Monday, January 27, 2014

I haven't updated the archive since last summer, and today is the day to remedy that lack. As luck would have it, I've reached what I think is the most beautiful poem in her collection. I like this first poem so much that I'll be including it The Conversation, although the one that follows is also lovely. Both are Jourdain at her best: focused, precise, patient, lyrical.


Watching the Meet

Milly Jourdain

The air is still so new and fresh and cold,
It makes a warm excitement in our hearts
To drive beside the sad and lonely fields.
And now we see a wider space of road
Where groups of horsemen moving restlessly
Are waiting for the quiet-footed hounds.
The hounds come swiftly, covering the way
Like foaming water surging round our feet.
And then with cries and sound of cracking whips
All, all are gone: the distant beat of hoofs
Like trailing smoke of dreams, comes fitfully
To tell how near they were a moment past.
But we see only winter trees again,
And turning homewards meet a drifting rain.



The End of a Hunting Day

Milly Jourdain

The dusk is creeping up the vale
While on the hill we rest,
And look across the wint'ry fields
Towards the dark'ning west.

A ringing sound comes changefully
Along the narrow way--
Some horsemen going to their homes,
After a hunting day.

They call "Good-night," and soon the dark
Has swallowed them from sight:
But still the sound lives on a while
Lingering like a light.

And now it all grows lonelier
Under the quiet sky,
Until some sparks of life shall come
And burn and then pass by.

2 comments:

  1. Dawn, I was searching for some basic biographical information about Milly Jourdain (full name--birth and married names, and years for each--and birth and death years) and I stumbled on your posted comments about Milly. You might be interested in this article: Archie Edward Heath (1887-1961), "Philip Edward Bertrand Jourdain", The Monist 30 #2 (April 1920), 161-182. I think this is freely available at . Pages 162-171 of this article has a lot of personal reminiscences, written by Milly, about Milly's and Philip's childhood and young adult years.

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    1. Apparently URL's are erased in blog comments. You can find the JSTOR version of the article I mentioned by googling this combination of words and phrases: Philip Milly Jourdain "The Monist"

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