Here you will find the Long Poem A Spring Carol of poet Alfred Austin
I Blithe friend! blithe throstle! Is it thou, Whom I at last again hear sing, Perched on thy old accustomed bough, Poet-prophet of the Spring? Yes! Singing as thou oft hast sung, I can see thee there among The clustered branches of my leafless oak; Where, thy plumage gray as it, Thou mightst unsuspected sit, Didst thou not thyself betray With thy penetrating lay, Swelling thy mottled breast at each triumphant stroke. Wherefore warble half concealed, When thy notes are shaft and shield, And no hand that lives would slay Singer of such a roundelay? Telling of thy presence thus, Be nor coy nor timorous! Sing loud! Sing long! And let thy song Usurp the air 'twixt earth and sky: Let it soar and sink and rally, Ripple low along the valley, Break against the fir-trees high, Ofttimes pausing, never dying, While we lean where fancy bids, Listening, with half-closèd lids, Unto the self-same chant, most sweet, most satisfying. II Where hast thou been all the dumb winter days, When neither sunlight was nor smile of flowers, Neither life, nor love, nor frolic, Only expanse melancholic, With never a note of thy exhilarating lays? But, instead, the raven's croak, Sluggish dawns and draggled hours, Gusts morose and callous showers, Underneath whose cutting stroke Huddle the seasoned kine, and even the robin cowers. Wast thou asleep in some snug hollow Of my hybernating oak, Through the dripping weeks that follow One another slow, and soak Summer's extinguished fire and autumn's drifting smoke? Did its waking awake thee, Or thou it with melody? Or together did ye both Start from winter's sleep and sloth, And the self-same sap that woke Bole and branch, and sets them budding, Is thy throat with rapture flooding? Or, avoiding icy yoke, When golden leaves floated on silver meres, And pensive Autumn, keeping back her tears, Nursed waning Summer in her quiet lap, Didst thou timely pinions flap, Fleeing from a land of loss, And, with happy mates, across Ocean's restless ridges travel, To that lemon-scented shore Where, beneath a deep-domed sky, Carven of lapis-lazuli, Golden sunlight evermore Glistens against golden gravel, Nor ever a snowflake falls, nor rain-clouds wheel and ravel; Clime where I wandered once among Ruins old with feelings young, Whither too I count to fly When my songful seasons die, And with the self-same spell which, first when mine, Intensified my youth, to temper my decline. III Wherefore dost thou sing, and sing? Is it for sheer joy of singing? Is it to hasten lagging Spring, Or greet the Lenten lilies through turf and turf upspringing? Dost thou sing to earth or sky? Never comes but one reply: Carol faint, carol high, Ringing, ringing, ringing! Are those iterated trills For the down-looking daffodils, That have strained and split their sheath, And are listening underneath? Or but music's prompting note, Whereunto the lambs may skip? Haply dost thou swell thy throat, Only to show thy craftsmanship? Wouldst thou pipe if none should hearken? If the sky should droop and darken, And, as came the hills more close, Moody March to wooing Spring Sudden turned a mouth morose,- Unheeded wouldst, unheeding, sing? What is it rules thy singing season? Instinct, that diviner reason, To which the thirst to know seemeth a sort of treason? If it be, Enough for me, And any motive for thy music I Will not ask thee to impart, Letting my head play traitor to my heart, Too deeply questioning why. Sing for nothing, if thou wilt, Or, if thou for aught must sing, Sing unto thy anxious spouse, Sitting somewhere 'mong the boughs, In the nest that thou hast built, Underneath her close-furled wing Future carols fostering. Sing, because it is thy bent; Sing, to heighten thy content! Sing, for secret none can guess; Sing for very uselessness! Sing for love of love and pleasure, Unborn joy, unfound treasure, Rapture no words can reach, yearning no thoughts can measure! IV Why dost thou ever cease to sing? Singing is such sweet comfort, who, If he could sing the whole year through, Would barter it for anything? Why do not thou and joy their reign assert Over winter, death, and hurt? If thou forcest them to flee, They in turn will banish thee, Making life betwixt ye thus Mutably monotonous. O, why dost thou not perch and pipe perpetually? All the answer I do get, Is louder, madder music yet; Thus rebuking: Thou dost err! I am no philosopher; Only a poet, forced to sing, When the cold gusts gather and go, When the earth stirs in its tomb, And, asudden, witching Spring Into her bosom sucks the snow, To give it back in t