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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 55. ...in one Ione corner...
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Fabian S. Woodley –
A Selections of War Poems from A Crown of Friendship
from Into Action
Trust the comrade whom thou lovest
To the care of God above,
Till the Hour of Battle prove thee
Worthy of his splendid love:
But, if Death's dread voice thou hearest
Midst the shouts of Victory,
Die triumphant, knowing surely
God hath greater need of thee. [i]
Quis ut Deus?
(From the trenches near Loos.)
This morning as I walked the winding road,
Through villages shell-shattered and forlorn,
I marked how every dwelling had its scar.
Nor was there one but was by Battle torn:
Long since the inhabitants had fled away –
Only the birds were there that summer morn.
And suddenly I spied at the cross-ways
A crownèd Christ upon a cross of pain,
Whose eyes, unfathomable utterly,
Looked ever out across the shell-scarred plain;
Behind Him rose the shadow of His House,
Which men in substance built – and broke again.
Even thus, through every hamlet that I passed
It was the same – Christ reigned triumphantly,
And men of Hate no weapon could devise,
To break His Cross, or mar His Effigy:
But of His goodness He permits them stay
To be our Help and Strength eternally. [ii]
Dean Cornwall Battlefield Crucifixion, 1915
To A. K. M.
“He was a verray parfit gentil knight”
O Love, since Thou from chaos did’st create
The world, the elemental atoms mate
In happy concord, glad complexity,
Lo! all things share in Thine eternity;
By Thee they live, Thine all-pervading breath
Their life sustains – what should they know of Death?
The silken rose her fragrant censer shakes
O’er paths untrod and lonely woodland brakes
With joyful heart to see her incense rise,
By gentle winds upborne through starry skies
To the very gates of Heaven for Thy delight.
Who has not trod a lonely shore by night,
And heard the restless heart-beat of the sea
Yearning for unity eterne with Thee?
Who has not seen the sun, Thine ardent lover,
‘Ere his triumphant march is wholly over,
Blush fiery-red as slowly down the West
He sinks to sleep upon Thy loving breast?
Who has not heard a nightingale in June
Charm with soft, fluted song the listening moon,
Trilling in tones half plaintive and half gay
Some olden tale of hearts beneath Thy sway?
Though all things pass away, yet nothing dies;
The gold that now the sunset glorifies
May change, dissolved to particles of light,
Making more glad tomorrow’s morning bright;
Or sleep, and wake at some appointed hour
To gild the pollen of a lily flower,
But never, never die.
O King of Melody,
Whose mind resolves into one perfect harmony
Each human heart’s vague, indecisive chord,
Thou omnipresent, all-compassionate Lord,
To whom the voice of man is dearer far
Than song of seraphim or morning star,
Forgive me! who with stumbling, fettered tongue
Presume to raise my paean of praise among
Immortal voices, who have strung for Thee
Melodious pearls of song and poesy.
I sing of him whose happy presence crowned
My manhood’s prime with joy, whose spirit fast bound
To mine in bonds of mutual love, shone clear
As crystal, bright as virgin gold. So near
He seemed to heaven. His voice, quiet as a sea,
When moony wavelets lap caressingly
Some plashy shore beneath the summer night,
Rang oftentimes with laughter, clear and light
As waters tumbling o’er some dizzy height.
Dim twilight dreamed within his violet eyes –
Visions half-fledged and fleet-winged phantasies
Flashed in those dusky pools, as sun-starts play
O’er streams slow gliding on an April day.
As rarest perfumes dwell in frailest flowers,
So was his mind – endowed with airy powers,
Thoughts broad and sunny, loath to be confined
By cramping trammels of the flesh – enshrined
In a lithe body, slender, beautiful.
O Death! surely one pang, swift, pitiful,
Pierced even Thine iron heart that one so fair
Should tread the dreadful halls of darkness, where
No gentle lilies blow, nor roses bloom,
Even before happy Fate had in her loom
Spun the rich dawning of his manhood’s year!
Our former lives he loved to hear retold
Our friendship’s happy dawn in days of old –
The golden age of Hellas, when he was
Fair-haired Autolycus – l Cleinias,
His lover-host; the sumptuous banquet spread
Where purple-robed guests, violet-garlanded
In his high honour, sunny music made
Till all the listening marble colonnade
Rang with his praises, while the sky’s blue pall
Beamed like a benediction over all.
A thousand years our bodies lay at rest
While we, Love’s servitors, at His behest
Through the Third Heaven ranged, oft journeying far
In the train of that bright sun-caressing star
Hespherus-Phosphor; or, on festal days
Bestrewed with roses white the starry ways
Whereby celestial choirs processional
With many a song and hymn antiphonal
Ascend the Primal Heaven Crystalline
Where all in one grand symphony combine.
• • • • • • • •
Thus through the centuries, oft-born again –
Each life a link in Love’s eternal chain –
We knew, at length, this England, this dear land
Of blossomy lanes, royal hills, and dappled strand
Swept by the ever-singing seas. In her
All former ages, all brave thoughts that stir
To knightly deeds, all strivings of the soul,
All noble aspirations, blend and blur,
Commingled in one fiery, passionate whole.
In Somerset I know a little glade –
A murmurous place for poets and lovers made,
Where summer voices sing the whole day long,
And skiey bluebells ring their evensong;
Here, couched in mossy grass, have I oft read
Some antique legend of the mighty dead,
With Coeur de Lion trod the Holy Land,
Nor ever dreamt that we also should stand
To man the battle line, and hear the ring
Of steel and guns of England thundering.
I was not with him when at dawn he led
His men, with courage flaming high, and head
Uplifted, proud to meet Death face to face;
Nor marked how instantly that cold embrace
Chilled the white ardour of his furious rush
Against o’erwhelming odds; nor heard the hush
Most bitter-eloquent that followed his last shout
Of Victory; nor saw his eyes go out –
But I remember how, alone, I stood
At that same hour’ within a shattered wood –
A charnel-house so swept by War’s wild rage
It seemed that nothing ever could assuage
Its woe, or cheer its countenance forlorn –
Not even the glad laughter of that sunny morn.
And suddenly, as when on breathless days
Skies darken, and through all the oppressive ways
Steals a chill breath, so did a wind sweep through
The chambers of my spirit, and I knew
That Kenneth, my beloved, was fallen on sleep.
• • • • • • • •
O Love! strong comforter of those who needs must weep,
Even in the darkest hour, for that firm faith
Which soars triumphant through the gates of Death
I thank Thee – most of all for that quiet voice
Which in my heart unceasing cries “Rejoice!
He whom thou lovest is safe in Paradise.”
All lovely things his presence tell – his eyes
Smile out from every dewy violet;
And in each little wave which burns, at set
Of sun, like a soft golden fame I see
His crisp, bright hair; there is no melody
But brings the echo of his voice, no rare
Unhoped for joy wherein he does not share;
I feel his arms around me everywhere.
There was a time when earth and sky and sea
Bore witness of their own reality;
But now in all things natural I find
Expression of the one Eternal Mind.
Love only is – and we, who day by day
Like blind men walk Life’s labyrinthine way,
May hear His voice in every rushing wind,
His laughter in deep booming seas, and find
A glory in the meekest flower that blows
No less divine than that which crowns the rose.
All Life is Love – I am content to pray,
To work, to hope, to welcome each new day,
Blessing, and blessed, and at the last to be
Lulled in the arms of Love’s immensity
Till My Belovèd’s kiss awakens me. [iii]
Aftermath
God! this is Death in Life – to wake at morn
Heart-sick with memories; till the sun set
To watch the long day wane, with soul forlorn
For ever striving to forget – forget!
Gone is the old content; from field and flower
The glory fled; Pleasure turned Bitterness;
Desire grown dim ere ever the longed-for hour
Might in oblivion steep the heart’s distress.
Could I but hear once more the bugle sound,
Into belovèd eyes look once again,
Clasp the strong hands of fighting men – my men,
In one united comradeship firm bound –
From the dead ashes of My Self would soar
A Phoenix-soul in love with Life once more! [iv]
My Garden
Once, in my little garden
Grew all lovely flowers –
Golden-hearted lilies swaying
Through long sunny hours.
Roses white as moonlight,
Pure and passionless,
Blooming, dying on the bosom
Of their own loveliness.
Carnations red as rich old wine,
Violets, a great store
Of Boy’s-love, Heartsease, Eglantine,
And thousand blossoms more.
• • • • • •
Now, desolate lies my garden
As the blank skies above –
Youth and Happiness are fled
And I am sick of Love.
Only, in one lone corner
I tend my Poppies yet,
Lest, happily, their presence
May help me to forget. [v]
~
[i] “from Into Action” Fabian S. Woodley A Crown of Friendship: and Other Poems (Taunton, Somerset, 1921), p. 51
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31210007844879&view=1up&seq=55&skin=2021
[ii] “Quis ut Deus?” Ibid., ps. 54-55. This poem is noted: “Gommecourt, June, 1917.” The Latin title means “Who as God?”
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31210007844879&view=1up&seq=58&skin=2021
[iii] “To A. K. M.” Ibid., ps. 43-50. The epigraph is from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31210007844879&view=1up&seq=47&skin=2021
[iv] “Aftermath” Ibid., p. 60
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31210007844879&view=1up&seq=64&skin=2021
[v] “My Garden” Ibid., ps. 30-31
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31210007844879&view=1up&seq=34&skin=2021
_
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