< Myrtle and Myrrh

My soul and I, upon the peak
  Of Sanneen grim and grey,
Sat musing in the twilight of
  A sombre summer day.

"Great Saturn and the Moon are gone
  Together o'er the sea;
But will great Saturn e'er return
  Should he elope with thee?

Ah well, who knows? when thou art gone
  I, too, shall sink within the brine,—
I, too, shall sail above this peak
  And signal yonder groves of pine.

Behold the melancholy sky
  Of this forgotten land;
On this side are the valleys bleak.
  On this, the desert sand."

"I hear the moaning of the wind,"
  My sad companion said;
"The snow is gathering in me
  And the night is overhead.

Long have we dwelt together, friend,
  In our sweet ennui;
But were I now to take my leave,
  Alas, what would I be?"

"O, think not of departing.
  Ah, too young I am to die;
I'll find the magic wings; and there
  Still hangs a friendly sky.

Let us above these pines, and clouds,
  And scents awhile yet dwell;—
Where wouldst thou go, if thou wert now
  To sigh a last farewell?"

Thou seest the busy elements
  Dissolving one by one
The souls that are acquitted.
  For the all-absorbing sun.

Let's sing the song of darkness then;
  Thy prison is the Whole;—
What canst thou do, where wilt thou go.
  What wilt thou be, my Soul?

Thou wouldst not be the air that weighs
  Upon the rising dust;
Thou wouldst not be the fog that chokes
  The air in savage lust.

Thou wouldst not be the clouds that block
  The smoke's way to a star;
Nor linger in the guilty tears
  Of clouds before the bar.

Thou wouldst not be the rain that taunts
  The all-devouring sea.
Itself destroying many a nest
  In bush and rock and tree.

Thou wouldst not be the thunder's tongue
  Spell-binding all the spheres;
Nor wouldst thou be the lightning blade
  That stabs and disappears.

Thou wouldst not be the dew that falls
  Alike on thorn and flower;
Nor even the morning zephyr
  That blows o'er den and bower.

Thou wouldst not be the virgin snow
  Set free from yonder clouds,
Only to melt beneath the feet
  Of surging human crowds."

"No! none of these," my Soul replied;
  "I'll shiver ever thrall;
O let me rise, for I would be
  The sky above them all."

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1924.


The author died in 1940, so this work is also in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 75 years or less. This work may also be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

 
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