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Alfred Noyes

Ballad of Old Japan

In old Japan, by creek and bay,

The blue plum-blossoms blow,

Where birds with sea-blue plumage gay

Thro' sea-blue branches go:

Dragons are coiling down below

Like dragons on a fan;

And pig-tailed sailors lurching slow

Thro' streets of old Japan.


There, in the dim blue death of day

Where white tea-roses grow

Petals and scents are strewn astray

Till night be sweet enow.

Then lovers wander whispering low

As lovers only can,

Where rosy paper lanterns glow

Thro' streets of old Japan.


From Wonderland to Yea-or-Nay

The junks of Weal-and-Woe

Dream on the purple water-way

Nor ever meet a foe;

Though still, with stiff mustachio

And crooked ataghan,

Their pirates guard with pomp and show

The ships of old Japan.


That land is very far away,

We lost it long ago!

No fairies ride the cherry spray,

No witches mop and mow,

The violet wells have ceased to flow;

And O, how faint and wan

The dawn on Fusiyama's snow.

The peak of old Japan.


Half smilingly our hearts delay,

Half mournfully forego

The blue fantastic twisted day

When faithful Konojo,

For small white Lily Hasu-ko

Knelt in the Butsudan,

And her tomb opened to bestrow

Lilies thro' old Japan.


There was a game they used to play

I' the San-ju-san-jen Do,

They filled a little lacquer tray

With powders in a row,

Dry dust of flowers from Tashiro

To Mount Daimugenzan,

Dry little heaps of dust, but O

They breathed of old Japan.


Then knights in blue and gold array

Would on their thumbs bestow

A pinch from every heap and say,

With many a hum  and ho, 

What blossoms, nodding to and fro

For joy of maid or man,

Conceived the scents that puzzled so

The brains of old Japan.


The hundred ghosts have ceased to affray

The dust of Kyoto,

Ah yet, what phantom blooms a-sway

Murmur, a-loft, a-low,

In dells no scythe of death can mow,

No power of reason scan,

O, what Samurai singers know

The Flower of old Japan?


Dry dust of blossoms, dim and gray,

Lost on the wind? Ah, no.

Hark, from yon clump of English may,

A cherub's mocking crow,

A sudden twang, a sweet, swift throe,

As Daisy trips by Dan,

And careless Cupid drops his bow

And laughs—from old Japan.


There, in the dim blue death of day

Where white tea-roses grow,

Petals and scents are strewn astray

Till night be sweet enow.

Then lovers wander, whispering low

As lovers only can,

Where rosy paper lanterns glow

Thro' streets of old Japan.