“What voice is
that I hear
Crying across the
pool ?”
“It is the voice
of Pan you hear,
Crying his
sorceries shrill and clear,
In the twillight
dim and cool.”
“What song is it
he sings,
Echoing from afar
;
While the sweet
swallow bends her wings,
Filling the air
with twitterings,
Beneath the
brightening star ?”
The woodman
answered me,
His fagot on his
back, -
“Seek not the face
of Pan to see;
Flee from his
clear note summoning thee
To darkness deep
and black!
"He dwells in
thickest shade,
Pipping his notes
forlorn
Of sorrow never to
be allayed ;
Turn from his
coverts sad
Of twillight unto
morn !”
The woodman passed
away
Along the forest
path ;
His ax shone keen
and grey
In the last beams
of day :
And all was still
as death : -
Only Pan singing
sweet
Out of earth’s
fragrant shade;
I dreamed his eyes
to meet,
And found but
shadow laid
Before my tired
feet.
Comes no more dawn
to me,
No birds of open
skies.
Only his wood’s
deep gloom I see
Till, at the end
of all, shall rise
Afar and
tranquilly,
Death’s stretching
sea.
Down-Adown-Derry,
A Book of Fairy
Poems by Walter de La Mare.(1873-1956).
Published :
c.1922.
Art by Dorothy
Pulis Lathrop.