Leaves From Australian Forests
Euroclydon

Henry Kend

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On the storm-cloven Cape

The bitter waves roll,

With the bergs of the Pole,

And the darks and the damps of the Northern Sea:

For the storm-cloven Cape

Is an alien Shape

With a fearful face; and it moans, and it stands

Outside all lands

Everlastingly!

When the fruits of the year

Have been gathered in Spain,

And the Indian rain

Is rich on the evergreen lands of the Sun,

There comes to this Cape

To this alien Shape,

As the waters beat in and the echoes troop forth,

The Wind of the North,

Euroclydon!

And the wilted thyme,

And the patches past

Of the nettles cast

In the drift of the rift, and the broken rime,

Are tumbled and blown

To every zone

With the famished glede, and the plovers thinned

By this fourfold Wind—

This Wind sublime!

On the wrinkled hills,

By starts and fits,

The wild Moon sits;

And the rindles fill and flash and fall

In the way of her light,

Through the straitened night,

When the sea-heralds clamour, and elves of the war,

In the torrents afar,

Hold festival!

From ridge to ridge

The polar fires

On the naked spires,

With a foreign splendour, flit and flow;

And clough and cave

And architrave

Have a blood-coloured glamour on roof and on wall,

Like a nether hall

In the hells below!

The dead, dry lips

Of the ledges, split

By the thunder fit

And the stress of the sprites of the forked flame,

Anon break out,

With a shriek and a shout,

Like a hard, bitter laughter, cracked and thin,

From a ghost with a sin

Too dark for a name!

And all thro' the year,

The fierce seas run

From sun to sun,

Across the face of a vacant world!

And the Wind flies forth

From the wild, white North,

That shivers and harries the heart of things,

And shapes with its wings

A chaos uphurled!

Like one who sees

A rebel light

In the thick of the night,

As he stumbles and staggers on summits afar—

Who looks to it still,

Up hill and hill,

With a steadfast hope (though the ways be deep,

And rough, and steep),

Like a steadfast star—

So I, that stand

On the outermost peaks

Of peril, with cheeks

Blue with the salts of a frosty sea,

Have learnt to wait,

With an eye elate

And a heart intent, for the fuller blaze

Of the Beauty that rays

Like a glimpse for me—

Of the Beauty that grows

Whenever I hear

The winds of Fear

From the tops and the bases of barrenness call;

And the duplicate lore

Which I learn evermore,

Is of Harmony filling and rounding the Storm,

And the marvellous Form

That governs all!

This book comes from:m.funovel.com。

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