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.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 42679
   :PG.Title: Fires - Book III
   :PG.Released: 2013-05-09
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
   :DC.Title: Fires - Book III
              The Hare, and Other Tales
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1912
   :coverpage: images/img-cover3.jpg

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FIRES - BOOK III
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      FIRES

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      BOOK III
      THE HARE, AND OTHER TALES

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      BY

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      WILFRID WILSON GIBSON

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      LONDON
      ELKIN MATHEWS, VIGO STREET
      M CM XII

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      *BY THE SAME WRITER*
      WOMENKIND (1912)
      DAILY BREAD (1910)
      THE STONEFOLDS (1907)
      ON THE THRESHOLD (1907)

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   CONTENTS

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   `The Dancing Seal`_
   `The Slag`_
   `Devil's Edge`_
   `The Lilac Tree`_
   `The Old Man`_
   `The Hare`_

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*Thanks are due to the editors of* RHYTHM, *and* THE
NATION, *for leave to reprint some of these tales*.

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.. _`THE DANCING SEAL`:

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   FIRES

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   THE DANCING SEAL

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..

   |  When we were building Skua Light--
   |  The first men who had lived a night
   |  Upon that deep-sea Isle--
   |  As soon as chisel touched the stone,
   |  The friendly seals would come ashore;
   |  And sit and watch us all the while,
   |  As though they'd not seen men before;
   |  And so, poor beasts, had never known
   |  Men had the heart to do them harm.
   |  They'd little cause to feel alarm
   |  With us, for we were glad to find
   |  Some friendliness in that strange sea;
   |  Only too pleased to let them be
   |  And sit as long as they'd a mind
   |  To watch us: for their eyes were kind
   |  Like women's eyes, it seemed to me.

   |  So, hour on hour, they sat: I think
   |  They liked to hear the chisels' clink:
   |  And when the boy sang loud and clear,
   |  They scrambled closer in to hear;
   |  And if he whistled sweet and shrill,
   |  The queer beasts shuffled nearer still:
   |  But every sleek and sheeny skin
   |  Was mad to hear his violin.

   |  When, work all over for the day,
   |  He'd take his fiddle down and play
   |  His merry tunes beside the sea,
   |  Their eyes grew brighter and more bright,
   |  And burned and twinkled merrily:
   |  And as I watched them one still night,
   |  And saw their eager sparkling eyes,
   |  I felt those lively seals would rise
   |  Some shiny night ere he could know,
   |  And dance about him, heel and toe,
   |  Unto the fiddle's heady tune.

   |  And at the rising of the moon,
   |  Half-daft, I took my stand before
   |  A young seal lying on the shore;
   |  And called on her to dance with me.
   |  And it seemed hardly strange when she
   |  Stood up before me suddenly,
   |  And shed her black and sheeny skin;
   |  And smiled, all eager to begin...
   |  And I was dancing, heel and toe,
   |  With a young maiden white as snow,
   |  Unto a crazy violin.

   |  We danced beneath the dancing moon,
   |  All night, beside the dancing sea,
   |  With tripping toes and skipping heels:
   |  And all about us friendly seals
   |  Like Christian folk were dancing reels
   |  Unto the fiddle's endless tune
   |  That kept on spinning merrily
   |  As though it never meant to stop.
   |  And never once the snow-white maid
   |  A moment stayed
   |  To take a breath,
   |  Though I was fit to drop:
   |  And while those wild eyes challenged me,
   |  I knew as well as well could be
   |  I must keep step with that young girl,
   |  Though we should dance to death.

   |  Then with a skirl
   |  The fiddle broke:
   |  The moon went out:
   |  The sea stopped dead:
   |  And, in a twinkling, all the rout
   |  Of dancing folk had fled...
   |  And in the chill bleak dawn I woke
   |  Upon the naked rock, alone.

   |  They've brought me far from Skua Isle...
   |  I laugh to think they do not know
   |  That as, all day, I chip the stone,
   |  Among my fellows here inland,
   |  I smell the sea-wrack on the shore...
   |  And see her snowy-tossing hand,
   |  And meet again her merry smile...
   |  And dream I'm dancing all the while,
   |  I'm dancing ever, heel and toe,
   |  With a seal-maiden, white as snow,
   |  On that moonshiny Island-strand,
   |  For ever and for evermore.





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.. _`THE SLAG`:

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   THE SLAG

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..

   |  Among bleak hills of mounded slag they walked,
   |  'Neath sullen evening skies that seemed to sag
   |  O'er-burdened by the belching smoke, and lie
   |  Upon their aching foreheads, dense and dank,
   |  Till both felt youth within them fail and flag--
   |  Even as the flame which shot a fiery rag
   |  A fluttering moment through the murky sky
   |  Above the black blast-furnaces, then sank
   |  Again beneath the iron bell close-bound--
   |  And it was all that they could do to drag
   |  Themselves along, 'neath that dead-weight of smoke,
   |  Over the cinder-blasted, barren ground.
   |  Though fitfully and fretfully she talked,
   |  He never turned his eyes to her, or spoke:
   |  And as he slouched with her along the track
   |  That skirted a stupendous, lowering mound,
   |  With listless eyes, and o'er-strained sinews slack,
   |  She bit a petted, puckered lip, and frowned
   |  To think she ever should be walking out
   |  With this tongue-tied, slow-witted, hulking lout,
   |  As cold and dull and lifeless as the slag.

   |  And, all on edge, o'erwrought by the crampt day
   |  Of crouched, close stitching at her dull machine,
   |  It seemed to her a girl of seventeen
   |  Should have, at least, an hour of careless talking--
   |  Should have, at least, an hour of life, out walking
   |  Beside a lover, mettlesome and gay--
   |  Not through her too short freedom doomed to lag
   |  Beside a sparkless giant, glum and grim,
   |  Till all her eager youth should waste away.
   |  Yet, even as she looked askance at him--
   |  Well-knit, big-thewed, broad-chested, steady-eyed--
   |  She dimly knew of depths she could not sound
   |  In this strong lover, silent at her side:
   |  And, once again, her heart was touched with pride
   |  To think that he was hers, this strapping lad--
   |  Black-haired, close-cropt, clean-skinned, and neatly clad...
   |  His crimson neckerchief, so smartly tied--
   |  And hers alone, and more than all she had
   |  In all the world to her ... and yet, so grave!
   |  If he would only shew that he was glad
   |  To be with her--a gleam, a spark of fire,
   |  A spurt of flame to shoot into the night,
   |  A moment through the murky heavens to wave
   |  An eager beacon of enkindling light
   |  In answer to her young heart's quick desire!

   |  Yet, though he walked with dreaming eyes agaze,
   |  As, deep within a mound of slag, a core
   |  Of unseen fire may smoulder many days,
   |  Till suddenly the whole heap glow ablaze,
   |  That seemed, but now, dead cinder, grey and cold,
   |  Life smouldered in his heart.  The fire he fed
   |  Day-long in the tall furnace just ahead
   |  From that frail gallery slung against the sky
   |  Had burned through all his being, till the ore
   |  Glowed in him.  Though no surface-stream of gold
   |  Quick-molten slag of speech was his to spill
   |  Unceasingly, the burning metal still
   |  Seethed in him, from the broken furnace-side
   |  To burst at any moment in a tide
   |  Of white-hot molten iron o'er the mould...

   |  But still he spoke no word as they strolled on
   |  Into the early-gathering Winter night:
   |  And, as she watched the leaping furnace-light,
   |  She had no thought of smouldering fires unseen...
   |  The daylong clattering whirr of her machine
   |  Hummed in her ears again--the straining thread
   |  And stabbing needle starting through her head--
   |  Until the last dull gleam of day was gone...

   |  When, all at once, upon the right,
   |  A crackling crash, a blinding flare...
   |  A shower of cinders through the air...
   |  A grind of blocks of slag aslide...
   |  And, far above them, in the night,
   |  The looming heap had opened wide
   |  About a fiery, gaping pit...
   |  And, startled and aghast at it,
   |  With clasping hands they stood astare,
   |  And gazed upon the awful glare:
   |  And, as she felt him clutch her hand,
   |  She seemed to know her heart's desire,
   |  For evermore with him to stand
   |  In that enkindling blaze of fire...
   |  When, suddenly, he left her side;
   |  And started scrambling up the heap:
   |  And, looking up, with stifled cry,
   |  She saw, against the glowing sky,
   |  Almost upon the pit's red brink,
   |  A little lad, stock-still with fright
   |  Before the blazing pit of dread
   |  Agape before him in the night,
   |  Where, playing castles on the height
   |  Since noon, he'd fallen, spent, asleep
   |  And dreaming he was home in bed...

   |  With brain afire, too strained to think,
   |  She watched her lover climb and leap
   |  From jag to jag
   |  Of broken slag...
   |  And still he only seemed to creep...
   |  She felt that he would never reach
   |  That little lad, though he should climb
   |  Until the very end of time...
   |  And, as she looked, the burning breach
   |  Gaped suddenly more wide...
   |  The slag again began to slide,
   |  And crash into the pit,
   |  Until the dazed lad's feet
   |  Stood on the edge of it.
   |  She saw him reel and fall...
   |  And thought him done for ... then
   |  Her lover, brave and tall,
   |  Against the glare and heat,
   |  A very fire-bright god of men!
   |  He stooped ... and now she knew the lad
   |  Was safe with Robert, after all.

   |  And while she watched, a throng of folk
   |  Attracted by the crash and flare,
   |  Had gathered round, though no one spoke
   |  But all stood terror-stricken there,
   |  With lifted eyes and indrawn breath,
   |  Until the lad was snatched from death
   |  Upon the very pit's edge, when,
   |  As Robert picked him up, and turned,
   |  A sigh ran through the crowd; and fear
   |  Gave place to joy, as cheer on cheer
   |  Sang through the kindled air...

   |  But still she never uttered word,
   |  As though she neither saw nor heard;
   |  Till as, at last, her lad drew near,
   |  She saw him bend with tender care
   |  Over the sobbing child who lay
   |  Safe in his arms, and hug him tight
   |  Against his breast--his brow alight
   |  With eager, loving eyes that burned
   |  In his transfigured face aflame...
   |  And even when the parents came
   |  It almost seemed that he was loth
   |  To yield them up their little son;
   |  As though the lad were his by right
   |  Of rescue, from the pit's edge won.

   |  Then, as his eyes met hers, she felt
   |  An answering thrill of tenderness
   |  Run, quickening, through her breast; and both
   |  Stood quivering there, with envious eyes,
   |  And stricken with a strange distress,
   |  As quickly homeward through the night
   |  The happy parents bore their boy...

   |  And then, about her reeling bright,
   |  The whole night seemed to her to melt
   |  In one fierce, fiery flood of joy.





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.. _`DEVIL'S EDGE`:

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   DEVIL'S EDGE

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   |  All night I lay on Devil's Edge,
   |  Along an overhanging ledge
   |  Between the sky and sea:
   |  And as I rested 'waiting sleep,
   |  The windless sky and soundless deep
   |  In one dim, blue infinity
   |  Of starry peace encompassed me.

   |  And I remembered, drowsily,
   |  How 'mid the hills last night I 'd lain
   |  Beside a singing moorland burn;
   |  And waked at dawn, to feel the rain
   |  Fall on my face, as on the fern
   |  That drooped about my heather-bed:
   |  And how by noon the wind had blown
   |  The last grey shred from out the sky,
   |  And blew my homespun jacket dry,
   |  As I stood on the topmost stone
   |  That crowns the cairn on Hawkshaw Head,
   |  And caught a gleam of far-off sea;
   |  And heard the wind sing in the bent
   |  Like those far waters calling me:
   |  When, my heart answering to the call,
   |  I followed down the seaward stream,
   |  By silent pool and singing fall;
   |  Till with a quiet, keen content,
   |  I watched the sun, a crimson ball,
   |  Shoot through grey seas a fiery gleam,
   |  Then sink in opal deeps from sight.

   |  And with the coming on of night,
   |  The wind had dropped: and as I lay,
   |  Retracing all the happy day,
   |  And gazing long and dreamily
   |  Across the dim, unsounding sea,
   |  Over the far horizon came
   |  A sudden sail of amber flame;
   |  And soon the new moon rode on high
   |  Through cloudless deeps of crystal sky.

   |  Too holy seemed the night for sleep:
   |  And yet, I must have slept, it seems;
   |  For, suddenly, I woke to hear
   |  A strange voice singing, shrill and clear,
   |  Down in a gully black and deep
   |  That cleft the beetling crag in twain.
   |  It seemed the very voice of dreams
   |  That drive hag-ridden souls in fear
   |  Through echoing, unearthly vales,
   |  To plunge in black, slow-crawling streams,
   |  Seeking to drown that cry, in vain...
   |  Or some sea creature's voice that wails
   |  Through blind, white banks of fog unlifting
   |  To God-forgotten sailors drifting
   |  Rudderless to death...
   |  And as I heard,
   |  Though no wind stirred,
   |  An icy breath
   |  Was in my hair...
   |  And clutched my heart with cold despair...
   |  But, as the wild song died away,
   |  There came a faltering break
   |  That shivered to a sobbing fall;
   |  And seemed half-human, after all...

   |  And yet, what foot could find a track
   |  In that deep gully, sheer and black...
   |  And singing wildly in the night!
   |  So, wondering I lay awake,
   |  Until the coming of the light
   |  Brought day's familiar presence back.

   |  Down by the harbour-mouth that day,
   |  A fisher told the tale to me.
   |  Three months before, while out at sea,
   |  Young Philip Burn was lost, though how,
   |  None knew, and none would ever know.
   |  The boat becalmed at noonday lay...
   |  And not a ripple on the sea...
   |  And Philip standing in the bow,
   |  When his six comrades went below
   |  To sleep away an hour or so,
   |  Dog-tired with working day and night,
   |  While he kept watch ... and not a sound
   |  They heard, until, at set of sun
   |  They woke; and coming up, they found
   |  The deck was empty, Philip gone...
   |  Yet not another boat in sight...
   |  And not a ripple on the sea.
   |  How he had vanished, none could tell.
   |  They only knew the lad was dead
   |  They'd left but now, alive and well...
   |  And he, poor fellow, newly-wed...
   |  And when they broke the news to her,
   |  She spoke no word to anyone:
   |  But sat all day, and would not stir--
   |  Just staring, staring in the fire,
   |  With eyes that never seemed to tire;
   |  Until, at last, the day was done,
   |  And darkness came; when she would rise,
   |  And seek the door with queer, wild eyes;
   |  And wander singing all the night
   |  Unearthly songs beside the sea:
   |  But always the first blink of light
   |  Would find her back at her own door.

   |  'Twas Winter when I came once more
   |  To that old village by the shore:
   |  And as, at night, I climbed the street,
   |  I heard a singing, low and sweet,
   |  Within a cottage near at hand:
   |  And I was glad awhile to stand
   |  And listen by the glowing pane:
   |  And as I hearkened, that sweet strain
   |  Brought back the night when I had lain
   |  Awake on Devil's Edge...
   |  And now I knew the voice again,
   |  So different, free of pain and fear--
   |  Its terror turned to tenderness--
   |  And yet the same voice none the less,
   |  Though singing now so true and clear
   |  And drawing nigh the window-ledge,
   |  I watched the mother sing to rest
   |  The baby snuggling to her breast.





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.. _`THE LILAC TREE`:

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   THE LILAC TREE

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   |  "I planted her the lilac tree
   |  Upon our wedding day:
   |  But, when the time of blossom came,
   |  With her dead babe she lay...
   |  And, as I stood beside the bed,
   |  The scent of lilac filled the room:
   |  And always when I smell the bloom,
   |  I think upon the dead."

   |  He spoke: and, speaking, sauntered on,
   |  The young girl by his side:
   |  And then they talked no more of death,
   |  But only of the happy things
   |  That burst their buds, and spread their wings,
   |  And break in song at Whitsuntide,
   |  That burst to bloom at Whitsuntide,
   |  And bring the summer in a breath.

   |  And, as they talked, the young girl's life
   |  Broke into bloom and song;
   |  And, one with all the happy things
   |  That burst their buds, and spread their wings,
   |  Her very blood was singing,
   |  And at her pulses ringing;
   |  Life tingled through her, sweet and strong,
   |  From secret sources springing:
   |  And, all at once, a quickening strife
   |  Of hopes and fears was in her heart,
   |  Where only wondering joy had been;
   |  And, kindling with a sudden light,
   |  Her eyes had sight
   |  Of things unseen:
   |  And, in a flash, a woman grown,
   |  With pangs of knowledge, fierce and keen,
   |  She knew strange things unknown.

   |  A year went by: at Whitsuntide,
   |  He brought her home, a bride.

   |  He planted her no lilac tree
   |  Upon their wedding day:
   |  And strange distress came over her,
   |  As on the bed she lay:
   |  For as he stood beside the bed,
   |  The scent of lilac filled the room.
   |  Her heart knew well he smelt the bloom,
   |  And thought upon the dead.
   |  Yet, she was glad to be his wife:
   |  And when the blossom-time was past,
   |  Her days no more were overcast;
   |  And deep she drank of life:
   |  And, thronged with happy household cares,
   |  Her busy days went pleasantly:
   |  Her foot was light upon the stairs;
   |  And every room rang merrily,
   |  And merrily, and merrily,
   |  With song and mirth, for unto her
   |  His heart seemed hers, and hers alone:
   |  Until new dreams began to stir
   |  Her wondering breast with bliss unknown
   |  Of some new miracle to be:
   |  And, though she moved more quietly,
   |  And seldom sang, yet, happily,
   |  From happy dawn to happy night
   |  The mother's eyes shone bright.

   |  But, as her time drew near,
   |  Her heart was filled with fear:
   |  And when the lilac burst to bloom,
   |  And brought the Summer in a breath,
   |  A presence seemed to fill the room,
   |  And fill her heart with death:
   |  And, as her husband lay asleep,
   |  Beside her, on the bed,
   |  Into her breast the thought would creep
   |  That he was dreaming of the dead.
   |  And all the mother's heart in her
   |  Was mad with mother-jealousy
   |  Of that sweet scented lilac tree;
   |  And, blind with savage ecstasy,
   |  Night after night she lay,
   |  Until the blink of day,
   |  With staring eyes and wild,
   |  Half-crazy, lest the lilac tree
   |  Should come betwixt him and his child.
   |  By day, her mother-tenderness
   |  Was turned to brooding bitterness,
   |  Whene'er she looked upon the bloom:
   |  And, if she slept at all at night,
   |  Her heart would waken in affright
   |  To smell the lilac in the gloom:
   |  And, when it rained, it seemed to her,
   |  The fresh keen scent was bitterer:
   |  Though, when the blaze of morning came,
   |  And flooded all the room,
   |  The perfume burnt her heart like flame.
   |  As, in the dark,
   |  One night she lay,
   |  A dark thought shot
   |  Through her hot heart:
   |  And, from a spark
   |  Of smouldering wrong,
   |  Hate burst to fire.
   |  Now, quaking cold,
   |  Now, quivering hot,
   |  With breath indrawn,
   |  Through time untold,
   |  She 'waited dawn
   |  That lagged too long
   |  For her desire.

   |  And when, at last, at break of day,
   |  Her husband rose, and went his way
   |  About his daily toil,
   |  She, too, arose, and dressed,
   |  With frenzy in her breast;
   |  And stole downstairs, and took a spade,
   |  And digged about the lilac roots,
   |  And laid them bare of soil:
   |  Then, with a jagged blade,
   |  She hacked and slashed the naked roots--
   |  She hacked and slashed with frantic hand,
   |  Until the lilac scarce might stand;
   |  And then again the soil she laid
   |  About the bleeding roots--
   |  (It seemed to her, the sap ran red
   |  About the writhing roots!)
   |  But, now her heart was eased of strife,
   |  Since she had sapped the lilac's life;
   |  And, frenzy-spent, she dropped the knife:
   |  Then, dizzily she crept to bed,
   |  And lay all day as one nigh dead.

   |  That night a sudden storm awoke,
   |  And struck the slumbering earth to life:
   |  And, as the heavens in thunder broke,
   |  She lay exulting in the strife
   |  Of flash and peal,
   |  And gust and rain;
   |  For now, she thought: the lightning-stroke
   |  Will lay the lilac low;
   |  And he need never know
   |  How I ... and then, again,
   |  Her heart went cold with dread,
   |  As she remembered that the knife
   |  Still lay beneath the lilac tree...
   |  A blinding flash,
   |  A lull, a crash,
   |  A rattling peal...
   |  And suddenly,
   |  She felt her senses reel:
   |  And, crying out: "The knife!  The knife!"
   |  Her pangs were on her...
   |                           Dawn was red,
   |  When she awoke upon the bed
   |  To life--and knew her babe was dead.
   |  She rose: and cried out fearfully:
   |  "The lilac tree!  The lilac tree!"
   |  Then fell back in a swoon.

   |  But, when she waked again at noon,
   |  And looked upon her sleeping child;
   |  And laid her hand upon its head,
   |  No more the mother's heart was wild,
   |  For hate and fear were dead;
   |  And all her brooding bitterness
   |  Broke into tears of tenderness.

   |  And, not a word the father said
   |  About the lilac, lying dead.

   |  A week went by, and Whitsuntide
   |  Came round: and, as she lay,
   |  And looked upon the newborn day,
   |  Her husband, lying by her side,
   |  Spoke to her very tenderly:
   |  "Wife, 'tis again our wedding day,
   |  And we will plant a lilac tree
   |  In memory of the babe that died."

   |  They planted a white lilac tree
   |  Upon their wedding day:
   |  And, when the time of blossom came,
   |  With kindly hearts they lay.
   |  The sunlight streamed upon the bed:
   |  The scent of lilac filled the room:
   |  And, as they smelt the breathing bloom,
   |  They thought upon the dead.





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.. _`THE OLD MAN`:

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   THE OLD MAN

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..

   |  The boat put in at dead of night;
   |  And, when I reached the house, 'twas sleeping dark.
   |  I knew my gentlest tap would be a spark
   |  To set my home alight:
   |  My mother ever listening in her sleep
   |  For my returning step, would leap
   |  Awake with welcome; and my father's eyes
   |  Would twinkle merrily to greet me;
   |  And my young sister would run down to meet me
   |  With sleepy sweet surprise.

   |  And yet, awhile, I lingered
   |  Upon the threshold, listening;
   |  And watched the cold stars glistening,
   |  And seemed to hear the deep
   |  Calm breathing of the house asleep--
   |  In easy sleep, so deep, I almost feared to break it;
   |  And, even as I fingered
   |  The knocker, loth to wake it,
   |  Like some uncanny inkling
   |  Of news from otherwhere,
   |  I felt a cold breath in my hair,
   |  As though, with chin upon my shoulder,
   |  One waited hard, upon my heel,
   |  With pricking eyes of steel,
   |  Though well I knew that not a soul was there.

   |  Until, at last, grown bolder,
   |  I rapped; and in a twinkling,
   |  The house was all afire
   |  With welcome in the night:
   |  First, in my mother's room, a light;
   |  And then, her foot upon the stair;
   |  A bolt shot back; a candle's flare:
   |  A happy cry; and to her breast
   |  She hugged her heart's desire:
   |  And hushed her fears to rest.

   |  Then, shivering in the keen night air,
   |  My sleepy sister, laughing came;
   |  And drew us in: and stirred to flame
   |  The smouldering kitchen-fire; and set
   |  The kettle on the kindling red:
   |  And, as I watched the homely blaze,
   |  And thought of wandering days
   |  With sharp regret;
   |  I missed my father: then I heard
   |  How he was still a-bed;
   |  And had been ailing, for a day or so;
   |  But, now was waking, if I'd go...
   |  My foot already on the stair,
   |  In answer to my mother's word
   |  I turned; and saw in dull amaze,
   |  Behind her, as she stood all unaware,
   |  An old man sitting in my father's chair.
   |  A strange old man ... yet, as I looked at him,
   |  Before my eyes, a dim
   |  Remembrance seemed to swim
   |  Of some old man, who'd lurked about the boat,
   |  While we were still at sea;
   |  And who had crouched beside me, at the oar,
   |  As we had rowed ashore;
   |  Though, at the time, I'd taken little note,
   |  I felt I'd seen that strange old man before:
   |  But, how he'd come to follow me,
   |  Unknown...
   |  And to be sitting there...
   |  Then I recalled the cold breath in my hair,
   |  When I had stood, alone,
   |  Before the bolted door.

   |  And now my mother, wondering sore
   |  To see me stare and stare,
   |  So strangely, at an empty chair,
   |  Turned, too; and saw the old man there.

   |  And as she turned, he slowly raised
   |  His drooping head;
   |  And looked upon her with her husband's eyes.
   |  She stood, a moment, dazed;
   |  And watched him slowly rise,
   |  As though to come to her:
   |  Then, with a cry, she sped
   |  Upstairs, ere I could stir.

   |  Still dazed, I let her go, alone:
   |  I heard her footstep overhead:
   |  I heard her drop beside the bed,
   |  With low forsaken moan.

   |  Yet, I could only stare and stare
   |  Upon my father's empty chair.





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.. _`THE HARE`:

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   THE HARE

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..

   |  My hands were hot upon a hare,
   |  Half-strangled, struggling in a snare--
   |  My knuckles at her warm wind-pipe--
   |  When suddenly, her eyes shot back,
   |  Big, fearful, staggering and black:
   |  And, ere I knew, my grip was slack;
   |  And I was clutching empty air,
   |  Half-mad, half-glad at my lost luck...
   |  When I awoke beside the stack.

   |  'Twas just the minute when the snipe,
   |  As though clock-wakened, every jack,
   |  An hour ere dawn, dart in and out
   |  The mist-wreaths filling syke and slack,
   |  And flutter wheeling round about,
   |  And drumming out the Summer night.
   |  I lay star-gazing yet a bit;
   |  Then, chilly-skinned, I sat upright,
   |  To shrug the shivers from my back;
   |  And, drawing out a straw to suck,
   |  My teeth nipped through it at a bite...
   |  The liveliest lad is out of pluck
   |  An hour ere dawn--a tame cock-sparrow--
   |  When cold stars shiver through his marrow,
   |  And wet mist soaks his mother-wit.
   |  But, as the snipe dropped, one by one;
   |  And one by one the stars blinked out;
   |  I knew 'twould only need the sun
   |  To send the shudders right about:
   |  And, as the clear East faded white,
   |  I watched and wearied for the sun--
   |  The jolly, welcome, friendly sun--
   |  The sleepy sluggard of a sun
   |  That still kept snoozing out of sight,
   |  Though well he knew the night was done
   |  And, after all, he caught me dozing,
   |  And leapt up, laughing, in the sky
   |  Just as my lazy eyes were closing:
   |  And it was good as gold to lie
   |  Full-length among the straw, and feel
   |  The day wax warmer every minute,
   |  As, glowing glad, from head to heel,
   |  I soaked and rolled rejoicing in it...
   |  When from the corner of my eye,
   |  Upon a heathery knowe hard-by,
   |  With long lugs cocked, and eyes astare,
   |  Yet all serene, I saw a hare.

   |  Upon my belly in the straw,
   |  I lay, and watched her sleek her fur,
   |  As, daintily, with well-licked paw,
   |  She washed her face and neck and ears:
   |  Then, clean and comely in the sun,
   |  She kicked her heels up, full of fun,
   |  As if she did not care a pin
   |  Though she should jump out of her skin,
   |  And leapt and lolloped, free of fears,
   |  Until my heart frisked round with her.
   |  "And yet, if I but lift my head,
   |  You'll scamper off, young Puss," I said.
   |  "Still, I can't lie, and watch you play,
   |  Upon my belly half-the-day.
   |  The Lord alone knows where I'm going:
   |  But, I had best be getting there.
   |  Last night I loosed you from the snare--
   |  Asleep, or waking, who's for knowing!--
   |  So, I shall thank you now for showing
   |  Which art to take to bring me where
   |  My luck awaits me.  When you're ready
   |  To start, I'll follow on your track.
   |  Though slow of foot, I'm sure and steady..."
   |  She pricked her ears, then set them back;
   |  And like a shot was out of sight:
   |  And, with a happy heart and light,
   |  As quickly I was on my feet;
   |  And following the way she went,
   |  Keen as a lurcher on the scent,
   |  Across the heather and the bent,
   |  Across the quaking moss and peat.
   |  Of course, I lost her soon enough,
   |  For moorland tracks are steep and rough;
   |  And hares are made of nimbler stuff
   |  Than any lad of seventeen,
   |  However lanky-legged and tough,
   |  However, kestrel-eyed and keen:
   |  And I'd at last to stop and eat
   |  The little bit of bread and meat
   |  Left in my pocket overnight.
   |  So, in a hollow, snug and green,
   |  I sat beside a burn, and dipped
   |  The dry bread in an icy pool;
   |  And munched a breakfast fresh and cool...
   |  And then sat gaping like a fool...
   |  For, right before my very eyes,
   |  With lugs acock, and eyes astare,
   |  I saw again the selfsame hare.

   |  So, up I jumped, and off she slipped:
   |  And I kept sight of her until
   |  I stumbled in a hole, and tripped;
   |  And came a heavy, headlong spill:
   |  And she, ere I'd the wit to rise,
   |  Was o'er the hill, and out of sight:
   |  And, sore and shaken with the tumbling,
   |  And sicker at my foot for stumbling,
   |  I cursed my luck, and went on, grumbling,
   |  The way her flying heels had fled.

   |  The sky was cloudless overhead;
   |  And just alive with larks asinging:
   |  And, in a twinkling, I was swinging
   |  Across the windy hills, lighthearted.
   |  A kestrel at my footstep started,
   |  Just pouncing on a frightened mouse,
   |  And hung o'erhead with wings a-hover:
   |  Through rustling heath an adder darted:
   |  A hundred rabbits bobbed to cover:
   |  A weasel, sleek and rusty-red,
   |  Popped out of sight as quick as winking:
   |  I saw a grizzled vixen slinking
   |  Behind a clucking brood of grouse
   |  That rose and cackled at my coming:
   |  And all about my way were flying
   |  The peewit, with their slow wings creaking
   |  And little jack-snipe darted, drumming:
   |  And now and then a golden plover
   |  Or redshank piped with reedy whistle.
   |  But never shaken bent or thistle
   |  Betrayed the quarry I was seeking
   |  And not an instant, anywhere
   |  Did I clap eyes upon a hare.

   |  So, travelling still, the twilight caught me:
   |  And as I stumbled on, I muttered:
   |  "A deal of luck the hare has brought me!
   |  The wind and I must spend together
   |  A hungry night among the heather.
   |  If I'd her here..."  And as I uttered,
   |  I tripped, and heard a frightened squeal;
   |  And dropped my hands in time to feel
   |  The hare just bolting 'twixt my feet.
   |  She slipped my clutch: and I stood there
   |  And cursed that devil-littered hare,
   |  That left me stranded in the dark
   |  In that wide waste of quaggy peat
   |  Beneath black night without a spark:
   |  When, looking up, I saw a flare
   |  Upon a far-off hill, and said:
   |  "By God, the heather is afire!
   |  It's mischief at this time of year..."
   |  And then, as one bright flame shot higher,
   |  And booths and vans stood out quite clear;
   |  My wits came back into my head:
   |  And I remembered Brough Hill Fair.
   |  And, as I stumbled towards the glare,
   |  I knew the sudden kindling meant
   |  The Fair was over for the day;
   |  And all the cattle-folk away
   |  And gipsy-folk and tinkers now
   |  Were lighting supper-fires without
   |  Each caravan and booth and tent.
   |  And, as I climbed the stiff hill-brow,
   |  I quite forgot my lucky hare.
   |  I'd something else to think about:
   |  For well I knew there's broken meat
   |  For empty bellies after fair-time;
   |  And looked to have a royal rare time
   |  With something rich and prime to eat:
   |  And then to lie and toast my feet
   |  All night beside the biggest fire.

   |  But, even as I neared the first,
   |  A pleasant whiff of stewing burst
   |  From out a smoking pot a-bubble:
   |  And, as I stopped behind the folk
   |  Who sprawled around, and watched it seething
   |  A woman heard my eager breathing,
   |  And, turning, caught my hungry eye:
   |  And called out to me: "Draw in nigher,
   |  Unless you find it too much trouble;
   |  Or you've a nose for better fare,
   |  And go to supper with the Squire...
   |  You've got the hungry parson's air!"
   |  And all looked up, and took the joke,
   |  As I dropped gladly to the ground
   |  Among them, where they all lay gazing
   |  Upon the bubbling and the blazing.
   |  My eyes were dazzled by the fire
   |  At first; and then I glanced around;
   |  And, in those swarthy, fire-lit faces--
   |  Though drowsing in the glare and heat
   |  And snuffing the warm savour in,
   |  Dead-certain of their fill of meat--
   |  I felt the bit between the teeth,
   |  The flying heels, the broken traces,
   |  And heard the highroad ring beneath
   |  The trampling hoofs: and knew them kin.
   |  Then for the first time, standing there
   |  Behind the woman who had hailed me,
   |  I saw a girl with eyes astare
   |  That looked in terror o'er my head:
   |  And, all at once, my courage failed me...
   |  For now again, and sore-adread,
   |  My hands were hot upon a hare,
   |  That struggled, strangling in the snare...
   |  Then once more as the girl stood clear,
   |  Before me--quaking cold with fear
   |  I saw the hare look from her eyes...

   |  And when, at last, I turned to see
   |  What held her scared, I saw a man--
   |  A fat man with dull eyes aleer--
   |  Within the shadow of the van:
   |  And I was on the point to rise
   |  To send him spinning 'mid the wheels,
   |  And twist his neck between his heels,
   |  And stop his leering grin with mud...
   |  And would have done it in a tick...
   |  When, suddenly, alive with fright,
   |  She started, with red, parted lips,
   |  As though she guessed we'd come to grips,
   |  And turned her black eyes full on me...
   |  And, as I looked into their light,
   |  My heart forgot the lust of fight,
   |  And something shot me to the quick,
   |  And ran like wildfire through my blood,
   |  And tingled to my finger-tips...
   |  And, in a dazzling flash, I knew
   |  I'd never been alive before...
   |  And she was mine for evermore.

   |  While all the others slept asnore
   |  In caravan and tent that night,
   |  I lay alone beside the fire;
   |  And stared into its blazing core,
   |  With eyes that would not shut or tire,
   |  Because the best of all was true,
   |  And they looked still into the light
   |  Of her eyes, burning ever bright.
   |  Within the brightest coal for me...
   |  Once more, I saw her, as she started,
   |  And glanced at me with red lips parted:
   |  And, as she looked, the frightened hare
   |  Had fled her eyes; and, merrily,
   |  She smiled, with fine teeth flashing white,
   |  As though she, too, were happy-hearted...
   |  Then she had trembled suddenly,
   |  And dropped her eyes, as that fat man
   |  Stepped from the shadow of the van,
   |  And joined the circle, as the pot
   |  Was lifted off, and, piping-hot,
   |  The supper steamed in wooden bowls.
   |  Yet, she had hardly touched a bite:
   |  And never raised her eyes all night
   |  To mine again: but on the coals,
   |  As I sat staring, she had stared--
   |  The black curls, shining round her head
   |  From under the red kerchief, tied
   |  So nattily beneath her chin--
   |  And she had stolen off to bed
   |  Quite early, looking dazed and scared.
   |  Then, all agape and sleepy-eyed,
   |  Ere long the others had turned in:
   |  And I was rid of that fat man,
   |  Who slouched away to his own van.

   |  And now, before her van, I lay,
   |  With sleepless eyes, awaiting day:
   |  And, as I gazed upon the glare,
   |  I heard, behind, a gentle stir:
   |  And, turning round, I looked on her
   |  Where she stood on the little stair
   |  Outside the van, with listening air--
   |  And, in her eyes, the hunted hare...
   |  And then, I saw her slip away,
   |  A bundle underneath her arm,
   |  Without a single glance at me.
   |  I lay a moment wondering,
   |  My heart a-thump like anything,
   |  Then, fearing she should come to harm,
   |  I rose, and followed speedily
   |  Where she had vanished in the night.
   |  And, as she heard my step behind,
   |  She started, and stopt dead with fright:
   |  Then blundered on as if struck blind:
   |  And now as I caught up with her,
   |  Just as she took the moorland track,
   |  I saw the hare's eyes, big and black...
   |  She made as though she'd double back...
   |  But, when she looked into my eyes,
   |  She stood quite still and did not stir...
   |  And, picking up her fallen pack,
   |  I tucked it 'neath my arm; and she
   |  Just took her luck quite quietly.
   |  As she must take what chance might come,
   |  And would not have it otherwise,
   |  And walked into the night with me,
   |  Without a word across the fells.

   |  And, all about us, through the night,
   |  The mists were stealing, cold and white,
   |  Down every rushy syke or slack:
   |  But, soon the moon swung into sight:
   |  And, as we went, my heart was light,
   |  And singing like a burn in flood:
   |  And in my ears were tinkling bells:
   |  My body was a rattled drum:
   |  And fifes were shrilling through my blood
   |  That summer night, to think that she
   |  Was walking through the world with me.

   |  But when the air with dawn was chill,
   |  As we were travelling down a hill,
   |  She broke her silence with low-sobbing:
   |  And told her tale, her bosom throbbing
   |  As though her very heart were shaken
   |  With fear she'd yet be overtaken...
   |  She'd always lived in caravans--
   |  Her father's, gay as any man's,
   |  Grass-green, picked out with red and yellow
   |  And glittering brave with burnished brass
   |  That sparkled in the sun like flame,
   |  And window curtains, white as snow...
   |  But, they had died, ten years ago,
   |  Her parents both, when fever came...
   |  And they were buried, side by side,
   |  Somewhere beneath the wayside grass...
   |  In times of sickness, they kept wide
   |  Of towns and busybodies, so
   |  No parson's or policeman's tricks
   |  Should bother them when in a fix...
   |  Her father never could abide
   |  A black coat or a blue, poor man...
   |  And so, Long Dick, a kindly fellow,
   |  When you could keep him from the can,
   |  And Meg, his easy-going wife,
   |  Had taken her into their van;
   |  And kept her since her parents died...
   |  And she had lived a happy life,
   |  Until Fat Pete's young wife was taken...
   |  But, ever since, he'd pestered her...
   |  And she dared scarcely breathe or stir,
   |  Lest she should see his eyes aleer...
   |  And many a night she'd lain and shaken,
   |  And very nearly died of fear--
   |  Though safe enough within the van
   |  With Mother Meg and her good-man--
   |  For, since Fat Pete was Long Dick's friend,
   |  And they were thick and sweet as honey;
   |  And Dick owed Pete a pot of money,
   |  She knew too well how it must end...
   |  And she would rather lie stone dead
   |  Beneath the wayside grass than wed
   |  With leering Pete, and live the life,
   |  And die the death, of his first wife...
   |  And so, last night, clean-daft with dread,
   |  She'd bundled up a pack and fled...

   |  When all the sobbing tale was out,
   |  She dried her eyes, and looked about,
   |  As though she'd left all fear behind,
   |  And out of sight were out of mind.
   |  Then, when the dawn was burning red,
   |  "I'm hungry as a hawk!" she said:
   |  And from the bundle took out bread.
   |  And, at the happy end of night,
   |  We sat together by a burn:
   |  And ate a thick slice, turn by turn;
   |  And laughed and kissed between each bite.

   |  Then, up again, and on our way
   |  We went; and tramped the livelong day
   |  The moorland trackways, steep and rough,
   |  Though there was little fear enough
   |  That they would follow on our flight.

   |  And then again a shiny night
   |  Among the honey-scented heather,
   |  We wandered in the moonblaze bright,
   |  Together through a land of light,
   |  A lad and lass alone with life.
   |  And merrily we laughed together,
   |  When, starting up from sleep, we heard
   |  The cock-grouse talking to his wife...
   |  And "Old Fat Pete" she called the bird.

   |  Six months and more have cantered by:
   |  And, Winter past, we're out again--
   |  We've left the fat and weatherwise
   |  To keep their coops and reeking sties,
   |  And eat their fill of oven-pies,
   |  While we win free and out again
   |  To take potluck beneath the sky
   |  With sun and moon and wind and rain.
   |  Six happy months ... and yet, at night,
   |  I've often wakened in affright,
   |  And looked upon her lying there,
   |  Beside me sleeping quietly,
   |  Adread that when she waked, I'd see
   |  The hunted hare within her eyes.

   |  And, only last night, as I slept
   |  Beneath the shelter of a stack...
   |  My hands were hot upon a hare,
   |  Half-strangled, struggling in the snare,
   |  When, suddenly, her eyes shot back,
   |  Big, fearful, staggering and black;
   |  And ere I knew, my grip was slack,
   |  And I was clutching empty air...
   |  Bolt-upright from my sleep I leapt...
   |  Her place was empty in the straw...
   |  And then, with quaking heart, I saw
   |  That she was standing in the night,
   |  A leveret cuddled to her breast...

   |  I spoke no word: but, as the light
   |  Through banks of Eastern cloud was breaking,
   |  She turned, and saw that I was waking:
   |  And told me how she could not rest;
   |  And, rising in the night, she'd found
   |  This baby-hare crouched on the ground;
   |  And she had nursed it quite a while:
   |  But, now, she'd better let it go...
   |  Its mother would be fretting so...
   |  A mother's heart...
   |                     I saw her smile,
   |  And look at me with tender eyes:
   |  And as I looked into their light,
   |  My foolish, fearful heart grew wise...
   |  And now, I knew that never there
   |  I'd see again the startled hare,
   |  Or need to dread the dreams of night.

   |  1910-1911.

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   LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.

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