ECLOGUES 
 This is the ninth book issued by the Beaumont Press and the fifth printed by hand 30 copies have been printed on Japanese vellum signed by the author and artist and numbered i to 30 50 copies on cartridge paper numbered 31 to 80 and 120 copies on hand-made paper numbered 81 to 200  
ECLOGUES  
A BOOK OF POEMS  
HERBERT READ 
 CONTENTS  
 THE MEDITATION OF A LOVER   I can just see the distant trees ... 9  
 WOODLANDS   Pine needles cover the silent ground: . 10  
 PASTURELANDS   We scurry over the pastures . . . 11  
 THE POND   Shrill green weeds . . . . . 12  
 THE ORCHARD   Grotesque patterns of blue-grey mould . 1 3  
 APRIL   To the fresh wet fields . . , . 14  
 THE WOODMAN  His russet coat and gleaming axe . . 15  
 HARVEST HOME   The waggons loom like blue caravans . 16  
 THE AUTUMN OF THE WORLD   As a host of bloodflecked clouds . . 17  
 CURFEW   Like a faun my head uplifted . . . 18  
 CHILDHOOD   The years come with their still perspective, 19  
 ON THE HEATH   White humours veining Earth, . . 23  
 GARDEN PARTY   I have assumed a conscious sociability, . 24  
 ROOFS   Above the vibrant town, . . , 25  
 ÉTUDE   That white hand poised . . . . 26  
 CHAMP DE MANCEUVRES   This hill indents my soul . . 27  
 NOCTURNE   I will make this girl a bed of ferns . . . 29  
 WINTER GRIEF   Life so brief . . . 30  
 PROMENADE SOLENNELLE  We walked mutely . . . . 31  
 THE SORROW OF UNICUME   Fresh in the flush light gleam . . . 33  
 NIGHT   The dark steep roofs chisel . . . 35  
 COLOPHON .... 37  
 
 
 
 
  
To Evelyn 
 
 
 
 
  
I CAN JUST SEE the distant trees  
And I wonder whether they will  
Or will not  
Bow their tall plumes at your passing  
In the carriage of the morning wind: 
 
Or whether they will merely  
Tremble against the cold dawnlight,  
Shaking a yellow leaf  
            to the dew-wet earth. 
 
                         9  
    
 
PINE NEEDLES cover the silent ground:  
     pine trees chancel the woodland ways. 
 
We penetrate into the dark depths  
Where only garlic and hemlock grow  
     Till we meet the blue stream  
     Cleaving the green  
     Twilight like a rhythmic sword. 
 
 lO  
    
WE SCURRY over the pastures  
     chasing the windstrewn oak-leaves. 
 
We kiss  
     the fresh petals of cowslips and primroses. 
 
We discover frog-spawn in the wet ditch. 
 
             II  
    
 
SHRILL GREEN WEEDS  
float on the black pond. 
 
A rising fish  
ripples the still water 
 
And disturbs my soul. 
 
12  
    
 
GROTESQUE patterns of blue-grey mould  
Cling to my barren apple-trees: 
 
But in spring  
Pale blossoms burst like little flowers  
Along black wavering twigs: 
 
And soon  
Rains wash the cold frail petals  
Downfallinor like tremulous flakes  
Even within my heart. 
 
                         13  
 
TO THE FRESH WET FIELDS  
and the white  
froth of flowers 
 
Came the wild errant  
swallows with a scream. 
 
14 
    
HIS RUSSET COAT and gleaming axe  
Flit  
In the blue glades. 
 
The wild birds sing;  
But the woodman he broods  
In the blue glades. 
 
                         15  
    
The waggons loom like blue caravans in the dusk:  
They lumber mysteriously down the moonlit lanes. 
 
We ride on the stacks of rust gold corn,  
Filling the sky with our song. 
 
The horses toss their heads and the harness-bells  
Jingle all the way. 
 
16 
 
AS A HOST of blood-flecked clouds  
     skim the golden sky  
        and melt in the vermilioned vastness   
There comes borne on a wind   
     from the infinite womb of chaos   
        the dank wafture of decay. 
 
Over the eternal waters of the sea   
     that weep and find no solace of their cares   
Lethargic vultures flock and swirl   
     and fill the echoes with their gloomy cries. 
 
Cold winds from arctic zones   
     betray   
       the transient things of earth:   
The last yellow leaves   
     fall on the iridescent sward:   
The wind dies   
     and the summer voices are forever quiet. 
 
                         17  
 
LIKE A FAUN my head uplifted  
In delicate mists: 
 
And breaking on my soul  
Tremulous waves that beat and cling  
To yellow leaves and dark green hills 
 
Bells in the autumn evening. 
 
 18  
 
I
 
THE YEARS COME with their still perspective, enveloping the past in the light of romance.  
The old elm trees flock round the tiled farmstead and their silver-bellied leaves dance in the wind. Beneath their shade, and in the corner of the green, is a pond. In winter it is full of water, green with various weeds: and in Spring a lily will open in its centre.  
                         19  
 Childhood I  
 The ducks waddle in the mud and sail in circles round the pond, or preen their feathers on the bank.  
 But in Summer the pond is dry, and its bed is glossy and baked by the sun, of a beautiful soft colour like the skins of the moles they catch and crucify on the stable doors.  
 On the green the fowls pick grains, or chatter and fight. Their yellows, whites and browns, the metallic lustre of their darker feathers, and the crimson splash of their combs make an everchanging pattern on the grass.  
 They drink with spasmodic upreaching necks by the side of the well.  
 Under the stones by the well live green lizards curious to our eves.  
 And the path from the well leads to a garden door set in the high wall whereon grow plums and apricots. The door is deep and narrow and opens on to paths bordered with box-hedges; one path leads through the aromatic currant bushes, beneath the plum-trees, to the lawn where grows the wonder of our day-dreams, the monkey's-puzzle tree. On the other side of the  
 20  
 Childhood I  
 lawn three fir-trees rise sharply to the sky, their dark shades homing a few birds.  
 And beyond is the orchard, and down its avenues of mould-smitten trees the path leads to the paddocks, with their mushrooms and fairy-rings, and to the flat- lands stretching till the girding hills complete our vision.  
 But on a hill-top, cut clean against a sunrise, is the figure of a child, full of an impatient gesture.  
                         21  
 
CHILDHOOD 
II 
THE FARM is distant from the high-road  
half a mile; 
 
The child of the farm  
does not realise it for several years;  
He wanders through the orchard,  
finds mushrooms in the paddock,  
or beetles in the pond. 
 
But one day he goes to the high-road,  
sees carts and carriages pass,  
and men go marketing. 
 
A traction-engine crashes into his vision  
with flame and smoke,  
and makes his eager soul retreat. 
 
He turns away:  
The huntsmen are galloping over the fields,  
Their red coats and the swift whimpering hcunds, 
 
 22  
WHITE HUMOURS veining Earth,  
The lymphic winds of Spring  
Veil an early morning  
When on the hill  
Men in cool sleeves dig the soil,  
Turning the loam or acrid manure  
With gripes that clink on stones. 
 
Silently horses speed on the sandy track. 
 
Lithe in white sweaters  
Two runners lean against a fountain.  
 
                         23  
 
I HAVE ASSUMED a conscious sociability,  
Pressed unresponding hfands,  
Sipped tea,  
And chattered aimlessly  
All afternoon, 
 
Achieving spontaneity  
Only  
When my eyes lit at the sight  
Of a scarlet spider  
Running over the bright  
Green mould of an apple-tree. 
 
 24  
    
ABOVE the vibrant town,  
Above its dull clamour,  
Roofs like ragged blades  
Break into the moist golden glow  
With mosaic of lustreful tiles  
And slates that gleam  
metallic. 
 
The first pale stars will soon illume  
The dying scene till sole  
Ethereal silhouettes pierce the gloom 
 
                         25  
 
THAT WHITE HAND poised  
Above the ivory keys  
Will soon descend to  
Shatter  
The equable surface of my reverie. 
 
To what abortion  
Will the silence give birth ? 
 
Noon of moist heat and the moan  
Of raping bees,  
And light like a sluice of molten gold  
On the satiate, petitioning leaves. 
 
In yellow fields,  
Mute agony of reapers. 
 
Does the metallic horizon  
Give release? 
 
Well, higher,  
against the wider void the immaculate  
angels of lust  
Lean  
on the swanbreasts of heaven. 
 
26  
    
THIS HILL INDENTS my soul  
So that I saor  
Like a silver mist about its flanks. 
 
I dwell  
In the golden setting of the sun,  
While on the plain  
The illumined mists invade  
Leaf-burdened trees. . . 
 
                         27  
Champ de Manœuvres
 
 
And then  
The silent tides of melting light  
Assail the hill, imbue  
My errant soul. 
 
Mine empty body broods  
One with the inanimate rocks . . . 
 
The last red rays are fierce and irritant.  
Then wakes my body on the lonely hill,  
Gathering to its shell my startled soul. 
 
 28  
 
I WILL MAKE this girl a bed of ferns  
Beneath the trees,  
And she shall come to me naked and shy in the  
     starlight,  
And when I kneel to kiss her body  
Faunish I will be aware of its human scent  
Mingled with the resin odours of the shrouded wood  
As salt in tears. 
 
We will be silent in the world;  
And if she think good  
We will go down to the green pool  
To lie with our bellies on the cool grass  
And drink together. 
 
The flying beetles and the bats  
And the birds drowsy in the branches  
Shall be our companions.  
The sheep in the open fields  
Shall see our white bodies  
     glimmering in the woodland dusk. 
 
                         29  
LIFE SO BRIEF . . .  
     Yet I am old  
          with an era of grief. 
 
The earth unveils  
     a sad nakedness  
And her hills  
     droop round my sorrow.  
Into the stillness  
     living things scream,  
And only the nerveless dead  
     get tranquillity. 
 
From the funereal mould  
Late asters blaspheme. 
 
 30  
    
WE WALKED MUTELY  
     over black moors  
     where gray walls crawl  
Sinuously into still horizons. 
 
I was mute  
     a stickybud  
     only to unfurl  
In the germination of your mood. 
 
                         31  
Promenade Solennelle 
 
But you called gray rain  
     to slake my heart:  
You called gray mist  
     over the black moors. 
 
We passed black altars of rock,  
Two mute, processional, docile Christs  
Amid the unheeding  
Bleakness. 
 
 32  
 
I 
 
FRESH in the flush light gleam  
the slape new furrows:  
ride the clean horizon rib  
lithe Unicume and his roan team. 
 
Man moulded with Earth — 
like clay uprisen:  
his whistling mingles  
with the throstle's this even. 
 
Inward from furtive woods  
the stretched light stains:  
end-toil star now broods  
deeming resthaven due. 
 
Unyoked the roan team  
garthward he leads:  
hooves beat to harness clink;  
the swollen sun bleeds. 
 
II
 
 
When alone, Unicume  
seeks his darkening dale.  
You my white garden-rail—  
Heart's tomb within! 
 
                         33  
The Sorrow of Unicume 
 
He lifts latch to the quiet room  
where yet it seems she breathes:  
he kneels to take her stark hands  
in caress mute with the gloom. 
 
"Draw the casement; let me see  
last light without" 
Ah, fierce the white, white stars to hurt,  
their beauty a wild shout. 
 
Retch of flower scent, lush decay  
among time-burdened shrubs.  
And near and shallowly buried lay  
love once enfleshed, now fled. 
 
Ill 
Harsh my heart is,  
scalded with grief:  
my life a limp  
worm-eaten leaf 
 
White flower unfeeling 
you star the mould:  
evolved calmness,  
my livid heart enfold. 
 
 34  
THE dark steep roofs chisel  
The infinity of the sky: 
 
But the white moonlit gables  
Resemble  
Still hands at prayer. 
 
                         35  
HERE ENDS ECLOGUES A BOOK OF POEMS  
by Herbert Read The Cover and the Decorations  
designed by Ethelbert White The Typography  
and Binding arranged by Cyril W. Beaumont  
Printed by hand on his Press at 75 Charing  
Cross Road in the City of Westminster  
Completed December the Twentieth  
MDCCCCXIX 
 
   
	
		| 
Pressman 
		 | 
		
Charles Wright
		 | 
	 
	
		| 
Compositor 
		 | 
		
C. W. Beaumont 
		 | 
	 
 
 
		
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