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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Pushcart at the Curb, by John Dos Passos
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Pushcart at the Curb
+
+
+Author: John Dos Passos
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 11, 2010 [eBook #32778]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PUSHCART AT THE CURB***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A PUSHCART AT THE CURB
+
+by
+
+JOHN DOS PASSOS
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Books by John Dos Passos_
+
+
+_NOVELS:_
+
+_Three Soldiers_
+
+_One Man's Initiation_
+
+_Streets of Night_
+
+ _(In Preparation)_
+
+
+_ESSAYS:_
+
+_Rosinante to the Road Again_
+
+
+_POEMS:_
+
+_A Pushcart at the Curb_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+A PUSHCART AT THE CURB
+
+by
+
+JOHN DOS PASSOS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Decorative Illustration]
+
+George H. Doran Company
+Publishers New York
+
+Copyright, 1922,
+By George H. Doran Company
+
+[Decorative Illustration]
+
+_A Pushcart at the Curb. I_
+
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+
+
+TO THE MEMORY
+
+OF
+
+WRIGHT McCORMICK
+
+WHO TUMBLED OFF A MOUNTAIN
+
+IN MEXICO
+
+
+
+
+ My verse is no upholstered chariot
+ Gliding oil-smooth on oiled wheels,
+ No swift and shining modern limousine,
+ But a pushcart, rather.
+
+ A crazy creaking pushcart, hard to push
+ Round corners, slung on shaky patchwork wheels,
+ That jolts and jumbles over the cobblestones
+ Its very various lading:
+
+ A lading of Spanish oranges, Smyrna figs,
+ Fly-specked apples, perhaps of the Hesperides,
+ Curious fruits of the Indies, pepper-sweet ...
+ Stranger, choose and taste.
+
+ _Dolo_
+
+
+
+
+ ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+
+ For permission to reprint certain of the poems
+ in this volume, thanks are due _The Bookman_,
+ _The Dial_, _Vanity Fair_, _The Measure_, and
+ _The New York Evening Post_.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ WINTER IN CASTILE 13
+
+ NIGHTS AT BASSANO 65
+
+ VAGONES DE TERCERA 109
+
+ QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE 139
+
+ ON FOREIGN TRAVEL 163
+
+ PHASES OF THE MOON 185
+
+
+
+
+WINTER IN CASTILE
+
+
+ The promiscuous wind wafts idly from the quays
+ A smell of ships and curious woods and casks
+ And a sweetness from the gorse on the flowerstand
+ And brushes with his cool careless cheek the cheeks
+ Of those on the street; mine, an old gnarled man's,
+ The powdered cheeks of the girl who with faded eyes
+ Stands in the shadow; a sailor's scarred brown cheeks,
+ And a little child's, who walks along whispering
+ To her sufficient self.
+ O promiscuous wind.
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ I
+
+ A long grey street with balconies.
+ Above the gingercolored grocer's shop
+ trail pink geraniums
+ and further up a striped mattress
+ hangs from a window
+ and the little wooden cage
+ of a goldfinch.
+
+ Four blind men wabble down the street
+ with careful steps on the rounded cobbles
+ scraping with violin and flute
+ the interment of a tune.
+
+ People gather:
+ women with market-baskets
+ stuffed with green vegetables,
+ men with blankets on their shoulders
+ and brown sunwrinkled faces.
+
+ Pipe the flutes, squeak the violins;
+ four blind men in a row
+ at the interment of a tune ...
+ But on the plate
+ coppers clink
+ round brown pennies
+ a merry music at the funeral,
+ penny swigs of wine
+ penny gulps of gin
+ peanuts and hot roast potatoes
+ red disks of sausage
+ tripe steaming in the corner shop ...
+
+ And overhead
+ the sympathetic finch
+ chirps and trills
+ approval.
+
+ _Calle de Toledo, Madrid_
+
+
+ II
+
+ A boy with rolled up shirtsleeves
+ turns the handle.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The black sphere whirls
+ above a charcoal fire.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The boy sweats and grits his teeth and turns
+ while a man blows up the coals.
+ Grind, grind.
+ Thicker comes the blue curling smoke,
+ the moka-scented smoke
+ heavy with early morning
+ and the awakening city
+ with click-clack click-clack on the cobblestones
+ and the young winter sunshine
+ advancing inquisitively
+ across the black and white tiles of my bedroom floor.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The coffee is done.
+ The boy rubs his arms and yawns,
+ and the sphere and the furnace are trundled away
+ to be set up at another café.
+
+ A poor devil
+ whose dirty ashen white body shows through his rags
+ sniffs sensually
+ with dilated nostrils
+ the heavy coffee-fragrant smoke,
+ and turns to sleep again
+ in the feeble sunlight of the greystone steps.
+
+ _Calle Espoz y Mina_
+
+
+ III
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square,
+ and sombre-tinted wreaths
+ stiffly twined and crinkly
+ for this is the day of the dead.
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square.
+ Their velvet odor fills the street
+ somehow stills the tramp of feet;
+ for this is the day of the dead.
+
+ Their presence is heavy about us
+ like the velvet black scent of the flowers:
+ incense of pompous interments,
+ patter of monastic feet,
+ drone of masses drowsily said
+ for the thronging dead.
+
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square
+ to cover the tombs of the envious dead
+ and shroud them again in the lethean scent
+ lest the dead should remember.
+
+ _Difuntos; Madrid_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Above the scuffling footsteps of crowds
+ the clang of trams
+ the shouts of newsboys
+ the stridence of wheels,
+ very calm,
+ floats the sudden trill of a pipe
+ three silvery upward notes
+ wistfully quavering,
+ notes a Thessalian shepherd might have blown
+ to call his sheep
+ in the emerald shade
+ of Tempe,
+ notes that might have waked the mad women sleeping
+ among pinecones in the hills
+ and stung them to headlong joy
+ of the presence of their mad Iacchos,
+ notes like the glint of sun
+ making jaunty the dark waves of Tempe.
+
+ In the street an old man is passing
+ wrapped in a dun brown mantle
+ blowing with bearded lips on a shining panpipe
+ while he trundles before him
+ a grindstone.
+
+ The scissors grinder.
+
+ _Calle Espoz y Mina_
+
+
+ V
+
+ Rain slants on an empty square.
+
+ Across the expanse of cobbles
+ rides an old shawl-muffled woman
+ black on a donkey with pert ears
+ that places carefully
+ his tiny sharp hoofs
+ as if the cobbles were eggs.
+ The paniers are full
+ of bright green lettuces
+ and purple cabbages,
+ and shining red bellshaped peppers,
+ dripping, shining, a band in marchtime,
+ in the grey rain,
+ in the grey city.
+
+ _Plaza Santa Ana_
+
+
+ VI
+ BEGGARS
+
+ The fountain some dead king put up,
+ conceived in pompous imageries,
+ piled with mossgreened pans and centaurs
+ topped by a prudish tight-waisted Cybele
+ (Cybele the many-breasted mother of the grain)
+ spurts with a solemn gurgle of waters.
+
+ Where the sun is warmest
+ their backs against the greystone basin
+ sit, hoarding every moment of the palefaced sun,
+ (thy children Cybele)
+ Pan a bearded beggar with blear eyes;
+ his legs were withered by a papal bull,
+ those shaggy legs so nimble to pursue
+ through groves of Arcadian myrtle
+ the nymphs of the fountains and valleys;
+ a young Faunus with soft brown face
+ and dirty breast bared to the sun;
+ the black hair crisps about his ears
+ with some grace yet;
+ a little barefoot Eros
+ crouching to scratch his skinny thighs
+ who stares with wide gold eyes aghast
+ at the yellow shiny trams that clatter past.
+
+ All day long they doze in the scant sun
+ and watch the wan leaves rustle to the ground
+ from the yellowed limetrees of the avenue.
+ They are still thine Cybele
+ nursed at thy breast;
+ (like a woman's last foster-children
+ that still would suck grey withered dugs).
+ They have not scorned thy dubious bounty
+ for stridence of grinding iron
+ and pale caged lives
+ made blind by the dust of toil
+ to coin the very sun to gold.
+
+ _Plaza de Cibeles_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Footsteps
+ and the leisurely patter of rain.
+
+ Beside the lamppost in the alley
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves
+ of breast and arms.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ A smell of frying fish;
+ footsteps of people going to dinner
+ clatter eagerly through the lane.
+ A boy with a trough of meat on his shoulder
+ turns by the lamppost,
+ his steps drag.
+ The green light slants
+ in the black of his eyes.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ Footsteps of people going to dinner
+ clatter eagerly; the rain
+ falls with infinite nonchalance ...
+ a man turns with a twirl of moustaches
+ and the green light slants on his glasses
+ on the round buttons of his coat.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ A woman with an umbrella
+ keeps her eyes straight ahead
+ and lifts her dress
+ to avoid the mud on the pavingstones.
+
+ An old man stares without fear
+ into the eyes of the girl
+ through the stripes of the rain.
+ His steps beat faster and he sniffs hard suddenly
+ the smell of dinner and frying fish.
+ Was it a flame of old days
+ expanding in his cold blood,
+ or a shiver of rigid graves,
+ chill clay choking congealing?
+
+ Beside the lamppost in the alley
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves
+ of breast and arms.
+
+ _Calle del Gato_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ A brown net of branches
+ quivers above silver trunks of planes.
+ Here and there
+ a late leaf flutters
+ its faint death-rattle in the wind.
+ Beyond, the sky burns fervid rose
+ like red wine held against the sun.
+
+ Schoolboys are playing in the square
+ dodging among the silver tree-trunks
+ collars gleam and white knees
+ as they romp shrilly.
+
+ Lamps bloom out one by one
+ like jessamine, yellow and small.
+ At the far end a church's dome
+ flat deep purple cuts the sky.
+
+ Schoolboys are romping in the square
+ in and out among the silver tree-trunks
+ out of the smoked rose shadows
+ through the timid yellow lamplight ...
+ Socks slip down
+ fingermarks smudge white collars;
+ they run and tussle in the shadows
+ kicking the gravel with muddied boots
+ with cheeks flushed hotter than the sky
+ eyes brighter than the street-lamps
+ with fingers tingling and breath fast:
+ banqueters early drunken
+ on the fierce cold wine of the dead year.
+
+ _Paseo de la Castellana_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Green against the livid sky
+ in their square dun-colored towers
+ hang the bronze bells of Castile.
+ In their unshakeable square towers
+ jutting from the slopes of hills
+ clang the bells of all the churches
+ the dustbrown churches of Castile.
+
+ How they swing the green bronze bells
+ athwart olive twilights of Castile
+ till their fierce insistant clangour
+ rings down the long plowed slopes
+ breaks against the leaden hills
+ whines among the trembling poplars
+ beside sibilant swift green rivers.
+
+ O you strong bells of Castile
+ that commanding clang your creed
+ over treeless fields and villages
+ that huddle in arroyos, gleaming
+ orange with lights in the greenish dusk;
+ can it be bells of Castile,
+ can it be that you remember?
+
+ Groans there in your bronze green curves
+ in your imperious evocation
+ stench of burnings, rattling screams
+ quenched among the crackling flames?
+ The crowd, the pile of faggots in the square,
+ the yellow robes.... Is it that
+ bells of Castile that you remember?
+
+ _Toledo--Madrid_
+
+
+ X
+
+ The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.
+ The speeding dark-green water mirrors the old red walls
+ and the balustrades and close-barred windows of the palace;
+ and on the other bank three stooping washerwomen
+ whose bright red shawls and piles of linen gleam in the green,
+ the swirling green where shimmer the walls of Aranjuez.
+
+ There's smoke in the gardens of Aranjuez
+ smoke of the burning of the years' dead leaves;
+ the damp paths rustle underfoot
+ thick with the crisp broad leaves of the planes.
+
+ The tang of the smoke and the reek of the box
+ and the savor of the year's decay
+ are soft in the gardens of Aranjuez
+ where the fountains fill silently with leaves
+ and the moss grows over the statues and busts
+ clothing the simpering cupids and fauns
+ whose stone eyes search the empty paths
+ for the rustling rich brocaded gowns
+ and the neat silk calves of the halcyon past.
+
+ The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.
+ And slipping by mirrors the brown-silver trunks
+ of the planes and the hedges
+ of box and spires of cypress and alleys of yellowing elms;
+ and on the other bank three grey mules pulling a cart
+ loaded with turnips, driven by a man in a blue woolen sash
+ who strides along whistling and does not look towards Aranjuez.
+
+
+ XI
+
+ Beyond ruffled velvet hills
+ the sky burns yellow like a candle-flame.
+
+ Sudden a village
+ roofs against the sky
+ leaping buttresses
+ a church
+ and a tower utter dark like the heart
+ of a candleflame.
+
+ Swing the bronze-bells
+ uncoiling harsh slow sound through the dusk
+ that growls out in the conversational clatter
+ Of the trainwheels and the rails.
+
+ A hill humps unexpectedly to hide
+ the tower erect like a pistil
+ in the depths of the tremendous flaming
+ flower of the west.
+
+ _Getafe_
+
+
+ XII
+
+ Genteel noise of Paris hats
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.
+ Mirrors create on either side
+ infinities of chandeliers.
+
+ The orchestra is tuning up:
+ Twanging of the strings of violins
+ groans from cellos
+ toodling of flutes.
+
+ Legs apart, with white fronts
+ the musicians stand
+ amiably as pelicans.
+
+ Tap. Tap. Tap.
+ With a silken rustle beards, hats
+ sink back in appropriate ecstasy.
+ A little girl giggles.
+ Crystals of infinities of chandeliers
+ tremble in the first long honey-savored chord.
+
+ From under a wide black hat
+ curving just to hide her ears
+ peers the little face of Juliet
+ of all child lovers
+ who loved in impossible gardens
+ among roses huge as moons
+ and twinkling constellations of jessamine,
+ Juliet, Isabel, Cressida,
+ and that unknown one who went forth at night
+ wandering the snarling streets of Jerusalem.
+
+ She presses her handkerchief to her mouth
+ to smother her profane giggling.
+ Her skin is browner than the tone of cellos,
+ flushes like with pomegranate juice.
+
+ ... The moist laden air of a garden in Granada,
+ spice of leaves bruised by the sun;
+ she sits in a dress of crimson brocade
+ dark as blood under the white moon
+ and watches the ripples spread
+ in the gurgling fountain;
+ her lashes curve to her cheeks
+ as she stares wide-eyed
+ lips drawn against the teeth and trembling;
+ gravel crunches down the path;
+ brown in a crimson swirl
+ she stands with full lips
+ head tilted back ... O her small breasts
+ against my panting breast.
+
+ Clapping. Genteel noise of Paris hats
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.
+
+ Her face lost in infinities of glittering chandeliers.
+
+ _Ritz_
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ There's a sound of drums and trumpets
+ above the rumble of the street.
+ (Run run run to see the soldiers.)
+ All alike all abreast keeping time
+ to the regimented swirl
+ of the glittering brass band.
+
+ The café waiters are craning at the door
+ the girl in the gloveshop is nose against the glass.
+ O the glitter of the brass
+ and the flutter of the plumes
+ and the tramp of the uniform feet!
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ The boy with a tray
+ of pastries on his head
+ is walking fast, keeping time;
+ his white and yellow cakes are trembling in the sun
+ his cheeks are redder
+ and his bluestriped tunic streams
+ as he marches to the rum tum of the drums.
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ The milkman with his pony
+ slung with silvery metal jars
+ schoolboys with their packs of books
+ clerks in stiff white collars
+ old men in cloaks
+ try to regiment their feet
+ to the glittering brass beat.
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ _Puerta del Sol_
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ Night of clouds
+ terror of their flight across the moon.
+ Over the long still plains
+ blows a wind out of the north;
+ a laden wind out of the north
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks
+ menacingly and loud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Black as old blood on the cold plain
+ close throngs spread to beyond lead horizons
+ swaying shrouded crowds
+ and their rustle in the knife-keen wind
+ is like the dry death-rattle of the winter grass.
+
+ (Like mouldered shrouds the clouds fall
+ from the crumbling skull of the dead moon.)
+
+ Huge, of grinning brass
+ steaming with fresh stains
+ their God
+ gapes with smudged expectant gums
+ above the plain.
+
+ Flicker through the flames of the wide maw
+ rigid square bodies of men
+ opulence of childbearing women
+ slimness of young men, and girls
+ with small curved breasts.
+
+ (Loud as musketry rattles the sudden laughter of the dead.)
+
+ Thicker hotter the blood drips
+ from the cold brass lips.
+
+ Swift over grainless fields
+ swift over shellplowed lands
+ ever leaner swifter darker
+ bay the hounds of the dead,
+ before them drive the pale ones
+ white limbs scarred and blackened
+ laurel crushed in their cold fingers,
+ the spark quenched in their glazed eyes.
+
+ Thicker hotter the blood drips
+ from the avenging lips
+ of the brass God;
+ (and rattling loud as musketry
+ the laughter of the unsated dead).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The clouds have blotted the haggard moon.
+ A harsh wind shrills from the cities of the north
+ Ypres, Lille, Liège, Verdun,
+ and from the tainted valleys
+ the cross-scarred hills.
+ Over the long still plains
+ the wind out of the north
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks.
+
+ _Cuatro Caminos_
+
+
+ XV
+
+ The weazened old woman without teeth
+ who shivers on the windy street corner
+ displays her roasted chestnuts invitingly
+ like marriageable daughters.
+
+ _Calle Atocha_
+
+
+ XVI
+ NOCHEBUENA
+
+ The clattering streets are bright with booths
+ lighted by balancing candleflames
+ ranged with figures in painted clay,
+ Virgins adoring and haloed bambinos,
+ St. Joseph at his joiner's bench
+ Judean shepherds and their sheep
+ camels of the Eastern kings.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ The streets resound with dancing
+ and chortle of tambourines,
+ strong rhythm of dancing
+ drumming of tambourines.
+
+ Flicker through the greenish lamplight
+ of the clattering cobbled streets
+ flushed faces of men
+ women in mantillas
+ children with dark wide eyes,
+ teeth flashing as they sing:
+
+ _La santa Virgen es en parto
+ a las dos va desparir.
+ Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ Beetred faces of women
+ whose black mantillas have slipped
+ from their sleek and gleaming hair,
+ streaming faces of men.
+
+ With click of heels on the pavingstones
+ boys in tunics are dancing
+ eyes under long black lashes
+ flash as they dance to the drum
+ of tambourines beaten with elbow and palm.
+ A flock of girls comes running
+ squealing down the street.
+
+ Boys and girls are dancing
+ flushed and dripping dancing
+ to the beat on drums and piping
+ on flutes and jiggle
+ of the long notes of accordions
+ and the wild tune swirls and sweeps
+ along the frosty streets,
+ leaps above the dark stone houses
+ out among the crackling stars.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ In the street a ragged boy
+ too poor to own a tambourine
+ slips off his shoes and beats them together
+ to the drunken reeling time,
+ dances on his naked feet.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ _Madrid_
+
+
+ XVII
+
+ The old strong towers the Moors built
+ on the ruins of a Roman camp
+ have sprung into spreading boistrous foam
+ of daisies and alyssum flowers,
+ and sprout of clover and veiling grass
+ from out of the cracks in the tawny stones
+ makes velvet soft the worn stairs
+ and grooved walks where clanked the heels
+ of the grave mailed knights who had driven and killed
+ the darkskinned Moors,
+ and where on silken knees their sons
+ knelt on the nights of the full moon
+ to vow strange deeds for their lady's grace.
+
+ The old strong towers are crumbled and doddering now
+ and sit like old men smiling in the sun.
+
+ About them clamber the giggling flowers
+ and below the sceptic sea gently
+ laughing in daisywhite foam on the beach
+ rocks the ships with flapping sails
+ that flash white to the white village on the shore.
+
+ On a wall where the path is soft with flowers
+ the brown goatboy lies, his cap askew
+ and whistles out over the beckoning sea
+ the tune the village band jerks out,
+ a shine of brass in the square below:
+ a swaggering young buck of a tune
+ that slouches cap on one side, cigarette
+ at an impudent tilt, out past the old
+ toothless and smilingly powerless towers,
+ out over the ever-youthful sea
+ that claps bright cobalt hands in time
+ and laughs along the tawny beaches.
+
+ _Denia_
+
+
+ XVIII
+
+ How fine to die in Denia
+ young in the ardent strength of sun
+ calm in the burning blue of the sea
+ in the stabile clasp of the iron hills;
+ Denia where the earth is red
+ as rust and hills grey like ash.
+ O to rot into the ruddy soil
+ to melt into the omnipotent fire
+ of the young white god, the flamegod the sun,
+ to find swift resurrection
+ in the warm grapes born of earth and sun
+ that are crushed to must under the feet
+ of girls and lads,
+ to flow for new generations of men
+ a wine full of earth
+ of sun.
+
+
+ XIX
+
+ The road winds white among ashen hills
+ grey clouds overhead
+ grey sea below.
+ The road clings to the strong capes
+ hangs above the white foam-line
+ of unheard breakers
+ that edge with lace the scarf of the sea
+ sweeping marbled with sunlight
+ to the dark horizon
+ towards which steering intently
+ like ducks with red bellies
+ swim the black laden steamers.
+
+ The wind blows the dust of the road
+ and whines in the dead grass
+ and is silent.
+
+ I can hear my steps
+ and the clink of coins in one pocket
+ and the distant hush of the sea.
+
+ _On the highroad to Villajoyosa_
+
+
+ XX
+ SIERRA GUADARRAMA
+ TO J. G. P.
+
+ The greyish snow of the pass
+ is starred with the sad lilac
+ of autumn crocuses.
+
+ Hissing among the brown leaves
+ of the scruboaks
+ bruising the tender crocus petals
+ a sleetgust sweeps the pass.
+
+ The air is calm again.
+ Under a bulging sky motionless overhead
+ the mountains heave velvet black
+ into the cloudshut distance.
+
+ South the road winds
+ down a wide valley
+ towards stripes of rain
+ through which shine straw yellow
+ faint as a dream
+ the rolling lands of New Castile.
+
+ A fresh gust whines through the snowbent grass
+ pelting with sleet the withering crocuses,
+ and rustles the dry leaves of the scruboaks
+ with a sound as of gallop of hoofs
+ far away on the grey stony road
+ a sound as of faintly heard cavalcades
+ of old stern kings
+ climbing the cold iron passes
+ stopping to stare with cold hawkeyes
+ at the pale plain.
+
+ _Puerto de Navecerrada_
+
+
+ XXI
+
+ Soft as smoke are the blue green pines
+ in the misty lavender twilight
+ yellow as flame the flame-shaped poplars
+ whose dead leaves fall
+ vaguely spinning through the tinted air
+ till they reach the brownish mirror of the stream
+ where they are borne a tremulous pale fleet
+ over gleaming ripples to the sudden dark
+ beneath the Roman bridge.
+
+ Forever it stands the Roman bridge
+ a firm strong arch in the purple mist
+ and ever the yellow leaves are swirled
+ into the darkness beneath
+ where echoes forever the tramp of feet
+ of the weary feet that bore
+ the Eagles and the Law.
+
+ And through the misty lavender twilight
+ the leaves of the poplars fall and float
+ with the silent stream to the deep night
+ beneath the Roman bridge.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXII
+
+ In the velvet calm of long grey slopes of snow
+ the silky crunch of my steps.
+ About me vague dark circles of mountains
+ secret, listening in the intimate silence.
+
+ Bleating of sheep, the bark of a dog
+ and, dun-yellow in the snow
+ a long flock straggles.
+ Crying of lambs,
+ twitching noses of snowflecked ewes,
+ the proud curved horns of a regal broadgirthed ram,
+ yellow backs steaming;
+ then, tails and tracks in the snow,
+ and the responsible lope of the dog
+ who stops with a paw lifted to look back
+ at the baked apple face of the shepherd.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXIII
+ JULIET
+
+ You were beside me on the stony path
+ down from the mountain.
+
+ And I was the rain that lashed such flame into your cheeks
+ and the sensuous rolling hills
+ where the mists clung like garments.
+
+ I was the sadness that came out of the languid rain
+ and the soft dove-tinted hills
+ and choked you with the harsh embrace of a lover
+ so that you almost sobbed.
+
+ _Siete Picos_
+
+
+ XXIV
+
+ When they sang as they marched in step
+ on the long path that wound to the valley
+ I followed lonely in silence.
+
+ When they sat and laughed by the hearth
+ where our damp clothes steamed in the flare
+ of the noisy prancing flames
+ I sat still in the shadow
+ for their language was strange to me.
+
+ But when as they slept I sat
+ and watched by the door of the cabin
+ I was not lonely
+ for they lay with quiet faces
+ stroked by the friendly tongues
+ of the silent firelight
+ and outside the white stars swarmed
+ like gnats about a lamp in autumn
+ an intelligible song.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXV
+
+ I lie among green rocks
+ on the thyme-scented mountain.
+ The thistledown clouds and the sky
+ grey-white and grey-violet
+ are mirrored in your dark eyes
+ as in the changing pools of the mountain.
+
+ I have made for your head
+ a wreath of livid crocuses.
+ How strange they are the wan lilac crocuses
+ against your dark smooth skin
+ in the intense black of your wind-towseled hair.
+
+ Sleet from the high snowfields
+ snaps a lash down the mountain
+ bruising the withered petals
+ of the last crocuses.
+
+ I am alone in the swirling mist
+ beside the frozen pools of the mountain.
+
+ _La Maliciosa_
+
+
+ XXVI
+
+ Infinities away already
+ are your very slender body
+ and the tremendous dark of your eyes
+ where once beyond the laughingness of childhood,
+ came a breath of jessamine prophetic of summer,
+ a sudden flutter of yellow butterflies
+ above dark pools.
+
+ Shall I take down my books
+ and weave from that glance a romance
+ and build tinsel thrones for you
+ out of old poets' fancies?
+
+ Shall I fashion a temple about you
+ where to burn out my life like frankincense
+ till you tower dark behind the sultry veil
+ huge as Isis?
+
+ Or shall I go back to childhood
+ remembering butterflies in sunny fields
+ to cower with you when the chilling shadow fleets
+ across the friendly sun?
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ XXVII
+
+ And neither did Beatrice and Dante ...
+ But Beatrice they say
+ was a convention.
+
+ _November, 1916--February, 1917._
+
+
+
+
+NIGHTS AT BASSANO
+
+
+ I
+ DIRGE OF THE EMPRESS TAITU OF ABYSSINIA
+
+ _And when the news of the Death of the Empress
+ of that Far Country did come to them, they
+ fashioned of her an Image in doleful wise and
+ poured out Rum and Marsala Sack and divers
+ Liquors such as were procurable in that place into
+ Cannikins to do her Honor and did wake and
+ keen and make moan most piteously to hear. And
+ that Night were there many Marvels and Prodigies
+ observed; the Welkin was near consumed
+ with fire and Spirits and Banashees grumbled and
+ wailed above the roof and many that were in that
+ place hid themselves in Dens and Burrows in the
+ ground. Of the swanlike and grievously melodious
+ Ditties the Minstrels fashioned in that fearsome
+ Night these only are preserved for the
+ Admiration of the Age._
+
+
+ [I]
+
+ Our lady lies on a brave high bed,
+ On pillows of gold with gold baboons
+ On red silk deftly embroidered--
+ O anger and eggs and candlelight--
+ Her gold-specked eyes have little sight.
+
+ Our lady cries on a brave high bed;
+ The golden light of the candles licks
+ The crown of gold on her frizzly head--
+ O candles and angry eggs so white--
+ Her gold-specked eyes are sharp with fright.
+
+ Our lady sighs till the high bed creaks;
+ The golden candles gutter and sway
+ In the swirling dark the dark priest speaks--
+ O his eyes are white as eggs with fright
+ --Our lady will die twixt night and night.
+
+ Our lady lies on a brave high bed;
+ The golden crown has slipped from her head
+ On the pillows crimson embroidered--
+ O baboons writhing in candlelight--
+ Her gold-specked soul has taken flight.
+
+
+ [II]
+ ZABAGLIONE
+
+ Champagne-colored
+ Deepening to tawniness
+ As the throats of nightingales
+ Strangled for Nero's supper.
+
+ Champagne-colored
+ Like the coverlet of Dudloysha
+ At the Hotel Continental.
+
+ Thick to the lips and velvety
+ Scented of rum and vanilla
+ Oversweet, oversoft, overstrong,
+ Full of froth of fascination,
+ Drink to be drunk of Isoldes
+ Sunk in champagne-colored couches
+ While Tristans with fair flowing hair
+ And round cheeks rosy as cherubs
+ Stand and stretch their arms,
+ And let their great slow tears
+ Roll and fall,
+ And splash in the huge gold cups.
+
+ And behind the scenes with his sleeves rolled up,
+ Grandiloquently
+ Kurwenal beats the eggs
+ Into spuming symphonic splendor
+ Champagne-colored.
+
+ Red-nosed gnomes roll and tumble
+ Tussle and jumble in the firelight
+ Roll on their backs spinning rotundly,
+ Out of earthern jars
+ Gloriously gurgitating,
+ Wriggling their huge round bellies.
+
+ And the air of the cave is heavy
+ With steaming Marsala and rum
+ And hot bruised vanilla.
+
+ Champagne-colored, one lies in a velvetiness
+ Of yellow moths stirring faintly tickling wings
+ One is heavy and full of languor
+ And sleep is a champagne-colored coverlet,
+ the champagne-colored stockings of Venus ...
+ And later
+ One goes
+ And pukes beautifully beneath the moon,
+ Champagne-colored.
+
+
+ II
+ ODE TO ENNUI
+
+ The autumn leaves that this morning danced with the wind,
+ curtseying in slow minuettes,
+ giddily whirling in bacchanals,
+ balancing, hesitant, tiptoe,
+ while the wind whispered of distant hills,
+ and clouds like white sails, sailing
+ in limpid green ice-colored skies,
+ have crossed the picket fence
+ and the three strands of barbed wire;
+ they have leapt the green picket fence
+ despite the sentry's bayonet.
+
+ Under the direction of a corporal
+ three soldiers in khaki are sweeping them up,
+ sweeping up the autumn leaves,
+ crimson maple leaves, splotched with saffron,
+ ochre and cream,
+ brown leaves of horse-chestnuts ...
+ and the leaves dance and curtsey round the brooms,
+ full of mirth,
+ wistful of the journey the wind promised them.
+
+ This morning the leaves fluttered gaudily,
+ reckless, giddy from the wind's dances,
+ over the green picket fence
+ and the three strands of barbed wire.
+ Now they are swept up
+ and put in a garbage can
+ with cigarette butts
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco,
+ burnt matches, old socks, torn daily papers,
+ and dust from the soldiers' blankets.
+
+ And the wind blows tauntingly
+ over the mouth of the garbage can,
+ whispering, Far away,
+ mockingly, Far away ...
+
+ And I too am swept up
+ and put in a garbage can
+ with smoked cigarette ash
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco;
+ I am fallen into the dominion
+ of the great dusty queen ...
+ Ennui, iron goddess, cobweb-clothed
+ goddess of all useless things,
+ of attics cluttered with old chairs
+ for centuries unsatupon,
+ of strong limbs wriggling on office stools,
+ of ancient cab-horses and cabs
+ that sleep all day in silent sunny squares,
+ of camps bound with barbed wire,
+ and green picket fences--
+ bind my eyes with your close dust
+ choke my ears with your grey cobwebs
+ that I may not see the clouds
+ that sail away across the sky,
+ far away, tauntingly,
+ that I may not hear the wind
+ that mocks and whispers and is gone
+ in pursuit of the horizon.
+
+
+ III
+ TIVOLI
+ TO D. P.
+
+ The ropes of the litter creak and groan
+ As the bearers turn down the steep path;
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet.
+ But the Roman poet lies back confident
+ On his magenta cushions and mattresses,
+ Thinks of Greek bronzes
+ At the sight of the straining backs of his slaves.
+
+ The slaves' breasts shine with sweat,
+ And they draw deep breaths of the cooler air
+ As they lurch through tunnel after tunnel of leaves.
+ At last, where the spray swirls like smoke,
+ And the river roars in a cauldron of green,
+ The poet feels his fat arms quiver
+ And his eyes and ears drowned and exalted
+ In the reverberance of the fall.
+
+ The ropes of the litter creak and groan,
+ The embroidered curtains, moist with spray,
+ Flutter in the poet's face;
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet
+ As the slaves strain up the path again,
+ And the Roman poet lies back confident
+ Among silk cushions of gold and magenta,
+ His hands clasped across his mountainous belly,
+ Thinking of the sibyll and fate,
+ And gorgeous and garlanded death,
+ Mouthing hexameters.
+
+ But I, my belly full and burning as the sun
+ With the good white wine of the Alban hills
+ Stumble down the path
+ Into the cool green and the roar,
+ And wonder, and am abashed.
+
+
+ IV
+ VENICE
+
+ The doge goes down in state to the sea
+ To inspect with beady traders' eyes
+ New cargoes from Crete, Mytilene,
+ Cyprus and Joppa, galleys piled
+ With bales off which in all the days
+ Of sailing the sea-wind has not blown
+ The dust of Arabian caravans.
+
+ In velvet the doge goes down to the sea.
+ And sniffs the dusty bales of spice
+ Pepper from Cathay, nard and musk,
+ Strange marbles from ruined cities, packed
+ In unfamiliar-scented straw.
+ Black slaves sweat and grin in the sun.
+ Marmosets pull at the pompous gowns
+ Of burgesses. Parrots scream
+ And cling swaying to the ochre bales ...
+ Dazzle of the rising dust of trade
+ Smell of pitch and straining slaves ...
+
+ And out on the green tide towards the sea
+ Drift the rinds of orient fruits
+ Strange to the lips, bitter and sweet.
+
+
+ V
+ ASOLO GATE
+
+ The air is drenched to the stars
+ With fragrance of flowering grape
+ Where the hills hunch up from the plain
+ To the purple dark ridges that sweep
+ Towards the flowery-pale peaks and the snow.
+
+ Faint as the peaks in the glister of starlight,
+ A figure on a silver-tinkling snow-white mule
+ Climbs the steeply twining stony road
+ Through murmuring vineyards to the gate
+ That gaps with black the wan starlight.
+
+ The watchman on his three-legged stool
+ Drowses in his beard, dreams
+ He is a boy walking with strong strides
+ Of slender thighs down a wet road,
+ Where flakes of violet-colored April sky
+ Have brimmed the many puddles till the road
+ Is as a tattered path across another sky.
+
+ The watchman on his three-legged stool,
+ Sits snoring in his beard;
+ His dream is full of flowers massed in meadowland,
+ Of larks and thrushes singing in the dawn,
+ Of touch of women's lips and twining hands,
+ And madness of the sprouting spring ...
+ His ears a-sudden ring with the shrill cry:
+ Open watchman of the gate,
+ It is I, the Cyprian.
+
+ --It is ruled by the burghers of this town
+ Of Asolo, that from sundown
+ To dawn no stranger shall come in,
+ Be he even emperor, or doge's kin.
+ --Open, watchman of the gate,
+ It is I, the Cyprian.
+ --Much scandal has been made of late
+ By wandering women in this town.
+ The laws forbid the opening of the gate
+ Till next day once the sun is down.
+ --Watchman know that I who wait
+ Am Queen of Jerusalem, Queen
+ Of Cypress, Lady of Asolo, friend
+ Of the Doge and the Venetian State.
+
+ There is a sound of drums, and torches flare
+ Dims the star-swarm, and war-horns' braying
+ Drowns the fiddling of crickets in the wall,
+ Hoofs strike fire on the flinty road,
+ Mules in damasked silk caparisoned
+ Climb in long train, strange shadows in torchlight,
+ The road that winds to the city gate.
+
+ The watchman, fumbling with his keys,
+ Mumbles in his beard:--Had thought
+ She was another Cyprian, strange the dreams
+ That come when one has eaten tripe.
+ The great gates creak and groan,
+ The hinges shriek, and the Queen's white mule
+ Stalks slowly through.
+
+ The watchman, in the shadow of the wall,
+ Looks out with heavy eyes:--Strange,
+ What cavalcade is this that clatters into Asolo?
+ These are not men-at-arms,
+ These ruddy boys with vineleaves in their hair!
+ That great-bellied one no seneschal
+ Can be, astride an ass so gauntily!
+ Virgin Mother! Saints! They wear no clothes!
+
+ And through the gate a warm wind blows,
+ A dizzying perfume of the grape,
+ And a great throng crying Cypris,
+ Cyprian, with cymbals crashing and a shriek
+ Of Thessalian pipes, and swaying of torches,
+ That smell hot like wineskins of resin,
+ That flare on arms empurpled and hot cheeks,
+ And full shouting lips vermillion-red.
+
+ Youths and girls with streaming hair
+ Pelting the night with flowers:
+ Yellow blooms of Adonis, white
+ scented stars of pale Narcissus,
+ Mad incense of the blooming vine,
+ And carmine passion of pomegranate blooms.
+
+ A-sudden all the strummings of the night,
+ All the insect-stirrings, all the rustlings
+ Of budding leaves, the sing-song
+ Of waters brightly gurgling through meadowland,
+ Are shouting with the shouting throng,
+ Crying Cypris, Cyprian,
+ Queen of the seafoam, Queen of the budding year,
+ Queen of eyes that flame and hands that twine,
+ Return to us, return from the fields of asphodel.
+
+ And all the grey town of Asolo
+ Is full of lutes and songs of love,
+ And vows exchanged from balcony to balcony
+ Across the singing streets ...
+ But in the garden of the nunnery,
+ Of the sisters of poverty, daughters of dust,
+ The cock crows. The cock crows.
+
+ The watchman rubs his old ribbed brow:
+ Through the gate, in silk all dusty from the road,
+ Into the grey town asleep under the stars,
+ On tired mules and lean old war-horses
+ Comes a crowd of quarrelling men-at-arms
+ After a much-veiled lady with a falcon on her wrist.
+ --This Asolo? What a nasty silent town
+ He sends me to, that dull old doge.
+
+ And you, watchman, I've told you thrice
+ That I am Cypress's Queen, Jerusalem's,
+ And Lady of this dull village, Asolo;
+ Tend your gates better. Are you deaf,
+ That you stand blinking at me, pulling at your dirty beard?
+ You shall be thrashed, when I rule Asolo.
+ --What strange dreams, mumbled in his beard
+ The ancient watchman, come from eating tripe.
+
+
+ VI
+ HARLEQUINADE
+
+ Shrilly whispering down the lanes
+ That serpent through the ancient night,
+ They, the scoffers, the scornful of chains,
+ Stride their turbulent flight.
+
+ The stars spin steel above their heads
+ In the shut irrevocable sky;
+ Gnarled thorn-branches tear to shreds
+ Their cloaks of pageantry.
+
+ A wind blows bitter in the grey,
+ Chills the sweat on throbbing cheeks,
+ And tugs the gaudy rags away
+ From their lean bleeding knees.
+
+ Their laughter startles the scarlet dawn
+ Among a tangled spiderwork
+ Of girdered steel, and shrills forlorn
+ And dies in the rasp of wheels.
+
+ Whirling like gay prints that whirl
+ In tatters of squalid gaudiness,
+ Borne with dung and dust in the swirl
+ Of wind down the endless street,
+
+ With thin lips laughing bitterly,
+ Through the day smeared in sooty smoke
+ That pours from each red chimney,
+ They speed unseemily.
+
+ Women with unlustered hair,
+ Men with huge ugly hands of oil,
+ Children, impudently stare
+ And point derisive hands.
+
+ Only ... where a barrel organ thrills
+ Two small peak-chested girls to dance,
+ And among the iron clatter spills
+ A swiftening rhythmy song,
+
+ They march in velvet silkslashed hose,
+ Strumming guitars and mellow lutes,
+ Strutting pointed Spanish toes,
+ A stately company.
+
+
+ VII
+ TO THE MEMORY OF DEBUSSY
+ _Good Friday, 1918._
+
+ This is the feast of death
+ We make of our pain God;
+ We worship the nails and the rod
+ and pain's last choking breath
+ and the bleeding rack of the cross.
+
+ The women have wept away their tears,
+ with red eyes turned on death, and loss
+ of friends and kindred, have left the biers
+ flowerless, and bound their heads in their blank veils,
+ and climbed the steep slope of Golgotha; fails
+ at last the wail of their bereavement,
+ and all the jagged world of rocks and desert places
+ stands before their racked sightless faces,
+ as any ice-sea silent.
+
+ This is the feast of conquering death.
+ The beaten flesh worships the swishing rod.
+ The lacerated body bows to its God,
+ adores the last agonies of breath.
+
+ And one more has joined the unnumbered
+ deathstruck multitudes
+ who with the loved of old have slumbered
+ ages long, where broods
+ Earth the beneficent goddess,
+ the ultimate queen of quietness,
+ taker of all worn souls and bodies
+ back into the womb of her first nothingness.
+
+ But ours, who in the iron night remain,
+ ours the need, the pain
+ of his departing.
+ He had lived on out of a happier age
+ into our strident torture-cage.
+ He still could sing
+ of quiet gardens under rain
+ and clouds and the huge sky
+ and pale deliciousness that is nearly pain.
+ His was a new minstrelsy:
+ strange plaints brought home out of the rich east,
+ twanging songs from Tartar caravans,
+ hints of the sounds that ceased
+ with the stilling dawn, wailings of the night,
+ echoes of the web of mystery that spans
+ the world between the failing and the rising of the wan daylight
+ of the sea, and of a woman's hair
+ hanging gorgeous down a dungeon wall,
+ evening falling on Tintagel,
+ love lost in the mist of old despair.
+
+ Against the bars of our torture-cage
+ we beat out our poor lives in vain.
+ We live on cramped in an iron age
+ like prisoners of old
+ high on the world's battlements
+ exposed until we die to the chilling rain
+ crouched and chattering from cold
+ for all scorn to stare at.
+ And we watch one by one the great
+ stroll leisurely out of the western gate
+ and without a backward look at the strident city
+ drink down the stirrup-cup of fate
+ embrace the last obscurity.
+
+ We worship the nails and the rod
+ and pain's last choking breath.
+ We make of our pain God.
+ This is the feast of death.
+
+
+ VIII
+ PALINODE OF VICTORY
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ In every bar and tavern
+ As the regiments victorious
+ March under garlands to the city square.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ And lips are free, and women,
+ Breathless, stand on tiptoe
+ To see the flushed young thousands in advance.
+
+ "Beer is free to soldiers;
+ Give all to the liberators" ...
+ Under wreaths of laurel
+ And small and large flags fluttering, victorious,
+ They of the frock-coats, with clink of official chains,
+ Are welcoming with eloquence outpouring
+ The liberating thousands, the victorious;
+ In their speaking is a soaring of great phrases,
+ Balloons of tissue paper,
+ Hung with patriotic bunting,
+ That rise serene into the blue,
+ While the crowds with necks uptilted
+ Gaze at their upward soaring
+ Till they vanish in the blue;
+ And each man feels the blood of life
+ Rumble in his ears important
+ With participation in Events.
+
+ But not the fluttering of great flags
+ Or the brass bands blaring, victorious,
+ Or the speeches of persons in frock coats,
+ Who pause for the handclapping of crowds,
+ Not the stamp of men and women dancing,
+ Or the bubbling of beer in the taverns,--
+ Frothy mugs free for the victorious--,
+ Not all the trombone-droning of Events,
+ Can drown the inextinguishible laughter of the gods.
+
+ And they hear it, the old hooded houses,
+ The great creaking peak-gabled houses,
+ That gossip and chuckle to each other
+ Across the clattering streets;
+ They hear it, the old great gates,
+ The grey gates with towers,
+ Where in the changing shrill winds of the years
+ Have groaned the poles of many various-colored banners.
+ The poplars of the high-road hear it,
+ From their trembling twigs comes a dry laughing,
+ As they lean towards the glare of the city.
+ And the old hard-laughing paving-stones,
+ Old stones weary with the weariness
+ Of the labor of men's footsteps,
+ Hear it as they quake and clamour
+ Under the garlanded wheels of the yawning confident cannon
+ That are dragged victorious through the flutter of the city.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers,
+ Bubbles on wind-parched lips,
+ Moistens easy kisses
+ Lavished on the liberators.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ All night in steaming bars,
+ In halls delirious with dancing
+ That spill their music into thronging streets.
+
+ --All is free to soldiers,
+ To the weary heroes
+ Who have bled, and soaked
+ The whole earth in their sacrificial blood,
+ Who have with their bare flesh clogged
+ The crazy wheels of Juggernaut,
+ Freed the peoples from the dragon that devoured them,
+ That scorched with greed their pleasant fields and villages,
+ Their quiet delightful places:
+
+ So they of the frock-coats, amid wreaths and flags victorious,
+ To the crowds in the flaring squares,
+ And a murmurous applause
+ Rises like smoke to mingle in the sky
+ With the crashing of the bells.
+
+ But, resounding in the sky,
+ Louder than the tramp of feet,
+ Louder than the crash of bells,
+ Louder than the blare of bands, victorious,
+ Shrieks the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+ The old houses rock with it,
+ And wag their great peaked heads,
+ The old gates shake,
+ And the pavings ring with it,
+ As with the iron tramp of old fighters,
+ As with the clank of heels of the victorious,
+ By long ages vanquished.
+ The spouts in the gurgling fountains
+ Wrinkle their shiny griffin faces,
+ Splash the rhythm in their ice-fringed basins--
+ Of the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+ And far up into the inky sky,
+ Where great trailing clouds stride across the world,
+ Darkening the spired cities,
+ And the villages folded in the hollows of hills,
+ And the shining cincture of railways,
+ And the pale white twining roads,
+ Sounds with the stir of quiet monotonous breath
+ Of men and women stretched out sleeping,
+ Sounds with the thin wail of pain
+ Of hurt things huddled in darkness,
+ Sounds with the victorious racket
+ Of speeches and soldiers drinking,
+ Sounds with the silence of the swarming dead--
+ The inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+
+ IX
+
+ O I would take my pen and write
+ In might of words
+ A pounding dytheramb
+ Alight with teasing fires of hate,
+ Or drone to numbness in the spell
+ Of old loves long lived away
+ A drowsy vilanelle.
+ O I would build an Ark of words,
+ A safe ciborium where to lay
+ The secret soul of loveliness.
+ O I would weave of words in rhythm
+ A gaudily wrought pall
+ For the curious cataphalque of fate.
+
+ But my pen does otherwise.
+
+ All I can write is the orange tinct with crimson
+ of the beaks of the goose
+ and of the wet webbed feet of the geese
+ that crackle the skimming of ice
+ and curve their white plump necks to the water
+ in the manure-stained rivulet
+ that runs down the broad village street;
+ and of their cantankerous dancings and hissings,
+ with beaks tilted up, half open
+ and necks stiffly extended;
+ and the curé's habit blowing in the stinging wind
+ and his red globular face
+ like a great sausage burst in the cooking
+ that smiles
+ as he takes the shovel hat off his head with a gesture,
+ the hat held at arm's length,
+ sweeping a broad curve, like a censor well swung;
+ and, beyond the last grey gabled house in the village,
+ the gaunt Christ
+ that stretches bony arms and tortured hands
+ to embrace the broad lands leprous with cold
+ the furrowed fields and the meadows
+ and the sprouting oats
+ ghostly beneath the grey bitter blanket of hoarfrost.
+
+ _Sausheim_
+
+
+ X
+
+ In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,
+ Sat dining through the warm spring night,
+ Spilling of the crocus-colored wine
+ Glass after brimming glass to rouse
+ The ghosts that dwell in books to flight
+ Of word and image that, divine,
+ In the draining of a glass would tear
+ The lies from off reality,
+ And the world in gaudy chaos spread
+ Naked-new in the throbbing flare
+ Of songs of long-fled spirits;--free
+ For the wanderer devious roads to tread.
+
+ Names waved as banners in our talk:
+ Lucretius, his master, all men who to balk
+ The fear that shrivels us in choking rinds
+ Have thrown their souls like pollen to the winds,
+ Erasmus, Bruno who burned in Rome, Voltaire,
+ All those whose lightning laughter cleaned the air
+ Of the minds of men from the murk of fear-sprung gods,
+ And straightened the backs bowed under the rulers' rods.
+
+ A hall full of the wine and chant of old songs,
+ Smelling of lilacs and early roses and night,
+ Clamorous with the names and phrases of the throngs
+ Of the garlanded dead, and with glasses pledged to the light
+ Of the dawning to come ...
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ Out into the drudging world and sing
+ And shout down dustblinded streets, hollo
+ From hill to hill, and our thought fling
+ Abroad through all the drowsy earth
+ To wake the sleeper and the worker and the jailed
+ In walls cemented of lies to mirth
+ And dancing joy; laughingly unveiled
+ From the sick mist of fear to run naked and leap
+ And shake the nations from their snoring sleep.
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ Fantastically arrayed
+ In silk and scarlet braid,
+ In rich glitter like the sun on snow
+ With banners of orange, vermillion, black,
+ And jasper-handed swords,
+ Anklets and tinkling gauds
+ Of topaz set twistingly, or lac
+ Laid over with charms of demons' heads
+ In indigo and gold.
+ Our going a music bold
+ Would be, behind us the twanging threads
+ Of mad guitars, the wail of lutes
+ In wildest harmony;
+ Lilting thumping free,
+ Pipes and kettledrums and flutes
+ And brazen braying trumpet-calls
+ Would wake each work-drowsed town
+ And shake it in laughter down,
+ Untuning in dust the shuttered walls.
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ With doleful steps so dragging and slow
+ And grievous mockery of woe
+ And bury the old gods where they lay
+ Sodden drunk with men's pain in the day,
+ In the dawn's first new burning white ray
+ That would shrivel like dead leaves the sacred lies,
+ The avengers, the graspers, the wringers of sighs,
+ Of blood from men's work-twisted hands, from their eyes
+ Of tears without hope ... But in the burning day
+ Of the dawn we would see them brooding to slay,
+ In a great wind whirled like dead leaves away.
+
+ In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,
+ In our talk as banners waving names,
+ Songs, phrases of the garlanded dead.
+
+ Yesterday I went back to that house ...
+ Guttered candles where were flames,
+ Shattered dust-grey glasses instead
+ Of the fiery crocus-colored wine,
+ Silence, cobwebs and a mouse
+ Nibbling nibbling the moulded bread
+ Those spring nights dipped in vintage divine
+ In the dawnward chanting of our last carouse.
+
+ _1918--1919_
+
+
+
+
+VAGONES DE TERCERA
+
+
+ _Refrain_
+
+ HARD ON YOUR RUMP
+ BUMP BUMP
+ HARD ON YOUR RUMP
+ BUMP BUMP
+
+
+ I
+
+ O the savage munching of the long dark train
+ crunching up the miles
+ crunching up the long slopes and the hills
+ that crouch and sprawl through the night
+ like animals asleep,
+ gulping the winking towns
+ and the shadow-brimmed valleys
+ where lone trees twist their thorny arms.
+
+ The smoke flares red and yellow;
+ the smoke curls like a long dragon's tongue
+ over the broken lands.
+
+ The train with teeth flashing
+ gnaws through the piecrust of hills and plains
+ greedy of horizons.
+
+ _Alcazar de San Juan_
+
+
+ II
+ TO R. H.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine
+ on the hard benches of my third class coach
+ that joggles over brown uplands
+ dragged at the end of a rattling train.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine,
+ great gods and small gods, gods of air
+ and earth and sea, and of the grey land
+ where among ghostly rubbish heaps and cast-out things
+ linger the strengthless dead.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine,
+ Jehovah and Crepitus and Sebek,
+ the slimy crocodile ... But no;
+ wait ... I revoke the invitation.
+
+ For I have seen you, crowding gods,
+ hungry gods. You have a drab official look.
+ You have your pockets full of bills,
+ claims for indemnity, for incense unsniffed
+ since men first jumped up in their sleep
+ and drove you out of doors.
+
+ Let me instead, O djinn that sows the stars
+ and tunes the strings of the violin,
+ have fifty lyric poets,
+ not pale parson folk, occasional sonneteers,
+ but sturdy fellows who ride dolphins,
+ who need no wine to make them drunk,
+ who do not fear to meet red death at the meanads' hands
+ or to have their heads at last
+ float vine-crowned on the Thracian sea.
+
+ Anacreon, a partridge-wing?
+ A sip of wine, Simonides?
+ Algy has gobbled all the pastry
+ and left none for the Elizabethans
+ who come arm in arm, singing bawdy songs,
+ smelling of sack, from the Mermaid. Ronsard,
+ will you eat nothing, only sniff roses?
+ Those Anthologists have husky appetites!
+ There's nothing left but a green banana
+ unless that galleon comes from Venily
+ with Hillyer breakfasts wrapped in sonnet-paper.
+
+ But they've all brought gods with them!
+ Avaunt! Take them away, O djinn
+ that paints the clouds and brings in the night
+ in the rumble and clatter of the train
+ cadences out of the past ... Did you not see
+ how each saved a bit out of the banquet
+ to take home and burn in quiet to his god?
+
+ _Madrid, Caceres, Portugal_
+
+
+ III
+
+ Three little harlots
+ with artificial roses in their hair
+ each at a window of a third-class coach
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ Too much powder and too much paint
+ shining black hair.
+ One sings to the clatter of wheels
+ a swaying unending song
+ that trails across the crimson slopes
+ and the blue ranks of olives
+ and the green ranks of vines.
+ Three little harlots
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ The plowman drops the traces
+ on the shambling oxen's backs
+ turns his head and stares
+ wistfully after the train.
+
+ The mule-boy stops his mules
+ shows his white teeth and shouts
+ a word, then urges dejectedly
+ the mules to the road again.
+
+ The stout farmer on his horse
+ straightens his broad felt hat,
+ makes the horse leap, and waves
+ grandiosely after the train.
+
+ Is it that the queen Astarte
+ strides across the fallow lands
+ to fertilize the swelling grapes
+ amid shrieking of her corybants?
+
+ Too much powder and too much paint
+ shining black hair.
+ Three little harlots
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ _Sevilla--Merida_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ My desires have gone a-hunting,
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,
+ hounds that have lost the scent.
+
+ Outside, behind the white swirling patterns of coalsmoke,
+ hunched fruit-trees slide by
+ slowly pirouetting,
+ and poplars and aspens on tiptoe
+ peer over each other's shoulders
+ at the long black rattling train;
+ colts sniff and fling their heels in air
+ across the dusty meadows,
+ and the sun now and then
+ looks with vague interest through the clouds
+ at the blonde harvest mottled with poppies,
+ and the Joseph's cloak of fields, neatly sewn together with hedges,
+ that hides the grisly skeleton
+ of the elemental earth.
+
+ My mad desires
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,
+ hounds that have lost the scent.
+
+ _Misto_
+
+
+ V
+ VIRGEN DE LAS ANGUSTIAS
+
+ The street is full of drums
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.
+ Above the roofs in the shaking towers
+ the bells yawn.
+
+ The street is full of drums
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.
+ The flanks of the houses glow
+ with the warm glow of candles,
+ and above the upturned faces,
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold,
+ swaying on the necks of men, swaying
+ with the strong throb of drums,
+ haltingly she advances.
+
+ What manner of woman are you,
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,
+ you who look bitterly
+ at the dead man on your knees,
+ while your foot in an embroidered slipper
+ tramples the new moon?
+
+ Haltingly she advances,
+ swaying above the upturned faces
+ and the shuffling feet.
+
+ In the dark unthought-of years
+ men carried you thus
+ down streets where drums throbbed
+ and torches flared,
+ bore you triumphantly,
+ mourner and queen,
+ followed you with shuffling feet
+ and upturned faces.
+ You it was who sat
+ in the swirl of your robes
+ at the granary door,
+ and brought the orange maize
+ black with mildew
+ or fat with milk, to the harvest:
+ and made the ewes
+ to swell with twin lambs,
+ or bleating, to sicken among the nibbling flock.
+ You wept the dead youth
+ laid lank and white in the empty hut,
+ sat scarring your cheeks with the dark-cowled women.
+ You brought the women safe
+ through the shrieks and the shuddering pain
+ of the birth of a child;
+ and, when the sprouting spring
+ poured fire in the blood of the young men,
+ and made the he-goats dance stiff-legged
+ in the sloping thyme-scented pastures,
+ you were the full-lipped wanton enchantress
+ who led on moonless nights,
+ when it was very dark in the high valleys,
+ the boys from the villages
+ to find the herd-girls among the munching sweet-breathed cattle
+ beside their fires of thyme-sticks,
+ on their soft beds of sweet-fern.
+
+ Many names have they called you,
+ Lady of laughing and weeping,
+ shuffling after you, borne
+ on the necks of men down town streets
+ with drums and red torches:
+ dolorous one, weeping the dead
+ youth of the year ever dying,
+ or full-breasted empress of summer,
+ Lady of the Corybants
+ and the headlong routs
+ that maddened with cymbals and shouting
+ the hot nights of amorous languor
+ when the gardens swooned under the scent
+ of jessamine and nard.
+ You were the slim-waisted Lady of Doves,
+ you were Ishtar and Ashtaroth,
+ for whom the Canaanite girls
+ gave up their earrings and anklets and their own slender bodies,
+ you were the dolorous Isis,
+ and Aphrodite.
+ It was you who on the Syrian shore
+ mourned the brown limbs of the boy Adonis.
+ You were the queen of the crescent moon,
+ the Lady of Ephesus,
+ giver of riches,
+ for whom the great temple
+ reeked with burning and spices.
+ And now in the late bitter years,
+ your head is bowed with bitterness;
+ across your knees lies the lank body
+ of the Crucified.
+
+ Rockets shriek and roar and burst
+ against the velvet sky;
+ the wind flutters the candle-flames
+ above the long white slanting candles.
+
+ Swaying above the upturned faces
+ to the strong throb of drums,
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold
+ haltingly, through the pulsing streets,
+ advances Mary, Virgin of Pain.
+
+ _Granada_
+
+
+ VI
+ TO R. J.
+
+ It would be fun, you said,
+ sitting two years ago at this same table,
+ at this same white marble café table,
+ if people only knew what fun it would be
+ to laugh the hatred out of soldiers' eyes ...
+
+ --If I drink beer with my enemy,
+ you said, and put your lips to the long glass,
+ and give him what he wants, if he wants it so hard
+ that he would kill me for it,
+ I rather think he'd give it back to me--
+ You laughed, and stretched your long legs out across the floor.
+
+ I wonder in what mood you died,
+ out there in that great muddy butcher-shop,
+ on that meaningless dicing-table of death.
+
+
+ Did you laugh aloud at the futility,
+ and drink death down in a long draught,
+ as you drank your beer two years ago
+ at this same white marble café table?
+ Or had the darkness drowned you?
+
+ _Café Oro del Rhin_
+ _Plaza de Santa Ana_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Down the road
+ against the blue haze
+ that hangs before the great ribbed forms of the mountains
+ people come home from the fields;
+ they pass a moment in relief
+ against the amber frieze of the sunset
+ before turning the bend
+ towards the twinkling smoke-breathing village.
+
+ A boy in sandals with brown dusty legs
+ and brown cheeks where the flush of evening
+ has left its stain of wine.
+ A donkey with a jingling bell
+ and ears askew.
+ Old women with water jars
+ of red burnt earth.
+ Men bent double under burdens of faggots
+ that trail behind them the fragrance
+ of scorched uplands.
+ A child tugging at the end of a string
+ a much inflated sow.
+ A slender girl who presses to her breast
+ big bluefrilled cabbages.
+ And a shepherd in the clinging rags of his cloak
+ who walks with lithe unhurried stride
+ behind the crowded backs of his flock.
+
+ The road is empty
+ only the swaying tufts of oliveboughs
+ against the fading sky.
+
+ Down on the steep hillside
+ a man still follows the yoke
+ of lumbering oxen
+ plowing the heavy crimson-stained soil
+ while the chill silver mists
+ steal up about him.
+
+ I stand in the empty road
+ and feel in my arms and thighs
+ the strain of his body
+ as he leans far to one side
+ and wrenches the plow from the furrow,
+ feel my blood throb in time to his slow careful steps
+ as he follows the plow in the furrow.
+
+ Red earth
+ giver of all things
+ of the yellow grain and the oil
+ and the wine to all gods sacred
+ of the fragrant sticks that crackle in the hearth
+ and the crisp swaying grass
+ that swells to dripping the udders of the cows,
+ of the jessamine the girls stick in their hair
+ when they walk in twos and threes in the moonlight,
+ and of the pallid autumnal crocuses ...
+ are there no fields yet to plow?
+
+ Are there no fields yet to plow
+ where with sweat and straining of muscles
+ good things may be wrung from the earth
+ and brown limbs going home tired through the evening?
+
+ _Lanjaron_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ O such a night for scaling garden walls;
+ to push the rose shoots silently aside
+ and pause a moment where the water falls
+ into the fountain, softly troubling the wide
+ bridge of stars tremblingly mirrored there
+ terror-pale and shaking as the real stars shake
+ in crystal fear lest the rustle of silence break
+ with a watchdog's barking.
+
+ O to scale the garden wall and fling
+ my life into the bowl of an adventure,
+ stake on the silver dice the past and future
+ forget the odds and lying in the garden sing
+ in time to the flutter of the waiting stars
+ madness of love for the slender ivory white
+ of her body hidden among dark silks where
+ is languidest the attar weighted air.
+
+ To drink in one strong jessamine scented draught
+ sadness of flesh, twining madness of the night.
+
+ O such a night for scaling garden walls;
+ yet I lie alone in my narrow bed
+ and stare at the blank walls, forever afraid,
+ of a watchdog's barking.
+
+ _Granada_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Rain-swelled the clouds of winter
+ drag themselves like purple swine across the plain.
+ On the trees the leaves hang dripping
+ fast dripping away all the warm glamour
+ all the ceremonial paint of gorgeous bountiful autumn.
+
+ The black wet boles are vacant and dead.
+ Among the trampled leaves already mud
+ rot the husks of the rich nuts. On the hills
+ the snow has frozen the last pale crocuses
+ and the winds have robbed the smell of the thyme.
+
+ Down the wet streets of the town
+ from doors where the light spills out orange
+ over the shining irregular cobbles
+ and dances in ripples on gurgling gutters;
+ sounds the zambomba.
+
+ In the room beside the slanting street
+ round the tray of glowing coals
+ in their stained blue clothes, dusty
+ with the dust of workshops and factories,
+ the men and boys sit quiet;
+ their large hands dangle idly
+ or rest open on their knees
+ and they talk in soft tired voices.
+ Crosslegged in a corner a child with brown hands
+ sounds the zambomba.
+
+ Outside down the purple street
+ stopping sometimes at a door, breathing deep
+ the heady wine of sunset, stride with clattering steps
+ those to whom the time will never come
+ of work-stiffened unrestless hands.
+
+ The rain-swelled clouds of winter roam
+ like a herd of swine over the town and the dark plain.
+
+ The wineshops full of shuffling and talk, tanned faces
+ bright eyes, moist lips moulding desires
+ blow breaths of strong wine in the faces of passers-by.
+
+ There are guards in the storehouse doors
+ where are gathered the rich fruits of autumn, the grain
+ the sweet figs and raisins; sullen blood tingling to madness
+ they stride by who have not reaped.
+ Sounds the zambomba.
+
+ _Albaicin_
+
+
+ X
+
+ The train throbs doggedly
+ over the gleaming rails
+ fleeing the light-green flanks of hills
+ dappled with alternate shadow of clouds,
+ fleeing the white froth of orchards,
+ of clusters of apples and cherries in flower,
+ fleeing the wide lush meadows,
+ wealthy with cowslips,
+ and the tramping horses and backward-strained bodies of plowmen,
+ fleeing the gleam of the sky in puddles and glittering waters
+ the train throbs doggedly
+ over the ceaseless rails
+ spurning the verdant grace
+ of April's dainty apparel;
+ so do my desires
+ spurn those things which are behind
+ in hunger of horizons.
+
+ _Rapido: Valencia--Barcelona_
+ _1919--1920_
+
+
+
+
+QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE
+
+
+ I
+
+ See how the frail white pagodas of blossom
+ stand up on the great green hills
+ of the chestnuts
+ and how the sun has burned the wintry murk
+ and all the stale odor of anguish
+ out of the sky
+ so that the swollen clouds bellying with sail
+ can parade in pomp like white galleons.
+
+ And they move the slow plumed clouds
+ above the spidery grey webs of cities
+ above fields full of golden chime
+ of cowslips
+ above warbling woods where the ditches
+ are wistfully patined
+ with primroses pale as the new moon
+ above hills all golden with gorse
+ and gardens frothed
+ to the brim of their grey stone walls
+ with apple bloom, cherry bloom,
+ and the raspberry-stained bloom of peaches and almonds.
+
+ So do the plumed clouds sail
+ swelling with satiny pomp of parade
+ towards somewhere far away
+ where in a sparkling silver sea
+ full of little flakes of indigo
+ the great salt waves have heaved and stirred
+ into blossoming of foam,
+ and lifted on the rush of the warm wind
+ towards the gardens and the spring-mad cities of the shore
+ Aphrodite Aphrodite is reborn.
+
+ And even in this city park
+ galled with iron rails
+ shrill with the clanging of ironbound wheels
+ on the pavings of the unquiet streets,
+ little children run and dance and sing
+ with spring-madness in the sun,
+ and the frail white pagodas of blossom
+ stand up on the great green hills
+ of the chestnuts
+ and all their tiers of tiny gargoyle faces
+ stick out gold and red-striped tongues
+ in derision of the silly things of men.
+
+ _Jardin du Luxembourg_
+
+
+ II
+
+ The shadows make strange streaks and mottled arabesques
+ of violet on the apricot-tinged walks
+ where the thin sunlight lies
+ like flower-petals.
+
+ On the cool wind there is a fragrance
+ indefinable
+ of strawberries crushed in deep woods.
+
+ And the flushed sunlight,
+ the wistful patterns of shadow
+ on gravel walks between tall elms
+ and broad-leaved lindens,
+ the stretch of country,
+ yellow and green,
+ full of little particolored houses,
+ and the faint intangible sky,
+ have lumped my soggy misery,
+ like clay in the brown deft hands of a potter,
+ and moulded a song of it.
+
+ _Saint Germain-en-Laye_
+
+
+ III
+
+ In the dark the river spins,
+ Laughs and ripples never ceasing,
+ Swells to gurgle under arches,
+ Swishes past the bows of barges,
+ in its haste to swirl away
+ From the stone walls of the city
+ That has lamps that weight the eddies
+ Down with snaky silver glitter,
+ As it flies it calls me with it
+ Through the meadows to the sea.
+
+ I close the door on it, draw the bolts,
+ Climb the stairs to my silent room;
+ But through the window that swings open
+ Comes again its shuttle-song,
+ Spinning love and night and madness,
+ Madness of the spring at sea.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The streets are full of lilacs
+ lilacs in boys' buttonholes
+ lilacs at women's waists;
+ arms full of lilacs, people trail behind them through the moist night
+ long swirls of fragrance,
+ fragrance of gardens
+ fragrance of hedgerows where they have wandered
+ all the May day
+ where the lovers have held each others hands
+ and lavished vermillion kisses
+ under the portent of the swaying plumes
+ of the funereal lilacs.
+
+ The streets are full of lilacs
+ that trail long swirls and eddies of fragrance
+ arabesques of fragrance
+ like the arabesques that form and fade
+ in the fleeting ripples of the jade-green river.
+
+ _Porte Maillot_
+
+
+ V
+
+ As a gardener in a pond
+ splendid with lotus and Indian nenuphar
+ wades to his waist in the warm black water
+ stooping to this side and that to cull the snaky stems
+ of the floating white glittering lilies
+ groping to break the harsh stems of the imperious lotus
+ lifting the huge flowers high
+ in a cluster in his hand
+ till they droop against the moon;
+ so I grope through the streets of the night
+ culling out of the pool
+ of the spring-reeking, rain-reeking city
+ gestures and faces.
+
+ _Place St. Michel_
+
+
+ VI
+ TO A. K. MC C.
+
+ This is a garden
+ where through the russet mist of clustered trees
+ and strewn November leaves,
+ they crunch with vainglorious heels
+ of ancient vermillion
+ the dry dead of spent summer's greens,
+ and stalk with mincing sceptic steps
+ and sound of snuffboxes snapping
+ to the capping of an epigram,
+ in fluffy attar-scented wigs ...
+ the exquisite Augustans.
+
+ _Tuileries_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ They come from the fields flushed
+ carrying bunches of limp flowers
+ they plucked on teeming meadows
+ and moist banks scented of mushrooms.
+
+ They come from the fields tired
+ softness of flowers in their eyes
+ and moisture of rank sprouting meadows.
+
+ They stroll back with tired steps
+ lips still soft with the softness of petals
+ voices faint with the whisper of woods;
+ and they wander through the darkling streets
+ full of stench of bodies and clothes and merchandise
+ full of the hard hum of iron things;
+ and into their cheeks that the wind had burned and the sun
+ that kisses burned out on the rustling meadows
+ into their cheeks soft with lazy caresses
+ comes sultry
+ caged breath of panthers
+ fetid, uneasy
+ fury of love sprouting hot in the dust and stench
+ of walls and clothes and merchandise,
+ pent in the stridence of the twilight streets.
+
+ And they look with terror in each other's eyes
+ and part their hot hands stained with grasses and flowerstalks
+ and are afraid of their kisses.
+
+
+ VIII
+ EMBARQUEMENT POUR CYTHERE
+ AFTER WATTEAU
+
+ The mists have veiled the far end of the lake
+ this sullen amber afternoon;
+ our island is quite hidden, and the peaks
+ hang wan as clouds above the ruddy haze.
+
+ Come, give your hand that lies so limp,
+ a tuberose among brown oak-leaves;
+ put your hand in mine and let us leave
+ this bank where we have lain the day long.
+
+ In the boat the naked oarsman stands.
+ Let us walk faster, or do you fear to tear
+ that brocaded dress in apricot and grey?
+ Love, there are silk cushions in the stern
+ maroon and apple-green,
+ crocus-yellow, crimson, amber-grey.
+
+ We will lie and listen to the waves
+ slap soft against the prow, and watch the boy
+ slant his brown body to the long oar-stroke.
+
+ But, love, we are more beautiful than he.
+ We have forgotten the grey sick yearning nights
+ brushed off the old cobwebs of desire;
+ we stand strong
+ immortal as the slender brown boy who waits
+ to row our boat to the island.
+
+ But love how your steps drag.
+
+ And what is this bundle of worn brocades I press
+ so passionately to me? Old rags of the past,
+ snippings of Helen's dress, of Melisande's,
+ scarfs of old paramours rotted in the grave
+ ages and ages since.
+
+ No lake
+ the ink yawns at me from the writing table.
+
+
+ IX
+ LA RUE DU TEMPS PASSE
+
+ Far away where the tall grey houses fade
+ A lamp blooms dully through the dusk,
+ Through the effacing dusk that gently veils
+ The traceried balconies and the wreaths
+ Carved above the shuttered windows
+ Of forgotten houses.
+
+ Behind one of the crumbled garden walls
+ A pale woman sits in drooping black
+ And stares with uncomprehending eyes
+ At the thorny angled twigs that bore
+ Years ago in the moon-spun dusk
+ One scarlet rose.
+
+ In an old high room where the shadows troop
+ On tiptoe across the creaking boards
+ A shrivelled man covers endless sheets
+ Rounding out in his flourishing hand
+ Sentence after sentence loud
+ With dead kings' names.
+
+ Looking out at the vast grey violet dusk
+ A pale boy sits in a window, a book
+ Wide open on his knees, and fears
+ With cold choked fear the thronging lives
+ That lurk in the shadows and fill the dusk
+ With menacing steps.
+
+ Far away the gaslamp glows dull gold
+ A vague tulip in the misty night.
+ The clattering drone of a distant tram
+ Grows loud and fades with a hum of wires
+ Leaving the street breathless with silence, chill
+ And the listening houses.
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ X
+
+ _O douce Sainte Geneviève
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ In the smoke of morning the bridges
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.
+
+ Bending their black smokestacks far back
+ muddling themselves in their spiralling smoke
+ the tugboats pass under the bridges
+ and behind them
+ stately
+ gliding smooth like clouds
+ the barges come
+ black barges
+ with blunt prows spurning the water gently
+ gently rebuffing the opulent wavelets
+ of opal and topaz and sapphire,
+ barges casually come from far towns
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.
+
+ The tugboats shrieks and shrieks again
+ calling beyond the next bend and away.
+ In the smoke of morning the bridges
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Geneviève
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ Big hairy-hoofed horses are drawing
+ carts loaded with flour-sacks,
+ white flour-sacks, bluish
+ in the ruddy flush of the morning streets.
+
+ On one cart two boys perch
+ wrestling and their arms and faces
+ glow ruddy against the white flour-sacks
+ as the sun against the flour-white sky.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Geneviève
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ Under the arcade
+ loud as castanettes with steps
+ of little women hurrying to work
+ an old hag who has a mole on her chin
+ that is tufted with long white hairs
+ sells incense-sticks, and the trail of their strangeness lingers
+ in the many-scented streets
+ among the smells of markets and peaches
+ and the must of old books from the quays
+ and the warmth of early-roasting coffee.
+
+ The old hag's incense has smothered
+ the timid scent of wild strawberries
+ and triumphantly mingled with the strong reek from the river
+ of green slime along stonework of docks
+ and the pitch-caulked decks of barges,
+ barges casually come from far towns
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Geneviève
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+
+ XI
+ A L'OMBRE DES JEUNES FILLES EN FLEURS
+
+ And now when I think of you
+ I see you on your piano-stool
+ finger the ineffectual bright keys
+ and even in the pinkish parlor glow
+ your eyes sea-grey are very wide
+ as if they carried the reflection
+ of mocking black pinebranches
+ and unclimbed red-purple mountains mist-tattered
+ under a violet-gleaming evening.
+
+ But chirruping of marriageable girls
+ voices of eager, wise virgins,
+ no lamp unlit every wick well trimmed,
+ fill the pinkish parlor chairs,
+ bobbing hats and shrill tinkling teacups
+ in circle after circle about you
+ so that I can no longer see your eyes.
+
+ Shall I tear down the pinkish curtains
+ smash the imitation ivory keyboard
+ that you may pluck with bare fingers on the strings?
+
+ I sit cramped in my chair.
+ Futility tumbles everlastingly
+ like great flabby snowflakes about me.
+
+ Were they in your eyes, or mine
+ the tattered mists about the mountains
+ and the pitiless grey sea?
+
+ _1919_
+
+
+
+
+ON FOREIGN TRAVEL
+
+
+ I
+
+ Grey riverbanks in the dusk
+ Melting away into mist
+ A hard breeze sharp off the sea
+ The ship's screws lunge and throb
+ And the voices of sailors singing.
+
+ O I have come wandering
+ Out of the dust of many lands
+ Ears by all tongues jangled
+ Feet worn by all arduous ways--
+ O the voices of sailors singing.
+
+ What nostalgia of sea
+ And free new-scented spaces
+ dreams of towns vermillion-gated
+ Must be in their blood as in mine
+ That the sailors long so in singing.
+
+ Churned water marbled astern
+ Grey riverbanks in the dusk
+ Melting away into mist
+ And a shrill wind hard off the sea.
+ O the voices of sailors singing.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Padding lunge of a camel's stride
+ turning the sharp purple flints. A man sings:
+
+ Breast deep in the dawn
+ a queen of the east;
+ the woolen folds of her robe
+ hang white and straight
+ as the hard marble columns
+ of the temple of Jove.
+
+ A thousand days
+ the pebbles have scuttled
+ under the great pads of my camels.
+
+ A thousands days
+ like bite of sour apples
+ have been bitter with desire in my mouth.
+
+ A thousand days
+ of cramped legs flecked
+ with green slobber of dromedaries.
+
+ At the crest of the road
+ that transfixes the sun
+ she awaits
+ me lean with desire
+ with muscles tightened
+ by these thousand days
+ pallid with dust
+ sinewy
+ naked before her.
+
+ Padding lunge of a camel's stride
+ over the flint-strewn hills. A man sings:
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of how in scarlet pools
+ in the west in purpurate mist
+ that bursts from the sun trodden
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness
+ a woman with great breasts
+ thighs white like wintry mountains
+ bathes her nakedness.
+
+ I have lain biting my cheeks
+ many nights with ears murmurous
+ with the songs of these strange men.
+ My arms have stung as if burned
+ by the touch of red ants with anguish
+ to circle strokingly
+ her bulging smooth body.
+ My blood has soured to gall.
+ The ten toes of my feet are hard
+ as buzzards' claws from the stones
+ of roads, from clambering
+ cold rockfaces of hills.
+ For uncountable days' journeys
+ jouncing on the humps of camels
+ iron horizons have swayed
+ like the rail of a ship at sea
+ mountains have tossed like wine
+ shaken hard in a wine cup.
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of the scarlet pools of the sunset.
+
+ Two men, bundled pyramids of brown
+ abreast, bow to the long slouch
+ of their slowstriding camels.
+ Shrilly the yellow man sings:
+
+ In the courts of Han
+ green fowls with carmine tails
+ peck at the yellow grain
+ court ladies scatter
+ with tiny ivory hands,
+ the tails of the fowls
+ droop with multiple elegance
+ over the wan blue stones
+ as the hands of courtladies
+ droop on the goldstiffened silk
+ of their angular flower-embroidered dresses.
+
+ In the courts of Han
+ little hairy dogs
+ are taught to bark twice
+ at the mention of the name of Confucius.
+
+ The twittering of the women
+ that hop like silly birds
+ through the courts of Han
+ became sharp like little pins
+ in my ears, their hands in my hands
+ rigid like small ivory scoops
+ to scoop up mustard with
+ when I had heard the songs
+ of the western pools where the great queen
+ is throned on a purple throne
+ in whose vast encompassing arms
+ all bitter twigs of desire
+ burst into scarlet bloom.
+
+ Padding lunge of the camel's stride
+ over flint-strewn hills. The brown man sings:
+
+ On the house-encumbered hills
+ of great marble Rome
+ no man has ever counted the columns
+ no man has ever counted the statues
+ no man has ever counted the laws
+ sharply inscribed in plain writing
+ on tablets of green bronze.
+
+ At brightly lit tables
+ in a great brick basilica
+ seven hundred literate slaves
+ copy on rolls of thin parchment
+ adorned by seals and purple bows
+ the taut philosophical epigrams
+ announced by the emperor each morning
+ while taking his bath.
+
+ A day of rain and roaring gutters
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man
+ who clenched about me hard-muscled arms
+ and whispered with moist lips against my ear
+ filled me with smell and taste of spices
+ with harsh panting need to seek out the great
+ calm implacable queen of the east
+ who erect against sunrise holds in the folds
+ of her woolen robe all knowledge of delight
+ against whose hard white flesh my flesh
+ will sear to cinders in a last sheer flame.
+
+ Among the house-encumbered hills
+ of great marble Rome
+ I could no longer read the laws
+ inscribed on tablets of green bronze.
+ The maxims of the emperor's philosophy
+ were croaking of toads in my ears.
+ A day of rain and roaring gutters
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man:
+ ... breast deep in the dawn
+ a queen of the east.
+
+ The camels growl and stretch out their necks,
+ their slack lips jiggle as they trot
+ towards a water hole in a pebbly torrent bed.
+
+ The riders pile dry twigs for a fire
+ and gird up their long gowns to warm
+ at the flame their lean galled legs.
+
+ Says the yellow man:
+
+ You have seen her in the west?
+
+ Says the brown man:
+
+ Hills and valleys
+ stony roads.
+ In the towns
+ the bright eyes of women
+ looking out from lattices.
+ Camps in the desert
+ where men passed the time of day
+ where were embers of fires
+ and greenish piles of camel-dung.
+
+ You have seen her in the east?
+
+ Says the yellow man:
+
+ Only red mountains and bare plains,
+ the blue smoke of villages at evening,
+ brown girls bathing
+ along banks of streams.
+
+ I have slept with no woman
+ only my dream.
+
+ Says the brown man:
+
+ I have looked in no woman's eyes
+ only stared along eastward roads.
+
+ They eat out of copper bowls beside the fire in silence.
+ They loose the hobbles from the knees of their camels
+ and shout as they jerk to their feet.
+ The yellow man rides west.
+ The brown man rides east.
+
+ Their songs trail among the split rocks of the desert.
+
+ Sings the yellow man:
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of how in the scarlet pools
+ that spurt from the sun trodden
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness
+ a woman with great breasts
+ bathes her nakedness.
+
+ Sings the brown man:
+
+ After a thousand days
+ of cramped legs flecked
+ with green slobber of dromedaries
+ she awaits
+ me lean with desire
+ pallid with dust
+ sinewy
+ naked before her.
+
+ Their songs fade in the empty desert.
+
+
+ III
+
+ There was a king in China.
+
+ He sat in a garden under a moon of gold
+ while a black slave scratched his back
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+ Beyond the tulip bed
+ where the tulips were stiff goblets of fiery wine
+ stood the poets in a row.
+
+ One sang the intricate patterns of snowflakes
+ One sang the henna-tipped breasts of girls dancing
+ and of yellow limbs rubbed with attar.
+ One sang red bows of Tartar horsemen
+ and whine of arrows and blood-clots on new spearshafts
+ The others sang of wine and dragons coiled in purple bowls,
+ and one, in a droning voice
+ recited the maxims of Lao Tse.
+
+ (Far off at the walls of the city
+ groaning of drums and a clank of massed spearmen.
+ Gongs in the temples.)
+
+ The king sat under a moon of gold
+ while a black slave scratched his back
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+ The long gold nails of his left hand
+ twined about a red tulip blotched with black,
+ a tulip shaped like a dragon's mouth
+ or the flames bellying about a pagoda of sandalwood.
+ The long gold nails of his right hand
+ were held together at the tips
+ in an attitude of discernment:
+ to award the tulip to the poet
+ of the poets that stood in a row.
+
+ (Gongs in the temples.
+ Men with hairy arms
+ climbing on the walls of the city.
+ They have red bows slung on their backs;
+ their hands grip new spearshafts.)
+
+ The guard of the tomb of the king's great grandfather
+ stood with two swords under the moon of gold.
+ With one sword he very carefully
+ slit the base of his large belly
+ and inserted the other and fell upon it
+ and sprawled beside the king's footstool.
+ His blood sprinkled the tulips
+ and the poets in a row.
+
+ (The gongs are quiet in the temples.
+ Men with hairy arms
+ scattering with taut bows through the city;
+ there is blood on new spearshafts.)
+
+ The long gold nails of the king's right hand
+ were held together at the tips
+ in an attitude of discernment.
+ The geometrical glitter of snowflakes,
+ the pointed breasts of yellow girls
+ crimson with henna,
+ the swirl of river-eddies about a barge
+ where men sit drinking,
+ the eternal dragon of magnificence....
+ Beyond the tulip bed
+ stood the poets in a row.
+
+ The garden full of spearshafts and shouting
+ and the whine of arrows and the red bows of Tartars
+ and trampling of the sharp hoofs of war-horses.
+ Under the golden moon
+ the men with hairy arms
+ struck off the heads of the tulips in the tulip-bed
+ and of the poets in a row.
+
+ The king lifted the hand that held the flaming dragon-flower.
+
+ Him of the snowflakes, he said.
+ On a new white spearshaft
+ the men with hairy arms
+ spitted the king and the black slave
+ who scratched his back with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+
+ There was a king in China.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Says the man from Weehawken to the man from Sioux City
+ as they jolt cheek by jowl on the bus up Broadway:
+ --That's her name, Olive Thomas, on the red skysign,
+ died of coke or somethin'
+ way over there in Paris.
+ Too much money. Awful
+ immoral the lives them film stars lead.
+
+ The eye of the man from Sioux City glints
+ in the eye of the man from Weehawken.
+ Awful ... lives out of sky-signs and lust;
+ curtains of pink silk fluffy troubling the skin
+ rooms all prinkly with chandeliers,
+ bed cream-color with pink silk tassles
+ creased by the slender press of thighs.
+ Her eyebrows are black
+ her lips rubbed scarlet
+ breasts firm as peaches
+ gold curls gold against her cheeks.
+ She dead
+ all of her dead way over there in Paris.
+
+ O golden Aphrodite.
+
+ The eye of the man from Weehawken slants
+ away from the eye of the man from Sioux City.
+ They stare at the unquiet gold dripping sky-signs.
+
+
+
+
+PHASES OF THE MOON
+
+
+ I
+
+ Again they are plowing the field by the river;
+ in the air exultant a smell of wild garlic
+ crushed out by the shining steel in the furrow
+ that opens softly behind the heavy-paced horses,
+ dark moist noisy with fluttering of sparrows;
+ and their chirping and the clink of the harness
+ chimes like bells;
+ and the plowman walks at one side
+ with sliding steps, his body thrown back from the waist.
+ O the sudden sideways lift of his back and his arms
+ as he swings the plow from the furrow.
+
+ And behind the river sheening blue
+ and the white beach and the sails of schooners,
+ and hoarsely laughing the black crows
+ wheel and glint. Ha! Haha!
+
+ Other springs you answered their laughing
+ and shouted at them across the fallow lands
+ that smelt of wild garlic and pinewoods and earth.
+
+ This year the crows flap cawing overhead Ha! Haha!
+ and the plow-harness clinks
+ and the pines echo the moaning shore.
+
+ No one laughs back at the laughing crows.
+ No one shouts from the edge of the new-plowed field.
+
+ _Sandy Point_
+
+
+ II
+
+ The full moon soars above the misty street
+ filling the air with a shimmer of silver.
+ Roofs and chimney-pots cut silhouettes
+ of dark against the milk-washed sky!
+ O moon fast waning!
+
+ Seems only a night ago you hung
+ a shallow cup of topaz-colored glass
+ that tilted towards my feverish dry lips
+ brimful of promise in the flaming west:
+ O moon fast waning!
+
+ And each night fuller and colder, moon,
+ the silver has welled up within you; still I
+ I have not drunk, only the salt tide
+ of parching desires has welled up within me:
+ only you have attained, waning moon.
+
+ The moon soars white above the stony street,
+ wan with fulfilment. O will the tide
+ of yearning ebb with the moon's ebb
+ leaving me cool darkness and peace
+ with the moon's waning?
+
+ _Madrid_
+
+
+ III
+
+ The shrill wind scatters the bloom
+ of the almond trees
+ but under the bark of the shivering poplars
+ the sap rises
+ and on the dark twigs of the planes
+ buds swell.
+
+ Out in the country
+ along soggy banks of ditches
+ among busy sprouting grass
+ there are dandelions.
+ Under the asphalt
+ under the clamorous paving-stones
+ the earth heaves and stirs
+ and all the blind live things
+ expand and writhe.
+
+ Only the dead
+ lie still in their graves,
+ stiff, heiratic,
+ only the changeless dead
+ lie without stirring.
+
+ Spring is not a good time
+ for the dead.
+
+ _Battery Park_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars
+ latticed with window-gaps
+ into the slate sky.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ the ice crumbles
+ about the edges of green pools;
+ from the leaping of white thighs
+ comes a smooth and fleshly sound,
+ girls grip hands and dance
+ grey moss grows green under the beat
+ of feet of saffron
+ crocus-stained.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ purple windflowers sway
+ on the swelling verges of pools,
+ naked girls grab hands and whirl
+ fling heads back
+ stamp crimson feet.
+
+ Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars
+ latticed with window-gaps
+ into the slate sky.
+
+ Garment-workers loaf in their overcoats
+ (stare at the gay breasts of pigeons
+ that strut and peck in the gutters).
+ Their fingers are bruised tugging needles
+ through fuzzy hot layers of cloth,
+ thumbs roughened twirling waxed thread;
+ they smell of lunchrooms and burnt cloth.
+ The wind goes among them
+ detaching sweat-smells from underclothes
+ making muscles itch under overcoats
+ tweaking legs with inklings of dancetime.
+
+ Bums on park-benches
+ spit and look up at the sky.
+
+ Garment-workers in their overcoats
+ pile back into black gaps of doors.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ scarlet windflowers sway
+ on rippling verges of pools,
+ sound of girls dancing
+ thud of vermillion feet.
+
+ _Madison Square_
+
+
+ V
+
+ The stars bend down
+ through the dingy platitude of arc-lights
+ as if they were groping for something among the houses,
+ as if they would touch the gritty pavement
+ covered with dust and scraps of paper and piles of horse-dung
+ of the wide deserted square.
+
+ They are all about me;
+ they sear my body.
+ How very cold the stars are touching my body.
+ What do they seek
+ the fierce ice-flames of the stars
+ in the platitude of arc-lights?
+
+ _Plaza Mayor, Madrid_
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Not willingly have I wronged you O Eros,
+ it is the bitter blood of joyless generations
+ making my fingers loosen suddenly
+ about the full glass of purple wine
+ for which my dry lips ache,
+ making me turn aside from the wide arms of lovers
+ that would have slaked the rage of my body
+ for supple arms and burning young flushed faces
+ to wander in solitary streets.
+
+ A funeral clatters over the glimmering cobbles;
+ they are burying despair!
+ Lank horses whose raw bones show through
+ the embroidered black caparisons
+ and whose heads jerk feebly
+ under the tall nodding crests;
+ they are burying despair.
+ A great hearse that trundles crazily along
+ under pompous swaying plumes
+ and intricate designs of mud-splashed heraldry;
+ they are burying despair!
+ A coffin obliterated under the huge folds
+ of a faded velvet pall
+ and following clattering over the cobblestones
+ lurching through mud-puddles
+ a long train of cabs
+ rain-soaked barouches
+ old landaus off which the paint has peeled
+ leprous coupés;
+ in their blank windows shines the glint
+ of interminable gaslamps;
+ they are burying despair!
+
+ Joyously I turn into the wineshop
+ where with strumming of tambourines
+ and staccato cackle of castanets
+ they are welcoming the new year,
+ and I look in the eyes of the woman;
+ (are they your wide eyes O Eros?)
+ who sits with wine-dabbled lips
+ and stained tinsel dress torn open
+ by the brown hands of strong young lovers;
+ (were they your brown hands O Eros?).
+
+ --Your flesh is hot to my cold hands
+ hot to thaw the ice of an old curse
+ now that with pomp of plumes and strings of ceremonial cabs
+ they are burying despair.
+
+ She laughs and points with a skinny forefinger
+ at the flabby yellow breasts that hang
+ over the tarnished tinsel of her dress,
+ and shows me her brown wolf's teeth;
+ and the blood in my temples goes suddenly cold
+ with bitterness and I know
+ it was not despair that they buried.
+
+ _New Year's Day--Casa de Bottin_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+ Horseshoes leave their mark
+ on the sun-softened asphalt.
+ Men unloading vegetable carts
+ along the steaming market curb
+ bare broad chests pink from sweating;
+ their wet shirts open to the last button
+ cling to their ribs and shoulders.
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+
+ At night along the riverside
+ glinting watery lights
+ sway upon the lapping waves
+ like many-colored candles that flicker in the wind.
+
+ The warm wind smells of pitch from the moored barges
+ smells of the broad leaves of the trees
+ wilted from the day's long heat;
+ smells of gas from the last taxicab.
+
+ Sounds of the riverwater rustling
+ circumspectly past the piers
+ of bridges that span the glitter with dark
+ of men and women's voices
+ many voices mouth to mouth
+ smoothness of flesh touching flesh,
+ a harsh short sigh blurred into a kiss.
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+
+ _Quai Malaquais_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ In me somewhere is a grey room
+ my fathers worked through many lives to build;
+ through the barred distorting windowpanes
+ I see the new moon in the sky.
+
+ When I was small I sat and drew
+ endless pictures in all colors on the walls;
+ tomorrow the pictures should take life
+ I would stalk down their long heroic colonnades.
+
+ When I was fifteen a red-haired girl
+ went by the window; a red sunset
+ threw her shadow on the stiff grey wall
+ to burn the colors of my pictures dead.
+
+ Through all these years the walls have writhed
+ with shadow overlaid upon shadow.
+ I have bruised my fingers on the windowbars
+ so many lives cemented and made strong.
+
+ While the bars stand strong, outside
+ the great processions of men's lives go past.
+ Their shadows squirm distorted on my wall.
+
+ Tonight the new moon is in the sky.
+
+ _Stuyvesant Square_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Three kites against the sunset
+ flaunt their long-tailed triangles
+ above the inquisitive chimney-pots.
+
+ A pompous ragged minstrel
+ sings beside our dining-table
+ a very old romantic song:
+
+ _I love the sound of the hunting-horns
+ deep in the woods at night._
+
+ A wind makes dance the fine acacia leaves
+ and flutters the cloths of the tables.
+ The kites tremble and soar.
+ The voice throbs sugared into croaking base
+ broken with the burden of the too ancient songs.
+
+ And yet, beyond the flaring sky,
+ beyond the soaring kites,
+ where are no voices of singers,
+ no strummings of guitars,
+ the untarnished songs
+ hang like great moths just broken
+ through the dun threads of their cocoons,
+ moist, motionless, limp
+ as flowers on the inaccessible twigs
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,
+ the untarnished songs.
+
+ Will you put your hand in mine
+ pompous street-singer,
+ and start on a quest with me?
+ For men have cut down the woods where the laurel grew
+ to build streets of frame houses,
+ they have dug in the hills after iron
+ and frightened the troll-king away;
+ at night in the woods no hunter puffs out his cheeks
+ to call to the kill on the hunting-horn.
+
+ Now when the kites flaunt bravely
+ their tissue-paper glory in the sunset
+ we will walk together down the darkening streets
+ beyond these tables and the sunset.
+
+ We will hear the singing of drunken men
+ and the songs whores sing
+ in their doorways at night
+ and the endless soft crooning
+ of all the mothers,
+ and what words the young men hum
+ when they walk beside the river
+ their arms hot with caresses,
+ their cheeks pressed against their girls' cheeks.
+
+ We will lean very close
+ to the quiet lips of the dead
+ and feel in our worn-out flesh perhaps
+ a flutter of wings as they soar from us
+ the untarnished songs.
+
+ But the minstrel sings as the pennies clink:
+ _I love the sound of the hunting-horns
+ deep in the woods at night._
+
+ O who will go on a quest with me
+ beyond all wide seas
+ all mountain passes
+ and climb at last with me
+ among the imperishable branches
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,
+ so that all the limp unuttered songs
+ shall spread their great moth-wings and soar
+ above the craning necks of the chimneys
+ above the tissue-paper kites and the sunset
+ above the diners and their dining-tables,
+ beat upward with strong wing-beats steadily
+ till they can drink the quenchless honey of the moon.
+
+ _Place du Tertre_
+
+
+ X
+
+ Dark on the blue light of the stream
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon.
+
+ On icegreen seas of sunset
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail
+ bellied by the evening wind
+ and bound for some glittering harbor
+ that blue hills circle
+ among the purple archipelagos of cloud.
+
+ So, in the quivering bubble of my memories
+ the schooners with peaked sails
+ lean athwart the low dark shore;
+ their sails glow apricot-color
+ or glint as white as the salt-bitten shells on the beach
+ and are curved at the tip like gulls' wings:
+ their courses are set for impossible oceans
+ where on the gold imaginary sands
+ they will unload their many-scented freight
+ of very childish dreams.
+
+ Dark on the blue light of the stream
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon;
+ the wind brings from them to my ears
+ faint creaking of rudder-cords, tiny slappings
+ of waves against their pitch-smeared flanks,
+ to my nose a smell of bales and merchandise
+ the wet familiar smell of harbors
+ and the old arousing fragrance
+ making the muscles ache and the blood seethe
+ and the eyes see the roadsteads and the golden beaches
+ where with singing they would furl the sails
+ of the schooners of childish dreams.
+
+ On icegreen seas of sunset
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail:
+ had I forgotten the fragrance of old dreams
+ that the smell from the anchored barges
+ can so fill my blood with bitterness
+ that the sight of the scudding moon
+ makes my eyes tingle with salt tears?
+
+ In the ship's track on the infertile sea
+ now many childish bodies float
+ rotting under the white moon.
+
+ _Quai des Grands Augustins_
+
+
+ XI
+ _Lua cheia esta noit_
+
+ Thistledown clouds
+ cover the whole sky
+ scurry on the southwest wind
+ over the sea and islands;
+ somehow in the sundown
+ the wind has shaken out plumed seed
+ of thistles milkweed asphodel,
+ raked from off great fields of dandelions
+ their ghosts of faded golden springs
+ and carried them in billowing of mist
+ to scurry in moonlight
+ out of the west.
+
+ They hide the moon
+ the whole sky is grey with them
+ and the waves.
+
+ They will fall in rain
+ over country gardens
+ where thrushes sing.
+
+ They will fall in rain
+ down long sparsely lighted streets
+ hiss on silvery windowpanes
+ moisten the lips
+ of girls leaning out
+ to stare after the footfalls of young men
+ who splash through the glimmering puddles
+ with nonchalant feet.
+
+ They will slap against the windows of offices
+ where men in black suits
+ shaped like pears
+ rub their abdomens
+ against frazzled edges of ledgers.
+
+ They will drizzle
+ over new-plowed fields
+ wet the red cheeks of men harrowing
+ and a smell of garlic and clay
+ will steam from the new-sowed land
+ and sharp-eared young herdsmen will feel
+ in the windy rain
+ lisp of tremulous love-makings
+ interlaced soundless kisses
+ impact of dead springs
+ nuzzling tremulous at life
+ in the red sundown.
+
+ Shining spring rain
+ O scud steaming up out of the deep sea
+ full of portents of sundown and islands,
+ beat upon my forehead
+ beat upon my face and neck
+ glisten on my outstretched hands,
+ run bright lilac streams
+ through the clogged channels of my brain
+ corrode the clicking cogs the little angles
+ the small mistrustful mirrors
+ scatter the shrill tiny creaking
+ of mustnot darenot cannot
+ spatter the varnish off me
+ that I may stand up
+ my face to the wet wind
+ and feel my body
+ and drenched salty palpitant April
+ reborn in my flesh.
+
+ I would spit the dust out of my mouth
+ burst out of these stiff wire webs
+ supple incautious
+ like the crocuses that spurt up too soon
+ their saffron flames
+ and die gloriously in late blizzards
+ and leave no seed.
+
+ _Off Pico_
+
+
+ XII
+
+ Out of the unquiet town
+ seep jagged barkings
+ lean broken cries
+ unimaginable silent writhing
+ of muscles taut against strangling
+ heavy fetters of darkness.
+
+ On the pool of moonlight
+ clots and festers
+ a great scum
+ of worn-out sound.
+
+ (Elagabalus, Alexander
+ looked too long at the full moon;
+ hot blood drowned them
+ cold rivers drowned them.)
+
+ Float like pondflowers
+ on the dead face of darkness
+ cold stubs of lusts
+ names that glimmer ghostly
+ adrift on the slow tide
+ of old moons waned.
+
+ (Lais of Corinth that Holbein drew
+ drank the moon in a cup of wine;
+ with the flame of all her lovers' pain
+ she seared a sign on the tombs of the years.)
+
+ Out of the voiceless wrestle of the night
+ flesh rasping harsh on flesh
+ a tune on a shrill pipe shimmers
+ up like a rocket blurred in the fog
+ of lives curdled in the moon's glare,
+ staggering up like a rocket
+ into the steely star-sharpened night
+ above the stagnant moon-marshes
+ the song throbs soaring and dies.
+
+ (Semiramis, Zenobia
+ lay too long in the moon's glare;
+ their yearning grew sere and they died
+ and the flesh of their empires died.)
+
+ On the pool of moonlight
+ clots and festers
+ a great scum
+ of worn-out lives.
+
+ No sound but the panting unsatiated
+ breath that heaves under the huge pall
+ the livid moon has spread above the housetops.
+ I rest my chin on the window-ledge and wait.
+ There are hands about my throat.
+
+ Ah Bilkis, Bilkis
+ where the jangle of your camel bells?
+ Bilkis when out of Saba
+ lope of your sharp-smelling dromedaries
+ will bring the unnameable strong wine
+ you press from the dazzle of the zenith
+ over the shining sand of your desert
+ the wine you press there in Saba?
+ Bilkis your voice loud above the camel bells
+ white sword of dawn to split the fog,
+ Bilkis your small strong hands to tear
+ the hands from about my throat.
+ Ah Bilkis when out of Saba?
+
+ _Pera Palace_
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcribers' note:
+
+The original spelling has been retained.
+
+Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+One typographical error was corrected:
+ Jasdin-->Jardin du Luxembourg.
+
+
+
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+<div class="pg">
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Pushcart at the Curb, by John Dos Passos</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: A Pushcart at the Curb</p>
+<p>Author: John Dos Passos</p>
+<p>Release Date: June 11, 2010 [eBook #32778]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PUSHCART AT THE CURB***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland<br>
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br>
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3></center><br><br>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" noshade>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i><big>Books by John Dos Passos</big></i><br><br>
+<i><b>NOVELS:</b></i><br>
+<i><small>Three Soldiers</small></i><br>
+<i><small>One Man's Initiation</small></i><br>
+<i><small>Streets of Night</small></i><br>
+<span class="add2em"><i><small>(In Preparation)</small></i></span><br><br>
+<i><b>ESSAYS:</b></i><br>
+<i><small>Rosinante to the Road Again</small></i><br><br>
+<i><b>POEMS:</b></i><br>
+<i><small>A Pushcart at the Curb</small></i></p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+
+<img src="images/image1.jpg" width="477" height="575" alt="A PUSHCART AT THE CURB JOHN DOS PASSOS">
+
+<br>
+<span class="caption">A PUSHCART AT THE CURB<br>
+
+<small>JOHN DOS PASSOS</small></span></div>
+
+
+<h1>A PUSHCART<br>
+AT THE CURB</h1>
+
+<p class="center">BY<br>
+
+<big>JOHN DOS PASSOS</big></p><br>
+
+<div class="center">
+<img src="images/image2.jpg" width="58" height="80" alt="decorative illustration" >
+</div><br>
+<p class="center"><small>GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY<br>
+PUBLISHERS <span class="add3em">NEW YORK</span></small><br>
+
+
+<i>Copyright, 1922,</i><br>
+<i>By George H. Doran Company</i></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<img src="images/image3.jpg" width="35" height="30" alt="decorative illustration" >
+</div><br>
+
+<p class="center"><i>A Pushcart at the Curb. I</i><br>
+<i>Printed in the United States of America</i><br>
+
+
+<br><br><small>TO THE MEMORY</small><br>
+<small>OF</small><br>
+<span class="smcap"><small>WRIGHT McCORMICK</small></span><br>
+
+<small>WHO TUMBLED OFF A MOUNTAIN<br>
+IN MEXICO</small></p><br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="poem2"><p class="noindent"> My verse is no upholstered chariot<br>
+ Gliding oil-smooth on oiled wheels,<br>
+ No swift and shining modern limousine,<br>
+ But a pushcart, rather.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A crazy creaking pushcart, hard to push<br>
+ Round corners, slung on shaky patchwork wheels,<br>
+ That jolts and jumbles over the cobblestones<br>
+ Its very various lading:</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A lading of Spanish oranges, Smyrna figs,<br>
+ Fly-specked apples, perhaps of the Hesperides,<br>
+ Curious fruits of the Indies, pepper-sweet ...<br>
+ Stranger, choose and taste.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"><i>Dolo</i></p></div>
+
+<h2>ACKNOWLEDGMENT</h2>
+<div class="center">
+<p class="noindent">For permission to reprint certain of the poems in this volume, thanks are
+due<br> <i>The Bookman</i>, <i>The Dial</i>, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, <i>The Measure</i>,
+ and <i>The New York Evening Post</i>.</p></div>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">WINTER IN CASTILE</td><td align="right"><a href="#page13">13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">NIGHTS AT BASSANO</td><td align="right"><a href="#page65">65</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">VAGONES DE TERCERA</td><td align="right"><a href="#page109">109</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE</td><td align="right"><a href="#page139">139</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">ON FOREIGN TRAVEL</td><td align="right"><a href="#page163">163</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">PHASES OF THE MOON</td><td align="right"><a href="#page185">185</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>[p. 13]</span>
+
+<h2>WINTER IN CASTILE</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The promiscuous wind wafts idly from the quays<br>
+ A smell of ships and curious woods and casks<br>
+ And a sweetness from the gorse on the flowerstand<br>
+ And brushes with his cool careless cheek the cheeks<br>
+ Of those on the street; mine, an old gnarled man's,<br>
+ The powdered cheeks of the girl who with faded eyes<br>
+ Stands in the shadow; a sailor's scarred brown cheeks,<br>
+ And a little child's, who walks along whispering<br>
+ To her sufficient self.<br>
+ <p class="ralign44"> O promiscuous wind.<br>
+ <br> <i>Bordeaux</i></p></div>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">A long grey street with balconies.<br>
+ Above the gingercolored grocer's shop<br>
+ trail pink geraniums<br>
+ and further up a striped mattress<br>
+ hangs from a window<br>
+ and the little wooden cage<br>
+ of a goldfinch.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Four blind men wabble down the street<br>
+ with careful steps on the rounded cobbles<br>
+ scraping with violin and flute<br>
+ the interment of a tune.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">People gather:<br>
+ women with market-baskets<br>
+ stuffed with green vegetables,<br>
+ men with blankets on their shoulders<br>
+ and brown sunwrinkled faces.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">Pipe the flutes, squeak the violins;<br>
+ four blind men in a row<br>
+ at the interment of a tune ...<br>
+ But on the plate<br>
+ coppers clink<br>
+ round brown pennies<br>
+ a merry music at the funeral,<br>
+ penny swigs of wine<br>
+ penny gulps of gin<br>
+ peanuts and hot roast potatoes<br>
+ red disks of sausage<br>
+ tripe steaming in the corner shop ...</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And overhead<br>
+ the sympathetic finch<br>
+ chirps and trills<br>
+ approval.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Calle de Toledo, Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> A boy with rolled up shirtsleeves<br>
+ turns the handle.<br>
+ Grind, grind.<br>
+ The black sphere whirls<br>
+ above a charcoal fire.<br>
+ Grind, grind.<br>
+ The boy sweats and grits his teeth and turns<br>
+ while a man blows up the coals.<br>
+ Grind, grind.<br>
+ Thicker comes the blue curling smoke,<br>
+ the moka-scented smoke<br>
+ heavy with early morning<br>
+ and the awakening city<br>
+ with click-clack click-clack on the cobblestones<br>
+ and the young winter sunshine<br>
+ advancing inquisitively<br>
+ across the black and white tiles of my bedroom floor.<br>
+
+
+
+ Grind, grind.<br>
+ The coffee is done.<br>
+ The boy rubs his arms and yawns,<br>
+ and the sphere and the furnace are trundled away<br>
+ to be set up at another café.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A poor devil<br>
+ whose dirty ashen white body shows through his rags<br>
+ sniffs sensually<br>
+ with dilated nostrils<br>
+ the heavy coffee-fragrant smoke,<br>
+ and turns to sleep again<br>
+ in the feeble sunlight of the greystone steps.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Calle Espoz y Mina</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Women are selling tuberoses in the square,<br>
+ and sombre-tinted wreaths<br>
+ stiffly twined and crinkly<br>
+ for this is the day of the dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Women are selling tuberoses in the square.<br>
+ Their velvet odor fills the street<br>
+ somehow stills the tramp of feet;<br>
+ for this is the day of the dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Their presence is heavy about us<br>
+ like the velvet black scent of the flowers:<br>
+ incense of pompous interments,<br>
+ patter of monastic feet,<br>
+ drone of masses drowsily said<br>
+ for the thronging dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Women are selling tuberoses in the square<br>
+ to cover the tombs of the envious dead<br>
+ and shroud them again in the lethean scent<br>
+ lest the dead should remember.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Difuntos; Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Above the scuffling footsteps of crowds<br>
+ the clang of trams<br>
+ the shouts of newsboys<br>
+ the stridence of wheels,<br>
+ very calm,<br>
+ floats the sudden trill of a pipe<br>
+ three silvery upward notes<br>
+ wistfully quavering,<br>
+ notes a Thessalian shepherd might have blown<br>
+ to call his sheep<br>
+ in the emerald shade<br>
+ of Tempe,<br>
+ notes that might have waked the mad women sleeping<br>
+ among pinecones in the hills<br>
+ and stung them to headlong joy<br>
+ of the presence of their mad Iacchos,<br>
+
+ notes like the glint of sun<br>
+ making jaunty the dark waves of Tempe.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the street an old man is passing<br>
+ wrapped in a dun brown mantle<br>
+ blowing with bearded lips on a shining panpipe<br>
+ while he trundles before him<br>
+ a grindstone.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The scissors grinder.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Calle Espoz y Mina</i></p></div>
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Rain slants on an empty square.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Across the expanse of cobbles<br>
+ rides an old shawl-muffled woman<br>
+ black on a donkey with pert ears<br>
+ that places carefully<br>
+ his tiny sharp hoofs<br>
+ as if the cobbles were eggs.<br>
+ The paniers are full<br>
+ of bright green lettuces<br>
+ and purple cabbages,<br>
+ and shining red bellshaped peppers,<br>
+ dripping, shining, a band in marchtime,<br>
+ in the grey rain,<br>
+ in the grey city.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Plaza Santa Ana</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VI<br>
+BEGGARS</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The fountain some dead king put up,<br>
+ conceived in pompous imageries,<br>
+ piled with mossgreened pans and centaurs<br>
+ topped by a prudish tight-waisted Cybele<br>
+ (Cybele the many-breasted mother of the grain)<br>
+ spurts with a solemn gurgle of waters.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Where the sun is warmest<br>
+ their backs against the greystone basin<br>
+ sit, hoarding every moment of the palefaced sun,<br>
+ (thy children Cybele)<br>
+ Pan a bearded beggar with blear eyes;<br>
+ his legs were withered by a papal bull,<br>
+ those shaggy legs so nimble to pursue<br>
+ through groves of Arcadian myrtle<br>
+ the nymphs of the fountains and valleys;<br>
+ a young Faunus with soft brown face<br>
+
+ and dirty breast bared to the sun;<br>
+ the black hair crisps about his ears<br>
+ with some grace yet;<br>
+ a little barefoot Eros<br>
+ crouching to scratch his skinny thighs<br>
+ who stares with wide gold eyes aghast<br>
+ at the yellow shiny trams that clatter past.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">All day long they doze in the scant sun<br>
+ and watch the wan leaves rustle to the ground<br>
+ from the yellowed limetrees of the avenue.<br>
+ They are still thine Cybele<br>
+ nursed at thy breast;<br>
+ (like a woman's last foster-children<br>
+ that still would suck grey withered dugs).<br>
+ They have not scorned thy dubious bounty<br>
+ for stridence of grinding iron<br>
+ and pale caged lives<br>
+ made blind by the dust of toil<br>
+ to coin the very sun to gold.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Plaza de Cibeles</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Footsteps<br>
+ and the leisurely patter of rain.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Beside the lamppost in the alley<br>
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl<br>
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves<br>
+ of breast and arms.<br>
+ Her eyes are in shadow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A smell of frying fish;<br>
+ footsteps of people going to dinner<br>
+ clatter eagerly through the lane.<br>
+ A boy with a trough of meat on his shoulder<br>
+ turns by the lamppost,<br>
+ his steps drag.<br>
+ The green light slants<br>
+ in the black of his eyes.<br>
+ Her eyes are in shadow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Footsteps of people going to dinner<br>
+ clatter eagerly; the rain<br>
+ falls with infinite nonchalance ...<br>
+ a man turns with a twirl of moustaches<br>
+ and the green light slants on his glasses<br>
+ on the round buttons of his coat.<br>
+ Her eyes are in shadow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A woman with an umbrella<br>
+ keeps her eyes straight ahead<br>
+ and lifts her dress<br>
+ to avoid the mud on the pavingstones.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">An old man stares without fear<br>
+ into the eyes of the girl<br>
+ through the stripes of the rain.<br>
+ His steps beat faster and he sniffs hard suddenly<br>
+ the smell of dinner and frying fish.<br>
+ Was it a flame of old days<br>
+ expanding in his cold blood,<br>
+
+ or a shiver of rigid graves,<br>
+ chill clay choking congealing?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Beside the lamppost in the alley<br>
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl<br>
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves<br>
+ of breast and arms.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Calle del Gato</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VIII</h3>
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">A brown net of branches<br>
+ quivers above silver trunks of planes.<br>
+ Here and there<br>
+ a late leaf flutters<br>
+ its faint death-rattle in the wind.<br>
+ Beyond, the sky burns fervid rose<br>
+ like red wine held against the sun.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Schoolboys are playing in the square<br>
+ dodging among the silver tree-trunks<br>
+ collars gleam and white knees<br>
+ as they romp shrilly.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Lamps bloom out one by one<br>
+ like jessamine, yellow and small.<br>
+ At the far end a church's dome<br>
+ flat deep purple cuts the sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Schoolboys are romping in the square<br>
+ in and out among the silver tree-trunks<br>
+ out of the smoked rose shadows<br>
+ through the timid yellow lamplight ...<br>
+ Socks slip down<br>
+ fingermarks smudge white collars;<br>
+ they run and tussle in the shadows<br>
+ kicking the gravel with muddied boots<br>
+ with cheeks flushed hotter than the sky<br>
+ eyes brighter than the street-lamps<br>
+ with fingers tingling and breath fast:<br>
+ banqueters early drunken<br>
+ on the fierce cold wine of the dead year.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Paseo de la Castellana</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Green against the livid sky<br>
+ in their square dun-colored towers<br>
+ hang the bronze bells of Castile.<br>
+ In their unshakeable square towers<br>
+ jutting from the slopes of hills<br>
+ clang the bells of all the churches<br>
+ the dustbrown churches of Castile.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">How they swing the green bronze bells<br>
+ athwart olive twilights of Castile<br>
+ till their fierce insistant clangour<br>
+ rings down the long plowed slopes<br>
+ breaks against the leaden hills<br>
+ whines among the trembling poplars<br>
+ beside sibilant swift green rivers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">O you strong bells of Castile<br>
+ that commanding clang your creed<br>
+ over treeless fields and villages<br>
+ that huddle in arroyos, gleaming<br>
+ orange with lights in the greenish dusk;<br>
+ can it be bells of Castile,<br>
+ can it be that you remember?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Groans there in your bronze green curves<br>
+ in your imperious evocation<br>
+ stench of burnings, rattling screams<br>
+ quenched among the crackling flames?<br>
+ The crowd, the pile of faggots in the square,<br>
+ the yellow robes.... Is it that<br>
+ bells of Castile that you remember?</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Toledo&mdash;&mdash;Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.<br>
+ The speeding dark-green water mirrors the old red walls<br>
+ and the balustrades and close-barred windows of the palace;<br>
+ and on the other bank three stooping washerwomen<br>
+ whose bright red shawls and piles of linen gleam in the green,<br>
+ the swirling green where shimmer the walls of Aranjuez.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">There's smoke in the gardens of Aranjuez<br>
+ smoke of the burning of the years' dead leaves;<br>
+ the damp paths rustle underfoot<br>
+ thick with the crisp broad leaves of the planes.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The tang of the smoke and the reek of the box<br>
+ and the savor of the year's decay<br>
+ are soft in the gardens of Aranjuez<br>
+ where the fountains fill silently with leaves<br>
+ and the moss grows over the statues and busts<br>
+ clothing the simpering cupids and fauns<br>
+ whose stone eyes search the empty paths<br>
+ for the rustling rich brocaded gowns<br>
+ and the neat silk calves of the halcyon past.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.<br>
+ And slipping by mirrors the brown-silver trunks of the planes and the hedges<br>
+ of box and spires of cypress and alleys of yellowing elms;<br>
+ and on the other bank three grey mules pulling a cart<br>
+ loaded with turnips, driven by a man in a blue woolen sash<br>
+ who strides along whistling and does not look towards Aranjuez.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XI</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Beyond ruffled velvet hills<br>
+ the sky burns yellow like a candle-flame.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Sudden a village<br>
+ roofs against the sky<br>
+ leaping buttresses<br>
+ a church<br>
+ and a tower utter dark like the heart<br>
+ of a candleflame.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Swing the bronze-bells<br>
+ uncoiling harsh slow sound through the dusk<br>
+ that growls out in the conversational clatter<br>
+ Of the trainwheels and the rails.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A hill humps unexpectedly to hide<br>
+ the tower erect like a pistil<br>
+ in the depths of the tremendous flaming<br>
+ flower of the west.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Getafe</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XII</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Genteel noise of Paris hats<br>
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.<br>
+ Mirrors create on either side<br>
+ infinities of chandeliers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The orchestra is tuning up:<br>
+ Twanging of the strings of violins<br>
+ groans from cellos<br>
+ toodling of flutes.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Legs apart, with white fronts<br>
+ the musicians stand<br>
+ amiably as pelicans.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Tap. Tap. Tap.<br>
+ With a silken rustle beards, hats<br>
+ sink back in appropriate ecstasy.<br>
+ A little girl giggles.<br>
+ Crystals of infinities of chandeliers<br>
+ tremble in the first long honey-savored chord.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">From under a wide black hat<br>
+ curving just to hide her ears<br>
+ peers the little face of Juliet<br>
+ of all child lovers<br>
+ who loved in impossible gardens<br>
+ among roses huge as moons<br>
+ and twinkling constellations of jessamine,<br>
+ Juliet, Isabel, Cressida,<br>
+ and that unknown one who went forth at night<br>
+ wandering the snarling streets of Jerusalem.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">She presses her handkerchief to her mouth<br>
+ to smother her profane giggling.<br>
+ Her skin is browner than the tone of cellos,<br>
+ flushes like with pomegranate juice.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent"> ... The moist laden air of a garden in Granada,<br>
+ spice of leaves bruised by the sun;<br>
+ she sits in a dress of crimson brocade<br>
+ dark as blood under the white moon<br>
+ and watches the ripples spread<br>
+
+ in the gurgling fountain;<br>
+ her lashes curve to her cheeks<br>
+ as she stares wide-eyed<br>
+ lips drawn against the teeth and trembling;<br>
+ gravel crunches down the path;<br>
+ brown in a crimson swirl<br>
+ she stands with full lips<br>
+ head tilted back ... O her small breasts<br>
+ against my panting breast.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Clapping. Genteel noise of Paris hats<br>
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Her face lost in infinities of glittering chandeliers.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Ritz</i></p></div>
+
+
+<h3>XIII</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> There's a sound of drums and trumpets<br>
+ above the rumble of the street.<br>
+ (Run run run to see the soldiers.)<br>
+ All alike all abreast keeping time<br>
+ to the regimented swirl<br>
+ of the glittering brass band.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The café waiters are craning at the door<br>
+ the girl in the gloveshop is nose against the glass.<br>
+ O the glitter of the brass<br>
+ and the flutter of the plumes<br>
+ and the tramp of the uniform feet!<br>
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The boy with a tray<br>
+ of pastries on his head<br>
+ is walking fast, keeping time;<br>
+ his white and yellow cakes are trembling in the sun<br>
+
+ his cheeks are redder<br>
+ and his bluestriped tunic streams<br>
+ as he marches to the rum tum of the drums.<br>
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The milkman with his pony<br>
+ slung with silvery metal jars<br>
+ schoolboys with their packs of books<br>
+ clerks in stiff white collars<br>
+ old men in cloaks<br>
+ try to regiment their feet<br>
+ to the glittering brass beat.<br>
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Puerta del Sol</i></p></div>
+
+
+<h3>XIV</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Night of clouds<br>
+ terror of their flight across the moon.<br>
+ Over the long still plains<br>
+ blows a wind out of the north;<br>
+ a laden wind out of the north<br>
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks<br>
+ menacingly and loud.</p>
+
+ <hr class="poems">
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Black as old blood on the cold plain<br>
+ close throngs spread to beyond lead horizons<br>
+ swaying shrouded crowds<br>
+ and their rustle in the knife-keen wind<br>
+ is like the dry death-rattle of the winter grass.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">(Like mouldered shrouds the clouds fall<br>
+ from the crumbling skull of the dead moon.)</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Huge, of grinning brass<br>
+ steaming with fresh stains<br>
+ their God<br>
+ gapes with smudged expectant gums<br>
+ above the plain.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Flicker through the flames of the wide maw<br>
+ rigid square bodies of men<br>
+ opulence of childbearing women<br>
+ slimness of young men, and girls<br>
+ with small curved breasts.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> (Loud as musketry rattles the sudden laughter of the dead.)</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Thicker hotter the blood drips<br>
+ from the cold brass lips.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Swift over grainless fields<br>
+ swift over shellplowed lands<br>
+ ever leaner swifter darker<br>
+ bay the hounds of the dead,<br>
+ before them drive the pale ones<br>
+ white limbs scarred and blackened<br>
+ laurel crushed in their cold fingers,<br>
+ the spark quenched in their glazed eyes.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Thicker hotter the blood drips<br>
+ from the avenging lips<br>
+ of the brass God;<br>
+ (and rattling loud as musketry<br>
+ the laughter of the unsated dead).</p>
+
+ <hr class="poems">
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The clouds have blotted the haggard moon.<br>
+ A harsh wind shrills from the cities of the north<br>
+ Ypres, Lille, Liège, Verdun,<br>
+ and from the tainted valleys<br>
+ the cross-scarred hills.<br>
+ Over the long still plains<br>
+ the wind out of the north<br>
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Cuatro Caminos</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XV</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">The weazened old woman without teeth<br>
+ who shivers on the windy street corner<br>
+ displays her roasted chestnuts invitingly<br>
+ like marriageable daughters.</p>
+
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Calle Atocha</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XVI<br>
+NOCHEBUENA</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The clattering streets are bright with booths<br>
+ lighted by balancing candleflames<br>
+ ranged with figures in painted clay,<br>
+ Virgins adoring and haloed bambinos,<br>
+ St. Joseph at his joiner's bench<br>
+ Judean shepherds and their sheep<br>
+ camels of the Eastern kings.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>Esta noche es noche buena<br>
+ nadie piensa a dormir.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The streets resound with dancing<br>
+ and chortle of tambourines,<br>
+ strong rhythm of dancing<br>
+ drumming of tambourines.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Flicker through the greenish lamplight<br>
+ of the clattering cobbled streets<br>
+ flushed faces of men<br>
+
+
+
+ women in mantillas<br>
+ children with dark wide eyes,<br>
+ teeth flashing as they sing:</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>La santa Virgen es en parto<br>
+ a las dos va desparir.<br>
+ Esta noche es noche buena<br>
+ nadie piensa a dormir.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Beetred faces of women<br>
+ whose black mantillas have slipped<br>
+ from their sleek and gleaming hair,<br>
+ streaming faces of men.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> With click of heels on the pavingstones<br>
+ boys in tunics are dancing<br>
+ eyes under long black lashes<br>
+ flash as they dance to the drum<br>
+ of tambourines beaten with elbow and palm.<br>
+ A flock of girls comes running<br>
+ squealing down the street.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Boys and girls are dancing<br>
+ flushed and dripping dancing<br>
+ to the beat on drums and piping<br>
+ on flutes and jiggle<br>
+ of the long notes of accordions<br>
+ and the wild tune swirls and sweeps<br>
+ along the frosty streets,<br>
+ leaps above the dark stone houses<br>
+ out among the crackling stars.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>Esta noche es noche buena<br>
+ nadie piensa a dormir.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the street a ragged boy<br>
+ too poor to own a tambourine<br>
+ slips off his shoes and beats them together<br>
+ to the drunken reeling time,<br>
+ dances on his naked feet.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>Esta noche es noche buena<br>
+ nadie piensa a dormir.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XVII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> The old strong towers the Moors built<br>
+ on the ruins of a Roman camp<br>
+ have sprung into spreading boistrous foam<br>
+ of daisies and alyssum flowers,<br>
+ and sprout of clover and veiling grass<br>
+ from out of the cracks in the tawny stones<br>
+ makes velvet soft the worn stairs<br>
+ and grooved walks where clanked the heels<br>
+ of the grave mailed knights who had driven and killed<br>
+ the darkskinned Moors,<br>
+ and where on silken knees their sons<br>
+ knelt on the nights of the full moon<br>
+ to vow strange deeds for their lady's grace.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The old strong towers are crumbled and doddering now<br>
+ and sit like old men smiling in the sun.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="noindent">About them clamber the giggling flowers<br>
+ and below the sceptic sea gently<br>
+ laughing in daisywhite foam on the beach<br>
+ rocks the ships with flapping sails<br>
+ that flash white to the white village on the shore.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> On a wall where the path is soft with flowers<br>
+ the brown goatboy lies, his cap askew<br>
+ and whistles out over the beckoning sea<br>
+ the tune the village band jerks out,<br>
+ a shine of brass in the square below:<br>
+ a swaggering young buck of a tune<br>
+ that slouches cap on one side, cigarette<br>
+ at an impudent tilt, out past the old<br>
+ toothless and smilingly powerless towers,<br>
+ out over the ever-youthful sea<br>
+ that claps bright cobalt hands in time<br>
+ and laughs along the tawny beaches.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Denia</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XVIII</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><p class="noindent">How fine to die in Denia<br>
+ young in the ardent strength of sun<br>
+ calm in the burning blue of the sea<br>
+ in the stabile clasp of the iron hills;<br>
+ Denia where the earth is red<br>
+ as rust and hills grey like ash.<br>
+ O to rot into the ruddy soil<br>
+ to melt into the omnipotent fire<br>
+ of the young white god, the flamegod the sun,<br>
+ to find swift resurrection<br>
+ in the warm grapes born of earth and sun<br>
+ that are crushed to must under the feet<br>
+ of girls and lads,<br>
+ to flow for new generations of men<br>
+ a wine full of earth<br>
+ of sun.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3>XIX</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> The road winds white among ashen hills<br>
+ grey clouds overhead<br>
+ grey sea below.<br>
+ The road clings to the strong capes<br>
+ hangs above the white foam-line<br>
+ of unheard breakers<br>
+ that edge with lace the scarf of the sea<br>
+ sweeping marbled with sunlight<br>
+ to the dark horizon<br>
+ towards which steering intently<br>
+ like ducks with red bellies<br>
+ swim the black laden steamers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The wind blows the dust of the road<br>
+ and whines in the dead grass<br>
+ and is silent.</p>
+
+
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I can hear my steps<br>
+ and the clink of coins in one pocket<br>
+ and the distant hush of the sea.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>On the highroad to Villajoyosa</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XX<br>
+SIERRA GUADARRAMA<br>
+<small><small>TO J. G. P.</small></small></h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> The greyish snow of the pass<br>
+ is starred with the sad lilac<br>
+ of autumn crocuses.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Hissing among the brown leaves<br>
+ of the scruboaks<br>
+ bruising the tender crocus petals<br>
+ a sleetgust sweeps the pass.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The air is calm again.<br>
+ Under a bulging sky motionless overhead<br>
+ the mountains heave velvet black<br>
+ into the cloudshut distance.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">South the road winds<br>
+ down a wide valley<br>
+ towards stripes of rain<br>
+ through which shine straw yellow<br>
+ faint as a dream<br>
+ the rolling lands of New Castile.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A fresh gust whines through the snowbent grass<br>
+ pelting with sleet the withering crocuses,<br>
+ and rustles the dry leaves of the scruboaks<br>
+ with a sound as of gallop of hoofs<br>
+ far away on the grey stony road<br>
+ a sound as of faintly heard cavalcades<br>
+ of old stern kings<br>
+ climbing the cold iron passes<br>
+ stopping to stare with cold hawkeyes<br>
+ at the pale plain.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Puerto de Navecerrada</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XXI</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> Soft as smoke are the blue green pines<br>
+ in the misty lavender twilight<br>
+ yellow as flame the flame-shaped poplars<br>
+ whose dead leaves fall<br>
+ vaguely spinning through the tinted air<br>
+ till they reach the brownish mirror of the stream<br>
+ where they are borne a tremulous pale fleet<br>
+ over gleaming ripples to the sudden dark<br>
+ beneath the Roman bridge.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Forever it stands the Roman bridge<br>
+ a firm strong arch in the purple mist<br>
+ and ever the yellow leaves are swirled<br>
+ into the darkness beneath<br>
+ where echoes forever the tramp of feet<br>
+ of the weary feet that bore<br>
+ the Eagles and the Law.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And through the misty lavender twilight<br>
+ the leaves of the poplars fall and float<br>
+ with the silent stream to the deep night<br>
+ beneath the Roman bridge.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Cercedilla</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XXII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> In the velvet calm of long grey slopes of snow<br>
+ the silky crunch of my steps.<br>
+ About me vague dark circles of mountains<br>
+ secret, listening in the intimate silence.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Bleating of sheep, the bark of a dog<br>
+ and, dun-yellow in the snow<br>
+ a long flock straggles.<br>
+ Crying of lambs,<br>
+ twitching noses of snowflecked ewes,<br>
+ the proud curved horns of a regal broadgirthed ram,<br>
+ yellow backs steaming;<br>
+ then, tails and tracks in the snow,<br>
+ and the responsible lope of the dog<br>
+ who stops with a paw lifted to look back<br>
+ at the baked apple face of the shepherd.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Cercedilla</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XXIII<br>
+JULIET</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> You were beside me on the stony path<br>
+ down from the mountain.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And I was the rain that lashed such flame into your cheeks<br>
+ and the sensuous rolling hills<br>
+ where the mists clung like garments.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I was the sadness that came out of the languid rain<br>
+ and the soft dove-tinted hills<br>
+ and choked you with the harsh embrace of a lover<br>
+ so that you almost sobbed.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Siete Picos</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XXIV</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">When they sang as they marched in step<br>
+ on the long path that wound to the valley<br>
+ I followed lonely in silence.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">When they sat and laughed by the hearth<br>
+ where our damp clothes steamed in the flare<br>
+ of the noisy prancing flames<br>
+ I sat still in the shadow<br>
+ for their language was strange to me.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">But when as they slept I sat<br>
+ and watched by the door of the cabin<br>
+ I was not lonely<br>
+ for they lay with quiet faces<br>
+ stroked by the friendly tongues<br>
+ of the silent firelight<br>
+ and outside the white stars swarmed<br>
+ like gnats about a lamp in autumn<br>
+ an intelligible song.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Cercedilla</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XXV</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">I lie among green rocks<br>
+ on the thyme-scented mountain.<br>
+ The thistledown clouds and the sky<br>
+ grey-white and grey-violet<br>
+ are mirrored in your dark eyes<br>
+ as in the changing pools of the mountain.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">I have made for your head<br>
+ a wreath of livid crocuses.<br>
+ How strange they are the wan lilac crocuses<br>
+ against your dark smooth skin<br>
+ in the intense black of your wind-towseled hair.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Sleet from the high snowfields<br>
+ snaps a lash down the mountain<br>
+ bruising the withered petals<br>
+ of the last crocuses.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I am alone in the swirling mist<br>
+ beside the frozen pools of the mountain.</p>
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>La Maliciosa</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XXVI</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Infinities away already<br>
+ are your very slender body<br>
+ and the tremendous dark of your eyes<br>
+ where once beyond the laughingness of childhood,<br>
+ came a breath of jessamine prophetic of summer,<br>
+ a sudden flutter of yellow butterflies<br>
+ above dark pools.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Shall I take down my books<br>
+ and weave from that glance a romance<br>
+ and build tinsel thrones for you<br>
+ out of old poets' fancies?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Shall I fashion a temple about you<br>
+ where to burn out my life like frankincense<br>
+ till you tower dark behind the sultry veil<br>
+ huge as Isis?</p>
+
+
+ <p class="noindent">Or shall I go back to childhood<br>
+ remembering butterflies in sunny fields<br>
+ to cower with you when the chilling shadow fleets<br>
+ across the friendly sun?</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Bordeaux</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XXVII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">And neither did Beatrice and Dante ...<br>
+ But Beatrice they say<br>
+ was a convention.</p>
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>November, 1916&mdash;&mdash;February, 1917.</i></p></div>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>[p. 65]</span>
+<h2>NIGHTS AT BASSANO</h2>
+
+
+<h3>I<br>
+DIRGE OF THE EMPRESS TAITU<br> OF ABYSSINIA</h3>
+
+<p><i>And when the news of the Death of the Empress
+of that Far Country did come to them, they
+fashioned of her an Image in doleful wise and
+ poured out Rum and Marsala Sack and divers
+ Liquors such as were procurable in that place into
+ Cannikins to do her Honor and did wake and
+ keen and make moan most piteously to hear. And
+that Night were there many Marvels and Prodigies
+ observed; the Welkin was near consumed
+ with fire and Spirits and Banashees grumbled and
+wailed above the roof and many that were in that
+place hid themselves in Dens and Burrows in the
+ground. Of the swanlike and grievously melodious
+ Ditties the Minstrels fashioned in that fearsome
+ Night these only are preserved for the Admiration of the Age.</i></p>
+
+
+<h4>I</h4>
+
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent">Our lady lies on a brave high bed,<br>
+ On pillows of gold with gold baboons<br>
+ On red silk deftly embroidered&mdash;<br>
+ O anger and eggs and candlelight&mdash;<br>
+ Her gold-specked eyes have little sight.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Our lady cries on a brave high bed;<br>
+ The golden light of the candles licks<br>
+ The crown of gold on her frizzly head&mdash;<br>
+ O candles and angry eggs so white&mdash;<br>
+ Her gold-specked eyes are sharp with fright.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Our lady sighs till the high bed creaks;<br>
+ The golden candles gutter and sway<br>
+ In the swirling dark the dark priest speaks&mdash;<br>
+ O his eyes are white as eggs with fright<br>
+ &mdash;Our lady will die twixt night and night.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Our lady lies on a brave high bed;<br>
+ The golden crown has slipped from her head<br>
+ On the pillows crimson embroidered&mdash;<br>
+ O baboons writhing in candlelight&mdash;<br>
+ Her gold-specked soul has taken flight.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h4>II<br>
+ZABAGLIONE
+</h4>
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">Champagne-colored<br>
+ Deepening to tawniness<br>
+ As the throats of nightingales<br>
+ Strangled for Nero's supper.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Champagne-colored<br>
+ Like the coverlet of Dudloysha<br>
+ At the Hotel Continental.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Thick to the lips and velvety<br>
+ Scented of rum and vanilla<br>
+ Oversweet, oversoft, overstrong,<br>
+ Full of froth of fascination,<br>
+ Drink to be drunk of Isoldes<br>
+ Sunk in champagne-colored couches<br>
+ While Tristans with fair flowing hair<br>
+ And round cheeks rosy as cherubs<br>
+ Stand and stretch their arms,<br>
+ And let their great slow tears<br>
+ Roll and fall,<br>
+ And splash in the huge gold cups.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And behind the scenes with his sleeves rolled up,<br>
+ Grandiloquently<br>
+ Kurwenal beats the eggs<br>
+ Into spuming symphonic splendor<br>
+ Champagne-colored.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Red-nosed gnomes roll and tumble<br>
+ Tussle and jumble in the firelight<br>
+ Roll on their backs spinning rotundly,<br>
+ Out of earthern jars<br>
+ Gloriously gurgitating,<br>
+ Wriggling their huge round bellies.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And the air of the cave is heavy<br>
+ With steaming Marsala and rum<br>
+ And hot bruised vanilla.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Champagne-colored, one lies in a velvetiness<br>
+ Of yellow moths stirring faintly tickling wings<br>
+ One is heavy and full of languor<br>
+ And sleep is a champagne-colored coverlet,<br>
+ the champagne-colored stockings of Venus ...<br>
+ And later<br>
+ One goes<br>
+ And pukes beautifully beneath the moon,<br>
+ Champagne-colored.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>II<br>
+
+ODE TO ENNUI</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">The autumn leaves that this morning danced with the wind,<br>
+ curtseying in slow minuettes,<br>
+ giddily whirling in bacchanals,<br>
+ balancing, hesitant, tiptoe,<br>
+ while the wind whispered of distant hills,<br>
+ and clouds like white sails, sailing<br>
+ in limpid green ice-colored skies,<br>
+ have crossed the picket fence<br>
+ and the three strands of barbed wire;<br>
+ they have leapt the green picket fence<br>
+ despite the sentry's bayonet.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Under the direction of a corporal<br>
+ three soldiers in khaki are sweeping them up,<br>
+ sweeping up the autumn leaves,<br>
+ crimson maple leaves, splotched with saffron,<br>
+ ochre and cream,<br>
+ brown leaves of horse-chestnuts ...<br>
+ and the leaves dance and curtsey round the brooms,<br>
+ full of mirth,<br>
+ wistful of the journey the wind promised them.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> This morning the leaves fluttered gaudily,<br>
+ reckless, giddy from the wind's dances,<br>
+ over the green picket fence<br>
+ and the three strands of barbed wire.<br>
+ Now they are swept up<br>
+ and put in a garbage can<br>
+ with cigarette butts<br>
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco,<br>
+ burnt matches, old socks, torn daily papers,<br>
+ and dust from the soldiers' blankets.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And the wind blows tauntingly<br>
+ over the mouth of the garbage can,<br>
+ whispering, Far away,<br>
+ mockingly, Far away ...</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And I too am swept up<br>
+ and put in a garbage can<br>
+ with smoked cigarette ash<br>
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco;<br>
+ I am fallen into the dominion<br>
+ of the great dusty queen ...<br>
+ Ennui, iron goddess, cobweb-clothed<br>
+ goddess of all useless things,<br>
+ of attics cluttered with old chairs<br>
+ for centuries unsatupon,<br>
+ of strong limbs wriggling on office stools,<br>
+ of ancient cab-horses and cabs<br>
+ that sleep all day in silent sunny squares,<br>
+ of camps bound with barbed wire,<br>
+ and green picket fences&mdash;<br>
+ bind my eyes with your close dust<br>
+ choke my ears with your grey cobwebs<br>
+ that I may not see the clouds<br>
+ that sail away across the sky,<br>
+ far away, tauntingly,<br>
+ that I may not hear the wind<br>
+ that mocks and whispers and is gone<br>
+ in pursuit of the horizon.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>III<br>
+
+TIVOLI<br>
+
+<small><small>TO D. P.</small></small></h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> The ropes of the litter creak and groan<br>
+ As the bearers turn down the steep path;<br>
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet.<br>
+ But the Roman poet lies back confident<br>
+ On his magenta cushions and mattresses,<br>
+ Thinks of Greek bronzes<br>
+ At the sight of the straining backs of his slaves.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The slaves' breasts shine with sweat,<br>
+ And they draw deep breaths of the cooler air<br>
+ As they lurch through tunnel after tunnel of leaves.<br>
+ At last, where the spray swirls like smoke,<br>
+ And the river roars in a cauldron of green,<br>
+ The poet feels his fat arms quiver<br>
+ And his eyes and ears drowned and exalted<br>
+ In the reverberance of the fall.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The ropes of the litter creak and groan,<br>
+ The embroidered curtains, moist with spray,<br>
+ Flutter in the poet's face;<br>
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet<br>
+ As the slaves strain up the path again,<br>
+ And the Roman poet lies back confident<br>
+ Among silk cushions of gold and magenta,<br>
+ His hands clasped across his mountainous belly,<br>
+ Thinking of the sibyll and fate,<br>
+ And gorgeous and garlanded death,<br>
+ Mouthing hexameters.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But I, my belly full and burning as the sun<br>
+ With the good white wine of the Alban hills<br>
+ Stumble down the path<br>
+ Into the cool green and the roar,<br>
+ And wonder, and am abashed.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IV<br>
+
+VENICE</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">The doge goes down in state to the sea<br>
+ To inspect with beady traders' eyes<br>
+ New cargoes from Crete, Mytilene,<br>
+ Cyprus and Joppa, galleys piled<br>
+ With bales off which in all the days<br>
+ Of sailing the sea-wind has not blown<br>
+ The dust of Arabian caravans.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> In velvet the doge goes down to the sea.<br>
+ And sniffs the dusty bales of spice<br>
+ Pepper from Cathay, nard and musk,<br>
+ Strange marbles from ruined cities, packed<br>
+ In unfamiliar-scented straw.<br>
+ Black slaves sweat and grin in the sun.<br>
+ Marmosets pull at the pompous gowns<br>
+ Of burgesses. Parrots scream<br>
+ And cling swaying to the ochre bales ...</p>
+
+
+
+ <p class="noindent">Dazzle of the rising dust of trade<br>
+ Smell of pitch and straining slaves ...</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And out on the green tide towards the sea<br>
+ Drift the rinds of orient fruits<br>
+ Strange to the lips, bitter and sweet.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>V<br>
+
+ASOLO GATE
+</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">The air is drenched to the stars<br>
+ With fragrance of flowering grape<br>
+ Where the hills hunch up from the plain<br>
+ To the purple dark ridges that sweep<br>
+ Towards the flowery-pale peaks and the snow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Faint as the peaks in the glister of starlight,<br>
+ A figure on a silver-tinkling snow-white mule<br>
+ Climbs the steeply twining stony road<br>
+ Through murmuring vineyards to the gate<br>
+ That gaps with black the wan starlight.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The watchman on his three-legged stool<br>
+ Drowses in his beard, dreams<br>
+ He is a boy walking with strong strides<br>
+ Of slender thighs down a wet road,<br>
+ Where flakes of violet-colored April sky<br>
+ Have brimmed the many puddles till the road<br>
+ Is as a tattered path across another sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The watchman on his three-legged stool,<br>
+ Sits snoring in his beard;<br>
+ His dream is full of flowers massed in meadowland,<br>
+ Of larks and thrushes singing in the dawn,<br>
+ Of touch of women's lips and twining hands,<br>
+ And madness of the sprouting spring ...<br>
+ His ears a-sudden ring with the shrill cry:<br>
+ Open watchman of the gate,<br>
+ It is I, the Cyprian.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> &mdash;It is ruled by the burghers of this town<br>
+ Of Asolo, that from sundown<br>
+ To dawn no stranger shall come in,<br>
+ Be he even emperor, or doge's kin.<br>
+ &mdash;Open, watchman of the gate,<br>
+ It is I, the Cyprian.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">&mdash;Much scandal has been made of late<br>
+ By wandering women in this town.<br>
+ The laws forbid the opening of the gate<br>
+ Till next day once the sun is down.<br>
+ &mdash;Watchman know that I who wait<br>
+ Am Queen of Jerusalem, Queen<br>
+ Of Cypress, Lady of Asolo, friend<br>
+ Of the Doge and the Venetian State.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> There is a sound of drums, and torches flare<br>
+ Dims the star-swarm, and war-horns' braying<br>
+ Drowns the fiddling of crickets in the wall,<br>
+ Hoofs strike fire on the flinty road,<br>
+ Mules in damasked silk caparisoned<br>
+ Climb in long train, strange shadows in torchlight,<br>
+ The road that winds to the city gate.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The watchman, fumbling with his keys,<br>
+ Mumbles in his beard:&mdash;Had thought<br>
+ She was another Cyprian, strange the dreams<br>
+ That come when one has eaten tripe.<br>
+ The great gates creak and groan,<br>
+ The hinges shriek, and the Queen's white mule<br>
+ Stalks slowly through.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The watchman, in the shadow of the wall,<br>
+ Looks out with heavy eyes:&mdash;Strange,<br>
+ What cavalcade is this that clatters into Asolo?<br>
+ These are not men-at-arms,<br>
+ These ruddy boys with vineleaves in their hair!<br>
+ That great-bellied one no seneschal<br>
+ Can be, astride an ass so gauntily!<br>
+ Virgin Mother! Saints! They wear no clothes!</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And through the gate a warm wind blows,<br>
+ A dizzying perfume of the grape,<br>
+ And a great throng crying Cypris,<br>
+ Cyprian, with cymbals crashing and a shriek<br>
+ Of Thessalian pipes, and swaying of torches,<br>
+ That smell hot like wineskins of resin,<br>
+ That flare on arms empurpled and hot cheeks,<br>
+ And full shouting lips vermillion-red.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Youths and girls with streaming hair<br>
+ Pelting the night with flowers:<br>
+ Yellow blooms of Adonis, white<br>
+ scented stars of pale Narcissus,<br>
+ Mad incense of the blooming vine,<br>
+ And carmine passion of pomegranate blooms.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A-sudden all the strummings of the night,<br>
+ All the insect-stirrings, all the rustlings<br>
+ Of budding leaves, the sing-song<br>
+ Of waters brightly gurgling through meadowland,<br>
+ Are shouting with the shouting throng,<br>
+ Crying Cypris, Cyprian,<br>
+ Queen of the seafoam, Queen of the budding year,<br>
+ Queen of eyes that flame and hands that twine,<br>
+ Return to us, return from the fields of asphodel.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And all the grey town of Asolo<br>
+ Is full of lutes and songs of love,<br>
+ And vows exchanged from balcony to balcony<br>
+ Across the singing streets ...<br>
+ But in the garden of the nunnery,<br>
+ Of the sisters of poverty, daughters of dust,<br>
+ The cock crows. The cock crows.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The watchman rubs his old ribbed brow:<br>
+ Through the gate, in silk all dusty from the road,<br>
+ Into the grey town asleep under the stars,<br>
+ On tired mules and lean old war-horses<br>
+ Comes a crowd of quarrelling men-at-arms<br>
+ After a much-veiled lady with a falcon on her wrist.<br>
+ &mdash;This Asolo? What a nasty silent town<br>
+ He sends me to, that dull old doge.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And you, watchman, I've told you thrice<br>
+ That I am Cypress's Queen, Jerusalem's,<br>
+ And Lady of this dull village, Asolo;<br>
+ Tend your gates better. Are you deaf,<br>
+ That you stand blinking at me, pulling at your dirty beard?<br>
+ You shall be thrashed, when I rule Asolo.<br>
+ &mdash;What strange dreams, mumbled in his beard<br>
+ The ancient watchman, come from eating tripe.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3>VI<br>
+
+HARLEQUINADE</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Shrilly whispering down the lanes<br>
+ That serpent through the ancient night,<br>
+ They, the scoffers, the scornful of chains,<br>
+ Stride their turbulent flight.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The stars spin steel above their heads<br>
+ In the shut irrevocable sky;<br>
+ Gnarled thorn-branches tear to shreds<br>
+ Their cloaks of pageantry.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A wind blows bitter in the grey,<br>
+ Chills the sweat on throbbing cheeks,<br>
+ And tugs the gaudy rags away<br>
+ From their lean bleeding knees.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Their laughter startles the scarlet dawn<br>
+ Among a tangled spiderwork<br>
+ Of girdered steel, and shrills forlorn<br>
+ And dies in the rasp of wheels.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Whirling like gay prints that whirl<br>
+ In tatters of squalid gaudiness,<br>
+ Borne with dung and dust in the swirl<br>
+ Of wind down the endless street,<br>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> With thin lips laughing bitterly,<br>
+ Through the day smeared in sooty smoke<br>
+ That pours from each red chimney,<br>
+ They speed unseemily.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Women with unlustered hair,<br>
+ Men with huge ugly hands of oil,<br>
+ Children, impudently stare<br>
+ And point derisive hands.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Only ... where a barrel organ thrills<br>
+ Two small peak-chested girls to dance,<br>
+ And among the iron clatter spills<br>
+ A swiftening rhythmy song,</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> They march in velvet silkslashed hose,<br>
+ Strumming guitars and mellow lutes,<br>
+ Strutting pointed Spanish toes,<br>
+ A stately company.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VII<br>
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF DEBUSSY<br>
+
+<i>Good Friday, 1918.</i></h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">This is the feast of death<br>
+ We make of our pain God; <br>
+ We worship the nails and the rod <br>
+ and pain's last choking breath <br>
+ and the bleeding rack of the cross.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The women have wept away their tears,<br>
+ with red eyes turned on death, and loss <br>
+ of friends and kindred, have left the biers <br>
+ flowerless, and bound their heads in their blank veils, <br>
+ and climbed the steep slope of Golgotha; fails <br>
+ at last the wail of their bereavement, <br>
+ and all the jagged world of rocks and desert places <br>
+ stands before their racked sightless faces, <br>
+ as any ice-sea silent.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">This is the feast of conquering death.<br>
+ The beaten flesh worships the swishing rod. <br>
+ The lacerated body bows to its God, <br>
+ adores the last agonies of breath.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And one more has joined the unnumbered<br>
+ deathstruck multitudes <br>
+ who with the loved of old have slumbered <br>
+ ages long, where broods <br>
+ Earth the beneficent goddess, <br>
+ the ultimate queen of quietness, <br>
+ taker of all worn souls and bodies <br>
+ back into the womb of her first nothingness.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But ours, who in the iron night remain,<br>
+ ours the need, the pain <br>
+ of his departing. <br>
+ He had lived on out of a happier age <br>
+ into our strident torture-cage. <br>
+ He still could sing <br>
+ of quiet gardens under rain <br>
+ and clouds and the huge sky <br>
+ and pale deliciousness that is nearly pain. <br>
+ His was a new minstrelsy: <br>
+ strange plaints brought home out of the rich east, <br>
+ twanging songs from Tartar caravans, <br>
+ hints of the sounds that ceased <br>
+ with the stilling dawn, wailings of the night, <br>
+ echoes of the web of mystery that spans <br>
+ the world between the failing and the rising of the wan daylight <br>
+ of the sea, and of a woman's hair <br>
+ hanging gorgeous down a dungeon wall, <br>
+ evening falling on Tintagel, <br>
+ love lost in the mist of old despair.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Against the bars of our torture-cage<br>
+ we beat out our poor lives in vain.<br>
+ We live on cramped in an iron age<br>
+ like prisoners of old <br>
+ high on the world's battlements <br>
+ exposed until we die to the chilling rain <br>
+ crouched and chattering from cold <br>
+ for all scorn to stare at. <br>
+ And we watch one by one the great <br>
+ stroll leisurely out of the western gate <br>
+ and without a backward look at the strident city <br>
+ drink down the stirrup-cup of fate <br>
+ embrace the last obscurity.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> We worship the nails and the rod<br>
+ and pain's last choking breath. <br>
+ We make of our pain God. <br>
+ This is the feast of death.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VIII <br>
+
+PALINODE OF VICTORY</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Beer is free to soldiers<br>
+ In every bar and tavern <br>
+ As the regiments victorious <br>
+ March under garlands to the city square.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Beer is free to soldiers<br>
+ And lips are free, and women, <br>
+ Breathless, stand on tiptoe <br>
+ To see the flushed young thousands in advance.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> "Beer is free to soldiers;<br>
+ Give all to the liberators" ... <br>
+ Under wreaths of laurel <br>
+ And small and large flags fluttering, victorious, <br>
+ They of the frock-coats, with clink of official chains, <br>
+ Are welcoming with eloquence outpouring <br>
+ The liberating thousands, the victorious; <br>
+ In their speaking is a soaring of great phrases, <br>
+ Balloons of tissue paper, <br>
+ Hung with patriotic bunting, <br>
+ That rise serene into the blue, <br>
+ While the crowds with necks uptilted <br>
+ Gaze at their upward soaring <br>
+ Till they vanish in the blue; <br>
+ And each man feels the blood of life <br>
+ Rumble in his ears important <br>
+ With participation in Events.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">But not the fluttering of great flags<br>
+ Or the brass bands blaring, victorious, <br>
+ Or the speeches of persons in frock coats, <br>
+ Who pause for the handclapping of crowds, <br>
+ Not the stamp of men and women dancing, <br>
+ Or the bubbling of beer in the taverns,&mdash; <br>
+ Frothy mugs free for the victorious&mdash;, <br>
+ Not all the trombone-droning of Events, <br>
+ Can drown the inextinguishible laughter of the gods.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And they hear it, the old hooded houses,<br>
+ The great creaking peak-gabled houses, <br>
+ That gossip and chuckle to each other <br>
+ Across the clattering streets; <br>
+ They hear it, the old great gates, <br>
+ The grey gates with towers, <br>
+ Where in the changing shrill winds of the years <br>
+ Have groaned the poles of many various-colored banners. <br>
+ The poplars of the high-road hear it, <br>
+ From their trembling twigs comes a dry laughing, <br>
+ As they lean towards the glare of the city. <br>
+ And the old hard-laughing paving-stones, <br>
+ Old stones weary with the weariness <br>
+ Of the labor of men's footsteps, <br>
+ Hear it as they quake and clamour <br>
+ Under the garlanded wheels of the yawning confident cannon <br>
+ That are dragged victorious through the flutter of the city.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Beer is free to soldiers,<br>
+ Bubbles on wind-parched lips, <br>
+ Moistens easy kisses <br>
+ Lavished on the liberators.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Beer is free to soldiers<br>
+ All night in steaming bars, <br>
+ In halls delirious with dancing <br>
+ That spill their music into thronging streets.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> &mdash;All is free to soldiers,<br>
+ To the weary heroes <br>
+ Who have bled, and soaked <br>
+ The whole earth in their sacrificial blood, <br>
+ Who have with their bare flesh clogged <br>
+ The crazy wheels of Juggernaut, <br>
+ Freed the peoples from the dragon that devoured them, <br>
+ That scorched with greed their pleasant fields and villages, <br>
+ Their quiet delightful places:</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">So they of the frock-coats, amid wreaths and flags victorious,<br>
+ To the crowds in the flaring squares, <br>
+ And a murmurous applause <br>
+ Rises like smoke to mingle in the sky <br>
+ With the crashing of the bells.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">But, resounding in the sky,<br>
+ Louder than the tramp of feet, <br>
+ Louder than the crash of bells, <br>
+ Louder than the blare of bands, victorious, <br>
+ Shrieks the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The old houses rock with it,<br>
+ And wag their great peaked heads, <br>
+ The old gates shake, <br>
+ And the pavings ring with it, <br>
+ As with the iron tramp of old fighters, <br>
+ As with the clank of heels of the victorious, <br>
+ By long ages vanquished. <br>
+ The spouts in the gurgling fountains <br>
+ Wrinkle their shiny griffin faces, <br>
+ Splash the rhythm in their ice-fringed basins&mdash; <br>
+ Of the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And far up into the inky sky,<br>
+ Where great trailing clouds stride across the world, <br>
+ Darkening the spired cities, <br>
+ And the villages folded in the hollows of hills, <br>
+ And the shining cincture of railways, <br>
+ And the pale white twining roads, <br>
+ Sounds with the stir of quiet monotonous breath <br>
+ Of men and women stretched out sleeping, <br>
+ Sounds with the thin wail of pain <br>
+ Of hurt things huddled in darkness, <br>
+ Sounds with the victorious racket <br>
+ Of speeches and soldiers drinking, <br>
+ Sounds with the silence of the swarming dead&mdash; <br>
+ The inextinguishable laughter of the gods.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> O I would take my pen and write<br>
+ In might of words <br>
+ A pounding dytheramb <br>
+ Alight with teasing fires of hate, <br>
+ Or drone to numbness in the spell <br>
+ Of old loves long lived away <br>
+ A drowsy vilanelle. <br>
+ O I would build an Ark of words, <br>
+ A safe ciborium where to lay <br>
+ The secret soul of loveliness. <br>
+ O I would weave of words in rhythm <br>
+ A gaudily wrought pall <br>
+ For the curious cataphalque of fate.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">But my pen does otherwise.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> All I can write is the orange tinct with crimson<br>
+ of the beaks of the goose<br>
+ and of the wet webbed feet of the geese<br>
+ that crackle the skimming of ice<br>
+ and curve their white plump necks to<br> the water
+ in the manure-stained rivulet<br>
+ that runs down the broad village street;<br>
+ and of their cantankerous dancings and hissings,<br>
+ with beaks tilted up, half open<br>
+ and necks stiffly extended;<br>
+ and the curé's habit blowing in the stinging wind<br>
+ and his red globular face<br>
+ like a great sausage burst in the cooking<br>
+ that smiles<br>
+ as he takes the shovel hat off his head with a gesture,<br>
+ the hat held at arm's length,<br>
+ sweeping a broad curve, like a censor well swung;<br>
+ and, beyond the last grey gabled house in the village,<br>
+ the gaunt Christ<br>
+ that stretches bony arms and tortured hands<br>
+ to embrace the broad lands leprous with cold<br>
+ the furrowed fields and the meadows<br>
+ and the sprouting oats<br>
+ ghostly beneath the grey bitter blanket of hoarfrost.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Sausheim</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,<br>
+ Sat dining through the warm spring night,<br>
+ Spilling of the crocus-colored wine<br>
+ Glass after brimming glass to rouse<br>
+ The ghosts that dwell in books to flight<br>
+ Of word and image that, divine,<br>
+ In the draining of a glass would tear<br>
+ The lies from off reality,<br>
+ And the world in gaudy chaos spread<br>
+ Naked-new in the throbbing flare<br>
+ Of songs of long-fled spirits;&mdash;free<br>
+ For the wanderer devious roads to tread.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Names waved as banners in our talk:<br>
+ Lucretius, his master, all men who to balk<br>
+ The fear that shrivels us in choking rinds<br>
+ Have thrown their souls like pollen to the winds,<br>
+ Erasmus, Bruno who burned in Rome, Voltaire,<br>
+ All those whose lightning laughter cleaned the air<br>
+ Of the minds of men from the murk of fear-sprung gods,<br>
+ And straightened the backs bowed under the rulers' rods.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A hall full of the wine and chant of old songs,<br>
+ Smelling of lilacs and early roses and night,<br>
+ Clamorous with the names and phrases of the throngs<br>
+ Of the garlanded dead, and with glasses pledged to the light<br>
+ Of the dawning to come ...</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O in the morning we would go<br>
+ Out into the drudging world and sing<br>
+ And shout down dustblinded streets, hollo<br>
+ From hill to hill, and our thought fling<br>
+ Abroad through all the drowsy earth<br>
+ To wake the sleeper and the worker and the jailed<br>
+ In walls cemented of lies to mirth<br>
+ And dancing joy; laughingly unveiled<br>
+ From the sick mist of fear to run naked and leap<br>
+ And shake the nations from their snoring sleep.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O in the morning we would go<br>
+ Fantastically arrayed<br>
+ In silk and scarlet braid,<br>
+ In rich glitter like the sun on snow<br>
+ With banners of orange, vermillion, black,<br>
+ And jasper-handed swords,<br>
+ Anklets and tinkling gauds<br>
+ Of topaz set twistingly, or lac<br>
+ Laid over with charms of demons' heads<br>
+ In indigo and gold.<br>
+ Our going a music bold<br>
+ Would be, behind us the twanging threads<br>
+ Of mad guitars, the wail of lutes<br>
+ In wildest harmony;<br>
+ Lilting thumping free,<br>
+ Pipes and kettledrums and flutes<br>
+ And brazen braying trumpet-calls<br>
+ Would wake each work-drowsed town<br>
+ And shake it in laughter down,<br>
+ Untuning in dust the shuttered walls.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O in the morning we would go<br>
+ With doleful steps so dragging and slow<br>
+ And grievous mockery of woe<br>
+ And bury the old gods where they lay<br>
+ Sodden drunk with men's pain in the day,<br>
+ In the dawn's first new burning white ray<br>
+ That would shrivel like dead leaves the sacred lies,<br>
+ The avengers, the graspers, the wringers of sighs,<br>
+ Of blood from men's work-twisted hands, from their eyes<br>
+ Of tears without hope ... But in the burning day<br>
+ Of the dawn we would see them brooding to slay,<br>
+ In a great wind whirled like dead leaves away.<br>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,<br>
+ In our talk as banners waving names,<br>
+ Songs, phrases of the garlanded dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Yesterday I went back to that house ...<br>
+ Guttered candles where were flames,<br>
+ Shattered dust-grey glasses instead<br>
+ Of the fiery crocus-colored wine,<br>
+ Silence, cobwebs and a mouse<br>
+ Nibbling nibbling the moulded bread<br>
+ Those spring nights dipped in vintage divine<br>
+ In the dawnward chanting of our last carouse.</p>
+
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>1918&mdash;&mdash;1919</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>[p. 109]</span>
+<h2>VAGONES DE TERCERA</h2>
+
+
+<h4><i>Refrain</i></h4>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> HARD ON YOUR RUMP<br>
+ BUMP BUMP<br>
+ HARD ON YOUR RUMP<br>
+ BUMP BUMP</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> O the savage munching of the long dark train<br>
+ crunching up the miles<br>
+ crunching up the long slopes and the hills<br>
+ that crouch and sprawl through the night<br>
+ like animals asleep,<br>
+ gulping the winking towns<br>
+ and the shadow-brimmed valleys<br>
+ where lone trees twist their thorny arms.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The smoke flares red and yellow;<br>
+ the smoke curls like a long dragon's tongue<br>
+ over the broken lands.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The train with teeth flashing<br>
+ gnaws through the piecrust of hills and plains<br>
+ greedy of horizons.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Alcazar de San Juan</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>II<br>
+
+<small>TO R. H.</small></h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> I invite all the gods to dine<br>
+ on the hard benches of my third class coach<br>
+ that joggles over brown uplands<br>
+ dragged at the end of a rattling train.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I invite all the gods to dine,<br>
+ great gods and small gods, gods of air<br>
+ and earth and sea, and of the grey land<br>
+ where among ghostly rubbish heaps and cast-out things<br>
+ linger the strengthless dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I invite all the gods to dine,<br>
+ Jehovah and Crepitus and Sebek,<br>
+ the slimy crocodile ... But no;<br>
+ wait ... I revoke the invitation.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> For I have seen you, crowding gods,<br>
+ hungry gods. You have a drab official look.<br>
+ You have your pockets full of bills,<br>
+ claims for indemnity, for incense unsniffed<br>
+ since men first jumped up in their sleep<br>
+ and drove you out of doors.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Let me instead, O djinn that sows the stars<br>
+ and tunes the strings of the violin,<br>
+ have fifty lyric poets,<br>
+ not pale parson folk, occasional sonneteers,<br>
+ but sturdy fellows who ride dolphins,<br>
+ who need no wine to make them drunk,<br>
+ who do not fear to meet red death at the meanads' hands<br>
+ or to have their heads at last<br>
+ float vine-crowned on the Thracian sea.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Anacreon, a partridge-wing?<br>
+ A sip of wine, Simonides?<br>
+ Algy has gobbled all the pastry<br>
+ and left none for the Elizabethans<br>
+ who come arm in arm, singing bawdy songs,<br>
+ smelling of sack, from the Mermaid. Ronsard,<br>
+ will you eat nothing, only sniff roses?<br>
+ Those Anthologists have husky appetites!<br>
+ There's nothing left but a green banana<br>
+ unless that galleon comes from Venily<br>
+ with Hillyer breakfasts wrapped in sonnet-paper.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But they've all brought gods with them!<br>
+ Avaunt! Take them away, O djinn<br>
+ that paints the clouds and brings in the night<br>
+ in the rumble and clatter of the train<br>
+ cadences out of the past ... Did you not see<br>
+ how each saved a bit out of the banquet<br>
+ to take home and burn in quiet to his god?</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Madrid, Caceres, Portugal</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Three little harlots<br>
+ with artificial roses in their hair<br>
+ each at a window of a third-class coach<br>
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Too much powder and too much paint<br>
+ shining black hair.<br>
+ One sings to the clatter of wheels<br>
+ a swaying unending song<br>
+ that trails across the crimson slopes<br>
+ and the blue ranks of olives<br>
+ and the green ranks of vines.<br>
+ Three little harlots<br>
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The plowman drops the traces<br>
+ on the shambling oxen's backs<br>
+ turns his head and stares<br>
+ wistfully after the train.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The mule-boy stops his mules<br>
+ shows his white teeth and shouts<br>
+ a word, then urges dejectedly<br>
+ the mules to the road again.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The stout farmer on his horse<br>
+ straightens his broad felt hat,<br>
+ makes the horse leap, and waves<br>
+ grandiosely after the train.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Is it that the queen Astarte<br>
+ strides across the fallow lands<br>
+ to fertilize the swelling grapes<br>
+ amid shrieking of her corybants?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Too much powder and too much paint<br>
+ shining black hair.<br>
+ Three little harlots<br>
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Sevilla&mdash;&mdash;Merida</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> My desires have gone a-hunting,<br>
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,<br>
+ hounds that have lost the scent.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Outside, behind the white swirling patterns of coalsmoke,<br>
+ hunched fruit-trees slide by<br>
+ slowly pirouetting,<br>
+ and poplars and aspens on tiptoe<br>
+ peer over each other's shoulders<br>
+ at the long black rattling train;<br>
+ colts sniff and fling their heels in air<br>
+ across the dusty meadows,<br>
+ and the sun now and then<br>
+ looks with vague interest through the clouds<br>
+ at the blonde harvest mottled with poppies,<br>
+ and the Joseph's cloak of fields, neatly sewn together with hedges,<br>
+ that hides the grisly skeleton<br>
+ of the elemental earth.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">My mad desires<br>
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,<br>
+ hounds that have lost the scent.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Misto</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>V<br>
+
+VIRGEN DE LAS ANGUSTIAS</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The street is full of drums<br>
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.<br>
+ Above the roofs in the shaking towers<br>
+ the bells yawn.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The street is full of drums<br>
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.<br>
+ The flanks of the houses glow<br>
+ with the warm glow of candles,<br>
+ and above the upturned faces,<br>
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe<br>
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold,<br>
+ swaying on the necks of men, swaying<br>
+ with the strong throb of drums,<br>
+ haltingly she advances.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> What manner of woman are you,<br>
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,<br>
+ you who look bitterly<br>
+ at the dead man on your knees,<br>
+ while your foot in an embroidered slipper<br>
+ tramples the new moon?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Haltingly she advances,<br>
+ swaying above the upturned faces<br>
+ and the shuffling feet.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the dark unthought-of years<br>
+ men carried you thus<br>
+ down streets where drums throbbed<br>
+ and torches flared,<br>
+ bore you triumphantly,<br>
+ mourner and queen,<br>
+ followed you with shuffling feet<br>
+ and upturned faces.<br>
+ You it was who sat<br>
+ in the swirl of your robes<br>
+ at the granary door,<br>
+ and brought the orange maize<br>
+ black with mildew<br>
+ or fat with milk, to the harvest:<br>
+ and made the ewes<br>
+ to swell with twin lambs,<br>
+ or bleating, to sicken among the nibbling flock.<br>
+ You wept the dead youth<br>
+ laid lank and white in the empty hut,<br>
+ sat scarring your cheeks with the dark-cowled women.<br>
+ You brought the women safe<br>
+ through the shrieks and the shuddering pain<br>
+ of the birth of a child;<br>
+ and, when the sprouting spring<br>
+ poured fire in the blood of the young men,<br>
+ and made the he-goats dance stiff-legged<br>
+ in the sloping thyme-scented pastures,<br>
+ you were the full-lipped wanton enchantress<br>
+ who led on moonless nights,<br>
+ when it was very dark in the high valleys,<br>
+ the boys from the villages<br>
+ to find the herd-girls among the munching sweet-breathed cattle<br>
+ beside their fires of thyme-sticks,<br>
+ on their soft beds of sweet-fern.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Many names have they called you,<br>
+ Lady of laughing and weeping,<br>
+ shuffling after you, borne<br>
+ on the necks of men down town streets<br>
+ with drums and red torches:<br>
+ dolorous one, weeping the dead<br>
+ youth of the year ever dying,<br>
+ or full-breasted empress of summer,<br>
+ Lady of the Corybants<br>
+ and the headlong routs<br>
+ that maddened with cymbals and shouting<br>
+ the hot nights of amorous languor<br>
+ when the gardens swooned under the scent<br>
+ of jessamine and nard.<br>
+ You were the slim-waisted Lady of Doves,<br>
+ you were Ishtar and Ashtaroth,<br>
+ for whom the Canaanite girls<br>
+ gave up their earrings and anklets and their own slender bodies,<br>
+ you were the dolorous Isis,<br>
+ and Aphrodite.<br>
+ It was you who on the Syrian shore<br>
+ mourned the brown limbs of the boy Adonis.<br>
+ You were the queen of the crescent moon,<br>
+ the Lady of Ephesus,<br>
+ giver of riches,<br>
+ for whom the great temple<br>
+ reeked with burning and spices.<br>
+ And now in the late bitter years,<br>
+ your head is bowed with bitterness;<br>
+ across your knees lies the lank body<br>
+ of the Crucified.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Rockets shriek and roar and burst<br>
+ against the velvet sky;<br>
+ the wind flutters the candle-flames<br>
+ above the long white slanting candles.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Swaying above the upturned faces<br>
+ to the strong throb of drums,<br>
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,<br>
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe<br>
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold<br>
+ haltingly, through the pulsing streets,<br>
+ advances Mary, Virgin of Pain.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Granada</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VI<br>
+
+<small>TO R. J.</small></h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> It would be fun, you said,<br>
+ sitting two years ago at this same table,<br>
+ at this same white marble café table,<br>
+ if people only knew what fun it would be<br>
+ to laugh the hatred out of soldiers' eyes ...</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> &mdash;If I drink beer with my enemy,<br>
+ you said, and put your lips to the long glass,<br>
+ and give him what he wants, if he wants it so hard<br>
+ that he would kill me for it,<br>
+ I rather think he'd give it back to me&mdash;<br>
+ You laughed, and stretched your long legs out across the floor.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I wonder in what mood you died,<br>
+ out there in that great muddy butcher-shop,<br>
+ on that meaningless dicing-table of death.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Did you laugh aloud at the futility,<br>
+ and drink death down in a long draught,<br>
+ as you drank your beer two years ago<br>
+ at this same white marble café table?<br>
+ Or had the darkness drowned you?</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Café Oro del Rhin</i><br>
+ <i>Plaza de Santa Ana</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Down the road<br>
+ against the blue haze<br>
+ that hangs before the great ribbed forms of the mountains<br>
+ people come home from the fields;<br>
+ they pass a moment in relief<br>
+ against the amber frieze of the sunset<br>
+ before turning the bend<br>
+ towards the twinkling smoke-breathing village.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A boy in sandals with brown dusty legs<br>
+ and brown cheeks where the flush of evening<br>
+ has left its stain of wine.<br>
+ A donkey with a jingling bell<br>
+ and ears askew.<br>
+ Old women with water jars<br>
+ of red burnt earth.<br>
+ Men bent double under burdens of faggots<br>
+ that trail behind them the fragrance<br>
+ of scorched uplands.<br>
+ A child tugging at the end of a string<br>
+ a much inflated sow.<br>
+ A slender girl who presses to her breast<br>
+ big bluefrilled cabbages.<br>
+ And a shepherd in the clinging rags of his cloak<br>
+ who walks with lithe unhurried stride<br>
+ behind the crowded backs of his flock.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The road is empty<br>
+ only the swaying tufts of oliveboughs<br>
+ against the fading sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Down on the steep hillside<br>
+ a man still follows the yoke<br>
+ of lumbering oxen<br>
+ plowing the heavy crimson-stained soil<br>
+ while the chill silver mists<br>
+ steal up about him.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">I stand in the empty road<br>
+ and feel in my arms and thighs<br>
+ the strain of his body<br>
+ as he leans far to one side<br>
+ and wrenches the plow from the furrow,<br>
+ feel my blood throb in time to his slow careful steps<br>
+ as he follows the plow in the furrow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Red earth<br>
+ giver of all things<br>
+ of the yellow grain and the oil<br>
+ and the wine to all gods sacred<br>
+ of the fragrant sticks that crackle in the hearth<br>
+ and the crisp swaying grass<br>
+ that swells to dripping the udders of the cows,<br>
+ of the jessamine the girls stick in their hair<br>
+ when they walk in twos and threes in the moonlight,<br>
+ and of the pallid autumnal crocuses ...<br>
+ are there no fields yet to plow?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Are there no fields yet to plow<br>
+ where with sweat and straining of muscles<br>
+ good things may be wrung from the earth<br>
+ and brown limbs going home tired through the evening?</p>
+
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>Lanjaron</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VIII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">O such a night for scaling garden walls;<br>
+ to push the rose shoots silently aside<br>
+ and pause a moment where the water falls<br>
+ into the fountain, softly troubling the wide<br>
+ bridge of stars tremblingly mirrored there<br>
+ terror-pale and shaking as the real stars shake<br>
+ in crystal fear lest the rustle of silence break<br>
+ with a watchdog's barking.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O to scale the garden wall and fling<br>
+ my life into the bowl of an adventure,<br>
+ stake on the silver dice the past and future<br>
+ forget the odds and lying in the garden sing<br>
+ in time to the flutter of the waiting stars<br>
+ madness of love for the slender ivory white<br>
+ of her body hidden among dark silks where<br>
+ is languidest the attar weighted air.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> To drink in one strong jessamine scented draught<br>
+ sadness of flesh, twining madness of the night.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">O such a night for scaling garden walls;<br>
+ yet I lie alone in my narrow bed<br>
+ and stare at the blank walls, forever afraid,<br>
+ of a watchdog's barking.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Granada</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Rain-swelled the clouds of winter<br>
+ drag themselves like purple swine across the plain.<br>
+ On the trees the leaves hang dripping<br>
+ fast dripping away all the warm glamour<br>
+ all the ceremonial paint of gorgeous bountiful autumn.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The black wet boles are vacant and dead.<br>
+ Among the trampled leaves already mud<br>
+ rot the husks of the rich nuts. On the hills<br>
+ the snow has frozen the last pale crocuses<br>
+ and the winds have robbed the smell of the thyme.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Down the wet streets of the town<br>
+ from doors where the light spills out orange<br>
+ over the shining irregular cobbles<br>
+ and dances in ripples on gurgling gutters;<br>
+ sounds the zambomba.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> In the room beside the slanting street<br>
+ round the tray of glowing coals<br>
+ in their stained blue clothes, dusty<br>
+ with the dust of workshops and factories,<br>
+ the men and boys sit quiet;<br>
+ their large hands dangle idly<br>
+ or rest open on their knees<br>
+ and they talk in soft tired voices.<br>
+ Crosslegged in a corner a child with brown hands<br>
+ sounds the zambomba.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Outside down the purple street<br>
+ stopping sometimes at a door, breathing deep<br>
+ the heady wine of sunset, stride with clattering steps<br>
+ those to whom the time will never come<br>
+ of work-stiffened unrestless hands.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The rain-swelled clouds of winter roam<br>
+ like a herd of swine over the town and the dark plain.<br>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The wineshops full of shuffling and talk, tanned faces<br>
+ bright eyes, moist lips moulding desires<br>
+ blow breaths of strong wine in the faces of passers-by.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> There are guards in the storehouse doors<br>
+ where are gathered the rich fruits of autumn, the grain<br>
+ the sweet figs and raisins; sullen blood tingling to madness<br>
+ they stride by who have not reaped.<br>
+ Sounds the zambomba.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Albaicin</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> The train throbs doggedly<br>
+ over the gleaming rails<br>
+ fleeing the light-green flanks of hills<br>
+ dappled with alternate shadow of clouds,<br>
+ fleeing the white froth of orchards,<br>
+ of clusters of apples and cherries in flower,<br>
+ fleeing the wide lush meadows,<br>
+ wealthy with cowslips,<br>
+ and the tramping horses and backward-strained bodies of plowmen,<br>
+ fleeing the gleam of the sky in puddles and glittering waters<br>
+ the train throbs doggedly<br>
+ over the ceaseless rails<br>
+ spurning the verdant grace<br>
+ of April's dainty apparel;<br>
+ so do my desires<br>
+ spurn those things which are behind<br>
+ in hunger of horizons.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Rapido: Valencia&mdash;&mdash;Barcelona</i><br>
+ <i>1919&mdash;&mdash;1920</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>[p. 139]</span>
+
+<h2>QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE</h2>
+<h3>I</h3>
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">See how the frail white pagodas of blossom<br>
+ stand up on the great green hills<br>
+ of the chestnuts<br>
+ and how the sun has burned the wintry murk<br>
+ and all the stale odor of anguish<br>
+ out of the sky<br>
+ so that the swollen clouds bellying with sail<br>
+ can parade in pomp like white galleons.<br>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And they move the slow plumed clouds<br>
+ above the spidery grey webs of cities<br>
+ above fields full of golden chime<br>
+ of cowslips<br>
+ above warbling woods where the ditches<br>
+ are wistfully patined<br>
+ with primroses pale as the new moon<br>
+ above hills all golden with gorse<br>
+ and gardens frothed<br>
+
+
+
+ to the brim of their grey stone walls<br>
+ with apple bloom, cherry bloom,<br>
+ and the raspberry-stained bloom of peaches and almonds.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">So do the plumed clouds sail<br>
+ swelling with satiny pomp of parade<br>
+ towards somewhere far away<br>
+ where in a sparkling silver sea<br>
+ full of little flakes of indigo<br>
+ the great salt waves have heaved and stirred<br>
+ into blossoming of foam,<br>
+ and lifted on the rush of the warm wind<br>
+ towards the gardens and the spring-mad cities of the shore<br>
+ Aphrodite Aphrodite is reborn.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And even in this city park<br>
+ galled with iron rails<br>
+ shrill with the clanging of ironbound wheels<br>
+ on the pavings of the unquiet streets,<br>
+ little children run and dance and sing<br>
+ with spring-madness in the sun,<br>
+ and the frail white pagodas of blossom<br>
+ stand up on the great green hills<br>
+ of the chestnuts<br>
+ and all their tiers of tiny gargoyle faces<br>
+ stick out gold and red-striped tongues<br>
+ in derision of the silly things of men.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i><a name="Jardin_du_Luxembourg" id="Jardin_du_Luxembourg"></a>Jardin du Luxembourg</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The shadows make strange streaks and mottled arabesques<br>
+ of violet on the apricot-tinged walks<br>
+ where the thin sunlight lies<br>
+ like flower-petals.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> On the cool wind there is a fragrance<br>
+ indefinable<br>
+ of strawberries crushed in deep woods.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And the flushed sunlight,<br>
+ the wistful patterns of shadow<br>
+ on gravel walks between tall elms<br>
+ and broad-leaved lindens,<br>
+ the stretch of country,<br>
+ yellow and green,<br>
+ full of little particolored houses,<br>
+ and the faint intangible sky,<br>
+ have lumped my soggy misery,<br>
+ like clay in the brown deft hands of a potter,<br>
+ and moulded a song of it.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ralign44"><i>Saint Germain-en-Laye</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">In the dark the river spins,<br>
+ Laughs and ripples never ceasing,<br>
+ Swells to gurgle under arches,<br>
+ Swishes past the bows of barges,<br>
+ in its haste to swirl away<br>
+ From the stone walls of the city<br>
+ That has lamps that weight the eddies<br>
+ Down with snaky silver glitter,<br>
+ As it flies it calls me with it<br>
+ Through the meadows to the sea.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I close the door on it, draw the bolts,<br>
+ Climb the stairs to my silent room;<br>
+ But through the window that swings open<br>
+ Comes again its shuttle-song,<br>
+ Spinning love and night and madness,<br>
+ Madness of the spring at sea.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The streets are full of lilacs<br>
+ lilacs in boys' buttonholes<br>
+ lilacs at women's waists;<br>
+ arms full of lilacs, people trail behind them through the moist night<br>
+ long swirls of fragrance,<br>
+ fragrance of gardens<br>
+ fragrance of hedgerows where they have wandered<br>
+ all the May day<br>
+ where the lovers have held each others hands<br>
+ and lavished vermillion kisses<br>
+ under the portent of the swaying plumes<br>
+ of the funereal lilacs.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The streets are full of lilacs<br>
+ that trail long swirls and eddies of fragrance<br>
+ arabesques of fragrance<br>
+ like the arabesques that form and fade<br>
+ in the fleeting ripples of the jade-green river.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ralign44"><i>Porte Maillot</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> As a gardener in a pond<br>
+ splendid with lotus and Indian nenuphar<br>
+ wades to his waist in the warm black water<br>
+ stooping to this side and that to cull the snaky stems<br>
+ of the floating white glittering lilies<br>
+ groping to break the harsh stems of the imperious lotus<br>
+ lifting the huge flowers high<br>
+ in a cluster in his hand<br>
+ till they droop against the moon;<br>
+ so I grope through the streets of the night<br>
+ culling out of the pool<br>
+ of the spring-reeking, rain-reeking city<br>
+ gestures and faces.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Place St. Michel</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VI<br>
+
+<small>TO A. K. MC C.</small>
+</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> This is a garden<br>
+ where through the russet mist of clustered trees<br>
+ and strewn November leaves,<br>
+ they crunch with vainglorious heels<br>
+ of ancient vermillion<br>
+ the dry dead of spent summer's greens,<br>
+ and stalk with mincing sceptic steps<br>
+ and sound of snuffboxes snapping<br>
+ to the capping of an epigram,<br>
+ in fluffy attar-scented wigs ...<br>
+ the exquisite Augustans.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Tuileries</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">They come from the fields flushed<br>
+ carrying bunches of limp flowers<br>
+ they plucked on teeming meadows<br>
+ and moist banks scented of mushrooms.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">They come from the fields tired<br>
+ softness of flowers in their eyes<br>
+ and moisture of rank sprouting meadows.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> They stroll back with tired steps<br>
+ lips still soft with the softness of petals<br>
+ voices faint with the whisper of woods;<br>
+ and they wander through the darkling streets<br>
+ full of stench of bodies and clothes and merchandise<br>
+ full of the hard hum of iron things;<br>
+ and into their cheeks that the wind had burned and the sun<br>
+ that kisses burned out on the rustling meadows<br>
+ into their cheeks soft with lazy caresses<br>
+ comes sultry<br>
+ caged breath of panthers<br>
+ fetid, uneasy<br>
+ fury of love sprouting hot in the dust and stench<br>
+ of walls and clothes and merchandise,<br>
+ pent in the stridence of the twilight streets.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And they look with terror in each other's eyes<br>
+ and part their hot hands stained with grasses and flowerstalks<br>
+ and are afraid of their kisses.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VIII<br>
+
+EMBARQUEMENT POUR CYTHERE<br>
+
+<small>AFTER WATTEAU</small></h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> The mists have veiled the far end of the lake<br>
+ this sullen amber afternoon; <br>
+ our island is quite hidden, and the peaks<br>
+ hang wan as clouds above the ruddy haze.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Come, give your hand that lies so limp,<br>
+ a tuberose among brown oak-leaves;<br>
+ put your hand in mine and let us leave<br>
+ this bank where we have lain the day long.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the boat the naked oarsman stands.<br>
+ Let us walk faster, or do you fear to tear<br>
+ that brocaded dress in apricot and grey?<br>
+ Love, there are silk cushions in the stern<br>
+ maroon and apple-green,<br>
+ crocus-yellow, crimson, amber-grey.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> We will lie and listen to the waves<br>
+ slap soft against the prow, and watch the boy<br>
+ slant his brown body to the long oar-stroke.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But, love, we are more beautiful than he.<br>
+ We have forgotten the grey sick yearning nights<br>
+ brushed off the old cobwebs of desire;<br>
+ we stand strong<br>
+ immortal as the slender brown boy who waits<br>
+ to row our boat to the island.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But love how your steps drag.<br>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And what is this bundle of worn brocades I press<br>
+ so passionately to me? Old rags of the past,<br>
+ snippings of Helen's dress, of Melisande's,<br>
+ scarfs of old paramours rotted in the grave<br>
+ ages and ages since.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">No lake<br>
+ the ink yawns at me from the writing table.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>IX<br>
+
+LA RUE DU TEMPS PASSE
+</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Far away where the tall grey houses fade<br>
+ A lamp blooms dully through the dusk,<br>
+ Through the effacing dusk that gently veils<br>
+ The traceried balconies and the wreaths<br>
+ Carved above the shuttered windows<br>
+ Of forgotten houses.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Behind one of the crumbled garden walls<br>
+ A pale woman sits in drooping black<br>
+ And stares with uncomprehending eyes<br>
+ At the thorny angled twigs that bore<br>
+ Years ago in the moon-spun dusk<br>
+ One scarlet rose.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> In an old high room where the shadows troop<br>
+ On tiptoe across the creaking boards<br>
+ A shrivelled man covers endless sheets<br>
+ Rounding out in his flourishing hand<br>
+ Sentence after sentence loud<br>
+ With dead kings' names.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Looking out at the vast grey violet dusk<br>
+ A pale boy sits in a window, a book<br>
+ Wide open on his knees, and fears<br>
+ With cold choked fear the thronging lives<br>
+ That lurk in the shadows and fill the dusk<br>
+ With menacing steps.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Far away the gaslamp glows dull gold<br>
+ A vague tulip in the misty night.<br>
+ The clattering drone of a distant tram<br>
+ Grows loud and fades with a hum of wires<br>
+ Leaving the street breathless with silence, chill<br>
+ And the listening houses.</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Bordeaux</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> <i>O douce Sainte Geneviève<br>
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the smoke of morning the bridges<br>
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Bending their black smokestacks far back<br>
+ muddling themselves in their spiralling smoke<br>
+ the tugboats pass under the bridges<br>
+ and behind them<br>
+ stately<br>
+ gliding smooth like clouds<br>
+ the barges come<br>
+ black barges<br>
+ with blunt prows spurning the water gently<br>
+ gently rebuffing the opulent wavelets<br>
+ of opal and topaz and sapphire,<br>
+ barges casually come from far towns<br>
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The tugboats shrieks and shrieks again<br>
+ calling beyond the next bend and away.<br>
+ In the smoke of morning the bridges<br>
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>O douce Sainte Geneviève<br>
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Big hairy-hoofed horses are drawing<br>
+ carts loaded with flour-sacks,<br>
+ white flour-sacks, bluish<br>
+ in the ruddy flush of the morning streets.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">On one cart two boys perch<br>
+ wrestling and their arms and faces<br>
+ glow ruddy against the white flour-sacks<br>
+ as the sun against the flour-white sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>O douce Sainte Geneviève<br>
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Under the arcade<br>
+ loud as castanettes with steps<br>
+ of little women hurrying to work<br>
+ an old hag who has a mole on her chin<br>
+ that is tufted with long white hairs<br>
+ sells incense-sticks, and the trail of their strangeness lingers<br>
+ in the many-scented streets<br>
+ among the smells of markets and peaches<br>
+ and the must of old books from the quays<br>
+ and the warmth of early-roasting coffee.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The old hag's incense has smothered<br>
+ the timid scent of wild strawberries<br>
+ and triumphantly mingled with the strong reek from the river<br>
+ of green slime along stonework of docks<br>
+ and the pitch-caulked decks of barges,<br>
+ barges casually come from far towns<br>
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"><i>O douce Sainte Geneviève<br>
+ ramène moi a ta ville, Paris.</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>XI<br>
+A L'OMBRE DES JEUNES FILLES EN FLEURS</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">And now when I think of you<br>
+ I see you on your piano-stool<br>
+ finger the ineffectual bright keys<br>
+ and even in the pinkish parlor glow<br>
+ your eyes sea-grey are very wide<br>
+ as if they carried the reflection<br>
+ of mocking black pinebranches<br>
+ and unclimbed red-purple mountains mist-tattered<br>
+ under a violet-gleaming evening.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> But chirruping of marriageable girls<br>
+ voices of eager, wise virgins,<br>
+ no lamp unlit every wick well trimmed,<br>
+ fill the pinkish parlor chairs,<br>
+ bobbing hats and shrill tinkling teacups<br>
+ in circle after circle about you<br>
+ so that I can no longer see your eyes.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Shall I tear down the pinkish curtains<br>
+ smash the imitation ivory keyboard<br>
+ that you may pluck with bare fingers on the strings?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I sit cramped in my chair.<br>
+ Futility tumbles everlastingly<br>
+ like great flabby snowflakes about me.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Were they in your eyes, or mine<br>
+ the tattered mists about the mountains<br>
+ and the pitiless grey sea?</p>
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>1919</i></p></div>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>[p. 163]</span>
+
+<h2>ON FOREIGN TRAVEL</h2>
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Grey riverbanks in the dusk<br>
+ Melting away into mist<br>
+ A hard breeze sharp off the sea<br>
+ The ship's screws lunge and throb<br>
+ And the voices of sailors singing.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">O I have come wandering<br>
+ Out of the dust of many lands<br>
+ Ears by all tongues jangled<br>
+ Feet worn by all arduous ways&mdash;<br>
+ O the voices of sailors singing.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> What nostalgia of sea<br>
+ And free new-scented spaces<br>
+ dreams of towns vermillion-gate<br>
+ Must be in their blood as in mine<br>
+ That the sailors long so in singing.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Churned water marbled astern<br>
+ Grey riverbanks in the dusk<br>
+ Melting away into mist<br>
+ And a shrill wind hard off the sea.<br>
+ O the voices of sailors singing.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Padding lunge of a camel's stride<br>
+ turning the sharp purple flints. A man sings:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent">Breast deep in the dawn<br>
+ a queen of the east;<br>
+ the woolen folds of her robe<br>
+ hang white and straight<br>
+ as the hard marble columns<br>
+ of the temple of Jove.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A thousand days<br>
+ the pebbles have scuttled<br>
+ under the great pads of my camels.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A thousands days<br>
+ like bite of sour apples<br>
+ have been bitter with desire in my mouth.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A thousand days<br>
+ of cramped legs flecked<br>
+ with green slobber of dromedaries.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">At the crest of the road<br>
+ that transfixes the sun<br>
+ she awaits<br>
+ me lean with desire<br>
+ with muscles tightened<br>
+ by these thousand days<br>
+ pallid with dust<br>
+ sinewy<br>
+ naked before her.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Padding lunge of a camel's stride<br>
+ over the flint-strewn hills. A man sings:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent">I have heard men sing songs<br>
+ of how in scarlet pools<br>
+ in the west in purpurate mist<br>
+ that bursts from the sun trodden<br>
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness<br>
+ a woman with great breasts<br>
+ thighs white like wintry mountains<br>
+ bathes her nakedness.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I have lain biting my cheeks<br>
+ many nights with ears murmurous<br>
+ with the songs of these strange men.<br>
+ My arms have stung as if burned<br>
+ by the touch of red ants with anguish<br>
+ to circle strokingly<br>
+ her bulging smooth body.<br>
+ My blood has soured to gall.<br>
+ The ten toes of my feet are hard<br>
+ as buzzards' claws from the stones<br>
+ of roads, from clambering<br>
+ cold rockfaces of hills.<br>
+ For uncountable days' journeys<br>
+ jouncing on the humps of camels<br>
+ iron horizons have swayed<br>
+ like the rail of a ship at sea<br>
+ mountains have tossed like wine<br>
+ shaken hard in a wine cup.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I have heard men sing songs<br>
+ of the scarlet pools of the sunset.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> Two men, bundled pyramids of brown<br>
+ abreast, bow to the long slouch<br>
+ of their slowstriding camels.<br>
+ Shrilly the yellow man sings:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">In the courts of Han<br>
+ green fowls with carmine tails<br>
+ peck at the yellow grain<br>
+ court ladies scatter<br>
+ with tiny ivory hands,<br>
+ the tails of the fowls<br>
+ droop with multiple elegance<br>
+ over the wan blue stones<br>
+ as the hands of courtladies<br>
+ droop on the goldstiffened silk<br>
+ of their angular flower-embroidered dresses.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">In the courts of Han<br>
+ little hairy dogs<br>
+ are taught to bark twice<br>
+ at the mention of the name of Confucius.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The twittering of the women<br>
+ that hop like silly birds<br>
+ through the courts of Han<br>
+ became sharp like little pins<br>
+ in my ears, their hands in my hands<br>
+ rigid like small ivory scoops<br>
+ to scoop up mustard with<br>
+ when I had heard the songs<br>
+ of the western pools where the great queen<br>
+ is throned on a purple throne<br>
+ in whose vast encompassing arms<br>
+ all bitter twigs of desire<br>
+ burst into scarlet bloom.</p></div>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Padding lunge of the camel's stride<br>
+ over flint-strewn hills. The brown man sings:</p></div>
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">On the house-encumbered hills<br>
+ of great marble Rome<br>
+ no man has ever counted the columns<br>
+ no man has ever counted the statues<br>
+ no man has ever counted the laws<br>
+ sharply inscribed in plain writing<br>
+ on tablets of green bronze.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">At brightly lit tables<br>
+ in a great brick basilica<br>
+ seven hundred literate slaves<br>
+ copy on rolls of thin parchment<br>
+ adorned by seals and purple bows<br>
+ the taut philosophical epigrams<br>
+ announced by the emperor each morning<br>
+ while taking his bath.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A day of rain and roaring gutters<br>
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man<br>
+ who clenched about me hard-muscled arms<br>
+ and whispered with moist lips against my ear<br>
+ filled me with smell and taste of spices<br>
+ with harsh panting need to seek out the great<br>
+ calm implacable queen of the east<br>
+ who erect against sunrise holds in the folds<br>
+ of her woolen robe all knowledge of delight<br>
+ against whose hard white flesh my flesh<br>
+ will sear to cinders in a last sheer flame.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Among the house-encumbered hills<br>
+ of great marble Rome<br>
+ I could no longer read the laws<br>
+ inscribed on tablets of green bronze.<br>
+ The maxims of the emperor's philosophy<br>
+ were croaking of toads in my ears.<br>
+ A day of rain and roaring gutters<br>
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man:<br>
+ ... breast deep in the dawn<br>
+ a queen of the east.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The camels growl and stretch out their necks,<br>
+ their slack lips jiggle as they trot<br>
+ towards a water hole in a pebbly torrent bed.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The riders pile dry twigs for a fire<br>
+ and gird up their long gowns to warm<br>
+ at the flame their lean galled legs.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Says the yellow man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">You have seen her in the west?</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Says the brown man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">Hills and valleys<br>
+ stony roads.<br>
+ In the towns<br>
+ the bright eyes of women<br>
+ looking out from lattices.<br>
+ Camps in the desert<br>
+ where men passed the time of day<br>
+ where were embers of fires<br>
+ and greenish piles of camel-dung.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">You have seen her in the east?</p></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Says the yellow man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">Only red mountains and bare plains, <br>
+ the blue smoke of villages at evening, <br>
+ brown girls bathing <br>
+ along banks of streams.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> I have slept with no woman<br>
+ only my dream.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Says the brown man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">I have looked in no woman's eyes<br>
+ only stared along eastward roads.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> They eat out of copper bowls beside the fire in silence.<br>
+ They loose the hobbles from the knees of their camels <br>
+ and shout as they jerk to their feet. <br>
+ The yellow man rides west. <br>
+ The brown man rides east. <br>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Their songs trail among the split rocks of the desert. <br>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Sings the yellow man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">I have heard men sing songs<br>
+ of how in the scarlet pools <br>
+ that spurt from the sun trodden <br>
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness <br>
+ a woman with great breasts <br>
+ bathes her nakedness.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Sings the brown man:</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">After a thousand days<br>
+ of cramped legs flecked <br>
+ with green slobber of dromedaries <br>
+ she awaits <br>
+ me lean with desire <br>
+ pallid with dust <br>
+ sinewy <br>
+ naked before her.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Their songs fade in the empty desert.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">There was a king in China.
+
+ <p class="noindent">He sat in a garden under a moon of gold<br>
+ while a black slave scratched his back <br>
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald. <br>
+ Beyond the tulip bed <br>
+ where the tulips were stiff goblets of fiery wine <br>
+ stood the poets in a row.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">One sang the intricate patterns of snowflakes<br>
+ One sang the henna-tipped breasts of girls dancing <br>
+ and of yellow limbs rubbed with attar. <br>
+ One sang red bows of Tartar horsemen <br>
+ and whine of arrows and blood-clots on new spearshafts <br>
+ The others sang of wine and dragons coiled in purple bowls, <br>
+ and one, in a droning voice <br>
+ recited the maxims of Lao Tse.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">(Far off at the walls of the city<br>
+ groaning of drums and a clank of massed spearmen. <br>
+ Gongs in the temples.)</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The king sat under a moon of gold<br>
+ while a black slave scratched his back <br>
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald. <br>
+ The long gold nails of his left hand <br>
+ twined about a red tulip blotched with black, <br>
+ a tulip shaped like a dragon's mouth <br>
+ or the flames bellying about a pagoda of sandalwood. <br>
+ The long gold nails of his right hand <br>
+ were held together at the tips <br>
+ in an attitude of discernment: <br>
+ to award the tulip to the poet <br>
+ of the poets that stood in a row. </p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">(Gongs in the temples.<br>
+ Men with hairy arms <br>
+ climbing on the walls of the city. <br>
+ They have red bows slung on their backs; <br>
+ their hands grip new spearshafts.)</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">The guard of the tomb of the king's great grandfather<br>
+ stood with two swords under the moon of gold. <br>
+ With one sword he very carefully <br>
+ slit the base of his large belly <br>
+ and inserted the other and fell upon it <br>
+ and sprawled beside the king's footstool. <br>
+ His blood sprinkled the tulips <br>
+ and the poets in a row.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> (The gongs are quiet in the temples.<br>
+ Men with hairy arms <br>
+ scattering with taut bows through the city; <br>
+ there is blood on new spearshafts.)</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The long gold nails of the king's right hand<br>
+ were held together at the tips <br>
+ in an attitude of discernment. <br>
+ The geometrical glitter of snowflakes, <br>
+ the pointed breasts of yellow girls <br>
+ crimson with henna, <br>
+ the swirl of river-eddies about a barge <br>
+ where men sit drinking, <br>
+ the eternal dragon of magnificence.... <br>
+ Beyond the tulip bed <br>
+ stood the poets in a row.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The garden full of spearshafts and shouting<br>
+ and the whine of arrows and the red bows of Tartars <br>
+ and trampling of the sharp hoofs of war-horses. <br>
+ Under the golden moon <br>
+ the men with hairy arms <br>
+ struck off the heads of the tulips in the tulip-bed <br>
+ and of the poets in a row.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The king lifted the hand that held the flaming dragon-flower. </p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Him of the snowflakes, he said.<br>
+ On a new white spearshaft <br>
+ the men with hairy arms <br>
+ spitted the king and the black slave <br>
+ who scratched his back with a back-scratcher of emerald.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">There was a king in China.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Says the man from Weehawken to the man from Sioux City<br>
+ as they jolt cheek by jowl on the bus up Broadway:<br>
+ &mdash;That's her name, Olive Thomas, on the red skysign,<br>
+ died of coke or somethin'<br>
+ way over there in Paris.<br>
+ Too much money. Awful<br>
+ immoral the lives them film stars lead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The eye of the man from Sioux City glints<br>
+ in the eye of the man from Weehawken.<br>
+ Awful ... lives out of sky-signs and lust;<br>
+ curtains of pink silk fluffy troubling the skin<br>
+ rooms all prinkly with chandeliers,<br>
+ bed cream-color with pink silk tassles<br>
+ creased by the slender press of thighs.<br>
+ Her eyebrows are black<br>
+ her lips rubbed scarlet<br>
+ breasts firm as peaches<br>
+ gold curls gold against her cheeks.<br>
+ She dead<br>
+ all of her dead way over there in Paris.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O golden Aphrodite.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The eye of the man from Weehawken slants<br>
+ away from the eye of the man from Sioux City.<br>
+ They stare at the unquiet gold dripping sky-signs.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>[p. 185]</span>
+
+<h2>PHASES OF THE MOON</h2>
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Again they are plowing the field by the river;<br>
+ in the air exultant a smell of wild garlic<br>
+ crushed out by the shining steel in the furrow<br>
+ that opens softly behind the heavy-paced horses,<br>
+ dark moist noisy with fluttering of sparrows;<br>
+ and their chirping and the clink of the harness<br>
+ chimes like bells;<br>
+ and the plowman walks at one side<br>
+ with sliding steps, his body thrown back from the waist. <br>
+ O the sudden sideways lift of his back and his arms<br>
+ as he swings the plow from the furrow.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">And behind the river sheening blue<br>
+ and the white beach and the sails of schooners,<br>
+ and hoarsely laughing the black crows<br>
+ wheel and glint. Ha! Haha!</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Other springs you answered their laughing<br>
+ and shouted at them across the fallow lands<br>
+ that smelt of wild garlic and pinewoods and earth.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> This year the crows flap cawing overhead Ha! Haha!<br>
+ and the plow-harness clinks<br>
+ and the pines echo the moaning shore.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> No one laughs back at the laughing crows.<br>
+ No one shouts from the edge of the new-plowed field.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ralign44"> <i>Sandy Point</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">The full moon soars above the misty street<br>
+ filling the air with a shimmer of silver.<br>
+ Roofs and chimney-pots cut silhouettes<br>
+ of dark against the milk-washed sky!<br>
+ O moon fast waning!</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Seems only a night ago you hung<br>
+ a shallow cup of topaz-colored glass<br>
+ that tilted towards my feverish dry lips<br>
+ brimful of promise in the flaming west:<br>
+ O moon fast waning!</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And each night fuller and colder, moon,<br>
+ the silver has welled up within you; still I<br>
+ I have not drunk, only the salt tide<br>
+ of parching desires has welled up within me:<br>
+ only you have attained, waning moon.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The moon soars white above the stony street,<br>
+ wan with fulfilment. O will the tide<br>
+ of yearning ebb with the moon's ebb<br>
+ leaving me cool darkness and peace<br>
+ with the moon's waning?</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> The shrill wind scatters the bloom<br>
+ of the almond trees<br>
+ but under the bark of the shivering poplars<br>
+ the sap rises<br>
+ and on the dark twigs of the planes<br>
+ buds swell.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Out in the country<br>
+ along soggy banks of ditches<br>
+ among busy sprouting grass<br>
+ there are dandelions.<br>
+ Under the asphalt<br>
+ under the clamorous paving-stones<br>
+ the earth heaves and stirs<br>
+ and all the blind live things<br>
+ expand and writhe.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Only the dead<br>
+ lie still in their graves,<br>
+ stiff, heiratic,<br>
+ only the changeless dead<br>
+ lie without stirring.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Spring is not a good time<br>
+ for the dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>Battery Park</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars<br>
+ latticed with window-gaps<br>
+ into the slate sky.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent"> Where the wind comes from<br>
+ the ice crumbles<br>
+ about the edges of green pools;<br>
+ from the leaping of white thighs<br>
+ comes a smooth and fleshly sound,<br>
+ girls grip hands and dance<br>
+ grey moss grows green under the beat<br>
+ of feet of saffron<br>
+ crocus-stained.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Where the wind comes from<br>
+ purple windflowers sway<br>
+ on the swelling verges of pools,<br>
+ naked girls grab hands and whirl<br>
+ fling heads back<br>
+ stamp crimson feet.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent">Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars<br>
+ latticed with window-gaps<br>
+ into the slate sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Garment-workers loaf in their overcoats<br>
+ (stare at the gay breasts of pigeons<br>
+ that strut and peck in the gutters).<br>
+ Their fingers are bruised tugging needles<br>
+ through fuzzy hot layers of cloth,<br>
+ thumbs roughened twirling waxed thread;<br>
+ they smell of lunchrooms and burnt cloth.<br>
+ The wind goes among them<br>
+ detaching sweat-smells from underclothes<br>
+ making muscles itch under overcoats<br>
+ tweaking legs with inklings of dancetime.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Bums on park-benches<br>
+ spit and look up at the sky.</p>
+ <p class="noindent">Garment-workers in their overcoats<br>
+ pile back into black gaps of doors.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent">Where the wind comes from<br>
+ scarlet windflowers sway<br>
+ on rippling verges of pools,<br>
+ sound of girls dancing<br>
+ thud of vermillion feet.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>Madison Square</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> The stars bend down<br>
+ through the dingy platitude of arc-lights<br>
+ as if they were groping for something among the houses,<br>
+ as if they would touch the gritty pavement<br>
+ covered with dust and scraps of paper and piles of horse-dung<br>
+ of the wide deserted square.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">They are all about me;<br>
+ they sear my body.<br>
+ How very cold the stars are touching my body.<br>
+ What do they seek<br>
+ the fierce ice-flames of the stars<br>
+ in the platitude of arc-lights?</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Plaza Mayor, Madrid</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Not willingly have I wronged you O Eros,<br>
+ it is the bitter blood of joyless generations<br>
+ making my fingers loosen suddenly<br>
+ about the full glass of purple wine<br>
+ for which my dry lips ache,<br>
+ making me turn aside from the wide arms of lovers<br>
+ that would have slaked the rage of my body<br>
+ for supple arms and burning young flushed faces<br>
+ to wander in solitary streets.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A funeral clatters over the glimmering cobbles;<br>
+ they are burying despair!<br>
+ Lank horses whose raw bones show through<br>
+ the embroidered black caparisons<br>
+ and whose heads jerk feebly<br>
+ under the tall nodding crests;<br>
+ they are burying despair.<br>
+ A great hearse that trundles crazily along<br>
+ under pompous swaying plumes<br>
+ and intricate designs of mud-splashed heraldry;<br>
+ they are burying despair!<br>
+ A coffin obliterated under the huge folds<br>
+ of a faded velvet pall<br>
+ and following clattering over the cobblestones<br>
+ lurching through mud-puddles<br>
+ a long train of cabs<br>
+ rain-soaked barouches<br>
+ old landaus off which the paint has peeled<br>
+ leprous coupés;<br>
+ in their blank windows shines the glint<br>
+ of interminable gaslamps;<br>
+ they are burying despair!</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Joyously I turn into the wineshop<br>
+ where with strumming of tambourines<br>
+ and staccato cackle of castanets<br>
+ they are welcoming the new year,<br>
+ and I look in the eyes of the woman;<br>
+ (are they your wide eyes O Eros?)<br>
+ who sits with wine-dabbled lips<br>
+ and stained tinsel dress torn open<br>
+ by the brown hands of strong young lovers;<br>
+ (were they your brown hands O Eros?).</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">&mdash;Your flesh is hot to my cold hands<br>
+ hot to thaw the ice of an old curse<br>
+ now that with pomp of plumes and strings of ceremonial cabs<br>
+ they are burying despair.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">She laughs and points with a skinny forefinger<br>
+ at the flabby yellow breasts that hang<br>
+ over the tarnished tinsel of her dress,<br>
+ and shows me her brown wolf's teeth;<br>
+ and the blood in my temples goes suddenly cold<br>
+ with bitterness and I know<br>
+ it was not despair that they buried.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>New Year's Day&mdash;&mdash;Casa de Bottin</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> The leaves are full grown now<br>
+ and the lindens are in flower.<br>
+ Horseshoes leave their mark<br>
+ on the sun-softened asphalt.<br>
+ Men unloading vegetable carts<br>
+ along the steaming market curb<br>
+ bare broad chests pink from sweating;<br>
+ their wet shirts open to the last button<br>
+ cling to their ribs and shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The leaves are full grown now<br>
+ and the lindens are in flower.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> At night along the riverside<br>
+ glinting watery lights<br>
+ sway upon the lapping waves<br>
+ like many-colored candles that flicker in the wind.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The warm wind smells of pitch from the moored barges<br>
+ smells of the broad leaves of the trees<br>
+ wilted from the day's long heat;<br>
+ smells of gas from the last taxicab.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Sounds of the riverwater rustling<br>
+ circumspectly past the piers<br>
+ of bridges that span the glitter with dark<br>
+ of men and women's voices <br>
+ many voices mouth to mouth<br>
+ smoothness of flesh touching flesh,<br>
+ a harsh short sigh blurred into a kiss.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> The leaves are full grown now<br>
+ and the lindens are in flower.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>Quai Malaquais</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>VIII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> In me somewhere is a grey room<br>
+ my fathers worked through many lives to build;<br>
+ through the barred distorting windowpanes<br>
+ I see the new moon in the sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">When I was small I sat and drew<br>
+ endless pictures in all colors on the walls;<br>
+ tomorrow the pictures should take life<br>
+ I would stalk down their long heroic colonnades.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">When I was fifteen a red-haired girl<br>
+ went by the window; a red sunset<br>
+ threw her shadow on the stiff grey wall<br>
+ to burn the colors of my pictures dead.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Through all these years the walls have writhed<br>
+ with shadow overlaid upon shadow.<br>
+ I have bruised my fingers on the windowbars<br>
+ so many lives cemented and made strong.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">While the bars stand strong, outside<br>
+ the great processions of men's lives go past.<br>
+ Their shadows squirm distorted on my wall.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Tonight the new moon is in the sky.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Stuyvesant Square</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Three kites against the sunset<br>
+ flaunt their long-tailed triangles<br>
+ above the inquisitive chimney-pots.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> A pompous ragged minstrel<br>
+ sings beside our dining-table<br>
+ a very old romantic song:</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> <i>I love the sound of the hunting-horns<br>
+ deep in the woods at night.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">A wind makes dance the fine acacia leaves<br>
+ and flutters the cloths of the tables.<br>
+ The kites tremble and soar.<br>
+ The voice throbs sugared into croaking base<br>
+ broken with the burden of the too ancient songs.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> And yet, beyond the flaring sky,<br>
+ beyond the soaring kites,<br>
+ where are no voices of singers,<br>
+ no strummings of guitars,<br>
+ the untarnished songs<br>
+ hang like great moths just broken<br>
+ through the dun threads of their cocoons,<br>
+ moist, motionless, limp<br>
+ as flowers on the inaccessible twigs<br>
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,<br>
+ the untarnished songs.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Will you put your hand in mine<br>
+ pompous street-singer,<br>
+ and start on a quest with me?<br>
+ For men have cut down the woods where the laurel grew<br>
+ to build streets of frame houses,<br>
+ they have dug in the hills after iron<br>
+ and frightened the troll-king away;<br>
+ at night in the woods no hunter puffs out his cheeks<br>
+ to call to the kill on the hunting-horn.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> Now when the kites flaunt bravely<br>
+ their tissue-paper glory in the sunset<br>
+ we will walk together down the darkening streets<br>
+ beyond these tables and the sunset.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">We will hear the singing of drunken men<br>
+ and the songs whores sing<br>
+ in their doorways at night<br>
+ and the endless soft crooning<br>
+ of all the mothers,<br>
+ and what words the young men hum<br>
+ when they walk beside the river<br>
+ their arms hot with caresses,<br>
+ their cheeks pressed against their girls' cheeks.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">We will lean very close<br>
+ to the quiet lips of the dead<br>
+ and feel in our worn-out flesh perhaps<br>
+ a flutter of wings as they soar from us<br>
+ the untarnished songs.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">But the minstrel sings as the pennies clink:<br>
+ <i>I love the sound of the hunting-horns<br>
+ deep in the woods at night.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> O who will go on a quest with me<br>
+ beyond all wide seas<br>
+ all mountain passes<br>
+ and climb at last with me<br>
+ among the imperishable branches<br>
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,<br>
+ so that all the limp unuttered songs<br>
+ shall spread their great moth-wings and soar<br>
+ above the craning necks of the chimneys<br>
+ above the tissue-paper kites and the sunset<br>
+ above the diners and their dining-tables,<br>
+ beat upward with strong wing-beats steadily<br>
+ till they can drink the quenchless honey of the moon.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Place du Tertre</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Dark on the blue light of the stream<br>
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">On icegreen seas of sunset<br>
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail<br>
+ bellied by the evening wind<br>
+ and bound for some glittering harbor<br>
+ that blue hills circle<br>
+ among the purple archipelagos of cloud.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> So, in the quivering bubble of my memories<br>
+ the schooners with peaked sails<br>
+ lean athwart the low dark shore;<br>
+ their sails glow apricot-color<br>
+ or glint as white as the salt-bitten shells on the beach<br>
+ and are curved at the tip like gulls' wings:<br>
+ their courses are set for impossible oceans<br>
+ where on the gold imaginary sands<br>
+ they will unload their many-scented freight<br>
+ of very childish dreams.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Dark on the blue light of the stream<br>
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon;<br>
+ the wind brings from them to my ears<br>
+ faint creaking of rudder-cords, tiny slappings<br>
+ of waves against their pitch-smeared flanks,<br>
+ to my nose a smell of bales and merchandise<br>
+ the wet familiar smell of harbors<br>
+ and the old arousing fragrance<br>
+ making the muscles ache and the blood seethe<br>
+ and the eyes see the roadsteads and the golden beaches<br>
+ where with singing they would furl the sails<br>
+ of the schooners of childish dreams.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">On icegreen seas of sunset<br>
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail:<br>
+ had I forgotten the fragrance of old dreams<br>
+ that the smell from the anchored barges<br>
+ can so fill my blood with bitterness<br>
+ that the sight of the scudding moon<br>
+ makes my eyes tingle with salt tears?</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> In the ship's track on the infertile sea<br>
+ now many childish bodies float<br>
+ rotting under the white moon.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Quai des Grands Augustins</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XI <br>
+
+<i><small>Lua cheia esta noit</small></i></h3>
+
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent"> Thistledown clouds<br>
+ cover the whole sky<br>
+ scurry on the southwest wind<br>
+ over the sea and islands;<br>
+ somehow in the sundown<br>
+ the wind has shaken out plumed seed<br>
+ of thistles milkweed asphodel,<br>
+ raked from off great fields of dandelions<br>
+ their ghosts of faded golden springs<br>
+ and carried them in billowing of mist<br>
+ to scurry in moonlight<br>
+ out of the west.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> They hide the moon<br>
+ the whole sky is grey with them<br>
+ and the waves.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> They will fall in rain<br>
+ over country gardens<br>
+ where thrushes sing.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">They will fall in rain<br>
+ down long sparsely lighted streets<br>
+ hiss on silvery windowpanes<br>
+ moisten the lips<br>
+ of girls leaning out<br>
+ to stare after the footfalls of young men<br>
+ who splash through the glimmering puddles<br>
+ with nonchalant feet.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">They will slap against the windows of offices<br>
+ where men in black suits<br>
+ shaped like pears<br>
+ rub their abdomens<br>
+ against frazzled edges of ledgers.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> They will drizzle<br>
+ over new-plowed fields<br>
+ wet the red cheeks of men harrowing<br>
+ and a smell of garlic and clay<br>
+ will steam from the new-sowed land<br>
+ and sharp-eared young herdsmen will feel<br>
+ in the windy rain<br>
+ lisp of tremulous love-makings<br>
+ interlaced soundless kisses<br>
+ impact of dead springs<br>
+ nuzzling tremulous at life<br>
+ in the red sundown.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">Shining spring rain<br>
+ O scud steaming up out of the deep sea<br>
+ full of portents of sundown and islands,<br>
+ beat upon my forehead<br>
+ beat upon my face and neck<br>
+ glisten on my outstretched hands,<br>
+ run bright lilac streams<br>
+ through the clogged channels of my brain<br>
+ corrode the clicking cogs the little angles<br>
+ the small mistrustful mirrors<br>
+ scatter the shrill tiny creaking<br>
+ of mustnot darenot cannot<br>
+ spatter the varnish off me<br>
+ that I may stand up<br>
+ my face to the wet wind<br>
+ and feel my body<br>
+ and drenched salty palpitant April<br>
+ reborn in my flesh.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">I would spit the dust out of my mouth<br>
+ burst out of these stiff wire webs<br>
+ supple incautious<br>
+ like the crocuses that spurt up too soon<br>
+ their saffron flames<br>
+ and die gloriously in late blizzards<br>
+ and leave no seed.</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"> <i>Off Pico</i></p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>XII</h3>
+
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">Out of the unquiet town<br>
+ seep jagged barkings<br>
+ lean broken cries<br>
+ unimaginable silent writhing<br>
+ of muscles taut against strangling<br>
+ heavy fetters of darkness.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent">On the pool of moonlight<br>
+ clots and festers<br>
+ a great scum<br>
+ of worn-out sound.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent"> (Elagabalus, Alexander<br>
+ looked too long at the full moon;<br>
+ hot blood drowned them<br>
+ cold rivers drowned them.)</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> Float like pondflowers<br>
+ on the dead face of darkness<br>
+ cold stubs of lusts<br>
+ names that glimmer ghostly<br>
+ adrift on the slow tide<br>
+ of old moons waned.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"> <p class="noindent"> (Lais of Corinth that Holbein drew<br>
+ drank the moon in a cup of wine;<br>
+ with the flame of all her lovers' pain<br>
+ she seared a sign on the tombs of the years.)</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"> <p class="noindent"> Out of the voiceless wrestle of the night<br>
+ flesh rasping harsh on flesh<br>
+ a tune on a shrill pipe shimmers<br>
+ up like a rocket blurred in the fog<br>
+ of lives curdled in the moon's glare,<br>
+ staggering up like a rocket<br>
+ into the steely star-sharpened night<br>
+ above the stagnant moon-marshes<br>
+ the song throbs soaring and dies.</p></div>
+
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent">(Semiramis, Zenobia<br>
+ lay too long in the moon's glare;<br>
+ their yearning grew sere and they died<br>
+ and the flesh of their empires died.)</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem"><p class="noindent">On the pool of moonlight<br>
+ clots and festers<br>
+ a great scum<br>
+ of worn-out lives.</p>
+
+ <p class="noindent"> No sound but the panting unsatiated<br>
+ breath that heaves under the huge pall<br>
+ the livid moon has spread above the housetops.<br>
+ I rest my chin on the window-ledge and wait.<br>
+ There are hands about my throat.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="poem2"><p class="noindent"> Ah Bilkis, Bilkis<br>
+ where the jangle of your camel bells?<br>
+ Bilkis when out of Saba<br>
+ lope of your sharp-smelling dromedaries<br>
+ will bring the unnameable strong wine<br>
+ you press from the dazzle of the zenith<br>
+ over the shining sand of your desert<br>
+ the wine you press there in Saba?<br>
+ Bilkis your voice loud above the camel bells<br>
+ white sword of dawn to split the fog,<br>
+ Bilkis your small strong hands to tear<br>
+ the hands from about my throat.<br>
+ Ah Bilkis when out of Saba?</p>
+
+ <p class="ralign44"><i>Pera Palace</i></p></div>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="center"> <p class="tn box">Transcribers' note:<br>
+<br>
+The original spelling has been retained.<br >
+<br>
+One typographical error was changed: Jasdin &mdash;&mdash;> <a href="#Jardin_du_Luxembourg">Jardin</a> du
+Luxembourg</p></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" noshade>
+<div class="pg">
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PUSHCART AT THE CURB***</p>
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+</div>
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+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Pushcart at the Curb, by John Dos Passos
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Pushcart at the Curb
+
+
+Author: John Dos Passos
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 11, 2010 [eBook #32778]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PUSHCART AT THE CURB***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A PUSHCART AT THE CURB
+
+by
+
+JOHN DOS PASSOS
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Books by John Dos Passos_
+
+
+_NOVELS:_
+
+_Three Soldiers_
+
+_One Man's Initiation_
+
+_Streets of Night_
+
+ _(In Preparation)_
+
+
+_ESSAYS:_
+
+_Rosinante to the Road Again_
+
+
+_POEMS:_
+
+_A Pushcart at the Curb_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+A PUSHCART AT THE CURB
+
+by
+
+JOHN DOS PASSOS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Decorative Illustration]
+
+George H. Doran Company
+Publishers New York
+
+Copyright, 1922,
+By George H. Doran Company
+
+[Decorative Illustration]
+
+_A Pushcart at the Curb. I_
+
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+
+
+TO THE MEMORY
+
+OF
+
+WRIGHT McCORMICK
+
+WHO TUMBLED OFF A MOUNTAIN
+
+IN MEXICO
+
+
+
+
+ My verse is no upholstered chariot
+ Gliding oil-smooth on oiled wheels,
+ No swift and shining modern limousine,
+ But a pushcart, rather.
+
+ A crazy creaking pushcart, hard to push
+ Round corners, slung on shaky patchwork wheels,
+ That jolts and jumbles over the cobblestones
+ Its very various lading:
+
+ A lading of Spanish oranges, Smyrna figs,
+ Fly-specked apples, perhaps of the Hesperides,
+ Curious fruits of the Indies, pepper-sweet ...
+ Stranger, choose and taste.
+
+ _Dolo_
+
+
+
+
+ ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+
+ For permission to reprint certain of the poems
+ in this volume, thanks are due _The Bookman_,
+ _The Dial_, _Vanity Fair_, _The Measure_, and
+ _The New York Evening Post_.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ WINTER IN CASTILE 13
+
+ NIGHTS AT BASSANO 65
+
+ VAGONES DE TERCERA 109
+
+ QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE 139
+
+ ON FOREIGN TRAVEL 163
+
+ PHASES OF THE MOON 185
+
+
+
+
+WINTER IN CASTILE
+
+
+ The promiscuous wind wafts idly from the quays
+ A smell of ships and curious woods and casks
+ And a sweetness from the gorse on the flowerstand
+ And brushes with his cool careless cheek the cheeks
+ Of those on the street; mine, an old gnarled man's,
+ The powdered cheeks of the girl who with faded eyes
+ Stands in the shadow; a sailor's scarred brown cheeks,
+ And a little child's, who walks along whispering
+ To her sufficient self.
+ O promiscuous wind.
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ I
+
+ A long grey street with balconies.
+ Above the gingercolored grocer's shop
+ trail pink geraniums
+ and further up a striped mattress
+ hangs from a window
+ and the little wooden cage
+ of a goldfinch.
+
+ Four blind men wabble down the street
+ with careful steps on the rounded cobbles
+ scraping with violin and flute
+ the interment of a tune.
+
+ People gather:
+ women with market-baskets
+ stuffed with green vegetables,
+ men with blankets on their shoulders
+ and brown sunwrinkled faces.
+
+ Pipe the flutes, squeak the violins;
+ four blind men in a row
+ at the interment of a tune ...
+ But on the plate
+ coppers clink
+ round brown pennies
+ a merry music at the funeral,
+ penny swigs of wine
+ penny gulps of gin
+ peanuts and hot roast potatoes
+ red disks of sausage
+ tripe steaming in the corner shop ...
+
+ And overhead
+ the sympathetic finch
+ chirps and trills
+ approval.
+
+ _Calle de Toledo, Madrid_
+
+
+ II
+
+ A boy with rolled up shirtsleeves
+ turns the handle.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The black sphere whirls
+ above a charcoal fire.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The boy sweats and grits his teeth and turns
+ while a man blows up the coals.
+ Grind, grind.
+ Thicker comes the blue curling smoke,
+ the moka-scented smoke
+ heavy with early morning
+ and the awakening city
+ with click-clack click-clack on the cobblestones
+ and the young winter sunshine
+ advancing inquisitively
+ across the black and white tiles of my bedroom floor.
+ Grind, grind.
+ The coffee is done.
+ The boy rubs his arms and yawns,
+ and the sphere and the furnace are trundled away
+ to be set up at another cafe.
+
+ A poor devil
+ whose dirty ashen white body shows through his rags
+ sniffs sensually
+ with dilated nostrils
+ the heavy coffee-fragrant smoke,
+ and turns to sleep again
+ in the feeble sunlight of the greystone steps.
+
+ _Calle Espoz y Mina_
+
+
+ III
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square,
+ and sombre-tinted wreaths
+ stiffly twined and crinkly
+ for this is the day of the dead.
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square.
+ Their velvet odor fills the street
+ somehow stills the tramp of feet;
+ for this is the day of the dead.
+
+ Their presence is heavy about us
+ like the velvet black scent of the flowers:
+ incense of pompous interments,
+ patter of monastic feet,
+ drone of masses drowsily said
+ for the thronging dead.
+
+
+ Women are selling tuberoses in the square
+ to cover the tombs of the envious dead
+ and shroud them again in the lethean scent
+ lest the dead should remember.
+
+ _Difuntos; Madrid_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Above the scuffling footsteps of crowds
+ the clang of trams
+ the shouts of newsboys
+ the stridence of wheels,
+ very calm,
+ floats the sudden trill of a pipe
+ three silvery upward notes
+ wistfully quavering,
+ notes a Thessalian shepherd might have blown
+ to call his sheep
+ in the emerald shade
+ of Tempe,
+ notes that might have waked the mad women sleeping
+ among pinecones in the hills
+ and stung them to headlong joy
+ of the presence of their mad Iacchos,
+ notes like the glint of sun
+ making jaunty the dark waves of Tempe.
+
+ In the street an old man is passing
+ wrapped in a dun brown mantle
+ blowing with bearded lips on a shining panpipe
+ while he trundles before him
+ a grindstone.
+
+ The scissors grinder.
+
+ _Calle Espoz y Mina_
+
+
+ V
+
+ Rain slants on an empty square.
+
+ Across the expanse of cobbles
+ rides an old shawl-muffled woman
+ black on a donkey with pert ears
+ that places carefully
+ his tiny sharp hoofs
+ as if the cobbles were eggs.
+ The paniers are full
+ of bright green lettuces
+ and purple cabbages,
+ and shining red bellshaped peppers,
+ dripping, shining, a band in marchtime,
+ in the grey rain,
+ in the grey city.
+
+ _Plaza Santa Ana_
+
+
+ VI
+ BEGGARS
+
+ The fountain some dead king put up,
+ conceived in pompous imageries,
+ piled with mossgreened pans and centaurs
+ topped by a prudish tight-waisted Cybele
+ (Cybele the many-breasted mother of the grain)
+ spurts with a solemn gurgle of waters.
+
+ Where the sun is warmest
+ their backs against the greystone basin
+ sit, hoarding every moment of the palefaced sun,
+ (thy children Cybele)
+ Pan a bearded beggar with blear eyes;
+ his legs were withered by a papal bull,
+ those shaggy legs so nimble to pursue
+ through groves of Arcadian myrtle
+ the nymphs of the fountains and valleys;
+ a young Faunus with soft brown face
+ and dirty breast bared to the sun;
+ the black hair crisps about his ears
+ with some grace yet;
+ a little barefoot Eros
+ crouching to scratch his skinny thighs
+ who stares with wide gold eyes aghast
+ at the yellow shiny trams that clatter past.
+
+ All day long they doze in the scant sun
+ and watch the wan leaves rustle to the ground
+ from the yellowed limetrees of the avenue.
+ They are still thine Cybele
+ nursed at thy breast;
+ (like a woman's last foster-children
+ that still would suck grey withered dugs).
+ They have not scorned thy dubious bounty
+ for stridence of grinding iron
+ and pale caged lives
+ made blind by the dust of toil
+ to coin the very sun to gold.
+
+ _Plaza de Cibeles_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Footsteps
+ and the leisurely patter of rain.
+
+ Beside the lamppost in the alley
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves
+ of breast and arms.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ A smell of frying fish;
+ footsteps of people going to dinner
+ clatter eagerly through the lane.
+ A boy with a trough of meat on his shoulder
+ turns by the lamppost,
+ his steps drag.
+ The green light slants
+ in the black of his eyes.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ Footsteps of people going to dinner
+ clatter eagerly; the rain
+ falls with infinite nonchalance ...
+ a man turns with a twirl of moustaches
+ and the green light slants on his glasses
+ on the round buttons of his coat.
+ Her eyes are in shadow.
+
+ A woman with an umbrella
+ keeps her eyes straight ahead
+ and lifts her dress
+ to avoid the mud on the pavingstones.
+
+ An old man stares without fear
+ into the eyes of the girl
+ through the stripes of the rain.
+ His steps beat faster and he sniffs hard suddenly
+ the smell of dinner and frying fish.
+ Was it a flame of old days
+ expanding in his cold blood,
+ or a shiver of rigid graves,
+ chill clay choking congealing?
+
+ Beside the lamppost in the alley
+ stands a girl in a long sleek shawl
+ that moulds vaguely to the curves
+ of breast and arms.
+
+ _Calle del Gato_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ A brown net of branches
+ quivers above silver trunks of planes.
+ Here and there
+ a late leaf flutters
+ its faint death-rattle in the wind.
+ Beyond, the sky burns fervid rose
+ like red wine held against the sun.
+
+ Schoolboys are playing in the square
+ dodging among the silver tree-trunks
+ collars gleam and white knees
+ as they romp shrilly.
+
+ Lamps bloom out one by one
+ like jessamine, yellow and small.
+ At the far end a church's dome
+ flat deep purple cuts the sky.
+
+ Schoolboys are romping in the square
+ in and out among the silver tree-trunks
+ out of the smoked rose shadows
+ through the timid yellow lamplight ...
+ Socks slip down
+ fingermarks smudge white collars;
+ they run and tussle in the shadows
+ kicking the gravel with muddied boots
+ with cheeks flushed hotter than the sky
+ eyes brighter than the street-lamps
+ with fingers tingling and breath fast:
+ banqueters early drunken
+ on the fierce cold wine of the dead year.
+
+ _Paseo de la Castellana_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Green against the livid sky
+ in their square dun-colored towers
+ hang the bronze bells of Castile.
+ In their unshakeable square towers
+ jutting from the slopes of hills
+ clang the bells of all the churches
+ the dustbrown churches of Castile.
+
+ How they swing the green bronze bells
+ athwart olive twilights of Castile
+ till their fierce insistant clangour
+ rings down the long plowed slopes
+ breaks against the leaden hills
+ whines among the trembling poplars
+ beside sibilant swift green rivers.
+
+ O you strong bells of Castile
+ that commanding clang your creed
+ over treeless fields and villages
+ that huddle in arroyos, gleaming
+ orange with lights in the greenish dusk;
+ can it be bells of Castile,
+ can it be that you remember?
+
+ Groans there in your bronze green curves
+ in your imperious evocation
+ stench of burnings, rattling screams
+ quenched among the crackling flames?
+ The crowd, the pile of faggots in the square,
+ the yellow robes.... Is it that
+ bells of Castile that you remember?
+
+ _Toledo--Madrid_
+
+
+ X
+
+ The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.
+ The speeding dark-green water mirrors the old red walls
+ and the balustrades and close-barred windows of the palace;
+ and on the other bank three stooping washerwomen
+ whose bright red shawls and piles of linen gleam in the green,
+ the swirling green where shimmer the walls of Aranjuez.
+
+ There's smoke in the gardens of Aranjuez
+ smoke of the burning of the years' dead leaves;
+ the damp paths rustle underfoot
+ thick with the crisp broad leaves of the planes.
+
+ The tang of the smoke and the reek of the box
+ and the savor of the year's decay
+ are soft in the gardens of Aranjuez
+ where the fountains fill silently with leaves
+ and the moss grows over the statues and busts
+ clothing the simpering cupids and fauns
+ whose stone eyes search the empty paths
+ for the rustling rich brocaded gowns
+ and the neat silk calves of the halcyon past.
+
+ The Tagus flows with a noise of wiers through Aranjuez.
+ And slipping by mirrors the brown-silver trunks
+ of the planes and the hedges
+ of box and spires of cypress and alleys of yellowing elms;
+ and on the other bank three grey mules pulling a cart
+ loaded with turnips, driven by a man in a blue woolen sash
+ who strides along whistling and does not look towards Aranjuez.
+
+
+ XI
+
+ Beyond ruffled velvet hills
+ the sky burns yellow like a candle-flame.
+
+ Sudden a village
+ roofs against the sky
+ leaping buttresses
+ a church
+ and a tower utter dark like the heart
+ of a candleflame.
+
+ Swing the bronze-bells
+ uncoiling harsh slow sound through the dusk
+ that growls out in the conversational clatter
+ Of the trainwheels and the rails.
+
+ A hill humps unexpectedly to hide
+ the tower erect like a pistil
+ in the depths of the tremendous flaming
+ flower of the west.
+
+ _Getafe_
+
+
+ XII
+
+ Genteel noise of Paris hats
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.
+ Mirrors create on either side
+ infinities of chandeliers.
+
+ The orchestra is tuning up:
+ Twanging of the strings of violins
+ groans from cellos
+ toodling of flutes.
+
+ Legs apart, with white fronts
+ the musicians stand
+ amiably as pelicans.
+
+ Tap. Tap. Tap.
+ With a silken rustle beards, hats
+ sink back in appropriate ecstasy.
+ A little girl giggles.
+ Crystals of infinities of chandeliers
+ tremble in the first long honey-savored chord.
+
+ From under a wide black hat
+ curving just to hide her ears
+ peers the little face of Juliet
+ of all child lovers
+ who loved in impossible gardens
+ among roses huge as moons
+ and twinkling constellations of jessamine,
+ Juliet, Isabel, Cressida,
+ and that unknown one who went forth at night
+ wandering the snarling streets of Jerusalem.
+
+ She presses her handkerchief to her mouth
+ to smother her profane giggling.
+ Her skin is browner than the tone of cellos,
+ flushes like with pomegranate juice.
+
+ ... The moist laden air of a garden in Granada,
+ spice of leaves bruised by the sun;
+ she sits in a dress of crimson brocade
+ dark as blood under the white moon
+ and watches the ripples spread
+ in the gurgling fountain;
+ her lashes curve to her cheeks
+ as she stares wide-eyed
+ lips drawn against the teeth and trembling;
+ gravel crunches down the path;
+ brown in a crimson swirl
+ she stands with full lips
+ head tilted back ... O her small breasts
+ against my panting breast.
+
+ Clapping. Genteel noise of Paris hats
+ and beards that tilt this way and that.
+
+ Her face lost in infinities of glittering chandeliers.
+
+ _Ritz_
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ There's a sound of drums and trumpets
+ above the rumble of the street.
+ (Run run run to see the soldiers.)
+ All alike all abreast keeping time
+ to the regimented swirl
+ of the glittering brass band.
+
+ The cafe waiters are craning at the door
+ the girl in the gloveshop is nose against the glass.
+ O the glitter of the brass
+ and the flutter of the plumes
+ and the tramp of the uniform feet!
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ The boy with a tray
+ of pastries on his head
+ is walking fast, keeping time;
+ his white and yellow cakes are trembling in the sun
+ his cheeks are redder
+ and his bluestriped tunic streams
+ as he marches to the rum tum of the drums.
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ The milkman with his pony
+ slung with silvery metal jars
+ schoolboys with their packs of books
+ clerks in stiff white collars
+ old men in cloaks
+ try to regiment their feet
+ to the glittering brass beat.
+ Run run run to see the soldiers.
+
+ _Puerta del Sol_
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ Night of clouds
+ terror of their flight across the moon.
+ Over the long still plains
+ blows a wind out of the north;
+ a laden wind out of the north
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks
+ menacingly and loud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Black as old blood on the cold plain
+ close throngs spread to beyond lead horizons
+ swaying shrouded crowds
+ and their rustle in the knife-keen wind
+ is like the dry death-rattle of the winter grass.
+
+ (Like mouldered shrouds the clouds fall
+ from the crumbling skull of the dead moon.)
+
+ Huge, of grinning brass
+ steaming with fresh stains
+ their God
+ gapes with smudged expectant gums
+ above the plain.
+
+ Flicker through the flames of the wide maw
+ rigid square bodies of men
+ opulence of childbearing women
+ slimness of young men, and girls
+ with small curved breasts.
+
+ (Loud as musketry rattles the sudden laughter of the dead.)
+
+ Thicker hotter the blood drips
+ from the cold brass lips.
+
+ Swift over grainless fields
+ swift over shellplowed lands
+ ever leaner swifter darker
+ bay the hounds of the dead,
+ before them drive the pale ones
+ white limbs scarred and blackened
+ laurel crushed in their cold fingers,
+ the spark quenched in their glazed eyes.
+
+ Thicker hotter the blood drips
+ from the avenging lips
+ of the brass God;
+ (and rattling loud as musketry
+ the laughter of the unsated dead).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The clouds have blotted the haggard moon.
+ A harsh wind shrills from the cities of the north
+ Ypres, Lille, Liege, Verdun,
+ and from the tainted valleys
+ the cross-scarred hills.
+ Over the long still plains
+ the wind out of the north
+ rattles the leaves of the liveoaks.
+
+ _Cuatro Caminos_
+
+
+ XV
+
+ The weazened old woman without teeth
+ who shivers on the windy street corner
+ displays her roasted chestnuts invitingly
+ like marriageable daughters.
+
+ _Calle Atocha_
+
+
+ XVI
+ NOCHEBUENA
+
+ The clattering streets are bright with booths
+ lighted by balancing candleflames
+ ranged with figures in painted clay,
+ Virgins adoring and haloed bambinos,
+ St. Joseph at his joiner's bench
+ Judean shepherds and their sheep
+ camels of the Eastern kings.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ The streets resound with dancing
+ and chortle of tambourines,
+ strong rhythm of dancing
+ drumming of tambourines.
+
+ Flicker through the greenish lamplight
+ of the clattering cobbled streets
+ flushed faces of men
+ women in mantillas
+ children with dark wide eyes,
+ teeth flashing as they sing:
+
+ _La santa Virgen es en parto
+ a las dos va desparir.
+ Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ Beetred faces of women
+ whose black mantillas have slipped
+ from their sleek and gleaming hair,
+ streaming faces of men.
+
+ With click of heels on the pavingstones
+ boys in tunics are dancing
+ eyes under long black lashes
+ flash as they dance to the drum
+ of tambourines beaten with elbow and palm.
+ A flock of girls comes running
+ squealing down the street.
+
+ Boys and girls are dancing
+ flushed and dripping dancing
+ to the beat on drums and piping
+ on flutes and jiggle
+ of the long notes of accordions
+ and the wild tune swirls and sweeps
+ along the frosty streets,
+ leaps above the dark stone houses
+ out among the crackling stars.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ In the street a ragged boy
+ too poor to own a tambourine
+ slips off his shoes and beats them together
+ to the drunken reeling time,
+ dances on his naked feet.
+
+ _Esta noche es noche buena
+ nadie piensa a dormir._
+
+ _Madrid_
+
+
+ XVII
+
+ The old strong towers the Moors built
+ on the ruins of a Roman camp
+ have sprung into spreading boistrous foam
+ of daisies and alyssum flowers,
+ and sprout of clover and veiling grass
+ from out of the cracks in the tawny stones
+ makes velvet soft the worn stairs
+ and grooved walks where clanked the heels
+ of the grave mailed knights who had driven and killed
+ the darkskinned Moors,
+ and where on silken knees their sons
+ knelt on the nights of the full moon
+ to vow strange deeds for their lady's grace.
+
+ The old strong towers are crumbled and doddering now
+ and sit like old men smiling in the sun.
+
+ About them clamber the giggling flowers
+ and below the sceptic sea gently
+ laughing in daisywhite foam on the beach
+ rocks the ships with flapping sails
+ that flash white to the white village on the shore.
+
+ On a wall where the path is soft with flowers
+ the brown goatboy lies, his cap askew
+ and whistles out over the beckoning sea
+ the tune the village band jerks out,
+ a shine of brass in the square below:
+ a swaggering young buck of a tune
+ that slouches cap on one side, cigarette
+ at an impudent tilt, out past the old
+ toothless and smilingly powerless towers,
+ out over the ever-youthful sea
+ that claps bright cobalt hands in time
+ and laughs along the tawny beaches.
+
+ _Denia_
+
+
+ XVIII
+
+ How fine to die in Denia
+ young in the ardent strength of sun
+ calm in the burning blue of the sea
+ in the stabile clasp of the iron hills;
+ Denia where the earth is red
+ as rust and hills grey like ash.
+ O to rot into the ruddy soil
+ to melt into the omnipotent fire
+ of the young white god, the flamegod the sun,
+ to find swift resurrection
+ in the warm grapes born of earth and sun
+ that are crushed to must under the feet
+ of girls and lads,
+ to flow for new generations of men
+ a wine full of earth
+ of sun.
+
+
+ XIX
+
+ The road winds white among ashen hills
+ grey clouds overhead
+ grey sea below.
+ The road clings to the strong capes
+ hangs above the white foam-line
+ of unheard breakers
+ that edge with lace the scarf of the sea
+ sweeping marbled with sunlight
+ to the dark horizon
+ towards which steering intently
+ like ducks with red bellies
+ swim the black laden steamers.
+
+ The wind blows the dust of the road
+ and whines in the dead grass
+ and is silent.
+
+ I can hear my steps
+ and the clink of coins in one pocket
+ and the distant hush of the sea.
+
+ _On the highroad to Villajoyosa_
+
+
+ XX
+ SIERRA GUADARRAMA
+ TO J. G. P.
+
+ The greyish snow of the pass
+ is starred with the sad lilac
+ of autumn crocuses.
+
+ Hissing among the brown leaves
+ of the scruboaks
+ bruising the tender crocus petals
+ a sleetgust sweeps the pass.
+
+ The air is calm again.
+ Under a bulging sky motionless overhead
+ the mountains heave velvet black
+ into the cloudshut distance.
+
+ South the road winds
+ down a wide valley
+ towards stripes of rain
+ through which shine straw yellow
+ faint as a dream
+ the rolling lands of New Castile.
+
+ A fresh gust whines through the snowbent grass
+ pelting with sleet the withering crocuses,
+ and rustles the dry leaves of the scruboaks
+ with a sound as of gallop of hoofs
+ far away on the grey stony road
+ a sound as of faintly heard cavalcades
+ of old stern kings
+ climbing the cold iron passes
+ stopping to stare with cold hawkeyes
+ at the pale plain.
+
+ _Puerto de Navecerrada_
+
+
+ XXI
+
+ Soft as smoke are the blue green pines
+ in the misty lavender twilight
+ yellow as flame the flame-shaped poplars
+ whose dead leaves fall
+ vaguely spinning through the tinted air
+ till they reach the brownish mirror of the stream
+ where they are borne a tremulous pale fleet
+ over gleaming ripples to the sudden dark
+ beneath the Roman bridge.
+
+ Forever it stands the Roman bridge
+ a firm strong arch in the purple mist
+ and ever the yellow leaves are swirled
+ into the darkness beneath
+ where echoes forever the tramp of feet
+ of the weary feet that bore
+ the Eagles and the Law.
+
+ And through the misty lavender twilight
+ the leaves of the poplars fall and float
+ with the silent stream to the deep night
+ beneath the Roman bridge.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXII
+
+ In the velvet calm of long grey slopes of snow
+ the silky crunch of my steps.
+ About me vague dark circles of mountains
+ secret, listening in the intimate silence.
+
+ Bleating of sheep, the bark of a dog
+ and, dun-yellow in the snow
+ a long flock straggles.
+ Crying of lambs,
+ twitching noses of snowflecked ewes,
+ the proud curved horns of a regal broadgirthed ram,
+ yellow backs steaming;
+ then, tails and tracks in the snow,
+ and the responsible lope of the dog
+ who stops with a paw lifted to look back
+ at the baked apple face of the shepherd.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXIII
+ JULIET
+
+ You were beside me on the stony path
+ down from the mountain.
+
+ And I was the rain that lashed such flame into your cheeks
+ and the sensuous rolling hills
+ where the mists clung like garments.
+
+ I was the sadness that came out of the languid rain
+ and the soft dove-tinted hills
+ and choked you with the harsh embrace of a lover
+ so that you almost sobbed.
+
+ _Siete Picos_
+
+
+ XXIV
+
+ When they sang as they marched in step
+ on the long path that wound to the valley
+ I followed lonely in silence.
+
+ When they sat and laughed by the hearth
+ where our damp clothes steamed in the flare
+ of the noisy prancing flames
+ I sat still in the shadow
+ for their language was strange to me.
+
+ But when as they slept I sat
+ and watched by the door of the cabin
+ I was not lonely
+ for they lay with quiet faces
+ stroked by the friendly tongues
+ of the silent firelight
+ and outside the white stars swarmed
+ like gnats about a lamp in autumn
+ an intelligible song.
+
+ _Cercedilla_
+
+
+ XXV
+
+ I lie among green rocks
+ on the thyme-scented mountain.
+ The thistledown clouds and the sky
+ grey-white and grey-violet
+ are mirrored in your dark eyes
+ as in the changing pools of the mountain.
+
+ I have made for your head
+ a wreath of livid crocuses.
+ How strange they are the wan lilac crocuses
+ against your dark smooth skin
+ in the intense black of your wind-towseled hair.
+
+ Sleet from the high snowfields
+ snaps a lash down the mountain
+ bruising the withered petals
+ of the last crocuses.
+
+ I am alone in the swirling mist
+ beside the frozen pools of the mountain.
+
+ _La Maliciosa_
+
+
+ XXVI
+
+ Infinities away already
+ are your very slender body
+ and the tremendous dark of your eyes
+ where once beyond the laughingness of childhood,
+ came a breath of jessamine prophetic of summer,
+ a sudden flutter of yellow butterflies
+ above dark pools.
+
+ Shall I take down my books
+ and weave from that glance a romance
+ and build tinsel thrones for you
+ out of old poets' fancies?
+
+ Shall I fashion a temple about you
+ where to burn out my life like frankincense
+ till you tower dark behind the sultry veil
+ huge as Isis?
+
+ Or shall I go back to childhood
+ remembering butterflies in sunny fields
+ to cower with you when the chilling shadow fleets
+ across the friendly sun?
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ XXVII
+
+ And neither did Beatrice and Dante ...
+ But Beatrice they say
+ was a convention.
+
+ _November, 1916--February, 1917._
+
+
+
+
+NIGHTS AT BASSANO
+
+
+ I
+ DIRGE OF THE EMPRESS TAITU OF ABYSSINIA
+
+ _And when the news of the Death of the Empress
+ of that Far Country did come to them, they
+ fashioned of her an Image in doleful wise and
+ poured out Rum and Marsala Sack and divers
+ Liquors such as were procurable in that place into
+ Cannikins to do her Honor and did wake and
+ keen and make moan most piteously to hear. And
+ that Night were there many Marvels and Prodigies
+ observed; the Welkin was near consumed
+ with fire and Spirits and Banashees grumbled and
+ wailed above the roof and many that were in that
+ place hid themselves in Dens and Burrows in the
+ ground. Of the swanlike and grievously melodious
+ Ditties the Minstrels fashioned in that fearsome
+ Night these only are preserved for the
+ Admiration of the Age._
+
+
+ [I]
+
+ Our lady lies on a brave high bed,
+ On pillows of gold with gold baboons
+ On red silk deftly embroidered--
+ O anger and eggs and candlelight--
+ Her gold-specked eyes have little sight.
+
+ Our lady cries on a brave high bed;
+ The golden light of the candles licks
+ The crown of gold on her frizzly head--
+ O candles and angry eggs so white--
+ Her gold-specked eyes are sharp with fright.
+
+ Our lady sighs till the high bed creaks;
+ The golden candles gutter and sway
+ In the swirling dark the dark priest speaks--
+ O his eyes are white as eggs with fright
+ --Our lady will die twixt night and night.
+
+ Our lady lies on a brave high bed;
+ The golden crown has slipped from her head
+ On the pillows crimson embroidered--
+ O baboons writhing in candlelight--
+ Her gold-specked soul has taken flight.
+
+
+ [II]
+ ZABAGLIONE
+
+ Champagne-colored
+ Deepening to tawniness
+ As the throats of nightingales
+ Strangled for Nero's supper.
+
+ Champagne-colored
+ Like the coverlet of Dudloysha
+ At the Hotel Continental.
+
+ Thick to the lips and velvety
+ Scented of rum and vanilla
+ Oversweet, oversoft, overstrong,
+ Full of froth of fascination,
+ Drink to be drunk of Isoldes
+ Sunk in champagne-colored couches
+ While Tristans with fair flowing hair
+ And round cheeks rosy as cherubs
+ Stand and stretch their arms,
+ And let their great slow tears
+ Roll and fall,
+ And splash in the huge gold cups.
+
+ And behind the scenes with his sleeves rolled up,
+ Grandiloquently
+ Kurwenal beats the eggs
+ Into spuming symphonic splendor
+ Champagne-colored.
+
+ Red-nosed gnomes roll and tumble
+ Tussle and jumble in the firelight
+ Roll on their backs spinning rotundly,
+ Out of earthern jars
+ Gloriously gurgitating,
+ Wriggling their huge round bellies.
+
+ And the air of the cave is heavy
+ With steaming Marsala and rum
+ And hot bruised vanilla.
+
+ Champagne-colored, one lies in a velvetiness
+ Of yellow moths stirring faintly tickling wings
+ One is heavy and full of languor
+ And sleep is a champagne-colored coverlet,
+ the champagne-colored stockings of Venus ...
+ And later
+ One goes
+ And pukes beautifully beneath the moon,
+ Champagne-colored.
+
+
+ II
+ ODE TO ENNUI
+
+ The autumn leaves that this morning danced with the wind,
+ curtseying in slow minuettes,
+ giddily whirling in bacchanals,
+ balancing, hesitant, tiptoe,
+ while the wind whispered of distant hills,
+ and clouds like white sails, sailing
+ in limpid green ice-colored skies,
+ have crossed the picket fence
+ and the three strands of barbed wire;
+ they have leapt the green picket fence
+ despite the sentry's bayonet.
+
+ Under the direction of a corporal
+ three soldiers in khaki are sweeping them up,
+ sweeping up the autumn leaves,
+ crimson maple leaves, splotched with saffron,
+ ochre and cream,
+ brown leaves of horse-chestnuts ...
+ and the leaves dance and curtsey round the brooms,
+ full of mirth,
+ wistful of the journey the wind promised them.
+
+ This morning the leaves fluttered gaudily,
+ reckless, giddy from the wind's dances,
+ over the green picket fence
+ and the three strands of barbed wire.
+ Now they are swept up
+ and put in a garbage can
+ with cigarette butts
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco,
+ burnt matches, old socks, torn daily papers,
+ and dust from the soldiers' blankets.
+
+ And the wind blows tauntingly
+ over the mouth of the garbage can,
+ whispering, Far away,
+ mockingly, Far away ...
+
+ And I too am swept up
+ and put in a garbage can
+ with smoked cigarette ash
+ and chewed-out quids of tobacco;
+ I am fallen into the dominion
+ of the great dusty queen ...
+ Ennui, iron goddess, cobweb-clothed
+ goddess of all useless things,
+ of attics cluttered with old chairs
+ for centuries unsatupon,
+ of strong limbs wriggling on office stools,
+ of ancient cab-horses and cabs
+ that sleep all day in silent sunny squares,
+ of camps bound with barbed wire,
+ and green picket fences--
+ bind my eyes with your close dust
+ choke my ears with your grey cobwebs
+ that I may not see the clouds
+ that sail away across the sky,
+ far away, tauntingly,
+ that I may not hear the wind
+ that mocks and whispers and is gone
+ in pursuit of the horizon.
+
+
+ III
+ TIVOLI
+ TO D. P.
+
+ The ropes of the litter creak and groan
+ As the bearers turn down the steep path;
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet.
+ But the Roman poet lies back confident
+ On his magenta cushions and mattresses,
+ Thinks of Greek bronzes
+ At the sight of the straining backs of his slaves.
+
+ The slaves' breasts shine with sweat,
+ And they draw deep breaths of the cooler air
+ As they lurch through tunnel after tunnel of leaves.
+ At last, where the spray swirls like smoke,
+ And the river roars in a cauldron of green,
+ The poet feels his fat arms quiver
+ And his eyes and ears drowned and exalted
+ In the reverberance of the fall.
+
+ The ropes of the litter creak and groan,
+ The embroidered curtains, moist with spray,
+ Flutter in the poet's face;
+ Pebbles scuttle under slipping feet
+ As the slaves strain up the path again,
+ And the Roman poet lies back confident
+ Among silk cushions of gold and magenta,
+ His hands clasped across his mountainous belly,
+ Thinking of the sibyll and fate,
+ And gorgeous and garlanded death,
+ Mouthing hexameters.
+
+ But I, my belly full and burning as the sun
+ With the good white wine of the Alban hills
+ Stumble down the path
+ Into the cool green and the roar,
+ And wonder, and am abashed.
+
+
+ IV
+ VENICE
+
+ The doge goes down in state to the sea
+ To inspect with beady traders' eyes
+ New cargoes from Crete, Mytilene,
+ Cyprus and Joppa, galleys piled
+ With bales off which in all the days
+ Of sailing the sea-wind has not blown
+ The dust of Arabian caravans.
+
+ In velvet the doge goes down to the sea.
+ And sniffs the dusty bales of spice
+ Pepper from Cathay, nard and musk,
+ Strange marbles from ruined cities, packed
+ In unfamiliar-scented straw.
+ Black slaves sweat and grin in the sun.
+ Marmosets pull at the pompous gowns
+ Of burgesses. Parrots scream
+ And cling swaying to the ochre bales ...
+ Dazzle of the rising dust of trade
+ Smell of pitch and straining slaves ...
+
+ And out on the green tide towards the sea
+ Drift the rinds of orient fruits
+ Strange to the lips, bitter and sweet.
+
+
+ V
+ ASOLO GATE
+
+ The air is drenched to the stars
+ With fragrance of flowering grape
+ Where the hills hunch up from the plain
+ To the purple dark ridges that sweep
+ Towards the flowery-pale peaks and the snow.
+
+ Faint as the peaks in the glister of starlight,
+ A figure on a silver-tinkling snow-white mule
+ Climbs the steeply twining stony road
+ Through murmuring vineyards to the gate
+ That gaps with black the wan starlight.
+
+ The watchman on his three-legged stool
+ Drowses in his beard, dreams
+ He is a boy walking with strong strides
+ Of slender thighs down a wet road,
+ Where flakes of violet-colored April sky
+ Have brimmed the many puddles till the road
+ Is as a tattered path across another sky.
+
+ The watchman on his three-legged stool,
+ Sits snoring in his beard;
+ His dream is full of flowers massed in meadowland,
+ Of larks and thrushes singing in the dawn,
+ Of touch of women's lips and twining hands,
+ And madness of the sprouting spring ...
+ His ears a-sudden ring with the shrill cry:
+ Open watchman of the gate,
+ It is I, the Cyprian.
+
+ --It is ruled by the burghers of this town
+ Of Asolo, that from sundown
+ To dawn no stranger shall come in,
+ Be he even emperor, or doge's kin.
+ --Open, watchman of the gate,
+ It is I, the Cyprian.
+ --Much scandal has been made of late
+ By wandering women in this town.
+ The laws forbid the opening of the gate
+ Till next day once the sun is down.
+ --Watchman know that I who wait
+ Am Queen of Jerusalem, Queen
+ Of Cypress, Lady of Asolo, friend
+ Of the Doge and the Venetian State.
+
+ There is a sound of drums, and torches flare
+ Dims the star-swarm, and war-horns' braying
+ Drowns the fiddling of crickets in the wall,
+ Hoofs strike fire on the flinty road,
+ Mules in damasked silk caparisoned
+ Climb in long train, strange shadows in torchlight,
+ The road that winds to the city gate.
+
+ The watchman, fumbling with his keys,
+ Mumbles in his beard:--Had thought
+ She was another Cyprian, strange the dreams
+ That come when one has eaten tripe.
+ The great gates creak and groan,
+ The hinges shriek, and the Queen's white mule
+ Stalks slowly through.
+
+ The watchman, in the shadow of the wall,
+ Looks out with heavy eyes:--Strange,
+ What cavalcade is this that clatters into Asolo?
+ These are not men-at-arms,
+ These ruddy boys with vineleaves in their hair!
+ That great-bellied one no seneschal
+ Can be, astride an ass so gauntily!
+ Virgin Mother! Saints! They wear no clothes!
+
+ And through the gate a warm wind blows,
+ A dizzying perfume of the grape,
+ And a great throng crying Cypris,
+ Cyprian, with cymbals crashing and a shriek
+ Of Thessalian pipes, and swaying of torches,
+ That smell hot like wineskins of resin,
+ That flare on arms empurpled and hot cheeks,
+ And full shouting lips vermillion-red.
+
+ Youths and girls with streaming hair
+ Pelting the night with flowers:
+ Yellow blooms of Adonis, white
+ scented stars of pale Narcissus,
+ Mad incense of the blooming vine,
+ And carmine passion of pomegranate blooms.
+
+ A-sudden all the strummings of the night,
+ All the insect-stirrings, all the rustlings
+ Of budding leaves, the sing-song
+ Of waters brightly gurgling through meadowland,
+ Are shouting with the shouting throng,
+ Crying Cypris, Cyprian,
+ Queen of the seafoam, Queen of the budding year,
+ Queen of eyes that flame and hands that twine,
+ Return to us, return from the fields of asphodel.
+
+ And all the grey town of Asolo
+ Is full of lutes and songs of love,
+ And vows exchanged from balcony to balcony
+ Across the singing streets ...
+ But in the garden of the nunnery,
+ Of the sisters of poverty, daughters of dust,
+ The cock crows. The cock crows.
+
+ The watchman rubs his old ribbed brow:
+ Through the gate, in silk all dusty from the road,
+ Into the grey town asleep under the stars,
+ On tired mules and lean old war-horses
+ Comes a crowd of quarrelling men-at-arms
+ After a much-veiled lady with a falcon on her wrist.
+ --This Asolo? What a nasty silent town
+ He sends me to, that dull old doge.
+
+ And you, watchman, I've told you thrice
+ That I am Cypress's Queen, Jerusalem's,
+ And Lady of this dull village, Asolo;
+ Tend your gates better. Are you deaf,
+ That you stand blinking at me, pulling at your dirty beard?
+ You shall be thrashed, when I rule Asolo.
+ --What strange dreams, mumbled in his beard
+ The ancient watchman, come from eating tripe.
+
+
+ VI
+ HARLEQUINADE
+
+ Shrilly whispering down the lanes
+ That serpent through the ancient night,
+ They, the scoffers, the scornful of chains,
+ Stride their turbulent flight.
+
+ The stars spin steel above their heads
+ In the shut irrevocable sky;
+ Gnarled thorn-branches tear to shreds
+ Their cloaks of pageantry.
+
+ A wind blows bitter in the grey,
+ Chills the sweat on throbbing cheeks,
+ And tugs the gaudy rags away
+ From their lean bleeding knees.
+
+ Their laughter startles the scarlet dawn
+ Among a tangled spiderwork
+ Of girdered steel, and shrills forlorn
+ And dies in the rasp of wheels.
+
+ Whirling like gay prints that whirl
+ In tatters of squalid gaudiness,
+ Borne with dung and dust in the swirl
+ Of wind down the endless street,
+
+ With thin lips laughing bitterly,
+ Through the day smeared in sooty smoke
+ That pours from each red chimney,
+ They speed unseemily.
+
+ Women with unlustered hair,
+ Men with huge ugly hands of oil,
+ Children, impudently stare
+ And point derisive hands.
+
+ Only ... where a barrel organ thrills
+ Two small peak-chested girls to dance,
+ And among the iron clatter spills
+ A swiftening rhythmy song,
+
+ They march in velvet silkslashed hose,
+ Strumming guitars and mellow lutes,
+ Strutting pointed Spanish toes,
+ A stately company.
+
+
+ VII
+ TO THE MEMORY OF DEBUSSY
+ _Good Friday, 1918._
+
+ This is the feast of death
+ We make of our pain God;
+ We worship the nails and the rod
+ and pain's last choking breath
+ and the bleeding rack of the cross.
+
+ The women have wept away their tears,
+ with red eyes turned on death, and loss
+ of friends and kindred, have left the biers
+ flowerless, and bound their heads in their blank veils,
+ and climbed the steep slope of Golgotha; fails
+ at last the wail of their bereavement,
+ and all the jagged world of rocks and desert places
+ stands before their racked sightless faces,
+ as any ice-sea silent.
+
+ This is the feast of conquering death.
+ The beaten flesh worships the swishing rod.
+ The lacerated body bows to its God,
+ adores the last agonies of breath.
+
+ And one more has joined the unnumbered
+ deathstruck multitudes
+ who with the loved of old have slumbered
+ ages long, where broods
+ Earth the beneficent goddess,
+ the ultimate queen of quietness,
+ taker of all worn souls and bodies
+ back into the womb of her first nothingness.
+
+ But ours, who in the iron night remain,
+ ours the need, the pain
+ of his departing.
+ He had lived on out of a happier age
+ into our strident torture-cage.
+ He still could sing
+ of quiet gardens under rain
+ and clouds and the huge sky
+ and pale deliciousness that is nearly pain.
+ His was a new minstrelsy:
+ strange plaints brought home out of the rich east,
+ twanging songs from Tartar caravans,
+ hints of the sounds that ceased
+ with the stilling dawn, wailings of the night,
+ echoes of the web of mystery that spans
+ the world between the failing and the rising of the wan daylight
+ of the sea, and of a woman's hair
+ hanging gorgeous down a dungeon wall,
+ evening falling on Tintagel,
+ love lost in the mist of old despair.
+
+ Against the bars of our torture-cage
+ we beat out our poor lives in vain.
+ We live on cramped in an iron age
+ like prisoners of old
+ high on the world's battlements
+ exposed until we die to the chilling rain
+ crouched and chattering from cold
+ for all scorn to stare at.
+ And we watch one by one the great
+ stroll leisurely out of the western gate
+ and without a backward look at the strident city
+ drink down the stirrup-cup of fate
+ embrace the last obscurity.
+
+ We worship the nails and the rod
+ and pain's last choking breath.
+ We make of our pain God.
+ This is the feast of death.
+
+
+ VIII
+ PALINODE OF VICTORY
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ In every bar and tavern
+ As the regiments victorious
+ March under garlands to the city square.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ And lips are free, and women,
+ Breathless, stand on tiptoe
+ To see the flushed young thousands in advance.
+
+ "Beer is free to soldiers;
+ Give all to the liberators" ...
+ Under wreaths of laurel
+ And small and large flags fluttering, victorious,
+ They of the frock-coats, with clink of official chains,
+ Are welcoming with eloquence outpouring
+ The liberating thousands, the victorious;
+ In their speaking is a soaring of great phrases,
+ Balloons of tissue paper,
+ Hung with patriotic bunting,
+ That rise serene into the blue,
+ While the crowds with necks uptilted
+ Gaze at their upward soaring
+ Till they vanish in the blue;
+ And each man feels the blood of life
+ Rumble in his ears important
+ With participation in Events.
+
+ But not the fluttering of great flags
+ Or the brass bands blaring, victorious,
+ Or the speeches of persons in frock coats,
+ Who pause for the handclapping of crowds,
+ Not the stamp of men and women dancing,
+ Or the bubbling of beer in the taverns,--
+ Frothy mugs free for the victorious--,
+ Not all the trombone-droning of Events,
+ Can drown the inextinguishible laughter of the gods.
+
+ And they hear it, the old hooded houses,
+ The great creaking peak-gabled houses,
+ That gossip and chuckle to each other
+ Across the clattering streets;
+ They hear it, the old great gates,
+ The grey gates with towers,
+ Where in the changing shrill winds of the years
+ Have groaned the poles of many various-colored banners.
+ The poplars of the high-road hear it,
+ From their trembling twigs comes a dry laughing,
+ As they lean towards the glare of the city.
+ And the old hard-laughing paving-stones,
+ Old stones weary with the weariness
+ Of the labor of men's footsteps,
+ Hear it as they quake and clamour
+ Under the garlanded wheels of the yawning confident cannon
+ That are dragged victorious through the flutter of the city.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers,
+ Bubbles on wind-parched lips,
+ Moistens easy kisses
+ Lavished on the liberators.
+
+ Beer is free to soldiers
+ All night in steaming bars,
+ In halls delirious with dancing
+ That spill their music into thronging streets.
+
+ --All is free to soldiers,
+ To the weary heroes
+ Who have bled, and soaked
+ The whole earth in their sacrificial blood,
+ Who have with their bare flesh clogged
+ The crazy wheels of Juggernaut,
+ Freed the peoples from the dragon that devoured them,
+ That scorched with greed their pleasant fields and villages,
+ Their quiet delightful places:
+
+ So they of the frock-coats, amid wreaths and flags victorious,
+ To the crowds in the flaring squares,
+ And a murmurous applause
+ Rises like smoke to mingle in the sky
+ With the crashing of the bells.
+
+ But, resounding in the sky,
+ Louder than the tramp of feet,
+ Louder than the crash of bells,
+ Louder than the blare of bands, victorious,
+ Shrieks the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+ The old houses rock with it,
+ And wag their great peaked heads,
+ The old gates shake,
+ And the pavings ring with it,
+ As with the iron tramp of old fighters,
+ As with the clank of heels of the victorious,
+ By long ages vanquished.
+ The spouts in the gurgling fountains
+ Wrinkle their shiny griffin faces,
+ Splash the rhythm in their ice-fringed basins--
+ Of the inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+ And far up into the inky sky,
+ Where great trailing clouds stride across the world,
+ Darkening the spired cities,
+ And the villages folded in the hollows of hills,
+ And the shining cincture of railways,
+ And the pale white twining roads,
+ Sounds with the stir of quiet monotonous breath
+ Of men and women stretched out sleeping,
+ Sounds with the thin wail of pain
+ Of hurt things huddled in darkness,
+ Sounds with the victorious racket
+ Of speeches and soldiers drinking,
+ Sounds with the silence of the swarming dead--
+ The inextinguishable laughter of the gods.
+
+
+ IX
+
+ O I would take my pen and write
+ In might of words
+ A pounding dytheramb
+ Alight with teasing fires of hate,
+ Or drone to numbness in the spell
+ Of old loves long lived away
+ A drowsy vilanelle.
+ O I would build an Ark of words,
+ A safe ciborium where to lay
+ The secret soul of loveliness.
+ O I would weave of words in rhythm
+ A gaudily wrought pall
+ For the curious cataphalque of fate.
+
+ But my pen does otherwise.
+
+ All I can write is the orange tinct with crimson
+ of the beaks of the goose
+ and of the wet webbed feet of the geese
+ that crackle the skimming of ice
+ and curve their white plump necks to the water
+ in the manure-stained rivulet
+ that runs down the broad village street;
+ and of their cantankerous dancings and hissings,
+ with beaks tilted up, half open
+ and necks stiffly extended;
+ and the cure's habit blowing in the stinging wind
+ and his red globular face
+ like a great sausage burst in the cooking
+ that smiles
+ as he takes the shovel hat off his head with a gesture,
+ the hat held at arm's length,
+ sweeping a broad curve, like a censor well swung;
+ and, beyond the last grey gabled house in the village,
+ the gaunt Christ
+ that stretches bony arms and tortured hands
+ to embrace the broad lands leprous with cold
+ the furrowed fields and the meadows
+ and the sprouting oats
+ ghostly beneath the grey bitter blanket of hoarfrost.
+
+ _Sausheim_
+
+
+ X
+
+ In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,
+ Sat dining through the warm spring night,
+ Spilling of the crocus-colored wine
+ Glass after brimming glass to rouse
+ The ghosts that dwell in books to flight
+ Of word and image that, divine,
+ In the draining of a glass would tear
+ The lies from off reality,
+ And the world in gaudy chaos spread
+ Naked-new in the throbbing flare
+ Of songs of long-fled spirits;--free
+ For the wanderer devious roads to tread.
+
+ Names waved as banners in our talk:
+ Lucretius, his master, all men who to balk
+ The fear that shrivels us in choking rinds
+ Have thrown their souls like pollen to the winds,
+ Erasmus, Bruno who burned in Rome, Voltaire,
+ All those whose lightning laughter cleaned the air
+ Of the minds of men from the murk of fear-sprung gods,
+ And straightened the backs bowed under the rulers' rods.
+
+ A hall full of the wine and chant of old songs,
+ Smelling of lilacs and early roses and night,
+ Clamorous with the names and phrases of the throngs
+ Of the garlanded dead, and with glasses pledged to the light
+ Of the dawning to come ...
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ Out into the drudging world and sing
+ And shout down dustblinded streets, hollo
+ From hill to hill, and our thought fling
+ Abroad through all the drowsy earth
+ To wake the sleeper and the worker and the jailed
+ In walls cemented of lies to mirth
+ And dancing joy; laughingly unveiled
+ From the sick mist of fear to run naked and leap
+ And shake the nations from their snoring sleep.
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ Fantastically arrayed
+ In silk and scarlet braid,
+ In rich glitter like the sun on snow
+ With banners of orange, vermillion, black,
+ And jasper-handed swords,
+ Anklets and tinkling gauds
+ Of topaz set twistingly, or lac
+ Laid over with charms of demons' heads
+ In indigo and gold.
+ Our going a music bold
+ Would be, behind us the twanging threads
+ Of mad guitars, the wail of lutes
+ In wildest harmony;
+ Lilting thumping free,
+ Pipes and kettledrums and flutes
+ And brazen braying trumpet-calls
+ Would wake each work-drowsed town
+ And shake it in laughter down,
+ Untuning in dust the shuttered walls.
+
+ O in the morning we would go
+ With doleful steps so dragging and slow
+ And grievous mockery of woe
+ And bury the old gods where they lay
+ Sodden drunk with men's pain in the day,
+ In the dawn's first new burning white ray
+ That would shrivel like dead leaves the sacred lies,
+ The avengers, the graspers, the wringers of sighs,
+ Of blood from men's work-twisted hands, from their eyes
+ Of tears without hope ... But in the burning day
+ Of the dawn we would see them brooding to slay,
+ In a great wind whirled like dead leaves away.
+
+ In a hall on Olympus we held carouse,
+ In our talk as banners waving names,
+ Songs, phrases of the garlanded dead.
+
+ Yesterday I went back to that house ...
+ Guttered candles where were flames,
+ Shattered dust-grey glasses instead
+ Of the fiery crocus-colored wine,
+ Silence, cobwebs and a mouse
+ Nibbling nibbling the moulded bread
+ Those spring nights dipped in vintage divine
+ In the dawnward chanting of our last carouse.
+
+ _1918--1919_
+
+
+
+
+VAGONES DE TERCERA
+
+
+ _Refrain_
+
+ HARD ON YOUR RUMP
+ BUMP BUMP
+ HARD ON YOUR RUMP
+ BUMP BUMP
+
+
+ I
+
+ O the savage munching of the long dark train
+ crunching up the miles
+ crunching up the long slopes and the hills
+ that crouch and sprawl through the night
+ like animals asleep,
+ gulping the winking towns
+ and the shadow-brimmed valleys
+ where lone trees twist their thorny arms.
+
+ The smoke flares red and yellow;
+ the smoke curls like a long dragon's tongue
+ over the broken lands.
+
+ The train with teeth flashing
+ gnaws through the piecrust of hills and plains
+ greedy of horizons.
+
+ _Alcazar de San Juan_
+
+
+ II
+ TO R. H.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine
+ on the hard benches of my third class coach
+ that joggles over brown uplands
+ dragged at the end of a rattling train.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine,
+ great gods and small gods, gods of air
+ and earth and sea, and of the grey land
+ where among ghostly rubbish heaps and cast-out things
+ linger the strengthless dead.
+
+ I invite all the gods to dine,
+ Jehovah and Crepitus and Sebek,
+ the slimy crocodile ... But no;
+ wait ... I revoke the invitation.
+
+ For I have seen you, crowding gods,
+ hungry gods. You have a drab official look.
+ You have your pockets full of bills,
+ claims for indemnity, for incense unsniffed
+ since men first jumped up in their sleep
+ and drove you out of doors.
+
+ Let me instead, O djinn that sows the stars
+ and tunes the strings of the violin,
+ have fifty lyric poets,
+ not pale parson folk, occasional sonneteers,
+ but sturdy fellows who ride dolphins,
+ who need no wine to make them drunk,
+ who do not fear to meet red death at the meanads' hands
+ or to have their heads at last
+ float vine-crowned on the Thracian sea.
+
+ Anacreon, a partridge-wing?
+ A sip of wine, Simonides?
+ Algy has gobbled all the pastry
+ and left none for the Elizabethans
+ who come arm in arm, singing bawdy songs,
+ smelling of sack, from the Mermaid. Ronsard,
+ will you eat nothing, only sniff roses?
+ Those Anthologists have husky appetites!
+ There's nothing left but a green banana
+ unless that galleon comes from Venily
+ with Hillyer breakfasts wrapped in sonnet-paper.
+
+ But they've all brought gods with them!
+ Avaunt! Take them away, O djinn
+ that paints the clouds and brings in the night
+ in the rumble and clatter of the train
+ cadences out of the past ... Did you not see
+ how each saved a bit out of the banquet
+ to take home and burn in quiet to his god?
+
+ _Madrid, Caceres, Portugal_
+
+
+ III
+
+ Three little harlots
+ with artificial roses in their hair
+ each at a window of a third-class coach
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ Too much powder and too much paint
+ shining black hair.
+ One sings to the clatter of wheels
+ a swaying unending song
+ that trails across the crimson slopes
+ and the blue ranks of olives
+ and the green ranks of vines.
+ Three little harlots
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ The plowman drops the traces
+ on the shambling oxen's backs
+ turns his head and stares
+ wistfully after the train.
+
+ The mule-boy stops his mules
+ shows his white teeth and shouts
+ a word, then urges dejectedly
+ the mules to the road again.
+
+ The stout farmer on his horse
+ straightens his broad felt hat,
+ makes the horse leap, and waves
+ grandiosely after the train.
+
+ Is it that the queen Astarte
+ strides across the fallow lands
+ to fertilize the swelling grapes
+ amid shrieking of her corybants?
+
+ Too much powder and too much paint
+ shining black hair.
+ Three little harlots
+ on the train from Zafra to the fair.
+
+ _Sevilla--Merida_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ My desires have gone a-hunting,
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,
+ hounds that have lost the scent.
+
+ Outside, behind the white swirling patterns of coalsmoke,
+ hunched fruit-trees slide by
+ slowly pirouetting,
+ and poplars and aspens on tiptoe
+ peer over each other's shoulders
+ at the long black rattling train;
+ colts sniff and fling their heels in air
+ across the dusty meadows,
+ and the sun now and then
+ looks with vague interest through the clouds
+ at the blonde harvest mottled with poppies,
+ and the Joseph's cloak of fields, neatly sewn together with hedges,
+ that hides the grisly skeleton
+ of the elemental earth.
+
+ My mad desires
+ circle through the fields and sniff along the hedges,
+ hounds that have lost the scent.
+
+ _Misto_
+
+
+ V
+ VIRGEN DE LAS ANGUSTIAS
+
+ The street is full of drums
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.
+ Above the roofs in the shaking towers
+ the bells yawn.
+
+ The street is full of drums
+ and shuffle of slow moving feet.
+ The flanks of the houses glow
+ with the warm glow of candles,
+ and above the upturned faces,
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold,
+ swaying on the necks of men, swaying
+ with the strong throb of drums,
+ haltingly she advances.
+
+ What manner of woman are you,
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,
+ you who look bitterly
+ at the dead man on your knees,
+ while your foot in an embroidered slipper
+ tramples the new moon?
+
+ Haltingly she advances,
+ swaying above the upturned faces
+ and the shuffling feet.
+
+ In the dark unthought-of years
+ men carried you thus
+ down streets where drums throbbed
+ and torches flared,
+ bore you triumphantly,
+ mourner and queen,
+ followed you with shuffling feet
+ and upturned faces.
+ You it was who sat
+ in the swirl of your robes
+ at the granary door,
+ and brought the orange maize
+ black with mildew
+ or fat with milk, to the harvest:
+ and made the ewes
+ to swell with twin lambs,
+ or bleating, to sicken among the nibbling flock.
+ You wept the dead youth
+ laid lank and white in the empty hut,
+ sat scarring your cheeks with the dark-cowled women.
+ You brought the women safe
+ through the shrieks and the shuddering pain
+ of the birth of a child;
+ and, when the sprouting spring
+ poured fire in the blood of the young men,
+ and made the he-goats dance stiff-legged
+ in the sloping thyme-scented pastures,
+ you were the full-lipped wanton enchantress
+ who led on moonless nights,
+ when it was very dark in the high valleys,
+ the boys from the villages
+ to find the herd-girls among the munching sweet-breathed cattle
+ beside their fires of thyme-sticks,
+ on their soft beds of sweet-fern.
+
+ Many names have they called you,
+ Lady of laughing and weeping,
+ shuffling after you, borne
+ on the necks of men down town streets
+ with drums and red torches:
+ dolorous one, weeping the dead
+ youth of the year ever dying,
+ or full-breasted empress of summer,
+ Lady of the Corybants
+ and the headlong routs
+ that maddened with cymbals and shouting
+ the hot nights of amorous languor
+ when the gardens swooned under the scent
+ of jessamine and nard.
+ You were the slim-waisted Lady of Doves,
+ you were Ishtar and Ashtaroth,
+ for whom the Canaanite girls
+ gave up their earrings and anklets and their own slender bodies,
+ you were the dolorous Isis,
+ and Aphrodite.
+ It was you who on the Syrian shore
+ mourned the brown limbs of the boy Adonis.
+ You were the queen of the crescent moon,
+ the Lady of Ephesus,
+ giver of riches,
+ for whom the great temple
+ reeked with burning and spices.
+ And now in the late bitter years,
+ your head is bowed with bitterness;
+ across your knees lies the lank body
+ of the Crucified.
+
+ Rockets shriek and roar and burst
+ against the velvet sky;
+ the wind flutters the candle-flames
+ above the long white slanting candles.
+
+ Swaying above the upturned faces
+ to the strong throb of drums,
+ borne in triumph on the necks of men,
+ crowned, robed in a cone-shaped robe
+ of vast dark folds glittering with gold
+ haltingly, through the pulsing streets,
+ advances Mary, Virgin of Pain.
+
+ _Granada_
+
+
+ VI
+ TO R. J.
+
+ It would be fun, you said,
+ sitting two years ago at this same table,
+ at this same white marble cafe table,
+ if people only knew what fun it would be
+ to laugh the hatred out of soldiers' eyes ...
+
+ --If I drink beer with my enemy,
+ you said, and put your lips to the long glass,
+ and give him what he wants, if he wants it so hard
+ that he would kill me for it,
+ I rather think he'd give it back to me--
+ You laughed, and stretched your long legs out across the floor.
+
+ I wonder in what mood you died,
+ out there in that great muddy butcher-shop,
+ on that meaningless dicing-table of death.
+
+
+ Did you laugh aloud at the futility,
+ and drink death down in a long draught,
+ as you drank your beer two years ago
+ at this same white marble cafe table?
+ Or had the darkness drowned you?
+
+ _Cafe Oro del Rhin_
+ _Plaza de Santa Ana_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Down the road
+ against the blue haze
+ that hangs before the great ribbed forms of the mountains
+ people come home from the fields;
+ they pass a moment in relief
+ against the amber frieze of the sunset
+ before turning the bend
+ towards the twinkling smoke-breathing village.
+
+ A boy in sandals with brown dusty legs
+ and brown cheeks where the flush of evening
+ has left its stain of wine.
+ A donkey with a jingling bell
+ and ears askew.
+ Old women with water jars
+ of red burnt earth.
+ Men bent double under burdens of faggots
+ that trail behind them the fragrance
+ of scorched uplands.
+ A child tugging at the end of a string
+ a much inflated sow.
+ A slender girl who presses to her breast
+ big bluefrilled cabbages.
+ And a shepherd in the clinging rags of his cloak
+ who walks with lithe unhurried stride
+ behind the crowded backs of his flock.
+
+ The road is empty
+ only the swaying tufts of oliveboughs
+ against the fading sky.
+
+ Down on the steep hillside
+ a man still follows the yoke
+ of lumbering oxen
+ plowing the heavy crimson-stained soil
+ while the chill silver mists
+ steal up about him.
+
+ I stand in the empty road
+ and feel in my arms and thighs
+ the strain of his body
+ as he leans far to one side
+ and wrenches the plow from the furrow,
+ feel my blood throb in time to his slow careful steps
+ as he follows the plow in the furrow.
+
+ Red earth
+ giver of all things
+ of the yellow grain and the oil
+ and the wine to all gods sacred
+ of the fragrant sticks that crackle in the hearth
+ and the crisp swaying grass
+ that swells to dripping the udders of the cows,
+ of the jessamine the girls stick in their hair
+ when they walk in twos and threes in the moonlight,
+ and of the pallid autumnal crocuses ...
+ are there no fields yet to plow?
+
+ Are there no fields yet to plow
+ where with sweat and straining of muscles
+ good things may be wrung from the earth
+ and brown limbs going home tired through the evening?
+
+ _Lanjaron_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ O such a night for scaling garden walls;
+ to push the rose shoots silently aside
+ and pause a moment where the water falls
+ into the fountain, softly troubling the wide
+ bridge of stars tremblingly mirrored there
+ terror-pale and shaking as the real stars shake
+ in crystal fear lest the rustle of silence break
+ with a watchdog's barking.
+
+ O to scale the garden wall and fling
+ my life into the bowl of an adventure,
+ stake on the silver dice the past and future
+ forget the odds and lying in the garden sing
+ in time to the flutter of the waiting stars
+ madness of love for the slender ivory white
+ of her body hidden among dark silks where
+ is languidest the attar weighted air.
+
+ To drink in one strong jessamine scented draught
+ sadness of flesh, twining madness of the night.
+
+ O such a night for scaling garden walls;
+ yet I lie alone in my narrow bed
+ and stare at the blank walls, forever afraid,
+ of a watchdog's barking.
+
+ _Granada_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Rain-swelled the clouds of winter
+ drag themselves like purple swine across the plain.
+ On the trees the leaves hang dripping
+ fast dripping away all the warm glamour
+ all the ceremonial paint of gorgeous bountiful autumn.
+
+ The black wet boles are vacant and dead.
+ Among the trampled leaves already mud
+ rot the husks of the rich nuts. On the hills
+ the snow has frozen the last pale crocuses
+ and the winds have robbed the smell of the thyme.
+
+ Down the wet streets of the town
+ from doors where the light spills out orange
+ over the shining irregular cobbles
+ and dances in ripples on gurgling gutters;
+ sounds the zambomba.
+
+ In the room beside the slanting street
+ round the tray of glowing coals
+ in their stained blue clothes, dusty
+ with the dust of workshops and factories,
+ the men and boys sit quiet;
+ their large hands dangle idly
+ or rest open on their knees
+ and they talk in soft tired voices.
+ Crosslegged in a corner a child with brown hands
+ sounds the zambomba.
+
+ Outside down the purple street
+ stopping sometimes at a door, breathing deep
+ the heady wine of sunset, stride with clattering steps
+ those to whom the time will never come
+ of work-stiffened unrestless hands.
+
+ The rain-swelled clouds of winter roam
+ like a herd of swine over the town and the dark plain.
+
+ The wineshops full of shuffling and talk, tanned faces
+ bright eyes, moist lips moulding desires
+ blow breaths of strong wine in the faces of passers-by.
+
+ There are guards in the storehouse doors
+ where are gathered the rich fruits of autumn, the grain
+ the sweet figs and raisins; sullen blood tingling to madness
+ they stride by who have not reaped.
+ Sounds the zambomba.
+
+ _Albaicin_
+
+
+ X
+
+ The train throbs doggedly
+ over the gleaming rails
+ fleeing the light-green flanks of hills
+ dappled with alternate shadow of clouds,
+ fleeing the white froth of orchards,
+ of clusters of apples and cherries in flower,
+ fleeing the wide lush meadows,
+ wealthy with cowslips,
+ and the tramping horses and backward-strained bodies of plowmen,
+ fleeing the gleam of the sky in puddles and glittering waters
+ the train throbs doggedly
+ over the ceaseless rails
+ spurning the verdant grace
+ of April's dainty apparel;
+ so do my desires
+ spurn those things which are behind
+ in hunger of horizons.
+
+ _Rapido: Valencia--Barcelona_
+ _1919--1920_
+
+
+
+
+QUAI DE LA TOURNELLE
+
+
+ I
+
+ See how the frail white pagodas of blossom
+ stand up on the great green hills
+ of the chestnuts
+ and how the sun has burned the wintry murk
+ and all the stale odor of anguish
+ out of the sky
+ so that the swollen clouds bellying with sail
+ can parade in pomp like white galleons.
+
+ And they move the slow plumed clouds
+ above the spidery grey webs of cities
+ above fields full of golden chime
+ of cowslips
+ above warbling woods where the ditches
+ are wistfully patined
+ with primroses pale as the new moon
+ above hills all golden with gorse
+ and gardens frothed
+ to the brim of their grey stone walls
+ with apple bloom, cherry bloom,
+ and the raspberry-stained bloom of peaches and almonds.
+
+ So do the plumed clouds sail
+ swelling with satiny pomp of parade
+ towards somewhere far away
+ where in a sparkling silver sea
+ full of little flakes of indigo
+ the great salt waves have heaved and stirred
+ into blossoming of foam,
+ and lifted on the rush of the warm wind
+ towards the gardens and the spring-mad cities of the shore
+ Aphrodite Aphrodite is reborn.
+
+ And even in this city park
+ galled with iron rails
+ shrill with the clanging of ironbound wheels
+ on the pavings of the unquiet streets,
+ little children run and dance and sing
+ with spring-madness in the sun,
+ and the frail white pagodas of blossom
+ stand up on the great green hills
+ of the chestnuts
+ and all their tiers of tiny gargoyle faces
+ stick out gold and red-striped tongues
+ in derision of the silly things of men.
+
+ _Jardin du Luxembourg_
+
+
+ II
+
+ The shadows make strange streaks and mottled arabesques
+ of violet on the apricot-tinged walks
+ where the thin sunlight lies
+ like flower-petals.
+
+ On the cool wind there is a fragrance
+ indefinable
+ of strawberries crushed in deep woods.
+
+ And the flushed sunlight,
+ the wistful patterns of shadow
+ on gravel walks between tall elms
+ and broad-leaved lindens,
+ the stretch of country,
+ yellow and green,
+ full of little particolored houses,
+ and the faint intangible sky,
+ have lumped my soggy misery,
+ like clay in the brown deft hands of a potter,
+ and moulded a song of it.
+
+ _Saint Germain-en-Laye_
+
+
+ III
+
+ In the dark the river spins,
+ Laughs and ripples never ceasing,
+ Swells to gurgle under arches,
+ Swishes past the bows of barges,
+ in its haste to swirl away
+ From the stone walls of the city
+ That has lamps that weight the eddies
+ Down with snaky silver glitter,
+ As it flies it calls me with it
+ Through the meadows to the sea.
+
+ I close the door on it, draw the bolts,
+ Climb the stairs to my silent room;
+ But through the window that swings open
+ Comes again its shuttle-song,
+ Spinning love and night and madness,
+ Madness of the spring at sea.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The streets are full of lilacs
+ lilacs in boys' buttonholes
+ lilacs at women's waists;
+ arms full of lilacs, people trail behind them through the moist night
+ long swirls of fragrance,
+ fragrance of gardens
+ fragrance of hedgerows where they have wandered
+ all the May day
+ where the lovers have held each others hands
+ and lavished vermillion kisses
+ under the portent of the swaying plumes
+ of the funereal lilacs.
+
+ The streets are full of lilacs
+ that trail long swirls and eddies of fragrance
+ arabesques of fragrance
+ like the arabesques that form and fade
+ in the fleeting ripples of the jade-green river.
+
+ _Porte Maillot_
+
+
+ V
+
+ As a gardener in a pond
+ splendid with lotus and Indian nenuphar
+ wades to his waist in the warm black water
+ stooping to this side and that to cull the snaky stems
+ of the floating white glittering lilies
+ groping to break the harsh stems of the imperious lotus
+ lifting the huge flowers high
+ in a cluster in his hand
+ till they droop against the moon;
+ so I grope through the streets of the night
+ culling out of the pool
+ of the spring-reeking, rain-reeking city
+ gestures and faces.
+
+ _Place St. Michel_
+
+
+ VI
+ TO A. K. MC C.
+
+ This is a garden
+ where through the russet mist of clustered trees
+ and strewn November leaves,
+ they crunch with vainglorious heels
+ of ancient vermillion
+ the dry dead of spent summer's greens,
+ and stalk with mincing sceptic steps
+ and sound of snuffboxes snapping
+ to the capping of an epigram,
+ in fluffy attar-scented wigs ...
+ the exquisite Augustans.
+
+ _Tuileries_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ They come from the fields flushed
+ carrying bunches of limp flowers
+ they plucked on teeming meadows
+ and moist banks scented of mushrooms.
+
+ They come from the fields tired
+ softness of flowers in their eyes
+ and moisture of rank sprouting meadows.
+
+ They stroll back with tired steps
+ lips still soft with the softness of petals
+ voices faint with the whisper of woods;
+ and they wander through the darkling streets
+ full of stench of bodies and clothes and merchandise
+ full of the hard hum of iron things;
+ and into their cheeks that the wind had burned and the sun
+ that kisses burned out on the rustling meadows
+ into their cheeks soft with lazy caresses
+ comes sultry
+ caged breath of panthers
+ fetid, uneasy
+ fury of love sprouting hot in the dust and stench
+ of walls and clothes and merchandise,
+ pent in the stridence of the twilight streets.
+
+ And they look with terror in each other's eyes
+ and part their hot hands stained with grasses and flowerstalks
+ and are afraid of their kisses.
+
+
+ VIII
+ EMBARQUEMENT POUR CYTHERE
+ AFTER WATTEAU
+
+ The mists have veiled the far end of the lake
+ this sullen amber afternoon;
+ our island is quite hidden, and the peaks
+ hang wan as clouds above the ruddy haze.
+
+ Come, give your hand that lies so limp,
+ a tuberose among brown oak-leaves;
+ put your hand in mine and let us leave
+ this bank where we have lain the day long.
+
+ In the boat the naked oarsman stands.
+ Let us walk faster, or do you fear to tear
+ that brocaded dress in apricot and grey?
+ Love, there are silk cushions in the stern
+ maroon and apple-green,
+ crocus-yellow, crimson, amber-grey.
+
+ We will lie and listen to the waves
+ slap soft against the prow, and watch the boy
+ slant his brown body to the long oar-stroke.
+
+ But, love, we are more beautiful than he.
+ We have forgotten the grey sick yearning nights
+ brushed off the old cobwebs of desire;
+ we stand strong
+ immortal as the slender brown boy who waits
+ to row our boat to the island.
+
+ But love how your steps drag.
+
+ And what is this bundle of worn brocades I press
+ so passionately to me? Old rags of the past,
+ snippings of Helen's dress, of Melisande's,
+ scarfs of old paramours rotted in the grave
+ ages and ages since.
+
+ No lake
+ the ink yawns at me from the writing table.
+
+
+ IX
+ LA RUE DU TEMPS PASSE
+
+ Far away where the tall grey houses fade
+ A lamp blooms dully through the dusk,
+ Through the effacing dusk that gently veils
+ The traceried balconies and the wreaths
+ Carved above the shuttered windows
+ Of forgotten houses.
+
+ Behind one of the crumbled garden walls
+ A pale woman sits in drooping black
+ And stares with uncomprehending eyes
+ At the thorny angled twigs that bore
+ Years ago in the moon-spun dusk
+ One scarlet rose.
+
+ In an old high room where the shadows troop
+ On tiptoe across the creaking boards
+ A shrivelled man covers endless sheets
+ Rounding out in his flourishing hand
+ Sentence after sentence loud
+ With dead kings' names.
+
+ Looking out at the vast grey violet dusk
+ A pale boy sits in a window, a book
+ Wide open on his knees, and fears
+ With cold choked fear the thronging lives
+ That lurk in the shadows and fill the dusk
+ With menacing steps.
+
+ Far away the gaslamp glows dull gold
+ A vague tulip in the misty night.
+ The clattering drone of a distant tram
+ Grows loud and fades with a hum of wires
+ Leaving the street breathless with silence, chill
+ And the listening houses.
+
+ _Bordeaux_
+
+
+ X
+
+ _O douce Sainte Genevieve
+ ramene moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ In the smoke of morning the bridges
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.
+
+ Bending their black smokestacks far back
+ muddling themselves in their spiralling smoke
+ the tugboats pass under the bridges
+ and behind them
+ stately
+ gliding smooth like clouds
+ the barges come
+ black barges
+ with blunt prows spurning the water gently
+ gently rebuffing the opulent wavelets
+ of opal and topaz and sapphire,
+ barges casually come from far towns
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.
+
+ The tugboats shrieks and shrieks again
+ calling beyond the next bend and away.
+ In the smoke of morning the bridges
+ are dusted with orangy sunshine.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Genevieve
+ ramene moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ Big hairy-hoofed horses are drawing
+ carts loaded with flour-sacks,
+ white flour-sacks, bluish
+ in the ruddy flush of the morning streets.
+
+ On one cart two boys perch
+ wrestling and their arms and faces
+ glow ruddy against the white flour-sacks
+ as the sun against the flour-white sky.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Genevieve
+ ramene moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+ Under the arcade
+ loud as castanettes with steps
+ of little women hurrying to work
+ an old hag who has a mole on her chin
+ that is tufted with long white hairs
+ sells incense-sticks, and the trail of their strangeness lingers
+ in the many-scented streets
+ among the smells of markets and peaches
+ and the must of old books from the quays
+ and the warmth of early-roasting coffee.
+
+ The old hag's incense has smothered
+ the timid scent of wild strawberries
+ and triumphantly mingled with the strong reek from the river
+ of green slime along stonework of docks
+ and the pitch-caulked decks of barges,
+ barges casually come from far towns
+ towards far towns unhurryingly bound.
+
+ _O douce Sainte Genevieve
+ ramene moi a ta ville, Paris._
+
+
+ XI
+ A L'OMBRE DES JEUNES FILLES EN FLEURS
+
+ And now when I think of you
+ I see you on your piano-stool
+ finger the ineffectual bright keys
+ and even in the pinkish parlor glow
+ your eyes sea-grey are very wide
+ as if they carried the reflection
+ of mocking black pinebranches
+ and unclimbed red-purple mountains mist-tattered
+ under a violet-gleaming evening.
+
+ But chirruping of marriageable girls
+ voices of eager, wise virgins,
+ no lamp unlit every wick well trimmed,
+ fill the pinkish parlor chairs,
+ bobbing hats and shrill tinkling teacups
+ in circle after circle about you
+ so that I can no longer see your eyes.
+
+ Shall I tear down the pinkish curtains
+ smash the imitation ivory keyboard
+ that you may pluck with bare fingers on the strings?
+
+ I sit cramped in my chair.
+ Futility tumbles everlastingly
+ like great flabby snowflakes about me.
+
+ Were they in your eyes, or mine
+ the tattered mists about the mountains
+ and the pitiless grey sea?
+
+ _1919_
+
+
+
+
+ON FOREIGN TRAVEL
+
+
+ I
+
+ Grey riverbanks in the dusk
+ Melting away into mist
+ A hard breeze sharp off the sea
+ The ship's screws lunge and throb
+ And the voices of sailors singing.
+
+ O I have come wandering
+ Out of the dust of many lands
+ Ears by all tongues jangled
+ Feet worn by all arduous ways--
+ O the voices of sailors singing.
+
+ What nostalgia of sea
+ And free new-scented spaces
+ dreams of towns vermillion-gated
+ Must be in their blood as in mine
+ That the sailors long so in singing.
+
+ Churned water marbled astern
+ Grey riverbanks in the dusk
+ Melting away into mist
+ And a shrill wind hard off the sea.
+ O the voices of sailors singing.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Padding lunge of a camel's stride
+ turning the sharp purple flints. A man sings:
+
+ Breast deep in the dawn
+ a queen of the east;
+ the woolen folds of her robe
+ hang white and straight
+ as the hard marble columns
+ of the temple of Jove.
+
+ A thousand days
+ the pebbles have scuttled
+ under the great pads of my camels.
+
+ A thousands days
+ like bite of sour apples
+ have been bitter with desire in my mouth.
+
+ A thousand days
+ of cramped legs flecked
+ with green slobber of dromedaries.
+
+ At the crest of the road
+ that transfixes the sun
+ she awaits
+ me lean with desire
+ with muscles tightened
+ by these thousand days
+ pallid with dust
+ sinewy
+ naked before her.
+
+ Padding lunge of a camel's stride
+ over the flint-strewn hills. A man sings:
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of how in scarlet pools
+ in the west in purpurate mist
+ that bursts from the sun trodden
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness
+ a woman with great breasts
+ thighs white like wintry mountains
+ bathes her nakedness.
+
+ I have lain biting my cheeks
+ many nights with ears murmurous
+ with the songs of these strange men.
+ My arms have stung as if burned
+ by the touch of red ants with anguish
+ to circle strokingly
+ her bulging smooth body.
+ My blood has soured to gall.
+ The ten toes of my feet are hard
+ as buzzards' claws from the stones
+ of roads, from clambering
+ cold rockfaces of hills.
+ For uncountable days' journeys
+ jouncing on the humps of camels
+ iron horizons have swayed
+ like the rail of a ship at sea
+ mountains have tossed like wine
+ shaken hard in a wine cup.
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of the scarlet pools of the sunset.
+
+ Two men, bundled pyramids of brown
+ abreast, bow to the long slouch
+ of their slowstriding camels.
+ Shrilly the yellow man sings:
+
+ In the courts of Han
+ green fowls with carmine tails
+ peck at the yellow grain
+ court ladies scatter
+ with tiny ivory hands,
+ the tails of the fowls
+ droop with multiple elegance
+ over the wan blue stones
+ as the hands of courtladies
+ droop on the goldstiffened silk
+ of their angular flower-embroidered dresses.
+
+ In the courts of Han
+ little hairy dogs
+ are taught to bark twice
+ at the mention of the name of Confucius.
+
+ The twittering of the women
+ that hop like silly birds
+ through the courts of Han
+ became sharp like little pins
+ in my ears, their hands in my hands
+ rigid like small ivory scoops
+ to scoop up mustard with
+ when I had heard the songs
+ of the western pools where the great queen
+ is throned on a purple throne
+ in whose vast encompassing arms
+ all bitter twigs of desire
+ burst into scarlet bloom.
+
+ Padding lunge of the camel's stride
+ over flint-strewn hills. The brown man sings:
+
+ On the house-encumbered hills
+ of great marble Rome
+ no man has ever counted the columns
+ no man has ever counted the statues
+ no man has ever counted the laws
+ sharply inscribed in plain writing
+ on tablets of green bronze.
+
+ At brightly lit tables
+ in a great brick basilica
+ seven hundred literate slaves
+ copy on rolls of thin parchment
+ adorned by seals and purple bows
+ the taut philosophical epigrams
+ announced by the emperor each morning
+ while taking his bath.
+
+ A day of rain and roaring gutters
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man
+ who clenched about me hard-muscled arms
+ and whispered with moist lips against my ear
+ filled me with smell and taste of spices
+ with harsh panting need to seek out the great
+ calm implacable queen of the east
+ who erect against sunrise holds in the folds
+ of her woolen robe all knowledge of delight
+ against whose hard white flesh my flesh
+ will sear to cinders in a last sheer flame.
+
+ Among the house-encumbered hills
+ of great marble Rome
+ I could no longer read the laws
+ inscribed on tablets of green bronze.
+ The maxims of the emperor's philosophy
+ were croaking of toads in my ears.
+ A day of rain and roaring gutters
+ the wine-reeking words of a drunken man:
+ ... breast deep in the dawn
+ a queen of the east.
+
+ The camels growl and stretch out their necks,
+ their slack lips jiggle as they trot
+ towards a water hole in a pebbly torrent bed.
+
+ The riders pile dry twigs for a fire
+ and gird up their long gowns to warm
+ at the flame their lean galled legs.
+
+ Says the yellow man:
+
+ You have seen her in the west?
+
+ Says the brown man:
+
+ Hills and valleys
+ stony roads.
+ In the towns
+ the bright eyes of women
+ looking out from lattices.
+ Camps in the desert
+ where men passed the time of day
+ where were embers of fires
+ and greenish piles of camel-dung.
+
+ You have seen her in the east?
+
+ Says the yellow man:
+
+ Only red mountains and bare plains,
+ the blue smoke of villages at evening,
+ brown girls bathing
+ along banks of streams.
+
+ I have slept with no woman
+ only my dream.
+
+ Says the brown man:
+
+ I have looked in no woman's eyes
+ only stared along eastward roads.
+
+ They eat out of copper bowls beside the fire in silence.
+ They loose the hobbles from the knees of their camels
+ and shout as they jerk to their feet.
+ The yellow man rides west.
+ The brown man rides east.
+
+ Their songs trail among the split rocks of the desert.
+
+ Sings the yellow man:
+
+ I have heard men sing songs
+ of how in the scarlet pools
+ that spurt from the sun trodden
+ like a grape under the feet of darkness
+ a woman with great breasts
+ bathes her nakedness.
+
+ Sings the brown man:
+
+ After a thousand days
+ of cramped legs flecked
+ with green slobber of dromedaries
+ she awaits
+ me lean with desire
+ pallid with dust
+ sinewy
+ naked before her.
+
+ Their songs fade in the empty desert.
+
+
+ III
+
+ There was a king in China.
+
+ He sat in a garden under a moon of gold
+ while a black slave scratched his back
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+ Beyond the tulip bed
+ where the tulips were stiff goblets of fiery wine
+ stood the poets in a row.
+
+ One sang the intricate patterns of snowflakes
+ One sang the henna-tipped breasts of girls dancing
+ and of yellow limbs rubbed with attar.
+ One sang red bows of Tartar horsemen
+ and whine of arrows and blood-clots on new spearshafts
+ The others sang of wine and dragons coiled in purple bowls,
+ and one, in a droning voice
+ recited the maxims of Lao Tse.
+
+ (Far off at the walls of the city
+ groaning of drums and a clank of massed spearmen.
+ Gongs in the temples.)
+
+ The king sat under a moon of gold
+ while a black slave scratched his back
+ with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+ The long gold nails of his left hand
+ twined about a red tulip blotched with black,
+ a tulip shaped like a dragon's mouth
+ or the flames bellying about a pagoda of sandalwood.
+ The long gold nails of his right hand
+ were held together at the tips
+ in an attitude of discernment:
+ to award the tulip to the poet
+ of the poets that stood in a row.
+
+ (Gongs in the temples.
+ Men with hairy arms
+ climbing on the walls of the city.
+ They have red bows slung on their backs;
+ their hands grip new spearshafts.)
+
+ The guard of the tomb of the king's great grandfather
+ stood with two swords under the moon of gold.
+ With one sword he very carefully
+ slit the base of his large belly
+ and inserted the other and fell upon it
+ and sprawled beside the king's footstool.
+ His blood sprinkled the tulips
+ and the poets in a row.
+
+ (The gongs are quiet in the temples.
+ Men with hairy arms
+ scattering with taut bows through the city;
+ there is blood on new spearshafts.)
+
+ The long gold nails of the king's right hand
+ were held together at the tips
+ in an attitude of discernment.
+ The geometrical glitter of snowflakes,
+ the pointed breasts of yellow girls
+ crimson with henna,
+ the swirl of river-eddies about a barge
+ where men sit drinking,
+ the eternal dragon of magnificence....
+ Beyond the tulip bed
+ stood the poets in a row.
+
+ The garden full of spearshafts and shouting
+ and the whine of arrows and the red bows of Tartars
+ and trampling of the sharp hoofs of war-horses.
+ Under the golden moon
+ the men with hairy arms
+ struck off the heads of the tulips in the tulip-bed
+ and of the poets in a row.
+
+ The king lifted the hand that held the flaming dragon-flower.
+
+ Him of the snowflakes, he said.
+ On a new white spearshaft
+ the men with hairy arms
+ spitted the king and the black slave
+ who scratched his back with a back-scratcher of emerald.
+
+ There was a king in China.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Says the man from Weehawken to the man from Sioux City
+ as they jolt cheek by jowl on the bus up Broadway:
+ --That's her name, Olive Thomas, on the red skysign,
+ died of coke or somethin'
+ way over there in Paris.
+ Too much money. Awful
+ immoral the lives them film stars lead.
+
+ The eye of the man from Sioux City glints
+ in the eye of the man from Weehawken.
+ Awful ... lives out of sky-signs and lust;
+ curtains of pink silk fluffy troubling the skin
+ rooms all prinkly with chandeliers,
+ bed cream-color with pink silk tassles
+ creased by the slender press of thighs.
+ Her eyebrows are black
+ her lips rubbed scarlet
+ breasts firm as peaches
+ gold curls gold against her cheeks.
+ She dead
+ all of her dead way over there in Paris.
+
+ O golden Aphrodite.
+
+ The eye of the man from Weehawken slants
+ away from the eye of the man from Sioux City.
+ They stare at the unquiet gold dripping sky-signs.
+
+
+
+
+PHASES OF THE MOON
+
+
+ I
+
+ Again they are plowing the field by the river;
+ in the air exultant a smell of wild garlic
+ crushed out by the shining steel in the furrow
+ that opens softly behind the heavy-paced horses,
+ dark moist noisy with fluttering of sparrows;
+ and their chirping and the clink of the harness
+ chimes like bells;
+ and the plowman walks at one side
+ with sliding steps, his body thrown back from the waist.
+ O the sudden sideways lift of his back and his arms
+ as he swings the plow from the furrow.
+
+ And behind the river sheening blue
+ and the white beach and the sails of schooners,
+ and hoarsely laughing the black crows
+ wheel and glint. Ha! Haha!
+
+ Other springs you answered their laughing
+ and shouted at them across the fallow lands
+ that smelt of wild garlic and pinewoods and earth.
+
+ This year the crows flap cawing overhead Ha! Haha!
+ and the plow-harness clinks
+ and the pines echo the moaning shore.
+
+ No one laughs back at the laughing crows.
+ No one shouts from the edge of the new-plowed field.
+
+ _Sandy Point_
+
+
+ II
+
+ The full moon soars above the misty street
+ filling the air with a shimmer of silver.
+ Roofs and chimney-pots cut silhouettes
+ of dark against the milk-washed sky!
+ O moon fast waning!
+
+ Seems only a night ago you hung
+ a shallow cup of topaz-colored glass
+ that tilted towards my feverish dry lips
+ brimful of promise in the flaming west:
+ O moon fast waning!
+
+ And each night fuller and colder, moon,
+ the silver has welled up within you; still I
+ I have not drunk, only the salt tide
+ of parching desires has welled up within me:
+ only you have attained, waning moon.
+
+ The moon soars white above the stony street,
+ wan with fulfilment. O will the tide
+ of yearning ebb with the moon's ebb
+ leaving me cool darkness and peace
+ with the moon's waning?
+
+ _Madrid_
+
+
+ III
+
+ The shrill wind scatters the bloom
+ of the almond trees
+ but under the bark of the shivering poplars
+ the sap rises
+ and on the dark twigs of the planes
+ buds swell.
+
+ Out in the country
+ along soggy banks of ditches
+ among busy sprouting grass
+ there are dandelions.
+ Under the asphalt
+ under the clamorous paving-stones
+ the earth heaves and stirs
+ and all the blind live things
+ expand and writhe.
+
+ Only the dead
+ lie still in their graves,
+ stiff, heiratic,
+ only the changeless dead
+ lie without stirring.
+
+ Spring is not a good time
+ for the dead.
+
+ _Battery Park_
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars
+ latticed with window-gaps
+ into the slate sky.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ the ice crumbles
+ about the edges of green pools;
+ from the leaping of white thighs
+ comes a smooth and fleshly sound,
+ girls grip hands and dance
+ grey moss grows green under the beat
+ of feet of saffron
+ crocus-stained.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ purple windflowers sway
+ on the swelling verges of pools,
+ naked girls grab hands and whirl
+ fling heads back
+ stamp crimson feet.
+
+ Buildings shoot rigid perpendiculars
+ latticed with window-gaps
+ into the slate sky.
+
+ Garment-workers loaf in their overcoats
+ (stare at the gay breasts of pigeons
+ that strut and peck in the gutters).
+ Their fingers are bruised tugging needles
+ through fuzzy hot layers of cloth,
+ thumbs roughened twirling waxed thread;
+ they smell of lunchrooms and burnt cloth.
+ The wind goes among them
+ detaching sweat-smells from underclothes
+ making muscles itch under overcoats
+ tweaking legs with inklings of dancetime.
+
+ Bums on park-benches
+ spit and look up at the sky.
+
+ Garment-workers in their overcoats
+ pile back into black gaps of doors.
+
+ Where the wind comes from
+ scarlet windflowers sway
+ on rippling verges of pools,
+ sound of girls dancing
+ thud of vermillion feet.
+
+ _Madison Square_
+
+
+ V
+
+ The stars bend down
+ through the dingy platitude of arc-lights
+ as if they were groping for something among the houses,
+ as if they would touch the gritty pavement
+ covered with dust and scraps of paper and piles of horse-dung
+ of the wide deserted square.
+
+ They are all about me;
+ they sear my body.
+ How very cold the stars are touching my body.
+ What do they seek
+ the fierce ice-flames of the stars
+ in the platitude of arc-lights?
+
+ _Plaza Mayor, Madrid_
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Not willingly have I wronged you O Eros,
+ it is the bitter blood of joyless generations
+ making my fingers loosen suddenly
+ about the full glass of purple wine
+ for which my dry lips ache,
+ making me turn aside from the wide arms of lovers
+ that would have slaked the rage of my body
+ for supple arms and burning young flushed faces
+ to wander in solitary streets.
+
+ A funeral clatters over the glimmering cobbles;
+ they are burying despair!
+ Lank horses whose raw bones show through
+ the embroidered black caparisons
+ and whose heads jerk feebly
+ under the tall nodding crests;
+ they are burying despair.
+ A great hearse that trundles crazily along
+ under pompous swaying plumes
+ and intricate designs of mud-splashed heraldry;
+ they are burying despair!
+ A coffin obliterated under the huge folds
+ of a faded velvet pall
+ and following clattering over the cobblestones
+ lurching through mud-puddles
+ a long train of cabs
+ rain-soaked barouches
+ old landaus off which the paint has peeled
+ leprous coupes;
+ in their blank windows shines the glint
+ of interminable gaslamps;
+ they are burying despair!
+
+ Joyously I turn into the wineshop
+ where with strumming of tambourines
+ and staccato cackle of castanets
+ they are welcoming the new year,
+ and I look in the eyes of the woman;
+ (are they your wide eyes O Eros?)
+ who sits with wine-dabbled lips
+ and stained tinsel dress torn open
+ by the brown hands of strong young lovers;
+ (were they your brown hands O Eros?).
+
+ --Your flesh is hot to my cold hands
+ hot to thaw the ice of an old curse
+ now that with pomp of plumes and strings of ceremonial cabs
+ they are burying despair.
+
+ She laughs and points with a skinny forefinger
+ at the flabby yellow breasts that hang
+ over the tarnished tinsel of her dress,
+ and shows me her brown wolf's teeth;
+ and the blood in my temples goes suddenly cold
+ with bitterness and I know
+ it was not despair that they buried.
+
+ _New Year's Day--Casa de Bottin_
+
+
+ VII
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+ Horseshoes leave their mark
+ on the sun-softened asphalt.
+ Men unloading vegetable carts
+ along the steaming market curb
+ bare broad chests pink from sweating;
+ their wet shirts open to the last button
+ cling to their ribs and shoulders.
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+
+ At night along the riverside
+ glinting watery lights
+ sway upon the lapping waves
+ like many-colored candles that flicker in the wind.
+
+ The warm wind smells of pitch from the moored barges
+ smells of the broad leaves of the trees
+ wilted from the day's long heat;
+ smells of gas from the last taxicab.
+
+ Sounds of the riverwater rustling
+ circumspectly past the piers
+ of bridges that span the glitter with dark
+ of men and women's voices
+ many voices mouth to mouth
+ smoothness of flesh touching flesh,
+ a harsh short sigh blurred into a kiss.
+
+ The leaves are full grown now
+ and the lindens are in flower.
+
+ _Quai Malaquais_
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ In me somewhere is a grey room
+ my fathers worked through many lives to build;
+ through the barred distorting windowpanes
+ I see the new moon in the sky.
+
+ When I was small I sat and drew
+ endless pictures in all colors on the walls;
+ tomorrow the pictures should take life
+ I would stalk down their long heroic colonnades.
+
+ When I was fifteen a red-haired girl
+ went by the window; a red sunset
+ threw her shadow on the stiff grey wall
+ to burn the colors of my pictures dead.
+
+ Through all these years the walls have writhed
+ with shadow overlaid upon shadow.
+ I have bruised my fingers on the windowbars
+ so many lives cemented and made strong.
+
+ While the bars stand strong, outside
+ the great processions of men's lives go past.
+ Their shadows squirm distorted on my wall.
+
+ Tonight the new moon is in the sky.
+
+ _Stuyvesant Square_
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Three kites against the sunset
+ flaunt their long-tailed triangles
+ above the inquisitive chimney-pots.
+
+ A pompous ragged minstrel
+ sings beside our dining-table
+ a very old romantic song:
+
+ _I love the sound of the hunting-horns
+ deep in the woods at night._
+
+ A wind makes dance the fine acacia leaves
+ and flutters the cloths of the tables.
+ The kites tremble and soar.
+ The voice throbs sugared into croaking base
+ broken with the burden of the too ancient songs.
+
+ And yet, beyond the flaring sky,
+ beyond the soaring kites,
+ where are no voices of singers,
+ no strummings of guitars,
+ the untarnished songs
+ hang like great moths just broken
+ through the dun threads of their cocoons,
+ moist, motionless, limp
+ as flowers on the inaccessible twigs
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,
+ the untarnished songs.
+
+ Will you put your hand in mine
+ pompous street-singer,
+ and start on a quest with me?
+ For men have cut down the woods where the laurel grew
+ to build streets of frame houses,
+ they have dug in the hills after iron
+ and frightened the troll-king away;
+ at night in the woods no hunter puffs out his cheeks
+ to call to the kill on the hunting-horn.
+
+ Now when the kites flaunt bravely
+ their tissue-paper glory in the sunset
+ we will walk together down the darkening streets
+ beyond these tables and the sunset.
+
+ We will hear the singing of drunken men
+ and the songs whores sing
+ in their doorways at night
+ and the endless soft crooning
+ of all the mothers,
+ and what words the young men hum
+ when they walk beside the river
+ their arms hot with caresses,
+ their cheeks pressed against their girls' cheeks.
+
+ We will lean very close
+ to the quiet lips of the dead
+ and feel in our worn-out flesh perhaps
+ a flutter of wings as they soar from us
+ the untarnished songs.
+
+ But the minstrel sings as the pennies clink:
+ _I love the sound of the hunting-horns
+ deep in the woods at night._
+
+ O who will go on a quest with me
+ beyond all wide seas
+ all mountain passes
+ and climb at last with me
+ among the imperishable branches
+ of the yewtree, Ygdrasil,
+ so that all the limp unuttered songs
+ shall spread their great moth-wings and soar
+ above the craning necks of the chimneys
+ above the tissue-paper kites and the sunset
+ above the diners and their dining-tables,
+ beat upward with strong wing-beats steadily
+ till they can drink the quenchless honey of the moon.
+
+ _Place du Tertre_
+
+
+ X
+
+ Dark on the blue light of the stream
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon.
+
+ On icegreen seas of sunset
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail
+ bellied by the evening wind
+ and bound for some glittering harbor
+ that blue hills circle
+ among the purple archipelagos of cloud.
+
+ So, in the quivering bubble of my memories
+ the schooners with peaked sails
+ lean athwart the low dark shore;
+ their sails glow apricot-color
+ or glint as white as the salt-bitten shells on the beach
+ and are curved at the tip like gulls' wings:
+ their courses are set for impossible oceans
+ where on the gold imaginary sands
+ they will unload their many-scented freight
+ of very childish dreams.
+
+ Dark on the blue light of the stream
+ the barges lie anchored under the moon;
+ the wind brings from them to my ears
+ faint creaking of rudder-cords, tiny slappings
+ of waves against their pitch-smeared flanks,
+ to my nose a smell of bales and merchandise
+ the wet familiar smell of harbors
+ and the old arousing fragrance
+ making the muscles ache and the blood seethe
+ and the eyes see the roadsteads and the golden beaches
+ where with singing they would furl the sails
+ of the schooners of childish dreams.
+
+ On icegreen seas of sunset
+ the moon skims like a curved white sail:
+ had I forgotten the fragrance of old dreams
+ that the smell from the anchored barges
+ can so fill my blood with bitterness
+ that the sight of the scudding moon
+ makes my eyes tingle with salt tears?
+
+ In the ship's track on the infertile sea
+ now many childish bodies float
+ rotting under the white moon.
+
+ _Quai des Grands Augustins_
+
+
+ XI
+ _Lua cheia esta noit_
+
+ Thistledown clouds
+ cover the whole sky
+ scurry on the southwest wind
+ over the sea and islands;
+ somehow in the sundown
+ the wind has shaken out plumed seed
+ of thistles milkweed asphodel,
+ raked from off great fields of dandelions
+ their ghosts of faded golden springs
+ and carried them in billowing of mist
+ to scurry in moonlight
+ out of the west.
+
+ They hide the moon
+ the whole sky is grey with them
+ and the waves.
+
+ They will fall in rain
+ over country gardens
+ where thrushes sing.
+
+ They will fall in rain
+ down long sparsely lighted streets
+ hiss on silvery windowpanes
+ moisten the lips
+ of girls leaning out
+ to stare after the footfalls of young men
+ who splash through the glimmering puddles
+ with nonchalant feet.
+
+ They will slap against the windows of offices
+ where men in black suits
+ shaped like pears
+ rub their abdomens
+ against frazzled edges of ledgers.
+
+ They will drizzle
+ over new-plowed fields
+ wet the red cheeks of men harrowing
+ and a smell of garlic and clay
+ will steam from the new-sowed land
+ and sharp-eared young herdsmen will feel
+ in the windy rain
+ lisp of tremulous love-makings
+ interlaced soundless kisses
+ impact of dead springs
+ nuzzling tremulous at life
+ in the red sundown.
+
+ Shining spring rain
+ O scud steaming up out of the deep sea
+ full of portents of sundown and islands,
+ beat upon my forehead
+ beat upon my face and neck
+ glisten on my outstretched hands,
+ run bright lilac streams
+ through the clogged channels of my brain
+ corrode the clicking cogs the little angles
+ the small mistrustful mirrors
+ scatter the shrill tiny creaking
+ of mustnot darenot cannot
+ spatter the varnish off me
+ that I may stand up
+ my face to the wet wind
+ and feel my body
+ and drenched salty palpitant April
+ reborn in my flesh.
+
+ I would spit the dust out of my mouth
+ burst out of these stiff wire webs
+ supple incautious
+ like the crocuses that spurt up too soon
+ their saffron flames
+ and die gloriously in late blizzards
+ and leave no seed.
+
+ _Off Pico_
+
+
+ XII
+
+ Out of the unquiet town
+ seep jagged barkings
+ lean broken cries
+ unimaginable silent writhing
+ of muscles taut against strangling
+ heavy fetters of darkness.
+
+ On the pool of moonlight
+ clots and festers
+ a great scum
+ of worn-out sound.
+
+ (Elagabalus, Alexander
+ looked too long at the full moon;
+ hot blood drowned them
+ cold rivers drowned them.)
+
+ Float like pondflowers
+ on the dead face of darkness
+ cold stubs of lusts
+ names that glimmer ghostly
+ adrift on the slow tide
+ of old moons waned.
+
+ (Lais of Corinth that Holbein drew
+ drank the moon in a cup of wine;
+ with the flame of all her lovers' pain
+ she seared a sign on the tombs of the years.)
+
+ Out of the voiceless wrestle of the night
+ flesh rasping harsh on flesh
+ a tune on a shrill pipe shimmers
+ up like a rocket blurred in the fog
+ of lives curdled in the moon's glare,
+ staggering up like a rocket
+ into the steely star-sharpened night
+ above the stagnant moon-marshes
+ the song throbs soaring and dies.
+
+ (Semiramis, Zenobia
+ lay too long in the moon's glare;
+ their yearning grew sere and they died
+ and the flesh of their empires died.)
+
+ On the pool of moonlight
+ clots and festers
+ a great scum
+ of worn-out lives.
+
+ No sound but the panting unsatiated
+ breath that heaves under the huge pall
+ the livid moon has spread above the housetops.
+ I rest my chin on the window-ledge and wait.
+ There are hands about my throat.
+
+ Ah Bilkis, Bilkis
+ where the jangle of your camel bells?
+ Bilkis when out of Saba
+ lope of your sharp-smelling dromedaries
+ will bring the unnameable strong wine
+ you press from the dazzle of the zenith
+ over the shining sand of your desert
+ the wine you press there in Saba?
+ Bilkis your voice loud above the camel bells
+ white sword of dawn to split the fog,
+ Bilkis your small strong hands to tear
+ the hands from about my throat.
+ Ah Bilkis when out of Saba?
+
+ _Pera Palace_
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcribers' note:
+
+The original spelling has been retained.
+
+Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+One typographical error was corrected:
+ Jasdin-->Jardin du Luxembourg.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PUSHCART AT THE CURB***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 32778.txt or 32778.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/2/7/7/32778
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
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