<h2><SPAN name="page200"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ODE ON THE INSURRECTION IN CANDIA</h2>
<h3><span class="smcap">Str</span>. 1</h3>
<p class="poetry"> I
<span class="smcap">laid</span> my laurel-leaf<br/>
At the white feet of grief,<br/>
Seeing how with covered face and plumeless wings,<br/>
With unreverted head<br/>
Veiled, as who mourns his dead,<br/>
Lay Freedom couched between the thrones of kings,<br/>
A wearied lion without lair,<br/>
And bleeding from base wounds, and vexed with alien air.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Str</span>. 2</h3>
<p class="poetry">Who was it, who, put poison to thy mouth,<br/>
Who lulled with craft or chant thy vigilant eyes,<br/>
O light of all men, lamp to north and south,<br/>
Eastward and westward, under all men’s
skies?<br/>
For if thou sleep, we perish, and thy name<br/>
Dies with the dying of our ephemeral breath;<br/>
And if the dust of death o’ergrows thy flame,<br/>
Heaven also is darkened with the dust of death.<br/>
If thou be mortal, if thou change or cease,<br/>
If thine hand fail, or thine eyes turn from Greece,<br/>
Thy firstborn, and the firstfruits of thy fame,<br/>
God is no God, and man is moulded out of shame.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="page201"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="smcap">Str</span>. 3</h3>
<p class="poetry">Is there change in the secret skies,<br/>
In the sacred places that see<br/>
The divine beginning of things,<br/>
The weft of the
web of the world?<br/>
Is Freedom a worm that dies,<br/>
And God no God of the free?<br/>
Is heaven like as earth with her
kings<br/>
And time as a
serpent curled<br/>
Round life as a tree?</p>
<p class="poetry">From the steel-bound snows of the north,<br/>
From the mystic mother, the east,<br/>
From the sands of the fiery
south,<br/>
From the low-lit
clouds of the west,<br/>
A sound of a cry is gone forth;<br/>
Arise, stand up from the feast,<br/>
Let wine be far from the mouth,<br/>
Let no man sleep
or take rest,<br/>
Till the plague hath ceased.</p>
<p class="poetry">Let none rejoice or make mirth<br/>
Till the evil thing be stayed,<br/>
Nor grief be lulled in the
lute,<br/>
Nor hope be loud
on the lyre;<br/>
Let none be glad upon earth.<br/>
O music of young man and maid,<br/>
O songs of the bride, be mute.<br/>
For the light of
her eyes, her desire,<br/>
Is the soul dismayed.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page202"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
202</span>It is not a land new-born<br/>
That is scourged of a stranger’s hand,<br/>
That is rent and consumed with
flame.<br/>
We have known it
of old, this face,<br/>
With the cheeks and the tresses torn,<br/>
With shame on the brow as a brand.<br/>
We have named it of old by
name,<br/>
The land of the
royallest race,<br/>
The most holy land.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Str</span>. 4</h3>
<p class="poetry"> Had I words
of fire,<br/>
Whose words are
weak as snow;<br/>
Were my heart a lyre<br/>
Whence all its
love might flow<br/>
In the mighty modulations of desire,<br/>
In the notes wherewith man’s passion worships woe;</p>
<p class="poetry"> Could my
song release<br/>
The thought weak
words confine,<br/>
And my grief, O Greece,<br/>
Prove how it
worships thine;<br/>
It would move with pulse of war the limbs of peace,<br/>
Till she flushed and trembled and became divine.</p>
<p class="poetry"> (Once she
held for true<br/>
This truth of
sacred strain;<br/>
Though blood drip like dew<br/>
And life run
down like rain,<br/>
It is better that war spare but one or two<br/>
Than that many live, and liberty be slain.)</p>
<p class="poetry"> <SPAN name="page203"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Then with
fierce increase<br/>
And bitter
mother’s mirth,<br/>
From the womb of peace,<br/>
A womb that
yearns for birth,<br/>
As a man-child should deliverance come to Greece,<br/>
As a saviour should the child be born on earth.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Str</span>. 5</h3>
<p class="poetry">O that these my days had been<br/>
Ere white peace and shame were wed<br/>
Without torch or dancers’ din<br/>
Round the unsacred marriage-bed!<br/>
For of old the sweet-tongued law,<br/>
Freedom, clothed with all men’s love,<br/>
Girt about with all men’s awe,<br/>
With the wild war-eagle mated<br/>
The white breast of peace the dove,<br/>
And his ravenous heart abated<br/>
And his windy wings were furled<br/>
In an eyrie consecrated<br/>
Where the snakes of strife uncurled,<br/>
And her soul was soothed and sated<br/>
With the welfare of the world.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Ant</span>. 1</h3>
<p class="poetry"> But now, close-clad with
peace,<br/>
While war lays hand on Greece,<br/>
The kingdoms and their kings stand by to see;<br/>
“Aha, we are strong,” they say,<br/>
“We are sure, we are well,” even
they;<br/>
“And if we serve, what ails ye to be free?<br/>
<SPAN name="page204"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
204</span>We are warm, clothed round with peace and shame;<br/>
But ye lie dead and naked, dying for a name.”</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Ant</span>. 2</h3>
<p class="poetry">O kings and queens and nations miserable,<br/>
O fools and blind, and full of sins and fears,<br/>
With these it is, with you it is not well;<br/>
Ye have one hour, but these the immortal years.<br/>
These for a pang, a breath, a pulse of pain,<br/>
Have honour, while that honour on earth shall be:<br/>
Ye for a little sleep and sloth shall gain<br/>
Scorn, while one man of all men born is free.<br/>
Even as the depth more deep than night or day,<br/>
The sovereign heaven that keeps its eldest way,<br/>
So without chance or change, so without stain,<br/>
The heaven of their high memories shall nor wax nor wane.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Ant</span>. 3</h3>
<p class="poetry">As the soul on the lips of the dead<br/>
Stands poising her wings for flight,<br/>
A bird scarce quit of her
prison,<br/>
But fair without
form or flesh,<br/>
So stands over each man’s head<br/>
A splendour of imminent light,<br/>
A glory of fame rearisen,<br/>
Of day rearisen
afresh<br/>
From the hells
of night.</p>
<p class="poetry">In the hundred cities of Crete<br/>
Such glory was not of old,<br/>
Though her name was great upon
earth<br/>
And her face was
fair on the sea.<br/>
<SPAN name="page205"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The
words of her lips were sweet,<br/>
Her days were woven with gold,<br/>
Her fruits came timely to
birth;<br/>
So fair she was,
being free,<br/>
Who is bought and sold.</p>
<p class="poetry">So fair, who is fairer now<br/>
With her children dead at her side,<br/>
Unsceptred, unconsecrated,<br/>
Unapparelled,
unhelped, unpitied,<br/>
With blood for gold on her brow,<br/>
Where the towery tresses divide;<br/>
The goodly, the golden-gated,<br/>
Many-crowned,
many-named, many-citied,<br/>
Made like as a bride.</p>
<p class="poetry">And these are the bridegroom’s gifts;<br/>
Anguish that straitens the breath,<br/>
Shame, and the weeping of
mothers,<br/>
And the suckling
dead at the breast,<br/>
White breast that a long sob lifts;<br/>
And the dumb dead mouth, which saith,<br/>
“How long, and how long, my
brothers?”<br/>
And wrath which
endures not rest,<br/>
And the pains of
death.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Ant</span>. 4</h3>
<p class="poetry"> Ah, but
would that men,<br/>
With eyelids
purged by tears,<br/>
Saw, and heard again<br/>
With consecrated
ears,<br/>
All the clamour, all the splendour, all the slain,<br/>
All the lights and sounds of war, the fates and fears;</p>
<p class="poetry"> <SPAN name="page206"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Saw far off
aspire,<br/>
With crash of
mine and gate,<br/>
From a single pyre<br/>
The myriad
flames of fate,<br/>
Soul by soul transfigured in funereal fire,<br/>
Hate made weak by love, and love made strong by hate.</p>
<p class="poetry"> Children
without speech,<br/>
And many a
nursing breast;<br/>
Old men in the breach,<br/>
Where death sat
down a guest;<br/>
With triumphant lamentation made for each,<br/>
Let the world salute their ruin and their rest.</p>
<p class="poetry"> In one iron
hour<br/>
The crescent
flared and waned,<br/>
As from tower to tower,<br/>
Fire-scathed and
sanguine-stained,<br/>
Death, with flame in hand, an open bloodred flower,<br/>
Passed, and where it bloomed no bloom of life remained.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Ant</span>. 5</h3>
<p class="poetry">Hear, thou earth, the heavy-hearted<br/>
Weary nurse of waning races;<br/>
From the dust of years departed,<br/>
From obscure funereal places,<br/>
Raise again thy sacred head,<br/>
Lift the light up of thine eyes<br/>
Where are they of all thy dead<br/>
That did more than these men dying<br/>
In their godlike Grecian wise?<br/>
<SPAN name="page207"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Not with
garments rent and sighing,<br/>
Neither gifts of myrrh and gold,<br/>
Shall their sons lament them lying,<br/>
Lest the fame of them wax cold;<br/>
But with lives to lives replying,<br/>
And a worship from of old.</p>
<h3><span class="smcap">Epode</span></h3>
<p class="poetry">O sombre heart of earth and swoln with
grief,<br/>
That in thy time wast as a bird for mirth,<br/>
Dim womb of life and many a seed and sheaf,<br/>
And full of changes, ancient heart of earth,<br/>
From grain and flower, from grass and every leaf,<br/>
Thy mysteries and thy multitudes of birth,<br/>
From hollow and hill, from vales and all thy springs,<br/>
From all shapes born and breath of all lips made,<br/>
From thunders, and the sound of winds and wings,<br/>
From light, and from the solemn sleep of shade,<br/>
From the full fountains of all living things,<br/>
Speak, that this plague be stayed.<br/>
Bear witness all the ways of death and life<br/>
If thou be with us in the world’s old strife,<br/>
If thou be mother indeed,<br/>
And from these wounds that
bleed<br/>
Gather in thy great breast the dews that fall,<br/>
And on thy sacred knees<br/>
Lull with mute melodies,<br/>
Mother, thy sleeping sons in death’s dim hall.<br/>
For these thy sons, behold,<br/>
Sons of thy sons of old,<br/>
Bear witness if these be not as they were;<br/>
If that high name of Greece<br/>
Depart, dissolve, decease<br/>
From mouths of men and memories like as air.<br/>
<SPAN name="page208"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>By the last milk that drips<br/>
Dead on the child’s dead
lips,<br/>
By old men’s white unviolated hair,<br/>
By sweet unburied faces<br/>
That fill those red high places<br/>
Where death and freedom found one lion’s lair,<br/>
By all the bloodred tears<br/>
That fill the chaliced years,<br/>
The vessels of the sacrament of time,<br/>
Wherewith, O thou most holy,<br/>
O Freedom, sure and slowly<br/>
Thy ministrant white hands cleanse earth of crime;<br/>
Though we stand off afar<br/>
Where slaves and slaveries are,<br/>
Among the chains and crowns of poisonous peace;<br/>
Though not the beams that shone<br/>
From rent Arcadion<br/>
Can melt her mists and bid her snows decrease;<br/>
Do thou with sudden wings<br/>
Darken the face of kings,<br/>
But turn again the beauty of thy brows on Greece;<br/>
Thy white and woundless brows,<br/>
Whereto her great heart bows;<br/>
Give her the glories of thine eyes to see;<br/>
Turn thee, O holiest head,<br/>
Toward all thy quick and dead,<br/>
For love’s sake of the souls that cry for thee;<br/>
O love, O light, O flame,<br/>
By thine own Grecian name,<br/>
We call thee and we charge thee that all these be free.</p>
<p><i>Jan.</i> 1867.</p>
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