| Download PDF |
American Literature – Children Books – American Poetry – Henry Van Dyke – Poems by Henry Van Dyke
< < < Two Songs of Heine
Rappel d’Amour > > >
Eight Echoes from the Poems of Auguste Angellier
I
THE IVORY CRADLE
The cradle I have made for theeIs carved of orient ivory,And curtained round with wavy silkMore white than hawthorn-bloom or milk.
A twig of box, a lilac spray,Will drive the goblin-horde away;And charm thy childlike heart to keepHer happy dream and virgin sleep.
Within that pure and fragrant nest,I’ll rock thy gentle soul to rest,With tender songs we need not fearTo have a passing angel hear.
Ah, long and long I fain would holdThe snowy curtain’s guardian foldAround thy crystal visions, bornIn clearness of the early morn.
But look, the sun is glowing redWith triumph in his golden bed;Aurora’s virgin whiteness diesIn crimson glory of the skies.
The rapid flame will burn its wayThrough these white curtains, too, one day;The ivory cradle will be leftUndone, and broken, and bereft.
II
DREAMS
Often I dream your big blue eyes, Though loth their meaning to confess,Regard me with a clear surprise Of dawning tenderness.
Often I dream you gladly hear The words I hardly dare to breathe,—The words that falter in their fear To tell what throbs beneath.
Often I dream your hand in mine Falls like a flower at eventide,And down the path we leave a line Of footsteps side by side.
But ah, in all my dreams of bliss, In passion’s hunger, fever’s drouth,I never dare to dream of this: My lips upon your mouth.
And so I dream your big blue eyes, That look on me with tenderness,Grow wide, and deep, and sad, and wise, And dim with dear distress.
III
THE GARLAND OF SLEEP
A wreath of poppy flowers, With leaves of lotus blended,Is carved on Life’s facade of hours, From night to night suspended.
Along the columned wall, From birth’s low portal starting,It flows, with even rise and fall, To death’s dark door of parting.
How short each measured arc, How brief the columns’ number!The wreath begins and ends in dark, And leads from sleep to slumber.
The marble garland seems, With braided leaf and bloom,To deck the palace of our dreams As if it were a tomb.
IV
TRANQUIL HABIT
Dear tranquil Habit, with her silent hands, Doth heal our deepest wounds from day to day With cooling, soothing oil, and firmly layAround the broken heart her gentle bands.
Her nursing is as calm as Nature’s care; She doth not weep with us; yet none the less Her quiet fingers weave forgetfulness,—We fall asleep in peace when she is there.
Upon the mirror of the mind her breath Is like a cloud, to hide the fading trace Of that dear smile, of that remembered face,Whose presence were the joy and pang of death.
And he who clings to sorrow overmuch, Weeping for withered grief, has cause to bless, More than all cries of pity and distress,—Dear tranquil Habit, thy consoling touch!
V
THE OLD BRIDGE
On the old, old bridge, with its crumbling stonesAll covered with lichens red and gray,Two lovers were talking in sweet low tones: And we were they!
As he leaned to breathe in her willing earThe love that he vowed would never die,He called her his darling, his dove most dear: And he was I!
She covered her face from the pale moonlightWith her trembling hands, but her eyes looked through,And listened and listened with long delight: And she was you!
On the old, old bridge, where the lichens rust,Two lovers are learning the same old lore;He tells his love, and she looks her trust: But we,—no more!
VI
EYES AND LIPS
1
Our silent eyes alone interpreted The new-born feeling in the heart of each: In yours I read your sorrow without speech,Your lonely struggle in their tears unshed.Behind their dreamy sweetness, as a veil, I saw the moving lights of trouble shine; And then my eyes were brightened as with wine,My spirit reeled to see your face grow pale!
Our deepening love, that is not yet allowed Another language than the eyes, doth learnTo speak it perfectly: above the crowdOur looks exchange avowals and desires,— Like wave-divided beacon lights that burn,And talk to one another by their fires.
2
When I embrace her in a fragrant shrine Of climbing roses, my first kiss shall fall On you, sweet eyes, that mutely told me all,—Through you my soul will rise to make her mine.Upon your drooping lids, blue-veined and fair, The touch of tenderness I first will lay, You springs of joy, lights of my gloomy day,Whose dear discovered secret bade me dare!
And when you open, eyes of my fond dove, Your look will shine with new delight, made sureBy this forerunner of a faithful love. Tis just, dear eyes, so pensive and so pure,That you should bear the sealing kisses trueOf love unhoped that came to me through you.
3
This was my thought; but when beneath the rose That hides the lonely bench where lovers rest, In friendly dusk I held her on my breastFor one brief moment,—while I saw you close,Dear, yielding eyes, as if your lids, blue-veined And pure, were meekly fain at last to bear The proffered homage of my wistful prayer,—In that high moment, by your grace obtained,
Forgetting your avowals, your alarms, Your anguish and your tears, sweet weary eyes,Forgetting that you gave her to my arms,I broke my promise; and my first caress, Ungrateful, sought her lips in sweet surprise,—Her lips, which breathed a word of tenderness!
VII
AN EVOCATION
When first upon my brow I felt your kiss, A sudden splendour filled me, like the rayThat promptly runs to crown the hills with bliss Of purple dawn before the golden day,And ends the gloom it crosses at one leap. My brow was not unworthy your caress;For some foreboding joy had bade me keep From all affront the place your lips would bless.
Yet when your mouth upon my mouth did lay The royal touch, no rapture made me thrill, But I remained confused, ashamed, and still. Beneath your kiss, my queen without a stain,I felt,—like ghosts who rise at Judgment Day,— A throng of ancient kisses vile and vain!
VIII
RESIGNATION
1
Well, you will triumph, dear and noble friend! The holy love that wounded you so deep Will bring you balm, and on your heart asleepThe fragrant dew of healing will descend. Your children,—ah, how quickly they will grow Between us, like a wall that fronts the sun, Lifting a screen with rosy buds o’errun,To hide the shaded path where I must go.
You’ll walk in light; and dreaming less and less Of him who droops in gloom beyond the wall,Your mother-soul will fill with happiness When first you hear your grandchild’s babbling call,Beneath the braided bloom of flower and leafThat We has wrought to veil your vanished grief.
2
Then I alone shall suffer! I shall bear The double burden of our grief alone,While I enlarge my soul to take your share Of pain and hold it close beside my own.Our love is torn asunder; but the crown Of thorns that love has woven I will makeMy relic sacrosanct, and press it down Upon my bleeding heart that will not break.
Ah, that will be the depth of solitude! For my regret, that evermore endures, Will know that new-born hope has conquered yours;And when the evening comes, no gentle broodOf wondering children, gathered at my side,Will soothe away the tears I cannot hide.
Freely rendered from the French, 1911.
< < < Two Songs of Heine
Rappel d’Amour > > >
American Literature – Children Books – American Poetry – Henry Van Dyke – Poems by Henry Van Dyke
| If you liked this article, subscribe , put likes, write comments! Share on social networks Visit us on Facebook or Twitter |
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 14 décembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of December 14, 2025
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 7 décembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of December 7, 2025
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 30 novembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of November 30, 2025
Copyright holders – Public Domain
© 2024 Akirill.com – All Rights Reserved
