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Ode For The Keats Centenary

February 23, 1921.

Read at Hart House Theatre before the University of Toronto.  The Muse is stern unto her favoured sons,  Giving to some the keys of all the joy  Of the green earth, but holding even that joy  Back from their life;  Bidding them feed on hope,  A plant of bitter growth,  Deep-rooted in the past;  Truth, 'tis a doubtful art  To make Hope sweeten  Time as it flows;  For no man knows  Until the very last,  Whether it be a sovereign herb that he has eaten,  Or his own heart.  O stern, implacable Muse,  Giving to Keats so richly dowered,  Only the thought that he should be  Among the English poets after death;  Letting him fade with that expectancy,  All powerless to unfold the future!  What boots it that our age has snatched him free  From thy too harsh embrace,  Has given his fame the certainty  Of comradeship with Shakespeare's?  He lies alone  Beneath the frown of the old Roman stone  And the cold Roman violets;  And not our wildest incantation  Of his most sacred lines,  Nor all the praise that sets  Towards his pale grave,  Like oceans towards the moon,  Will move the Shadow with the pensive brow  To break his dream,  And give unto him now  One word! —  When the young master reasoned  That our puissant England  Reared her great poets by neglect,  Trampling them down in the by-paths of Life  And fostering them with glory after death,  Did any flame of triumph from his own fame  Fall swift upon his mind; the glow  Cast back upon the bleak and aching air  Blown around his days — ?  Happily so!  But he, whose soul was mighty as the soul  Of Milton, who held the vision of the world  As an irradiant orb self-filled with light,  Who schooled his heart with passionate control  To compass knowledge, to unravel the dense  Web of this tangled life, he would weigh slight  As thistledown blown from his most fairy fancy  That pale self-glory, against the mystery,  The wonder of the various world, the power  Of "seeing great things in loneliness."  Where bloodroot in the clearing dwells  Along the edge of snow;  Where, trembling all their trailing bells,  The sensitive twinflowers blow;  Where, searching through the ferny breaks,  The moose-fawns find the springs;  Where the loon laughs and diving takes  Her young beneath her wings;  Where flash the fields of arctic moss  With myriad golden light;  Where no dream-shadows ever cross  The lidless eyes of night;  Where, cleaving a mountain storm, the proud  Eagles, the clear sky won,  Mount the thin air between the loud  Slow thunder and the sun;  Where, to the high tarn tranced and still  No eye has ever seen,  Comes the first star its flame to chill  In the cool deeps of green; —  Spirit of Keats, unfurl thy wings,  Far from the toil and press,  Teach us by these pure-hearted things,  Beauty in loneliness.  Where, in the realm of thought, dwell those  Who oft in pain and penury  Work in the void,  Searching the infinite dark between the stars,  The infinite little of the atom,  Gathering the tears and terrors of this life,  Distilling them to a medicine for the soul;  (And hated for their thought  Die for it calmly;  For not their fears,  Nor the cold scorn of men,  Fright them who hold to truth: )  They brood alone in the intense serene  Air of their passion,  Until on some chill dawn  Breaks the immortal form foreshadowed in their dream,  And the distracted world and men  Are no more what they were.  Spirit of Keats, unfurl thy deathless wings,  Far from the wayward toil, the vain excess,  Teach us by such soul-haunting things  Beauty in loneliness.  The minds of men grow numb, their vision narrows,  The clogs of Empire and the dust of ages,  The lust of power that fogs the fairest pages,  Of the romance that eager life would write,  These war on Beauty with their spears and arrows.  But still is Beauty and of constant power;  Even in the whirl of Time's most sordid hour,  Banished from the great highways,  Afflighted by the tramp of insolent feet,  She hangs her garlands in the by-ways;  Lissome and sweet  Bending her head to hearken and learn  Melody shadowed with melody,  Softer than shadow of sea-fern,  In the green-shadowed sea:  Then, nourished by quietude,  And if the world's mood  Change, she may return  Even lovelier than before. —  The white reflection in the mountain lake  Falls from the white stream  Silent in the high distance;  The mirrored mountains guard  The profile of the goddess of the height,  Floating in water with a curve of crystal light;  When the air, envious of the loveliness,  Rushes downward to surprise,  Confusion plays in the contact,  The picture is overdrawn  With ardent ripples,  But when the breeze, warned of intrusion,  Draws breathless upward in flight,  The vision reassembles in tranquillity,  Reforming with a gesture of delight,  Reborn with the rebirth of calm.  Spirit of Keats, lend us thy voice,  Breaking like surge in some enchanted cave  On a dream-sea-coast,  To summon Beauty to her desolate world.  For Beauty has taken refuge from our life  That grew too loud and wounding;  Beauty withdraws beyond the bitter strife,  Beauty is gone, (Oh where?)  To dwell within a precinct of pure air  Where moments turn to months of solitude;  To live on roots of fern and tips of fern,  On tender berries flushed with the earth's blood.  Beauty shall stain her feet with moss  And dye her cheek with deep nut-juices,  Laving her hands in the pure sluices  Where rainbows are dissolved.  Beauty shall view herself in pools of amber sheen  Dappled with peacock-tints from the green screen  That mingles liquid light with liquid shadow.  Beauty shall breathe the fairy hush  With the chill orchids in their cells of shade,  And hear the invocation of the thrush  That calls the stars into their heaven,  And after even  Beauty shall take the night into her soul.  When the thrill voice goes crying through the wood,  (Oh,

Beauty,

Beauty!)  Troubling the solitude  With echoes from the lonely world,  Beauty will tremble like a cloistered thing  That hears temptation in the outlands singing,  Will steel her dedicated heart and breathe  Into her inner ear to firm her vow: —  "Let me restore the soul that ye have marred.  O mortals, cry no more on Beauty,  Leave me alone, lone mortals,  Until my shaken soul comes to its own,  Lone mortals, leave me alone!"  (Oh Beauty,

Beauty,

Beauty!)  All the dim wood is silent as a dream  That dreams of silence.

Composition Date:ca. 1920-21?

Form: occasional couplets and quatrains.1.

John Keats,

English poet (1795-1821).

Hart House Theatre, located in Hart House, the (then) male students' building, is just west of Queen's Park on the St.

George Campus of the University of Toronto.

It was a venue of choice for classical and Canadian playsthrough much of the century.48.

John Milton,

English poet.56. source of quotation not found.60. twinflowers: honeysuckle shrub.63.

Canadian fish-eating bird with a haunting crywhose image is now on Canada's one-dollar coin, \

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