Complete works of willia.., p.416

Complete Works of William Morris, page 416

 

Complete Works of William Morris
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  But no heed took his fellows of his case,

  Till Firuz, with a side-glance at him, said,

  “Why mourn ye more that yet another face

  Must see our shame and sorrow in this place?

  Do ye not know this worldly man is come

  To lay the last one of us in his home?

  “And now in turn another soul is gone,

  Get ready then to bear him forth straightway.

  Be patient, for the heavy days crawl on!

  But thou, O friend, I pray thee from this day

  Help thou us helpless men, who cannot pray

  Even to die; no long time will it be

  Ere we shall leave this countless wealth to thee.

  “Behold, a master, not a slave, we need,

  For we, I say, have neither will to die

  Nor yet to live, yet will we pay good heed

  To thy commands, still doing patiently

  Our daily tasks, as the dull time goes by;

  Drive us like beasts, yea, slay us if thou wilt,

  Nor will our souls impute to thee the guilt.

  “Yet ask us not to tell thee of our tale,

  Why we are brought unto this sad estate,

  Nor for the rest will any words avail

  To make us flee from this lone house, where fate

  With all its cruel sport will we await;

  Lo, now thy task, O fellow, in return

  A mighty kingdom’s wealth thou soon shalt earn.”

  Now as he spoke, a hard forgetfulness

  Of his own lot, the rich man’s cruel pride,

  Smote Bharam’s heart, he thought, “What dire distress

  Could make me cast all hope of life aside?

  Could aught but death my life and will divide:

  Surely this mood of theirs will pass away

  And these walls yet may see a merry day.”

  So thought he, yet, beholding them again,

  And seeing them so swallowed up with woe

  That they scarce heeded him, a pang of pain

  Like pleasure’s death throughout his heart did go;

  And therewithal a strong desire to know

  The utmost of their tale possessed his mind

  And made him scorn an easy life and blind.

  So midst his silence neither spoke they aught,

  Firuz himself, as one, who having laid

  His charge upon another, may take thought

  Of l is own miseries, sat with head downweighed,

  With tears that would not flow; then Bharam said,

  “Masters, I bid you rise and do your best

  To give your fellow’s body its due rest!”

  They rose up at his words and straight began,

  As men who oft had had such things to do,

  To dress the body of the just-dead man

  For his last resting-place, then two and two

  They bore it forth, passing the chambers through,

  Where Bharam on that morn had hoped to see

  Fair folk that had no name for misery.

  Then through the sunny pleasance slow they passed,

  That sweet with flowers behind the palace lay,

  Until they reached a thick, black wood at last,

  Bounding the garden as the night bounds day,

  And through a narrow path they took their way,

  Less like to men than shadows in a dream,

  Till the wood ended at a swift broad stream,

  Beneath the boughs dark green it ran, and deep,

  Well-nigh awash with the wood’s tangled grass,

  But on the other side wall-like and steep,

  Straight from the gurgling eddies, rose a mass

  Of dark grey cliff; no man unhelped could pass;

  But a low door e’en in the very base

  Was set, above the water’s hurrying race.

  Of iron seemed that door to Bharam’s eyes,

  Heavily wrought, and closely locked it seemed;

  But as he stared thereon strange thoughts would rise

  Within his heart, until he well-nigh deemed

  That he in morning sleep of such things dreamed,

  And dreamed that he had seen all this before,

  Wood and deep river, cliff, and close-shut door.

  But in the stream, and close unto his feet,

  A boat there lay, as though for wafting o’er

  Whoso had will such doubtful things to meet

  As that strange door might hide; and on the shore,

  About the path, a rod of ground or more

  Was cleared of wood, in which space here and there

  Low changing mounds told of dead men anear.

  So there that doleful company made stay,

  And ‘twixt the trees and swift stream hurrying by,

  Their brother’s body in the earth did lay.

  Nor ever to the cliff would raise an eye,

  But trembling, as with added agony,

  Did their dull task as swiftly as they could,

  Then went their way again amidst the wood.

  NOW with these dreary folk must Bharam live

  Henceforward, doing even as he would;

  And many a joy the palace had to give

  To such a man as e’en could find life good

  So prisoned, and with nought to stir the blood,

  And seeing still from weary day to day

  These wretched mourners cast their lives away.

  Yet came deliverance; one by one they died,

  E’en as new-come he saw that man die first,

  And so were buried by the river-side.

  And ever as he saw these men accurst

  Vanish from life, he grew the more athirst

  To know what evil deed had been their bane,

  But still were all his prayers therefor in vain.

  His utmost will in all things else they did,

  Serving as slaves if he demanded aught,

  But in grim silence still their story hid;

  Nor did he fare the better when he sought

  In the fair parchments that scribes’ hands had wrought

  Within that house. Of many a tale they told;

  But none the tale of that sad life did hold.

  Therefore in silence he consumed his days

  Until a weary year had clean gone by

  Since first upon that palace he did gaze,

  And all that doleful band had he seen die,

  Except Firuz; and ever eagerly

  Did Bharam watch him, lest he too should go,

  And make an end of all he longed to know.

  At last a day came when the mourner said,

  “Beneath the ground my woe thou soon shalt lay,

  And all our foolish sorrow shall be dead;

  Come then, I fain would show thee the straight way

  Through which we came the night of that passed day

  When first I brought thee here. This knowledge thine,

  Guard thou this house, and use it as a mine;

  “While safe thou dwellest in some city fair, —

  Hasten, for little strength is in me now!”

  But Bharam thought, “Yet will he not lay bare

  His story to me utterly, and show

  What-thing it was that brought these men so low.”

  Yet said he nought, but from the house they went,

  While painfully the mourner on him leant.

  So, the wood gained, by many glades they passed

  That Firuz heeded not, though they were wide,

  Until they reached a certain one at last,

  Whereon he said, “Here did we come that tide;

  I counsel thee no longer to abide

  When I am dead, but mount my mule and go,

  Nor doubt the beast the doubtful way shall know.

  “She too shall serve thee when thou com’st again,

  With many men, and sumpter mules enow

  To gather up the wealth we held in vain, —

  Turn me, I would depart! fainter I grow!

  And thou the road to happy life dost know.

  Alas, my feet are heavy! nor can I

  Go any further. Lay me down to die!”

  Then ‘gainst a tree-root Bharam laid his head,

  Saying, “Fear not, thou hast been good to me,

  And by the river-side, when thou art dead,

  I will not fail to lay thee certainly!”

  “Nay, nay,” he said, “what matter — let it be!

  I bring the dismal rite unto an end.

  Hide my bones here, and toward thy city wend!

  “Better perchance that thou beholdest not

  That place once more, our misery and bane!”

  Then at that word did Bharam’s heart wax hot;

  He seemed at point his whole desire to gain.

  He cried aloud, “Nay, surely all in vain

  Thy secret hast thou hidden till this day,

  Since to the mystic road thou showest the way!”

  “My will is weak,” his friend said, “thine is strong;

  Draw near, and I will tell thee all the tale,

  If this my feeble voice will last so long.

  Perchance my dying words may yet avail

  To make thee wise. This pouch of golden scale,

  Open thou it. The gold key hid therein

  Opens the story of our foolish sin.

  “How thy face flushes, holding it! Just so,

  As by that door I stood, did my face burn

  That summer morning past so long ago.

  Draw nigher still if thou the tale wouldst learn.

  I scarce can speak now, and withal I yearn

  To die at last, and leave the thing unsaid.

  Raise thou me up, or I shall soon be dead!”

  His fellow raised him trembling, nor durst speak

  Lest he should scare his feeble life away,

  Then from his mouth came wailing words, and weak:

  “Where art thou then, O loveliest one, to-day?

  Beneath the odorous boughs that gladden May,

  Laid in the thymy hollow of some hill,

  Dost thou remember me a little still?

  “Can kindness such as thine was, vanish quite

  And be forgotten? Ah, if I forget,

  Canst thou forget the love and fresh delight

  That held thee then — my love that even yet

  Midst other love must make thy sweet eyes wet,

  At least sometimes, at least when heaven and earth

  In some fair eve are grown too fair for mirth?

  “O joy departed, know’st thou how at first

  I prayed in vain, and strove with hope to dull

  My ravening hunger, mock my quenchless thirst?

  And know’st thou not how when my life was full

  Of nought but pain, I strove asleep to lull

  My longing for the eyeless, hopeless rest,

  Lest even yet strange chance should bring the best?

  “Farewell, farewell, beloved! I depart,

  But hope, once dead, now liveth though I die,

  Whispering of marvels to my fainting heart —

  Perchance the memory of some written lie,

  Perchance the music of the rest anigh;

  I know not — but farewell, be no more sad!

  For life and love that has been, I am glad.”

  He ceased, and his friend, trembling, faintly said —

  “Wilt thou not speak to me, what hast thou done?’

  But even as he spoke, the mourner’s head

  Fell backward, and his troubled soul was gone;

  And Bharam, in the forest left alone,

  Durst scarcely move at first for very fear,

  And longing for the tale he was to hear.

  But in a while the body down he laid,

  And swiftly gat him o’er the hot dry plain,

  And through the garden, as a man afraid,

  Went softly, and the golden porch did gain,

  And from the wealth those men had held in vain,

  Most precious things he did not spare to take

  For his new life and joyous freedom’s sake.

  So doing he came round unto the door

  That led out to the passage through the wood,

  Wherethrough the mourners erst their dead ones bore

  Down to the river; but as there he stood

  He felt a new fire kindling in his blood;

  His sack he laid aside, and touched the key

  That could unlock that dreadful history;

  And his friend’s words, that loving tender voice

  He sent forth ere he died, smote on his heart:

  How could he leave those dead men and rejoice

  With folk who in their story had no part?

  Yea, as he lingered did the hot tears start

  Into his eyes, he wept, and knew not why;

  Some pleasure seemed within his grasp to lie,

  He could not grasp or name, and none the less

  He muttered to himself, “I must be gone

  Or I shall die in this fair wilderness,

  That every minute seems to grow more lone;

  Why do I stand here like a man of stone?”

  And with that very word he moved indeed,

  But took the path that toward the stream did lead.

  Quickly he walked with pale face downward bent,

  As ‘twixt the trembling tulip-beds he passed,

  Until a horror seized him as he went,

  And, turning toward the house, he ran full fast,

  Nor, till he reached it, one look backward cast;

  And by the gathered treasure, left behind

  Awhile ago, he stood confused, half blind.

  Then slowly did he lift the precious weight,

  Yet lingered still. “Ah, must I go?” he said,

  “Have I no heart to meet that unknown fate?

  And must I lead the life that once I led,

  Midst folk who will rejoice when I am dead;

  Even as if they had not shared with me

  The fear and longing of felicity?”

  “And yet indeed if I must live alone,

  If fellowship is but an empty dream,

  Is there not left a world that is mine own?

  Am I not real, if all else doth but seem?

  Yea, rather, with what wealth the world doth teem,

  When we are once content from us to cast

  The dreadful future and remorseful past.”

  A little while he lingered yet, and then

  As fearful what he might be tempted to,

  He hurried on until he reached again

  The outer door, and, sighing, passed therethrough,

  But still made haste to do what he must do,

  And found the mule and cast on her the sack,

  And took his way to that lone forest-track.

  Mattock and spade with him too did he bear,

  And dug a grave beneath the spreading tree

  Whereby Firuz had died, and laid him there,

  Thinking the while of all his misery,

  And muttering still, “How could it hap to me?

  Unless I died within a day or two

  Surely some deed I soon should find to do.”

  But when the earth on him he ‘gan to throw,

  He said, “And shall I cast the key herein?

  What need have I this woeful tale to know,

  To vex me midst the fair life I shall win;

  Why do I seek to probe my fellow’s sin,

  Who, living, saved my life from misery,

  And dying, gave this fresh life unto me?”

  He kept the key, his words he answered not,

  But smoothed the earth above the mourner’s head,

  Then mounting, turned away from that sad spot,

  Feverish with hope and change, bewildered,

  And ever more oppressed with growing dread,

  As through the dark and silent wood he rode,

  And drew the nigher unto man’s abode.

  But when at last he met the broad sweet light

  Upon the hill’s brow where that wood had end,

  And saw the open upland fresh and bright,

  A thrill of joy that sight through him must send,

  And with good heart he ‘twixt the fields did wend,

  And not so much of that sad house he thought

  As of the wealthy life he thence had brought;

  So amidst thoughts of pleasant life and ease,

  Seemed all things fair that eve; the peasant’s door,

  The mother with the child upon her knees

  Sitting within upon the shaded floor;

  While ‘neath the trellised gourd some maid sung o’er

  Her lover to the rude lute’s trembling strings,

  Her brown breast heaving ‘neath the silver rings;

  The slender damsel coming from the well,

  Smiling beneath the flashing brazen jar,

  Her fellows left behind thereat, to tell

  How weary of her smiles her lovers are;

  While the small children round wage watery war

  Till the thin linen more transparent grows,

  And ruddy brown the flesh beneath it glows;

  The trooper drinking at the homestead gate,

  Telling wild lies about the sword and spear,

  Unto the farmer striving to abate

  The pedler’s price; the village drawing near,

  The smoke, that scenting the fresh eve, and clear,

  Tells of the feast; the stithy’s dying spark,

  The barn’s wealth dimly showing through the dark.

  How sweet was all! how easy it should be

  Amid such life one’s self-made woes to bear!

  He felt as one who, waked up suddenly

  To life’s delight, knows not of grief or care.

  How kind, how lovesome, all the people were!

  Why should he think of aught but love and bliss

  With many years of such-like life as this?

  Night came at last, and darker and more still

  The world was, and the stars hung in the sky,

 

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