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Home  »  Collected Poems by A.E.  »  140. The Feast of Age

Walter Murdoch (1874–1970). The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse. 1918.

140. The Feast of Age

SEE where the light streams over Connla’s fountain

Starward aspire!

The sacred sign upon the holy mountain

Shines in white fire:

Wavering and flaming yonder o’er the snows

The diamond light

Melts into silver or to sapphire glows,

Night beyond night:

And from the heaven of heaven descends on earth

A dew divine.

Come, let us mingle in the starry mirth

Around the shrine.

O earth, enchantress, mother, to our home

In thee we press,

Thrilled by thy fiery breath and wrapt in some

Vast tenderness.

The homeward birds, uncertain o’er their nest

Wheel in the dome,

Fraught with dim dreams of more enraptured rest,

Another home.

But gather ye, to whose undarkened eyes

Night is as day,

Leap forth, immortals, birds of paradise,

In bright array,

Robed like the shining tresses of the sun,

And by his name

Call from his haunt divine the ancient one,

Our father flame.

Aye, from the wonder light, heart of our star,

Come now, come now.

Sun-breathing spirit, ray thy lights afar:

Thy children bow,

Hush with more awe the heart; the bright-browed races

Are nothing worth,

By those dread gods from out whose awful faces

The earth looks forth

Infinite pity set in calm, whose vision cast

Adown the years

Beholds how beauty burns away at last

Their children’s tears.

Now while our hearts the ancient quietness

Floods with its tide,

The things of air and fire and height no less

In it abide;

And from their wanderings over sea and shore

They rise as one

Unto the vastness, and with us adore

The midnight sun,

And enter the innumerable All

And shine like gold,

And starlike gleam in the immortal’s hall,

The heavenly fold,

And drink the sun-breaths from the mother’s lips

Awhile, and then

Fail from the light and drop in dark eclipse

To earth again,

Roaming along by heaven-hid promontory

And valley dim,

Weaving a phantom image of the glory

They knew in Him.

Out of the fulness flow the winds, their song

Is heard no more,

Or hardly breathes a mystic sound along

The dreamy shore,

Blindly they move, unknowing as in trance;

Their wandering

Is half with us, and half an inner dance,

Led by the King.