Young Adventure
II. Miscellaneous

Stephen Vi

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Rain after a Vaudeville Show

The last pose flickered, failed. The screen's dead white

Glared in a sudden flooding of harsh light

Stabbing the eyes; and as I stumbled out

The curtain rose. A fat girl with a pout

And legs like hams, began to sing "His Mother".

Gusts of bad air rose in a choking smother;

Smoke, the wet steam of clothes, the stench of plush,

Powder, cheap perfume, mingled in a rush.

I stepped into the lobby -- and stood still

Struck dumb by sudden beauty, body and will.

Cleanness and rapture -- excellence made plain --

The storming, thrashing arrows of the rain!

Pouring and dripping on the roofs and rods,

Smelling of woods and hills and fresh-turned sods,

Black on the sidewalks, gray in the far sky,

Crashing on thirsty panes, on gutters dry,

Hurrying the crowd to shelter, making fair

The streets, the houses, and the heat-soaked air, --

Merciful, holy, charging, sweeping, flashing,

It smote the soul with a most iron clashing! . . .

Like dragons' eyes the street-lamps suddenly gleamed,

Yellow and round and dim-low globes of flame.

And, scarce-perceived, the clouds' tall banners streamed.

Out of the petty wars, the daily shame,

Beauty strove suddenly, and rose, and flowered. . . .

I gripped my coat and plunged where awnings lowered.

Made one with hissing blackness, caught, embraced,

By splendor and by striving and swift haste --

Spring coming in with thunderings and strife --

I stamped the ground in the strong joy of life!

The City Revisited

The grey gulls drift across the bay

Softly and still as flakes of snow

Against the thinning fog. All day

I sat and watched them come and go;

And now at last the sun was set,

Filling the waves with colored fire

Till each seemed like a jewelled spire

Thrust up from some drowned city. Soon

From peak and cliff and minaret

The city's lights began to wink,

Each like a friendly word. The moon

Began to brn out her shield,

Spurting with silver. Straight before

The brown hills lay like quiet beasts

Stretched out beside a well-loved door,

And filling earth and sky and field

With the calm heaving of their breasts.

Nothing was gone, nothing was changed,

The smallest wave was unestranged

By all the long ache of the years

Since last I saw them, blind with tears.

Their welcome like the hills stood fast:

And I, I had come home at last.

So I laughed out with them aloud

To think that now the sun was br

And climbing up the iron sky,

Where the raw streets stretched sullenly

About another room I knew,

In a mean house -- and soon there, too,

The smith would burst the flimsy door

And find me lying on the floor.

Just where I fell the other night,

After that breaking wave of pain. --

How they will storm and rage and fight,

Servants and mistress, one and all,

"No money for the funeral!"

I broke my life there. Let it stand

At that.

The waters are a plain,

Heaving and bright on either hand,

A tremulous and lustral peace

Which shall endure though all things cease,

Filling my heart as water fills

A cup. There stand the quiet hills.

So, waiting for my wings to grow,

I watch the gulls sail to and fro,

Rising and falling, soft and swift,

Drifting along as bubbles drift.

And, though I see the face of God

Hereafter -- this day have I trod

Nearer to Him than I shall tread

Ever again. The night is dead.

And there's the dawn, poured out like wine

Along the dim horizon-line.

And from the city comes the chimes --

We have our heaven on earth -- sometimes!

Going Back to School

The boat ploughed on. Now Alcatraz was past

And all the grey waves flamed to red again

At the dead sun's last glimmer. Far and vast

The Sausalito lights burned suddenly

In little dots and clumps, as if a pen

Had scrawled vague lines of gold across the hills;

The sky was like a cup some rare wine fills,

And stars came as he watched

-- and he was free

One splendid instant -- back in the great room,

Curled in a chair with all of them beside

And the whole world a rush of happy voices,

With laughter beating in a clamorous tide. . . .

Saw once again the heat of harvest fume

Up to the empty sky in threads like glass,

And ran, and was a part of what rejoices

In thunderous nights of rain; lay in the grass

Sun-baked and tired, looking through a maze

Of tiny stems into a new green world;

Once more knew eves of perfume, days ablaze

With clear, dry heat on the brown, rolling fields;

Shuddered with fearful ecstasy in bed

Over a of knights and bloody shields . . .

The ship slowed, jarred and stopped. There, straight ahead,

Were dock and fellows. Stumbling, he was whirled

Out and away to meet them -- and his back

Slumped to the old half-cringe, his hands fell slack;

A big boy's arm went round him -- and a twist

Sent shattering pain along his tortured wrist,

As a voice cried, a bloated voice and fat,

"Why it's Miss Nancy! Come along, you rat!"

Nos Immortales

Perhaps we go with wind and cloud and sun,

Into the free companionship of air;

Perhaps with sunsets when the day is done,

All's one to me -- I do not greatly care;

So long as there are brown hills -- and a tree

Like a mad prophet in a land of dearth --

And I can lie and hear eternally

The vast monotonous breathing of the earth.

I have known hours, slow and golden-glowing,

Lovely with laughter and suffused with light,

O Lord, in such a time appoint my going,

When the hands clench, and the cold face grows white,

And the spark dies within the feeble brain,

Spilling its star-dust back to dust again.

Young Blood

"But, sir," I said, "they tell me the man is like to die!"

The Canon shook his head indulgently. "Young blood, Cousin," he boomed.

"Young blood! Youth will be served!" -- D'Hermonville's Fabliaux.

He woke up with a sick taste in his mouth

And lay there heavily, while dancing motes

Whirled through his brain in endless, rippling streams,

And a grey mist weighed down upon his eyes

So that they could not open fully. Yet

After some time his blurred mind stumbled back

To its last ragged memory -- a room;

Air foul with wine; a shouting, reeling crowd

Of friends who dragged him, dazed and blind with drink

Out to the street; a crazy rout of cabs;

The steady mutter of his neighbor's voice,

Mumbling out dull obscenity by rote;

And then . . . well, they had brought him home it seemed,

Since he awoke in bed -- oh, damn the business!

He had not wanted it -- the silly jokes,

"One last, great night of freedom ere you're married!"

"You'll get no fun then!" "H-ssh, don't tell that story!

He'll have a wife soon!" -- God! the sitting down

To drink till you were sodden! . . .

Like great light

She came into his thoughts. That was the worst.

To wallow in the mud like this because

His friends were fools. . . . He was not fit to touch,

To see, oh far, far off, that silver place

Where God stood manifest to man in her. . . .

Fouling himself. . . . One thing he brought to her,

At least. He had been clean; had taken it

A kind of point of honor from the first . . .

Others might do it . . . but he didn't care

For those things. . . .

Suddenly his vision cleared.

And something seemed to grow within his mind. . . .

Something was wrong -- the color of the wall --

The queer shape of the bedposts -- everything

Was changed, somehow . . . his room. Was this his room?

. . . He turned his head -- and saw beside him there

The sagging body's slope, the paint-smeared face,

And the loose, open mouth, lax and awry,

The breasts, the bleached and brittle hair . . . these things.

. . . As if all Hell were crushed to one bright line

Of lightning for a moment. Then he sank,

Prone beneath an intolerable weight.

And bitter loathing crept up all his limbs.

The Quality of Courage

Black trees against an orange sky,

Trees that the wind shook terribly,

Like a harsh spume along the r

Quavering up like withered arms,

Writhing like streams, like twisted charms

Of hot lead flung in snow. Below

The iron ice stung like a g

Slashing the torn shoes from my feet,

And all the air was bitter sleet.

And all the land was cramped with snow,

Steel-strong and fierce and glimmering wan,

Like pale plains of obsidian.

-- And yet I strove -- and I was fire

And ice -- and fire and ice were one

In one vast hunger of desire.

A dim desire, of pleasant places,

And lush fields in the summer sun,

And logs aflame, and walls, and faces,

-- And wine, and old ambrosial talk,

A golden ball in fountains dancing,

And unforgotten hands. (Ah, God,

I trod them down where I have trod,

And they remain, and they remain,

Etched in unutterable pain,

Loved lips and faces now apart,

That once were closer than my heart --

In agony, in agony,

And horribly a part of me. . . .

For Lethe is for no man set,

And in Hell may no man forget.)

And there were flowers, and jugs, bright-glancing,

And old Italian swords -- and looks,

A moment's glance of fire, of fire,

Spiring, leaping, flaming higher,

Into the intense, the cloudless blue,

Until two souls were one, and flame,

And very flesh, and yet the same!

As if all springs were crushed anew

Into one globed drop of dew!

But for the most I thought of heat,

Desiring greatly. . . . Hot white sand

The lazy body lies at rest in,

Or sun-dried, scented grass to nest in,

And fires, innumerable fires,

Great fagots hurling golden gyres

Of sparks far up, and the red heart

In sea-coals, crashing as they part

To tiny flares, and kindling snapping,

Bunched sticks that burst their string and wrapping

And fall like jackstraws; green and blue

The evil flames of driftwood too,

And heavy, sullen lumps of coke

With still, fierce heat and ugly smoke. . . .

. . . And then the vision of his face,

And theirs, all theirs, came like a sword,

Thrice, to the heart -- and as I fell

I thought I saw a light before.

I woke. My hands were blue and sore,

Torn on the ice. I scarcely felt

The frozen sleet begin to melt

Upon my face as I breathed deeper,

But lay there warmly, like a sleeper

Who shifts his arm once, and moans low,

And then sinks back to night. Slow, slow,

And still as Death, came Sleep and Death

And looked at me with quiet breath.

Unbending figures, black and stark

Against the intense deeps of the dark.

Tall and like trees. Like sweet and fire

Rest crept and crept along my veins,

Gently. And there were no more pains. . . .

Was it not better so to lie?

The fight was done. Even gods tire

Of fighting. . . . My way was the wrong.

Now I should drift and drift along

To endless quiet, golden peace . . .

And let the tortured body cease.

And then a light winked like an eye.

. . . And very many miles away

A girl stood at a warm, lit door,

Holding a lamp. Ray upon ray

It cloaked the snow with perfect light.

And where she was there was no night

Nor could be, ever. God is sure,

And in his hands are things secure.

It is not given me to trace

The lovely laughter of that face,

Like a clear brook most full of light,

Or olives swaying on a height,

So silver they have wings, almost;

Like a great word once known and lost

And meaning all things. Nor her voice

A happy sound where larks rejoice,

Her body, that great loveliness,

The tender fashion of her dress,

I may not paint them.

These I see,

Blazing through all eternity,

A fire-winged sign, a glorious tree!

She stood there, and at once I knew

The bitter thing that I must do.

There could be no surrender now;

Though Sleep and Death were whispering low.

My way was wrong. So. Would it mend

If I shrank back before the end?

And sank to death and cowardice?

No, the last lees must be drained up,

Base wine from an ignoble cup;

(Yet not so base as sleek content

When I had shrunk from punishment)

The wretched body strain anew!

Life was a storm to wander through.

I took the wrong way. Good and well,

At least my feet sought out not Hell!

Though night were one consuming flame

I must go on for my base aim,

And so, perhaps, make evil grow

To something clean by agony . . .

And reach that light upon the snow . . .

And touch her dress at last . . .

So, so,

I crawled. I could not speak or see

Save dimly. The ice glared like fire,

A long bright Hell of choking cold,

And each vein was a tautened wire,

Throbbing with torture -- and I crawled.

My hands were wounds.

So I attained

The second Hell. The snow was stained

I thought, and shook my head at it

How red it was! Black tree-roots clutched

And tore -- and soon the snow was smutched

Anew; and I lurched babbling on,

And then fell down to rest a bit,

And came upon another Hell . . .

Loose stones that ice made terrible,

That rolled and gashed men as they fell.

I stumbled, slipped . . . and all was gone

That I had gained. Once more I lay

Before the long bright Hell of ice.

And still the light was far away.

There was red mist before my eyes

Or I could tell you how I went

Across the swaying firmament,

A glittering torture of cold stars,

And how I fought in Titan wars . . .

And died . . . and lived again upon

The rack . . . and how the horses strain

When their red task is nearly done. . . .

I only know that there was Pain,

Infinite and eternal Pain.

And that I fell -- and rose again.

So she was walking in the r

And I stood upright like a man,

Once, and fell blind, and heard her cry . . .

And then there came long agony.

There was no pain when I awoke,

No pain at all. Rest, like a g

Spurred my eyes open -- and light broke

Upon them like a million swords:

And she was there. There are no words.

Heaven is for a moment's span.

And ever.

So I spoke and said,

"My honor stands up unbetrayed,

And I have seen you. Dear . . ."

Sharp pain

Closed like a cloak. . . .

I moaned and died.

Here, even here, these things remain.

I shall draw nearer to her side.

Oh dear and laughing, lost to me,

Hidden in grey Eternity,

I shall attain, with burning feet,

To you and to the mercy-seat!

The ages crumble down like dust,

Dark roses, deviously thrust

And scattered in sweet wine -- but I,

I shall lift up to you my cry,

And kiss your wet lips presently

Beneath the ever-living Tree.

This in my heart I keep for g

Somewhere, in Heaven she walks that r

Somewhere . . . in Heaven . . . she walks . . . that . . . r . . .

Campus Sonnets:

1. Before an Examination

The little letters dance across the page,

Flaunt and retire, and trick the tired eyes;

Sick of the strain, the glaring light, I rise

Yawning and stretching, full of empty rage

At the dull maunderings of a long dead sage,

Fling up the windows, fling aside his lies;

Choosing to breathe, not stifle and be wise,

And let the air pour in upon my cage.

The breeze blows cool and there are stars and stars

Beyond the dark, soft masses of the elms

That whisper things in windy tones and light.

They seem to wheel for dim, celestial wars;

And I -- I hear the clash of silver helms

Ring icy-clear from the far deeps of night.

2. Talk

Tobacco smoke drifts up to the dim ceiling

From half a dozen pipes and cigarettes,

Curling in endless shapes, in blue rings wheeling,

As formless as our talk. Phil, drawling, bets

Cornell will win the relay in a walk,

While Bob and Mac discuss the Giants' chances;

Deep in a morris-chair, Bill scowls at "Falk",

John gives large views about the last few dances.

And so it goes -- an idle speech and aimless,

A few chance phrases; yet I see behind

The empty words the gleam of a beauty tameless,

Friendship and peace and fire to strike men blind,

Till the whole world seems small and bright to hold --

Of all our youth this hour is pure gold.

3. May Morning

I lie stretched out upon the window-seat

And doze, and read a page or two, and doze,

And feel the air like water on me close,

Great waves of sunny air that lip and beat

With a small noise, monotonous and sweet,

Against the window -- and the scent of cool,

Frail flowers by some brown and dew-drenched pool

Possesses me from drowsy head to feet.

This is the time of all-sufficing laughter

At idiotic things some one has done,

And there is neither past nor vague hereafter.

And all your body stretches in the sun

And drinks the light in like a liquid thing;

Filled with the divine languor of late spring.

4. Return -- 1917

"The College will reopen Sept. --." `Catalogue'.

I was just aiming at the jagged hole

Torn in the yellow sandbags of their trench,

When something threw me sideways with a wrench,

And the skies seemed to shrivel like a scroll

And disappear . . . and propped against the bole

Of a big elm I lay, and watched the clouds

Float through the blue, deep sky in speckless crowds,

And I was clean again, and young, and whole.

Lord, what a dream that was! And what a doze

Waiting for Bill to come along to class!

I've cut it now -- and he -- Oh, hello, Fred!

Why, what's the matter? -- here -- don't be an ass,

Sit down and tell me! -- What do you suppose?

I dreamed I . . . AM I . . . wounded? "YOU ARE DEAD."

Alexander VI Dines with the Cardinal of Capua

Next, then, the peacock, gilt

With all its feathers. Look, what gorgeous dyes

Flow in the eyes!

And how deep, lustrous greens are splashed and spilt

Along the back, that like a sea-wave's crest

Scatters soft beauty o'er th' emblazoned breast!

A strange fowl! But most fit

For feasts like this, whereby I honor one

Pure as the sun!

Yet glowing with the fiery zeal of it!

Some wine? Your goblet's empty? Let it foam!

It is not often that you come to Rome!

You like the Venice glass?

Rippled with lines that float like women's curls,

Neck like a girl's,

Fierce-glowing as a chalice in the Mass?

You start -- 'twas artist then, not Pope who spoke!

Ave Maria stella! -- ah, it broke!

'Tis said they break alone

When poison writhes within. A foolish tale!

What, you look pale?

Caraffa, fetch a silver cup! . . . You own

A Birth of Venus, now -- or so I've heard,

Lovely as the breast-plumage of a bird.

Also a Dancing Faun,

Hewn with the lithe grace of Praxiteles;

Globed pearls to please

A sultan; golden veils that drop like lawn --

How happy I could be with but a tithe

Of your possessions, fortunate one! Don't writhe

But take these cushions here!

Now for the fruit! Great peaches, satin-skinned,

Rough tamarind,

Pomegranates red as lips -- oh they come dear!

But men like you we feast at any price --

A plum perhaps? They're looking rather nice!

I'll cut the thing in half.

There's yours! Now, with a one-side-poisoned knife

One might snuff life

And leave one's friend with -- "fool" for epitaph!

An old trick? Truth! But when one has the itch

For pretty things and isn't very rich. . . .

There, eat it all or I'll

Be angry! You feel giddy? Well, it's hot!

This bergamot

Take home and smell -- it purges blood of bile!

And when you kiss Bianca's dimpled knee,

Think of the poor Pope in his misery!

Now you may kiss my ring!

Ho there, the Cardinal's litter! -- You must dine

When the new wine

Is in, again with me -- hear Bice sing,

Even admire my frescoes -- though they're nought

Beside the calm Greek glories you have bought!

Godspeed, Sir Cardinal!

And take a weak man's blessing! Help him there

To the cool air! . . .

Lucrezia here? You're ready for the ball?

-- He'll die within ten hours, I suppose --

MhM! Kiss your poor old father, little rose!

The Breaking Point

It was not when temptation came,

Swiftly and blastingly as flame,

And seared me white with burning scars;

When I stood up for age-long wars

And held the very Fiend at grips;

When all my mutinous body rose

To range itself beside my foes,

And, like a greyhound in the slips,

The Beast that dwells within me roared,

Lunging and straining at his cord. . . .

For all the blusterings of Hell,

It was not then I slipped and fell;

For all the storm, for all the hate,

I kept my soul inviolate!

But when the fight was fought and won,

And there was Peace as still as Death

On everything beneath the sun.

Just as I started to draw breath,

And yawn, and stretch, and pat myself,

-- The grass began to whisper things --

And every tree became an elf,

That grinned and chuckled counsellings:

Birds, beasts, one thing alone they said,

Beating and dinning at my head.

I could not fly. I could not shun it.

Slimily twisting, slow and blind,

It crept and crept into my mind.

Whispered and shouted, sneered and laughed,

Screamed out until my brain was daft. . . .

One snaky word, "WHAT IF YOU'D DONE IT?"

And I began to think . . .

Ah, well,

What matter how I slipped and fell?

Or you, you gutter-searcher say!

Tell where you found me yesterday!

Lonely Burial

There were not many at that lonely place,

Where two scourged hills met in a little plain.

The wind cried loud in gusts, then low again.

Three pines strained darkly, runners in a race

Unseen by any. Toward the further woods

A dim harsh noise of voices rose and ceased.

-- We were most silent in those solitudes --

Then, sudden as a flame, the black-robed priest,

The clotted earth piled roughly up about

The hacked red oblong of the new-made thing,

Short words in swordlike Latin -- and a rout

Of dreams most impotent, unwearying.

Then, like a blind door shut on a carouse,

The terrible bareness of the soul's last house.

Dinner in a Quick Lunch Room

Soup should be heralded with a mellow horn,

Blowing clear notes of gold against the stars;

Strange entrees with a jangle of glass bars

Fantastically alive with subtle scorn;

Fish, by a plopping, gurgling rush of waters,

Clear, vibrant waters, beautifully austere;

Roast, with a thunder of drums to stun the ear,

A screaming fife, a voice from ancient slaughters!

Over the salad let the woodwinds moan;

Then the green silence of many watercresses;

Dessert, a balalaika, strummed alone;

Coffee, a slow, low singing no passion stresses;

Such are my thoughts as -- clang! crash! bang! -- I brood

And gorge the sticky mess these fools call food!

The Hemp

(A Virginia Legend.)

The Planting of the Hemp.

Captain Hawk scourged clean the seas

(Black is the gap below the plank)

From the Great North Bank to the Caribbees

(Down by the marsh the hemp grows rank).

His fear was on the seaport towns,

The weight of his hand held hard the downs.

And the merchants cursed him, bitter and black,

For a red flame in the sea-fog's wrack

Was all of their ships that might come back.

For all he had one word alone,

One clod of dirt in their faces thrown,

"The hemp that shall hang me is not grown!"

His name bestrode the seas like Death.

The waters trembled at his breath.

This is the tale of how he fell,

Of the long sweep and the heavy swell,

And the rope that dragged him down to hell.

The fight was done, and the gutted ship,

Stripped like a shark the sea-gulls strip,

Lurched blindly, eaten out with flame,

Back to the land from where she came,

A skimming horror, an eyeless shame.

And Hawk stood upon his quarter-deck,

And saw the sky and saw the wreck.

Below, a butt for sailors' jeers,

White as the sky when a white squall nears,

Huddled the crowd of the prisoners.

Over the bridge of the tottering plank,

Where the sea shook and the gulf yawned blank,

They shrieked and struggled and dropped and sank,

Pinioned arms and hands bound fast.

One girl alone was left at last.

Sir Henry Gaunt was a mighty lord.

He sat in state at the Council board;

The governors were as nought to him.

From one rim to the other rim

Of his great plantations, flung out wide

Like a purple cloak, was a full month's ride.

Life and death in his white hands lay,

And his only daughter stood at bay,

Trapped like a hare in the toils that day.

He sat at wine in his gold and his lace,

And far away, in a bloody place,

Hawk came near, and she covered her face.

He rode in the fields, and the hunt was brave,

And far away his daughter gave

A shriek that the seas cried out to hear,

And he could not see and he could not save.

Her white soul withered in the mire

As paper shrivels up in fire,

And Hawk laughed, and he kissed her mouth,

And her body he took for his desire.

The Growing of the Hemp.

Sir Henry stood in the manor room,

And his eyes were hard gems in the gloom.

And he said, "Go dig me furrows five

Where the green marsh creeps like a thing alive --

There at its edge, where the rushes thrive."

And where the furrows rent the ground,

He sowed the seed of hemp around.

And the blacks shrink back and are sore afraid

At the furrows five that rib the glade,

And the voodoo work of the master's spade.

For a cold wind blows from the marshland near,

And white things move, and the night grows drear,

And they chatter and crouch and are sick with fear.

But down by the marsh, where the gray slaves glean,

The hemp sprouts up, and the earth is seen

Veiled with a tenuous mist of green.

And Hawk still scourges the Caribbees,

And many men kneel at his knees.

Sir Henry sits in his house alone,

And his eyes are hard and dull like stone.

And the waves beat, and the winds roar,

And all things are as they were before.

And the days pass, and the weeks pass,

And nothing changes but the grass.

But down where the fireflies are like eyes,

And the damps shudder, and the mists rise,

The hemp-stalks stand up toward the skies.

And down from the poop of the pirate ship

A body falls, and the great sharks grip.

Innocent, lovely, go in grace!

At last there is peace upon your face.

And Hawk laughs loud as the corpse is thrown,

"The hemp that shall hang me is not grown!"

Sir Henry's face is iron to mark,

And he gazes ever in the dark.

And the days pass, and the weeks pass,

And the world is as it always was.

But down by the marsh the sickles beam,

Glitter on glitter, gleam on gleam,

And the hemp falls down by the stagnant stream.

And Hawk beats up from the Caribbees,

Swooping to pounce in the Northern seas.

Sir Henry sits sunk deep in his chair,

And white as his hand is grown his hair.

And the days pass, and the weeks pass,

And the sands roll from the hour-glass.

But down by the marsh in the blazing sun

The hemp is smoothed and twisted and spun,

The rope made, and the work done.

The Using of the Hemp.

Captain Hawk scourged clean the seas

(Black is the gap below the plank)

From the Great North Bank to the Caribbees

(Down by the marsh the hemp grows rank).

He sailed in the brAtlantic track,

And the ships that saw him came not back.

And once again, where the wide tides ran,

He stooped to harry a merchantman.

He bade her stop. Ten guns spake true

From her hidden ports, and a hidden crew,

Lacking his great ship through and through.

Dazed and dumb with the sudden death,

He scarce had time to draw a breath

Before the grappling-irons bit deep,

And the boarders slew his crew like sheep.

Hawk stood up straight, his breast to the steel;

His cutlass made a bloody wheel.

His cutlass made a wheel of flame.

They shrank before him as he came.

And the bodies fell in a choking crowd,

And still he thundered out aloud,

"The hemp that shall hang me is not grown!"

They fled at last. He was left alone.

Before his foe Sir Henry stood.

"The hemp is grown, and my word made good!"

And the cutlass clanged with a hissing whir

On the lashing blade of the rapier.

Hawk roared and charged like a maddened buck.

As the cobra strikes, Sir Henry struck,

Pouring his life in a single thrust,

And the cutlass shivered to sparks and dust.

Sir Henry stood on the blood-stained deck,

And set his foot on his foe's neck.

Then from the hatch, where the rent decks slope,

Where the dead roll and the wounded grope,

He dragged the serpent of the rope.

The sky was blue, and the sea was still,

The waves lapped softly, hill on hill,

And between one wave and another wave

The doomed man's cries were little and shrill.

The sea was blue, and the sky was calm;

The air dripped with a golden balm.

Like a wind-blown fruit between sea and sun,

A black thing writhed at a yard-arm.

Slowly then, and awesomely,

The ship sank, and the gallows-tree,

And there was nought between sea and sun --

Nought but the sun and the sky and the sea.

But down by the marsh where the fever breeds,

Only the water chuckles and pleads;

For the hemp clings fast to a dead man's throat,

And blind Fate gathers back her seeds.

Poor Devil!

Well, I was tired of life; the silly folk,

The tiresome noises, all the common things

I loved once, crushed me with an iron yoke.

I longed for the cool quiet and the dark,

Under the common sod where louts and kings

Lie down, serene, unheeding, careless, stark,

Never to rise or move or feel again,

Filled with the ecstasy of being dead. . . .

I put the shining pistol to my head

And pulled the trigger hard -- I felt no pain,

No pain at all; the pistol had missed fire

I thought; then, looking at the floor, I saw

My huddled body lying there -- and awe

Swept over me. I trembled -- and looked up.

About me was -- not that, my heart's desire,

That small and dark abode of death and peace --

But all from which I sought a vain release!

The sky, the people and the staring sun

Glared at me as before. I was undone.

My last state ten times worse than was my first.

Helpless I stood, befooled, betrayed, accursed,

Fettered to Life forever, horribly;

Caught in the meshes of Eternity,

No further doors to break or bars to burst!

Ghosts of a Lunatic Asylum

Here, where men's eyes were empty and as bright

As the blank windows set in glaring brick,

When the wind strengthens from the sea -- and night

Drops like a fog and makes the breath come thick;

By the deserted paths, the vacant halls,

One may see figures, twisted shades and lean,

Like the mad shapes that crawl an Indian screen,

Or paunchy smears you find on prison walls.

Turn the knob gently! There's the Thumbless Man,

Still weaving glass and silk into a dream,

Although the wall shows through him -- and the Khan

Journeys Cathay beside a paper stream.

A Rabbit Woman chitters by the door --

-- Chilly the grave-smell comes from the turned sod --

Come -- lift the curtain -- and be cold before

The silence of the eight men who were God!

The White Peacock

(France -- Ancient Regime.)

I.

Go away!

Go away; I will not confess to you!

His black biretta clings like a hangman's cap; under his twitching fingers

the beads shiver and click,

As he mumbles in his corner, the shadow deepens upon him;

I will not confess! . . .

Is he there or is it intenser shadow?

Dark huddled coilings from the obscene depths,

Black, formless shadow,

Shadow.

Doors creak; from secret parts of the chateau come the scuffle and worry

of rats.

Orange light drips from the guttering candles,

Eddying over the vast embroideries of the bed

Stirring the monstrous tapestries,

Retreating before the sable impending gloom of the canopy

With a swift thrust and sparkle of gold,

Lipping my hands,

Then

Rippling back abashed before the ominous silences

Like the swift turns and starts of an overpowered fencer

Who sees before him Horror

Behind him darkness,

Shadow.

The clock jars and strikes, a thin, sudden note like the sob of a child.

Clock, buhl clock that ticked out the tortuous hours of my birth,

Clock, evil, wizened dwarf of a clock, how many years of agony

have you relentlessly measured,

Yardstick of my stifling shroud?

I am Aumaury de Montreuil; once quick, soon to be eaten of worms.

You hear, Father? Hsh, he is asleep in the night's cloak.

Over me too steals sleep.

Sleep like a white mist on the rotting paintings of cupids and gods

on the ceiling;

Sleep on the carven shields and knots at the foot of the bed,

Oozing, blurring outlines, obliterating colors,

Death.

Father, Father, I must not sleep!

It does not hear -- that shadow crouched in the corner . . .

Is it a shadow?

One might think so indeed, save for the calm face, yellow as wax,

that lifts like the face of a drowned man from the choking darkness.

II.

Out of the drowsy fog my body creeps back to me.

It is the white time before dawn.

Moonlight, watery, pellucid, lifeless, ripples over the world.

The grass beneath it is gray; the stars pale in the sky.

The night dew has fallen;

An infinity of little drops, crystals from which all light has been taken,

Glint on the sighing branches.

All is purity, without color, without stir, without passion.

Suddenly a peacock screams.

My heart shocks and stops;

Sweat, cold corpse-sweat

Covers my rigid body.

My hair stands on end. I cannot stir. I cannot speak.

It is terror, terror that is walking the pale sick gardens

And the eyeless face no man may see and live!

Ah-h-h-h-h!

Father, Father, wake! wake and save me!

In his corner all is shadow.

Dead things creep from the ground.

It is so long ago that she died, so long ago!

Dust crushes her, earth holds her, mold grips her.

Fiends, do you not know that she is dead? . . .

"Let us dance the pavon!" she said; the waxlights glittered like swords

on the polished floor.

Twinkling on jewelled snuffboxes, beaming savagely from the crass gold

of candelabra,

From the white shoulders of girls and the white powdered wigs of men . . .

All life was that dance.

The mocking, resistless current,

The beauty, the passion, the perilous madness --

As she took my hand, released it and spread her dresses like petals,

Turning, swaying in beauty,

A lily, bowed by the rain, --

Moonlight she was, and her body of moonlight and foam,

And her eyes stars.

Oh the dance has a pattern!

But the clear grace of her thrilled through the notes of the viols,

Tremulous, pleading, escaping, immortal, untamed,

And, as we ended,

She blew me a kiss from her hand like a drifting white blossom --

And the starshine was gone; and she fled like a bird up the stair.

Underneath the window a peacock screams,

And claws click, scrape

Like little lacquered boots on the rough stone.

Oh the long fantasy of the kiss; the ceaseless hunger, ceaselessly,

divinely appeased!

The aching presence of the beloved's beauty!

The wisdom, the incense, the brightness!

Once more on the ice-bright floor they danced the pavon

But I turned to the garden and her from the lighted candles.

Softly I trod the lush grass between the black hedges of box.

Softly, for I should take her unawares and catch her arms,

And embrace her, dear and startled.

By the arbor all the moonlight flowed in silver

And her head was on his breast.

She did not scream or shudder

When my sword was where her head had lain

In the quiet moonlight;

But turned to me with one pale hand uplifted,

All her satins fiery with the starshine,

Nacreous, shimmering, weeping, iridescent,

Like the quivering plumage of a peacock . . .

Then her head drooped and I gripped her hair,

Oh soft, scented cloud across my fingers! --

Bending her white neck back. . . .

Blood writhed on my hands; I trod in blood. . . .

Stupidly agaze

At that crumpled heap of silk and moonlight,

Where like twitching pinions, an arm twisted,

Palely, and was still

As the face of chalk.

The buhl clock strikes.

Thirty years. Christ, thirty years!

Agony. Agony.

Something stirs in the window,

Shattering the moonlight.

White wings fan.

Father, Father!

All its plumage fiery with the starshine,

Nacreous, shimmering, weeping, iridescent,

It drifts across the floor and mounts the bed,

To the tap of little satin shoes.

Gazing with infernal eyes.

Its quick beak thrusting, rending, devil's crimson . . .

Screams, great tortured screams shake the dark canopy.

The light flickers, the shadow in the corner stirs;

The wax face lifts; the eyes open.

A thin trickle of blood worms darkly against the vast red coverlet

and spreads to a pool on the floor.

Colors

(For D. M. C.)

The little man with the vague beard and guise

Pulled at the wicket. "Come inside!" he said,

"I'll show you all we've got now -- it was size

You wanted? -- oh, dry colors! Well" -- he led

To a dim alley lined with musty bins,

And pulled one fiercely. Violent and bold

A sudden tempest of mad, shrieking sins

Scarlet screamed out above the battered gold

Of tins and picture-frames. I held my breath.

He tugged another hard -- and sapphire skies

Spread in vast quietude, serene as death,

O'er waves like crackled turquoise -- and my eyes

Burnt with the blinding brilliance of calm sea!

"We're selling that lot there out cheap!" said he.

A Minor Poet

I am a shell. From me you shall not hear

The splendid tramplings of insistent drums,

The orbed gold of the viol's voice that comes,

Heavy with radiance, languorous and clear.

Yet, if you hold me close against the ear,

A dim, far whisper rises clamorously,

The thunderous beat and passion of the sea,

The slow surge of the tides that drown the mere.

Others with subtle hands may pluck the strings,

Making even Love in music audible,

And earth one glory. I am but a shell

That moves, not of itself, and moving sings;

Leaving a fragrance, faint as wine new-shed,

A tremulous murmur from great days long dead.

The Lover in Hell

Eternally the choking steam goes up

From the black pools of seething oil. . . .

How merry

Those little devils are! They've stolen the pitchfork

From Bel, there, as he slept . . . Look! -- oh look, look!

They've got at Nero! Oh it isn't fair!

Lord, how he squeals! Stop it . . . it's, well -- indecent!

But funny! . . . See, Bel's waked. They'll catch it now!

. . . Eternally that stifling reek arises,

Blotting the dome with smoky, terrible towers,

Black, strangling trees, whispering obscene things

Amongst their branches, clutching with maimed hands,

Or oozing slowly, like blind tentacles

Up to the gates; higher than that heaped brick

Man piled to smite the sun. And all around

Are devils. One can laugh . . . but that hunched shape

The face one stone, like those Assyrian kings!

One sees in carvings, watching men flayed red

Horribly laughable in leaps and writhes;

That face -- utterly evil, clouded round

With evil like a smoke -- it turns smiles sour!

. . . And Nero there, the flabby cheeks astrain

And sweating agony . . . long agony . . .

Imperishable, unappeasable

For ever . . . well . . . it droops the mouth. Till I

Look up.

There's one blue patch no smoke dares touch.

Sky, clear, ineffable, alive with light,

Always the same . . .

Before, I never knew

Rest and green peace.

She stands there in the sun.

. . . It seems so quaint she should have long gold wings.

I never have got used -- folded across

Her breast, or fluttering with fierce, pure light,

Like shaken steel. Her crown too. Well, it's queer!

And then she never cared much for the harp

On earth. Here, though . . .

She is all peace, all quiet,

All passionate desires, the eloquent thunder

Of new, glad suns, shouting aloud for joy,

Over fresh worlds and clean, trampling the air

Like stooping hawks, to the long wind of horns,

Flung from the bastions of Eternity . . .

And she is the low lake, drowsy and gentle,

And good words spoken from the tongues of friends,

And calmness in the evening, and deep thoughts,

Falling like dreams from the stars' solemn mouths.

All these.

They said she was unfaithful once.

Or I remembered it -- and so, for that,

I lie here, I suppose. Yes, so they said.

You see she is so troubled, looking down,

Sorrowing deeply for my torments. I

Of course, feel nothing while I see her -- save

That sometimes when I think the matter out,

And what earth-people said of us, of her,

It seems as if I must be, here, in heaven,

And she --

. . . Then I grow proud; and suddenly

There comes a splatter of oil against my skin,

Hurting this time. And I forget my pride:

And my face writhes.

Some day the little ladder

Of white words that I build up, up, to her

May fetch me out. Meanwhile it isn't bad. . . .

But what a sense of humor God must have!

Winged Man

The moon, a sweeping scimitar, dipped in the stormy straits,

The dawn, a crimson cataract, burst through the eastern gates,

The cliffs were robed in scarlet, the sands were cinnabar,

Where first two men spread wings for flight and dared the hawk afar.

There stands the cunning workman, the crafty past all praise,

The man who chained the Minotaur, the man who built the Maze.

His young son is beside him and the boy's face is a light,

A light of dawn and wonder and of valor infinite.

Their great vans beat the cloven air, like eagles they mount up,

Motes in the wine of morning, specks in a crystal cup,

And lest his wings should melt apace old Daedalus flies low,

But Icarus beats up, beats up, he goes where lightnings go.

He cares no more for warnings, he rushes through the sky,

Braving the crags of ether, daring the gods on high,

Black 'gainst the crimson sunset, golden o'er cloudy snows,

With all Adventure in his heart the first winged man arose.

Dropping gold, dropping gold, where the mists of morning rolled,

On he kept his way undaunted, though his breaths were stabs of cold,

Through the mystery of dawning that no mortal may behold.

Now he shouts, now he sings in the rapture of his wings,

And his great heart burns intenser with the strength of his desire,

As he circles like a swallow, wheeling, flaming, gyre on gyre.

Gazing straight at the sun, half his pilgrimage is done,

And he staggers for a moment, hurries on, reels backward, swerves

In a rain of scattered feathers as he falls in broken curves.

Icarus, Icarus, though the end is piteous,

Yet forever, yea, forever we shall see thee rising thus,

See the first supernal glory, not the ruin hideous.

You were Man, you who ran farther than our eyes can scan,

Man absurd, gigantic, eager for impossible Romance,

Overthrowing all Hell's legions with one warped and broken lance.

On the highest steeps of Space he will have his dwelling-place,

In those far, terrific regions where the cold comes down like Death

Gleams the red glint of his pinions, smokes the vapor of his breath.

Floating downward, very clear, still the echoes reach the ear

Of a little tune he whistles and a little song he sings,

Mounting, mounting still, triumphant, on his torn and broken wings!

Music

My friend went to the piano; spun the stool

A little higher; left his pipe to cool;

Picked up a fat green volume from the chest;

And propped it open.

Whitely without rest,

His fingers swept the keys that flashed like swords,

. . . And to the brute drums of barbarian hordes,

Roaring and thunderous and weapon-bare,

An army stormed the bastions of the air!

Dreadful with banners, fire to slay and parch,

Marching together as the lightnings march,

And swift as storm-clouds. Brazen helms and cars

Clanged to a fierce resurgence of old wars

Above the screaming horns. In state they passed,

Trampling and splendid on and sought the vast --

Rending the darkness like a leaping knife,

The flame, the noble pageant of our life!

The burning seal that stamps man's high indenture

To vain attempt and most forlorn adventure;

Romance, and purple seas, and toppling towns,

And the wind's valiance crying o'er the downs;

That nerves the silly hand, the feeble brain,

From the loose net of words to deeds again

And to all courage! Perilous and sharp

The last chord shook me as wind shakes a harp!

. . . And my friend swung round on his stool, and from gods we were men,

"How pretty!" we said; and went on with our talk again.

The Innovator

(A Pharaoh Speaks.)

I said, "Why should a pyramid

Stand always dully on its base?

I'll change it! Let the top be hid,

The bottom take the apex-place!"

And as I bade they did.

The people flocked in, scores on scores,

To see it balance on its tip.

They praised me with the praise that bores,

My godlike mind on every lip.

-- Until it fell, of course.

And then they took my body out

From my crushed palace, mad with rage,

-- Well, half the town WAS wrecked, no doubt --

Their crazy anger to assuage

By dragging it about.

The end? Foul birds defile my skull.

The new king's praises fill the land.

He clings to precept, simple, dull;

HIS pyramids on bases stand.

But -- Lord, how usual!

Love in Twilight

There is darkness behind the light -- and the pale light drips

Cold on vague shapes and figures, that, half-seen loom

Like the carven prows of proud, far-triumphing ships --

And the firelight wavers and changes about the room,

As the three logs crackle and burn with a small still sound;

Half-blotting with dark the deeper dark of her hair,

Where she lies, head pillowed on arm, and one hand curved round

To shield the white face and neck from the faint thin glare.

Gently she breathes -- and the long limbs lie at ease,

And the rise and fall of the young, slim, virginal breast

Is as certain-sweet as the march of slow wind through trees,

Or the great soft passage of clouds in a sky at rest.

I kneel, and our arms enlace, and we kiss long, long.

I am drowned in her as in sleep. There is no more pain.

Only the rustle of flames like a broken song

That rings half-heard through the dusty halls of the brain.

One shaking and fragile moment of ecstasy,

While the grey gloom flutters and beats like an owl above.

And I would not move or speak for the sea or the sky

Or the flame-bright wings of the miraculous Dove!

The Fiddling Wood

Gods, what a black, fierce day! The clouds were iron,

Wrenched to strange, rugged shapes; the red sun winked

Over the rough crest of the hairy wood

In angry scorn; the grey rtwisted, kinked,

Like a sick serpent, seeming to environ

The trees with magic. All the wood was still --

Cracked, crannied pines bent like malicious cripples

Before the gusty wind; they seemed to nose,

Nudge, poke each other, cackling with ill mirth --

Enchantment's days were over -- sh! -- Suppose

That crouching log there, where the white light stipples

Should -- break its quiet! WAS THAT CRIMSON -- EARTH?

It smirched the ground like a lewd whisper, "Danger!" --

I hunched my cloak about me -- then, appalled,

Turned ice and fire by turns -- for -- someone stirred

The brown, dry needles sharply! Terror crawled

Along my spine, as forth there stepped -- a Stranger!

And all the pines crooned like a drowsy bird!

His stock was black. His great shoe-buckles glistened.

His fur cuffs ended in a sheen of rings.

And underneath his coat a case bulged blackly --

He swept his beaver in a rush of wings!

Then took the fiddle out, and, as I listened,

Tightened and tuned the yellowed strings, hung slackly.

Ping! Pang! The clear notes swooped and curved and darted,

Rising like gulls. Then, with a finger skinny,

He rubbed the bow with rosin, said, "Your pardon

Signor! -- Maestro Nicolo Paganini

They used to call me! Tchk! -- The cold grips hard on

A poor musician's fingers!" -- His lips parted.

A tortured soul screamed suddenly and loud,

From the brown, quivering case! Then, faster, faster,

Dancing in flame-like whorls, wild, beating, screaming,

The music wailed unutterable disaster;

Heartbroken murmurs from pale lips once proud,

Dead, choking moans from hearts once nobly dreaming.

Till all resolved in anguish -- died away

Upon one minor chord, and was resumed

In anguish; fell again to a low cry,

Then rose triumphant where the white fires fumed,

Terrible, marching, trampling, reeling, gay,

Hurling mad, broken legions down to die

Through everlasting hells -- The tears were salt

Upon my fingers -- Then, I saw, behind

The fury of the player, all the trees

Crouched like violinists, boughs crooked, jerking, blind,

Sweeping mad bows to music without fault,

Grey cheeks to greyer fiddles, withered knees.

Gasping, I fled! -- but still that devilish tune

Stunned ears and brain alike -- till clouds of dust

Blotted the picture, and the noise grew dim --

Shaking, I reached the town -- and turned -- in trust --

Wind-smitten, dread, against the sky-line's rim,

Black, dragon branches whipped below a moon!

Portrait of a Boy

After the whipping he crawled into bed,

Accepting the harsh fact with no great weeping.

How funny uncle's hat had looked striped red!

He chuckled silently. The moon came, sweeping

A black, frayed rag of tattered cloud before

In scorning; very pure and pale she seemed,

Flooding his bed with radiance. On the floor

Fat motes danced. He sobbed, closed his eyes and dreamed.

Warm sand flowed round him. Blurts of crimson light

Splashed the white grains like blood. Past the cave's mouth

Shone with a large, fierce splendor, wildly bright,

The crooked constellations of the South;

Here the Cross swung; and there, affronting Mars,

The Centaur stormed aside a froth of stars.

Within, great casks, like wattled aldermen,

Sighed of enormous feasts, and cloth of gold

Glowed on the walls like hot desire. Again,

Beside webbed purples from some galleon's hold,

A black chest bore the skull and bones in white

Above a scrawled "Gunpowder!" By the flames,

Decked out in crimson, gemmed with syenite,

Hailing their fellows with outrageous names,

The pirates sat and diced. Their eyes were moons.

"Doubloons!" they said. The words crashed gold. "Doubloons!"

Portrait of a Baby

He lay within a warm, soft world

Of motion. Colors bloomed and fled,

Maroon and turquoise, saffron, red,

Wave upon wave that broke and whirled

To vanish in the grey-green gloom,

Perspectiveless and shadowy.

A bulging world that had no walls,

A flowing world, most like the sea,

Compassing all infinity

Within a shapeless, ebbing room,

An endless tide that swells and falls . . .

He slept and woke and slept again.

As a veil drops Time dropped away;

Space grew a toy for children's play,

Sleep bolted fast the gates of Sense --

He lay in naked impotence;

Like a drenched moth that creeps and crawls

Heavily up brown, light-baked walls,

To fall in wreck, her task undone,

Yet somehow striving toward the sun.

So, as he slept, his hands clenched tighter,

Shut in the old way of the fighter,

His feet curled up to grip the ground,

His muscles tautened for a bound;

And though he felt, and felt alone,

Strange brightness stirred him to the bone,

Cravings to rise -- till deeper sleep

Buried the hope, the call, the leap;

A wind puffed out his mind's faint spark.

He was absorbed into the dark.

He woke again and felt a surge

Within him, a mysterious urge

That grew one hungry flame of passion;

The whole world altered shape and fashion.

Deceived, befooled, bereft and torn,

He scourged the heavens with his scorn,

Lifting a bitter voice to cry

Against the eternal treachery --

Till, suddenly, he found the breast,

And ceased, and all things were at rest,

The earth grew one warm languid sea

And he a wave. Joy, tingling, crept

Throughout him. He was quenched and slept.

So, while the moon made brher ring,

He slept and cried and was a king.

So, worthily, he acted o'er

The endless miracle once more.

Facing immense adventures daily,

He strove still onward, weeping, gaily,

Conquered or fled from them, but grew

As soil-starved, rough pine-saplings do.

Till, one day, crawling seemed suspect.

He gripped the air and stood erect

And splendid. With immortal rage

He entered on man's heritage!

The General Public

"Ah, did you once see Shelley plain?" -- Browning.

"Shelley? Oh, yes, I saw him often then,"

The old man said. A dry smile creased his face

With many wrinkles. "That's a great poem, now!

That one of Browning's! Shelley? Shelley plain?

The time that I remember best is this --

A thin mire crept along the rutted ways,

And all the trees were harried by cold rain

That drove a moment fiercely and then ceased,

Falling so slow it hung like a grey mist

Over the school. The walks were like blurred glass.

The buildings reeked with vapor, black and harsh

Against the deepening darkness of the sky;

And each lamp was a hazy yellow moon,

Filling the space about with golden motes,

And making all things larger than they were.

One yellow halo hung above a door,

That gave on a black passage. Round about

Struggled a howling crowd of boys, pell-mell,

Pushing and jostling like a stormy sea,

With shouting faces, turned a pasty white

By the strange light, for foam. They all had clods,

Or slimy balls of mud. A few gripped stones.

And there, his back against the battered door,

His pile of scattered about his feet,

Stood Shelley while two others held him fast,

And the clods beat upon him. `Shelley! Shelley!'

The high shouts rang through all the corridors,

`Shelley! Mad Shelley! Come along and help!'

And all the crowd dug madly at the earth,

Scratching and clawing at the streaming mud,

And fouled each other and themselves. And still

Shelley stood up. His eyes were like a flame

Set in some white, still room; for all his face

Was white, a whiteness like no human color,

But white and dreadful as consuming fire.

His hands shook now and then, like slender cords

Which bear too heavy weights. He did not speak.

So I saw Shelley plain."

"And you?" I said.

"I? I threw straighter than the most of them,

And had firm clods. I hit him -- well, at least

Thrice in the face. He made good sport that night."

Rand Hills

I shall go away

To the brown hills, the quiet ones,

The vast, the mountainous, the rolling,

Sun-fired and drowsy!

My horse snuffs delicately

At the strange wind;

He settles to a swinging trot; his hoofs tramp the dust.

The rwinds, straightens,

Slashes a marsh,

Shoulders out a bridge,

Then --

Again the hills.

Unchanged, innumerable,

Bowing huge, round backs;

Holding secret, immense converse:

In gusty voices,

Fruitful, fecund, toiling

Like yoked black oxen.

The clouds pass like great, slow thoughts

And vanish

In the intense blue.

My horse lopes; the saddle creaks and sways.

A thousand glittering spears of sun slant from on high.

The immensity, the spaces,

Are like the spaces

Between star and star.

The hills sleep.

If I put my hand on one,

I would feel the vast heave of its breath.

I would start away before it awakened

And shook the world from its shoulders.

A cicada's cry deepens the hot silence.

The hills open

To show a slope of poppies,

Ardent, noble, heroic,

A flare, a great flame of orange;

Giving sleepy, brittle scent

That stings the lungs.

A creeping wind slips through them like a ferret; they bow and dance,

answering Beauty's voice . . .

The horse whinnies. I dismount

And tie him to the grey worn fence.

I set myself against the javelins of grass and sun;

And climb the rounded breast,

That flows like a sea-wave.

The summit crackles with heat, there is no shelter, no hollow from

the flagellating glare.

I lie down and look at the sky, shading my eyes.

My body becomes strange, the sun takes it and changes it, it does not feel,

it is like the body of another.

The air blazes. The air is diamond.

Small noises move among the grass . . .

Blackly,

A hawk mounts, mounts in the inane

Seeking the star-r

Seeking the end . . .

But there is no end.

Here, in this light, there is no end. . . .

Elegy for an Enemy

(For G. H.)

Say, does that stupid earth

Where they have laid her,

Bind still her sullen mirth,

Mirth which betrayed her?

Do the lush grasses hold,

Greenly and glad,

That brittle-perfect gold

She alone had?

Smugly the common crew,

Over their knitting,

Mourn her -- as butchers do

Sheep-throats they're slitting!

She was my enemy,

One of the best of them.

Would she come back to me,

God damn the rest of them!

Damn them, the flabby, fat,

Sleek little darlings!

We gave them tit for tat,

Snarlings for snarlings!

Squashy pomposities,

Shocked at our violence,

Let not one tactful hiss

Break her new silence!

Maids of antiquity,

Look well upon her;

Ice was her chastity,

Spotless her honor.

Neighbors, with breasts of snow,

Dames of much virtue,

How she could flame and glow!

Lord, how she hurt you!

She was a woman, and

Tender -- at times!

(Delicate was her hand)

One of her crimes!

Hair that strayed elfinly,

Lips red as haws,

You, with the ready lie,

Was that the cause?

Rest you, my enemy,

Slain without fault,

Life smacks but tastelessly

Lacking your salt!

Stuck in a bog whence naught

May catapult me,

Come from the grave, long-sought,

Come and insult me!

WE knew that sugared stuff

Poisoned the other;

Rough as the wind is rough,

Sister and brother!

Breathing the ether clear

Others forlorn have found --

Oh, for that peace austere

She and her scorn have found!

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