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Authors: Unknown
The following poems are from the Chamber Music cycle
Alas, how sad the lover’s lot
Whose love to him can do offence!
Alas, that beauty should have not
Stability nor reverence!
My heart is taken in a net
Misled ill-used made captive too
By promises and shows - but yet
Happy with vows that are untrue.
Poor heart, alas, that such offence
Love all too reverent may not chide,
That winds that have no reverence
Abide where love doth still abide!
O, it is cold and still - alas
!
O, it is cold and still - alas! -
The soft white bosom of my love,
Wherein no mood of guile or fear
But only gentleness did move.
She heard, as standing on the shore,
A bell above the waters toll,
She heard the call of ‘Come away’
Which is the calling of the soul
They covered her with linen white
And set white candles at her head
And loosened out her glorious hair
And laid her on a snow-white bed.
I saw her passing like a cloud,
Discreet and silent and apart.
O, little joy and great sorrow
Is all the music of the heart
The fiddle has a mournful sound
That’s playing in the street below.
I would I lay with her I love —
And who is here to say me no?
We lie upon the bed of love
And lie together in the ground:
To live, to love and to forget
Is all the wisdom lovers have.
She is at peace where she is sleepi
n
g
She is at peace where she is sleeping,
Her pale hands folded on her shroud,
And I am wandering in the world
Alone and sorrowful and proud.
She heard, as standing on the shore,
A bell above the waters toll,
She heard the call of ‘Come away’
Which is the calling of the soul.
They covered her with linen white
And laid her on a snow-white bed
And loosened out her glorious hair
And set white candles at her head.
I remember her moving of old
Amid grave days as one apart.
O, little joy and great sorrow
Is all the music of my heart.
The fiddle has a mournful sound
That’s playing in the street below —
I would I lay with her I love:
And who is there to say me no?
I would I lay in the dark earth
For sorrow bids me now depart
And the remembering of love
Makes a sad music in my heart.
I said: I will go down to whe
r
e
I said: I will go down to where
She waits amid the silences,
And look upon her face and smile;
And she will cover me with her hair.
I shall forget what sorrow is
And rest with her a little while.
I put aside sorrow and care
For these may not be where she is,
For these are enemies. I came
And sought the glimmer of her hair
Amid the desolate silences
And cried upon the gloom her name.
Though we are leaving youth behi
n
d
Though we are leaving youth behind
And ways of pleasure would reprove
Thou hast engraven in the mind
Thy name, O many-weathered love
And should the grace, the presence - all
That was thy magic — cease to be,
Here in the bosom ever shall
Endure thy dear charactery.
Come out to where youth is me
t
Come out to where youth is met
Under the moon, beside the sea,
And leave your weapon and your net,
Your loom and your embroidery.
This collection of poems was published in May, 1907 and is comprised of thirty-six love poems.
Some believe the title refers to the sound of urine tinkling into a chamber pot, but it is now generally agreed that the title was first suggested by his Joyce’s brother Stanislaus, with a more traditional sense of the phrase.
The first edition