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- HE greets you with a smile from friendly eyes;
- But never speaks, nor rises from his bed:
- Beneath the green night of the sea he lies,
- The whole world's waters weighing on his head.
- The empty wain made slowly over the sand;
- And he, with hands in pockets by the side
- Was trudging, deep in dream, the while he scanned
- With blue, unseeing eyes the far-off tide:
- When, stumbling in a hole, wiyth startled neigh,
- His young horse reared, and, snatching at the rein,
- He slipped: the wheels crushed on him as he lay;
- Then, tilting over him, the lumbering wain
- Turned turtle as theplunging beast broke free,
- And made for home: and pinioned and half-dead
- He lay, and listened to the far-off sea;
- And seemed to hear it surging overhead
- Already, though 'twas full an hour or more
- Until high-tide, when Solway's shining flood
- Should sweep the shallow firth from shore to shore.
- He felt a salty tingle in his blood;
- And seemed to stifle, drowning. Then again,
- he knew that he must lie a lingering while
- Before the sea might close above his pain,
- Although the advancing waves had scarce a mile
- To travel, creeping nearer, inch by inch,
- With little runs and sallies over the sand.
- Cooped in the dark, he felt his body flinch
- From each cold wave as it drew nearer hand.
- He saw the froth of each oncoming crest;
- And felt the tugging of the ebb and flow,
- And waves already breaking over his breast;
- Though still far-off they murmured, faint and low;
- Yet, creeping nearer, inch by inch, and now
- He felt the cold drench of the drowning wave,
- And the salt cold of lips and brow;
- And sank, and sank . . . while still, as ina grave,
- In the close dark beneath the crushing cart,
- He lay, and listened to the far-off sea.
- Wave after wave was knocking at his heart,
- And swishing, swishing, swishing carelessly
- About the wain -- cool waves that never reached
- His cracking lips, to slake his hell-hot thirst . . .
- Shrill in his ear a startled barn-owl screeched . . .
- He smelt the smell of oil-cake . . . when there burst,
- Through the big barn's wide-open door, the sea --
- The whole sea sweeping on him with a roar . . .
- He clutched a falling rafter, dizzily . . .
- Then sank through drowning deeps, to rise no more.
- Down, ever down, a hundred years he sank
- Through cold green death, ten thousand fathoms deep.
- His fiery lips deep draughts of cold sea drank
- That filled his body with strange icy sleep,
- Until he felt no longer that numb ache,
- The dead-weight lifted from his legs at last:
- And yet, he gazed with wondering eyes awake
- Up the green glassy gloom through which he passed:
- And saw, far overhead, the keels of ships
- Grow smaller and smaller,dwindling out of sight;
- And watched the bubbles rising from his lips;
- And silver salmon swimming in green night;
- And queer big, golden bream with scarlet fins
- And emerald eyes and fiery-flashing tails;
- Enormous eels with purple-spotted skins;
- And mammoth unknown fish with sapphire scales
- That bore down on him with red jaws agape,
- Like yawning furnaces of blinding heat;
- And when it seemed to him as though escape
- From those hell-mouths were hopeless, his bare feet
- Touched bottom: and he lay down in his place
- Among the dreamless legion of the drowned,
- The calm of deeps unsounded on his face,
- And calm within his heart; while all around
- Upon the midmost ocean's crystal floor
- The naked bodies of dead seamen lay,
- Dropped, sheer and clean, from hubbub, brawl and roar,
- To peace, too deep for any tide to sway.
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- The little waves were lapping round the cart
- Already, when they rescued him from death.
- Life cannot touch the quiet of his heart
- To joy or sorrow, as, with easy breath,
- And smiling lips upon his back he lies,
- And never speaks, nor rises from his bead;
- Gazing through those green glooms with happy eyes,
- While gold and sapphire fish swim overhead.
- Wilfred Gibson

- STUCK in a bottle on the window-sill,
- In the cold gaslight burning gaily red
- Against the luminous blue of London night,
- These flowers are mine: while somewhere out of sight
- In some black-throated alley's stench and heat,
- Oblivious of the racket of the street,
- A poor old weary woman lies in bed.
- Broken with lust and drink, blear-eyed and ill,
- Her battered bonnet nodding on her head,
- From a dark door she clutched my sleeve and said:
- "I've sold no bunch to-day, nor touched a bite . . .
- Son, buy six-penn'orth; and 'till mean a bed."
- So, blazing gaily red
- Against the luminous deeps
- Of starless London night,
- They burn for my delight:
- While somewhere, snug in bed,
- A worn old woman sleeps.
- And yet to-morrow will these blooms be dead
- With all their lively beauty; and to-morrow
- may end the light lusts and the heavy sorrow
- Of that old body with the nodding head.
- The last oath uttered, the last pint drained deep,
- She'll sink, as Cleopatra sank, to sleep;
- Nor need to barter blossoms for a bed.
- Wilfred Gibson

- As beneath the moon I walked,
- Dog-at-heel, my shadow stalked,
- Keeping ghostly company:
- And as we went gallantly
- Down the fell-road, dusty-white,
- Round us in the windy night
- Bracken, rushes, bent and heather
- Whispered ceaselessly together:
- "Would he ever journey more,
- Ever stride so carelessly:
- If he knew what lies before,
- And could see what we can see?"
- As I listened, cold with dread,
- Every hair upon my head
- Strained to hear them talk of me,
- Whispering, whispering ceaselessly:
- "Folly's fool the man must be,
- Surely, since, though where he goes
- He knows not, his shadow knows:
- And his secret shadow never
- Utters warning words, or ever
- Seeks to save him from his fate,
- Reckless, blindfold, and unknown,
- Till death tells him all, too late,
- And his shadow walks alone."
- Wilfred Gibson

- WHEN up the fretful, creaking stair,
- From floor to floor
- I creep
- On tiptoe, lest I wake from their first beauty-sleep
- The unknown lodgers lying, layer on layer,
- In the packed house from roof to basement
- Behind each landings unseen door;
- The well-known steps are strangely steep,
- And the old stairway seems to soar,
- For my amazement
- Hung in air,
- Flight on flight
- Through pitchy night,
- Evermore and evermore.
- And when at last I stand outside
- My garret-door I hardly dare
- To open it,
- Lest, when I fling it wide,
- With candle lit
- And reading in my only chair,
- I find myself already there . . .
- And so must crawl down the sheer black pit
- Of hell's own stair,
- Past lodgers sleeping layer on layer,
- To seek a home I know not where.
- Wilfred Gibson

- HER day out from the workhouse-ward, she stands,
- A grey-haired woman, decent and precise,
- With prim black bonnet and neat paisley shawl,
- Among the other children by the stall;
- And with grave relish eats a penny ice.
- To wizened toothless gums, with quaking hands
- She holds it, shuddering with deliscious cold;
- Nor heeds the jeering laughter of young men --
- The happiest, in her innocense, of all:
- For, while their insolent youth must soon grow old,
- She, who's been old, is now a child again.
- Wilfred Gibson

- YOUTH that goes woolgathering,
- Mooning and stargazing,
- Always finding everything
- Full of fresh amazing,
- Best will meet the moment's need
- When the dream brings forth the deed.
- He who keeps through all his days
- Open eyes of wonder
- Is the lord of skiey ways,
- And the earth thereunder:
- For the heart to do and sing
- Comes of youth's woolgathering.
- Wilfred Gibson

- HE wears a red rose in his buttonhole,
- A city-clerk on Sunday dining out:
- And as the music surges over the din
- The heady quavering of the violin
- Sings through his blood, and puts old cares to rout,
- And tingles, quickening, through his shrunken soul,
- Till he forgets he ledgers, and the prim
- Black, crabbèd figures, and the qualmy smell
- Of ink and musty leather and leadglaze,
- As, in eternities of Summer days,
- He dives through shivering waves, or rides the swell
- On rose-red seas of melody aswim.
- Wilfred Gibson

- I SIT beside the brazier's glow,
- And, drowsing in the heat,
- A dream of daffodils that blow
- And lambs that frisk and bleat--
- Black lambs that frolic in the snow
- Among the daffodils,
- In a far orchard that I know
- Beneath the Malvern hills.
- Next year the daffodils will blow,
- And lambs will frisk and bleat;
- But I'll not feel the the brazier's glow,
- Nor any cold or heat.
- Wilfred Gibson

- WE ate our breakfast lying on our backs,
- Because the shells were screeching overhead.
- I bet a rasher to a loaf of bread
- That Hull United would beat Halifax
- When Jimmy Strainthorpe played full-back instead
- Of Billy Bradford. Ginger raised his head
- And cursed, and took the bet; and dropt back dead.
- We ate our breakfast lying on our backs,
- Because the shells were screeching overhead.
- Wilfred Gibson

- I WONDER if the old cow died or not.
- Gey bad she was the night I left, and sick.
- Dick reconed she would mend. He knows a lot--
- At least he fancies so himself, does Dick.
- Dick knows a lot. But maybe I did wrong
- To leave the cow to him, and come away.
- Over and over like a silly song
- These words keep bumming in my head all day.
- And all I think of, as I face the foe
- And take my lucky chance of being shot,
- Is this -- that if I'm hit, I'll never know
- Till Doomsday if the old cow died or not.
- Wilfred Gibson

- HE went, and he was gay to go;
- And I smiled on him as he went.
- My son, 'twas well he couldn't know
- My darkest dread, nor what it meant--
- Just what it meant to smile and smile
- And let my son go cheerily--
- My son . . . and wondering all the while
- What stranger would come back to me.
- Wilfred Gibson

- THE night I left my father said:
- "You'll go and do some stupid thing.
- You've no more sense in that fat head
- Than silly Billy Witterling.
- "Not sense to come in when it rains--
- Not sense enough for that, you've got.
- You'll get a bullet through your brains,
- Before you know, as like as not."
- And now I'm lying in the trench
- And shells and bullets through the night
- Are raining in a steady drench,
- I'm thinking the old man was right.
- Wilfred Gibson

- I SOMETIMES wonder if it's really true
- I ever knew
- Another life
- Than this unending strife
- With unseen enemies in lowland mud,
- And wonder if my blood
- Thrilled ever to the tune
- Of clean winds blowing through an April noon
- Mile after sunny mile
- On the green ridges of the Windy Gile.
- Wilfred Gibson

- AS I was marching in Flanders
- A ghost kept step with me--
- Kept step with me and chuckled
- And muttered ceaselessly:
- "Once I too marched in Flanders,
- The very spit of you,
- And just a hundred years since,
- To fall at Waterloo.
- "They buried me in Flanders
- Upon the field of blood,
- And long I've lain forgotten
- Deep in the Flemmish mud.
- "But now you march in Flanders,
- The very spit of me;
- To the ending of the day's march
- I'll bear you company."
- Wilfred Gibson

- THEY ask me where I've been,
- And what I've done and seen.
- But what can I reply
- Who know it wasn't I,
- But someone just like me,
- Who went across the sea
- And with my head and hands
- Killed men in foreign lands . . .
- Though I must bear the blame
- Because he bore my name.
- Wilfred Gibson

- A HANDFUL of cherries
- She gave me in passing,
- The wizened old woman,
- And wished me good luck--
- And again I was dreaming,
- A boy in the sunshine,
- And life but an orchard
- Of cherries to pluck.
- Wilfred Gibson

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