The Snow Waste

I SAW one sitting mid a waste of snow
Where never sun looked down nor silvering moon,
But far around the silent skies were grey,
With chill far stars bespeckled here and there,
And a great stillness brooded over all.
And nought was there that broke the level plain,
And nothing living was there but himself.
Yet was he not alone, there stood by him
One right, one left, two forms that seemed of flesh,
But blue with the first clutchings of their deaths,
Fixed rigid in the death-pang, glassy-eyed,
Turning towards him each a vacant gaze.
And he looked on them blankly, turn by turn,
With gaze as void as theirs. He uttered speech
That was as though his voice spoke of itself
And swayed by no part of the life in him,
In an uncadenced chant on one slow chord
Dull undulating surely to and fro.
And thus it ran.

“Ye dead who comrade me amid this snow
Where through long æons I drag me to and fro,
I speak again to ye the things I know
But, knowing, cannot feel, that haply so
I may relight in me life's former glow
And thaw the ice-bound tears in me to flow,
If I might into sentient memory grow
And waken in me energy of woe.

“For there is left in me full memory
Of things that were to me in days gone by,
And I can read them with my inward eye;
But like a book whose fair-writ phrases lie
All shapely moulded to word-harmony
But void of meaning in their melody,
Vague echoes that awaken no reply
In my laxed mind that knows not what they cry.

“And I can reason duly with my thought,
And am not lessened of its range in aught,
Can reckon all the deeds that I have wrought
And say, ‘Here lurked the canker taint that brought
The plague whereby thy whole man was distraught,
Here with a grace of good the act was fraught,
A dew of love here slaked the desert drought,
Thy sin in truth hath here the vengeance brought.

“So can I reckoning keep of woe and weal,
And mine own self unto myself reveal
In perfect knowledge: but I cannot feel.
And all the past across my mind will steal
And leave as little trace as the swift keel
Upon the lake's cleft waves that seamless heal
Cold memory can with the old things but deal
As with the creatures of some show unreal.

“I know that I was bent beneath the weight
Of wearying sorrow, or grew wroth with fate,
Or was with triumphing and joy elate,
Or bore towards another love or hate,
And ask, ‘What were these that had power so great,
These senses in me in my former state?’
And mouth their names out in my hollow prate
To rouse with them my heart inanimate.

“Because I know if I one pang could make
Of sorrow in me, if my heart could ache
One moment for the memories I spake,
The spell that is upon me now might break,
And I might with a sudden anguish shake
The numbness from it and perceive it wake,
And these be no more bound here for my sake
But slumber calmly in their silent lake.

“Then I like other men might pass away,
And cold could no more gnaw me when I lay
Amid these snows a painless heap of clay,
And, though the sharp-tongued frosts my skin should flay,
I should not feel, no chills on me could prey
And gnaw their teeth into my bones for aye,
As now is my long doom that will not slay:
I should know no dull torture in decay.

“Ye dead who follow me, I think that ye,
If ye have any being save in me,
Must have much longing that such end should be
To my long wandering, that ye may flee
To the deep grave I gave ye and be free
From bondage here, and in death quiet be,
If ye can know and loathe the bitter lee
Ye drink from my dregged cup by That decree.

“Yet hear, if ye can hear, if ye have might,
Ye dead, to wake my heart from its strange night,
Hear now and waken it while I recite
That which hath brought on it this icy blight,
So I may come to mean my words aright
And not, as now, like some dull purblind wight
Prating by rote of shadow and of light,
Or like an idiot echoing wisdoms trite.

“What love is now I know not; but I know
I once loved much, and then there was no snow.
A woman was with me whose voice was low
With trembling sweetness in my ears, as though
Some part of her on me she did bestow
In only speaking, that made new life flow
Quick through me: yet remembering cannot throw
That spell upon me now from long ago.

“I only know it was, forgetting how,
Nor can remind me why my soul should bow
Before her beauty, nor can gather now
What charm her nobleness of eye and brow
Had with such queenship o'er me to endow;
My memory can keep count of look and vow
But nothing of their spirit re-allow.
I know, dead woman, that my love art thou.

“I look on thee and him with equal mind.
I know him too: some years my heart was twined
In love round his. He was of noble kind,
He had no rival, leaving all behind;
Me too he passed, and then my love declined.
But when I knew him first the boy would wind
His younger arms round me, and I would find
Pride in his triumphs next to mine assigned.

“He grew in strength and in all daring fast
Until, as if a sudden chill north blast
Had found me sleeping in the sun, aghast
I woke and knew my glory overcast.
No feat or skill in which I all had passed
But he passed me. My triumphs had been glassed
In eyes of all the fairest and I classed
First and alone; now I to him was last.

“In all ways last: he was more deft, more gay,
More comely, apter in the minstrel lay;
The brightness of my life had passed away:
I heard his praises echoed day by day:
And she, from whom no thought of mine could stray,
Set all her pride on him: I heard her say
Amid the maidens, ‘None, seek where ye may
Will match my brother till his hair is grey.’

“When she was wed to me I sought in vain
By hid degrees her love from him to gain;
It only seemed to move in her such pain
That need was on my hatred to refrain
From open showing of its bitter strain,
Albeit if thought could slay he had been slain,
He nothing doubting. So did all remain
Until the corn was yellow on the plain.

“And even mother earth had loved him more
Than me; his wide sun-flooded meadows bore
A golden host that numbered mine thrice o'er;
His vines a richer bloom of promise wore;
The very river turned it from my shore
That, plenty bringing, it had marged of yore,
To make his pastures richer. Wroth and sore
My heart grew in me, burning at its core.

“Before our door, beneath the palm-tree wide,
One eve I sat alone with my young bride,
For he, who mostly then was by our side,
Some days had gone beyond the lake's far tide
Where the great city basked her in her pride,
And, thinking of him, she was absent-eyed,
And ever in our dearest talk she sighed
‘Great God and Light my brother's journey guide.’

“Because a pilgrim had passed by that day
And told us that the golden city lay
Beneath a ghastly plague's devouring sway,
The living could not hide their dead away,
They writhed in human heaps of foul decay,
The glutted vultures lingered o'er their prey
Along the marts, poor fools with minds astray
Howled blasphemies or leaped in ghastly play.

“And loathsome taint, he said, lurked in the air
For miles around, and whoso harboured there
Must look no more to life, unless he were
Even to miracle the Heaven's care.
So, while we watched the red lake's sunset glare,
I only joyed that he might in that snare
Be caught and die: but she could only spare
Half thoughts for me, and sighed for him some prayer.

“I knew that there was gladness in my eyes,
But hers were clouded with sad reveries:
I spoke to her of our fair destinies,
She told her fears for him in low replies:
‘Yes love him still, still me for him despise,’
I cried, ‘What wife have I unless he dies?
Would that he might.’ In startled sad surprise
She answered, weeping out a voice of sighs.”

But a clear solemn voice rose over his,
“ Thou speak it.” And I saw a lucent form,
As of a spirit making to itself
A pure white brightness, drooping over him
Towards that shape of a dead woman, cry:
“ Thou , speak it, if so any ghost of love
Might yearn in him towards thee.” Her dead lips
Moved not, nor moaned with any breath of words,
Nor passed there any stir across her face,
But a sweet plaining voice came out from her,
A voice as of one weeping at the heart.
“Do I not love thee first and most, my own?
And art thou bitter that my heart has room
For him, my brother? Dost thou chide the sun,
Our light of life and soul, that he will shine
His brightest on him even as on thee?
Wilt thou chide love that is our second light
Because it shines upon him from my heart
Only a little less than upon thee?”
Sadly the voice died off. He, vacantly,
As though he knew her not, met her dead eyes,
Then with his old unpassioned utterance spoke.
 “These were her words and thus did her voice sigh;
 Mine hurried from me in a fierce reply
 That burst from out my lips with sudden cry,
 As though itself had willed to speak, not I,
 My secret thought: I wished all love might die
 If else he in her love must press me nigh:
 Since he must bless my foe, the sun on high
 Might dwindle into darkness utterly.”

There cried a voice, “Speak thou his very words
That he may hear them spoken as he spoke,
Hear his words, laden with his hateful doom,
In thy voice that he hated: so some ghost
Of passion might awaken in his soul.
Speak thou the words.” And I saw stand by him
A form of darkness, like a tempest-cloud,
Waving towards that shape of a dead man
That he should speak. And voice came from that dead,
As from the woman, moving not the lips
Not waking any life in the glazed eyes,
“Thus didst thou say, ‘Rather might all love die
Out from the earth for ever than warm him!
Rather might all love perish from my life
Than have him wound into thy love with me!
And I do hate the sun though he be God.
What love or thanking need I to this God,
Since he but makes me one amid the all?
I curse him. Would that all his vaunted light
Were utter darkness, rather than that he
Alike with me should shine on him I hate!’”
 So the voice ceased in tempest. But he looked
One moment on that corpse's livid face
With a dull dreamy loathing in his eyes,
And in the moment they were cold again
With the old quiet nothingness of gaze,
And he spoke on again in shadeless rhythm.
 “These were the words wherein I did invoke
 Thy doom upon me, naming even the stroke
 Of this long vengeance. It was his voice spoke
 Thy words again. If for the moment woke
 An impulse in my breast to burst its yoke
 And leap out through the clogging frosts that choke
 Its well-springs, it but seemed as if they broke;
 Still do those frosts my stagnant life-blood cloke.”

Then the dark shadow cried, “Lo I have failed.
I cannot wake him even by his hate;
He is not given me but bears such doom
As was awarded him by his own words.”
And the fair brightness cried, “And I have failed
And he, alas! is left to his dread doom.”
And both passed out from him; who still spoke on.
 “And while my words yet on the echoes played,
 The clouds that singly through the blueness strayed,
 Hurled into one a sudden darkness made;
 A shrilling whirlwind all the palm-tops swayed,
 Then stillness. Horror on our spirits weighed,
 And I stood awe-struck, while she knelt and prayed.
 Then through the dark we heard, and were afraid,
 A slow voice speak the doom upon me laid.”

Called then a voice that was as though it dropped
From the far stars and rose from the deep snows,
And was in all and over all at once:
“Hear once again: this was the doom pronounced:
‘Because thou hast cursed love which is a life
And is God's greatest gift to souls on earth,
All love shall die from thee; thou shalt not know it
Even in thought. And, since thou hast blasphemed
That which is God to thee, and cursed the day,
Thou shalt have lost all part in day. And know
That herein lies a curse more than thy mind
Can fathom yet. Yet this of hope is given,
Thou hast until to-morrow's sun be sunk
For penitence: so may this less doom be,
To live thy life alone in heart and blind
But yet to die at last as all men die.’”
He listened calmly, and again spoke on.

 “One came at noon and told that he to flee
 The plague had turned him homewards and would be
 Once more with us before the great lake sea
 Was flushed to the red evening skies. Then she,
 I saw it, in her joy lost thought of me
 And could forget a moment That decree.
 I went, unwatched to set my passion free;
 Perhaps, I thought, unwatched my weird to dree.
 “I turned me home at noon. The house seemed lone,
 No greeting voice made answer to my own,
 But through the hush I heard a frequent moan.
 I traced it where I found her anguish-prone,
 Her writhing length athwart the cushions thrown,
 So left to die, for all in dread had flown:
 The black plague-roses on her cheek had blown.
 I knew my weird's first working on her shown.

 “I did not fear the plague, who inly knew
 The doom that had been meted out my due
 Must fence me from it though all else it slew:
 I held her till the death-films came to glue
 Her swollen lids apart: my cold hand drew
 Them o'er her faded eye's dull glazing blue:
 I still watched by her while the first plague hue
 Upon the corpse's face a blackness grew.

 “It was at the first evening hour she died;
 And I, so waiting by my dead one's side,
 Thought angrily of him who homewards hied,
 And joyed that now at least the linkings tied
 Between us since his sister was my bride,
 Now she was dead were snapt asunder wide.
 At length I heard his voice without that cried,
 And I went forth and smilingly replied.

 “I said, ‘Go in, thy sister was distressed,
 Long waiting for thee, and I bade her rest:
 I think e'en now her eyes are slumber-pressed:
 But thou, go clasp the sleeper to thy breast,
 Let her be wakened by her looked-for guest:
 She said not seeing thee she slept unblest,
 And named thee last half-dreaming; do her hest,
 Obey the call; 'twill be a goodly jest.

 “I led him to her softly: his fresh eye
 Could only glimmering outline yet descry,
 He saw her silent in the dimness lie,
 And breathed, ‘Yes she is sleeping,’ then drew nigh.
 And then I fled, and, that he should not fly,
 I fenced the door. And then I watched the sky
 That I might count how well the time went by,
 And thought, ‘He surely will go mad or die.’

 “Two hours, then near an hour, passed onward slow,
 The high east clouds were losing their last glow,
 So late it grew, when I returned to know
 If any evil came upon my foe.
 I only heard a gasping thick and low,
 I raised my torch his darkening face to show;
 He lay, plague-smitten, in the passing throe.
 I mocked him, watching, ‘Is the jest but so?’

 “He lay beside her, and I could not bear,
 Through my great hatred, that he should rest there:
 Ere yet the life had passed I sought to tear
 His arms from her. But suddenly from where
 The sun was sleeping, rose an awful glare
 That reddened on us. When it ceased to flare
 Its fiery anger I had lost all care
 Of love or hatred, and I left the pair.

 “But, when I was made strong with food and wine,
 I called to mind that need was to consign
 The darkening mass to fitter couch than mine,
 And could not choose but his close grasp untwine,
 That I might drag each where the mountain's spine
 Broke sudden lakewards in one high-ridged line.
 I hurled them downwards. From the steep incline
 I watched the startled ripples whirl and dwine.

 “And I was calmer than the lake; no throe
 Had stirred in me, no eddying of woe;
 And when once more it lay unmoved below
 I went in peace my tired limbs to bestow
 On my freed couch, alone but pangless so,
 And slept such quiet sleep as children know.
 But I awakened in this waste of snow
 Where evermore gnawed by quick cold I go.”

He ceased, and looked long with alternate gaze
On the dead faces that were fixed on him,
As seeking in some change in them to read
His change, if any change might grow to him.
But they and he looked still one rigid void.
And nothing stirred along the boundless snows,
And nothing broke the wide unbreathing calm.
He rose, and moved with slow and even pace:
And those strange dead were borne along with him,
As though they were himself. So they passed on.
And far away along the dreadful waste
I heard the droning murmur of his words
But knew not what they bore. And when they died
In distance all things slept in one great hush,
The plain of snow and the unchanging sky.
Translation: 
Language: 
Rate this poem: 

Reviews

No reviews yet.