The Poetry Corner

Psyche

By Robert Laurence Binyon

She is not fair, as some are fair, Cold as the snow, as sunshine gay: On her clear brow, come grief what may, She suffers not too stern an air; But, grave in silence, sweet in speech, Loves neither mockery nor disdain; Gentle to all, to all doth teach The charm of deeming nothing vain. She join'd me: and we wander'd on; And I rejoiced, I cared not why, Deeming it immortality To walk with such a soul alone. Primroses pale grew all around, Violets, and moss, and ivy wild; Yet, drinking sweetness from the ground, I was but conscious that she smiled. The wind blew all her shining hair From her sweet brows; and she, the while, Put back her lovely head, to smile On my enchanted spirit there. Jonquils and pansies round her head Gleam'd softly; but a heavenlier hue Upon her perfect cheek was shed, And in her eyes a purer blue. There came an end to break the spell; She murmur'd something in my ear; The words fell vague, I did not hear, And ere I knew, I said farewell; And homeward went, with happy heart And spirit dwelling in a gleam, Rapt to a Paradise apart, With all the world become a dream. Yet now, too soon, the world's strong strife Breaks on me pitiless again; The pride of passion, hopes made vain, The wounds, the weariness, of life. And losing that forgetful sphere, For some less troubled world I sigh, If not divine, more free, more clear, Than this poor, soil'd humanity. But when, in trances of the night, Wakeful, my lonely bed I keep, And linger at the gate of Sleep, Fearing, lest dreams deny me light; Her image comes into the gloom, With her pale features moulded fair, Her breathing beauty, morning bloom, My heart's delight, my tongue's despair. With loving hand she touches mine, Showers her soft tresses on my brow, And heals my heart, I know not how, Bathing me with her looks divine. She beckons me; and I arise; And, grief no more remembering, Wander again with rapturous eyes Through those enchanted lands of Spring. Then, as I walk with her in peace, I leave this troubled air below, Where, hurrying sadly to and fro, Men toil, and strain, and cannot cease: Then, freed from tyrannous Fate's control, Untouch'd by years or grief, I see Transfigured in that child-like soul The soil'd soul of humanity.