Textarchiv - Franklin Benjamin Sanborn
https://www.textarchiv.com/franklin-benjamin-sanborn
American journalist, author, and reformer. Born on 15 December 1831 in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire. Died 24 February 1917 in Plainfield, New Jersey.
deThe Poet's Countersign
https://www.textarchiv.com/franklin-benjamin-sanborn/the-poets-countersign
<div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>"I grant, sweet soul, thy lovely argument<br />
Deserves the travail of a worthier pen;<br />
Yet what of thee thy poet doth invent,<br />
He robs thee of, and pays it thee again;<br />
He lends thee virtue, — and he stole that word<br />
From thy behavior; beauty doth he give,<br />
And found it on thy cheek; he can afford<br />
No praise to thee but what in thee doth live."</p>
<p>I.</p>
<p>Across these meadows, o'er the hills,<br />
Beside our sleeping waters, hurrying rills,<br />
Through many a woodland dark, and many a bright arcade,<br />
Where out and in the shifting sunbeams braid<br />
An Indian mat of checquered light and shade, —<br />
The sister seasons in their maze,<br />
Since last we wakened here<br />
From hot siesta the still drowsy year,<br />
Have led the fourfold dance along our quiet ways, —<br />
Autumn apparelled sadly gay,<br />
Winter's white furs and shortened day,<br />
Spring's loitering footstep, quickened at the last,<br />
And half the affluent summer went and came,<br />
As for uncounted years the same —<br />
Ah me! another unreturning spring hath passed.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>"When the young die," the Grecian mourner said,<br />
"The springtime from the year hath vanished;"<br />
The gray-haired poet, in unfailing youth,<br />
Sits by the shrine of Truth,<br />
Her oracles to spell,<br />
And their deep meaning tell;<br />
Or else he chants a bird-like note<br />
From that thick-bearded throat<br />
Which warbled forth the songs of smooth-checked May<br />
Beside Youth's sunny fountain all the day;<br />
Sweetly the echoes ring<br />
As in the flush of spring;<br />
At last the poet dies,<br />
The sunny fountain dries, —<br />
The oracles are dumb, no more the wood-birds sing.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>Homer forsakes the billowy round<br />
Of sailors circling o'er the island-sea;<br />
Pindar, from Theban fountains and the mound<br />
Builded in love and woe by doomed Antigone,<br />
Must pass beneath the ground;<br />
Stout Æschylus that slew the deep-haired Mede<br />
At Marathon, at Salamis, and freed<br />
Athens from Persian thrall,<br />
Then sung the battle call, —<br />
Must yield to that one foe he could not quell;<br />
In Gela's flowery plain he slumbers well *<br />
Sicilian roses bloom<br />
Above his nameless tomb;<br />
And there the nightingale doth mourn in vain<br />
For Bion, too, who sung the Dorian strain; —<br />
By Arethusa's tide,<br />
His brother swains might flute in Dorian mood, —<br />
The bird of love in thickets of the wood<br />
Sing for a thousand years his grave beside —<br />
Yet Bion still was mute — the Dorian lay had died.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>The Attic poet at approach of age<br />
Laid by his garland, took the staff and scrip,<br />
For singing robes the mantle of the sage, —<br />
And taught gray wisdom with the same grave lip<br />
That once had carolled gay<br />
Where silver flutes breathed soft and festal harps did play;<br />
Young Plato sang of love and beauty's charm,<br />
While he that from Stagira came to hear<br />
In lyric measures bade his princely pupil arm,<br />
And strike the Persian tyrant mute with fear.<br />
High thought doth well accord with melody,<br />
Brave deed with Poesy,<br />
And song is prelude fair to sweet Philosophy.<br />
But wiser English Shakspeare's noble choice,<br />
Poet and sage at once, whose varied voice<br />
Taught beyond Plato's ken, yet charming every ear; —<br />
A kindred choice was his, whose spirit hovers here.</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p>Now Avon glides through Severn to the sea,<br />
And murmurs that her Shakspeare sings no more;<br />
Thames bears the freight of many a tribute shore,<br />
But on those banks her poet bold and free,<br />
That stooped in blindness at his humble door,<br />
Yet never bowed to priest or prince the knee,<br />
Wanders no more by those sad sisters led;<br />
Herbert and Spenser dead<br />
Have left their names alone to him whose scheme<br />
Stiffly endeavors to supplant the dream<br />
Of seer and poet, with mechanic rule<br />
Learned from the chemist's closet, from the surgeon's tool.<br />
With us Philosophy still spreads her wing,<br />
And soars to seek Heaven's King —<br />
Nor creeps through charnels, prying with the glass<br />
That makes the little big, — while gods unseen may pass.</p>
<p>VI.</p>
<p>Along the marge of these slow-gliding streams,<br />
Our winding Concord add the wider flow<br />
Of Charles by Cambridge, walks and dreams<br />
A throng of poets, — tearfully they go;<br />
For each bright river misses from its band<br />
The keenest eye, the truest heart, the surest minstrel hand, —<br />
They sleep each on his wooded hill above the sorrowing land.<br />
Duly each mound with garlands we adorn<br />
Of violet, lily, laurel, and the flowering thorn, —<br />
Sadly above them wave<br />
The wailing pine-trees of their native strand;<br />
Sadly the distant billows smite the shore,<br />
Plash in the sunlight, or at midnight roar;<br />
All sounds of melody, all things sweet and fair,<br />
On earth, in sea or air,<br />
Droop and grow silent by the poet's grave.</p>
<p>VII.</p>
<p>Yet wherefore weep? Old age is but a tomb,<br />
A living hearse, slow creeping to the gloom<br />
And utter silence. He from age is freed<br />
Who meets the stroke of Death and rises thence<br />
Victor o'er every woe; his sure defence<br />
Is swift defeat; by that he doth succeed.<br />
Death is the poet's friend — I speak it sooth;<br />
Death shall restore him to his golden youth,<br />
Unlock for him the portal of renown,<br />
And on Fame's tablet write his verses down,<br />
For every age in endless time to read.<br />
With us Death's quarrel is: he takes away<br />
Joy from our eyes — from this dark world the day —<br />
When other skies he opens to the poet's ray.</p>
<p>VIII.</p>
<p>Lonely these meadows green,<br />
Silent these warbling woodlands must appear<br />
To us, by whom our poet-sage was seen<br />
Wandering among their beauties, year by year, —<br />
Listening with delicate ear<br />
To each fine note that fell from tree or sky,<br />
Or rose from earth on high:<br />
Glancing that falcon eye,<br />
In kindly radiance as of some young star,<br />
At all the shows of Nature near and far,<br />
Or on the tame procession plodding by,<br />
Of daily toil and care, — and all life's pageantry;<br />
Then darting forth warm beams of wit and love,<br />
Wide as the sun's great orbit, and as high above<br />
These paths wherein our lowly tasks we ply.</p>
<p>IX.</p>
<p>His was the task and his the lordly gift<br />
Our eyes, our hearts, bent earthward, to uplift;<br />
He found us chained in Plato's fabled caves<br />
Our faces long averted from the blaze<br />
Of Heaven's broad light, and idly turned to gaze<br />
On shadows, flitting ceaseless as the wave<br />
That dashes ever idly on some isle enchanted;<br />
By shadows haunted<br />
We sat, — amused in youth, in manhood daunted,<br />
in vacant age forlorn, — then slipped within the grave,<br />
The same dull chain still clasped around our shroud;<br />
These captives, bound and bowed,<br />
He from their dungeon like that angel led<br />
Who softly to imprisoned Peter said,<br />
"Arise up quickly! gird thyself and flee!"<br />
We wist not whose the thrilling voice, we knew our souls were free.</p>
<p>X.</p>
<p>Ah! blest those years of youthful hope,<br />
When every breeze was Zephyr, every morning May!<br />
Then as we bravely climbed the slope<br />
Of life's steep mount, we gained a wider scope<br />
At every stair, and could with joy survey<br />
The track beneath us, and the upward way;<br />
Both lay in light — round both the breath of love<br />
Fragrant and warm from Heaven's own tropic blew;<br />
Beside us what glad comrades smiled and strove!<br />
Beyond us what dim visions rose to view!<br />
With thee, dear Master! through that morning land<br />
We journeyed happy: thine the guiding hand,<br />
Thine the far-looking eye, the dauntless smile;<br />
Thy lofty song of hope did the long march beguile.</p>
<p>XI.</p>
<p>Now scattered wide and lost to loving sight<br />
The gallant train<br />
That heard thy strain;<br />
'Tis May no longer, — shadows of the night<br />
Beset the downward pathway; thou art gone,<br />
And with thee vanished that perpetual dawn<br />
Of which thou wert the harbinger and seer.<br />
Yet courage! comrades, — though no more we hear<br />
Each other's voices, lost within this cloud<br />
That time and chance about our way have cast.<br />
Still his brave music haunts the hearkening ear,<br />
As 'mid bold cliffs and dewy passes of the Past.<br />
Be that our countersign! for chanting loud<br />
His magic song, though far apart we go,<br />
Best shall we thus discern both friend and foe.</p>
</div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/franklin-benjamin-sanborn" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Franklin Benjamin Sanborn</a></div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/franklin-benjamin-sanborn/the-poets-countersign" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="The Poet's Countersign" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span>Wed, 15 Feb 2017 21:44:17 +0000admin6733 at https://www.textarchiv.com