ly dance.
He walks no more where shadows are
But left their ivory gates ajar,
That shadows might prolong
The dance, the tale, the song.
His was no narrow test or rule.
He chose the best of every school,--
Stendhal and Keats and Donne,
Balzac and Stevenson;
Wordsworth and Flaubert filled their place.
Dumas met Hawthorne face to face.
There were both new and old
In his good realm of gold.
The title-pages bore his name;
And, nightly, by the dancing flame,
Following him, I found
That all was haunted ground;
Until a friendlier shadow fell
Upon the leaves he loved so well,
And I no longer read,
But talked with him instead.
THE GHOST OF SHAKESPEARE
1914
Crimson was the twilight, under that crab-tree,
Where--old tales tell us--all a midsummer's night,
A mad young poacher, drunk with mead of elfin-land,
Lodged with the fern-owl, and looked at the stars.
There, from the dusk where the dream of Piers Plowman
Darkens on the sunset, to this dusk of our own,
I read, in a history, the record of our world.
The hawk-moth, the currant-moth, the red-striped tiger-moth
Shimmered all around me, so white shone those pages;
And, in among the blue boughs, the bats flew low.
I slumbered, the history slipped from my hand.
Then I saw a dead man, dreadful in the moon-dawn,
The ghost of the master, bowed upon that book.
He muttered as he searched it,--_what vast convulsion
Mocks my sexton's curse now, shakes our English clay?_
Whereupon I told him, and asked him in turn
Whether he espied any light in those pages
Which painted an epoch later than his own.
_I am a shadow_, he said, _and I see none_....
_I am a shadow_, he said, _and I see none_.
Then, O then he murmured to himself (while the moon hung
Crimson as a lanthorn of Cathay in that crab-tree),
Laughing at his work and the world, as I thought,
Yet with some bitterness, yet with some beauty,
Mocking his own music, these wraiths of his rhymes:
I
God, when I turn the leaves of that dark book
Wherein our wisest teach us to recall
Those glorious flags which in old tempests shook
And those proud thrones which held my youth in thrall;
When I see clear what seemed to childish eyes
The gorgeous colouring of each pictured age;
And for their dominant tints now recognise
Those prints of innocent blood on ever
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