The Dead Quire

I

Beside the Mead of Memories

Where Church-way mounts to Moaning Hill,

The sad man sighed his fantasies:

    He seems to sigh them still.

 

II

"'Twas the birth-tide, and the hamleteers

Made merry with ancient Mellstock zest,

But the Mellstock quire of former years

    Had enetered into rest.

III

Old Dewy lay by the gaunt yew tree,

and Reuben and Michael a pace behind.

And Bowman with his family

    By the wall the ivies bind.

IV

The singers had followed one by one,

Treble, and tenor, and thorough-bass;

And the worm that wasteth had begun

    To mine their mouldering place.

V

For two-score years, ere Christ-day light,

Mellstock had throbbed to strains from these;

But now there echoed on the night

N o Christmas harmonies.

VI

Three meadows off, at a dormered inn,

The youth had gathered in a high carouse,

And, ranged on settles, some therein

    Had drunk them to a drowse.

VII

Loud, lively, reckless, some had grown,

Each dandling on his jigging knee,

Eliza, Dolly, Nance or Joan -

    Livers in levity

VIII

The taper-flames and hearthfire shine

Grew smoke-hazed to a lurid light,

And songs on subjects not divine

    Were warbled forth that night.

IX

Yet many were sons and grandsons here

Of those who, on such eves gone by,

At that still hour had throated clear

    Their anthems to the sky.

X

The clock belled midnight; and ere long

One shouted, "Now 'tis Christmas morn;

Here's to our women old and young,

    And to John Barleycorn!"

XI

They drink the toast and shout again:

the pewter-ware rings back the boom,

and for a breath-while follows then

    A silence in the room.

XII

When nigh without, as in old days,

The ancient quire of voice and string

Seemed singing words of prayer and praise

    As they had used to sing:

XIII

While shepherds watch'd their flocks by night, -

Thus swells the long familiar sound

In many a quaint symphonic flight

To, Glory shone around.

XIV

The sons defined their fathers' tones,

The widow his whom she had wed,

And others in the minor moans

    The viols of the dead.

XV

Something supernal has the sound

As verse by verse the strain proceeds,

And stilly staring on the ground

    Each roysterer holds and heeds.

XVI

Towards its chorded closing bar

Plaintively, thinly, waned the hymn,

Yet linger, like the notes afar

    Of banded seraphim.

XVII

With brows abashed, and reverent tread,

The hearkeners sought the tavern door:

But nothing, save wan moonlight, spread

    The empty highway o'er.

XVIII

While on their hearing fixed and tense

The aerial music seemed to sink,

As it were gently moving thence

    Along the river brink.

XIX

Then did the Quick pursue the Dead

By crystal Froom that crinkles there;

And still the viewless quire ahead

    Voiced the old holy air.

XX

By Bank-walk, wicket, brightly bleached,

It passed, and 'twixt the hedges twain,

Dogged by the living, till it reached

    The bottom of Church Lane.

XXI

There, at the turning, it was heard

Drawing to where the churchyard lay:

But when they followed thitherward

    It smalled, and died away.

XXII

Each headstone of the quire, each mound,

Confronted them beneath the moon;

But no more floated therearound

    That ancient Birth-night tune.

   XXIII

There Dewy lay by the gaunt yew tree,

There Reuben and Michael, a pace behind,

And Bowman with his family

    By the wall the ivies bind.....

XXIV

As from a dream each sobered son

Awoke, and musing reached his door:

'Twas said that of them all, not one

    Sat in a tavern more.

XXV

- The sad man ceased, and ceased to heed

His listener, and crossed the leae

From Moaning Hill towards the mead -

The Mead of Memories.

1897