, And named it feeble seven thousand years, Lest all the lore and wit of all thy seers Must brand thee fool, and name thy folly crime. I say that I have seen an eon's rime Upon thy father's head, and bitter tears, Quintillions old. And countless fears, Remembered from an old world's mapless clime. Nor call thy folly old,—'twas surely born When thou didst cease to think. Thou hast a child, Whose beauty brands thee for a thing forsworn. Leave thou its tender reason undefiled! For shame to chain the base of all thy glory, Upon an olden tale, a useless allegory! |
ON A FESTAL NIGHT
|
Above the city hangs a limpid glare, From hollow laughter's laden festal board: Thou seest the lover fondling his adored— Thou hearest music singing of her hair. Thou seest the tryst that's neither here nor there. Thou seest the gallant with his mocking sword, And honor at his feet;—the miser's hoard, And Lo! the music, sword, and tryst are there. Say when has music breathed a song, Encored so long as yonder jingling gold? Say when do lover's wand'ring from the throng, Turn wholly from the mart where love is sold? Ah man! were gold where erst it did belong Then love were winged music as of old. |
TO X
|
And thou hast seen yon priest in holy stole, But thinkest, never yet a jackal's skin, Embodied more hereditary sin— And he with healing ointment for the soul, May not remember when his own was whole. Behold a myriad monks he ushereth in Whom dol'rous chant pronounceth holy kin, And yet each readeth from a foreign scroll. When all these jarring sects pronounce decree, Then must thou wait another Fiat lux. Old Chaos slumbering in eternity, Hath writ his secret hope in monkish books, That some shall beckon when his reign shall be— And even now the priestly finger crooks. |
WANDERING WILLIE
MY LADY OF DREAMS
TO A MOCKING BIRD
A Rhapsody
THE MYSTERY
|
The gos'mer web that mistifies, Lies not on any whole or part, Or stop or start, but in the art, Men hang upon their eyes. And haply in an age afar, Two men may see the self-same mote— The selfsame beam, with motes afloat, And learn what souls and systems are. |
FAME
|
Triumphant Day's grand pageantry At song, and all the garlands won, Far in the west the queenly Eve, Blue misty mantled, takes her leave, Tiaraed with a Sun. And Lo! Sweet night, a nut-brown maid, With silent wonder pursing lips, Or humming soft a bird's low song, Trips down the hall. Behold the throng Bow to her finger tips. |
GOOD NIGHT MY LOVE
|
Thy dewy dreams, thine Ariel dreams, Then turn thee to thy dainty dreams, Thine airy shell is now alight, To bear thee down Æolean streams, Good night, my love, good night, good night. By misty strands of phantom lands, By golden shores and phantom lands, Across the sea of starry light To drop thee on enchanted strands— Good night, my love, good night, good night. Afar from me and there with thee, Ah! could I journey there with thee, Across the sea of starry light; But nay, 'tis thine own journey's sea— Good night, my love, good night, good night. But golden Morn must sound her horn, And when the morning's triton horn Is heralding thy homing flight, I'll meet thee on the shores of morn,— Good night, my love, good night, good night. |
MY SOUTH
TO LLOYD MIFFLIN
A Poet
|
And thou hast oped the matrix of sweet thought, And graven on the gem rare imagery. Or piercing free thine arts reality, Hast found uncarven gods, as richly wraught; Such tints of soul, such matchless colors fraught With all thy beings dearest phantasy; Such fair illusive forms that luring flee, Within the crystal web of fancy caught. Till to thine eyes, a radiant cosmos spreads In crystaline delight from pole to pole, Of godly folk at play on flowry meads, And one fair form of beauties finished whole! Then through the golden mist one fancy threads: It is the god of gods, thy pristine soul. |
KEATS
|
Thou golden fragment of the sweetest dream, That ever smiled beside the gates of morn, And left enraptured Beauty half forlorn And half entranced. Still for thy vanished gleam That spirit-maiden weeps. On her refulgent stream No more the tinted bark is lightly borne, But frail as thought by streaming phantoms torn, She waits forever thy returning beam. A golden dream of art's divinity And held bright Beauty's jeweled anadem; Of music breathing immortality Till stonéd silence falls a carven gem. And but a fragment! Ah! couldst thou have sated A bursting heart, what worlds had been created! |
A POET
|
As one, who gath'ring flowers in a dream, Hath found a vanished passion all in bloom, And wild sweet odors lifting in the gloom Of olden time, but casts it on a stream, To mar the silver moon's reflectant beam, And laugh at circles sweeping on to doom, In dusky marges, shining in her brume, Hath England found thee. Thus her silly deem! Ah! Shame that she, whose head is vaunted so, Hath vision narrowed to a needle's eye. And only far from home, doth England know That she has doomed another son to die. But fair Columbia brings her wreath of woe, Sweet Rhine, a tear, and lyric France a sigh. |
THE CRITICS
|
And when thy soul had made a simple song And laughed for very glee to sing and sound it, Outside the walls, the dim mysterious throng Wrought keen and barbed darts wherewith to wound it: There was a fault, a fearful deadly fault, And loud they screamed a very bull's-eye named it; As one they saw, as one they would assault— Each kneeling archer drew his dart and aimed it. And lo! How fared a myriad archetypes! A myriad fancies, sounds, and colors riddled! And harps! and horns! and flutes! and lutes! and pipes! And O! the laugh as each some vict'ry twiddled! But still the dainty spirit sang its song And laughed its laugh unconscious of a wrong. |
AVAILABILITY
|
And shall I join this scramble after fame, Astonish so the free delightful spirit, To bind his song, that fettered ears may hear it, And win an encore, or a sounding name? Or shall his broad imperial wings go lame, To make a semblance of existing merit? Or fly no more less favor disinherit, And yield his lightness to an ordered game? Not so! and never for the fickle throng, One soaring rapture less in fancy free! But sing thou bonden music's saddest wrong My spirit-bird, 'til shackles melt for thee— Still sing, for never yet thy spirit's song, May bend to crass availability. |
A PORTRAIT
|
She was a breath of forest-wild perfume So sweet, one could but stand and drink it in, Until the soul should burst; a dream so thin And airy fine, it seemed a spirit's bloom, And left a haunting fragrance in the room When it had vanished. Garb'd in snowy lynn So rare one knew not where it did begin— A scented sunbeam in a human gloom. And thou hast called her woman, woman only, When thou hadst music yearning at thy tongue To call her Heaven. Aching fancy lonely Still breathes that fragrance in a song unsung, Or wandering, lost deep in a golden dream, Hears sweet white Lurley from a vanished stream. |
ON THE DEATH OF A YOUNG LADY
|
Ah! Thou wert fairer than the early morn, Thy dress all spangled with the dewy flowers— A lynn soft woven in the wondrous hours That hedged about thy dreams. But Lo! the horn Of some far Triton from the sea up-borne Across the bluey hills, and tinted showers Faint limning scenes of Elfin grots and bowers, Bound thee in thrall by misty strands forlorn. Thou couldst not longer bide the sweet low calling Of some sad sea-soul for his wand'ring nymph. Thou couldst not yield to mortal love's enthralling And Nerius calling in thy spirits coralled lymph. O! if our hearts have sweeter balm than tears, It is the call that kissed thy dreaming ears. |
TO MY LOVE
|
I can not say how much I love thee, words, Like wearied petrels, fall on shoreless seas. But O! I love thee! Simple words of these Float on the stormy soul, like halcyon birds, With speechless calm. A golden zone engirds The thee and me in worlds of nameless ease, And promise fairer far than Æetes'. No clouds there tempest tost, but phantom herds Of golden fleece feed in the fields of blue, And sunny harbors lull the freighted ships Of tender song, the while thine hero woo, For aye sweet message from thine honeyed lips; Or catch some music from thy spheres above thee,— A song of songs to tell how dear I love thee. |
THE STORM KING
|
The storm-king playeth his organ tonight— O! weep for the mortals that heareth at sea! The King of the storm! What god in his might, May still the dread music, or silence the key? The lightning, the thunder, the rain, and the blast— How he driveth each note to its ultimate goal! And the roll of dead worlds in the infinite vast, How they roll in his soul, in his madness of soul! The lightning, the thunder, the blast, and the rain— How he playeth each note for its ultimate soul! 'Til his caverns great center grows blacker again, With the deep where his musics great nebulas roll! And grandeur, mad grandeur, the sweep of his song, The raging and lurid storm grandeur of night, Till the Souls of the Ages, to him but a throng, Of beetling black nebula, crash in their flight. How he laugheth, and laugheth, this maddest of Kings! How he rageth, and rendeth his organ assunder! Now soaring, now crashing to nethermost springs— The maddest of music but never a blunder. For he smiteth the sea, and he teareth the land, And never a prayer but he laugheth to scorn! A King and a God—should he render less grand For sake of the ghoul haunted beeches of morn? |
THE BIRTH OF FANCY
|
I dreamed, and ah! the dream was sweeter far, Than any dream of cloud-born poet ever; Or love-lorn maiden praying to a star On Agne's Eve. I thought a glorious quiver, Of ecstasy was trembling, full with tears, Deep in the eyes of a maternal thought, And Time, beyond the outposts of the years, Was hushed expectant, all of wonder fraught. For Fancy cradled in a golden cloud Had risen in a dream of boundless glory,— While on his brow his soul had overflowed, And swiftly scaled a purple promontory. Then back again, in speed as dreamy fleet, And laid a snow-white feather at my feet. |
DESPAIR
|
Alas! so sick at heart! My lips are dumb. Dull inquisition racks the aching brain. I work no more, but fight the growing pain Of losing hours. Night of heart! No moonbeams come To bring thee twilight. Still, ah! still the hum Of artless industry—the spirit's chain That binds for life sake. Still the fight for gain That binds it to th' arena, pale and numb. And I that hoped to do so much indeed, To clear a path in spite of time and room, To sing a song, ah! now I faint, I bleed, A conquered victim. See the conqueror loom, A careless frown and sword his only creed,— And watching close the turning thumb of doom. |
THE MAGAZINES
|
If Orpheus came to Maga with a song As sad as tongueless sorrow dying, So sweet the weeping world should throng To hear the strain, but come not flying The Maga pennant, unassailable, Then faith! the song were not available. If Orpheus, singing in the lonely hills, Should charm the world to raptured wonder, And Maga came in wraps and frills, And dainty tears, to cry his blunder. Then faith! the world might wait laconical, If Maga readjust his monicle. But if perchance the godly singer, Should pass, like bitter grief with time. What Ho! The dandy crooks his finger, And menials bring each Orphean rhime. And Maga's bards, and Maga's sages, Write epitaphs on tombs of pages. |
THE SPHINX
|
Beside the falls of ancient walls, And golden Halls, Entomb'd forever, On lonely sands, with phantom bands, A figure stands, Called never, never. Her eyes are green, as em'rald sheen, With glories seen, In distant ages; As dongon keep, her eyes are deep, And there asleep, Enchanted Mages. A thousand years of hopes and fears, With dying cheers, Her cohort only. A thousand miles of vanished piles, Of olden whiles Her Empire lonely. From night to morn of glory shorn, She stands forlorn, Her only glory. From sun to frost, a night uncrossed, Forever lost, An endless story. |
A SHELL
|
Full wondrous wrought, and passing strange, Of many a sea-born tint— Some old and deathless work of change, For fairy wonderment. But what of that strange elfin sprite, That in this rainbow hall Once moved? What woe, or what delight, Did make its all in all? How roamed it through the scenery? Of ocean's old expanse? Or dreamed, in fragrant greenery, O'er some sweet sea romance? Was't haughty King, or was it slave, In its unknown kingdom there? Or loved, in elfin grot or cave, Some sweet shell-maiden fair? Alas! like some old haunted palace, The silence, how profound! Where mem'ry's drunk from death's deep chalice, And turned the chalice down. |
TO THE TRAVELLER
|
Because thy winged spirit ever craves Then must thou range wide seas and distant lands— To see, to know, thy burning thirst demands No sweeter drink. To kneel in sainted naves For art sake; marvel by Egyptian graves; Seek paynim shrines with strange fantastic bands Or pause to weep where sad Pompeii stands, So richly jewelled in her granite waves. Ah! 'Tis to know, till every cup is drained, And passion wane in pale satiety. Then but to dare the boundless unattained,— Thy self a world, thy thirst its history. Ah! such a world! such wash of human waves On human shores, where still the thirst enslaves. |
SONG TO DEATH
THE MAGICAL RING
Saith Puck
(A faint low rumble of thunder cometh from over the hills,) and Oberon saith,
(A Song)
|
Ah! the clink of our glasses How they clink as we drink! And memory passes, Too pleasant to think. |
(The Orator)
|
"Too much there is singing and dancing, Sweet sorrow is scorned for her weeds. Come back dear Brother October And chant us thine anthem of deeds!" |
|
Here's one to each other, Another as deep, And life is a brother, Too pleasant to weep. |
(The Orator)
(While a dark cloud appeareth on the horizon.)
|
"Sweet thought is outclassed and outbidden, Gay summer too high on her wings! Come back dear Brother October And chant us thy requiem of Kings!" |
(Consternation among revellers. The King starteth up, but Puck singeth:)
(While the lightning flasheth.)
|
Here's one to our lasses, How nimbly they dance! And the bright of our glasses Is the light of their glance. |
(And the revellers.)
|
Here's one to the vintry, How brightly he shines! May never the wintry, Drink deep of his wines. |
(He rolleth his parchment and speaketh.)
|
"'Tis young blood counts and moneyless brains! And the heart and soul of devil-may-care Is abroad in the land, with a fig for the pains, To do and to dare! to do and to dare!" |
(The Revellers.)
(While the storm rageth.)
|
Ah! the clink of our glasses, How they clink as we drink! And memory passes. Too pleasant to think. |
(And the court adjourneth.)
TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
A page number error in the Table of Contents has been corrected.
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected without note.
Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.