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The presence of the graceful Greek;
Achilles in his armor dressed;
Alcides with the Cretan bull;
And Aphrodite with her boy;
Or lovely Helena of Troy;
Still living and still beautiful。
Turn; turn; my wheel! 'T is nature's plan
The child should grow into the man;
The man grow wrinkled; old; and gray;
In youth the heart exults and sings;
The pulses leap; the feet have wings;
In age the cricket chirps; and brings
The harvest home of day。
And now the winds that southward blow;
And cool the hot Sicilian isle;
Bear me away。 I see below
The long line of the Libyan Nile;
Flooding and feeding the parched land
With annual ebb and overflow;
A fallen palm whose branches lie
Beneath the Abyssinian sky;
Whose roots are in Egyptian sands;
On either bank huge water…wheels;
Belted with jars and dripping weeds;
Send forth their melancholy moans;
As if; in their gray mantles hid;
Dead anchorites of the Thebaid
Knelt on the shore and told their beads;
Beating their breasts with loud appeals
And penitential tears and groans。
This city; walled and thickly set
With glittering mosque and minaret;
Is Cairo; in whose gay bazaars
The dreaming traveller first inhales
The perfume of Arabian gales;
And sees the fabulous earthen jars;
Huge as were those wherein the maid
Morgiana found the Forty Thieves
Concealed in midnight ambuscade;
And seeing; more than half believes
The fascinating tales that run
Through all the Thousand Nights and One;
Told by the fair Scheherezade。
More strange and wonderful than these
Are the Egyptian deities;
Ammonn; and Emeth; and the grand
Osiris; holding in his hand
The lotus; Isis; crowned and veiled;
The sacred Ibis; and the Sphinx;
Bracelets with blue enamelled links;
The Scarabee in emerald mailed;
Or spreading wide his funeral wings;
Lamps that perchance their night…watch kept
O'er Cleopatra while she slept;
All plundered from the tombs of kings。
Turn; turn; my wheel! The human race;
Of every tongue; of every place;
Caucasian; Coptic; or Malay;
All that inhabit this great earth;
Whatever be their rank or worth;
Are kindred and allied by birth;
And made of the same clay。
O'er desert sands; o'er gulf and bay;
O'er Ganges and o'er Himalay;
Bird…like I fly; and flying sing;
To flowery kingdoms of Cathay;
And bird…like poise on balanced wing
Above the town of King…te…tching;
A burning town; or seeming so;
Three thousand furnaces that glow
Incessantly; and fill the air
With smoke uprising; gyre on gyre
And painted by the lurid glare;
Of jets and flashes of red fire。
As leaves that in the autumn fall;
Spotted and veined with various hues;
Are swept along the avenues;
And lie in heaps by hedge and wall;
So from this grove of chimneys whirled
To all the markets of the world;
These porcelain leaves are wafted on;
Light yellow leaves with spots and stains
Of violet and of crimson dye;
Or tender azure of a sky
Just washed by gentle April rains;
And beautiful with celadon。
Nor less the coarser household wares;
The willow pattern; that we knew
In childhood; with its bridge of blue
Leading to unknown thoroughfares;
The solitary man who stares
At the white river flowing through
Its arches; the fantastic trees
And wild perspective of the view;
And intermingled among these
The tiles that in our nurseries
Filled us with wonder and delight;
Or haunted us in dreams at night。
And yonder by Nankin; behold!
The Tower of Porcelain; strange and old;
Uplifting to the astonished skies
Its ninefold painted balconies;
With balustrades of twining leaves;
And roofs of tile; beneath whose eaves
Hang porcelain bells that all the time
Ring with a soft; melodious chime;
While the whole fabric is ablaze
With varied tints; all fused in one
Great mass of color; like a maze
Of flowers illumined by the sun。
Turn; turn; my wheel! What is begun
At daybreak must at dark be done;
To…morrow will be another day;
To…morrow the hot furnace flame
Will search the heart and try the frame;
And stamp with honor or with shame
These vessels made of clay。
Cradled and rocked in Eastern seas;
The islands of the Japanese
Beneath me lie; o'er lake and plain
The stork; the heron; and the crane
Through the clear realms of azure drift;
And on the hillside I can see
The villages of Imari;
Whose thronged and flaming workshops lift
Their twisted columns of smoke on high;
Cloud cloisters that in ruins lie;
With sunshine streaming through each rift;
And broken arches of blue sky。
All the bright flowers that fill the land;
Ripple of waves on rock or sand;
The snow on Fusiyama's cone;
The midnight heaven so thickly sown
With constellations of bright stars;
The leaves that rustle; the reeds that make
A whisper by each stream and lake;
The saffron dawn; the sunset red;
Are painted on these lovely jars;
Again the skylark sings; again
The stork; the heron; and the crane
Float through the azure overhead;
The counterfeit and counterpart
Of Nature reproduced in Art。
Art is the child of Nature; yes;
Her darling child; in whom we trace
The features of the mother's face;
Her aspect and her attitude;
All her majestic loveliness
Chastened and softened and subdued
Into a more attractive grace;
And with a human sense imbued。
He is the greatest artist; then;
Whether of pencil or of pen;
Who follows Nature。 Never man;
As artist or as artisan;
Pursuing his own fantasies;
Can touch the human heart; or please;
Or satisfy our nobler needs;
As he who sets his willing feet
In Nature's footprints; light and fleet;
And follows fearless where she leads。
Thus mused I on that morn in May;
Wrapped in my visions like the Seer;
Whose eyes behold not what is near;
But only what is far away;
When; suddenly sounding peal on peal;
The church…bell from the neighboring town
Proclaimed the welcome hour of noon。
The Potter heard; and stopped his wheel;
His apron on the grass threw down;
Whistled his quiet little tune;
Not overloud nor overlong;
And ended thus his simple song:
Stop; stop; my wheel! Too soon; too soon
The noon will be the afternoon;
Too soon to…day be yesterday;
Behind us in our path we cast
The broken potsherds of the past;
And all are ground to dust a last;
And trodden into clay!
*************
BIRDS OF PASSAGE
FLIGHT THE FIFTH
THE HERONS OF ELMWOOD
Warm and still is the summer night;
As here by the river's brink I wander;
White overhead are the stars; and white
The glimmering lamps on the hillside yonder。
Silent are all the sounds of day;
Nothing I hear but the chirp of crickets;
And the cry of the herons winging their way
O'er the poet's house in the Elmwood thickets。
Call to him; herons; as slowly you pass
To your roosts in t