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The Everlasting Mercy Part 6

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The gate was backed against the ryme To pa.s.s the cows at milking time.

And by the gate as I went out A moldwarp rooted earth wi 's snout.

A few steps up the Callows' Lane Brought me above the mist again; The two great fields arose like death Above the mists of human breath.

All earthly things that blessed morning Were everlasting joy and warning.

The gate was Jesus' way made plain, The mole was Satan foiled again, Black blinded Satan snouting way Along the red of Adam's clay; The mist was error and d.a.m.nation, The lane the road unto salvation, Out of the mist into the light; O blessed gift of inner sight.



The past was faded like a dream; There come the jingling of a team, A ploughman's voice, a clink of chain, Slow hoofs, and harness under strain.

Up the slow slope a team came bowing, Old Callow at his autumn ploughing, Old Callow, stooped above the hales.

Ploughing the stubble into wales; His grave eyes looking straight ahead, Shearing a long straight furrow red; His plough-foot high to give it earth To bring new food for men to birth.

O wet red swathe of earth laid bare, O truth, O strength, O gleaming share, O patient eyes that watch the goal, O ploughman of the sinner's soul.

O Jesus, drive the coulter deep To plough my living man from sleep.

Slow up the hill the plough team plod, Old Callow at the task of G.o.d, Helped by man's wit, helped by the brute Turning a stubborn clay to fruit, His eyes for ever on some sign To help him plough a perfect line.

At top of rise the plough team stopped, The fore-horse bent his head and cropped Then the chains chack, the bra.s.ses jingle, The lean reins gather through the cringle, The figures move against the sky, The clay wave breaks as they go by.

I kneeled there in the muddy fallow, I knew that Christ was there with Callow, That Christ was standing there with me, That Christ had taught me what to be, That I should plough, and as I ploughed My Saviour Christ would sing aloud, And as I drove the clods apart Christ would be ploughing in my heart, Through rest-harrow and bitter roots, Through all my bad life's rotten fruits.

O Christ who holds the open gate, O Christ who drives the furrow straight, O Christ, the plough, O Christ, the laughter Of holy white birds flying after, Lo, all my heart's field red and torn, And Thou wilt bring the young green corn, The young green corn divinely springing, The young green corn for ever singing; And when the field is fresh and fair Thy blessed feet shall glitter there.

And we will walk the weeded field, And tell the golden harvest's yield, The corn that makes the holy bread By which the soul of man is fed, The holy bread, the food unpriced, Thy everlasting mercy, Christ.

The share will jar on many a stone, Thou wilt not let me stand alone; And I shall feel (Thou wilt not fail), Thy hand on mine upon the hale.

Near Bullen Bank, on Gloucester Road, Thy everlasting mercy showed The ploughman patient on the hill For ever there, for ever still, Ploughing the hill with steady yoke Of pine-trees lightning-struck and broke.

I've marked the May Hill ploughman stay There on his hill, day after day Driving his team against the sky, While men and women live and die.

And now and then he seems to stoop To clear the coulter with the scoop, Or touch an ox to haw or gee While Severn stream goes out to sea.

The sea with all her s.h.i.+ps and sails, And that great smoky port in Wales, And Gloucester tower bright i' the sun, All know that patient wandering one.

And sometimes when they burn the leaves The bonfires' smoking trails and heaves, And girt red flames twink and twire As though he ploughed the hill afire.

And in men's hearts in many lands A spiritual ploughman stands For ever waiting, waiting now, The heart's 'Put in, man, zook the plough.'

By this the sun was all one glitter, The little birds were all in twitter; Out of a tuft a little lark Went higher up than I could mark, His little throat was all one thirst To sing until his heart should burst, To sing aloft in golden light His song from blue air out of sight.

The mist drove by, and now the cows Came plodding up to milking house, Followed by Frank, the Callows' cowman, Who whistled 'Adam was a ploughman.'

There come such cawing from the rooks, Such running chuck from little brooks, One thought it March, just budding green With hedgerows full of celandine.

An otter out of stream and played, Two hares come loping up and stayed; Wide-eyed and tender-eared but bold.

Sheep bleated up by Penny's fold.

I heard a partridge covey call; The morning sun was bright on all.

Down the long slope the plough team drove The tossing rooks arose and hove.

A stone struck on the share. A word Came to the team. The red earth stirred.

I crossed the hedge by shooter's gap, I hitched my boxer's belt a strap, I jumped the ditch and crossed the fallow I took the hales from farmer Callow.

How swift the summer goes, Forget-me-not, pink, rose.

The young gra.s.s when I started And now the hay is carted, And now my song is ended, And all the summer spended; The blackbird's second brood Routs beech-leaves in the wood The pink and rose have speeded, Forget-me-not has seeded.

Only the winds that blew, The rain that makes things new, The earth that hides things old, And blessings manifold.

O lovely lily clean, O lily springing green, O lily bursting white, Dear lily of delight, Spring in my heart agen That I may flower to men.

GREAT HAMPDEN. June 1911.

NOTE

'The Everlasting Mercy' first appeared in _The English Review_ for October 1911. I thank the Editor and Proprietors of that paper for permitting me to reprint it here. The persons and events described in the poem are entirely imaginary, and no reference is made or intended to any living person.

JOHN MASEFIELD.

THE RIVERSIDE PRESS LIMITED, EDINBURGH

FROM SIDGWICK & JACKSON'S LIST

JOHN MASEFIELD

THE WIDOW IN THE BYE STREET.

Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d. net. Third Impression

"Mr Masefield is no common realist, but universalizes his tragedy in the grand manner.... We are convinced that he is writing truly of human nature, which is the vital thing.... The last few stanzas show us pastoral poetry in the very perfection of simplicity."--_Spectator_.

"In 'The Widow in the Bye Street' all Mr Masefield's pa.s.sionate love of loveliness is utterly fused with the violent and unlovely story, which glows with an inner harmony. The poem, it is true, ends on a note of idyllism which recalls Theocritus; but this is no touch of eternal decoration. Inevitably the story has worked towards this culmination."--_Bookman_.

THE TRAGEDY OF POMPEY THE GREAT.

A Play in Three Acts. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d. net. Wrappers, 1s. 6d.

net. Third Impression

"In this Roman tragedy, while we admire its closely knit structure, dramatic effectiveness, and atmosphere of reality ... the warmth and colour of the diction are the most notable things.... He knows the art of phrasing; he has the instinct for and by them."--_Athaeneum_.

"He has written a great tragedy.... The dialogue is written in strong, simple and nervous prose, flas.h.i.+ng with poetic insight, significance and suggestion. The characters are intensely alive, the situations are handled by a master hand, and the whole play is pregnant with that high and solemn pathos which is the gift of the born writer of tragedies."--_Morning Post_.

AUTUMN, 1913

_NEW EDITION_

EDINBURGH REVISITED. By JAMES BONE. Extra Crown 8vo, with 50 Drawings by HANSLIP FLETCHER. Cloth gilt, 5s. net. Original Edition, with Etched Frontispiece, 16 Collotypes, and over 50 Line Drawings by HANSLIP FLETCHER, Demy 4to, 264 pages, 1, 1s. net; Edition de Luxe, limited to 30 signed copies, 3, 3s. each.

TOM BROWN'S SCHOOLDAYS. By THOMAS HUGHES. With a Preface by LORD KILBRACKEN, and an Introduction and Notes by F. SIDGWICK. Ill.u.s.trated from contemporary Portraits and Drawings. Large square 8vo, buckram gilt, 10s. 6d. net.

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