Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Yule Guest by Bliss Carman (William)
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The Yule Guest

    By Bliss Carman (William)



    And Yanna by the yule log
    Sat in the empty hall,
    And watched the goblin firelight
    Caper upon the wall:

    The goblins of the hearthstone,
    Who teach the wind to sing,
    Who dance the frozen yule away
    And usher back the spring;

    The goblins of the Northland,
    Who teach the gulls to scream,
    Who dance the autumn into dust,
    The ages into dream.

    Like the tall corn was Yanna,
    Bending and smooth and fair,--
    His Yanna of the sea-gray eyes
    And harvest-yellow hair.

    Child of the low-voiced people
    Who dwell among the hills,
    She had the lonely calm and poise
    Of life that waits and wills.

    Only to-night a little
    With grave regard she smiled,
    Remembering the morn she woke
    And ceased to be a child.

    Outside, the ghostly rampikes,
    Those armies of the moon,
    Stood while the ranks of stars drew on
    To that more spacious noon,--

    While over them in silence
    Waved on the dusk afar
    The gold flags of the Northern light
    Streaming with ancient war.

    And when below the headland
    The riders of the foam
    Up from the misty border rode
    The wild gray horses home,

    And woke the wintry mountains
    With thunder on the shore,
    Out of the night there came a weird
    And cried at Yanna's door.

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    They buried me away
    In the blue fathoms of the deep,
    Beyond the outer bay.

    "But in the yule, O Yanna,
    Up from the round dim sea
    And reeling dungeons of the fog,
    I am come back to thee!"

    The wind slept in the forest,
    The moon was white and high,
    Only the shifting snow awoke
    To hear the yule guest cry.

    "O Yanna, Yanna, Yanna,
    Be quick and let me in!
    For bitter is the trackless way
    And far that I have been!"

    Then Yanna by the yule log
    Starts from her dream to hear
    A voice that bids her brooding heart
    Shudder with joy and fear.

    The wind is up a moment
    And whistles at the eaves,
    And in his troubled iron dream
    The ocean moans and heaves.

    She trembles at the door-lock
    That he is come again,
    And frees the wooden bolt for one
    No barrier could detain.

    "O Garvin, bonny Garvin,
    So late, so late you come!"
    The yule log crumbles down and throws
    Strange figures on the gloom;

    But in the moonlight pouring
    Through the half-open door
    Stands the gray guest of yule and casts
    No shadow on the floor.

    The change that is upon him
    She knows not in her haste;
    About him her strong arms with glad
    Impetuous tears are laced.

    She's led him to the fireside,
    And set the wide oak chair,
    And with her warm hands brushed away
    The sea-rime from his hair.

    "O Garvin, I have waited,--
    Have watched the red sun sink,
    And clouds of sail come flocking in
    Over the world's gray brink,

    "With stories of encounter
    On plank and mast and spar;
    But never the brave barque I launched
    And waved across the bar.

    "How come you so unsignalled,
    When I have watched so well?
    Where rides the Adrianna
    With my name on boat and bell?"

    "O Yanna, golden Yanna,
    The Adrianna lies
    With the sea dredging through her ports,
    The white sand through her eyes.

    "And strange unearthly creatures
    Make marvel of her hull,
    Where far below the gulfs of storm
    There is eternal lull.

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    This midnight I am here,
    Because one night of all my life
    At yule tide of the year,

    "With the stars white in heaven,
    And peace upon the sea,
    With all my world in your white arms
    You gave yourself to me.

    "For that one night, my Yanna,
    Within the dying year,
    Was it not well to love, and now
    Can it be well to fear?"

    "O Garvin, there is heartache
    In tales that are half told;
    But ah, thy cheek is pale to-night,
    And thy poor hands are cold!

    "Tell me the course, the voyage,
    The ports, and the new stars;
    Did the long rollers make green surf
    On the white reefs and bars?"

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    Though easily I found
    The set of those uncharted tides
    In seas no line could sound,

    "And made without a pilot
    The port without a light,
    No log keeps tally of the knots
    That I have sailed to-night.

    "It fell about mid-April;
    The Trades were holding free;
    We drove her till the scuppers hissed
    And buried in the lee.

    *            *            *            *            *

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    Loose hands and let me go!
    The night grows red along the East,
    And in the shifting snow

    "I hear my shipmates calling,
    Sent out to search for me
    In the pale lands beneath the moon
    Along the troubling sea."

    "O Garvin, bonny Garvin,
    What is the booming sound
    Of canvas, and the piping shrill,
    As when a ship comes round?"

    "It is the shadow boatswain
    Piping his hands to bend
    The looming sails on giant yards
    Aboard the Nomansfriend.

    "She sails for Sunken Harbor
    And ports of yester year;
    The tern are shrilling in the lift,
    The low wind-gates are clear.

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    The little while is done.
    Thou wilt behold the brightening sea
    Freshen before the sun,

    "And many a morning redden
    The dark hill slopes of pine;
    But I must sail hull-down to-night
    Below the gray sea-line.

    "I shall not hear the snowbirds
    Their morning litany,
    For when the dawn comes over dale
    I must put out to sea."

    "O Garvin, bonny Garvin,
    To have thee as I will,
    I would that never more on earth
    The dawn came over hill."

    *            *            *            *            *

    Then on the snowy pillow,
    Her hair about her face,
    He laid her in the quiet room,
    And wiped away all trace

    Of tears from the poor eyelids
    That were so sad for him,
    And soothed her into sleep at last
    As the great stars grew dim.

    Tender as April twilight
    He sang, and the song grew
    Vague as the dreams which roam about
    This world of dust and dew:

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    Dear Love, look forth to sea
    And all year long until the yule,
    Dear Heart, keep watch for me!

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    I hear the calling sea,
    And the folk telling tales among
    The hills where I would be.

    "O Yanna, Adrianna,
    Over the hills of sea
    The wind calls and the morning comes,
    And I must forth from thee.

    "But Yanna, Adrianna,
    Keep watch above the sea;
    And when the weary time is o'er,
    Dear Life, come back to me!"

    "O Garvin, bonny Garvin--"
    She murmurs in her dream,
    And smiles a moment in her sleep
    To hear the white gulls scream.

    Then with the storm foreboding
    Far in the dim gray South,
    He kissed her not upon the cheek
    Nor on the burning mouth,

    But once above the forehead
    Before he turned away;
    And ere the morning light stole in,
    That golden lock was gray.

    "O Yanna, Adrianna--"
    The wind moans to the sea;
    And down the sluices of the dawn
    A shadow drifts alee.



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