SONNETS AND VERSE
BY
H. BELLOC
BY
H. BELLOC
DUCKWORTH & CO.
3 HENRIETTA STREET, LONDON, W.C.
{iv}
First Published in 1923
All rights reserved
Made and Printed in Great Britain
by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh
{v}
To
JOHN SWINNERTON PHILLIMORE
A DEDICATION
WITH THIS BOOK OF VERSE
I. SONNETS | ||
---|---|---|
PAGE | ||
I. | Lift up your Hearts in Gumber, laugh the Weald | 3 |
II. | I was like one that keeps the Deck by Night | 4 |
III. | Rise up and do begin the Day’s Adorning | 5 |
IV. | The Winter Moon has such a quiet Car | 6 |
V. | Whatever Moisture nourishes the Rose | 7 |
VI. | Youth gave you to me, but I’ll not believe | 8 |
VII. | Mortality is but the Stuff you wear | 9 |
VIII. | Not for the Luckless Buds our Roots may bear | 10 |
IX. | That which is one they Shear and make it Twain | 11 |
X. | Shall any Man for whose strong love another | 12 |
XI. | They that have taken Wages of things done | 13 |
XII. | Beauty that Parent is to deathless Rhyme | 14 |
XIII. | What are the Names for Beauty? Who shall praise | 15 |
XIV. | Love wooing Honour, Honour’s Love did win | 16 |
XV. | Your Life is like a little Winter’s Day | 17 |
XVI. | Now shall the certain Purpose of my Soul | 18 |
XVII. | Because my faltering Feet may fail to dare | 19 |
XVIII. | When you to Acheron’s ugly Water come | 20 |
XIX. | We will not Whisper, we have found the Place{viii} | 21 |
XX. | I went to Sleep at Dawn in Tuscany | 22 |
XXI. | Almighty God, whose Justice like a Sun | 23 |
XXII. | Mother of all my Cities once there lay | 24 |
XXIII. | November is that Historied Emperor | 25 |
XXIV. | Hoar Time about the House betakes him Slow | 26 |
XXV. | It Freezes: all across a soundless Sky | 27 |
XXVI. | O my Companion, O my Sister Sleep | 28 |
XXVII. | Are you the End, Despair, or the poor least | 29 |
XXVIII. | But Oh! not Lovely Helen, nor the Pride | 30 |
XXIX. | The World’s a Stage. The Light is in One’s Eyes | 31 |
XXX. | The World’s a Stage—and I’m the Super Man | 32 |
XXXI. | The World’s a Stage. The trifling Entrance Fee | 33 |
LYRICAL, DIDACTIC AND GROTESQUE | ||
To Dives | 37 | |
Stanzas Written on Battersea Bridge during a South-Westerly Gale | 39 | |
The South Country | 42 | |
The Fanatic | 45 | |
The Early Morning | 48 | |
Our Lord and Our Lady | 49 | |
Courtesy | 51 | |
The Night | 53 | |
The Leader | 54 | |
A Bivouac{ix} | 56 | |
To the Balliol Men still in Africa | 57 | |
Verses to a Lord who, in the House of Lords, said that those who Opposed the South African Adventure confused Soldiers with Money-Grubbers | 59 | |
The Rebel | 61 | |
The Prophet Lost in the Hills at Evening | 63 | |
The End of the Road | 65 | |
An Oracle that Warned the Writer when on Pilgrimage | 67 | |
The Death and Last Confession of Wandering Peter | 68 | |
Dedicatory Ode | 70 | |
Dedication on the Gift of a Book to a Child | 78 | |
Dedication of a Child’s Book of Imaginary Tales | 79 | |
Homage | 80 | |
The Moon’s Funeral | 81 | |
The Happy Journalist | 83 | |
Lines to a Don | 85 | |
Newdigate Poem | 88 | |
The Yellow Mustard | 93 | |
The Politician or the Irish Earldom | 94 | |
The Loser | 96 | |
SONGS | ||
Noël | 99 | |
The Birds | 101 | |
In a Boat | 102 | |
Song inviting the Influence of a Young Lady upon the Opening Year{x} | 104 | |
The Ring | 105 | |
Cuckoo! | 106 | |
The Little Serving Maid | 107 | |
Auvergnat | 110 | |
Drinking Song, on the Excellence of Burgundy Wine | 111 | |
Drinking Dirge | 113 | |
West Sussex Drinking Song | 115 | |
A Ballad on Sociological Economics | 117 | |
Heretics All | 118 | |
Ha’nacker Mill | 119 | |
Tarantella | 120 | |
The Chaunty of the “Nona” | 122 | |
The Winged Horse | 125 | |
Strephon’s Song (from “The Cruel Shepherdess”) | 127 | |
IV. BALLADES | ||
Short Ballade and Postscript on Consols and Boers | 131 | |
Ballade of the Unanswered Question | 134 | |
Ballade to Our Lady of Czestochowa | 136 | |
Ballade of Hell and of Mrs Roebeck | 138 | |
Ballade of Unsuccessful Men | 140 | |
Ballade of the Heresiarchs | 142 | |
V. EPIGRAMS | 147 | |
VI. THE BALLAD OF VAL-ÈS-DUNES | 157 |
VERSES TO A LORD WHO, IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, SAID THAT THOSE WHO OPPOSED THE SOUTH AFRICAN ADVENTURE CONFUSED SOLDIERS WITH MONEY-GRUBBERS
Translation of the above:—
A PRIZE POEM SUBMITTED BY MR LAMBKIN, THEN SCHOLAR AND LATER FELLOW OF BURFORD COLLEGE, TO THE EXAMINERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD ON THE PRESCRIBED POETIC THEME SET BY THEM IN 1893, “THE BENEFITS OF THE ELECTRIC LIGHT”
INVITING THE INFLUENCE OF A YOUNG LADY UPON THE OPENING YEAR
(FROM “THE CRUEL SHEPHERDESS”)
Postscript.
Last Envoi.
On His Books
On Noman, a Guest
A Trinity
On Torture, a Public Singer
On Paunch, a Parasite
On Hygiene
On Lady Poltagrue, a Public Peril
The Mirror
The Elm
The Telephone
The Statue
Epitaph on the Favourite Dog of a Politician
Epitaph on the Politician Himself
Another on the Same
On Mundane Acquaintances
On a Rose for Her Bosom
On the Little God
On a Prophet
On a Dead Hostess
On a Great Election
On a Mistaken Mariner
On a Sleeping Friend
Fatigued
On Benicia, who Wished Him Well
The False Heart
Partly from the Greek
THE VICTORY OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR IN HIS YOUTH OVER THE REBELS AT VAL-ÈS-DUNES IN THE YEAR 1047
[This piece of verse is grossly unhistorical. Val-ès-Dunes is not on the sea but inland. No Norman blazoned a shield or a church window in the middle eleventh century, still less would he frame one in silver, and I doubt gilt spurs. It was not the young Bastard of Falaise, but the men of the King in Paris that really won the battle. There was nothing Scandinavian left in Normandy, and whatever there had been five generations before was slight. The Colentin had no more Scandinavian blood than the rest. There is no such place as Longuevaile. There is a Hauteville, but it has no bay and had nothing to do with the Harcourts, and the Harcourts were not of Bloodroyal—and so forth.]
FOOTNOTES:
[C] Never mind.
[E] To be pronounced as a monosyllable in the Imperial fashion.
[F] Mr Punt, Mr Howl, and Mr Grewcock (now, alas, deceased).
[G] A neat rendering of “Sublimi feriam sidera vertice.”
[H] To the Examiners: These facts (of which I guarantee the accuracy) were given me by a Director.
[I] A reminiscence of Milton: “Fas est et ab hoste docere.”
[J] Lambkin told me he regretted this line, which was for the sake of Rhyme. He would willingly have replaced it, but to his last day could construct no substitute.