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Songs of Travel and Other Verses



by Robert Louis Stevenson












CONTENTS





I。       THE VAGABOND … Give to me the life I love

II。      YOUTH AND LOVE: I。 … Once only by the garden gate

III。     YOUTH AND LOVE: II。 … To the heart of youth the world is 

          a highwayside

IV。      In dreams; unhappy; I behold you stand

V。       She rested by the Broken Brook

VI。      The infinite shining heavens

VII。     Plain as the glistering planets shine

VIII。    To you; let snows and roses

IX。      Let Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams

X。       I know not how it is with you

XI。      I will make you brooches and toys for your delight

XII。     WE HAVE LOVED OF YORE … Berried brake and reedy island

XIII。    MATTER TRIUMPHANS … Son of my woman's body; you go; to 

          the drum and fife

XIV。     Bright is the ring of words

XV。      In the highlands; in the country places

XVI。     Home no more home to me; wither must I wander?

XVII。    WINTER … In rigorous hours; when down the iron lane

XVIII。   The stormy evening closes now in vain

XIX。     TO DR。 HAKE … In the beloved hour that ushers day

XX。      TO … I knew thee strong and quiet like the hills

XXI。     The morning drum…call on my eager ear

XXII。    I have trod the upward and downward slope

XXIII。   He hears with gladdened heart the thunder

XXIV。    Farewell; fair day and fading light!

XXV。     IF THIS WERE FAITH … God; if this were enough

XXVI。    MY WIFE … Trusty; dusky; vivid; true

XXVII。   TO THE MUSE … Resign the rhapsody; the dream

XXVIII。  TO AN ISLAND PRINCESS … Since long ago; a child at home

XXIX。    TO KALAKAUA … The Sliver Ship; my King … that was her name

XXX。     TO PRINCESS KAIULANI … Forth form her land to mine she goes

XXXI。    TO MOTHER MARYANNE … To see the infinite pity of this place

XXXII。   IN MEMORIAM E。 H。 … I knew a silver head was bright beyond compare

XXXIII。  TO MY WIFE … Long must elapse ere you behold again

XXXIV。   TO MY OLD FAMILIARS … Do you remember … can we e'er forget?

XXXV。    The tropics vanish; and meseems that I

XXXVI。   TO S。 C。 … I heard the pulse of the besieging sea

XXXVII。  THE HOUSE OF TEMBINOKA … Let us; who part like brothers; part

          like bards

XXXVIII。 THE WOODMAN … In all the grove; not stream nor bird

XXXIX。   TROPIC RAIN … As the single pang of the blow; when the metal is

          mingled well

XL。      AN END OF TRAVEL … Let now your soul in this substantial world

XLI。     We uncommiserate pass into the night

XLII。    Sing me a song of a lad that is gone

XLIII。   TO S。 R。 CROCKETT … Blows the wind to…day; and the sun and rain

          are flying

XLIV。    EVENSONG … The embers of the day are red





I … THE VAGABOND (To an air of Schubert)





GIVE to me the life I love;

Let the lave go by me;

Give the jolly heaven above

And the byway nigh me。

Bed in the bush with stars to see;

Bread I dip in the river …

There's the life for a man like me;

There's the life for ever。



Let the blow fall soon or late;

Let what will be o'er me;

Give the face of earth around

And the road before me。

Wealth I seek not; hope nor love;

Nor a friend to know me;

All I seek; the heaven above

And the road below me。



Or let autumn fall on me

Where afield I linger;

Silencing the bird on tree;

Biting the blue finger。

White as meal the frosty field …

Warm the fireside haven …

Not to autumn will I yield;

Not to winter even!



Let the blow fall soon or late;

Let what will be o'er me;

Give the face of earth around;

And the road before me。

Wealth I ask not; hope nor love;

Nor a friend to know me;

All I ask; the heaven above

And the road below me。





II … YOUTH AND LOVE … I





ONCE only by the garden gate

Our lips we joined and parted。

I must fulfil an empty fate

And travel the uncharted。



Hail and farewell!  I must arise;

Leave here the fatted cattle;

And paint on foreign lands and skies

My Odyssey of battle。



The untented Kosmos my abode;

I pass; a wilful stranger:

My mistress still the open road

And the bright eyes of danger。



Come ill or well; the cross; the crown;

The rainbow or the thunder;

I fling my soul and body down

For God to plough them under。





III … YOUTH AND LOVE … II





To the heart of youth the world is a highwayside。

Passing for ever; he fares; and on either hand;

Deep in the gardens golden pavilions hide;

Nestle in orchard bloom; and far on the level land

Call him with lighted lamp in the eventide。



Thick as the stars at night when the moon is down;

Pleasures assail him。  He to his nobler fate

Fares; and but waves a hand as he passes on;

Cries but a wayside word to her at the garden gate;

Sings but a boyish stave and his face is gone。





IV





IN dreams; unhappy; I behold you stand

As heretofore:

The unremembered tokens in your hand

Avail no more。



No more the morning glow; no more the grace;

Enshrines; endears。

Cold beats the light of time upon your face

And shows your tears。



He came and went。  Perchance you wept a while

And then forgot。

Ah me! but he that left you with a smile

Forgets you not。





V





SHE rested by the Broken Brook;

She drank of Weary Well;

She moved beyond my lingering look;

Ah; whither none can tell!



She came; she went。  In other lands;

Perchance in fairer skies;

Her hands shall cling with other hands;

Her eyes to other eyes。



She vanished。  In the sounding town;

Will she remember too?

Will she recall the eyes of brown

As I recall the blue?





VI





THE infinite shining heavens

Rose and I saw in the night

Uncountable angel stars

Showering sorrow and light。



I saw them distant as heaven;

Dumb and shining and dead;

And the idle stars of the night

Were dearer to me than bread。



Night after night in my sorrow

The stars stood over the sea;

Till lo!  I looked in the dusk

And a star had come down to me。





VII





PLAIN as the glistering planets shine

When winds have cleaned the skies;

Her love appeared; appealed for mine;

And wantoned in her eyes。



Clear as the shining tapers burned

On Cytherea's shrine;

Those brimming; lustrous beauties turned;

And called and conquered mine。



The beacon…lamp that Hero lit

No fairer shone on sea;

No plainlier summoned will and wit;

Than hers encouraged me。



I thrilled to feel her influence near;

I struck my flag at sight。

Her starry silence smote my ear

Like sudden drums at night。



I ran as; at the cannon's roar;

The troops the ramparts man …

As in the holy house of yore

The willing Eli ran。



Here; lady; lo! that servant stands

You picked from passing men;

And should you need nor heart nor hands

He bows and goes again。





VIII





TO you; let snow and roses

And golden locks belong。

These are the world's enslavers;

Let these delight the throng。

For her of duskier lustre

Whose favour still I wear;

The snow be in her kirtle;

The rose be in her hair!



The hue of highland rivers

Careering; full and cool;

From sable on to golden;

From rapid on to pool …

The hue of heather…honey;

The hue of honey…bees;

Shall tinge her golden shoulder;

Shall gild her tawny knees。





IX





LET Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams;

Beauty awake from rest!

Let Beauty awake

For Beauty's sake

In the hour when the birds awake in the brake

And the stars are bright in the west!



Let Beauty awake in the eve from the slumber of day;

Awake in the crimson eve!

In the day's dusk end

When the shades ascend;

Let her wake to the kiss of a tender friend

To render again and receive!





X





I KNOW not how it is with you …

I love the first and last;

The whole field of the present view;

The whole flow of the past。



One tittle of the things that are;

Nor you should change nor I …

One pebble in our path … one star

In all our heaven of sky。



Our lives; and every day and hour;

One symphony appear:

One road; one garden … every flower

And every bramble dear。





XI





I WILL make you brooches and toys for your delight

Of bird…song at morning and star…shine at night。

I will make a palace fit for you and me

Of green days in forests and blue days at sea。



I will make my kitchen; and you shall keep your room;

Where white flows the river and bright blows the broom;

And you shall wash your linen and keep your body white

In rainfall at morning and dewfall at night。



And this shall be for music when no one else is near;

The fine song for singing; the rare song to hear!

That only I remember; that only you admire;

Of the broad road that stretches and the roadside fire。





XII … WE HAVE LOVED OF YORE (To an air of Diabelli)





BERRIED br

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