Late evening, on the first of May—
The twilit May—the time of love.
Meltingly called the turtle-dove,
Where rich and sweet
pinewoods lay.
Whispered of love the mosses frail,
The flowering
tree as sweetly lied,
The rose's fragrant sigh replied
To love-songs
of the nightingale.
In shadowy woods the burnished lake
Darkly
complained a secret pain,
By circling shores embraced again;
And
heaven's clear sun leaned down to take
A road astray in azure
deeps,
Like burning tears the lover weeps.
A haze of stars in heaven hovers—
That church of endless love's
communion—
Each jewel blanches and recovers
As blanch and burn
long-parted lovers
In the high rapture of reunion.
How clear, to her
full beauty grown,
How pale, how clear, the moon above,
Like maiden
seeking for her love,
A rosy halo round her thrown!
Her mirrored
image she espied,
And of self-love, beholding, died.
Forth from the
farms pale shadows strayed,
Lengthening longing to their kind,
Till
they embraced, and close entwined,
Coiled low into the lap of
shade,
Grown all one twilight unity.
Tree in the shadows writhes to
tree.
In the far mountains' dark confine
Pine leans to birch and
birch to pine.
Wave baunting wave the streamlets move.
For love's
sake—in the time of love—
Anguished goes every living thing.
A fair girl at the rim of land
Watches the evening's rosy
phases;
Under the oak-tree by the strand
Far out across the lakes
she gazes.
Blue to her feet it coils and glimmers,
And green beyond,
and greener, sleeps,
Till in the distances and deeps
In clear, pale
light all melts and shimmers.
Over the wide and watery plain
The
girl has fixed her weary gaze;
Over the wide and watery plain
Only
the glint of starlight plays.
A lovely girl, an angel ravaged,
A bud
that April winds have savaged,
In her pale cheeks doomed beauty
hastens.
One hour has swallowed up her morrow,
One hour her promise
chills and chastens,
Marries her May to grief and sorrow.
Of twenty days the last has died;
Still dreams the quiet
countryside.
The last light hastens to its close,
And heaven, like a
great, clear rose,
Over the deep blue mountains flushes.
“He comes
not! Ah, such anguish takes me!
Another spoiled, and he forsakes
me!”
A heavy sigh her sad voice bushes,
Her aching heart burns in
her breast,
And with the water's plaint unsleeping
Mingles the note
of bitter weeping.
Snared in her tears the stars find rest,
Down her
pale cheeks like bright sparks flowing
Till like quenched stars they
burn to shades there,
On her cold countenance briefly glowing.
And
where they fall, the blossom fades there.
At the rock's rim she glimmers whitely;
A silken standard flies her
gown,
In evening zephyrs fluttering lightly.
Her eyes on distance
fix and frown—
In haste she dries her blinding tears,
Beneath her
shading hand she peers,
And on the distant shore she fastens,
Where
in the hills the lake creeps hiding;
Over the waves live sparks go
gliding,
Star after watery starlet bastens.
Even as snow-white virgin doves
Against dark wastes of cloud in
flight,
On water-lily flowering white
On deepest blue—so something
moves—
Where in the hills the lake creeps hiding—
Over the dark
waves nearer gliding,
Nearer in haste. A moment proves
Now as the
stork's grave flight it looms,
No dove so flies nor lily blooms,
But
a white sail rocked by hasting breezes.
A slender oar the blue wave
teases,
With flaming furrows the surface bazing.
The golden rose of
heaven's hold,
High in the mountain oakwoods blazing,
Gilds the
ripples with rosy gold.
“Swift litlle boat! Near, nearer
bounding!
'Tis be! 'Tis be! Those plumes bright beaming,
The hat,
the eyes beneath it gleaming—
His cloak—” The boat in the beach is
grounding.
Over the rocks his light step rings,
By a known path he climbs and
closes.
The girl's pale face flowers into roses;
From the tree's
shade in wild hope flying
She runs, high-calling, runs and
springs,
And on the rower's breast she's lying-
“Alas, my heart!:
The moonlight shows
In its full flood a face she knows.
Her pounding
blood to terror knells her.
Where is Vilem?”
“See, by the lake,”
In low grim tone the boatman tells
her,
“Above the night the forests make
Rises a tower, its image
white
Deep in the lake's heart drowned from sight;
But deeper, see,
at the water's rim,
From a little window a lantern's gleam;
This
night to vigil Vilem is giving:
Tomorrow sets him free from
living.
His heavy guilt and yours he carries:
Deep your seducer's
blood has stained him,
That stroke a parricide arraigned him.
Still,
still revenge the avenger barries!
A felon's death! Peace to him
bring,
Lord, when that face, the rose outshining,
In its high place
stands withering,
And in the wheel his limbs are twining!
So dies
the dreaded Forest King!
Bear for his guilt, and your own shame,
My
bitter curse, and the world's blame!”
He turns. His voice to silence falls;
Down he climbs through the
rocky walls,
Outward his boat goes gliding.
Swift as the stork's
flight, beating fast,
Dwindling, dwindling, a lily at last,
Over the
lake in the mountains hiding.
Hushed are the waters, dark, forlorn,
In deep dusk all things crouch
to cover.
A white dress gleams on the waves that mourn
Over her:
“Jarmila!” like a lover,
And the woods sigh: “Jarmila!” over and
over.
Late evening, on the first of May—
The twilit May-the time of
love.
To dalliance woos the turtle-dove:
“Jarmila! Jarmila!!
Jarmila!!!”
2
Out of heaven a star falls questing,
Dying through the wastes of
space,
Endlessly it falls unresting
Through its endless
resting-place;
From the unbounded grave wild crying
Beats at heaven
with bitter breath.
“Is there then no end of dying?”
Nowhere—never
an end of death.
Around the white tower breezes shiver,
Beneath, the
whispering wavelets quiver.
On the blanched walls in silver
glance
The argent moon sheds radiance.
But deep within the tower is
darkness only,
For the clear moon's pale wealth of light
Through
narrow window into the cell gropes lonely,
And dims into the assault of
night.
Column by column the sombre vault's recesses
Melt into
darkness. The entering wind sighing
Circles the cell like murdered
felons crying,
And stirs the prisoner's tresses.
Beside a table hewn
of stone,
His head upon his hands inclining
Half-sits, half-kneels
this wretched one,
To deeps of thought his soul resigning.
As clouds
the moon's face veil and cover,
He draws their web his spirit
over;
Thought into thought flows undesigning.
“Deep night, now in your veiling hold
My native village you
enfold,
And friends weep for my end there.
Weep?—and for me? A dream
outworn!
Long since I have no friend there.
The first gleam of
tommorow's morn
Over her forest breaking,
Will send me to my death
forlorn,
And gild, as when her child was born,
Her merry, mild
awaking.”
Silent he falls; but through the night,
About the high vault
flying,
Far, far his voice goes sighing,
Till as with horror frozen
in flight
At the cell's end it chills there,
And into darkness
stills there.
The silence in the darkness grieving
Calls back to heart the days
departed;
Again in waking dreams he's living
The long-lost life of a
boy light-hearted.
Remembrance of green years and kind
Brings back a
young man's dreams to mind;
The prisoner's eyes with tears are
flowing,
And in his heart a great pain growing—
A lost world how
shall the seeker find?
Mountain on mountain westward presses
Beyond the lake
high-piled
And there in the pinewoods' sweet recesses,
He dreams
himself once more a child.
Early thrust from his father's care,
Bred
up by brigands in strifes and stresses,
Last to their leader fallen
heir,
Gallant and daring they acclaim him.
Known to all men, thus
all men name him,
Lord of the Woods, a name of fear.
Till the love
of a broken rose inflames him;
His hand, to bitter vengeance
straying,
Seeks the seducer, strikes him, claims him,
His stranger
father strangely slaying.
Wherefore a prisoner he lies,
Doomed to
the wheel's embrace that kills;
Lord of the Woods, at dawn he
dies,
At the first kindling of the hills.
Now at a table hewn of stone,
His head upon his hands
reposing,
Half-sits, half-kneels this wretched one,
The abyss of
thought his soul enclosing:
As clouds the moon's face veil and
cover,
He draws their web his spirit over,
Thought evermore new
thought disclosing.
“He, sire and foe!-I, death and seed!
And he my love's
betrayer!
I knew him not! My fearful deed
recoiled and slew the
slayer.
Why was I banished from his sight
The lawless woods to
barry?
Whose crime does the dawn's death requite?
Whose guilt is
this I carry?
Not mine! ab, surely I was bent
A mute, unwitting
instrument
God's judgment to deliver.
Not mine the deed! Why, then,
ah, why
Out to this hideous death go I
So soon-and, ah, for
ever?
Soon, and for ever! Endless—death—”
For horror fails the
prisoner's breath,
Echoing from the dungeon wall;
The voiceless
shadow of the night
In iron grip shuts sound and sight.
A new dream
holds his mind in thrall.
“Ah, she, my saint, my rose embowered!
Why lost ere ever she was
found?
Why at my father's hands deflowered?
Accursed I!—” Deep
anguish drowned
The struggling words. With sudden sound
Of clamorous
chains he springs upright,
And from the little window strains
Over
the waves his tortured sight.
Cloud veils the moon, and shadow
reigns
Over the earth, but no shade mars
The zenith glittering with
stars;
With points of fire the lake they stain,
That flash and fade
in waters hollow.
Their glimmering flight his fixed eyes follow,
And
all his heart is wrenched with pain.
“How fair the world! How rich the
night!
Silver and shade agreeing!
Ah, tomorrow shuts my dying
sight
On all the bliss of seeing!
And as grey cloud across the
skies
Far, far and wide goes flying,
So—” Down he sinks, his
hungering eyes
Torn from the scene, his chains' harsh cries
Soon
into silence dying.
A monstrous bird's extended wing,
From peak to peak the cloud is
driven,
Under one vast pall gathering
In blackest marriage earth and
heaven.
Hark! from the high hills lost to sight
A poignant voice is
trilling,
A forest piper of the night,
The song of heaven
distilling.
To all things which bave wakeful lain
It charms down
sleep's completeness;
The prisoner in his mortal pain
Finds Lethe in
its sweetness.
“How beautiful, dear voice, the song
On the night's
breast you're flinging!
But one more night-ah, God, not long!-
And
deaf to your enchanted tongue,
No more I'll hear such
singing.”
Again be sings-the clank of chains
Rings through the cell,
despairing-
Deep silence. Once again the pains
Of death his heart
are tearing,
And fading far the voice complains
An anguish beyond
bearing.
“Time yet to come? Tomorrow's day?
Still, still some dream
will time repay,
Or sleep too deep for dreaming?
Perhaps this life
which here I live
Is but a sleep, and dawn will give
Only another
seeming?
Or that best rose, long longed-for here,
That fruit the
wide earth did not bear,
Will dawn and death disclose?
Who
knows?—Ah,no one knows!”
Silence again. The hush of night
On all the earth is draped
there.
Quenched is the moon's benignant light,
Quenched are the
stars, and all around
Is purest darkness, black, profound,
As if the
grave's mouth gaped there.
No winds blow more, nor waves
complain,
Nor even the far, sweet pipe of pain,
And in the bosom in
the cell
Dead silence, utter darkness dwell.
“How deep the night-how
dark the night!
On me a darker closes—
Away, thought!” Panic shuts
from sight
The grave his thought discloses.
Deep silence. From the streaming wall
Flows down a small, slow
river,
And echoing drops the silence fret;
Through the long cell
their hollow fall,
Measuring night's moments of
regret,
Chimes—ceases—chimes and ceases ever,
Chimes—ceases—chimes
and ceases yet.
“How long the night—how long the night!
On me a longer
closes—
Away, thought!” Horror shuts from sight
The grave his
thought discloses.
Deep silence. Once again the chime
Of slow drops
falling metes out time.
“A darker night! Here in the womb
Of veriest midnight shines some
beam
Of moon or star—there—hideous gloom,
There never—never—never a
gleam,
Only the dark for ever.
All's one there, without part-they
send
no hours, no moments to befriend,
Night fails not, never dawns
the day,
For there time passes never.
There never—never—never an
end!
From death that passes not away
Who shall my soul
deliver?
“There utter emptiness, beneath,
Around, above, the void of
death,
Quenching all live's endeavour.
Unending silence—never a
sound—
Unending space, night, time, surround
The dead mind dreaming
on decay—
Mere nothingness—for ever!
And I to nothing—but one more
day,
And I to nothing am cast away—”
He faints, he falls
aquiver.
Lightly the waves at play come springing
Under the tower, their
small spray flying,
Ever a gentle murmur bringing,
A cradle-song for
captive singing,
Who in a deep half-death is lying.
The fearful clash of chains awakes
The guard, who with his lamp
comes hasting;
So light a step, it scarcely breaks
The prisoner's
trance of dread unresting.
Pillar to pillar the lantern bright
Puts
forth its little gleaming:
Still paler, paler grows its light,
Till
fails at last the exhausted spark,
And absolute and moveless dark
On
all beyond lies dreaming.
But still the prisoner's eyes, adaze
As if
night shrouded still their gaze,
Strain forward, nothing
seeing,
Althought the lantern's reddening ray
Lights his wan face,
and drives away
The timid shadows fleeing.
Beside the table hewn of
stone,
His head upon his hands inclining,
Half-sits, half-kneels the
wredched one,
To sick despair his soul resigning;
And the faint
whispering of his breath
Tells forth tormenting dreams of death.
“Alas, my soul-Alas, my love-”
Single and slow the sad words
move
Out of his shut lips sighing.
Scarcely they reach the straining
ear
When, newly born in pain and fear,
Already they are dying.
The gaoler's light before him goes,
And on the prisoner's face it
glows.
The prisoner's face—ah, dread and pain!—
His fixed eyes glare
in wild distress
After an end of endlessness,
Tears, sweat and blood
his pallor stain,
For speech his lips contend in vain.
The frightened gaoler stoops to snare
The thread of utterance from
the air,
Lighter than lightest breeze he hears
The prisoner's tale
of blood and tears.
Lower he leans, and closer yet
To the wan mouth
his ear is set,
Hard on the labouring lips now leaning,
Till
fainting, fainting, they forget
Speech, as if sleep came unawares.
Still stands the guard in dreadful dreaming,
Like bees in swarm his
tears come teeming,
Sorrow his heart within him sears.
Long he
stands frozen there aghast,
Till thrusting off his helpless
fears,
Out of the cell he flies in haste.
Long as he lived, he told
no word
Of what his ears this night had heard:
Rather his whole life
through thereafter
His pale lips said farewell to laughter.
The guard is fled, fast-closed the door.
Deep darkness shrouds the
cell once more;
And through the night once more the chime
Of slow
drops falling metes out time.
Beside the table hewn of stone
Half-sits, half-kneels Vilem
alone;
His face a sight for fear and pain,
With fixed eyes staring
in distress
After an end of endlessness—
Tears, sweat and blood his
pallor stain.
Incessantly the watery chime
Of slow drops falling metes out
time,
And wind and wawes as one complain;
To Vilem's ear of death
they tell.
He faints beneath the thought appalling.
Far through the
night an owl is calling,
And louder beats the midnight bell.
Intermezzo I
Midnight
(a lonely place in the countryside)
In the wide plains sleeps sound the pale moon's argent
light,
Darkness is on the hills, the lake with stars is bright.
A
hillock by the lake-shore rises,
A stake thereon, a wheel raised
lightly,
Whereon a bleached skull glistens whitely,
While ghostly
rout a dance devises,
About the high wheel revelling rightly.
Chorus of Phantoms
“Silent the midnight graveyard lies;
Through the graves the
marshlight flies,
Its dead blue radiance lights the head
Of the
newly-buried dead,
Who, while his fellows sleep, stands guard,
Last
of the sepulchred, dead today,
Beside his own cross keeping ward.
A
grey cloud in the zenith stays,
No moon beneath it but the ray
Of
the dead man's glassy gaze,
And through half-open lips beneath
The
glitter of his gnashing teeth.”
A Voice
“This is the hour! The place prepare!
Lord of the Woods, the lord of
fear,
Is one with us at dawn of day.”
Chorus of Phantoms (lifting down the skull)
“From death's dim threshold come away,
Inherit life - a voice
receive.
Be one among us, know us well,
No more be doomed alone to
dwell.
Another must your place achieve.”
The Skull (joining in their dance)
“How my limbs long to join again
In one whole creature, only
one!
What is this rout of terror and pain?
My newest dream - I still
dream on!”
Voice
“His place of honour ready see!
When tomorrow's course is
o'er
The storm shall bear us here once more.
Glorious may his burial
be!”
Chorus of Phantoms
“His place of honour ready see!
When tomorrow's course is
o'er
The storm shall bear us here once more.
Glorious may his burial
be!”
Voice
Fly, voice, across the fields with power!
At midnight is the funeral
hour.
His votive gift let each make known!
The Stake and Wheel
“I'll be the coffin to his repose.”
Frogs in the Marsh
“The burial anthem we'll intone.”
Storm over the Lake
“The gale funereal music knows.”
The Moon in the Zenith
“I'll cover him with snow-white pall.”
Mist on the Mountains
“With veils I'll drape his funeral.”
Night
“I'll give black weeds to mourn the dead.”
The Hills Standing Round
“Give veils and garments to us all.”
The Falling Dew
“And I will give you tears to shed.”
The Barren Soil
“I'll incense with sweet smoke his head.”
The Sinking Cloud
“With rain will I asperge his bed.”
The Falling Blossom
“I will weave garlands for his bier.”
Light Breezes
“We'll bear them to the coffin lightly.”
St John's Fireflies
“Our tiny candles shall burn up brightly.”
Thunder out of the Depths
“I'll wake the great bell's hollow tone.”
The Mole under the Earth
“I'll dig his grave, I, lowly here.”
Time
“Over his bones a tomb I'll rear.”
Flocks of Night-Birds Crossing the Moon
“We'll make the funeral feast our own.”
Voice
“All honour to his grave we pay!
The moon pales in the heaven's
heart,
The gates of morning draw apart—
It is day! It is day!”
Chorus of Phantoms (as they vanish)
“It is day! It is Day!”
3
Over the dark hills rosy day
Arises, the May valley wakes;
Above
the woods, as morning breaks,
Like mist lies long the dream of
May.
Out of the forests bluely lifting
Faint vapours climb the
rose-flushed sky,
And on the lake more bluely drifting
In delicate
colours melt and die;
And on the shore, and in the shadow
Of hills
and valleys flowering,
Shine out white courts through wood and
meadow,
Waking; till like a mighty king—
Colossal as the shade of
night
Against thwe heaven's rosy light—
The highest peak stands
towering.
But now the sun his first red blessing gives
Over the blue, dark
hills, and by that token
Suddenly all the spell of dreams is
broken,
And joy possesses everything that lives.
Whitely the lake's
green glass the flight of birds receives,
And fleets of little craft,
and small, swift-rowing shallops,
Pattern the dim blue waves with
glancing, fiery scallops.
Murmurous by the shore the pinewoods greet
the day,
Sweet with the song of birds, the thrush's shower of
pearls,
And mingling with their psalm the mirth of straying
girls,
As all that lives draws breath to praise the youthful
May.
The morning wind, like song, through the green valley
blowing,
Bears on its incensed breath a sweet white foam of
flowers,
And wild geese ride its flight above the forest bowers,
And
to its touch young trees unfold their eager growing.
One scene, and
only one, the fair young morn defaces,
Where to the wide lake's heart a
narrow isle goes straying,
Bearing the little town, and the white
tower, whose shade
Deep in the waters green in quiveringly
laid.
Here wakes a clamorous cry, babel of human baying,
As from the
gates of the town the hungry man-pack races.
From far the people haste,
a swift stream rushing by,
And ever swells the food, a river strongly
rolling,
A mighty multitude, its voice to thunder tolling;
The
unhappy felon comes, led forth at dawn to die.
Now from the little town a troop of guards comes swinging,
In slow
and sombre march the hapless prisoner bringing,
Whose old, proud habit
soon the eager watchers spy.
The clamour stills around—a hush falls on
the crowd—
Till babel bursts anew, with many a cry and loud:
“Tis
he! The flowers, the plumes he's wearing,
The hat, the eye beneath it
glaring—
His very cloak—'Tis he,'tis he! The dreaded Forest
King!”
About him beats the cry, his old name echoing;
And louder
still it rings, as thundering waters clear,
As with a heavy step the
criminal draws near.
Round him darkens the throng—like heavy clouds in
heaven—
A sword flames from the dark—as heaven's lightnings
flare;
Slowly the doomed man goes, his gaze to earth is given.
The
town bell tolls; the crowd pities and falls to prayer.
There stahd a little mound, on the lake-shore leaning lightly,
A
long stake raised thereon, a wheel above it rearing,
A steep hill looms
above, twin peaks its summit sharing,
And on the higher point a chapel
gleaming whitely.
In sombre march thereto company is come;
Now all
men move aside—the felon stands alone.
A last time led forth here,
still he beholds his own,
The dark, deep-breasted hills which were his
early home,
Where the lost coin was spent, the golden childhood
days.
Yet once more, only once, in the rosy dawning light,
Let forth
to the hills, a shade before the chapel white,
To the lord of heaven
and earth his reverence he pays.
And deep compassion folds its hands on
every heart.
His grief their grief inflames, they suffer his
despair,
Fixing their eyes through tears on the summit where he
stands
Adoring the fair earth well-fashioned at God's hands,
A
murderer praising God in the humbled hush of prayer.
The rising sun with ruddy grace
Flushes the prisoner's pallid
face;
His eyes, through mists of weeping,
A last love-tryst are
keeping.
Beneath him deep the lovely vale
Dreams in its rugged
mountain pale,
By forests circled greenly.
The lucid lake
serenely
Nursed in the flowering valley drowses.
Blue to the shore
it coils and glimmers,
And green beyond, and greener, sleeps,
Till
in the distances and deeps
In clear, pale light all melts and
shimmers.
About the wheel the white farmhouses
Dimpling the sunlit
lake-shore lie.
Across the mirroring waters fast
Flocks of white
birds and small boats fly,
Till bluely hides the lake at last,
Far
in the hills retreating.
And white craft in the scalloped
beaches—
The tower-the town-the white birds' flight—
Hillocks and
shadowy mountain reaches—
Gaze on that mirror with delight,
Their
deep-drowned beauty greeting.
Rocks are piled heavy on that far
shore
Where flowering land and lake are meeting,
And there an
oak-tree old and hoar
Roots in the rocks-once, once the dove
Called
there deliciously to love—
Oh, fair lost hour and fleeting!
Never
again! The mound is nearing,
The column an the wheel
appearing.
Beyond the hill there slips away
A young wood, murmuring
mournfully;
Radiant the sun on vale and lea—
The morning dew—the
morning May.
Beauty once more the felon's eyes receive,
Beauty which now for ever
he must leave,
And passionate regret his heart possesses:
Deeply he
sighs—tear after tear flows over—
One last long look, lingering as
looks the lover,
Then to the sky his tear-dimmed eyes he raises.
In
the azure vault of heaven the blanching mists are dancing,
In light
dissolving zephyrs tattered,
And on the far horizon scattered
White
cloudlets over the placid sky go glancing.
The grieving prisoner greets
them as they race:
“You clouds, whou in your wandering course
embrace
Like secret circling arm the earth her own course
keeping,
You dissolutions of stars, shades in the blue of
heaven,
You mourners ever to mutual sorrow given,
Who know so well
the ways of silent weeping—
Bear you my charge, of all things that have
birth.
Where you pass from me on your long, wide way
To the distant
shore, there for a moment stay,
There, pilgrim clouds, greet reverently
the earth.
Ah, well-beloved earth, beautiful earth,
My cradle and
grave, the womb that gave me birth,
My sweet, sole land, left to my
spirit's keeping,
Ah, vast and single of beauty as of worth!-
Seek
there that rock, and when your swift sails gain it—
If you shall see—by
the shore—a woman weeping—”
There fails his voice, the strangling tears
have slain it.
Down from the height the guards their prisoner
lead
By a wide pathway through young pinewoods threading,
Down and
still down; now on the mound they're treading;
And now the multitude is
hushed indeed.
The executioner with his sword stands ready.
Yet one
more time the prisoner lifts his eyes,
Worships the sweet, encircling
world-once sighs-
And on the approaching death his soul makes
steady.
His breast and throat he bares, kneeling to earth he leaves
it;
Back steps the headsman-an age the frozen mind believes it!—
The
sword flashes; a rapid forward stride—
The sword circles; the bent
white neck receives it—
The head falls—a tremor—and yet a tremor
beside—
And falls the body after, one with the grieved earth
growing.
Into the earth, so beautiful, so beloved.
His cradle and
grave, the womb that gave him birth,
His sweet, sole land, his heritage
approved,
In the generous earth, the single, holy earth,
Into the
mother's heart the blood of her son is flowing.
The prisoner's shattered shell, limb after long limb broken,
Twined
in the wheel's embrace is raised, a terrible token,
And over the wheel
his head, a blind, oblivious thing.
So died the lord of the woods, the
dreaded Forest King.
On the dead countenance the last dream lingers
still.
Gazing upon his face, mute round the little hill
The unquiet
multitude awaits the long day's ending,
Till the declining sun draws to
the west once more,
Into the head's blind eyes its gay last laughter
sending.
Hushed is the broad lake-hushed is the evening shore.
Above the far dark hills the last radiance blazed.
The pale, dead
face of the head is softly silvered o'er,
Silvered the silent mound,
hushed by the lake-shore,
As in the evening hush the moon's fair face
is raised.
Distant are grown the towns, far as a cloud in
air,
Beyond to the edge of seeing the dead eyes steadily stare,
To
the edge of sight, to his youth-Oh, brief, bright childhood day!
Time in its headlong flight has carried that Spring away.
Far fled
is his dream, a shadow no more found,
Like visions of white towns, deep
in the waters drowned,
The last indignant thoughts of the defeated
dead,
Their unremembered names, the clamour of old fights,
The
worn-out northern lights, after their gleam is fled,
The untuned harp,
whose strings distil no more delights,
The deeds of time gone by,
quenched starlight overhead,
Heresy's pilgrimage, the loving, lovely
dead,
The deep forgotten grave, eternal board and bed;
As the smoke
of burned-out fires, as the shattered bell's chime,
Are the dead years
of the dead, their beautiful childhood time!
Late eve—the second eve of May—
The twilit May—the time of
love—
Meltingly calls the turtle-dove:
Vilem! Vilem! Vilem!!
Intermezzo II
Close the hills lean to each other,
Underneath a dark cloud
hiding,
Like a vaulted ceiling riding
Taut from one peak to his
brother.
Dark this place by evening gloom is,
Dark and silent as the
tomb is.
In the portal deeply-shaded,
Where the hills shrink back
dividing,
Sharp rocks in the opening spaces
Steeply rear their
frowning faces,
Lower, narrower, blackly biding;
Underneath the
cloud dark-braided
Shuts this gate of rocks and boulders.
In the
valley's heart deep-gladed,
Darkly red a camp-fire smoulders,
Broken
from the west bright-beaming,
A long sliver of the sunset;
Round its
red nocturnal gleaming
Circle night-birds, wheeling, plaining,
In a
red and restless onset,
Till the blue of night they borrow.
Sinks
the fire, still waning-waning,
Till the broad and bounteous
heaven
Melts in nightly dews of sorrow,
And the earth to grief is
given.
Oaks a hundred years a-growing,
Darkness within darkness
throwing,
Hide a company of friends there.
Cloaked in white, as in
the bright time,
Sit the comrades of the night-time.
Each before him
groundward bends there,
Wordless, motionless, his vision,
As if
terror's chill transition
Into stone their flesh had
stricken.
Through the valley seems to quicken
Whispered breath of
lamentation
Round the moveless men who plain him,
Secretly, without
cessation:
“Lost, our leader!—they have slain him!”
And the wind, the smoke-wreaths plying,
To the moveless men is
crying:
“Lost, our leader!-they have slain him!”
And the restless leaves aquiver
Underneath the cold
cliff-faces,
Trembling, murmuring, utter ever
These insistent,
changeless phrases:
“Lost, our leader!-they have slain him!”
All the forests in their station
Sound the great, sad
accusation:
“They have slain him—slain him!!—slain him—!!!”
4
Beautiful May is passed, withered the bloom of Spring;
The summer
fire burns high, wanes, and as soon is gone,
Autumn, and winter after;
another Spring comes on,
As time bears off the years on its unresting
wing.
The seventh year it was, the seventh year's last day;
Deep on it lay
the night, and with the midnight chime
A new year would be born. The
cold earth dreaming lay.
Lone hoof-beats by the lake troubled the
silent time.
I was that wayfarer, bound for the town by night,
Led
by chance to the mound, where, long ago at rest,
The dreaded Forest
King lingered a quiet guest;
There first I saw Vilem- a bare skull
glistening white.
There in the midnight land, far as the eye's reach
ranging,
Through valleys, over hills, by forest, lake and meadow,
A
wide, white pall of snow lay level and unchanging,
Over the skull and
wheel-all white without a shadow.
Deep clouds hemmed in the moon, which
seemed to droop and sicken;
Sometimes the weird owl cried, ever the sad
wind's shaking
Plucked at the wheel above, and set the loud bones
quaking,
So that my horse and I with panic dread were
stricken.
Forward I spurred in fear, there where the safe town hailed
me,
And asked what wheel, what bones were these which grimly grew
there,
The old innkeeper told the story all men knew there-
The
story I have told-and on that wheel impaled me.
Far I went through the world-and the world has enough of pain,
Many
a storm of heart blew over me and bled me;
But still this old, worn woe
beckoned me back again,
Till in a young Spring season home to the mound
it led me.
Under the stake I sat, just as the sun descended,
Under
the wheel which bore the skeleton and skull there,
Gazing sad-eyed on
Spring, whose cup was fair and full there,
Even to the misty rim where
earth and heaven blended.
Evening once more, the first of May-
The twilit May-the time of
love.
Meltingly called the turtle-dove,
Where rich and sweet the
pinewoods lay.
Whispered of love the mosses frail,
The flowering
tree as sweetly lied
The rose's fragrant sigh replied
To love-songs
of the nightingale.
The lake within the dark woods straying
Softly
complained a secret pain,
By circling shores embraced again
As
brother sister in their playing.
About the head the sunset
bright
Lay like a wreath of roses growing,
Gilding the bony face
with light,
On fretted skin and white jaw glowing.
In the hollow
skull the breezes sped
As if grim laughter mocked the dead,
and
lifted lightly here and there
What time had left of his long
hair;
Beneath his brows the dewdrops borrow
The sunset light, as if,
discerning
The evening beauty of May's returning,
His dead eyes brim
with tears of sorrow.
There I sat on, until the young moon's light
Blanched both my face
and his with rays as pale as bright;
Now like a snowy pall its
whiteness spreads before him
Over the vales and woods to the distant
hills that bore him.
Sometimes from far away the cuckoo's greeting
sounds here,
Flung from the flowering vale, sometimes the owl's grave
warning;
From many a farmyard near the bark of dogs rebounds
here;
Out of the dust arises a sweet incense of mourning,
The little
tears of the Virgin upon the hill are flowering,
Deep in the heart of
the lake a secret light is burning;
And the fireflies, shooting stars,
about the wheel are showering,
Glittering in their play, touching the
pale skull brightly,
Lighting to launch again, and launch again ac
lightly,
Like fiery falling tears, all his spent tears embowering.
And in my grieving eyes two hot tears rise and break,
Glittering
down my cheeks as sparks play in the lake;
For my young years, mine
too, my childhood golden-gay,
Time in its headlong flight has seized
and borne away.
Far is that lost dream now, a shadow no more
found,
Like visions of white towns, deep in the waters drowned,
The
last indignant thoughts of the defeated dead,
Their unremembered names,
the clamour of old fights,
The worn-out northern lights after their
gleam is fled,
The untuned harp, whose strings distil no more
delights,
The deeds of time gone by, quenched starlight
overhead,
Heresy's pilgrimage, the loving, lovely dead,
The deep,
forgotten grave, etrnal board and bed,
The smoke of burned-out fires,
the scattered bell's chime—
Like the song of dead swam, like Eden
snatched away,
So is my childhood time—
But what of following
time?
My youth, alas, my youth! My season and song are May!
An
eventide of May on a rocky, desolate shore:
Light laughter on the lips,
deep grief in the heart's core.
See you the pilgrim there, hastening on his quest
Through the long,
sunset fields, beneath the dimming west?
Strain your eyes as you will,
the end you cannot see,
As over the edge of vision he falters and finds
no rest.
Never-ah, never! And this is all life offers me!
Comfort?
Who comforts me? What charm this heart can move?
Love is without an
end!-And bitter is my love!
Late evening, on the first of May—
The twilit May-the time of love—
Meltingly calls the turtle-dove:
“Hynek! Vilem! Ah, Jarmila!!!