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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
NORWEGIAN SONNETS, SELS., by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON Alternate Author Name(s): Haliburton, Hugh | |||
I. BALDER BACK! FACING the North, in the grey sea he stands. The solar orb comes northward, sliding slow, And-empties on him its solstitial glow! Blinks up at last with tear- bewildered glands The puzzled jotun: from his rough red hands Slip the huge balls of hard compacted snow That in his wrath enraged he meant to throw, And where they melt, behold! a brace of vands. Meanwhile the blinding tears run down his cheeks, Like torrents swollen with sudden summer rain; In vain deep-knuckling in his eyes he seeks To clear his sight-the cataracts burst amain; Till, at the last, he gets a peep, and speaks ·· - It's you, Balder! So you've got back again! II. UP THE SKAGER RACK. IT was the point of dawn; and in the bow I stood alone, facing the grey north- east. Far on the left, like a huge brown sea- beast That had been chased and was o'ertaken now, Surprised asleep, lay Norway. From the prow A hissing of salt spray that still increased Rose plainly audible--for the gale had ceased And the keel cut the sea- plain like a plough. And so with only a ripple on the sea, And ne'er a storm- cloud o'er us muttering black, We voyaged with an easy course and free And-disappointing, now on looking back; For the old sagas make the surges flee Like riderless horses up the Skager Rack. III. WELCOME! WAS it the filial instinct of a child Yearning to visit the ancestral home That drove me o'er the furrows and the foam To Norway northward of the ocean wild? Meseemed at least from fell on fell up-piled Streamed voices- Now at last, though late, ye come; Here is yourparent land, no longer roam: And the scenes grew familiar all, and smiled . But who was he, this worshipper of Thor? Or, likelier, Odin would the genius suit Of a bold- cruising Viking ancestor Some scale - mailed Eric, or chain - shirted Knut! - Vainly I questioned welcoming breeze and torr, The winds were silent now, the mountains mute! IV. THAT SPEAR. WE parted with the Times at Guldsmedmo'n, Yet two days longer up the dale the hum Of European politics would come But sunk, and sinking, to an undertone. At last we entered a deep dell o'ergrown With ancient pines of lofty stature-some An hundred feet -and Europe's voice was dumb, And we now fairly found ourselves alone. Silence, and gloom, and isolation drear Produced a feeling, hard to understand, Which grew at last a dim-embodied fear As of a Spirit, gloomy, silent, grand, That rose from out the wood, and drew a- near, Grasping a pine- spear in his rebel hand! V. MILTON IN NORWAY. THE feeling passed, the Spirit passed away -- The silence and the isolation drear, As broke in fitful bursts on Fancy's ear A gravely measured yet melodious lay. Wider the sweep, and more complete the sway, And longer, deeper, louder, and more clear, Until I cried-Milton is monarch here, Whatever Oscar and his subjects say! - How had the Master slung into his song The pride of Norway, with an arm as free As fierce Alcides' when he hurled along The ether from Mount Eta to the sea, Nerved with the strength of that Thessalian wrong, The groaning trunk of many an uptorn tree! VI. THE SCENERY-GO AND SEE IT! AND speak ye may of grandeur and of gloom And all the dread magnificence that lies Where through the dale the foam - fleckt torrent flies, Or gorgeous sunsets o'er the mountains bloom . But who shall in the sonnet's scanty room Set the majestic magnitude, the size, The mighty mountains and the widening skies Up on Norwegian table-lands assume? This you must see to feel within your heart, And cannot know from others: Nature still In this defies all imitative art, Baffles all ' schools and soars beyond their skill: It is a joy she only shall impart, But, once received, it ne'er can cease to thrill. VII. A TERROR OF THE TWILIGHT. FAR in Norwegian solitudes we strayed: Behind us lay a long bright summer day, But evening now was stooping o'er our way, When, at a sudden turn, alarmed we stayed. It was a terror by the twilight made Of river, cliff, and cloud, and the weird play Of sunset's one live liberated ray Piercing the horror of the pinewood shade. Stood, like a charred cross, or a huge swordhilt, Against the sky, above the cliff's black line, That seemed a bastion by Harfager built, A solitary thunder-blasted pine; On the dark flood below, the sunset spilt What now was blood and now was wassai-lwine. VIII. A WATERFALL WITHIN A WOOD. THE Sound, that seemed at sunrise-when the glow Of Morning, mingling with the early breeze, Caught the still water through the lakeside trees The Voice of Liberty, now seems to grow The muffled moan of an imprisoned woe; And Fancy, peering through the forest, sees An agonising Samson on his knees, With the pines looking on and whispering low. How does a noise, monotonous and rude, Take tone, when blown into a poet mind, Concording with the mystery of its mood, And suiting with the symphony it designed! 'Tis but a waterfall within a wood To Peter Bell and others of his kind. IX. MINERVA IN THE SAETERSDAL. WE said Far Vel to Frosn…s at the dawn Leaving it as one leaves a treasure, soon To long for it, and call it prize and boon In words, sincere no doubt, but overdrawn. Then on we raced as gamesome as the fawn Though not so graceful, till mid- afternoon Brought us to Hellé to the skydsstation Under a cliff behind a natural lawn. Here in a squalid room we look for ease, Loath to sit down, but yet too tired to stand, And call for black- cock, bacon, bread and cheese - In short, whate'er their larder might command: Enters Minerva, kilted to the knees, With a vast shield of fladbröd in her hand! X. THE LITTLE MEAL-MILL. PERCHED on its four grey cairns across the stream That tumbles down the cliff, secure it stands; An old possession, for on plank and beam Are Knuts and Olës carved by various hands. Its cubic measure, six by five by four; Yet in this compass, everything complete; And there he bent-his back was towards the door While plashed the mill-wheel merrily at his feet, And ground his rye, and sang with honest glee. - Be mine the knowledge that I now possess, And mine a heart, like his, of envy free, And I could don to- day the saeter dress, And bring my wishes docile to my will To moil content in this Norwegian mill. XI. THE CLIMB FROM VALLE. STEEP was the climb from Valle: far below The saeter we had left lay lost in mist, And still the height rose higher than we wist Beyond the ravings of the Otteraa. And now a thin bleak air began to blow, And now the bispevei to turn and twist, Here round a tjern no summer ever kissed , And there behind a hide of hoarded snow. The stars dissolved anon; and airy trills Of wavering music showed the day begun: We toiled to meet the morn-o'er rocks, o'er rills; And, breathless, but at last our wish we won The top! and lo, a countless herd of hills Tossing their shining muzzles in the sun! XIV. A THOUGHT OF HOME. SHE walks where Callerfountain to Kinnoull Looks lovingly across the twists of Tay, And oft, along the zigzag of her way, Up Craigie burn, or through the plantains cool, Stoops, from the bank beside the shaded pool To pluck forget- me- nots, or from the brae A gowan, with whose petals she will play, Filling her breast of love's distractions full. Fair are the Scottish hills around her here, Nor fairer scenes a wandering eye beheld, But now in all the glory of the year To her their beauty is a dream of eld, And Norway's distant hills have grown more dear - For sake of one far up the Dovrefeld. XV. MORNING-THE MOUNTAIN FAMILY AT THEIR DEVOTIONS. I SEE across the lofty table- lands A hundred regal mountains at the least Inclining mutely towards the opening East, - As many little tjerns and queenly vands Kneeling at different levels: Phoebus stands Beaming benevolence like a great High Priest Blessing a nation for some holy feast At his wide temple-door with lifted hands.- Rejoice, ye hills! ye happy mountains, fling Your arms aloft in worship wildly free! Ye vands, and rivers in the valleys, sing! Shout! till the heavens ring with your choral glee; And God Himself with mild face wondering Looks out at last, and smiles well - pleased to see! XVI. A CANDIDATE FOR HONOURS. THIS were a spectacle to cleanse the heart Of all the mean vexations of the town, The envious slander and the jealous frown, And all remembrances that make it smart. Phoebus Apollo! fit another dart And shoot the last surviving meanness down Ere on my head thou place the golden crown And teach my lyre the mystery of thine art! Then, with a bosom purified of hate And rankling cares and cankers reared of wrong, Envy forgotten and the low debate That to unworthy rivalry belong, On thine own heights, Apollo, will I wait A shriven candidate of holy song! XVII. "THE LAST INFIRMITY." THE god!-or else a fierce consuming flame! Spare me, Apollo of the burning brow! Spare me! It was a rash novitiate's vow When to thy shrine with shameful haste I came And vowed, alas! with an unworthy aim, To be a priest of thine: forgive me now And let me go, or take me where I bow And purge me of that lust of earthly fame! -- Thus, like a weed that woos the summer sun To wither in the fierceness of his glance, The ignoble wish that I had told to none And scarcely to myself, by sweet mischance, Seeking to honour it, was clean undone, Pierced by Apollo's keen detecting lance. XVIII. HARVEST IN THE DALE. A MILLION fields to- day are standing white Over the north of Europe: here is one, And three bright sickles circling in the sun Will have the little crop cut down ere night. The girl is singing, for her heart is light; But the two brothers think it best to shun The guise of gladness till the work be done And they have earned a reason and a right; Yet they are glad: God of the bounteous Year, What pleasure must be Thine to look from heaven Into a thousand happy dales, and hear From out the barren rocks, where man has striven, The voices of Thy children far and near Rejoicing in the gifts which Thou hast given! XIX. ARTHUR'S SEAT AGAIN! FJORD, Wood, and waterfall, and cliff whose line Rose level with the heavens, and the long swell Of fell up-reaching arm to brother fell, And the lone aspiration of the pine That stood erect on sunset heights divine Under the gaze of God in holy spell, While on the slope, or from the sunken dell, Aspens looked up and trembled-these were mine; And I had grown familiar with them till They seemed a patrimony all my own; And yet when Arthur's green and rounded hill Met my returning gaze, and seaward blown A Scottish voice came floating-closer still Was Scotland at my heart than I had known. XX. A GREY MORNING AT GRANTON. How bright it is to-day! we see across The Firth quite clearly to the shores of Fife! " - Good heavens! And yet 'twere pity of my life (Thought I, while travelling northward to Kinross) If I should count as worse to me than loss My fellow creature's gain. Yet was the strife 'Twixt scorn and pity for the grey-worn wife, Thankful for nothing as it seemed, a toss. For I had been where skies of brilliant hue Soared o'er gigantic cliffs to heaven itself, Where the delighted eye for miles looked thro' Opaline widths of air, and aa and elv Linked vand to fjord with chains of living blue, Or shot in foam from granite shelf to shelf! XXI. ON THE PIER AT BURNTISLAND. So ran my thoughts at Granton as the train Swept curving round in view of the grey sea, But when the lazy steamer crossed, and we Were free of its collective stinks again, I caught a glimpse, through cloud, coal- smoke, and rain Upon the sloppy pier, that furnished me The missing gloss there well was need to be To clear the air for her, and light the main! - The world looks bright to kings-a favoured race Who free of toil through earth's gay gardens roam; Looks fair to lovers; and a happy place To children; but its brightest mornings come To humble mother waiting the embrace Of her bronzed sailor son returning home. XXII. A RARE DIP. I'VE floated on Lochleven, dipped in Tay, And many another stream both great and small, Dared the white thunder of a waterfall , And been baptized in many a mill - wheel's spray; I've drunk the brine in Kristiania bay And swum almost all up the Saetersdal, And every bath was ecstasy, but all Must yield to one rare dip I had to- day. Oh, pleasantly the Farg's clear waters flashed Into the rocky pool their liquid song; With more than Alpheus' haste I stripped, and dashed Among the music, plunging oft and long; And not alone my limbs-the music washed Hate from my heart, and from my memory wrong! XXIII. FROM THE WICKS OF BAIGLIE. HERE there are braes, and glens, and brawling brooks, And cascades flinging loose their diamond spray, And waters winding down to firth and bay, And woods, and craigs, and knowes, and fairy nooks; But on the hill-tops there are golden stooks, And mill- wheels in the cascade's thunder play, Boats breast the river, artists glenward stray, And over barren craigs rise pastoral crooks.- Not many years ago the scene was claimed By the rude elements-to whom it gave Thistle, and thorn, and stone, and stream unnamed, Harvestless hill, and undivided wave; Now the wild elephant is trapped and tamed, Caparisoned and tended-and a slave! XXIV. THELEMARKEN: A PER- CONTRA. HOWEVER, there's the freedom of the Fells, Such as the wilds of Thelemarken show, Where cataracts roar unbridged, and torrents flow Burdened but with the beauty of their bells; Where the cliff soars, and the broad sky-roof swells, And morning comes with larger longer glow, And, pinnacled beyond the axe's blow, In peace the stately pine its centuries tells! Here you may live at large, with no one nigh: - Only, when twilight darkens earth and air, From the lone uplands you may chance to spy On the cliff-edge a wolf, perhaps a pair; Or silhouetted on the evening sky The slouching horror of a hermit bear! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WHITE WINTER - HUGHIE SNAWED UP by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON DAVE (SC. DAPHNIS) by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON SCHULE LADDIE'S LAMENT ON THE LATENESS O' THE SEASON by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE REFUSES TO EMIGRATE by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE'S ADVICE TO HIS BROTHER JOHN by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE'S INDIGNATION AT THE CONDUCT OF THE ... ELDER by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE'S MONUMENT by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE'S WINTER EXCUSE FOR A DRAM by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON HUGHIE TAKES HIS EASE IN HIS INN by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON MORNING - THE MOUNTAIN FAMILY AT THEIR DEVOTIONS by JAMES LOGIE ROBERTSON |
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