Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
William Watson 18581935The First Skylark of Spring
Watson-WT
The virginal, untroubled sky,
And this vexed region at my feet.—
Alas, but one have I!
The dulling shade, of mundane care;
They amid mortal mists are made,—
Thine, in immortal air.
My song comes fluttering, and is gone.
O high above the home of tears,
Eternal Joy, sing on!
Shall ever chant a note so pure,
Till he can cast this earth behind
And breathe in heaven secure.
That shakes the lute’s distempered string:
We sing of Love, and loveless Death
Takes up the song we sing.
Insurgent from the womb, we strive
With proud, unmanumitted soul
To burst the golden gyve.
On thee no shreds of thraldom hang:
Not more enlarged, the morning stars
Their great Te Deum sang.
And but forget my bonds an hour;
In amplitude of dreams a god,
A slave in dearth of power.
And fretful ignorance irks it more.
Thou sing’st as if thou knew’st the whole,
And lightly held’st thy lore!
And arrowy labyrinthine sting,
There riots in the veins of Earth
The ichor of the Spring!
And Morn the bride is wreathed and gay;
Sing, while her revelling lord o’erhead
Leads the wild dance of day!
Sing, till I know not if there be
Aught else in the dissolving world
But melody and thee!
All hope, all wonder, all desire—
Creation’s ancient canticle
To which the worlds conspire!
In porches of the lucent morn,
Ere he had felt his lack of wing,
Or cursed his iron bourn.
The sweet sky seemed not far above,
And young and lovesome came the note;—
Ah, thine is Youth and Love!
And dreamlike from afar recalls;
In flashes of forgotten gold
An orient glory falls.
Life’s utmost splendors blaze more nigh;
Less inaccessible the sun,
Less alien grows the sky.
And of the courts of heaven art free,
And carriest to his temporal ear
News from eternity;
And lur’st him o’er the dazzling line,
Where mortal and immortal merge,
And human dies divine.