Blunt as a child, since child he was at heart, And sun-sincere, my friend to many seemed Dull, rude, aggressive, tactless. Add to all His bulk and hairiness and stormy laugh, And one can find them some excuse for that. ’Twas seeming only. We, who found his soul Thro friendship’s crystal, saw beyond the glass The elusive seraph. In his mind were met The faun, the cynic, the philosopher, But first of all, the poet. Give to such Apollo’s guise, and matters were not well. Too glad to pose, ofttimes he held his peace Before the jest that sought his heart; but let The whim appeal, and all his mind took fire— The shifted diamond’s instant shock of light. Richer than blood, and every drop a dream) Was like a wind some hidden world put forth To baffle, madden, lure—at times, betray, Then win him back to worship with a breath Of Edens never trodden. Yet he stood No dupe to Nature in her harlotry, Her guile, her blind injustice and the abrupt Ferocities of chance, but swift to face The unkempt fact, and swift no less to snatch Its honey from illusion’s stinging hive— No moth that beat upon Time’s enginery. Yet loved he Nature well, as one might love A half-tamed leopardess, for beauty’s grace Alone. Within his enigmatic soul Sorrow and Art made Love their servitor, For he would have no master but himself. To what best liken him? Some singer must Have used the star-souled geode’s rind and heart, His rugged aspect and auroral mind To that wide shell our western ocean grants— Without, all harsh and hueless, with, perhaps, A group of barnacles or tattered weed; Within, such splendor as would make one guess That once a score of dawnings and a troop Of royal sunsets had condensed their pomp To rainbow lacquer which the ocean pow’rs Had lavished, godlike, on the gorgeous bowl. |