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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 72. ...Still when his pilgrim words return...
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Vincent Benson
from The Temple of Friendship
from A Song of a Song
O the trees die down in the autumn,
And the leaves are off the spray;
But I have a flower that will not pass,
When bloom has passed away.
O the ivied wall may molder
And the ivy-fingers green
Unclasp; but I have a tendril
That clasps, and is unseen.
And the winter world is dark,
And the frost is over the knoll:
But it cannot freeze my sunny flower,
It cannot touch my soul.
O I have a song within me,
And it longs to sing of the years:
And it rises high in the sunshine,
But fall again in tears. [i]
The Hearth Knoweth
Perfect he was not, nor would I contend
That others have not passed his virtue’s line
With ample margin: but, as friend with friend,
I have not found his equal, nor he mine.
So said himself one evening in sweet June,
When up the pleasant lane alone we walked,
Drinking the stillness in, and a thin moon
Eyed us askance, yet loving, as we talked
Of things that neither ever told his soul
Till he had told his friend, nor thought the half
Alone; together, could not shrink the whole,
Nor fear the selfish mockery of a laugh.
That was our nature’s link. I ask no more.
O Death, Death, Death, why is he gone before? [ii]
Mnemosyne
Still when at morn his pilgrim words return,
Which lit the wings of love with golden foil,
Some way more clearly know I to discern
Those beauties which no earth can ever soil.
The Ice-King’s frosted fingers on the pane
Weave not so silver-bright a tracery
As those bright words which like a silver rain
Trace him in crystals on my memory.
Living, while I shall live, and then comes death,
And takes my picture from me?—Nay, I know
That it shall blend with that undying breath
Which lives beyond small world and little woe:
Such words, once said, a deathless sweet content,
Such thought, once mused, a force that ne’er is spent. [iii]
Whom the Gods Love
Cover him, bright as ever
The winter roses bloom;
Lay out their younger fellow
Within the darkened room.
Bring just that sprig of heather,
A breath from his wild hill!
Lay sword and spur beside him
And leave the brave boy still.
The freshening morn of April
Unclasped him with a sigh;
The eve of torn November,
Received him home to die.
He left with life to venture,
His face in smiled was set.
He came with life behind him,
The smile is living yet.
He would not feel his sorrows,
But for another’s grieve.
Upon so bright a picture
Earth dare no sorrow leave.
Bring down his hand entwining
That ruffled ring of hair.
Call in his faithful sentry
And leave him sleeping there. [iv]
The Many-Headed Multitude
Art thou more blest for worldly much ado?
Shall we less kind to general notice seem?
Then, if that touch me, I’ll for pardon sue
To him whose havior I thus disesteem:
Who made his friends against acquaintance voice,
And found their faults, but not by tongue malign;
Nay, in such contradictions did rejoice,
To say ‘Ye scorn him, then I’ll bind him mine.
For having found him in all matters true,
Save that I feared he was too popular,
Your condemnation now condemneth you,
And lights the zenith brilliance of his star:
And this shall to our arms but blazon give,
Lest we as dull and carpet knights should live.’ [v]
The Trappings and the Suits of Woe
I need no black to prick the memory
That could not falter since I met thee first;
Thou crav’st no tombstone as a debt from me,
Whose debts by that could never be reversed:
No bubble ceremony thee can please,
Who all thy life did’st ceremony shun –
No vaunt of funeral, no common fees,
Can pleasure thee whose even glass is run.
No wreath, no lettered narrative of woe,
Save only perhaps to tell them ‘He is dead!’
No circumstance, no dark memorial show
To draw him following, who alway led.
Give to the body, for the body grows,
But never think the soul hath aught with those. [vi]
The Officer’s Grave
Lay the earth light above him,
And volley the last salute:
And let who knew him love him,
And who knew not, be mute.
With arms reversed, unweeping,
We soldiers turn away;
And leave the strong man sleeping,
Who missed his call today.
We shall not find a brother
We e’er shall love so true;
‘Tis long before another
Will love the men he knew
So kindly, firmly, knighting
Us peers, himself above:
Who won his medals fighting,
But won his men by love. [vii]
The Thoughts of Man
O when I sent the summer’s last red rose
To bear good speed to thee, and dear regret
That thou shouldest spur afield to front our foes,
With joy thy courage was so firmly set –
Had I a thought to see thee honored pass
Into the tomb, to hear the volleyed roar,
And know the bannered body in the grass
Was once my friend, and now is mine no more:
At least on earth, where I am bid to stay,
And grapple with the inevitable truth,
And will not from my dusty post away,
Nor give thee manly my unmanly ruth?
O, not a thought: for to my loving eye
Thou wast too glorious, too bright, to die. [viii]
The Challenge
And if Death asks me ‘Art thou still untaught?’
With drying lips I’ll answer, ‘Even so.
Take thou my books, my pen, my treasured thought,
My robes, my gold, my things of outward show.
Strip and have done with this o’erplastering clay,
But near my soul, no lanky finger draw –
Else with thy royal self I’ll havoc play,
And Love-in-Death thrice throw thee on the floor.
Unhandle me, thou masked, cold deceit;
‘Tis thy appearance, not thy stuff, that kills.
Thou wast no terror to my friend: unmeet
That I, his friend, should dread thy passing chills.’
Nor had I fear for him when he was gone,
Nor shall I fear when I am called anon. [ix]
from The Star of Love
Just so much light in heaven that one may see
Four taper spires of stone,
And that dislimned, majestic, wealth of tree,
Tall, dense, and lone;
And I to thee
My heart’s sweet moan,
Dearest of all things dear, outpour,
And love thee absent but the more.
Just so much silence in the night to hear
The night’s low songs of rest;
Just so much love that cannot prove it’s peer
Within my breast;
Just so much fear,
That time may wrest
From me agaze on yon warm eye,
It’s dearest emblem – and I sigh. [x]
Timon
They passed away, the friends, the day
Of love, the youth so fair;
They left me lorn, before the morn,
They left me to my care.
I prayed for death, but ere the breath
Was spent in me, foredone,
O’er crimson hill, o’er sparkling rill
Came up the glorious sun.
The ocean’s roar did slowly pour
A peace into my breast:
Eternity was in that sea.
Nor I, nor sea, could rest:
And yet I knew within the blue,
And understandeth the foam,
There was a tide that I should ride,
There was a setting home. [xi]
¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤
Epigraph
To my Friend
Jon G. Findlay
Music and poetry in birth are twins;
And I, well knowing how thou lov’st first,
Am fain to set, by music’s sister nursed,
My humble music to songs within.
Nor have I failed, though little praise I win,
Shall I but touch in all thy heart one chord
Which rings, as some lost harmony restored,
To make sweet music of the soul begin.
Nor lay I here presumingly a claim
To be a poet for my labor spent;
Yet, could I love again, would not repent
The inward choice, though still denied the name.
Enough that we, who care not for the fame,
Be each other’s poet, and content.
—Vincent Benson, [xii]
1903
[i] “from A Song of a Song” Vincent Benson The Temple of Friendship, and other poems (Oxford 1903), p. 21
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/20/mode/2up
[ii] “The Heart Knoweth” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 7
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/6/mode/2up
[iii] “Mnemosyne” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 6. The title takes the name of the Titaness of Ancient Greek lore. Daughter of heaven (Uranus) and earth (Gaea), she is said to be the mother of the nine muses of the arts. Mnemosyne is usually venerated as the goddess of memory.
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/6/mode/2up
[iv] “Whom the Gods Love” Vincent Benson Ibid., ps. 76-77
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/76/mode/2up
[v] “The Many-Headed Multitude” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 5
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/4/mode/2up
[vi] “The Trappings and the Suits of Woe” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 4
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/4/mode/2up
[vii] “The Officer’s Grave” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 83
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/82/mode/2up
[viii] “The Thoughts of Man” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 3
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/n15/mode/2up
[ix] “The Challenge” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 8
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/8/mode/2up
[x] “from The Star of Love” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 25
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/24/mode/2up
[xi] “Timon” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 111
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/110/mode/2up
[xii] “Epigraph” Vincent Benson Ibid., p. 1. This poem is noted “New College, Oxford. Oct., 1903”.)
https://archive.org/details/templeoffriendsh00bensiala/page/n11/mode/2up
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