Poems - Part Two

An exert from Faust

Then to the moment could I say:
Linger you now, you are so fair!
Now Records of my early day
No flights of eons can impair-
Forenowlage comes, and fills me with such bliss
I take my joy, my highest moment this(...)
A foolish word, bygone
How so then gone?
Gone to sheer nothing, past with null made one!
What matters creative endless toil
When, at a snatch, oblivion ends the coil?
As good as if things never had begun,
Yet circle back, existence to possess:
I'd rather have Eternal Emptiness!

-Goethe

(This one is from some movie or something- I really don't know- but a friend of mine wants it on her gravestone, and it's pretty cool..)
And may the stars smile as she joins them. Her soul takes flight to the world of the invisible where there apon she is forever sure of bliss

The Rules

The lines are blurred
the rules don't apply
there are no rules
there never were
I made up the rules
so that this would make sense
and now I don't like the sense that they've made
so I'm taking them away
and living in a blurry world

Fear

I'm alone
and I can only hear myself breathing
would it be better
or worse
to hear an unknown breath behind me?

Homeward Bound

I have seen a fiercer tempest,
Known louder whirlwind blow;
I was wrecked off red Algeirs,
Six-and-thirty years ago.
Young I was, and yet old seamen
Were not strong or calm as I;
While life held such treasures for me,
I felt sure I could not die

Life I struggled for,- and saved it;
Life alone,- and nothing more
Bruised, half dead, alone and helpless
I was cast upon the shore.
I feared the pitiless rocks of Ocean;
So the great sea rose,- and then
Cast me from her friendly bosom,
On the pitiless hearts of men.

Gaunt and dreary ran the mountains,
With black gorges up the land;
Up to where the lonely Desert
Spreads her burning, dreary sand;
In the gorges of the mountains,
On the plain beside the sea,
Dwelt my cruel masters,
The black Moors of Barbary.

Ten long years I toiled among them,
Hopeless- as I used to say;
Now I know Hope burnt within me
Fiercer, stronger, day by day:
Those dim years of toil and sorrow
Like one long dark dream appear;
One long year of waiting,-
Then each day was like a year
How I cursed the land - my prison;
How I cursed the serpant sea,
And the demon Fate that showered
All her curses upon me;
I was mad, I think - God pardon
Words so terrible and wild -
This voyage would have been my last one,
For I left a wife and child.

Never did one tender vision
Fade away before my sight,
Never once through all my slavery,
Burning day or dreary night;
In my soul it lived and kept me,
Now I feel, from black dispair,
And my heart was not quite broken,
While they lived and blessed me there.

When at night my task was over,
I would hasten to the shore;
(All was strange and foreign inland,
Nothing I had known before);
Strange looked the bleak mountain passes,
Strange the red glare and black shade,
And the oleanders waving
To the sound the fountains made.

Then I gazed at the great Ocean,
Till she grew a friend again;
And because she knew old England,
I forgave her all my pain;
So the blue sky above me,
With its white cloud's fleecy fold
And the glimmering stars (though brighter),
Looked like home and days of old.

And a calm would fall upon me,
Worn perhaps with work and rain,
The wild hungry longing left me,
And I was myself again;
Looking at the silver waters,
Looking up at the far sky,
Dreams of home and all I left there
Floated sorrowfully by.

A fair face, but pale with sorrow,
With blue eyes, brimful of tears,
And the little red mouth, quivering
With a smile to hide its fears;
Holding out her baby toward me,
From the sky she looked on me;
So it was that last I saw her,
As the ship put out to sea.

Sometimes (and a pang would seize me
That the years were floating on)
I would strive to paint her, altered,
And the little baby gone:
She no longer young and girlish,
The child standing by her knee,
And a face more pale and saddened
With the weariness for me.

Then I saw, as night grew darker,
How she taught my child to pray,
Holding its small hands together,
For its father, far away;
And I felt her sorrow, weighing
Heavier on me than my own,
Pitying her blighted spring-time
and her joy so early flown.

Till upon my hands (now hardened
With the rough harsh toil of years)
Bitter drops of anguish falling,
Woke me from my dream to tears;
Woke me as a slave, an outcast,
Leagues from home, across the deep;
So - though you may call it childish -
So I sobbed myself to sleep.

Well, the years speed on - my sorrow,
Calmer, and yet stronger grown,
Was my shield against all suffering,
Poorer, meaner than her own.
Thus my cruel master's harshness
Fell upon me all in vain,
Yet the tale of what we suffered
Echoed back from main to main.

You have heard in a far country
Of a self-devoted band,
Vowed to rescue Christian captives
Pining in a foreign land.
And these gentle-hearted strangers
Year by year go forth from Rome,
In their hands the hard earned ransom,
To retore some exiles home.

I was freed: they broke the tidings
Gently to me; but indeed
Hour by hour sped on, I know not
What the words meant - I was freed!
Better so, perhaps; while sorrow
(More akin to earthly things)
Only strains the sad heart's fibres,
Joy bright stronger, breaks the strings.

Yet at last it rushed upon me,
And my heart beat full and fast;
What were now my years of waiting,
What was that dreary past?
Nothing - to the impatient throbbing
I must bear across the sea:
Nothing - to the eternal hours
Still between my home and me!

How the voyage passed I know not;
Strange it was once more to stand
With my countrymen around me,
And to clasp an English hand.
But, through all, my heart was dreaming
Of the first words I should hear,
In the gentle voice that echoed,
Fresh as ever, on my ear.

Should I see her start of wonder,
And the sudden truth arise,
Flushing all her face and lightening
The dimmed splendor of her eyes?
Oh! to watch the fear and doubting
Stir the silent depths of pain,
And the rush of joy - then melting
Into perfect peace again.

And the child! - but why remember
Foolish fancies that I thought?
Every tree and every hedge row
From the well-known past I brought;
I would picture my dear cottage,
See the crackling wood-fire burn,
And the two beside it seated,
Watching, waiting, my return.

So at last we reached the harbor.
I remember nothing more
Till I stood, my sick heart throbbing,
With my hand upon the door.
There I paused - I heard her speaking;
Low soft mummering words she said;
Then I first knew the dumb terror
I had lest she be dead.

It was evening in late autumn,
And the gusty wind blew chill;
Autumn leaves were falling round me,
And the red sun lit the hill.
Six-and-twenty years are vanished
Since then, - I am old and grey, -
But I never told to mortal
What I saw until this day.

She was seated by the fire,
In her arms she held a child,
Whispering baby words caressing,
And then, looking up, she smiled;
Smiled on him who stood beside her-
Oh! the bitter truth was told,
In her look of trusting fondness-
I had seen the look of old!

But she rose and turned toward me
(Cold and dumb I waited there)
With a shriek of fear and terror,
And a white face of despair.
He had been an ancient comrade,-
Not a single word he said,
While we gazed upon each other,
He the living: I the dead!

I drew nearer, nearer to her,
And I took her trembling hand,
Looking on her white face, looking
That her heart might understand
All the love and all the pity
That my lips refused to say,-
I thank God no thought save sorrow
Rose in our crushed hearts that day.

Bitter tears that desolate moment,
Bitter, bitter tears we wept,
We three broken hearts together,
While the baby smiled and slept.
Tears alone- no words were spoken,
Till he- till her husband said
That my boy (I had forgotten
The poor child), that he was dead.

Then at last I rose, and, turning,
Wrung his hand, but made no sign;
And I stooped and kissed her forehead
Once more, as if she were mine.
Nothing of farewell I uttered,
Save in broken words to pray
That God would ever guard and bless her,-
Then in silence passed away.

Over the great restless ocean
Six-and-twenty years I roam;
All my comrades, old and weary,
Have gone back to die at home.
Home! yes, I shall reach a haven,
I, too, shall reach home and rest;
I shall find her waiting for me
With our baby on her breast.

-Proctor

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