Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
Eric Mackay b. 1851Mary Arden
O
And parted nights, long sped, we lift our gaze,
Behold! I greet thee with a modern rhyme,
Love-lit and reverent as befits the time,
To solemnize the feast-day of thy son.
Of thy fair face? ’T was Shakespeare of the Isles,
Shakespeare of England, whom the world has known
As thine, and ours, and Glory’s, in the zone
Of all the seas and all the lands of earth.
But sound, and sweet, and good for eyes to see,
And born at Stratford, on St. George’s Day,
A week before the wondrous month of May;
And God therein was gracious to us all.
And, like a flag, his fealty was unfurled;
And kings who flourished ere thy son was born
Shall live through him, from morn to furthest morn,
In all the far-off cycles yet to come.
A hundred mottoes from immortal lips;
And, year by year, we smile to keep away
The generous tears that mind us of the sway
Of his great singing, and the pomp thereof.
The lute of Orpheus, and the Golden Fleece
Of grand endeavor; and the thunder-roll
Of words majestic, which, from pole to pole,
Have borne the tidings of our English tongue.
Than schools have taught us; and his fairy-lore
Was fraught with science; and he called from death
Verona’s lovers, with the burning breath
Of their great passion that has filled the spheres.
Who murdered sleep, and baleful Caliban;
And, one by one, athwart the gloom appeared
Maidens and men and myths who were revered
In olden days, before the earth was sad.
He was thine own, three hundred years ago;
But ours to-day; and ours till earth be red
With doom-day splendor for the quick and dead,
And days and nights be scattered like the leaves.
To raise to Heaven the face that never lied,
To lean to earth the lips that should become
Fraught with conviction when the mouth was dumb,
And all the firm, fine body turned to clay.
Of perished maids, and uncreated wives,
And gave them each a space wherein to dwell;
And for his mother’s sake he loved them well
And made them types undying of all truth.
Who wrought all this—O Mary!—in this the joy
Didst thou perceive, when, fitful from his rest,
He turned to thee, that his would be the best
Of all men’s chanting since the world began?
Perceive, prophetic through the dark and dust
Of things terrene, the glory of thy son,
And all the pride therein that should be won
By toilsome men, content to be his slaves?
That women find to fill the fleeting days,
Behold afar the Giant who should rise
With foot on earth, and forehead in the skies,
To write his name and thine among the stars?
I see thee stand, erect, and all in white,
With hands out-yearning to that mighty form,
As if to draw him back from out the storm—
A child again, and thine to nurse withal.
And big, bright eyes—far-searching in the air
For thy sweet babe—and, in a trice of time,
I see the boy advance to thee, and climb,
And call thee “Mother!” in ecstatic tones.
Of this weak hand, I vex thee overmuch—
Forbear the blame, sweet Spirit! and endow
My heart with fervor while to thee I bow
Athwart the threshold of my fading dream.
I turn to thee with reverence, in the throng
Of words and thoughts, as shepherds scanned afar
The famed effulgence of that eastern star
Which ushered in the Crowned One of the heavens.
Along the banks of Avon, by the grass,
As fair as that fair Juliet whom thy son
Endowed with life, but with the look of one
Who knows the nearest way to some new grave.
Of thy full beauty, while the mother’s “Hush!”
Hung on thy lip, and all thy tangled hair
Re-clothed a bosom that in part was bare
Because a tiny hand had toyed therewith!
When, eight weeks old, the child in thine embrace
Did leap and laugh—O Mary! by the same,
I bow to thee, subservient to thy fame,
And call thee England’s Pride forevermore!