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Thoughts of Home (6) - Druckversion +- Sonett-Forum (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum) +-- Forum: Sonett-Archiv (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=126) +--- Forum: Sonette aus germanischen Sprachen (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=394) +---- Forum: Englische Sonette (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=818) +----- Forum: Autoren B (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=830) +------ Forum: Bowman, Archibald Allan (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=1121) +------ Thema: Thoughts of Home (6) (/showthread.php?tid=17687) |
Thoughts of Home (6) - ZaunköniG - 13.06.2008 Thoughts of Home I As are the features of some well-loved face, One which a life's prolixity is writ In moving characters much conned and fit Across a single soulful ground to trace Feeling and thought and purpose, like the grace Which motion adds to loveliness (there flit The spirit's shades, and there the lamp is lit That lights twin souls to a lifelong embrace); So to the city-dweller hath the town, Much conned, its moving physiognomy, Which oft in exile, as the sun goes down, Teams in the caverned dusk of memory With haunting visions of dear streets, that crown Night's sorrow with entrancing imagery. II Does the slant touch of early light awake The sirens on the Clyde, and fling the door Wide on the city's rousing all-day roar? Are the streets well a-clatter? Do they break From tram and train, that travelling host, and take The town by storm? Does gathering traffic pour Over the tide-line of night's silent shore, Into the spaces, till the cobbles quake? While down the river, crowded to the brink With huddled shipyards, many a loaded quay, Ten hundred thousand volleying hammers clink; And the slow homing liner booms to see The ever-coiling waters still a-wink With mirrored shipping freighted for the sea. III Ah me, I dream of what they do at home This Sabbath sunrise of the early prime! The slumbering city waking to the chime Of opening church-bells, when the sun hath clomb Full half-way up the hollow of heaven's dome; The leisured family muster, the sublime Jollity and the uplift of the time That sets the week-worn spirit free to roam; The walking to the kirk, the solemn hour With the Creator, lapsing at the close Into the sweet expansiveness that plays Round the church door, when from the too tense power Of prayer and praise the natural spirit flows Back to its level. - That was in past days. IV What do they do to-day? What form of fear Haunts the now voided chambers of their life, Troubling its ancient tenor, parent, wife, Survivors of the broken circle dear In the old home enisled, as in some drear Interspace of existance, till the strife Is overblown, and but the echoes rife Volley adown the days still left them here? How they must suffer! - Yet these later shocks Displace not from my brain the life it knew Before the Power that our planned journey mocks, Over our faring war's dark glory drew; And when my miser mind its store unlocks, It takes out treasures rather old than new. V So thus I picture it, not as life lies Now writhing, but as when the days and nights Followed each other in unmarked delights; Nor noted we the measure of the prize Till all was over. Now the spirit cries, What time encroaching Inanition blights, For but the phantom of its past, and fights Extinction with its memories. Let them rise! Let me dissemble that as in past days The crystal fountain with delicious flow Of bursting social joy unconscious plays Over the garden close, where row by row The flowers of life in such profusion blaze That their own loveliness they do not know. VI Day follows night, and night returns to day Through all the enchanting stages of the spring; And exile lengthens out to months that fling Their shadow further, and my life grows gray; Grays even with the sun's increasing ray; While forward still the heading heats do wing Into the year, that softly rounds his ring To midsummer, and June is on the way: The perfect season, when the hawthorn blows Down cream-white Scottish hedges, and the spent Airs of the evening gently swaying close Tired eyes upon it, heavy with its scent; While on the Downs the beating sunlight glows, And sends the wildering roses over Kent. |