A wind comes in from the sea,And rolls through the hollow darkLike loud, tempestuous waters.As the swift recurrent tide,It pours adown the sky,And rears at the cliffs of nightUppiled against the vast.Like the soul of the sea—Hungry, unsatisfiedWith ravin of shores and of ships—Come forth on the land to seekNew prey of tideless coasts,It raves, made hoarse with desire,And the sounds of the night are dumbWith the sound of its passing.
THE BUTTERFLY
IO wonderful and wingèd flow'r,That hoverest in the garden-close,Finding in mazes of the rose,The beauty of a Summer hour!O symbol of Impermanence,Thou art a word of Beauty's tongue,A word that in her song is sung,Appealing to the inner sense!Of that great mystic harmony,All lovely things are notes and words—The trees, the flow'rs, the songful birds,The flame-white stars, the surging sea,The aureate light of sudden dawn,The sunset's crimson afterglow,The summer clouds, the dazzling snow,The brooks, the moonlight chaste and wan.Lacking (who knows?) a cloud, a tree,A streamlet's purl, the ocean's roarFrom Nature's multitudinous store—Imperfect were the melody!IIO Beauty, why so sad my heart?Why stirs in me a nameless painWhich seems like some remembered strain,As on this product of thine artEnraptured, marvelling I gaze,And note how airily 'tis wrought—A wingèd dream, a bodied thought,The spirit of the summer days?Thy beauty opes, O Butterfly,The doors of being, with subtle senseOf Beauty's frail impermanence,And grief of knowing it must die.Again I seem to know the tearsOf other lives, the woe and painOf days that died; resurgent waneThe moons of countless bygone years.IIIOn other worlds, on other stars,To us but tiny points of light,Or lost in distances of nightBeyond our system's farthest bars,A priest to Beauty's service sworn,I sought and served her all my days,With music and with hymns of praise.In sunset and the fires of morn,With thrilling heart her form I knew,And in the stars she whitely gleamed,And all the face of Nature seemedExpression of her shape and hue.I grieved to watch the summers passWith all their gorgeous shows of bloom,And sterner autumn months assumeTheir realm with withered leaves and grass.Mine was the grief of Change and Death,Of fair things gone beyond recall,The paling light of dawns, and allThe flowers' vanished hues and breath.IV