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    The Portable Blake

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      And into my garden stole

      When the night had veil’d the pole:

      In the morning glad I see

      My foe outstretch’d beneath the tree.

      A LITTLE BOY LOST

      ‘Nought loves another as itself,

      Nor venerates another so,

      Nor is it possible to Thought

      A greater than itself to know:

      “And Father, how can I love you

      Or any of my brothers more?

      I love you like the little bird

      That picks up crumbs around the door.”

      The Priest sat by and heard the child,

      In trembling zeal he siez’d his hair:

      He led him by his little coat,

      And all admir’d the Priestly care.

      And standing on the altar high,

      “Lo ! what a fiend is herel” said he,

      “One who sets reason up for judge

      Of our most holy Mystery.”

      The weeping child could not be heard,

      The weeping parents wept in vain;

      They strip’d him to his little shirt,

      And bound him in an iron chain;

      And burn’d him in a holy place,

      Where many had been burn’d before:

      The weeping parents wept in vain.

      Are such things done on Albion’s shore?

      A LITTLE GIRL LOST

      Children of the future Age

      Reading this indignant page,

      Know that in a former time

      Love! sweet Love! was thought a crime.

      In the Age of Gold,

      Free from winter’s cold,

      Youth and maiden bright

      To the holy light,

      Naked in the sunny beams delight.

      Once a youthful pair,

      Fill’d with softest care,

      Met in garden bright

      Where the holy light

      Had just remov’d the curtains of the night.

      There, in rising day,

      On the grass they play;

      Parents were afar,

      Strangers came not near,

      And the maiden soon forgot her fear.

      Tired with kisses sweet,

      They agree to meet

      When the silent sleep

      Waves o’er heaven’s deep,

      And the weary tired wanderers weep.

      To her father white

      Came the maiden bright;

      But his loving look,

      Like the holy book,

      All her tender limbs with terror shook.

      “Ona! pale and weak !

      To thy father speak:

      0, the trembling fear!

      O, the dismal care!

      That shakes the blossoms of my hoary hair.”

      ADDITIONAL POEMS

      (1794-1901)

      TO TIRZAH

      Whate’er is Born of Mortal Birth

      Must be consumed with the Earth

      to rise from Generation free:

      Then what have I to do with thee?

      The Sexes sprung from Shame & Pride,

      Blow’d in the mom; in evening died;

      But Mercy chang’d Death into Sleep;

      The Sexes rose to work & weep.

      Thou, Mother of my Mortal part,

      With cruelty didst mould my Heart,

      And with false self-decieving tears

      Didst bind my Nostrils, Eyes, & Ears:

      Didst close my Tongue in senseless clay,

      And me to Mortal Life betray.

      The Death of Jesus set me free:

      Then what have I to do with thee?

      THE SCHOOLBOY

      I love to rise in a summer morn

      When the birds sing on every tree;

      The distant huntsman winds his horn,

      And the sky-lark sings with me.

      O! what sweet company.

      But to go to school in a summer morn,

      O! it drives all joy away;

      Under a cruel eye outworn,

      The little ones spend the day

      In sighing and dismay.

      Ah! then at times I drooping sit,

      And spend many an anxious hour,

      Nor in my book can I take delight,

      Nor sit in learning’s bower,

      Worn thro’ with the dreary shower.

      How can the bird that is born for joy

      Sit in a cage and sing?

      How can a child, when fears annoy,

      But droop his tender wing,

      And forget his youthful spring?

      O! father & mother, if buds are nip’d

      And blossoms blown away,

      And if the tender plants are strip’d

      Of their joy in the springing day,

      By sorrow and care’s dismay,

      How shall the summer arise in joy,

      Or the summer fruits appear?

      Or how shall we gather what griefs destroy,

      Or bless the mellowing year,

      When the blasts of winter appear?

      THE VOICE OF THE ANCIENT BARD

      Youth of delight, come hither,

      And see the opening morn,

      Image of truth new born.

      Doubt is fled, & clouds of reason,

      Dark disputes & artful teazing.

      Folly is an endless maze,

      Tangled roots perplex her ways.

      How many have fallen there!

      They stumble all night over bones of the dead,

      And feel they know not what but care,

      And wish to lead others, when they should be led.

      A DIVINE IMAGE

      Cruelty has a Human Heart,

      And Jealousy a Human Face;

      Terror the Human Form Divine,

      And Secrecy the Human Dress.

      The Human Dress is forged Iron,

      The Human Form a fiery Forge,

      The Human Face a Furnace seal’d.

      The Human Heart its hungry Gorge.

      IV.

      VERSES AND FRAGMENTS FROM THE ROSSETTI AND PICKERING MANUSCRIPTS

      FIRST SERIES

      (1793-1799)

      Never seek to tell thy love

      Love that never told can be;

      For the gentle wind does move

      Silently, invisibly.

      I told my love, I told my love,

      I told her all my heart,

      Trembling, cold, in ghastly fears—

      Ah, she doth depart.

      Soon as she was gone from me

      A traveller came by

      Silently, invisibly—

      0, was no deny.

      I laid me down upon a bank

      Where love lay sleeping.

      I heard among the rushes dank

      Weeping, Weeping.

      Then I went to the heath & the wild

      To the thistles & thorns of the waste

      And they told me how they were beguil’d,

      Driven out, & compel’d to be chaste.

      I saw a chapel all of gold

      That none did dare to enter in,

      And many weeping stood without,

      Weeping, mourning, worshipping.

      I saw a serpent rise between

      The white pillars of the door,

      And he forc’d & forc’d & forc’d,

      Down the golden hinges tore.

      And along the pavement sweet,

      Set with pearls & rubies bright,

      All his slimy length he drew,

      Till upon the altar white

      Vomiting his poison out

      On the bread & on the wine.

      So I turn’d into a sty

      And laid me down among the swine.

      I asked a thief to steal me a peach:

      He turned up his eyes.

      I ask’d a lithe lady to lie her down:

      Holy & meek she cries.

      As soon as I went an angel came:

      He wink’d at the thief

      And smil’d at the dame,

      And without one word spoke


      Had a peach from the tree,

      And ’twixt earnest & joke

      Enjoy’d the Lady.

      I heard an Angel singing

      When the day was springing,

      “Mercy, Pity, Peace

      Is the world’s release.”

      Thus he sung all day

      Over the new mown hay,

      Till the sun went down

      And haycocks looked brown.

      I heard a Devil curse

      Over the heath & the furze,

      “Mercy could be no more,

      If there was nobody poor,

      “And pity no more could be,

      If all were as happy as we.”

      At his curse the sun went down,

      And the heavens gave a frown.

      Down pour’d the heavy rain

      Over the new reap’d grain,

      And Miseries’ increase

      Is Mercy, Pity, Peace.

      A CRADLE SONG

      Sleep, Sleep, beauty bright

      Dreaming o’er the joys of night.

      Sleep, Sleep: in thy sleep

      Little sorrows sit & weep.

      Sweet Babe, in thy face

      Soft desires I can trace

      Secret joys & secret smiles

      Little pretty infant wiles.

      As thy softest limbs I feel

      Smiles as of the morning steal

      O‘er thy cheek & o’er thy breast

      Where thy little heart does rest.

      O, the cunning wiles that creep

      In thy little heart asleep.

      When thy little heart does wake,

      Then the dreadful lightnings break.

      From thy cheek & from thy eye

      O’er the youthful harvests nigh

      Infant wiles & infant smiles

      Heaven & Earth of peace beguiles.

      I fear’d the fury of my wind

      Would blight all blossoms fair & true;

      And my sun it shin’d & shin’d

      And my wind it never blew.

      But a blossom fair or true

      Was not found on any tree;

      For all blossoms grew & grew

      Fruitless, false, tho’ fair to see.

      Why should I care for the men of thames,

      Or the cheating waves of charter’d streams,

      Or shrink at the little blasts of fear

      That the hireling blows into my ear?

      Tho’ born on the cheating banks of Thames,

      Tho’ his waters bathed my infant limbs,

      The Ohio shall wash his stains from me:

      I was born a slave, but I go to be free.

      INFANT SORROW

      My mother groan’d, my father wept;

      Into the dangerous world I leapt,

      Helpless, naked, piping loud,

      Like a fiend hid in a cloud.

      Struggling in my father’s hands

      Striving against my swaddling bands,

      Bound & weary, I thought best

      To sulk upon my mother’s breast.

      When I saw that rage was vain,

      And to sulk would nothing gain,

      Turning many a trick & wile,

      I began to soothe & smile.

      And I sooth’d day after day

      Till upon the ground I stray;

      And I smil’d night after night,

      Seeking only for delight.

      And I saw before me shine

      Clusters of the wand’ring vine,

      And many a lovely flower & tree

      Streteh’d their blossoms out to me.

      My father then with holy look,

      In his hands a holy book,

      Pronounc’d curses on my head

      And bound me in a mirtle shade.

      IN A MIRTLE SHADE

      Why should I be bound to thee,

      O my lovely mirtle tree?

      Love, free love, cannot be bound

      To any tree that grows on ground.

      0, how sick & weary I

      Underneath my mirtle lie,

      Like to dung upon the ground

      Underneath my mirtle bound.

      Oft my mirtle sigh’d in vain

      To behold my heavy chain;

      Oft my father saw us sigh,

      And laugh’d at our simplicity.

      So I smote him & his gore

      Stain’d the roots my mirtle bore.

      But the time of youth is Bed,

      And grey hairs are on my head.

      Silent, Silent Night

      Quench the holy light

      Of thy torches bright.

      For possess’d of Day

      Thousand spirits stray

      That sweet joys betray

      Why should joys be sweet

      Used with deceit

      Nor with sorrows meet?

      But an honest joy

      Does itself destroy

      For a harlot coy.

      0 lapwing, thou fliest around the heath,

      Nor seest the net that is spread beneath.

      Why dost thou not fly among the corn fields?

      They cannot spread nets where a harvest yields.

      Thou hast a lap full of seed,

      And this is a fine country.

      Why dost thou not cast thy seed

      And live in it merrily?

      Shall I cast it on the sand

      And turn it into fruitful land?

      For on no other ground

      Can I sow my seed

      Without tearing up

      Some stinking weed.

      TO NOBODADDY

      Why art thou silent & invisible,

      Father of Jealousy?

      Why dost thou hide thy self in clouds

      From every searching Eye?

      Why darkness & obscurity

      In all thy words & laws,

      That none dare eat the fruit but from

      The wily serpent’s jaws? ,

      Or is it because Secresy gains females’ loud applause?

      Are not the joys of morning sweeter

      Than the joys of night?

      And are the vig’rous joys of youth

      Ashamed of the light?

      Let age & sickness silent rob

      The vineyards in the night;

      But those who burn with vig’rous youth

      Pluck fruits before the light.

      Love to faults is always blind,

      Always is to joy inclin‘d,

      Lawless, wing’d, & unconfin’d,

      And breaks all chains from every mind.

      Deceit to secresy confin’d,

      Lawful, cautious, & refin’d;

      To every thing but interest blind,

      And forges fetters for the mind.

      THE WILD FLOWER’S SONG

      As I wander’d the forest,

      The green leaves among,

      I heard a wild flower

      Singing a song:

      “I slept in the dark

      In the silent night,

      I murmur’d my fears

      And I felt delight.

      “In the morning I went

      As rosy as morn

      To seek for new Joy,

      But I met with scorn.”

      SOFT SNOW

      I walked abroad in a snowy day:

      I ask’d the soft snow with me to play:

      She play’d & she melted in all her prime,

      And the winter call’d it a dreadful crime.

      AN ANCIENT PROVERB

      Remove away that black’ning church:

      Remove away that marriage hearse:

      Remove away that place of blood:

      You’ll quite remove the ancient curse.

      TO MY MIRTLE

      To a lovely mirtle bound,

      Blossoms show’ring all around,

      0, how sick & weary I

      Underneath my mirtle lie.

      Why should I be bound to thee,

      0, my lovely mirtle tree?

      MERLIN’S PROPHECY

      The harvest shall flourish in wintry weather

      When two virginities
    meet together:

      The King & the Priest must be tied in a tether

      Before two virgins can meet together.

      DAY

      The Sun arises in the East,

      Cloth’d in robes of blood & gold;

      Swords & spears & wrath increast

      All around his bosom roll’d,

      Crown’d with warlike fires & raging desires.

      THE MARRIAGE RING

      “Come hither my sparrows,

      My little arrows.

      If a tear or a smile

      Will a man beguile,

      If an amorous delay

      Clouds a sunshiny day,

      If the step of a foot

      Smites the heart to its root,

     


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