Page TWO THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1961 Southern Pines North Carolina “In taking over The Pilot no changes are contemplated. We will try to keep this a good paper. We will try to make a little money for all concerned. Wherever there seems to be an occasion to use our influence for the public good we will try to do it. And we will treat everybody alike.”—James Boyd, May 23, 1941. An Easter Carol Spring bursts today, For Christ is risen and all the earth’s at play. Flash forth, thou Sun, The rain is over and gone, its work is done. Winter is past. Sweet Spring is come at last, is come at last. Bud, Fig and Vine, Bud, Olive, fat with fruit and oil and wine. Break forth this morn In roses, thou but yesterday a Thorn. Uplift thy head, O pure white Lily through the Winter dead. Beside your dams Leap and rejoice, you merry-making Lambs. All Herds and Flocks Rejoice, all Beasts of thickets and of rocks. Sing, Creatures, sing, Angels and Men and Birds and everything. All notes of Doves Fill all our world: this is the times of loves. —CHRISTINA ROSSETTI *In No Strange Land^ Springes Welcome O world invisible, we view thee, O world intangible, we touch thee, O world unknowable, we know thee, Does the fish soar to find the ocean, The eagle plunge to find the air. That we ask of the stars in motion If they have rumor of thee there? Not where the wheeling systems darken. And our benumbed conceiving soars!— The drift of pinions, would we hearken. Beats at our own clay-shuttered doors. The angels keep their ancient places;— Turn but a stone, and start a wing! ‘Tis ye, ’tis your estranged faces, That miss the many-splendored thing. What bird so sings, yet so does wail? O ’tis the ravish’d nightingale. Jug, jug, jug, tereu! she cries. And still her woes at midnight rise. Brave prick-song! Who is’t now we hear? None but the lark so shrill and clear; Now at heaven’s gate she claps her wings. The morn not waking till she sings. Hark, hark with what a pretty throat Poor robin redbreast tunes his note! Hark how the jolly cuckoos sing Cuckoo! to welcome in the spring! Cuckoo! to welcome in the spring! —JOHN LYLY (1553-1606) But (when so sad thou canst not sadder) Cry:—and upon thy so sore loss Shall shine the traffic of Jacob’s ladder Pitched betwixt Heaven and Charing Cross. With Beauty Yea, in the night, my Soul, my daughter. Cry,—clinging Heaven by the hems, And, lo, Christ walking on the water Not of Gennesareth, but Thames. —FRANCIS THOMPSON Who walks with Beauty has no need of fear: The sun and moon and stars keep pace with him; Invisible hands restore the ruined year, And time itself grows beautifully dim. One hill will keep the footprints of the moon That came and went a hushed and secret hour; One star at dusk will yield the lasting boon: Remembered beauty’s white, immortal flower. Blessing the Kindling I will kindle my fire this morning In presence of the holy angels of heaven, In presence of Ariel of the loveliest form. In presence of Uriel of the myriad charms, Without malice, without jealousy, without envy. Without fear, without terror of any one under the sun, Who-lakes of Beauty wine and daily bread. Will know no lack when bitter years are lean; The brimming cup is by, the feast is spread: The sun and moon and stars his eyes have seen Are for his hunger and the thirst he slakes: The wine of Beauty and the bread he breaks. ' —DAVID MORTON Easter Wings But the Holy Son of God to shield me. God, kindle Thou in my heart, within, A flame of love to my neighbor. To my foe, to my friend, to my kindred all. To the brave, to the knave, to the thrall, O Son of the loveliest Mary, From the lowliest thing that liveth. To the Name that is highest of all. —ALEXANDER CARMICHAEL (From the Gaelic) To Daffodils Fair daffodils, we weep to see You haste away so soon; As yet the early-rising sun Has not attained his noon. Stay, stay Until the hasting day Has run But to the evensong; And, having prayed together, we Will go with you along. Then shall the fall further the flight in me. My tender age in sorrow did beginne: And still with sicknesses and shame Though didst so punish sinne. That I became Most thinne. With thee Let me combine. And feel this day the victorie; For, if I imp my wing on thine. Affliction shall advance the flight in me. —GEORGE HERBERT (1593-1633) Blue-Butterfly Day We have short time to stay, as you, We have as short a spring; As quick a growth to meet decay, As you or anything. We die. As your hours do, and dry Away, Like to the summer’s rain; Or as the pearls of morning’s dew. Ne’er to be found again. ' —ROBERT HERRICK (1591-1674) It is blue-butterfly day here in spring. And with these sky-flakes down in flurry on flurry There is more unmixed color on the wing Than flowers will show for days unless they hurry. But these are flowers that fly and all but sing; And now from having ridden out desire They lie closed over in the wind and cling Where wheels have freshly sliced the April mire. —ROBERT FROST Pied Beauty Glory be to God for dappled things— For skies of couple-colour, as a brinded cow; For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim; Fresh-firecoal chestnut-calls; finches’ wings; Landscape plotted and pieced—fold, fallow, and plough; And all trades, their gear and tackle and trim. All things counter, original, spare, strange; Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?) With swift, slow; sweet, sour; a-dazzle, dim; He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise Him. —GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS iii % - . 'if ^ ^ * THE MIRACLE OF LIFE ITSELF' (Springtime scene at Clarendon Gardens, Pinehurst) ICs Important to Wonder (Two excerpts from "Come Rain. Come Shine" by John Moore) Lord, who createdst man in wealth and store Though foolishly he lost the same, Decaying more and more. Till he became Mosl poore: O let me rise As larks, harmoniously. And sing this day thy victories: If you have any children be tween five and eight, you should never omit from your seedman’s order at least one packet each of mustard and watercress. You should then, in February for preference, provide each o^ the children with a saucer and a small square of flannel. . . The flannel should be laid in the sau cers and allowed to soak up as much warm water as it will. Th.'j seed should be sprinkled on the flannel, the cress first, the mus tard two days later, because the cress takes a little longer to ger minate. In due course a sort of' grey fluff will appear upon the seeds. Then they will ‘chit’—a tiny shoot sprouting from eagh. Within a few days there will be green leaves, lengthening stalks: a week later, if your room is a warm one, the children can eat mustard-and-cress sandwiches. Possibly tbs mustard and cress won’t be so good as it would^ be if you grew it in earth, in a box or pan; but it’ll taste fine to the children. The presence of soil would detract from the miracle; even five-year-olds expect things to grow in the earth. With the flannel only, they can get a better view of the sprouts length ening and the little fibrous roots forming. How does th.? stuff grow with out any “food”? I suppose it has stored up enough food within the seed to last it at any rate for a fortnight. But that's not the mir acle. The miracle is germination: life itself. Now, although your children watch television, read about spaceships and so on without showing the least surprise that these concepts should be, it is nevertheless important that they should know Wonder. If they can experience Wonder when they watch the seeds growing, there’s no great harm in their ac cepting television as an everyday happening. You will probably find it impossible to teach them th.3 wonder of television, for that belongs 1,0 your generation and mine. But unless they can kno'w som.s Wonder they will lack hu mility; and the eternal, unchan e- ing, ever-present Wonder is this mystery of Life. It is the completely fundamen- FOR SPRING This page today, as in sev eral past years, is given over to Spring and to the Easter season—a time of year that in the Sandhills provides natural charm and beauty in abundance. Both the message of Easter —the inspiration of the Res urrection—and the recurring rejuvenation of the Spring have evoked from men and women, now and in past cen turies, a deep emotional re sponse. expressed in all the arts, but with peculiar effec- ti'veness, it seems to us, in poetry. So again we reach back in time for some of our comments on the eternal miracles of Christian sacrifice and the awakening earth. tal mystery. That man’s ingenu ity should harness electricity, in vent the internal combustion en gine, build airplanes to fly at 70() m.p.h., and ultimately drive rockets to the stars, is not partic ularly wonderful once you have accepted the inventiveness and the questing spirit of man. But the wonder is that men exist; and still more that some five hundneS million years ago a fusion or combination or creation of mat ter (have it which way you like) produced by accident or desigp a tiny cell which grew—which grew as the mustard and cress grows, and proliferated, and, as it adapted itself to changing con ditions, itself changed, sprouted organs, legs, eyes, shells, intes tines, lungs, tails—giving birth in time to an infinite variety of living creatures “multiplex of wing and eye,” which by a pro cess of adaptation and inter necine warfare, living upon each other, resulted ultimately in fishes, great lizards, birds, mam mals, apes, ourselves. to New York in a few hours, al though we can Set off a process of nuclear fission, or fusion, by which it may be possible to de stroy all life upon the earth, WE STILL DON’T KNOW WHAT LIFE IS. That’s why I recommend the mustard and cress as an intro- , duction to humility; without which your children will grow up into the kind of adults you would not wish to contemplate. If they wonder when the seed sprouts, it’s enough; for this is the wonder that makes all else commonplace. It even makes the existence of Martians and Ven- usians a matter for no surprise. After all, if the process started here, it probably started there too; but the climatic conditions being so different, the living or ganisms probably had to be dif ferent in order to adapt them selves to it. All this from the germ; and al though we can transmit sound and pictures by a kind of magic great distances, although we can transport ourselves from London And so if a little green man with antennae like a butterfly’s or a thinking vegetable, a Triffid, appears one morning at my back door, I shall not be really aston ished. Why should I be? I exper ienced the true astonishment forty years ago, when I grew the mustard and cress on the flannel. ‘Cuckoo Birds of Golden Hue’ We used to call the wild daf fodils Affies, and w.a bicycled across the Severn into the red- sandstone I country where they grew and came back with huge bunches which we hawked ^ound the neighbors at a tew pence for a sticky double-handful. The gypsies, who were on the move from their winter-quarters, did likewise but sold smaller bunches at a higher price. When the March wind flutters the daffodils, they seem to come alive, and you might almost sup pose them to be winged things, anchored only by their fragile stems to the ground. How stolid by comparison are the marsh marigolds (which we called king cups and which were Shake speare’s “cuckoo-buds of golden hue”). They have a pleasing bux omness, and look aggressively healthy, like farmers’ daughters in old prints. What pals waifs be side them are the wood anem ones, the delicate windflowers, of which ' Gerard, the herbalist, wrote so sweetly: “It hath small leaves very much snipt or jagged, among which rises up a stalke bare or naked almost to the top; and at the top of the stalke cometh forth a faire and beautiful floure which never doth open itself but when the wind do blow.” That Sharp Knife Yes, and in that month when Proserpine comes back and Ceres’s dead heart rekindles, when all the woods are a tender, smoky blur, and birds no bigger than a budding leaf dart through the singing trees, and when an odorous tar comes spongy in the streets, and boys roll balls of it upon their tongues, and they are lumpy with tops and agate marbles; and there is blasting thunder in the night, and the soaking million footed rain, and one looks out at morning on a stormy sky, a broken wrack of cloud; and when the mountain boy brings water to his kinsmen laying fence, and as the wind snakes through the grasses hears far in the valley below the long wail of the whistle and the faint clangor of a bell; and the blue great cup of the hills seems closer, nearer, for he has heard an inarticulate promise: he has been pierced by Spring, that sharp knife. And life unseals its rusty weathered pelt and earth wells out in tender exhaustless strength, and the cup of a man’s heart runs over with dateless expectancy, tongueless promise, in definable desire. Something gathers in the throat, something blinds him in the eyes, and faint and valorous horns sound through the earth. And little girls trot pigtailed primly on their dutiful way to school; but the young gods loiter: they hear the reed, the oaten stop, the running goathoofs in the spongy wood, here, there, everywhere; they dawdle, listen, fleetest when they wait, go vaguely on to their one fixed home, because the earth is full of ancient rumor and they cannot find the way. —THOMAS WOLFE Crains of Sand matiNs Pack, clouds, away; And wel come, day! With night we banish sorrow; Sweet air, blow soft; mount, lark, aloft. To give my Love good-ihorrow! Wings from the wind to please her mind. Notes from the lark I’ll borrow, Bird, prune thy wing! Nightingale, sing! To give my love good-morrow! To give my love good-morrow Notes from them all I’ll borrow! —HEYWOOD NOT FOR SPECIALISTS The green catalpa tree has turn ed All white; the cherry blooms once rhore. In one ■Whole year I haven’t I learned A blessed thing they pay you for. . . Though trees turn bare and girls turn wives,. We shall afford our costly sea sons; There is a gentleness survives That will outspeak and has its reasons. There is a loveliness exists. Preserves us. Not for specialists. -W. D. SNODGRASS PITY ME NOT Pity me, not because the light of day At close of day no longer walks the sky; Pity me not for beauties passed away From field and thicket as the year goes by; Pity rtie not the waning of the moon Nor that the ebbing tide goes out to sea. Nor that a man’s desire is hush ed so soon And you no longer look with love on me. This have I known always: Love is no more Than the wild blossom which the wind assails. Than the great tide that treads the shifting shore Strewing fresh wreckage gather ed in the gales. Pity me that the heart is slow to learn What the swift mind beholds at every turn. —MILLAY BY SANDY WATERS Much have I roved by Sandy River Among the spring - bloomed thyme. Where love and life go on for ever And where I’ve spun my rhyme Much have I loved by Sandy River Girls with the light brown hair; I thought love would go on for ever. Spring be forever fair. The- spring for mountains goes forever But not for us who fade In love and life by Sandy River Before our dreams are made . . . Before our dust goes back forever To mountain earth we’ve known; Before the sweet thyme blossoms hither Among the gray sandstone. I pray the music from this river Will sing for them and me; Will sing for us, for us forever In our eternity. —JESSE STUART (“Kentucky is My Land”) The PILOT Published Every Thursda'y by THE PILOT. Incorporated . Southern Pines, North Carolina 1941—JAMES BOYD—1944 Katharine Boyd Editor C. Benedict Associate Editor Dan S. Ray Gen.* Mgr. C. G. Council Advertising Mary Scott Newton Business Mary Evelyn de Nissoff Society Composing Room Dixie B. Ray, Michael Valen, Jas per Swearingen, TK&mas Mattocks and James C. Morris. Subscription Rates: One Year $4. 6 mos. $2. 3 mos. $1 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mail matter. Member National Editoriari Assn, and N. C. Press Assn.