AS, fore-announced by threat of flame and smoke, Out of the night's lair broke The sun among the startled stars, whose blood Looses its slow bright flood Beneath the radiant onset of the sun; So crouches he anon, With nostrils breathing threat of smoke and flame, Back to the lairing night wherefrom he came. Say, who is she, With cloudy battle smoking round her feet, That goes out through the exit-doors of death; And at the alternate limit of her path, Where first her nascent footsteps troubled day, Forgotten turmoil curls itself away? Who is she that rose Tumultuous, and in tumult goes? This is she That rose 'midst dust of a down-tumbled world, And dies with rumour on the air Of preparation For a more ample devastation, And death of ancient fairness no more fair. First when she knew the day, The holy poets sung her on her way: The high, clear band that takes Its name from heaven-acquainted mountain-lakes; And he That like a star set in Italian sea; And he that mangled by the jaws of our Fierce London, from all frets Lies balmed in Roman violets; And other names of power, Too recent but for worship and regret, On whom the tears lie wet. But not to these She gave her heart; her heart she gave To the blind worm that bores the mold, Bloodless, pertinacious, cold, Unweeting what itself upturns, The seer and prophet of the grave. It reared its head from off the earth (Which gives it life and gave it birth) And placed upon its eyeless head a crown, Thereon a name writ new, 'Science,' erstwhile with ampler meanings known; And all the peoples in their turns Before the blind worm bowed them down. Yet, crowned beyond its due, Working dull way by obdurate, slow degrees, It is a thing of sightless prophecies; And glories, past its own conceit, Wait to complete Its travail, when the mounded time is meet. Nor measured, fit renown, When that hour paces forth, Shall overlook those workers of the North And West, those patient Darwins who forthdrew From humble dust what truth they knew, And greater than they knew, not knowing all they knew. Yet was their knowledge in its scope a Might, Strong and true souls to measure of their sight. Behold the broad globe in their hands comprest, As a boy kneads a pellet, till the East Looks in the eyes o' the West; And as guest whispers guest That counters him at feast, The Northern mouth Leans to the attent ear of the blended South. The fur-skinned garb justling the Northern Bear Crosses the threshold where, With linen wisp girt on, Drowses the next-door neighbour of the sun. Such their laborious worth To change the old face of the wonted earth. Nor were they all o' the dust; as witness may Davy and Faraday; And they Who clomb the cars And learned to rein the chariots of the stars; Or who in night's dark waters dipt their hands To sift the hid gold from its sands; And theirs the greatest gift, who drew to light By their sciential might, The secret ladder, wherethrough all things climb Upward from the primeval slime. Nor less we praise Him that with burnished tube betrays The multitudinous diminutive Recessed in virtual night Below the surface-seas of sight; Him whose enchanted windows give Upon the populated ways Where the shy universes live Ambushed beyond the unapprehending gaze: The dusted anther's globe of spiky stars; The beetle flashing in his minute mail Of green and golden scale; And every water-drop a-sting with writhing wars. The unnoted green scale cleaving to the moist earth's face Behold disclosed a conjugal embrace, And womb -- Submitting to the tomb -- That sprouts its lusty issue: everywhere conjoins Either glad sex, and from unguessed-at loins Breeds in an opulent ease The liberal earth's increase; Such Valentine's sweet unsurmised diocese. Nor, dying Lady, of the sons Whom proudly owns Thy valedictory and difficult breath, The least are they who followed Death Into his obscure fastnesses, Tracked to her secret lair Disease -- Under the candid-seeming and confederate Day Venoming the air's pure lips to kiss and to betray; Who foiled the ancient Tyrant's grey design Unfathomed long, and brake his dusty toils, Spoiling him of his spoils, And man, the loud dull fly, loosed from his woven line. Such triumph theirs who at the destined term Descried the arrow flying in the day -- The age-long hidden Germ -- And threw their prescient shield before its deadly way. Thou, spacious Century! Hast seen the Western knee Set on the Asian neck, The dusky Africa Kneel to imperial Europe's beck; The West for her permitted while didst see Stand mistress-wise and tutelar To the grey nations dreaming on their days afar, From old forgotten war Folding hands whence has slid disused rule; The while, unprescient, in her regent school She shapes the ample days and things to be, And large new empery. Thence Asia shall be brought to bed Of dominations yet undreamed; Narrow-eyed Egypt lift again the head Whereon the far-seen crown Nilotic gleamed. Thou'st seen the Saxon horde whose veins run brine, Spawned of the salt wave, wet with the salt breeze, Their sails combine, Lash their bold prows together, and turn swords Against the world's knit hordes; The whelps repeat the lioness' roar athwart the windy seas. Yet let it grieve, grey Dame, Thy passing spirit, God wot, Thou wast half-hearted, wishing peace, but not The means of it. The avaricious flame Thou'st fanned, which thou should'st tame: Cluck'dst thy wide brood beneath thy mothering plumes, And coo'dst them from their fumes, Stretched necks provocative, and throats Ruffled with challenging notes; Yet all didst mar, Flattering the too-much-pampered Boy of War: Whence the far-jetting engine, and the globe In labour with her iron progeny, -- Infernal litter of sudden-whelped deaths, Vomiting venomous breaths; The growl as of long surf that draweth back Half a beach in its rattling track, When like a tiger-cat The angry rifle spat Its fury in the opposing foeman's eyes; -- These are thy consummating victories, For this hast thou been troubled to be wise! And now what child is this upon thy lap, Born in the red glow of relighted war? That draws Bellona's pap, -- Fierce foster-mother! -- does already stare With mimicked dark regard And copied threat of brow whose trick it took from her: Young Century, born to hear The cannon talking at its infant ear -- The Twentieth of Time's loins, since that Which in the quiet snows of Bethlehem he begat. Ah! with forthbringing such and so ill-starred, After the day of blood and night of fate, Shall it survive with brow no longer marred, Lip no more wry with hate; With all thou hadst of good, But from its blood Washed thine hereditary ill, Yet thy child still? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SWALLOW FLIGHT by SARA TEASDALE THE DANCE OF THE SEVIN DEIDLY SYNNIS by WILLIAM DUNBAR DIBDIN'S GHOST by EUGENE FIELD THE CONGO by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY AMONG THE REDWOODS by EDWARD ROWLAND SILL |