CA - Poems
CA - Poems
CA - Poems
Selected
Poems
CONRAD AIKEN
OXFORD
UNIVERSITY PRESS
OXFORD
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vii
3
After the Preludes, the new reader of Aiken will seek out, for
herself or himself, her or his own favorites in this volume. My
own include some that once were anthology-pieces, and some
others always neglected. I begin with those I possess by memory:
Senlin: A Biography, II, 2, his "Morning Song"; "And in the
Hanging Gardens," "Sea Holly," and many from the Preludes.
But there is also the extraordinary, twenty-five page visionary
poem, Landscape West of Eden, which is one of Aiken's masterworks. So are The Kid and "Mayflower," rekincllings of early
American history. The elegy, "Another Lycidas," and "The Crystal," the summa of a poetic career, serve together as something
close to a concentration of all of Aiken into two inevitable
works. Here Aiken refinds himself in Pythagoras, imaginative
brother:
It would be for this
Apollonian fountain of the forever enfolding,
the forever-together, ourselves but a leaf
on the fountain of tree, that we would return:
the crystal self-shaping, the godhead designing the god.
For this moment of vision, we would return.
How shall we hold the eclectic Conrad Aiken together, so
that we can see him clearly in the idea of his crystal? His best
clue (to me) comes at the end of Section XLII of Time in the
Rock:
who would carve words must carve himself,
first carve himself; and then alas
finds, too late, that Word is only Hand.
There is no Eliotic "incarnate word"; there is only the hand
of the artist. The idea necessarily is shared with the geniuses of
Modernism, Joyce and Proust, Matisse and Picasso. Aiken's autobiographical essay, Ushant (1952), is written in the shadow of
Joyce's Ulysses, as is Blue Voyage, perhaps the best of Aiken's
novels. And it is Joyce, not Eliot, or Pound, who is the fecund,
major influence upon Aiken's poetry.
viii
4
Aiken's diction tends not to be original, a weakness that he
transformed into a relative strength. Whether he quite surmounted his overt reliance upon traditional modes of figuration,
I sadly doubt. There he contrasts unfavorably with Hart Crane,
as with Stevens and Eliot. The problem (or part of it) ensued
from Aiken's hard-thought conviction that he could best extend
his reader's "general awareness" by playing upon, rather than
against, traditional associations. Associative rhetoric became Aiken's prime resource, and reflected Freud's lasting influence
upon him. And yet Aiken truly had an American Gothic sensibility, echoing Hawthorne's and Poe's, and that kind of sensibility
drowns in associative language. Such gorgeous failures as the
"symphony", The Chamel Rose, and John Deth: A Metaphysical
Legend testify to this miasma in Aiken.
The true questions for me, are why and how Aiken makes it
work as often as he does, since he does not want to (and cannot)
make it new. On the surface, Robert Frost is rarely innovative,
but that is illusive: Frost is cunning, and radically original. The
ironies of Frost's best poems are largest where they are least evident. Aiken rarely implies the opposite of what he says, and the
reader schooled by Frost, Eliot, Stevens, Hart Crane can come
to feel that Aiken does not know where to curtail or qualify his
continuous assertions.
And yet eloquence, in Conrad Aiken, can take on the American Romantic force that Emerson prophesied and Whitman exemplified. There is a fire in Aiken's best poetry so idiosyncratic
that I want to call it the refiner's fire, alchemical and breaking
out beyond all limits. Section XIV of the Preludes for Memnon
shares in the mythmaking audacity of Shelley and Blake, though
it has more in common with Victor Hugo in the sublime madness of his long cosmological poems, God and The End of Satan.
What did you see?
--I saw myself and God.
I saw the ruin in which godhead lives:
Shapeless and vast: the strewn wreck of the world:
Sadness unplurnbed: miser)' without bound.
Wailing I heard, but also I heard joy,
ix
Aiken, Conrad (5 Aug. 1889-17 Aug. 1973), author and critic, was
born in Savannah, Georgia, the first child of Dr. William Ford
Aiken, an ophthalmological surgeon, and Anna Potter, transplanted New Englanders. Aiken's father was brilliant but unstable, hectored increasingly by bouts of paranoia io the late 18908.
The main targets of his rage during these seizures were his wife,
who strove vainly to convince relatives io the North of his worsening mental condition, and his oldest son, who was often beaten
for slight or imaginary wrongs. Aiken later said of this period, "I
hardly ever forgot what it was to be afraid."
Dr. Aiken's internal struggle reached its cliinax in the dawn
hours of 27 February 1901, when he shot his wife to death and
then put the gun to his own head. Aiken, whose bedroom was
nearby, heard the shots and found his parents* bodies. After the
funeral, the children were taken north, where Aiken was parted
from his sister and two brothers when they were adopted by Frederick Winslow Taylor, an affluent engineer-inventor and pioneer
efficiency expert. As the eldest, Aiken was expected to carry on
the family name; he became the ward of his uncle William TilImghast, a Harvard librarian residing in Cambridge, although he
never regarded his new abode as a "real home."
After graduating from a local grammar school in 1903, Aiken was
sent to the Middlesex School in Concord, where he edited the
school magazine, writing many of its poems and stories. Here he
formed several close friendships, despjte a bitter conflict with the
headmaster. He entered Harvard in 1907 and immediately felt at
ease. Not only had it been his father's college, but his guardian
and another uncle, Alfred Potter, still worked there as librarians.
More important, Harvard's intense literary atmosphere reinforced
his own writing ambitions, which had been nurtured in Savannah by exposure to Edgar Allan Eoe's literature and the published sermons and essays of his maternal grandfather, Rev. William James Potter, famed radical preacher. T. S. Eliot, with
whom Aiken traded ideas and poems, became a permanent
friend, though their relationship proved deeply ambivalent.
Other class friendships destined to endure included those with
Grayson McCouch, a Middlesex chum, and George Wilbur;
both shared Aiken's interest in Freud's psychological theories.
xi
dilemmas from a Freudian vantage. Protagonists in the symphonies are alter-egos who suffer from various neuroses.
Aiken was more successful in prose, particularly when evaluating
contemporaries. He was an early exponent of integrating psychoanalytic tenets with more orthodox methods to forge a less subjective, not merely impressionistic, critical scale. Although he acquired a reputation for being a prickly conservative because of his
campaign against imagism, he was among the few to recognize
the value of Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and William Carlos Williams. His editions of Modem American Poets (1922), Selected
Poems of Emily Dickinson (1924), and American Poetry .1.671-1928
(1929) helped establish the reputations of these poets and initiated
a serious revaluation of Emily Dickinson and Anne Bradstreet.
Aiken moved his family to England in 1922, settling down in Rye
by 1925, where Jessie gave birth to their third child. The marriage
was in trouble, however; his philandering, which had been a
constant from the start (unknown to his wife), was no longer
sufficient to keep at bay the depression that began harrowing his
days when he reached the age his father had been at. the time
of his death. In 1926, on a trip to America, he met and fell in
love with Clarissa Lorenz, a musician and journalist, whom he
would marry in 1930, after receiving a divorce from Jessie in 1929.
The period of Aiken's affair with and marriage to Lorenz, which
ended in divorce in 1937, encompassed years of poisonous selfdoubts and at least one attempt at suicide (in 1932). It was also,
however, a time of incredible artistic achievement, marked by
the publication of Aiken's two major "preludes" sequences, Preludes for Memnon (1931) and Time in the Rock (1936), which explored fundamental linguistic and epistemological problems; an
autobiographical Joycean novel, Blue Voyage (1927); and two collections of short stories, Costumes by Eros (1928) and Among the
Lost People (1934). The latter contained "Silent Snow, Secret
Snow" and "Mr. Arcularis," deemed classics of the genre. In addition, his Selected Poems (1929) won the Pulitzer Prize for 1930.
Finances were an increasing problem after his first divorce and
the stock market crash of 1929partly instrumental in his original decision to write fiction and Aiken ground out a "London
Letter" column for the New Yorker under the name Samuel
xiii
Jeake, Jr. (Jeake's House was his Rye home through three marriages) between 1934 and 1936. He also worked briefly for the
WPA in Boston, producing four essays for that organization's
Massachusetts: A Guide (1937). His closest friends from the late
19205 to the end of his life were artists, such as Paul Nash and Edward Buna in England, and psychiatrists or psychologists, among
them his old schoolmate Wilbur, a Cape Cod neighbor from the
19405 on, and Henry Murray, at Harvard's Psychological Clinic.
Aiken's literary career continued to be an odd combination of
growing public recognition, critical neglect, and poor sales
each of his five novels did worse financially than the one before.
In the 19505, for instance, he served two one-year terms as consultant in poetry at the Library of Congress (19501952), had a
special issue of Wake magazine (1951) devoted to his work, saw
"Mr. Arcularis" turned into a successful TV play on the Philco
Television Playhouse (1951), and won the National Book Award
(1954) for his Collected Poems (1953), as well as the Bollingen
Prize in 1956. In the same decade, he published Ushant An Essay (1952), his innovative autobiography, to generally favorable reviews, as well as several verse collections, and A Reviewer's ABC:
Collected Criticism (1958), edited by Rufus A. Blanshard. Yet, he
could justifiably claim, "Everyone thinks I'm dead."
In 1939, Aiken and his third wife, the artist Mary Augusta Hoover,
had abandoned Jeake's House, which would be sold after the
war. They subsequently divided their time between a house in
Brewster and a tiny Manhattan flat until 1962, when they were
given lifetime residency in a Savannah towehouse next to Aiken's
childhood home; this became their winter retreat Despite the
painful, onset of pemphigus, a skin disease, in 1962 and a heart attack in 1963, Aiken kept writing, though he now mined lighter
poetic veins, completing a book of limericks and several children's books. His sole serious project was Thee: A Poem (1967),
which addressed God directly, albeit irreverently at times. His
two daughters, Jane and Joan, have written popular children's stories and adult fiction, and their brother John, a chemist, has written two science fiction novels.
Aiken died in a Savannah hospital from a second heart attack the
same year Governor Jimmy Carter named him Georgia's poet
laureate.
xiv
Selected Poems
Preface
The arrangement of the poems in this book is for the most part
chronological, the one major exception being that of The Coming Forth by Day of Osiris Jones. This was actually written after
Preludes for Memnon, and before Time in the Rock; but I have
now placed it ahead of those poems, and for two reasons. For
one thing, it helps, I think, to explain those two sequences; and
for another, it enables me to put them together, as they were
meant to be to all intents, they are one poem.
For the rest I think I need only say that limitations of space
have inevitably caused the omission of a good many things that
I would have liked to include. Less than half of the Preludes are
here, but they keep their proper serial numbers, and therefore
the reader who cares to do so can refer to the Collected Poems
to see them in context. Of the six early "symphonies" which
comprise the long poem, The Divine Pilgrim, published by the
University of Georgia Press, only two are here given in their
entirety, Senlin: A Biography, and Changing Mind. Too long to
include, and virtually impossible to represent by selection or fragmentation, the others are best left to themselves. The sole exceptions are the two first poems in the book, which are taken
from The House of Dust, written in 1917, and are the earliest
work here presented. The Crystal, at the end of the book, 1958,
is the latest.
The explanatory notes for Senlin: A Biography and The Kid,
not here included, may be found at the end of Collected Poems.
C. A.
Brewster, Massachusetts, 1960
XVll
Contents
PALIMPSEST: THE DECEITFUL PORTRAIT 3
NO, / SHALL MOT SAY 10
SENLJN: A BIOGRAPHY iz
TETELESTAI 36
PSYCHOMACHIA
40
EXILE 44
SAMADHI 45
KING BORBORIGMI 47
AND JN THE HANGING GARDENS 51
THE WEDDING 53
THE ROAD 54
DEAD LEAF IN MAY" 56
SEA HOLLY 57
THE ROOM 58
SOUND OF BREAKING 59
ELECTRA 60
THE POMECITRON TREE 64
CHANGING MIND 67
'THE COMING FORTH OBY DAY OF OSIRIS JONES
PRELUDES FOR MEMNON 113
79
1, II, III, VII, VIII, X, XIII, XIV, XVII, XK, XX, XXIX,
XXXI, XXXIII, XXXV, XXXVIII, XLI, XLIII, XLTV, XLV,
XLVIII, L, LII, LIII, LVI, LXH, LMII
xix
289
xx
Selected Poems
10
11
Senlin: A Biography
I. HIS DARK ORIGINS
i
Senlin sits before us, and we see him.
He smokes his pipe before us, and we hear him.
Is he small, with reddish hair,
Does he light his pipe with a meditative stare,
And a pointed iame reflected in both eyes?
Is he sad and happy and foolish and wise?
Did no one see him enter the doors of the city,
Looking about him at roofs and trees and skies?
*I stepped from a cloud,' he says, 'as eveoing fell;
I walked on the sound of a bell;
I ran with winged heels along a gust;
Or is it true that I laughed and sprang from dust? .
Has no one, in a great autumnal forest,
When the wind bares the trees,
Heard the sad horn of Senlin slowly blown?
Has no one, on a mountain in the spring,
Heard Senlin sing?
Perhaps I came alone on a snow-white horse,
Riding alone from the deep-starred night.
Perhaps I carne on a ship whose sails were music,
Sailing from moon or sun on a river of light,'
s
In the hot noon, in an old and savage garden,
The peach-tree grows. Its ugly cruel roots
Rend and rifle the silent earth for moisture.
Above, in the blue, hang warm and golden fruits.
Look, how the cancerous roots crack mould and stone!
Earth, if she had a voice, would wail her pain.
Is she the victim? Or is the tree the victim?
Delicate blossoms opened in the rain,
Blade bees flew among them in the sunlight,
And sacked them ruthlessly; and now a bird
Hangs, sharp-eyed, in the leaves, and pecks the fruit;
And the peach-tree dreams, and does not say a word.
. . . Senlin, tapping his trowel against a stone,
Observes this tree he planted: it is his own.
Ton will think it strange/ says Senlin, 'but this tree
Utters profound things in this garden;
16
7
'And am I then, a pyramid?' says Senlin,
'In which are caves and coffins, where lies hidden
Some old and mocking hieroglyph of flesh?
Or am I rather the moonlight, spreading subtly
Above those stones and times?
Or the green blade of grass that bravely grows
Between two massive boulders of black basalt
Year after year, and fades and blows?'
20
23
8
The pale blue gloom of evening comes
Among the phantom forests and walls
With a mournful and rhythmic sound of drums.
My heart is disturbed with a sound of myriad throbbing,
Persuasive and sinister, near and far:
In the blue evening of my heart
I hear the thrum of the evening star.
30
31
34
Tetekstai
I
37
Ill
39
PsycJioraacfiia
I
Tent-caterpillars, as yon see, (he said)
Have nested in these cherry-trees, and stripped
All sound of leaves from them. You see their webs
Like broken harp-strings, of a fairy kind,
Shine in the moonlight.
And then I to him:
But is this why, when all the houses sleep,
You meet me here,to tell me only this,
That caterpillars weave their webs in trees?
This road I know. I have walked many times
These sandy ruts. I know these starveling trees,
Their gestures of stiff agony in winter,
And the sharp conscious pain that gnaws them now.
But there is mystery, a message learned,
A word flung down from nowhere, caught by you,
And hither brought for me. How shines that word,
From what star comes it? ... This is what I seek.
And he in answer: Can you hear the blood
Cry out like jangled bells from all these twigs;
Or feel the ghosts of blossom touch your face?
Walk you amid these trees as one who walks
Upon a field where lie the newly slain
And those who darkly die? And hear yon crying?
Flesh here is torn from flesh. The tongue's plucked out.
What speech then would you have, where speech is tongueless,
And nothing, nothing, but a welling up of pain?
I answered: You may say these smitten trees,
Being leafless, have no tongues and cannot speak.
How comforts that my question? . . . You have come,
40
43
Exile
These hills are sandy. Trees are dwarfed here. Crows
Caw dismally in skies of an arid brilliance,
Complain in dusty pine-trees. Yellow daybreak
Lights on the long brown slopes a frost-like dew,
Dew as heavy as rain; the rabbit tracks
Show sharply in it, as they might in snow.
But ifs soon gone in the sunwhat good does it do?
The houses, on the slope, or among brown trees,
Are grey and shrivelled. And the men who live here
Are small and withered, spider-like, with large eyes.
Bring water with yoii if you come to live here
Cold tinkling cisterns, or else wells so deep
That one looks down to Ganges or Himalayas.
Yes, and bring mountains with yon, white, moon-bearing,
44
Samadhi
Take then the nrasie; plunge in the thickest of it,
Thickest, darkest, richest; call it a forest,
A million boles of trees, with leaves, leaves,
Golden and green, flashing like scales in the sun,
Tossed and torn in the tempest, whirling and streaming,
With the terrible sound, beneath, of boughs that crack.
. . . Again, a hush comes; and the wind's a whisper.
One leaf goes pirouetting. You stand in the dusk
In the misty shaft of light the sun iings faintly
Through planes of green; and suddenly, out of the darkest
And deepest and farthest of the forest ,wavers
That golden horn, cor augldis, husky-tintbred,
Sending through all this gloom of trees and silence
It? faint half-mute nostalgia . . . How the soul
45
King Borborigmi
You say you heard King Borborigmi faugh?
Say how it was. Some heavenly body moved him?
The moors laughed first? Dark earth put up a inger
Of honeysuckle, through his moonlit window,
And tickled him?
47
49
The Wedding
At noon, Tithonus, withered by his singing,
Climbing the oatstalk with his hairy legs,
Met grey Arachne, poisoned and shrunk down
By her own beauty; pride had shrivelled both.
In the white webwhere seven flies hung wrapped
She heard his footstep; hurried to him; bound him;
Enshrouded him in silk; then poisoned him.
Twice shrieked Tithonus, feebly; then was still.
Arachne loved him. Did he love Arachne?
She watched him with red eyes, venomous sparks,
And the furred claws outspread . . . 'O sweet Tithonns!
Darling! Be kind, and sing that song again!
Shake the bright web again with that deep Eddlingl
Are you much poisoned? sleeping? do you dream?
Darling Tithonus!'
And Tithonus, weakly
Moving one hairy shin against the other
Within the silken sack, contrived to iddle
A little time, half-hearted: 'Shrewd Arachne!
Whom pride in beauty withered to this shape
As pride in singing shrivelled me to mineUnwrap me, let me goand let me limp,
With what poor strength your venom leaves me, down
This oatstalk, and away.'
Arachne, angry,
Stung him again, twirling him with rough paws,
The red eyes keen. 'What! You would dare to leave me?
53
The Road
Three then came forward out of darkness, one
An old man bearded, his old eyes red with weeping,
A peasant, with hard hands. 'Come now,' he said,
'And see the road, for which our people die.
Twelve miles of road we've made, a little only,
Westward winding. Of human blood and stone
We build; and in a thousand years wffl come
Beyond the hills to sea.'
54
We fonr passed on
Over the hill, to westward. Then I felt
How tears ran down my face, tears without number;
And knew that all my life henceforth was weeping,
Weeping, thinking of human grief, and human
Endeavour fruitless in a world of pain.
And when I held my hands up they were old;
I knew my face would not be young again.
Sea Holly
Begotten by the meeting of rock with rock,
The mating of rock and rock, rocks gnashing together;
Created so, and yet forgetful, walks
The seaward path, puts up her left hand, shades
Blue eyes, the eyes of rock, to see better
In slanting light the ancient sheep (which kneels
Biting the grass} the while her other hand,
Hooking the wicker handle, turns the basket
Of eggs. The sea is high to-day. The eggs
Are cheaper. The sea is blown from the southwest,
Confused, taking up sand aod mud in waves,
The waves break, sluggish, in brown foam, the wind
Disperses (on the sheep and hawthorn) spray,
And on her cheeks, the cheeks engendered of rock,
And eyes, the colour of rock. The left hand
Falls from the eyes, and undecided slides
Over the left breast on which muslin lightly
Rests, touching the nipple, and then down
The hollow side, virgin as rock, and bitterly
Caresses the blue hip.
It was for this,
This obtuse taking of the seaward path,
This stupid hearing of larks, this hooking
Of wicker, this absent observation of sheep
Kneeling in harsh sea-grass, the cool hand shading
57
The Room
Through that windowall else being extinct
Except itself and meI saw the struggle
Of darkness against darkness. Within the room
It turned and turned, dived downward. Then I saw
How order mightif chaos wishedbecome:
And saw the darkness crush upon itself.
Contracting powerfully; it was as if
It killed itself: slowly: and with much pain.
58
Sound of Breaking
Why do you cry out, why do I like to hear you
Cry out, here in the dewless evening, sitting
Close, close together, so close that the heart stops beating
And the brain its thought? Wordless, worthless mortals
Stumbling, exhausted, in this wilderness
Of our conjoint destruction! Hear the grass
Raging about us! Hear the worms applaud!
Hear how the ripples make a sound of chaos!
Hear now, in these and the other sounds of evening,
The Erst brute step of God!
About your elbow,
Making a ring of thumb and inger, I
Slide the walled blood against the less-walled blood,
59
EJecfcra
I
The little princess, on her eleventh birthday,
Trapped a blue butterfly in a net of gairee,
Where it was sunning on a speckled stone.
The blue wings iuttered in the silkworm net.
60
Ill
63
VI
Changing Mind
1
family of little Tozos, all exactly alike in pink fleshings all shortlegged and bowlegged, lying on their long backs and twirling purple barrels (gold-star-emblazoned} on their pat-slapping soft feet,
tossing the purple barrels from one simian sole to another. Here 1
was Nozo, the hobo, the awkward inlamed nose with a diamond
sparking on its horn. I was each of these in turn, and then also I
was Bozo, the muscular trapeze artist, and all the while I was
Harry cocking his left eye over his fiddle, and Tom rubbing sandpaper together (wisha wisha) while Mrs. Bishop put her perfumed
hand in his pocket, and three thousand yellow faces perched in
rows like birds, and a humming marble foyer with gilt mirrors,
and O'Dwyer crowding into the same telephone booth with Mrs.
Harry Frank (naughty-naughty) and the electric sign in Bosworth
Place
AH this I was, and also the amphitheatre itself,
AM this, but also a small room, a forest,
Trees full of birds walking down to the water's edge,
Socrates in a basket hanging beside the full moon, eating a
partridge,
The young men pushing, hubbub on Golgotha,
The mad king among them, terrified,, smelling the sweat of the
crowd,
Hegel arriving on a sea-scallop accompanied by Venus,
All this I was, but also those four strangers
Leaning above me, leaning above the stream,
The tall man, the small man, and the blue-eyed woman,
And that other woman, whose beauty, on a kite,
Rose to a beauty like the evening star.
Golgotha, the skull, was the amphitheatre,
The skull was my skull, and within it played
The seven-man orchestra, while Luvic sang
Lights! Lights! O'Dwyer hoarsely cried,
His bloodshot eyes peeped round the gilded smooth
Belly of a cherub, who supported
Chryselephantine pillar of fruits and lutes and leaves.
The lights changed, the walls
Came closer, the crowd was blue, obscure, the forest
Nodded, the blue smoke rolled among the leaves
And nests of birds. The orchestra sat playing
79
4
My father which art in earth
From whom I got my birth,
What is it that I inherit?
From the bones fallen apart
And tie deciphered heart,
Body and spirit.
My mother which art in tomb
Who carriedst me ID thy womb,
What is it that I inherit?
From the thought come to dust
And the remembered lust,
Body and spirit.
Father and mother, who gave
Life, love, and DOW the grave,
What is it that! can be?
Nothing but what lies here,
The hand still, the brain sere.
Naught lives in thee
Nor ever will live, save
It have within this grave
Roots in the mingled heart,
In the damp ashes wound
Where the past, underground,,
Falls, falls apart.
78
79
THE THINGS
The house in Broad Street, red bridk, with nine rooms
the weedgrown graveyard with its rows of tombs
the jail from which imprisoned faces grinned
at stiff palmettos iashing in the wind
the engine-house, with engines, and a tank
in which young alligators swam and stank,
the bell-tower, of red iron, where the bell
gouged of the fires in a tone from hell
magnolia trees with whitehot torch of bud
the yellow river between banks of mud
the tall striped lighthouse like a barber's pole
snake in the bog and locust in the hole
worn cigarette cards, of white battleships,
or flags, or chorus girls with scarlet lips,
jadfcstones of copper, peach tree in the yard
splashing ripe peaches on an earth baked hard
children beneath the arc-light in a romp
with Run sheep Run, and rice-biids in the swamp,
the organ-grinder's monkey, dancing bears,
okras in baskets, Psyche on the staits
and then the north star nearer, and the snow
silent between the now and long ago
time like a train that roared from place to place
new crowds, new faces, for a single face
no longer then the chinaberry tree
nor the dark mockingbird to sing Ms glee
nor prawns nor catfish; icicles instead
and Indian-pipes, and cider in the shed
arbutus under pinewoods in the spring
and death remembered as a tropic thing
80
The necktie
wrinkled
Thefre
Shdkspere
to lie in cold obstruction and to rot
Vivien
hot Darlingl
The rain
look at the streaked light on the window-pane
The other faces
we are smiling
The shoes
polish us
The pencils
sharpen us
The desk
work
The peach
eat me in sunlight
The prostitute
follow me
The coffin
I also serve who only lie in wait
The heat
I will
FOUR SPEECHES MADE BY AN OBELISK
North
Northward, the nothing that we give a name,
southward, the selfsame nothing without fame,
westward, the sunset over sterile sands
eastward, the stone Memnon with hollowed hands.
84
South
Little is life, with love, or without love,
with or without wings, bones can scarcely move,
rain will destroy the flesh, the eyes go blind,
and stone will not remember much the mind.
Eairt
West
85
Picture of a mountain
you too
The horses in the field
you are swift
The leaf
you are brief
The snow
centuries hence, it wfll be long ago
jTiw nnTTOf
lights, lights, more lights!
Memory
this is a roiled reiection of the face
Vivien
If you had wings you would be less an angel
and more the devil that you sometimes are
but you're an angel aod a devil, too
and amateur at both
Pride
Look at that biceps! measure it with your hand.
Was ever sect a consciousness as this?
here's wisdom that would break behemoth's heart
and such a passkm as could shape the world
to better purpose
Shame
Foulest, foulest, foulest,
digester of ilth, excreter of filth,
unwashed effluvium of this rotting world,
sickly beginning and more sickly end,
cut out that natural heart that beats your blood
and with it shed your life
The sun
rejoice
86
The rain
weep
INSCRIPTIONS IN SUNDRY PLACES
On a billboard
smoke Sweet Caporals
In a street-car
do not speak to the motorman
On a vending machine
insert one ceot then press the rod
push push push push
On a weighing machine
give yourself a weigh
On the schoolhouse
Morton Grammar School Founded 1886
In gilt letters on a swinging black sign
Dr. William F, Jones M.D.
On a tombstone
memento mori
On a coin
e pluribus unum
On the fence of a vacant lot
commit no nuisance
In a library
silence
At the entrance to a graveyard
dogs admitted only on leash
At a zoo
do not feed the animals
87
On a cotton wharf
no smoking
On a crocheted bookmarker in a Bftfe
time is short
On a saSor cap
V. S. S. Oregon
At a rattway-cromng
stop look and listen
At the end of a road
private way dangerous passing
Beside a pond
no fishing
In a park
keep off the glass
In a train
spitting prohibited $100 fine
On a ceEuloid button
remember the Maine
On a brick watt
trespassers will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law
Outside a theatre
standing room only
At the foot of a companion-way leading to the bridge of a ship
officers only
In a subway
the cough and sneeze
both spread disease
and so does spit
take care of it
88
On an ofltce door
Peter Jones
In a saloon
no treating allowed
Laundry-mark on linen
869
In a window
board and room
On a ship
first class passengers not allowed aft of this sign
In a train
ne pas se pencher au deliors
On an apartment-house door
all deliveries must be made at side entrance
Over a door in a hospital
staff only
VARIOUS ROOMS
The nursery
High on the southern wall the clock
ticktoefcticktock
and on the western wall the rain
flashing claws on the window pane
the ceiling white the walls blue
the shawl above you is blue too
here is the place where comes the face
and murmurs mmmmniinmtnmmnMn,
The walls are changed and papered well
with peacock and ted tulip bell
here is a desk with pen and ink
and here at night you sit and think
90
TheheO.
Father's office
a verb is an action being or state of being;
the articles are 'the' and 'an' or *a';
around the rugged rock the ragged rascal ran
The schoolroom
these desks, all carved with names, once saw him rise
and in his trouser-pocket pat the prize
Kitchen
tin mug of coffee on an oilcloth table;
advertisements of pills for female ills
Sunday school
tie fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of man
Another schoolroom
let me see that paper. Did you cheat?
A room in a school hospital
so the three caravels to westward veiling
9*
Another bedroom
Is that you Vivien?
This is the face I saw, this is the face
the trumpetvine the tombstone and the place
This is what music said
look, you are walking in a hall of clouds
your hand is cunning, the gods are young
A drawing-room
Lovely weather isn't it? How do you do
A ballroom
One, two, three-and-slide; one, two, three-and-slide;
down by the stream where I first met Rebecca
An office
In reply to your inquiry of the i6th instantA stateroom
Creakand a wash of seabells and a bugle,
the north star drowned, a majesty of waves
washing the heart, and memory but a night
in which at last a single face is bright
Bedroom in a hospital
Now if you'll roll your sleeve up, I will give you
this little shot of morphine, which will help you
you'll be surprised, it will be very easy
lie still and close our eyes.
Mr, Jones
bat I am more
than what I sec
The mirror
what are you then
if more than that?
a coat a collar
and a hat
Mr. Jones
also a heart
also a soul
also a will
that knows its goal
The mirror
you are a razor
in a claw
and more than that
I never saw
Mr. Jones
far more than that
I am a mind
whose wanderings
are unconined
north sooth and east
and west I go
and all things under god
I know
The mirror
$peak if yon must
but I distrust
and all that glitters
is but dust
Mr. Jones
but I remember
what I see
94
THE FACE
The blue shawl first, a canopy of blue,
blue sky, blue ceiling, the bewildering light
that comes and goes, and in it formless forms
and then the form of forms the shape of shapes
the darkness with the face, the face with eyes,
the face with stars, the leaoing face, the murmur,
sweet food, sweet softness, incalculable depth
unassailable but protective height
the tower among the stars, great Igdrasil,
and so the sounds grown slower, more distinct,
one from another clear, the murmur shaking
deeply the chords of being, and the voice
speaking or singing, with notes far apartso far apart that terror folds his wings
between one syllable of sweetest sound
95
97
Entrance to a subway
He stood beside his suitcase, reading a paper.
When they met, they were both embarrassed.
A tree on a hill
They will remember roe.
Bench in an avenue
For many days she came and sat alone.
Lobby of a dingy hotel
I knew him well.
Abdomen
the skin, deeply pigmented. The abdomen
somewhat distended; uniform in shape.
Found only one small spot that might be thought
a rose-spot: no abdominal pulsation.
Extremities
forearms and thighs, dotted with small spots
average about a pinhead size (some larger)
varying from the color of fresh blood
to almost black. Are not removed by pressure,
not raised above the surface, sharply outlined:
appear (on close inspection) as minute
haemorrhages beneath the epidermis . . .
The skin, harsh, scaly. Follicles, not prominent.
Muscles, somewhat flaccid. No oedema.
Palpation
confirmed throughout the character of the skin,
No evidence of enlarged glands OB the neck.
None found in the groin or the axillae.
The heart impulse not felt; nor apex beat.
Could not determine lower border of liver.
Over a considerable area, and bilateral,
marked tenderness, most marked in lower portion.
Recti contractedspasmodicallyunder pressure.
Percussion
the lungs gave normal resonance throughout
The area of cardiac dulness
came half an inch within the mammary line.
The abdomen, throughout, was tympanitic,
flat on the flanks well back; dull on the pubes;
which I attribute to contacted recti.
The upper limit of the negative dulness
was opposite fifth rib in mammary line.
Flatness began at sixth rib. Lower border
seemed normal in position. Splenic enlargement
could not be well determined; normal dulness
not easily distinguished, partly owing
to tympany of stomach and intestines.
100
Auscultation
negative as regards the chest; nothing abnormal
was audible in either lung.
The apex beat was heard (equally well)
in interspaces four and five.
The heart-sounds feeble: difficult to hear;
the first sound, valvular; the second, clicking.
No murmur. In the neck, no venous hum.
No friction sounds were heard above the liver.
Did not examine spleen for friction sounds.
The eruption
first noticed with the first abdominal pains.
On radial side of forearm, near the wrist,
a braise-like spot, size of a dime;
which passed through various shades of red and blue;
then brown and black; scaled oif; and disappeared.
SPEECHES MADE BY BOOKS,
STARS, THINGS AND PEOPLE
The hoots
Everyman I wfll go with thee and be thy guide,
in thy most need
to go by thy side.
The people
Hi there Jones
say did you mean that?
well, telling him won't make him, wfll it
when I saw you yon were sitting at the caf6 table, thinking
The stars
Look at as
Shakspere
And death being dead there's no more dying then
The people
Hi there Jones!
101
The stan
light-years!
The books
Homage to thee, o great God, lord of truth.
0 lord I come to thee to see thy kindness
1 know thee and I know thy name, and know
the names of all those gods who dwell with thee.
The people
He must go westward to the onter darkaess
and die, and pick the deathless asphodels.
The stars
We are eyes
The books
Behold I have come to thee, and I bring truth
sin I destroyed for thee, I have not sinned
against mankind, nor yet against my kin
nor wronged the place of truth, nor known the worthless.
I wrought no evil, nor cheated the oppressed,
nor did those things the gods atarninate
nor viliied the servant to his lord.
The people
He's a liar.
The stars
Winter is coming.
The booh
102
The people
Hey bridktop hey carrots
who let you out? are you wet behind the ears?
his hands are covered with blood.
The stars
Nebular hypothesis.
The books
Have not polluted myself in holy places
diminished from the bushel, taken from
nor added to the acre-measure, nor
encroached on ields of others. Nor have I
misread the pointers of the scales, nor added weight,
I have not taken milk from mouths of children,
nor caught the fish with fish of their own kind.
The people
The sycamores wil have no food for this guy
he lies in his throat
lynch him
The stars
Square of the distance?
The books
I have not put out a fire when it should bum
I have not driven cattle from their pastures
I have not cut the dam of a canal
I have not shunned the god at Ms appearance
I am pore. I am pure. I am pure. I am pure. I am pure.
The people
Outside, ootsideS
close the door after you, will you?
who let him in anyway?
hi there Jones
The pendulums
Painpangpainpangpainpang.
103
Tfte stars
First degree! second degree! third degree! forever.
Tfte things
We koow better
A clock
CuefewJ cucfeool cuckoo!
Tfte beds
Foul enseamed sheets
A girl
Hello Peter~-~do yon remember me?
A doIlar-MI
He'd steal a penny from a dead man's eye
A grave
Enter, to grow in wisdom
A cat
He kicked me
The peach-tree
He broke me
Waste-basket
Filled nie with circulars and unpaid bills
The hands of a clock
Here we go round the mulberry bosh
mulberry bush mulberry bush
Jae&stone
I am still here in the yard, uader a brick
Psycft
He drew a moustache on me with an indelible pencil
104
The locusts
Look out for the wasps
The swamp
Beware the snake
The books
Homage to you who dwell in the hall of truth
I know you and I know your names. Let me not fall
under the slaughtering knives, bring not my wickedness
to the notice of the god whom you all follow;
speak ye the truth concerning me to god.
I have not done an evil thing, but live
on truth, and feed on truth, and have performed
behests of men, and tilings that please the gods.
The things
Pull out the plug.
Broad street
Hot asphalt!
Ricebirds in the swtanp
Gunshot!
The organ
Please give a penny to the poor blind man
poor blind manpoor blind man
Shakspere
Walk you thus westward you will see the west
grown colder but still west: or march you east
why eastward still the sun will blanch before you,
with ice upon his eyes, but still the sun.
Picture-postcard angels
Harp the herald tribune sings
The mums
Angel of nothing in a world of nothings,
palmetto leaf in sunlight, time and tide
105
The operating-table
Now if you'll roll your sleeve ap I wfll give you
The stars
Open your mouth and shut your eyes
and I will give you a great surprise.
Eclipse
obscuration
transit
A basket of okras
Childhood! sunshine!
The shoes
Laces broken, worn out
The books
I gave a boat to him who needed one.
I have made holy offerings to the gods.
Be ye my saviours, be ye my protectors,
and make no accusations before God.
Look, I am pure of mouth, and clean of hands,
therefore it hath been said by those who saw me
come in peace, come in peace, come in peace.
The graveyard
Come to pieces! bones to you, old bonetrap
The snow
Poor Pete's a-cold
The books
My heart of my mothermy heart of my mothermy heart
of my being,
make no stand against me when testifying,
thrust me not back to darkness!
The face
My little son!
107
Truth
Tell me: who is he whose roof is ire,
whose walls are living serpents, and whose floor
a stream of water?
HypotemiM
The shortest distanceha habetween two points
The people
Dirty dogI
look at flie cut of his trousers.
Hi there Jones!
The books
In very truth this heart has now been weighed
this soul born testimony concerning him
this that comes from his mouth has been conirmed
he has not sinned, his name stinks not before us
let him go forth into the field of iowers
let him go forth into the field of oierings
let him go forth into the field of reeds.
TJte pwpfa
Bribery! simony! perjury! blasphemy!
The stars
Chaosherray!is come again
The face
Divinest of divine and love of loves
daybreak of brightest light and morning star
murmur of music in the fairest iower
o cloven sweetest fruit, and tenderest vine
dear timelessness of time and heavenly face
and dearest clover in the darkest place
A lamp-post
Here he spat
108
A document
Here is his name, perjured
A ditch
Here he stooped
The face
Wonder of wonders ID a world of worlds
o heart that beats beneath a larger heart
quick hands to beauty bom in helplessness
and love of loveliness with teoderest touch
The stars
Great Circle
The outer darkness
Airless! Waterless! Lightless!
The books
In god's name, and god's image, let him die
The dock
Took.
109
The brook
Demosthenes' pebbles
The wind
where was It? when?
The gftm
she? who was she?
The echo
tell it again
The hilMde
warm sun upon these frozen bones of granite
I stretched my ribs and thawed
The haunted house
another frost like that, the ohimney'll fallthere was Ice by tite pond's edge.
The cricket
zeek . . . zeek . . . zeek
The mud
who did yon say she was? who?
The brook
she babbled, she laughed, half weeping she loitered,
she laughed without laughter, wept without tearfal
The echo
laughed and laughed laughed and laughed
The wind
why did she? where? , , .
The pines
seek her and soothe hei!
no
The birches
tale-telling tell-tale!
this frost makes me tinkle.
The cricket
seek . . . seek . . . seek . . . seek . . .
The hittside
slowly the hard earth, from these cusps of granite
softly in sunlight released
The bell-tower
doomed in hell, domed in hell, doomed.
The brook
she, she was querulous:
he, he was quarrelsome:
The echo
he he!she she!
The haunted house
alas, alas how this cold autumn-wind
moans through old rib-bones! whines through old clapboards!
The grass
they? who were they? . . .
sure, surely I saw them . . .
The pines
who saw them? you?
The brook
babblers and wind-bibblers
leave love alone!
The echo
fling the first stone
in
The brook
wept she then? walled she then? whither.
The hittside
warm sun upon these frosted bones of granite
I stretch my ribs and thaw beneath the lichens
the drip from hoarfrost tickles at my sides
and runs toward that chattering brook
The flaunted house
I knew itthat brick at the top is loose.
The cricket
seek . . . see ... seek . . . see ...
The bett-tawer
doom doing, doomsday, doom done, doom.
The larches
where are they vanished to?
The brook
what was that word that so hurt her? what hurt her so?
The birches
'whisper it
The larches
soothesay
The pines
where and when? who and why?
The grass
shhhhhhhhh! . . . shhhhhhh!
112
116
VJI
Beloved, let us onoe more praise the rain.
Let us discover some new alphabet,
For this, the often-praised; and be ourselves
The rain, the duckweed, and the burdock leaf,
The green-white privet flower, the spotted stone,
And all that welcomes rain; the sparrow, too,
Who watches with a hard eye, from seclusion,
Beneath the elm-tree bough, till rain is done.
There is an oriole who, upside down,
Hangs at his nest, and flicks an orange wing,
Under a tree as dead and still as lead;
There is a single leaf, in all this heaven
Of leaves, which rain has loosened from its twig:
The stern breaks, and it falls, but it is caught
Upon a sister leaf, and thus she hangs;
There is ao acorn cup, beside a mushroom,
Which catches three drops from the stooping cloud.
The timid bee goes back to hive; the fly
Under the broad leaf of the hollyhock
Perpends stupid with cold; the raindark snail
Surveys the wet world from a watery stone . .
And still the syllables of water whisper:
The wheel of cloud whirs slowly: while we wait
In the dark room; and in your heart I End
One silver raindrop,on a hawthorn leaf,
Orion in a cobweb, and the World.
VIII
Conceive: be fecundated by the word,
Hang op your mind for the intrusion of the wind.
Be blown, be blown, like a handful of withered seed,
Or a handful of leaves in autumn. Blow, blow,
Careless of where you blow, or to what end,
Or whether living or dying. Go with the wind,
Whirl and return, lodge in a tree, detach,
117
118
You went to the verge, you say, and come back safely?
Some have not been so fortunate,some have fallen.
Children go lightly there, from crag to crag,
And coign to coign,where even the goat is wary,
And make a sport of it . . . They fling down pebbles,
Following, with eyes undizzied, the long curve,
The long slow outward curve, into the abyss,
As far as eye can follow; and they themselves
Turn back, unworried, to the here and now . . .
But you have been there, too?-
121
I saw at length
The space-defying pine, that on the last
Outjutting rock has cramped Its powerful roots.
There stood I too: under that tree I stood:
My hand against its resinous bark: my face
Turned out and downward to the fourfold kingdom.
The wind roared from all quarters. The waterfall
Came down, it seemed, from Heaven. The mighty sound
Of pouring elements,earth, air, and water,
The cry of eagles, chatter of falling stones,
These were the frightful language of that place.
I understood it ill, but understood.
You understood it? Tell me, then, its meaning.
It was an all, a nothing, or a something?
Chaos, or divine love, or emptiness?
Water and earth and air and the sun's fire?
Or else, a question, simply?
Water and fire were there,
And air and earth; there too was emptiness;
All,, and nothing, and something too, and love.
But these poor words, these squeaks of ours, in which
We strive to mimic, with strained throats and tongues,
The spawning and outrageous elements
Alas, how paltry are theyl For I saw
What did you see?
-I saw myself and God.
I saw the ruin in which godhead lives:
Shapeless and vast: the strewn wreck of the world:
Sadness unplumbed: misery without bound.
Wailing I heard, but also I heard joy.
Wreckage I saw, but also I saw flowers.
Hatred I saw, but also I saw love . . .
And thus, I saw myself.
And this alone?
122
123
XIX
XX
130
XLI
Or daylong watched, in the kaleidoscope,
While the raio beat the window, and the smote
Blew down along the roof, how the clear fragments
Clicked subtly inward to new patterns, seeming
To melt from rose to crystal, moon to star,
Snowflake to asphodel, the bright white shrinking
To let the ruby vein its way like blood,
The violet opening like an eye, the pearl
Gone like a raindrop. Never twice the same,
Never remembered. The carpet there, the table
On which the dog's-eared Euclid with ixed stars,
The cardboard battleship, the tops, the jactstones,
And the long window lustred with changing rain,
And the long day, profound and termless.
Or
The ship's deck, midnight, winter, and the stare
Swung in a long curve starboard above the mast,
And bow-ward then as the sea hoists the bow,
And back to port, in a vast dance of atoms,
Poured down like snow about you, or again
Steady above the mast-light, the wide span
Of brilliant worlds, not meaningless, watched bravely
By him who guards the lighted binnacle, and him
Dark in the swaying crow's nest, who beats his arms
Against the cold. What mind of stars is this?
What changing thought that takes its ever-changing
131
XLM
Not with despair, nor with rash hardihood,
And yet with both, salute the grassblade, take
The terrible thistledown between your hands, assume
Divinity, and ride the cloud. Come boldly
Upon the rock and count his scars, number
The ants that raid the pear, and be yourself
The multitude you are. We are destroyed
Daily. We meet the arrows of the sun,
Corruption, ruin, decay, time in the seed,
Usury in the flesh, death in the heart.
This band of sunlight on the frostmistrust it.
This frost that measures blades against the sun-
132
134
XLV
XLVJII
Pawn to king four; pawn to king four; pawn
To king's knight fourthe gambit is declined.
The obvious is declined; and we adventure
For stranger mishap than would here have fallen.
Where would the victory have led us, what
New square might thus have witnessed our defeat?
The king is murdered in his coueting-hoiise;
Or at the table, where he carves a fowl;
Stabbed by his light-of-love; drowned in his bath}
And all that he might knowWhy, something new;
Such sport of nature as deforms a leaf
Or gives the toad a wing. Thus we find
The afternoon, for all its honeyed light
On gilded lawns, is monstrous grown, profound
Induction to such hell as Blake himself
Had never guessed. Suddenly comes the Queen
Dressed like a playing-card; a wind of fear
Flutters the courtiers; and the garden strewn
Witt the blown wreckage of our flimsy world.
And the poor king, bewildered, stops his heart
On the loud note of doubt.
L
The world is intricate, and we ate nothing.
The world is nothing: we are intricate,
Alas, how simple to invert the world
Inverting phrases! And, alas, how simple
To fool the foolish heart to his topmost bent
With flattery of the moment! Add, subtract,
Divide or subdivide with verbs and adverbs,
Multiply adjectives like cockatoos
That scream lewd colors in a phrase of trees;
137
138
LII
LJII
Nothing to say, you say? Thee we'll say nothing;
But step from rug to mg and hold our breaths,
Coont the green ivy-strings against the window,
The pictures on the wall. Let us exchange
Pennies of gossip, news from nowhere, names
Held in despite or honor; we have seen
The weather-vanes veer westward, and the clouds
Obedient to the wind; have walked in snow;
Forgotten and rememberedBut we are strangers;
Came here by paths which never crossed; and stare
At the blind mystery of each to each.
You've seen the sea and mountains? taken ether?
And slept in hospitals from Rome to Cairo?
Why so have I; and lost my tonsils, too;
And drunk the waters of the absolute.
But is it this we meet for, of an evening,
Is it this
O come, like Shelley,
For god's sake let us sit on honest ground
And tell harsh stories of the deaths of kings!
Have out our hearts, confess our blood,
Our foulness and our virtue! I have known
Such sunsets of despair as god himself
140
142
145
II
We need a theme? then let that be our theme:
that we, poor grovellers between faith and doubt,
the son and north star lost, and compass out,
the heart's weak engine all but stopped, the time
timeless in this chaos of onr wills
that we most ask a theme, something to think,
something to say, between dawn and dark,
something to hold to, something to love
Medusa of the northern sky, shine npon us,
and if we fear to think, then turn that fear to stone,
that we may learn unconsciousness alone;
but freeze not the uplifted prayer of hands
that hope for the unknown.
Give us this day our daily death, that we
may learn to live;
teach us that we trespass; that we may learn,
in wisdom, not in kindness, to forgive;
and in the granite of our own bones seal us daily.
O neighbors, in this world of dooms and omens,
participators in the crime of god,
seekers of self amid the rains of space:
jurors and guilty men, who, face to face,
discover you but judge yourselves to death,
and for such guilt as god himself prepared,
dreamed in the atom, and so brought to birth
between one zero and another,
turn again
to the cold violet that braves the snow,
146
Ill
Envy is holy. Let us envy those
bright angels whose bright wings are stronger far
than the bare arms we lift toward the star.
And hate them too; until our hate has grown
to wings more powerful than angels' wings;
when with a vaulting step, from the bare mountain,
we'll breathe the empyrean; and so wheel
gladly to earth again.
Then we shall see
and love that humbleness which was ourselves;
it will be home to us; until such time
as our strong wings, in their OWD majesty,
themselves will lift us to another world;
from which is no return.
But in that world,
there too burn higher angels, whose wide wings
outspan us, shadow us hugely, and outsoar us;
rainbows of such magnificent height
as hide the stars; and under these we'll cower
envious and hateful; and we will envy,
till once again, with contumacious wings,
ourselves will mount to a new terror, wheel
slowly once more, but gratefully, and gladly,
to home in limbo.
And thus North forever.
147
V
Out of your sickness let your sickness speak
the bile must have his waythe Hood his froth
poison will come to the tongue. Is hell your kingdom?
you keow its privies and its purlieus? keep
sad record of its filth? Why this is health:
there is no other, save what angels know.
Rave! the pattern backward, to no pattern:
reduce the granite downward, to DO stone:
unhinge the rainbow to his sun and rain:
dissolve the blood to water and to salt:
is this dishevelment we cannot bear?
The angel is the one who knows his wings!
You came from darkness, and you now remember
darkness, terror, windows to a world,
horror of light, cold hands in violence thrust,
tyrants diastole and systole.
O cling to warmth, poor child, and press your mouth
against the warm all-poisoning side of the world.
She's there, she's there,whispering at all hoursdefending and deluding and defending
she's in your heart, she's in your traitor blood,
arches your eyebrow and contracts your eye.
Alas, what help for you, poor orphan fool,
who creep from rib to rib, and lose your way?
Let poison spit its blister from your tongue:
let horror break the left side of your heart,
the brightest syllable be drowned in blood:
thus to the knowledge of year wings you come,
O angel, man! and thus to wisdom bring
terror from terror, and the Thing from thing.
148
149
XI
1.50
151
XIII
As if god were a gypsy in a tent,
the smeared mask in the smoky light,
smiling with concealed intentpointing to the bag of fortunes from which you choosehis hand like a claw, a tiger's claw,
the claw with stripes
(as if one thus, in the twilight,
at the hour of the bat, the hour of the moth,
when night-eyes open and day-eyes close,
saw, in the flitting betwixt light arid light,
the half-knowledge which is more than knowledge,)
saying choose nowthe time is comeput ia your hand
take out the card that tells your futureEve words or six in vast calligraphy
spaced paused and pointed as they should be, printed
in words of Alpha, in words of Omega
or in such words as are not words at all
thunder, harsh lightning, the fierce asterisk
that stars the word for footnote to dead worldschoose now, be doomed, take out the phrase
that calls you king, that calls yon fool,
brings the fat klondyke to too greedy hands
152
as if you saw
153
XIX
155
XXI
Deep violet, deep snow-cloud, deep despair,
deep root, deep pain, deep morningmust we say
deepness in all things, find our lives in deepness?
we too are deep? the breakfast salutation,
that too is deep? Alas, poor Arabel,
poor woman, poor deluded human, you
who finick with a fork and eat an egg,
are you as deep as thought of you is deep?
Timeless. The morning is not deep as thought.
Spaceless. The noon is not as deep as dream.
Formless. The night is not as deep as death.
And I defer the notion of the infinite,
the thought of you, the thought of morning,
idea of evening, idea of noon.
XXII
If man, that angel of bright consciousness,
that wingless mind and brief epitome
of god's forgetfulness, will be going forth
156
*57
XXV
159
XXXVJJ
Where we were walking in the day's light, seeing
the flight of bones to the stars, the voyage of dead men,
those who go forth like dead leaves on the air
in the long journey, those who are swept
on the last current, the cold and shoreless ones,
who do not speak, do not answer, have no names,
nor are assembled again by any thought, but voyage
in the wide circle, the great circle
where we were talking, in the day's light, watching
even as I took your hand, even as I kissed you,
ah the unspeakable voyage of the dead men
those who go up from the grass without laughter
who fake leave of the wheat and water without speech
who pass us without memory and without murmur
as they begin the endless voyage
160
where we stood
in the little round of colour, perilously poised
in the bright instant hetween two instant deaths,
whispering yes, whispering no, greeting and permitting,
touching and recalling, and with our eyes
looking into the past to see if there the future
might grow like a leaf, might grow like a bough with flowers,
might grow like a tree with beneficent shade
but what delight that was, O wave who broke
out of the long dark nothing against my breast,
you who lifted me violently so that we rose together,
what delight that was, in that clear instant,
even as we shone thus, the first, the last,
to see the flight of bones, the everlasting,
the noiseless unhurrying flight
of the cold and shoreless ones, the ones who no more
answer to any names, whose voyage in space
does not remember the earth or stars
nor is recalled by any spider, or any iower,
the joyless and deathless dancers
speak once, speak twice,
before we join them, lady, and speak no more.
XXXVIII
Then it was that the child irst spoke to me
the innocent the clear in the clear morning
the young voice finding the irst sounds of joy
first sounds of grief of terror of despair
the weak hand holding mine, that was no stronger,
as if for guidance, who was my guide, though younger
so that we walked together in the cool garden
he that was innocent but knew it not
who in the thrush's song teard terror and delight
and a wide fear in the wide wave of light
joy and sorrow in the coolness of the shade
strength in my hand my hand that was afraid
161
XXXIX
On that wild verge in the late light he stood,
the last one, who was alone, the naked one,
wingless unhappy one who had climbed there,
braised foot and braised hand,
first beholder of the indecipherable land,
the nameless land, the selfless land,
stood and beheld it from the granite cliff
the far beneath, the far beyond, the far above,
162
XLI
XLIV
Where without speech the angel walked I went
and strove as silently as he to move
seeking in Ms deep kindness my content
and ia his grace my love
walked without word and held my arms as wings
from stone to stone as gently stepped as he
observed humility with humble things
as I himself might be:
till he it was at last who stood and spoke
Be man, if man you be! Or be ashamed.
And turned and strode away. And on that stroke,
(as if now I were named)
165
167
LI
The miracle said T and then was still,
lost in the wing-bright sphere of his own wonder:
as if the river paused to say a river,
or thunder to self said thunder.
As once the voice had spoken, now the mind
uttered itself, and gave itself a name;
and in the instant all was changed, the world
two separate worlds became
The indivisible unalterably divided;
the rock forever sundered from the eye;
henceforth the lonely self, by self anointed,
hostile to earth and sky.
Alas, good angel, loneliest of heroes!
pity your coward children, who become
afraid of loneliness, and long for rock
as sick men long for home.
LVIII
Why should we care what this absurd child does,
follow him idly, watch the doll
laid in the grass and covered with dead leaves
ingers tenderly lacing the dead leaves
pathetic solicitude of the foolish for the unknowing?
why should we stand here, and watch this travesty,
we, the wise and old, the hardened, the disillusioned
from our window of bright despair looking downward
at the little contemptible street of human affairs
and the child there, unconscious, tender, preoccupied,
bending in the dnst above his beloved fragment?
Or the old men and women going up and down:
those with tired feet, or bent hands; those who see
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170
LXIV
Insist on formality if yon will, let the skeleton
insist OH formality if it will
allow it the hat the spats the gloves
and let it observe its exquisite decorum
at weddings or funerals, even at christenings
Let it say yes and no and horn and haw
give it an eyeglass and a programme of the music
something to do with hand and eye
it will embrace you pat you on the back
say it remembers yoa and knew your father
Let it observe its exquisite decorum
in the manipulation of decayand sing too-with hearty sepulchral voicein celebration of those rituals
which make a formal of the absolute
As if it were better, at the end of time,
when time runs faster, to mark the minutes out
with gold or diamonds, even with cannonshot
the intervals more regular and precise
and decorated tooto give them dignity!
171
LXIX
I saw all these things and they meant nothing
1 touched all these hands and they meant nothing
I saw all these faces Lord and they meant nothing
Lord Zero they meant nothing
accept my worship Zero for these devotions
for all these sins and for their absolutions
remit my guilt and wash my hands Lord Zero
for yours was the conception
and I will teach yon in another world
out of rny misery I will learn and teach you
I will teach yon Lord in another world
I will give you my heart
the heart that the sailor gives to the broken ship
or the wheelwright to the turning wheel
the heart that the farmer gives to the frozen furrow
a stubborn heart like that
and I will also teach you by giving you my hands
look how they are injured Lord, see how hard they are
174
176
177
LXXXI
Assurance can come from nothing, or almost nothing;
the imperceptible accretion of trifles;
the mistaken speech, acknowledged, or unacknowledged,
the penetration of a deception; it can come
from observation of what has been unobserved:
new knowledge of an old history, new sight
of a known face, a known field; the path
familiar to the foot, but with surprises,
a raw pebble, dislodged by rain, a scarlet leaf
drowned in a puddle, a branch of maple to brush the sleeve,
or such other casuals. It can come
with a change of weather, the sundrawn mist
exaggerating softly the shape of a tree, snow
altering the face of a house, so that you guess
but do not know, yet triumph in knowing. Or can come,
and this is best, from the renewed inspection
of a known thing, and long loved; something small,
something tiny, but loved. The pimpernel,
hidden, with dusty petals, in deep grass,
obscure but always remembered, clear and
178
LXXXIII
Music will more nimbly move
than quick wit can order word
words can point or speaking prove
but music heard
How with successions it can take
time in change and change in time
and all reorder, all remake
with no recourse to rhyme!
Let us in joy, let us in love,
surrender speech to music, tell
what music so much more can prove
nor talking say so well:
Love with delight may move away
love with delight may forward come
or else will hesitate and slay
Enger at lip, at home,
But verse can never say these things;
only in music may be heard
the subtle touching of such strings,
never in word.
179
LXXXIV
What face she put on it, we will not discuss:
she went hence an hour since. Where she went,
is another matter. To the north, to the south,
as the mart whistled, or the whim bade, she went,
or evenwho can sayfollowing a star.
Her heart is like an hourglass, from which the sand runs
no sooner run than tilted to run again;
her mind, a mirror, which reflects the last moment;
her face, you would know it anywhere, it gives you back
your own light, like the moon. Tell her a lie,
threefold she reflects it; tell her the truth,
and its returned brilliance will strike you dead.
She is of quicksilver, You might as well
pillow your head on a cloud, as on that breast,
or strive to sleep with a meteor: when you wake,
she is gone, your own hand is under your cheek.
Yet she is of the material that earth is made of:
will breed as quick as a fly; bloom like the cherry,
fearless of frost: and has a nimble fancy
as tropic in pattern as a femleaf. She walks
as naturally as a young tree might walk:
with no pretence: picks up her roots and goes
out of your world, arid into the secret darkness,
as a lady with lifted train will leave a ballroom,
and who knows why.
Wherefor do you love her, gentlemen?
Because, like the spring earth, she is rruitfulness?
and you are seed? you need no other reason?
and she no other than her perpetual season.
LXXXV
Observe yourself, bat placidly: the mirror
is well placed, with the light behind you: Narcissus
180
i8i
182
XCII
But no, the familiar symbol, as that the
curtain lifts on a current of air, the rain
drips at the window, the green leaves seen in the
lamplight are bright against the darkness, these
will DO longer serve your appetite, you must have
something fresh, something sharpThe coarse grassblade, such as will cut
a careless finger, the silver pencil
lying straight along the crack in the table
in its pure rondure a multitude of reflections
or else your own thumbnail suddenly seen
and as if for the first time
Strongly ridged, warm-coloured as flesh but cool,
the pale moon at the base, and the fleck of scar
which grows slowly towards the tipyou think of a river
dowo which a single dead leaf perhaps is carried
or you think of a glacier in which
an acorn has been frozen
But these too are familiar, it is not these
which will say your thought, you lift desperately
your eyes to the wallthe smooth surface
awaits them as precisely and coldly
as the paper awaits the gleaming pencil, giving
nothing, not even a resistance
Where will you turn now if not to the rain,
to the curtain in the wind, the leaf tapping the window,
these are the wilderness, these are beyond
your pencil with its reflections
your thumbnail with its suggestion of rivers and glaciers
now you must go abroad
To the wild night which everywhere awaits you
and the deep darkness full of sounds
183
XCVI
It is the other, it is the separate, it is the one
whose touch was strange, who with an eyeglance
sounded and wounded you, who went then
quickly to another world, who was gone
before you had guessed, before you had known,
quick as the shadow of a whip over grass
or the shadow of falling water on a rockhe who said yes, but with a separate meaning,
who said no with an air of profound acceptance,
he who was other, he who was separateThat precious thing is gone, that bright grassHade
suddenly by the frost's ierce tongue
was silvered and melted, how will you have it back
there is no having it unless you had it,
lament your selfishness in vain, be sentimental
and hug the lost image, it is in vain,
he remains in another world
Simple one, simpleton,
when will you learn the flower's simplicity
lie open to all comers, permit yourself
to be rifled-fruitfully too-by other selves?
Self, and other selfpermit them, permit them
it is summer still, winter can do no more
who brings them together in death, let them come
murderously now together, it is the lifelong
season of meeting, speak your secret.
184
to plant the bright gold solid seeds of Eden, and the bright shoots,
in something less than Eden or more than earth?
Nor could I persuade them; nor, not being God, would wish
to alter the inalterable, save for my own poor pleasure,
and that perhaps were pleasure enough? to see the change
alter historic eyes, with all the fallen stars removed?
the constellations clearer, those I know?
But ah, poor children, to make them the victims
of such ideal delight! that they should see their flowers
wither, or worse, worse still, grow to strange shapes!
And am I a father, that I should beat my children for this?
No, no, my darlings, do your murder in your own way,
as I in mine; and at the end of the world's evening,
when the harvest of stars has been gathered and stored for nothing
then we will sit together, and understand, and exchange
the husks of seeds which we vainly planted under the rainbow;
and you will say, Ton went farther,' and I will say,
'But to no purpose* . . .
Bat now we sail
westward together, and say nothing, hostile to each other,
and the world is good, and old, and deep.
II
And then the minstrel fellow, whom I hated,
came softly stepping, harp in hand, from wave to wave,
with such a brightness, such a lightness, such delight
in his own wave-Bight across seas of chaos,
and such assurance, and such eyes of wisdom's colour,
and wings of the sea-eagle or the angel,
touching his heart to such deep chords of heaven-praise,
that I was ashamed, but also jealous. And I saw
how well and swiftly from wave to wave he came,
making such sport of it as swallow makes of summer-flight
for his own joy in motion. And "O curst man,' he sang,
'you will know nothing, you will waste your life
in desperate voyages to the unknown coasts,
turn back and listen; but you cannot, cannot listen;
nor, if you listened, could I sieg to you with such power.'
186
VI
VII
191
VIII
who sent their words with iags to the very ramparts of time.
Only the questioner I loved, the hemlock-lover,
him whom bitterness made sweet and hombleness made wisej
and not that poet who thought himself (alas) a god.
This much I learned from the tomb-seeing angel.
And this too I concealed from the children.
And as I sat
there with the publican drinking bitter beer,
while the coarse dock ticked centuries for stupid stars,
calendars coming and going from dying printers of words,
planets cooling and changing as men change minds,
it was there the two men came from east and west,
wise men from west and east, and spoke their wisdom;
while the publican with wings laughed in the corner.
And first the Erst one said, his face like sea-moss,
his hands the claws of gulls: 'Good fellow, I have been,
from here to there, front dust to water, and have known
all languages, and spoken them, aod known also
the god withheld in each, the wisdom lost; but lastly
found, at the end of lifeas now I amthis wonder:
this tongue, in which the meaning is so dispersed,
into such tiny particles, such fragments
of meaningless glitter, sach infcdtesinial surds,
that (on a careful estimate) it will take
a thousand years to assemble (of such sounds)
enough to make one meaning . . .'
Hearing this, I went forth and laboured
a thousand years; and slowly gathered, in my carts and barrows,
at last enough of sounds to make a meaning.
Proudly I brought them back, before the publican, and drank
his bitter beer again; and now the second sage
had just begun to speak. He pulled his beard, and said
(gently scorning the other sage, and also scorning
the carts and barrows which had brought my meaning):
'So say you? . . . Why, this is nothing. I have been
from there to here, and here to there, and found
at last the tongue of tongues; now, at the end of life, I know
what no philogist has known before me.*
195
XI
197
XII
'Strange, strange it is,' I said to the dark angelhe, darkened by his thought, as I by mine,
and as the field we sat in was darkened by a cload
'strange that the body should be unfaithful to the mind,
the mind unfaithful to the body! will the soul wander
199
witless among the waters and hills which are her own?
This peach-blossom is visited by innumerable
bees and flies and butterflies (faithless wantons);
it is their faithlessness that makes them welcome.
Thus, she is fertile; thus, the mind is fertile; why then
must love be sterile, in pure faithfulness?'
'Why indeed?' the angel said.
'Let Eve love Satan, and Adam adore Lilith then,' I answered:
'Eve will learo much from Satan, and Adam from Lilith,
and how delicious, how new, this wisdom will be!
Satan disguising himselfneedlesslyquite needlessly!
as the insinuating, the insidious, the all-knowing serpentl
and Lilithwhat will Lilith be? what will Lilith be?'
'La, la!" the angel said.
'But then'I pondered aload'will Eve love Adam? or Adam
love Eve? will they bring back their wisdoms?
will each receive from the other the new wisdoms?
Witt they be angry?'
'They will be angry/ the angel said.
'Ah! Just as I thought! . . . Rain is unfaithful to field,
ocean to air, lover to lover,
mind to body and body to mind. The thought
runs westward, while the body leches eastward!
Thought will want fractions, body will want flesh!
Here are no conclusions?'
"Thou sayest it? Thou knowest? Then thoo growest!
And soon, thou wilt learn to laugh.'
Whereat he rose, and spread angelic wings,
and eastward went to Eden; while in the grass I wondered
at the disparatenessor so it seemedof thought and flesh;
and held the blossom in my hand, and in a vision
saw the world ending in a laughter of pure delight.
200
XV
The tired hand, the tired eye,these too will have place
in thought's constellation, which sags slowly
earthward and sleepward, arid as it sinks grows brighter,
brighter and larger; so grow the setting stars,
magnified to magnificence in earth's miasma.
Thus fever iniames the infinitesimal;
the seed becomes a world, terrors become gods;
and thus fatigue makes prophecies and portents
of its own wearieess.
Or so I thought, while evening
brightened above the marsh-mist the first planet-light;
and, tired, I felt my tiredness turn to tired thought;
tired thought to sadness; sadness to bitter despair,
despair to wisdom, backward-looking, but such wisdom
as lives on nightshade, and the moonlight in waste places.
Ruin of thought? ruin of gods and worlds? ruin
of man's brief empire?
I saw Adam sleeping, Eve
sleeping beside him; her hand was on his shoulder,
the buttercups half-fallen from it, some of them fallen,
behind him fallen, her hand relaxed and sleeping too
and Adam's hand, asleep also, was on her hip;
the caress arrested, poised, postponed. And so they waited
(not knowing that they waited) for the renewal
of loves exhausted, and beliefs destroyed.
But in the morninghow new their love would be!
the world, how young! the buttercups, how many!
and Eve so strange to Adam, and Adam so strange to Eve!
Where then,-I said to the moon,is honesty?
can thought be trusted, if it change its tune
as weariness, or weather, time or space or mood,
dictate the theme? If so, here's chaos come.
If thought must change, as changing seasons change,
change to the dictates of the blood and moon, the mind
moving to measures of the mere unmeaning
201.
xw
'Daybreak?' the angel said. 'But what is daybreak, god?
do you mean night-break? do you mean dark-break?
or else, poor dreamer, do you mean that sullen waking
from sleep's omniscient nescience to sad thought?
Why, would you have, flung from the eastern mountain-top,
three stars, an arrow of light, and a rose-petal?
Is this so precious? is this a harbinger of joy?
O come and climb with me; eastward we fare from Eden;
thus we will speed the dawn; and thus-ah, think of this
will speed the sunset too.'
He spread angelic wings,
wide as the valley seemed they in the darkness, beating,
and whirled the air and rose; and with him, I, unwilling,
beat my new wings, which ill sustained me eastward,
already burdened with foredoom and feel of night.
Eastward we went, and Eden fell behind us;
until our eastward thought so far outran us
that we were there, before our wings were there.
Hung on our wings, then, in the empyrean,
202
XIX
XX
209
211
IV
214
215
v
But this was nothing boy, and I said nothing,
no leaf or love was born but it took time.
Come on and shake the cosmic dice, come seven,
come on and shake the bones for odd or even
but this was nothing and no one said a word.
I saw the palm leaf and I took it down, Rnby,
I saw the gold leaf and I took it down.
I saw the heaven leaf and I took it down, honey,
I saw the dead leaf and I took it down.
I saw the word that shaped the lips of water,
I saw the idea that shaped the mind of water,
I saw the thought of time that shaped the face,
I saw tie face that brought disgrace to space.
But this was nothing, girl, aod I said nothing,
nothing I thought, what could I think but nothing?
who nothing knew and was the seed of nothing,
the conscious No One watching Naught from Nowhere.
Tale the palm leaf for what it is no other,
take the gold-leaf and put it down,
take the heaven-leaf and put it down, Ruby,
take the dead leaf and put it down
ai6
for what is wisdom, wisdom is only thishistory of the world in a deathbed kiss,
past aad to be in agony brought home,
and kingdom of darkness come.
VI
217
VII
The Kid
PROEM
WILLIAM BLACXSTONE (DM 1675)
Where now he roves, by wood or swainp whatever,
the always restless, always moving on,
his books burned, and his own book lost forever,
under the cold stars of New England, gone,
scholar who loved, and therefor left, the most,
secret and solitary, no Indian-giver,
who to his own cost played the generous host
and asked adventurers across his river:
what would he make of as, if he could see,
after so many tides have ringed this coast,
what manner of men his children's children be
to welcome home his still inquisitive ghost?
He, more than all, of individual grace,
the pilgrim innocence, self-knowledge sure,
119
I. THE WITNESS
Who saw the Kid when he rose from the east
riding the bridled and fire-bright Beast?
heard him shout from the surf-gold, streaming
cropper and bit, the surcingle gleaming,
elbows sharp against daybreak sky,
the reins held light and the hands held high?
The clouds above him and the breakers below
blazed with glory, and the Kid also.
Who saw that hero, that pinto, come
like one indivisible Word from foam?
The horseshoe crab and the nighthawk did,
the quawk and the tern and the chickadee did,
yes, and the little green grasshopper did,
they saw the Kid, they heard the Kid.
Who heard that lad leap down from a cloud,
over the night hard hooibeats pounding,
rapid and far or softer sounding,
22O
222
223
224
William
BJacfaton
225
Anne
Badstieet
227
V. THE MARTYRDOM
He turned on his tracks: to the puritans came:
bore witness to bigots, was martyred in shame:
no church found for truths, and no house for faith,
but choir of the word, and the walls of breath:
an arbor of saplings, a shanty of wood,
for winter's whistlings, a river in flood.
This season, how grievous, how bitter this coast,
where love finds no chapel, no comfort a ghost!
Clap wings and begone, no lantern hangs here,
but hatred and darkness, the dead of the year.
Cry, cry, for New England, New Canaan indeed!
Dear ghosts of this forest, who suffer and bleed,
your names shall be chalice, your voices cry still,
who were whipped at a cart's-tai! and hanged on a Ml.
Lashed at a cart's-tail, through three towns driven,
hanged on a hfll by the servants of heaven,
banished, or perished, or sold as a slave,
poor body anhouseled, a hole for a gravecry, cry for New Englandl The true voices speak,
while granites of Norton and Endicott break.
This is my bodye: let it be my truth:
tear it in pieces, if ye have not ruth:
freely I give it, let it die, let it rot:
but as for your sentence, I matter it not.
Well know you the things we said in this place:
the enlargement of God we ind in His grace:
come now what His wisdom and pleasure approve,
our rest and our life in His infinite love.
By the wills of men captive: made free by the Son:
chapter eight, in the Gospel according to John.
Lawrence,
Cassandra,
Daniel,
Josiah,
and
Provided
Southwick
228
230
Kit
Carson
Billy
the
KM
Paal
Revere
Benjamin
Franklin
Herman
Melville
Wfflard
Gibbs
Hemy
Adams
Brook
Adams
Waft
Whitman
235
Emily
Dickinson
Mayflower
I
Hallowe'en
I
240
241
242
244
A Letter from LI Po
I
245
IV
249
Why here. Nor can we say why here. The peachtree bough
scrapes on the wall at midnight, the west wind
sculptures the wall of fog that slides
250
The tat
comes through the wainscot, brings to his larder
the twinned acora and chestnut burr. Our sleep
lights for a moment into dream, the eyes
turn under eyelids for a scene, a scene,
O and the music, too, of landscape lost.
And yet, not lost. For here savannahs wave
cressets of pampas, and the kingfisher
binds all that gold with blue.
Why here? why here?
Why does the dream keep only this, just thisf
Yes, as the poem or the music do?
254
256
Another LycicJas
I
II
259
a6i
The Ciystal
I
II
270
Discordants
I
Shaemus
We will go no more to Shaemus, at the Nip,
for sly innuendo and an Oporto Flip,
the rough but tender voice, the wide-mouthed grin,
the steady-unsteady hand that poured the gin:
memory, that flew back years to find a name,
found it, and fetched it up, still just the same;
the shaky footsteps, and then the shaky kidding:
you, the big business man, outbid, outbidding,
273
Herman Melville
'My towers at last!'
What meant the word
from what acknowledged circuit sprung
and in the heart and on the tongue
at sight of few familiar birds
when seaward his last sail unfurled
to leeward from the wheel once more
bloomed the pale crags of haunted shore
that once-more-visited notch of world:
and straight he knew as known before
the Logos in Leviathan's roar
he deepest sounding with his lead
who all had fathomed all had said.
Much-loving herotowers indeed
were those that overhung your log
with entries of typhoon and fog
and thunderstone for Adam's breed:
man's warm Sargasso Sea of faith
275
I am he
and this I share with you
in this perhaps alone am true
who cannot infringe upon cannot conceive
the arcane process by which he might believe
or not believe or learn or know
begin or not begin choose or not choose: who came
without a name
as also without intention: knows no measure
277
280
the green light says Walk the red light says Stop
take me quick to the apothecary shop
we dial Meridian for the split jewel of time
and Weather for the windsong of weather.
Who needs a change of scene
walks with the greee
into the unfolding world
himself too unfolding
the stage is struck the lights change
the street grows strange
it leads without hesitation forever
into our own involuntary invention
among the whispers and rainbows
of the unexpected
the fairyland
that waits to be named
between life and death.
Azrael Azrael
winged with thunder
pass thou not by this day
let no thing die
the farmer sun is hastening
the western hill is glistening
the eastern honeycombs are filled
with crocus light
it is farewell to night
see that this day no thing be killed.
But if thy daily dead
old thunder head
thou yet must have then take instead
the bee's faint shadow on the hill
but the bee spare and daffodil
leave all else living still
under the opening eyelid of the sky
swoop thou riot hawklike by.
iii
Who are you? Who?
Fatigue this might be, or repetition
281
The Clover
The tiger gash of daybreak rips the night
under palmetto leaves drips the first light
the dream is broken the word of water spoken
and the dream bursts with the golden scream
of the unknown bird in the fountained park
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