Spiral, spiral, the sickle winds;
Upwards, upwards, the squall winds,
To beat upon the beaten shore,
To hail upon the stoic shore;
Tremble rock; shatter, shards,
Reign, calm; gentle the peaks;
Shy and shirk; the waves
Disperse and die; the clouds
Pause and peace before the rock,
Wither and wear before the sun;
To gather before the dusk is done,
To lie before the day is due;
Snigger before the lonely shore,
Dance above the moonlit shore;
Spiral, spiral, the sickle winds;
Upwards, upwards, the squall winds,
To beat upon the beaten shore,
To roar upon the wrinkled shore;
Squall rock, before the dawn,
Wash away, with salty tears.
sunnuntai 12. kesäkuuta 2011
tiistai 7. kesäkuuta 2011
No dog barks in a distant post... Op. 37
No dog barks in a distant post,
The gate unbarred, the battlements worn,
No guard to play the copper horn,
None to blow the bugle of borderlands,
And to sound a warning of shifting sands,
Of inns and taverns which with dust,
Show the signs of decadence and lust.
Though here once sojourned the settlers pride,
No courageous soul now stays to reside,
To populate with childrens' cries,
To travel the trek with uplifted eyes;
The cities now barren, the land empty,
And like akin the unknown oasis, the fertile sea,
Should frown and scorn the race of man,
That leaves undone which with promise began,
And so should too the sun of west,
When unobserved from the citadel he lays to rest.
Yet not all is dead, open hangs not every gate,
No song sings of what is truly desolate,
So here too, one local recruit,
With dreary step and spotted suit,
Drags to man the post in the wall,
Which unmanned leaves the local gall,
To see how the red sun falls, in her bowl
And hear the lonesome wolves' howl.
There, on the stark steps of masonry,
Alone he grows slumberly and dreamy,
Throwing one glance to the southern way,
To dream of dreams which beyond there lay;
Of vivid beauty, with silver white,
With golden clad, towns beyond his sight,
And most of all, where with stern order,
He could banish the waning northern border.
Little he knows, that the silver and gold,
To pay the debts they ever are sold,
And that the Roman roads his mind does pave
With golden tiles, none would brave,
When the hounds of empire, in feral packs,
Have swept even the brigands with their attacks.
Yet, perhaps these things he indeed knew,
As to the northern lands he turns his view,
And wills to see some brazen horde,
Come back to sack and rule with sword;
In its head some flame-drunk Tamerlane,
To sweep this empire in his wane.
The gate unbarred, the battlements worn,
No guard to play the copper horn,
None to blow the bugle of borderlands,
And to sound a warning of shifting sands,
Of inns and taverns which with dust,
Show the signs of decadence and lust.
Though here once sojourned the settlers pride,
No courageous soul now stays to reside,
To populate with childrens' cries,
To travel the trek with uplifted eyes;
The cities now barren, the land empty,
And like akin the unknown oasis, the fertile sea,
Should frown and scorn the race of man,
That leaves undone which with promise began,
And so should too the sun of west,
When unobserved from the citadel he lays to rest.
Yet not all is dead, open hangs not every gate,
No song sings of what is truly desolate,
So here too, one local recruit,
With dreary step and spotted suit,
Drags to man the post in the wall,
Which unmanned leaves the local gall,
To see how the red sun falls, in her bowl
And hear the lonesome wolves' howl.
There, on the stark steps of masonry,
Alone he grows slumberly and dreamy,
Throwing one glance to the southern way,
To dream of dreams which beyond there lay;
Of vivid beauty, with silver white,
With golden clad, towns beyond his sight,
And most of all, where with stern order,
He could banish the waning northern border.
Little he knows, that the silver and gold,
To pay the debts they ever are sold,
And that the Roman roads his mind does pave
With golden tiles, none would brave,
When the hounds of empire, in feral packs,
Have swept even the brigands with their attacks.
Yet, perhaps these things he indeed knew,
As to the northern lands he turns his view,
And wills to see some brazen horde,
Come back to sack and rule with sword;
In its head some flame-drunk Tamerlane,
To sweep this empire in his wane.
perjantai 3. kesäkuuta 2011
I would, should the moon hide its silver face... Op. 36
I would, should the moon hide its silver face;
Should the stars shield away their golden blaze;
Should the mist clear, earth steal away her haze:
I could dare, and would, should she shy away her gaze.
"And I would honor her with a graceful kiss,
Kiss her with grace, and honor life with parting lips"
Yet flee would not the stars, not tonight,
The moon too, with vexed and enthralled light,
Would but gaze away at the graceful sight,
And smile from her austere and azure height
"Yet why care, for one smile and moment's bliss,
Heart and eyes see, whatever from blessed state"
And let moon sway and shake her silken frame,
Let the stars disjoint and flee their astral fame,
Let earth and water cease their lasting game,
What but a moment lasts shall never be the same
"Though a blink shall part that and this,
Not thousand more to stop the will of it"
Oh shame the night and the street-lamp sun!
With bravery and dare were the wars and kisses won,
Yet the dare the dying sun had just began,
With one flash of moon it's with cowardice outdone
"So, with waning moon we part, yet our lips meet not,
Nay, not a kiss today, I send none to meet the rest."
Should the stars shield away their golden blaze;
Should the mist clear, earth steal away her haze:
I could dare, and would, should she shy away her gaze.
"And I would honor her with a graceful kiss,
Kiss her with grace, and honor life with parting lips"
Yet flee would not the stars, not tonight,
The moon too, with vexed and enthralled light,
Would but gaze away at the graceful sight,
And smile from her austere and azure height
"Yet why care, for one smile and moment's bliss,
Heart and eyes see, whatever from blessed state"
And let moon sway and shake her silken frame,
Let the stars disjoint and flee their astral fame,
Let earth and water cease their lasting game,
What but a moment lasts shall never be the same
"Though a blink shall part that and this,
Not thousand more to stop the will of it"
Oh shame the night and the street-lamp sun!
With bravery and dare were the wars and kisses won,
Yet the dare the dying sun had just began,
With one flash of moon it's with cowardice outdone
"So, with waning moon we part, yet our lips meet not,
Nay, not a kiss today, I send none to meet the rest."
perjantai 29. huhtikuuta 2011
Idle Age, Op. 35
Once I on more idle age,
Let flow both wines of saint and sage,
And having none to compel, my flickering fire
Did tint an Angelic host with desire,
And pass day, its increase,
Did their spotless innocence cease.
There were the bountiful horns that did offer,
The overflowing contents of an Empire's coffer;
And there were the heirs of an apple-tree,
Which lowly did lay within the reach of me;
Yet as my grasp to them my fingers led,
The apples told, they'd made me a death-bed!
What followed was as decreed by a draconian law,
As with wild and frightened grip and claw,
I all the scarlet gardens did adjourn,
And having adjourned, set them to burn,
So that what to pleasure before I'd lost,
Was now but a shade what its retainment cost.
The smoke which silently from the wreck did rise,
I think, with tearful brand did scratch my eyes,
Till again the angels of innocence fled,
And with them the haze, and cleared this head;
The burning Eden was not fit for a sage,
And I yearned - yearned for an idler age.
Let flow both wines of saint and sage,
And having none to compel, my flickering fire
Did tint an Angelic host with desire,
And pass day, its increase,
Did their spotless innocence cease.
There were the bountiful horns that did offer,
The overflowing contents of an Empire's coffer;
And there were the heirs of an apple-tree,
Which lowly did lay within the reach of me;
Yet as my grasp to them my fingers led,
The apples told, they'd made me a death-bed!
What followed was as decreed by a draconian law,
As with wild and frightened grip and claw,
I all the scarlet gardens did adjourn,
And having adjourned, set them to burn,
So that what to pleasure before I'd lost,
Was now but a shade what its retainment cost.
The smoke which silently from the wreck did rise,
I think, with tearful brand did scratch my eyes,
Till again the angels of innocence fled,
And with them the haze, and cleared this head;
The burning Eden was not fit for a sage,
And I yearned - yearned for an idler age.
torstai 14. huhtikuuta 2011
Extempore
Oh Poet! sing me your sweetest song,
The world soon prove your singing wrong;
Oh Lover! sing me of your love's lore,
That love will demand you no more;
Fair Bumblebee! sing me of yon fair meadow,
Well I see, you of that mead nothing know;
Oh Lad! sing me of what you'd grow to be,
No matter, what are you to him or me;
Oh Lass! sing me of your youth and fun,
Your song will end when your work is done;
Oh Poet! sing me your sweetest song,
You do your duty with your golden tongue!
The world soon prove your singing wrong;
Oh Lover! sing me of your love's lore,
That love will demand you no more;
Fair Bumblebee! sing me of yon fair meadow,
Well I see, you of that mead nothing know;
Oh Lad! sing me of what you'd grow to be,
No matter, what are you to him or me;
Oh Lass! sing me of your youth and fun,
Your song will end when your work is done;
Oh Poet! sing me your sweetest song,
You do your duty with your golden tongue!
Cain at Euphrates, Op. 34
"It is I! Cain, the riddle-breaker,
The truthful idealist, the wave-waker,
The dreamer of dreams,
The schemer of schemes,
The Hero, who from the well of treasons,
Has drained the dregs of reasons;
I've tasted it all,
Done it all;
Drank it all!"
So issues Cain from the banks of Euphrates,
Where with fear and terror driven he falls,
Thinking that above the star-lit caverns and halls,
Stand still with vigilant ear,
Swaying closer for his boasts to hear,
And as he more leans to the river's brink,
He more dreams, laughing at his magnificient lies,
While his hands shatter the surface before his eyes,
And his lips embrace the rippling waves.
For tendays since that fateful turn,
The mark of slayer has in him burnt,
The blood that flowed in him has yet to stop;
In his mind the blade makes a screeching float,
And with pleasant ambient evokes his laughter,
Emerging from his thoughts of jubilant slaughter;
Till, early today he sees the river, where fearlessly,
The stains of blood he finally washes away,
And in idle fantasies he now spends his day;
Marvelling where the water reflects his face,
Onto which now is etched a handsome mark.
This here then, the kingdom of sinners,
Where both deliberate and foolishly branded will
Wander, and their own mark on the domains instill,
And build a prouder nation, which with diamond towers,
Will reach the realms of heaven in their cloudy bowers.
The river that fleetly flows here we'll redirect,
Its course through arid lands with manlier hand,
Will carve through rock and desert my joyful band,
And make irrigation over mead, farm over pasture,
Civilization over ruin, and ruin onto pastoral,
Make dreams come visions, and visions onto true,
So that blissful gardens will be anew,
And that blood that flowed ever will taste like wine,
And the blood flows from a knife, and the knife is mine.
So indolently dreams Cain, and his feats of tommorrow,
Like from his present they borrow,
As soon like a wild beast or a predator of dark,
He'll pounce on every pheasant or squalid lark.
The fate of villain is no lonely one,
As more villains than heroes here below the sun,
And neither will I be without a pair,
For ever the feminine form has sought for,
The villain and the knave, these they do adore;
And my queen shall be the fairest of all,
My Helen's beauty shall eclipse the stars,
And gather my corps from near and afar.
So issues Cain, from his golden throne lying,
From his kraks and citadels in Babylon's hills,
From his dark and towering satanic mills;
And in his mind the paladins of old are his,
Their hearts of gold are his hearts of cold;
The legions under his command untold,
His courts are filled with sagacious pedigree,
Philosophers crowd his door, the love of a woman,
Is his to ask for, his harem a mountain does span.
Yet not all can be, not all dreams be real,
His magnificient court is filled with rot,
The only philosophers those that here are not.
The truthful idealist, the wave-waker,
The dreamer of dreams,
The schemer of schemes,
The Hero, who from the well of treasons,
Has drained the dregs of reasons;
I've tasted it all,
Done it all;
Drank it all!"
So issues Cain from the banks of Euphrates,
Where with fear and terror driven he falls,
Thinking that above the star-lit caverns and halls,
Stand still with vigilant ear,
Swaying closer for his boasts to hear,
And as he more leans to the river's brink,
He more dreams, laughing at his magnificient lies,
While his hands shatter the surface before his eyes,
And his lips embrace the rippling waves.
For tendays since that fateful turn,
The mark of slayer has in him burnt,
The blood that flowed in him has yet to stop;
In his mind the blade makes a screeching float,
And with pleasant ambient evokes his laughter,
Emerging from his thoughts of jubilant slaughter;
Till, early today he sees the river, where fearlessly,
The stains of blood he finally washes away,
And in idle fantasies he now spends his day;
Marvelling where the water reflects his face,
Onto which now is etched a handsome mark.
This here then, the kingdom of sinners,
Where both deliberate and foolishly branded will
Wander, and their own mark on the domains instill,
And build a prouder nation, which with diamond towers,
Will reach the realms of heaven in their cloudy bowers.
The river that fleetly flows here we'll redirect,
Its course through arid lands with manlier hand,
Will carve through rock and desert my joyful band,
And make irrigation over mead, farm over pasture,
Civilization over ruin, and ruin onto pastoral,
Make dreams come visions, and visions onto true,
So that blissful gardens will be anew,
And that blood that flowed ever will taste like wine,
And the blood flows from a knife, and the knife is mine.
So indolently dreams Cain, and his feats of tommorrow,
Like from his present they borrow,
As soon like a wild beast or a predator of dark,
He'll pounce on every pheasant or squalid lark.
The fate of villain is no lonely one,
As more villains than heroes here below the sun,
And neither will I be without a pair,
For ever the feminine form has sought for,
The villain and the knave, these they do adore;
And my queen shall be the fairest of all,
My Helen's beauty shall eclipse the stars,
And gather my corps from near and afar.
So issues Cain, from his golden throne lying,
From his kraks and citadels in Babylon's hills,
From his dark and towering satanic mills;
And in his mind the paladins of old are his,
Their hearts of gold are his hearts of cold;
The legions under his command untold,
His courts are filled with sagacious pedigree,
Philosophers crowd his door, the love of a woman,
Is his to ask for, his harem a mountain does span.
Yet not all can be, not all dreams be real,
His magnificient court is filled with rot,
The only philosophers those that here are not.
keskiviikko 13. huhtikuuta 2011
There are certain old men... Op. 33
There are certain old men,
Who, when half-pressed lingers their day,
Do in winter bloom, all grizzled and gray.
And such wraiths they are! In the last years,
There's attained the bounties of sombrer age,
And the youthful vigour, diadem of king and sage,
There's gained anew, like from embers a fitful fire,
Or from chaste life, that in pleasure excess,
And having none to lose, the heavens glee and bless.
While many a youth I've seen in frenzied pace,
Dream-drunk their ambition's circuit a-race,
Few did possess a strength so haunting,
Than those few who with dissatisfied stance
Banish the wrinkled brow with austere countenance,
And who with a grip of unshaking hand
Clutch tight the scepter of their waning might,
And gaze forth from the shade of their waxing night.
Such men are the rigour of a state, yet still,
Many have bewailed the deeds, and many yet will,
To whom there is no progeny and no heirs do suffice.
The door of death behind them casts a breath of ice,
And what they feel in their backs, others in their grip,
For age makes blunt even remorse's wailing whip.
Who, when half-pressed lingers their day,
Do in winter bloom, all grizzled and gray.
And such wraiths they are! In the last years,
There's attained the bounties of sombrer age,
And the youthful vigour, diadem of king and sage,
There's gained anew, like from embers a fitful fire,
Or from chaste life, that in pleasure excess,
And having none to lose, the heavens glee and bless.
While many a youth I've seen in frenzied pace,
Dream-drunk their ambition's circuit a-race,
Few did possess a strength so haunting,
Than those few who with dissatisfied stance
Banish the wrinkled brow with austere countenance,
And who with a grip of unshaking hand
Clutch tight the scepter of their waning might,
And gaze forth from the shade of their waxing night.
Such men are the rigour of a state, yet still,
Many have bewailed the deeds, and many yet will,
To whom there is no progeny and no heirs do suffice.
The door of death behind them casts a breath of ice,
And what they feel in their backs, others in their grip,
For age makes blunt even remorse's wailing whip.
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