A New-Year Ode

By Algernon Charles Swinburne

    To Victor Hugo I.     Twice twelve times have the springs of years refilled     Their fountains from the river-head of time     Since by the green seas marge, ere autumn chilled     Waters and woods with sense of changing clime,     A great light rose upon my soul, and thrilled     My spirit of sense with sense of spheres in chime,     Sound as of song wherewith a God would build     Towers that no force of conquering war might climb.     Wind shook the glimmering sea     Even as my soul in me     Was stirred with breath of mastery more sublime,     Uplift and borne along     More thunderous tides of song,     Where wave rang back to wave more rapturous rhyme     And world on world flashed lordlier light     Than ever lit the wandering ways of ships by night. II.     The spirit of God, whose breath of life is song,     Moved, though his word was human, on the face     Of those deep waters of the soul, too long     Dumb, dark, and cold, that waited for the grace     Wherewith day kindles heaven: and as some throng     Of quiring wings fills full some lone chill place     With sudden rush of life and joy, more strong     Than death or sorrow or all nights darkling race,     So was my heart, that heard     All heaven in each deep word,     Filled full with light of thought, and waxed apace     Itself more wide and deep,     To take that gift and keep     And cherish while my days fulfilled their space;     A record wide as earth and sea,     The Legend writ of Ages past and yet to be. III.     As high the chant of Paradise and Hell     Rose, when the soul of Milton gave it wings;     As wide the sweep of Shakespeares empire fell,     When life had bared for him her secret springs;     But not his various soul might range and dwell     Amid the mysteries of the founts of things;     Nor Miltons range of rule so far might swell     Across the kingdoms of forgotten kings.     Men, centuries, nations, time,     Life, death, love, trust, and crime,     Rang record through the change of smitten strings     That felt an exiles hand     Sound hope for every land     More loud than storms cloud-sundering trumpet rings,     And bid strong death for judgment rise,     And life bow down for judgment of his awless eyes. IV.     And death, soul-stricken in his strength, resigned     The keeping of the sepulchres to song;     And life was humbled, and his height of mind     Brought lower than lies a grave-stone fallen along;     And like a ghost and like a God mankind     Rose clad with light and darkness; weak and strong,     Clean and unclean, with eyes afire and blind,     Wounded and whole, fast bound with cord and thong,     Free; fair and foul, sin-stained,     And sinless; crowned and chained;     Fleet-limbed, and halting all his lifetime long;     Glad of deep shame, and sad     For shames sake; wise, and mad;     Girt round with love and hate of right and wrong;     Armed and disarmed for sleep and strife;     Proud, and sore fear made havoc of his pride of life. V.     Shadows and shapes of fable and storied sooth     Rose glorious as with gleam of gold unpriced;     Eve, clothed with heavenly nakedness and youth     That matched the mornings; Cain, self-sacrificed     On crimes first altar: legends wise as truth,     And truth in legends deep embalmed and spiced;     The stars that saw the starlike eyes of Ruth,     The grave that heard the clarion call of Christ.     And higher than sorrow and mirth     The heavenly song of earth     Sprang, in such notes as might have well sufficed     To still the storms of time     And sins contentious clime     With peace renewed of life reparadised:     Earth, scarred not yet with temporal scars;     Goddess of gods, our mother, chosen among the stars. VI.     Earth fair as heaven, ere change and time set odds     Between them, light and darkness know not when,     And fear, grown strong through panic periods,     Crouched, a crowned worm, in faiths Lernean fen,     And love lay bound, and hope was scourged with rods,     And death cried out from desert and from den,     Seeing all the heaven above him dark with gods     And all the world about him marred of men.     Cities that nought might purge     Save the seas whelming surge     From all the pent pollutions in their pen     Deep death drank down, and wrought,     With wreck of all things, nought,     That none might live of all their names again,     Nor aught of all whose life is breath     Serve any God whose likeness was not like to death. VII.     Till by the lips and eyes of one live nation     The blind mute world found grace to see and speak,     And light watched rise a more divine creation     At that more godlike utterance of the Greek,     Let there be freedom. Kings whose orient station     Made pale the morn, and all her presage bleak,     Girt each with strengths of all his generation,     Dim tribes of shamefaced soul and sun-swart cheek,     Twice, urged with one desire,     Son following hard on sire,     With all the wrath of all a world to wreak,     And all the rage of night     Afire against the light     Whose weakness makes her strong-winged empire weak,     Stood up to unsay that saying, and fell     Too far for song, though song were thousand-tongued, to tell. VIII.     From those deep echoes of the loud gean     That rolled response whereat false fear was chid     By songs of joy sublime and Sophoclean,     Fresh notes reverberate westward rose to bid     All wearier times take comfort from the pan     That tells the night what deeds the sunrise did,     Even till the lawns and torrents Pyrenean     Ring answer from the records of the Cid.     But never force of fountains     From sunniest hearts of mountains     Wherein the soul of hidden June was hid     Poured forth so pure and strong     Springs of reiterate song,     Loud as the streams his fame was reared amid,     More sweet than flowers they feed, and fair     With grace of lordlier sunshine and more lambent air. IX.     A star more prosperous than the storm-clothed easts     Clothed all the warm south-west with light like springs,     When hands of strong men spread the wolves their feasts     And from snake-spirited princes plucked the stings;     Ere earth, grown all one den of hurtling beasts,     Had for her sunshine and her watersprings     The fire of hell that warmed the hearts of priests,     The wells of blood that slaked the lips of kings.     The shadow of night made stone     Stood populous and alone,     Dense with its dead and loathed of living things     That draw not life from death,     And as with hells own breath     And clangour of immitigable wings     Vexed the fair face of Paris, made     Foul in its murderous imminence of sound and shade. X.     And all these things were parcels of the vision     That moved a cloud before his eyes, or stood     A tower half shattered by the strong collision     Of spirit and spirit, of evil gods with good;     A ruinous wall rent through with grim division,     Where time had marked his every monstrous mood     Of scorn and strength and pride and self-derision:     The Tower of Things, that felt upon it brood     Night, and about it cast     The storm of all the past     Now mute and forceless as a fire subdued:     Yet through the rifted years     And centuries veiled with tears     And ages as with very death imbrued     Freedom, whence hope and faith grow strong,     Smiles, and firm love sustains the indissoluble song. XI.     Above the cloudy coil of days deceased,     Its might of flight, with mists and storms beset,     Burns heavenward, as with heart and hope increased,     For all the change of tempests, all the fret     Of frost or fire, keen fraud or force released,     Wherewith the world once wasted knows not yet     If evil or good lit all the darkling east     From the ardent moon of sovereign Mahomet.     Sublime in work and will     The song sublimer still     Salutes him, ere the splendour shrink and set;     Then with imperious eye     And wing that sounds the sky     Soars and sees risen as ghosts in concourse met     The old worlds seven elder wonders, firm     As dust and fixed as shadows, weaker than the worm. XII.     High witness borne of knights high-souled and hoary     Before deaths face and empires rings and glows     Even from the dust their life poured forth left gory,     As the eagles cry rings after from the snows     Supreme rebuke of shame clothed round with glory     And hosts whose track the false crowned eagle shows;     More loud than sounds through stormiest song and story     The laugh of slayers whose names the sea-wind knows;     More loud than peals on land     In many a red wet hand     The clash of gold and cymbals as they close;     Loud as the blast that meets     The might of marshalled fleets     And sheds it into shipwreck, like a rose     Blown from a childs light grasp in sign     That earths high lords are lords not over breeze and brine. XIII.     Above the dust and mire of mans dejection     The wide-winged spirit of song resurgent sees     His wingless and long-labouring resurrection     Up the arduous heaven, by sore and strange degrees     Mount, and with splendour of the souls reflection     Strike heavens dark sovereign down upon his knees,     Pale in the light of orient insurrection,     And dumb before the almightier lords decrees     Who bade him be of yore,     Who bids him be no more:     And all earths heart is quickened as the seas,     Even as when sunrise burns     The very seas heart yearns     That heard not on the midnight-walking breeze     The wail that woke with evensong     From hearts of poor folk watching all the darkness long. XIV.     Dawn and the beams of sunbright song illume     Love, with strange children at her piteous breast,     By grace of weakness from the grave-mouthed gloom     Plucked, and by mercy lulled to living rest,     Soft as the nurslings nigh the grandsires tomb     That fell on sleep, a bird of rifled nest;     Soft as the lips whose smile unsaid the doom     That gave their sire to violent deaths arrest.     Even for such loves sake strong,     Wrath fires the inveterate song     That bids hell gape for one whose bland mouth blest     All slayers and liars that sighed     Prayer as they slew and lied     Till blood had clothed his priesthood as a vest,     And hears, though darkness yet be dumb,     The silence of the trumpet of the wrath to come. XV.     Nor lacked these lights of constellated age     A star among them fed with life more dire,     Lit with his bloodied fame, whose withering rage     Made earth for heavens sake one funereal pyre     And life in faiths name one appointed stage     For death to purge the souls of men with fire.     Heaven, earth, and hell on one thrice tragic page     Mixed all their light and darkness: one mans lyre     Gave all their echoes voice;     Bade rose-cheeked love rejoice,     And cold-lipped craft with ravenous fear conspire,     And fire-eyed faith smite hope     Dead, seeing enthroned as Pope     And crowned of heaven on earth at hells desire     Sin, called by deaths incestuous name     Borgia: the world that heard it flushed and quailed with shame. XVI.     Another year, and hope triumphant heard     The consummating sound of song that spake     Conclusion to the multitudinous word     Whose expectation held her spirit awake     Till full delight for twice twelve years deferred     Bade all souls entering eat and drink, and take     A third time comfort given them, that the third     Might heap the measure up of twain, and make     The sinking year sublime     Among all sons of time     And fan in all mens memories for his sake.     Each thought of ours became     Fire, kindling from his flame,     And music widening in his wide songs wake.     Yea, and the world bore witness here     How great a light was risen upon this darkening year. XVII.     It was the dawn of winter: sword in sheath,     Change, veiled and mild, came down the gradual air     With cold slow smiles that hid the doom beneath.     Five days to die in yet were autumns, ere     The last leaf withered from his flowerless wreath.     South, east, and north, our skies were all blown bare,     But westward over glimmering holt and heath     Cloud, wind, and light had made a heaven more fair     Than ever dream or truth     Showed earth in times keen youth     When men with angels communed unaware.     Above the suns head, now     Veiled even to the ardent brow,     Rose two sheer wings of sundering cloud, that were     As a birds poised for vehement flight,     Full-fledged with plumes of tawny fire and hoar grey light. XVIII.     As midnight black, as twilight brown, they spread,     But feathered thick with flame that streaked and lined     Their living darkness, ominous else of dread,     From south to northmost verge of heaven inclined     Most like some giant angels, whose bent head     Bowed earthward, as with message for mankind     Of doom or benediction to be shed     From passage of his presence. Far behind,     Even while they seemed to close,     Stoop, and take flight, arose     Above them, higher than heavenliest thought may find     In light or night supreme     Of vision or of dream,     Immeasurable of mens eyes or mounting mind,     Heaven, manifest in manifold     Light of pure pallid amber, cheered with fire of gold. XIX.     And where the fine gold faded all the sky     Shone green as the outer sea when April glows,     Inlaid with flakes and feathers fledged to fly     Of cloud suspense in rapture and repose,     With large live petals, broad as love bids lie     Full open when the sun salutes the rose,     And small rent sprays wherewith the heavens most high     Were strewn as autumn strews the garden-close     With ruinous roseleaves whirled     About their wan chill world,     Through wind-worn bowers that now no music knows,     Spoil of the dim dusk year     Whose utter night is near,     And near the flower of dawn beyond it blows;     Till east and west were fire and light,     As though the dawn to come had flushed the coming night. XX.     The highways paced of men that toil or play,     The byways known of none but lonely feet,     Were paven of purple woven of night and day     With hands that met as hands of friends might meet,     As though nights were not lifted up to slay     And days had waxed not weaker. Peace more sweet     Than music, light more soft than shadow, lay     On downs and moorlands wan with days defeat,     That watched afar above     Lifes very rose of love     Let all its lustrous leaves fall, fade, and fleet,     And fill all heaven and earth     Full as with fires of birth     Whence time should feed his years with light and heat:     Nay, not lifes, but a flower more strong     Than life or time or death, loves very rose of song. XXI.     Song visible, whence all mens eyes were lit     With love and loving wonder: song that glowed     Through cloud and change on souls that knew not it     And hearts that wist not whence their comfort flowed,     Whence fear was lightened of her fever-fit,     Whence anguish of her life-compelling load.     Yea, no mans head whereon the fire alit,     Of all that passed along that sunset road     Westward, no brow so drear,     No eye so dull of cheer,     No face so mean whereon that light abode,     But as with alien pride     Strange godhead glorified     Each feature flushed from heaven with fire that showed     The likeness of its own life wrought     By strong transfiguration as of living thought. XXII.     Nor only clouds of the everlasting sky,     Nor only men that paced that sunward way     To the utter bourne of evening, passed not by     Unblest or unillumined: none might say,     Of all things visible in the wide worlds eye,     That all too low for all that grace it lay:     The lowliest lakelets of the moorland nigh,     The narrowest pools where shallowest wavelets play,     Were filled from heaven above     With light like fire of love,     With flames and colours like a dawn in May,     As hearts that lowlier live     With light of thoughts that give     Light from the depth of souls more deep than they     Through songs or storys kindling scroll,     The splendour of the shadow that reveals the soul. XXIII.     For, when such light is in the world, we share,     All of us, all the rays thereof that shine:     Its presence is alive in the unseen air,     Its fire within our veins as quickening wine;     A spirit is shed on all men everywhere,     Known or not known of all men for divine.     Yea, as the sun makes heaven, that light makes fair     All souls of ours, all lesser souls than thine,     Priest, prophet, seer and sage,     Lord of a subject age     That bears thy seal upon it for a sign;     Whose name shall be thy name,     Whose light thy light of fame,     The light of love that makes thy soul a shrine;     Whose record through all years to be     Shall bear this witness written, that its womb bare thee. XXIV.     O mystery, whence to one mans hand was given     Power upon all things of the spirit, and might     Whereby the veil of all the years was riven     And naked stood the secret soul of night!     O marvel, hailed of eyes whence cloud is driven,     That shows at last wrong reconciled with right     By death divine of evil and sin forgiven!     O light of song, whose fire is perfect light!     No speech, no voice, no thought,     No love, avails us aught     For service of thanksgiving in his sight     Who hath given us all for ever     Such gifts that man gave never     So many and great since first Times wings took flight.     Man may not praise a spirit above     Mans: life and death shall praise him: we can only love. XXV.     Life, everlasting while the worlds endure,     Death, self-abased before a power more high,     Shall bear one witness, and their word stand sure,     That not till time be dead shall this man die     Love, like a bird, comes loyal to his lure;     Fame flies before him, wingless else to fly.     A childs heart toward his kind is not more pure,     An eagles toward the sun no lordlier eye.     Awe sweet as love and proud     As fame, though hushed and bowed,     Yearns toward him silent as his face goes by:     All crowns before his crown     Triumphantly bow down,     For pride that one more great than all draws nigh:     All souls applaud, all hearts acclaim,     One heart benign, one soul supreme, one conquering name.

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Poem Details

Language: English
Keywords: Public Domain
Source: Public Domain Collection
Rights/Permissions: Public Domain

Analysis & Notes:
This piece is a grand, sweeping tribute to the celebrated French poet and novelist Victor Hugo, traversing his life and works, and the profound influence he had on literature and society. The poem is rich with classical allusions and biblical imagery, underscoring the monumental stature of Hugo in the eyes of the poet.

The poem's structure is epic in its scope, divided into twenty-five sections, each one a tribute to a different aspect of Hugo's life, work, or influence. The use of rhyme, meter, and intricate language, while complex, creates a rhythmic flow that carries the reader through the narrative.

The poem explores themes of power, divinity, creativity, and the transformative impact of literature. The poet positions Hugo as a near divine figure "whose fire is perfect light", whose works have the power to reveal truths and inspire change. The tone is one of profound reverence and admiration, painting Hugo as a figure of unmatched brilliance and influence.

The poem also makes use of standout literary devices such as alliteration, vivid imagery, and metaphor to enhance its narrative and emotional impact. For example, the poet uses the image of a bird and a lure to represent love's attraction to Hugo's works, and an eagle toward the sun to symbolize Hugo's lofty ambition and achievements. These striking images serve to emphasize the enormity of Hugo's literary contribution and the enduring impact of his works.

Overall, this poem is a richly textured, deeply admiring tribute to Victor Hugo. It celebrates his extraordinary literary talent, his profound influence on literature and society, and the timeless appeal of his works.

Understanding Elegy

An elegy is a form of poetry that expresses sorrow or lamentation, often for someone who has died. This type of poetry serves as a tribute to the deceased, reflecting on their life and the grief left behind.


Elegies are deeply emotional and personal, exploring themes of loss, mourning, and remembrance. Here are some defining characteristics:

  • Mournful Tone: Elegies are characterized by a tone of sadness and reflection, as the poet grapples with the pain of loss.
  • Tribute to the Deceased: The subject of an elegy is often someone who has passed away, with the poem serving as a memorial that honors their life and legacy.
  • Personal Reflection: Elegies often include personal reflections on the impact of the deceased on the poet's life, as well as broader musings on mortality and the human condition.
  • Structure and Form: While elegies can vary in form, they often follow a traditional structure that includes an expression of grief, praise for the deceased, and a sense of consolation or acceptance.

From ancient times to the present, elegies have provided a way for poets to navigate the complexities of grief and loss, offering solace and a means of preserving the memory of those who have passed.