Textarchiv - Adam Lindsay Gordon https://www.textarchiv.com/adam-lindsay-gordon Australian poet, jockey and politician. Born on 19 October 1833 in Faial Island, Portugal. Died 24 June 1870 in Brighton, Australia. de Podas Okus https://www.textarchiv.com/adam-lindsay-gordon/podas-okus <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>Am I waking? Was I sleeping?<br /> Dearest, are you watching yet?<br /> Traces on your cheeks of weeping<br /> Glitter, &#039;tis in vain you fret;<br /> Drifting ever! drifting onward!<br /> In the glass the bright sand runs<br /> Steadily and slowly downward;<br /> Hushed are all the Myrmidons.</p> <p>Has Automedon been banish&#039;d<br /> From his post beside my bed?<br /> Where has Agamemnon vanished?<br /> Where is warlike Diomed?<br /> Where is Nestor? where Ulysses?<br /> Menelaus, where is he?<br /> Call them not, more dear your kisses<br /> Than their prosings are to me.</p> <p>Daylight fades and night must follow,<br /> Low, where sea and sky combine,<br /> Droops the orb of great Apollo,<br /> Hostile god to me and mine.<br /> Through the tent&#039;s wide entrance streaming,<br /> In a flood of glory rare,<br /> Glides the golden sunset, gleaming<br /> On your golden, gleaming hair.</p> <p>Chide him not, the leech who tarries,<br /> Surest aid were all too late;<br /> Surer far the shaft of Paris,<br /> Winged by Phoebus and by fate;<br /> When he crouch&#039;d behind the gable,<br /> Had I once his features scann&#039;d,<br /> Phoebus&#039; self had scarce been able<br /> To have nerved his trembling hand.</p> <p>Blue-eyed maiden! dear Athena!<br /> Goddess chaste, and wise and brave,<br /> From the snares of Polyxena<br /> Thou would&#039;st fain thy favourite save.<br /> Tell me, is it not far better<br /> That it should be as it is?<br /> Jove&#039;s behest we cannot fetter,<br /> Fate&#039;s decrees are always his.</p> <p>Many seek for peace and riches,<br /> Length of days and life of ease;<br /> I have sought for one thing, which is<br /> Fairer unto me than these.<br /> Often, too, I&#039;ve heard the story,<br /> In my boyhood, of the doom<br /> Which the fates assigned me--Glory,<br /> Coupled with an early tomb.</p> <p>Swift assault and sudden sally<br /> Underneath the Trojan wall;<br /> Charge, and countercharge, and rally,<br /> War-cry loud, and trumpet call;<br /> Doubtful strain of desp&#039;rate battle,<br /> Cut and thrust and grapple fierce,<br /> Swords that ring on shields that rattle,<br /> Blades that gash and darts that pierce;--</p> <p>I have done with these for ever;<br /> By the loud resounding sea,<br /> Where the reedy jav&#039;lins quiver,<br /> There is now no place for me.<br /> Day by day our ranks diminish,<br /> We are falling day by day;<br /> But our sons the strife will finish,<br /> Where man tarries man must slay.</p> <p>Life, &#039;tis said, to all men sweet is,<br /> Death to all must bitter be;<br /> Wherefore thus, oh, mother Thetis!<br /> None can baffle Jove&#039;s decree?<br /> I am ready, I am willing,<br /> To resign my stormy life;<br /> Weary of this long blood-spilling,<br /> Sated with this ceaseless strife.</p> <p>Shorter doom I&#039;ve pictured dimly,<br /> On a bed of crimson sand;<br /> Fighting hard and dying grimly,<br /> Silent lips, and striking hand.<br /> But the toughest lives are brittle,<br /> And the bravest and the best<br /> Lightly fall--it matters little;<br /> Now I only long for rest.</p> <p>I have seen enough of slaughter,<br /> Seen Scamander&#039;s torrent red,<br /> Seen hot blood poured out like water,<br /> Seen the champaign heaped with dead.<br /> Men will call me unrelenting,<br /> Pitiless, vindictive, stern;<br /> Few will raise a voice dissenting,<br /> Few will better things discern.</p> <p>Speak! the fires of life are reeling,<br /> Like the wildfires on the marsh,<br /> Was I to a friend unfeeling?<br /> Was I to a mistress harsh?<br /> Was there nought save bloodshed throbbing<br /> In this heart and on this brow?<br /> Whisper! girl, in silence sobbing!<br /> Dead Patroclus! answer thou!</p> <p>Dry those violet orbs that glisten,<br /> Darling, I have had my day;<br /> Place your hand in mine and listen,<br /> Ere the strong soul cleaves its way<br /> Through the death mist hovering o&#039;er me,<br /> As the stout ship cleaves the wave,<br /> To my fathers gone before me,<br /> To the gods who love the brave!</p> <p>Courage, we must part for certain;<br /> Shades that sink and shades that rise,<br /> Blending in a shroud-like curtain,<br /> Gather o&#039;er these weary eyes.<br /> O&#039;er the fields we used to roam, in<br /> Brighter days and lighter cheer,<br /> Gathers thus the quiet gloaming--<br /> Now, I ween, the end is near.</p> <p>For the hand that clasps your fingers,<br /> Closing in the death-grip tight,<br /> Scarcely feels the warmth that lingers,<br /> Scarcely heeds the pressure light;<br /> While the failing pulse that alters,<br /> Changing &#039;neath a death chill damp,<br /> Flickers, flutters, flags, and falters,<br /> Feebly like a waning lamp.</p> <p>Think&#039;st thou, love, &#039;twill chafe my ghost in<br /> Hades&#039; realm, where heroes shine,<br /> Should I hear the shepherd boasting<br /> To his Argive concubine?<br /> Let him boast, the girlish victor,<br /> Let him brag; not thus, I trow,<br /> Were the laurels torn from Hector,<br /> Not so very long ago.</p> <p>Does my voice sound thick and husky?<br /> Is my hand no longer warm?<br /> Round that neck where pearls look dusky<br /> Let me once more wind my arm;<br /> Rest my head upon that shoulder,<br /> Where it rested oft of yore;<br /> Warm and white, yet seeming colder<br /> Now than e&#039;er it seem&#039;d before.</p> <p>&#039;Twas the fraud of Priam&#039;s daughter,<br /> Not the force of Priam&#039;s son,<br /> Slew me--ask not why I sought her,<br /> &#039;Twas my doom--her work is done!<br /> Fairer far than she, and dearer,<br /> By a thousandfold thou art;<br /> Come, my own one, nestle nearer,<br /> Cheating death of half his smart.</p> <p>Slowly, while your amber tresses<br /> Shower down their golden rain,<br /> Let me drink those last caresses,<br /> Never to be felt again;<br /> Yet th&#039; Elysian halls are spacious,<br /> Somewhere near me I may keep<br /> Room--who knows?--The gods are gracious;<br /> Lay me lower--let me sleep!</p> <p>Lower yet, my senses wander,<br /> And my spirit seems to roll<br /> With the tide of swift Scamander<br /> Rushing to a viewless goal.<br /> In my ears, like distant washing<br /> Of the surf upon the shore,<br /> Drones a murmur, faintly splashing,<br /> &#039;Tis the splash of Charon&#039;s oar.</p> <p>Lower yet, my own Briseis,<br /> Denser shadows veil the light;<br /> Hush, what is to be, to be is,<br /> Close my eyes, and say good-night.<br /> Lightly lay your red lips, kissing,<br /> On this cold mouth, while your thumbs<br /> Lie on these cold eyelids pressing--<br /> Pallas! thus thy soldier comes!</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/adam-lindsay-gordon" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Adam Lindsay Gordon</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1867</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/adam-lindsay-gordon/podas-okus" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="Podas Okus" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:18:20 +0000 mrbot 5560 at https://www.textarchiv.com