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- HERE in a quiet and dusty room they lie,
- Faded as crumbled stone or shifting sand,
- Forlorn as ashes, shrivelled, scentless, dry--
- Meadows and gardens running through my hand.
- Dead that shall quicken at the call of Spring,
- Sleepers to stir beneath June's magic kiss,
- Though birds pass over, unremembering,
- And no bee seek here roses that were his.
- In this brown husk a dale of hawthorn dreams,
- A cedar in this narrow cell is thrust
- That will drink deeply of a century's streams,
- These lilies shall make summer on my dust.
- Here in their safe and simple house of death,
- Sealed in their shells a million roses leap;
- Here I can blow a garden with my breath,
- And in my hand a forest lies asleep.
- Muriel Stuart

- I AM one of the wind's stories,
- I am a poem of the rain,--
- A memory of the high moon's glories,
- A hint the sunset had of pain.
- They dreamed me, as they dreamed all other,
- Hawthorn and I, I and the grass,
- With sister shade and phantom brother
- Across their slumber glide and pass.
- Twilight is in my blood, my being
- Mingles with trees and ferns and stones,
- Thunder and stars my lips are freeing,
- And there is sea-rack in my bones.
- Those that have dreamed me shall outwake me,
- Though I go hence with flowers and weeds;
- I am no more to those who make me
- Than other falling fruit and seeds.
- And though I love them, mourn to leave them,--
- Sea, earth and sunset, stars and streams,
- My tears, my passing do not grieve them . . .
- Other dreams have they, other dreams.
- Muriel Stuart

- THE low bay melts into a ring of silver
- And slips it on the shore's reluctant finger,
- Though in an hour the tide will turn, will tremble,
- Forsaking her because the moon persuades him.
- But the black wood that leans and sighs above her
- No hour can change, no moon can slave or summon,
- Though leaning to the tide she hears nor heeds him.
- Then comes the dark. From sleepy, shell-strewn beaches,
- From long, pale leagues of sand and cold, clear water,
- She hears the tide go out toward the moonlight.
- The wood still leans . . . weeping she turns to seek him,
- And his black hair all night is on her bosom.
- Muriel Stuart

- THERE shall be a song for both of us that day,
- Though fools say you have long outlived your songs,
- And when perhaps because your hair is grey
- You go unsing, to whom all praise belongs,
- And no men kiss your hands, your fragile hands
- Folded like empty shells on lonely sands.
- And you that were drawn whereat men shouted once,
- Are sunset now, with but one worshipper.
- Then to your twilight heart this song shall be
- Sweeter than those that did your youth announce,
- For your brave, beautiful spirit is lovelier
- Than once your lovely body was to me.
- Your folded hands and your shut eyelids stir
- A passion that Time has crowned with sanctity.
- Young fools shall wonder why, your youth being over,
- You are so sung still, but your heart will know
- That he who loved your soul was your true lover,
- And the last song alone was worthy you.
- Muriel Stuart

- YOU give no portent of impermanence
- Though before the sun goes you are long gone hence,
- Your bright, inherited crown
- Withered and fallen down.
- It seems that your blue immobility
- Has been forever, and must forever be.
- Man seems the unstable thing,
- Fevered and hurrying.
- So free of joy, so prodigal of tears;
- Yet he can hold his fevers seventy years,
- Out-wear sun, rain and frost
- By which you are soon lost.
- Muriel Stuart

- IN women is it Chastity you prize?
- The unapproachable white purities,--
- The vestal moon forsworn of celibate skies,
- The ice that spurns remote and barren seas?
- Can Chastity cool your kisses, slake your sighs?
- And when, at last, o'ertaken and embraced,
- We give you burning lips, wild words and eyes,
- In your arms lying, would you have us chaste?
- If it were Chastity filled your treasuries,
- Possession would be Prize instead of Prey.
- You would be wise and clean, and we should go
- Free of your lusts and importunities,
- Nor trace the dubious paths we take to-day
- From your first, careless footsteps in the snow.
- Muriel Stuart

- WHAT once to me was fierce and sweet
- Is bitter now: the road my feet
- Took once in such gay hardihood
- My spirit cannot compass it.
- And the old sin I huggled once
- Is now grown easy to renounce,
- So to the source of power and peace
- Backward my erring spirit runs.
- Now to the hills whence help may come,
- Where wild bees shape their honeycomb,
- To a little bed of watercress
- I would go back . . . I would go home.
- Muriel Stuart

- BELOW, the street was hoarse with cries,
- With groan of carts and scuffling feet,
- With laughter worse than blasphemies,
- Was choked with dust and blind with heat,
- This room was still--too still for peace.
- It heard the livid words we said
- Of hate and passion, watched us where
- I sat, as one beside the dead--
- You lay with all your glorious hair
- Flung on the crazy bed.
- The moment's passion ended brought--
- Ah, child, to you what did it bring?
- What could it, but one hideous thought
- To us so tired of everything,
- And hating what we sought?
- --So tired of all this grey room meant,
- Of life together, shackled cold,
- Or bound in flame so different
- From the swift, white desire of old,
- The old, divine consent.
- Poor room, so meanly intimate!
- Our dirty clothes sprawled on a chair,
- Combs, candle-ends, and grimy plate
- Littered the table, paper and hair
- Forlornely choked the grate.
- And I so passionate, you such
- A wild sweet plunderer of bliss
- Soon fallen in our own folly's clutch,
- Finding how wrong, how mad it is
- To know, to love, too much.
- You rose, but with no woman's care
- For all the beauty that is hers,
- Pent up your out-burst storm of hair
- And fetched your cloak and found your purse,
- And matched my sullen stare.
- Wild words so often said before
- Escape us in the old fierce way.
- You cried, "I shall return no more!"
- I said, "I shall no longer stay!"
- You closed the grumbling door.
- The mirror grinned, "They are still one."
- The cupboard gasped, "Their clothes are here."
- The ghastly bed said with a leer,
- "I shall not sleep alone!"
- They knew what took us years to learn,
- That Habit terrible and slow
- Must Love and Hate alike inurn.
- They knew too well I should not go,
- They knew you would return.
- Muriel Stuart

- HOLLOW shell, wrinkled leaf,
- What were you once?
- "I held all the wonder of the seas."
- "I all the sun's."
- "I only faintly mourn."
- "I only fade . . ."
- The full heart that questioned them
- Listened afraid.
- Muriel Stuart

- HOLLOW shell, wrinkled leaf,
- What were you once?
- "I held all the wonder of the seas."
- "I all the sun's."
- "I only faintly mourn."
- "I only fade . . ."
- The full heart that questioned them
- Listened afraid.
- Muriel Stuart

- I CAME by night to Thèlus wood,
- And though in dark and desperate places
- Stubborned with wire and brown with blood
- Undaunted April crept and sewed
- Her violets in dead men's faces,
- And in a soft and snowy shroud
- Drew the scarred fields with gentle stitch;
- Though in the valley where the ditch
- Was hoarse with nettles, blind with mud,
- She stroked the golden-headed bud,
- And loosed the fern, she dared not here
- To touch nor tend this murdered thing;
- The wind went wide of it, the year
- Upon this breast stopped short of Spring:
- Beauty turned back from Thèlus Wood.
- From broken brows the dim eyes stared,
- Blistered and maimed the wide stumps grinned
- From the black mouth of Thèlus bared
- In laughter at some monstrous jest.
- No creature moved there, weed nor wind.
- Huge arms, half-torn from savage breast,
- Hung wide, and tangled limbs and faces
- Lay, as if giants blind and stark
- With violent, with perverse embraces
- Groped for each other in the dark.
- A moaning rose--not of the wind,
- --There was no wind, but hollowly
- From its dim bed of mud each tree
- Gave forth a sound, till trees and mud
- Seemed but a single, sighing mouth,
- A wound that spoke with lips uncouth,
- And cried to me from Thèlus Wood.
- I heard one tree say: "This was I
- Who drew great clouds across the sky
- To weep against me." This one said:
- "I made a gloom where love might lie
- All day and dream it night, a bed
- Secret and soft, the birds' song had
- A twilight sound the whole day there."
- One said: "Last night I shook my hair
- Before the mirror of the moon."
- "I saw a corpse to-day," said one
- "That was but buried yester-year."
- And one, the smallest, sweetest thing--
- A fair child-tree made never stir,
- Dead before God had tended her
- In the green nurseries of Spring.
- She lay, the loveliest, loneliest,
- Among the old and ruined trees,
- And at each small and broken wrist
- The white flowers grew like bandages.
- Then from the ruined churchyard where
- Old vaults and graves lay turned and tossed
- And earth from earth was shaken bare,
- Came murmurings of a tongueless host
- That to each ghastly brother said:
- "Who raised us from our sleep? Is this
- The resurrection of the dead?
- Upon our bodies no flesh grows,
- No bright blood through our temples springs,
- No glory spreads, no trumpet blows,
- The air is not white and blind with wings.
- And yet dragged up before us lie
- The woods of Thèlus at our feet,
- And strange hills sentinel the sky,
- And where the road went yawns a pit.
- The world is finished: let us sleep.
- God has forgotten: we shall keep
- Here a sweet, safe Eternity.
- There is no other end than this,
- And this is death, and that is peace."
- But even as they ceased the stones
- Were loosed, the earth shook where I stood,
- And from far off the crouching guns
- Swung slowly round on Thèlus Wood.
- Muriel Stuart

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