I Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the sea?
LORD, said a flying fish, | |
| Below the foundations of storm | |
| We feel the primal wish | |
| Of the earth take form. | |
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| Through the dim green water-fire | 5 |
| We see the red sun loom, | |
| And the quake of a new desire | |
| Takes hold on us down in the gloom. | |
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| No more can the filmy drift | |
| Nor draughty currents buoy | 10 |
| Our whim to its bent, nor lift | |
| Our heart to the height of its joy. | |
| |
| When sheering down to the Line | |
| Come polar tides from the North, | |
| Thy silver folk of the brine | 15 |
| Must glimmer and forth. | |
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| Down in the crumbling mill | |
| Grinding eternally, | |
| We are the type of thy will | |
| To the tribes of the sea. | 20 |
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II Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the air
Lord, said a butterfly, | |
| Out of a creeping thing, | |
| For days in the dust put by, | |
| The spread of a wing | |
| |
| Emerges with pulvil of gold | 25 |
| On a tissue of green and blue, | |
| And there is thy purpose of old | |
| Unspoiled and fashioned anew. | |
| |
| Ephemera, ravellings of sky | |
| And shreds of the Northern light, | 30 |
| We age in a heart-beat and die | |
| Under the eaves of night. | |
| |
| What if the small breath quail, | |
| Or cease at a touch of the frost? | |
| Not a tremor of joy shall fail, | 35 |
| Nor a pulse be lost. | |
| |
| This fluttering life, never still, | |
| Survives to oblivions despair. | |
| We are the type of thy will | |
| To the tribes of the air. | 40 |
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III Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the field?
Lord, said a maple seed, | |
| Though well we are wrapped and bound, | |
| We are the first to give heed, | |
| When thy bugles give sound. | |
| |
| We banner thy House of the Hills | 45 |
| With green and vermilion and gold, | |
| When the floor of April thrills | |
| With the myriad stir of the mould, | |
| |
| And her hosts for migration prepare. | |
| We too have the veined twin-wings, | 50 |
| Vans for the journey of air. | |
| With the urge of a thousand springs | |
| |
| Pent for a germ in our side, | |
| We perish of joy, being dumb, | |
| That our race may be and abide | 55 |
| For aeons to come. | |
| |
| When rivulet answers to rill | |
| In snow-blue valleys unsealed, | |
| We are the type of thy will | |
| To the tribes of the field. | 60 |
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IV Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the ground?
Lord, when the time is ripe, | |
| Said a frog through the quiet rain, | |
| We take up the silver pipe | |
| For the pageant again. | |
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| When the melting wind of the South | 65 |
| Is over meadow and pond, | |
| We draw the breath of thy mouth, | |
| Reviving the ancient bond. | |
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| Then must we fife and declare | |
| The unquenchable joy of earth, | 70 |
| Testify hearts still dare, | |
| Signalize beautys worth. | |
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| Then must we rouse and blow | |
| On the magic reed once more, | |
| Till the glad earth-children know | 75 |
| Not a thing to deplore. | |
| |
| When rises the marshy trill | |
| To the soft spring nights profound, | |
| We are the type of thy will | |
| To the tribes of the ground. | 80 |
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V Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the earth?
Lord, said an artist born, | |
| We leave the city behind | |
| For the hills of open morn, | |
| For fear of our kind. | |
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| Our brother they nailed to a tree | 85 |
| For sedition; they bully and curse | |
| All those whom love makes free. | |
| Yet the very winds disperse | |
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| Rapture of birds and brooks, | |
| Colours of sea and cloud, | 90 |
| Beauty not learned of books, | |
| Truth that is never loud. | |
| |
| We model our joy into clay, | |
| Or help it with line and hue, | |
| Or hark for its breath in stray | 95 |
| Wild chords and new. | |
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| For to-morrow can only fulfil | |
| Dreams which to-day have birth; | |
| We are the type of thy will | |
| To the tribes of the earth. | 100 |