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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+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: Songs and Satires
+
+Author: Edgar Lee Masters
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36149]
+ [Most recently updated: November 22, 2023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
+ ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
+
+ MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
+ LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
+ MELBOURNE
+
+ THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
+ TORONTO
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ _By_
+ EDGAR LEE MASTERS
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"
+
+
+ New York
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1916,
+ BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
+
+ Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1916.
+ Reprinted March, June, 1916.
+
+ Norwood Press
+ J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+ Norwood, Mass., U.S.A
+
+
+
+
+For permission to print in book form certain of these poems I wish to
+acknowledge an indebtedness to _Poetry_, _The Smart Set_, _The Little
+Review_, _The Cosmopolitan Magazine_, and William Marion Reedy, Editor
+of _Reedy's Mirror_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ SILENCE 1
+
+ ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE 4
+
+ THE COCKED HAT 10
+
+ THE VISION 18
+
+ SO WE GREW TOGETHER 21
+
+ RAIN IN MY HEART 31
+
+ THE LOOP 32
+
+ WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES 40
+
+ IN THE CAR 41
+
+ SIMON SURNAMED PETER 43
+
+ ALL LIFE IN A LIFE 47
+
+ WHAT YOU WILL 56
+
+ THE CITY 57
+
+ THE IDIOT 65
+
+ HELEN OF TROY 68
+
+ O GLORIOUS FRANCE 71
+
+ FOR A DANCE 74
+
+ WHEN LIFE IS REAL 76
+
+ THE QUESTION 78
+
+ THE ANSWER 79
+
+ THE SIGN 80
+
+ WILLIAM MARION REEDY 82
+
+ A STUDY 85
+
+ PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN 88
+
+ IN THE CAGE 91
+
+ SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE 95
+
+ LOVE IS A MADNESS 97
+
+ ON A BUST 98
+
+ ARABEL 101
+
+ JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER 108
+
+ THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES 116
+
+ THE CRY 119
+
+ THE HELPING HAND 120
+
+ THE DOOR 121
+
+ SUPPLICATION 122
+
+ THE CONVERSATION 125
+
+ TERMINUS 130
+
+ MADELINE 132
+
+ MARCIA 134
+
+ THE ALTAR 135
+
+ SOUL'S DESIRE 137
+
+ BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE 140
+
+ THE DEATH OF LAUNCELOT 149
+
+ IN MICHIGAN 156
+
+ THE STAR 166
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+
+
+SILENCE
+
+
+ I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,
+ And the silence of the city when it pauses,
+ And the silence of a man and a maid,
+ And the silence for which music alone finds the word,
+ And the silence of the woods before the winds of spring begin,
+ And the silence of the sick
+ When their eyes roam about the room.
+ And I ask: For the depths
+ Of what use is language?
+ A beast of the field moans a few times
+ When death takes its young:
+ And we are voiceless in the presence of realities--
+ We cannot speak.
+
+ A curious boy asks an old soldier
+ Sitting in front of the grocery store,
+ "How did you lose your leg?"
+ And the old soldier is struck with silence,
+ Or his mind flies away,
+ Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg.
+ It comes back jocosely
+ And he says, "A bear bit it off."
+ And the boy wonders, while the old soldier
+ Dumbly, feebly lives over
+ The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,
+ The shrieks of the slain,
+ And himself lying on the ground,
+ And the hospital surgeons, the knives,
+ And the long days in bed.
+ But if he could describe it all
+ He would be an artist.
+ But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds
+ Which he could not describe.
+
+ There is the silence of a great hatred,
+ And the silence of a great love,
+ And the silence of a deep peace of mind,
+ And the silence of an embittered friendship.
+ There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,
+ Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,
+ Comes with visions not to be uttered
+ Into a realm of higher life.
+ And the silence of the gods who understand each other without speech.
+ There is the silence of defeat.
+ There is the silence of those unjustly punished;
+ And the silence of the dying whose hand
+ Suddenly grips yours.
+ There is the silence between father and son,
+ When the father cannot explain his life,
+ Even though he be misunderstood for it.
+
+ There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.
+ There is the silence of those who have failed;
+ And the vast silence that covers
+ Broken nations and vanquished leaders.
+ There is the silence of Lincoln,
+ Thinking of the poverty of his youth.
+ And the silence of Napoleon
+ After Waterloo.
+ And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc
+ Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus"--
+ Revealing in two words all sorrow, all hope.
+ And there is the silence of age,
+ Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it
+ In words intelligible to those who have not lived
+ The great range of life.
+
+ And there is the silence of the dead.
+ If we who are in life cannot speak
+ Of profound experiences,
+ Why do you marvel that the dead
+ Do not tell you of death?
+ Their silence shall be interpreted
+ As we approach them.
+
+
+
+
+ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE
+
+
+ Antonio loved the Lady Clare.
+ He caught her to him on the stair
+ And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,
+ And drew her lips in his, and drew
+ Her soul out like a torch's flare.
+ Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;
+ Her senses in a vortex swound.
+ She tore him loose and turned around,
+ And reached her chamber in a bound
+ Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.
+
+ She closed the door and turned the lock,
+ Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.
+ She reeled as drunken from the shock.
+ Before her eyes the devils skipped,
+ She thought she heard the devils mock.
+ For had her soul not been as pure
+ As sifted snow, could she endure
+ Antonio's passion and be sure
+ Against his passion's strength and lure?
+ Lean fears along her wonder slipped.
+
+ Outside she heard a drunkard call,
+ She heard a beggar against the wall
+ Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall
+ Struck through the riot like a sword,
+ And gashed the midnight's festival.
+ She watched the city through the pane,
+ The old Silenus half insane,
+ The idiot crowd that drags its chain--
+ And then she heard the bells again,
+ And heard the voices with the word:
+
+ Ecco il santo! Up the street
+ There was the sound of running feet
+ From closing door and window seat,
+ And all the crowd turned on its way
+ The Saint of Poverty to greet.
+ He passed. And then a circling thrill,
+ As water troubled which was still,
+ Went through her body like a chill,
+ Who of Antonio thought until
+ She heard the Saint begin to pray.
+
+ And then she turned into the room
+ Her soul was cloven through with doom,
+ Treading the softness and the gloom
+ Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,
+ And China's magical perfume.
+ She sickened from the vases hued
+ In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd
+ Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,
+ And tapestries that showed a brood
+ Of leopards by a pool!
+
+ Candles of wax she lit before
+ A pier glass standing from the floor;
+ Up to the ceiling, off she tore
+ With eager hands her jewels, then
+ The silken vesture which she wore.
+ Her little breasts so round to see
+ Were budded like the peony.
+ Her arms were white as ivory,
+ And all her sunny hair lay free
+ As marigold or celandine.
+
+ Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase
+ Of crackled turquoise, in her face
+ Was memory of the mad embrace
+ Antonio gave her on the stair,
+ And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.
+ Like pigeon blood her lips were red.
+ She clasped her bands above her head.
+ Under her arms the waxlight shed
+ Delicate halos where was spread
+ The downy growth of hair.
+
+ Such sudden sin the virgin knew
+ She quenched the tapers as she blew
+ Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw
+ Herself in tears upon her knees,
+ And round her couch the curtain drew.
+ She called upon St. Francis' name,
+ Feeling Antonio's passion maim
+ Her body with his passion's flame
+ To save her, save her from the shame
+ Of fancies such as these!
+
+ "Go by mad life and old pursuits,
+ The wine cup and the golden fruits,
+ The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,
+ I would praise God forevermore
+ With harps of gold and silver lutes."
+ She stripped the velvet from her couch
+ Her broken spirit to avouch.
+ She saw the devils slink and slouch,
+ And passion like a leopard crouch
+ Half mirrored on the polished floor.
+
+ Next day she found the saint and said:
+ I would be God's bride, I would wed
+ Poverty and I would eat the bread
+ That you for anchorites prepare,
+ For my soul's sake I am in dread.
+ Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,
+ Put off this gown of green snake cloth,
+ Put on one somber as a moth,
+ Then come to me and make your troth
+ And I will clip your golden hair.
+
+ She went and came. But still there lay,
+ A gem she did not put away,
+ A locket twixt her breasts, all gay
+ In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,
+ And inlay work of fruit and spray.
+ St. Francis felt it as he slipped
+ His hand across her breast and whipped
+ Her golden tresses ere he clipped--
+ He closed his eyes then as he gripped
+ The shears, plunged the shears through.
+
+ The waterfall of living gold.
+ The locks fell to the floor and rolled,
+ And curled like serpents which unfold.
+ And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.
+ Of worldly glory manifold.
+ She thrilled to feel him take and hide
+ The locket from her breast, a tide
+ Of passion caught them side by side.
+ He was the bridegroom, she the bride--
+ Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.
+
+ Thus was the Lady Clare debased
+ To sack cloth and around her waist
+ A rope the jeweled belt replaced.
+ Her feet made free of silken hose
+ Naked in wooden sandals cased
+ Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then
+ They housed her in St. Damian
+ And here she prayed for poor women
+ And here St. Francis sought her when
+ His faith sank under earthly woes.
+
+ Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme
+ And took to wine and got the lime
+ Of hatred on his soul, in time
+ Grew healed though left a little lame,
+ And laughed about it in his prime;
+ When he could see with crystal eyes
+ That love is a winged thing which flies;
+ Some break the wings, some let them rise
+ From earth like God's dove to the skies
+ Diffused in heavenly flame.
+
+
+
+
+THE COCKED HAT
+
+Would that someone would knock Mr. Bryan into a cocked hat.--WOODROW
+WILSON.
+
+
+ It ain't really a hat at all, Ed:
+ You know that, don't you?
+ When you bowl over six out of the nine pins,
+ And the three that are standing
+ Are the triangular three in front,
+ You've knocked the nine into a cocked hat.
+ If it was really a hat, he would be knocked in, too.
+ Which he hardly is. For a man with money,
+ And a man who can draw a crowd to listen
+ To what he says, ain't all-in yet....
+ Oh yes, defeated
+ And killed off a dozen times, but still
+ He's one of the three nine pins that's standing ...
+ Eh? Why, the other is Teddy, the other
+ Wilson, we'll say. We'll see, perhaps.
+ But six are down to make the cocked hat--
+ That's me and thousands of others like me,
+ And the first-rate men who were cuffed about
+ After the Civil War,
+ And most of the more than six million men
+ Who followed this fellow into the ditch,
+ While he walked down the ditch and stepped to the level--
+ Following an ideal!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember how slim he was,
+ And trim he was,
+ With black hair and pale brow,
+ And the hawk-like nose and flashing eyes,
+ Not turning slowly like an owl
+ But with a sudden eagle motion?...
+
+ One time, in '96, he came here
+ And we had just a dollar and sixty cents
+ In the treasury of the organization.
+ So I stuck his lithograph on a pole
+ And started out for the station.
+ By the time we got back here to Clark street
+ Four thousand men were marching in line,
+ And a band that was playing for an opening
+ Of a restaurant on Franklin street
+ Had left the job and was following his carriage.
+ Why, it took all the money Mark Hanna could raise
+ To beat me, with nothing but a pole
+ And a lithograph.
+ And it wasn't because he was one of the prophets
+ Come back to earth again.
+ It shows how human hearts are hungry
+ How wonderfully true they are--
+ And how they will rise and follow a man
+ Who seems to see the truth!
+ Well, these fellows who marched are the cocked hat,
+ And I am the cocked hat and the six millions,
+ And more are the cocked hat,
+ Who got themselves despised or suspected
+ Of ignorance or something for being with him.
+ But still, he's one of the pins that's standing.
+ He got the money that he went after,
+ And he has a place in history, perhaps--
+ Because we took the blow and fell down
+ When the ripping ball went wild on the alley.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For we were radicals,
+ And he wasn't a radical.
+ Eh? Why, a radical stands for freedom,
+ And for truth--which he never finds
+ But always looks for.
+ A radical is not a moralist.
+ A radical doesn't say:
+ "This is true and you must believe it;
+ This is good and you must accept it,
+ And if you don't believe it and accept it
+ We'll get a law and make you,
+ And if you don't obey the law, we'll kill you--"
+ Oh no! A radical stands for freedom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont
+ In '97 on Jackson's day?
+ Bryan and Altgeld walked together
+ Out to the banquet room.
+ That's the time he said the bolters must
+ Bring fruits meet for repentance--ha! ha! Oh, Gawd!--
+ They never did it and they didn't have to,
+ For they had made friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,
+ Even as he did, a little later, in his own way.
+ Well, Darrow was there that night.
+ I thought it was terribly raw in him,
+ But he said to Bryan, there, in a group:
+ "You'd better go back to Lincoln and study
+ Science, history, philosophy,
+ And read Flaubert's Madam something-or-other,
+ And quit this village religious stuff.
+ You're head of the party before you are ready
+ And a leader should lead with thought."
+ And Bryan turned to the others and said:
+ "Darrow's the only man in the world
+ Who looks down on me for believing in God."
+ "Your kind of a God," snapped Darrow.
+ Honest, Ed, I didn't see this religious business
+ In Bryan in '96 or 1900.
+ Oh well, I knew he went to Church,
+ And talked as statesmen do of God--
+ But McKinley did it, and I used to laugh:
+ "We've got a man to match McKinley,
+ And it's good for us, in a squeeze like this,
+ We didn't nominate some fellow
+ Ethical culture or Unitarian."
+ You see, the newspapers and preachers then
+ Were raising such a hullabaloo
+ About irreligion and dishonesty,
+ And calling old Altgeld an anarchist,
+ And comparing us to Robespierre
+ And the guillotine boys in France.
+ And a little of this religion came in handy.
+ The same as if you saw a Mason button on me,
+ You'd know, you see--but Gee!
+ He was 24-carat religious,
+ A cover-to-cover man....
+ He was a trained collie,
+ And he looked like a lion,
+ There in the convention of '96--What do you know about that?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But right here, I tell you he ain't a hypocrite,
+ This ain't a pose. But I'll tell you:
+ In '96 when they knocked him out,
+ I know what he said to himself as well
+ As if I heard him say it ...
+ I'll tell you in a minute.
+ But suppose you were giving a lecture on the constitution,
+ And you got mixed on your dates,
+ And the audience rotten-egged you,
+ And some one in the confusion
+ Stole the door receipts,
+ And there you were, disgraced and broke!
+ But suppose you could just change your clothes,
+ And lecture to the same audience
+ On the religious nature of Washington,
+ And be applauded and make money--
+ You'd do it, wouldn't you?
+ Well, this is what Bill said to himself:
+ "I'm naturally regular and religious.
+ I'm a moral man and I can prove it
+ By any one in Marion County,
+ Or Jacksonville or Lincoln, Nebraska.
+ I'm a radical, but a radical
+ Alone can be religious.
+ I belong to the church, if not to the bank,
+ Of the people who defeated me.
+ And I'll prove to religious people
+ That I'm a man to be trusted--
+ And just what a radical is.
+ And I'll make some money while winning the votes
+ Of the churches over the country."...
+
+ That's it--it ain't hypocrisy,
+ It's using what you are for ends,
+ When you find yourself in trouble.
+ And this accounts for "The Prince of Peace"--
+ Except no one but him could write it--
+ And "The Value of an Ideal"--
+ (Which is money in bank and several farms) ...
+
+ His place in history?
+ One time my grandfather, who was nearly blind,
+ Went out to sow some grass seed.
+ They had two sacks in the barn,
+ One with grass seed, one with fertilizer,
+ And he got the sack with fertilizer,
+ And scattered it over the ground,
+ Thinking he was sowing grass.
+ And as he was finishing up, a grandchild,
+ Dorothy, eight years old,
+ Followed him, dropping flower seeds.
+ Well, after a time
+ That was the greatest patch of weeds
+ You ever saw! And the old man sat,
+ Half blind, on the porch, and said:
+ "Good land, that grass is growing!"
+ And there was nothing but weeds except
+ A few nasturtiums here and there
+ That Dorothy had sown....
+ Well, I forgot.
+ There was a sunflower in one corner
+ That looked like a man with a golden beard
+ And a mass of tangled, curly hair--
+ And a pumpkin growing near it....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Say, Ed! lend me eighty dollars
+ To pay my life insurance.
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION
+
+
+ Of that dear vale where you and I have lain
+ Scanning the mysteries of life and death
+ I dreamed, though how impassable the space
+ Of time between the present and the past!
+ This was the vision that possessed my mind;
+ I thought the weird and gusty days of March
+ Had eased themselves in melody and peace.
+ Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,
+ Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh
+ Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs
+ Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;
+ And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;
+ The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;
+ The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;
+ Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries
+ Of awakened life had blossomed into May,
+ Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair
+ Blew music from the stops of watery stems,
+ And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,
+ Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.
+ Now as I lay in vision by the stream
+ That flows amidst our well beloved vale,
+ I looked throughout the vista stretched between
+ Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;
+ The other wooded, thick and quite obscure
+ With overgrowth, rank in the luxury
+ Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse
+ Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope
+ That met the grassy level of the vale;--
+ But still within the shadow of those woods,
+ Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,
+ There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths
+ Between them, up and on into the wood.
+ Here, as the sun had left his midday peak
+ The incommunicable blue of heaven blent
+ With his fierce splendor, filling all the air
+ With softened glory, while the pasturage
+ Trembled with color of the poppy blooms
+ Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.
+ Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream
+ Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.
+ Then as I looked upon the widest space
+ Of open meadow where the sunlight fell
+ In veils of tempered radiance, I saw
+ The form of one who had escaped the care
+ And equal dullness of our common day.
+ For like a bright mist rising from the earth
+ He made appearance, growing more distinct
+ Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre
+ Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.
+ Yea, I did see the glory of his hair
+ Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting
+ The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale
+ His figure stood distinct and his own shade
+ Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach
+ Augur of good, as if in hidden ways
+ Of loveliness the gods do still appear
+ The counselors of men, and even where
+ Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,
+ I cried, "Apollo"--and his form dissolved,
+ As if the nymphs of echo, who took up
+ The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,
+ By that same flight had startled the great god
+ To vanishment. And thereupon I woke
+ And disarrayed the figment of my thought.
+ For of the very air, magic with hues,
+ Blent with the distant objects, I had formed
+ The splendid apparition, and so knew
+ It was, alas! a dream within a dream!
+
+
+
+
+"SO WE GREW TOGETHER"
+
+
+ Reading over your letters I find you wrote me
+ "My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope
+ Said "master"--all as I had been your very son,
+ And not the orphan whom you adopted.
+ Well, you were father to me! And I can recall
+ The things you did for me or gave me:
+ One time we rode in a box car to Springfield
+ To see the greatest show on earth;
+ And one time you gave me redtop boots,
+ And one time a watch, and one time a gun.
+ Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice
+ Like a rooster trying to crow in August
+ Hatched in April, we'll say.
+ And you went about wrapped up in silence
+ With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors
+ Of what they were doing to you, and how
+ They wronged you--and we were poor--so poor!
+ And I could not understand why you failed,
+ And why if you did good things for the people
+ The people did not sustain you.
+ And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan,
+ So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser,
+ Or so little to be forgiven?...
+
+ They crowded you hard in those days.
+ But you fought like a wounded lion
+ For yourself I know, but for us, for me.
+ At last you fell ill, and for months you tottered
+ Around the streets as thin as death,
+ Trying to earn our bread, your great eyes glowing
+ And the silence around you like a shawl!
+ But something in you kept you up.
+ You grew well again and rosy with cheeks
+ Like an Indian peach almost, and eyes
+ Full of moonlight and sunlight, and a voice
+ That sang, and a humor that warded
+ The arrows off. But still between us
+ There was reticence; you kept me away
+ With a glittering hardness; perhaps you thought
+ I kept you away--for I was moving
+ In spheres you knew not, living through
+ Beliefs you believed in no more, and ideals
+ That were just mirrors of unrealities.
+ As a boy can be I was critical of you.
+ And reasons for your failures began to arise
+ In my mind--I saw specific facts here and there
+ With no philosophy at hand to weld them
+ And synthesize them into one truth--
+ And a rush of the strength of youth
+ Deluded me into thinking the world
+ Was something so easily understood and managed
+ While I knew it not at all in truth.
+ And an adolescent egotism
+ Made me feel you did not know me
+ Or comprehend the all that I was.
+ All this you divined....
+
+ So it went. And when I left you and passed
+ To the world, the city--still I see you
+ With eyes averted, and feel your hand
+ Limp with sorrow--you could not speak.
+ You thought of what I might be, and where
+ Life would take me, and how it would end--
+ There was longer silence. A year or two
+ Brought me closer to you. I saw the play now
+ And the game somewhat and understood your fights
+ And enmities, and hardnesses and silences,
+ And wild humor that had kept you whole--
+ For your soul had made it as an antitoxin
+ To the world's infections. And you swung to me
+ Closer than before--and a chumship began
+ Between us....
+
+ What vital power was yours!
+ You never tired, or needed sleep, or had a pain,
+ Or refused a delight. I loved the things now
+ You had always loved, a winning horse,
+ A roulette wheel, a contest of skill
+ In games or sports ... long talks on the corner
+ With men who have lived and tell you
+ Things with a rich flavor of old wisdom or humor;
+ A woman, a glass of whisky at a table
+ Where the fatigue of life falls, and our reserves
+ That wait for happiness come up in smiles,
+ Laughter, gentle confidences. Here you were
+ A man with youth, and I a youth was a man,
+ Exulting in your braveries and delight in life.
+ How you knocked that scamp over at Harry Varnell's
+ When he tried to take your chips! And how I,
+ Who had thought the devil in cards as a boy,
+ Loved to play with you now and watch you play;
+ And watch the subtle mathematics of your mind
+ Prophecy, divine the plays. Who was it
+ In your ancestry that you harked back to
+ And reproduced with such various gifts
+ Of flesh and spirit, Anglo-Saxon, Celt?--
+ You with such rapid wit and powerful skill
+ For catching illogic and whipping Error's
+ Fangéd head from the body?...
+
+ I was really ahead of you
+ At this stage, with more self-consciousness
+ Of what man is, and what life is at last,
+ And how the spirit works, and by what laws,
+ With what inevitable force. But still I was
+ Behind you in that strength which in our youth,
+ If ever we have it, squeezes all the nectar
+ From the grapes. It seemed you'd never lose
+ This power and sense of joy, but yet at times
+ I saw another phase of you....
+
+ There was the day
+ We rode together north of the old town,
+ Past the old farm houses that I knew--
+ Past maple groves, and fields of corn in the shock,
+ And fields of wheat with the fall green.
+ It was October, but the clouds were summer's,
+ Lazily floating in a sky of June;
+ And a few crows flying here and there,
+ And a quail's call, and around us a great silence
+ That held at its core old memories
+ Of pioneers, and dead days, forgotten things!
+ I'll never forget how you looked that day. Your hair
+ Was turning silver now, but still your eyes
+ Burned as of old, and the rich olive glow
+ In your cheeks shone, with not a line or wrinkle!--
+ You seemed to me perfection--a youth, a man!
+ And now you talked of the world with the old wit,
+ And now of the soul--how such a man went down
+ Through folly or wrong done by him, and how
+ Man's death cannot end all,
+ There must be life hereafter!...
+
+ As you were that day, as you looked and spoke,
+ As the earth was, I hear as the soul of it all
+ Godard's _Dawn_, Dvorák's _Humoresque_,
+ The Morris Dances, Mendelssohn's _Barcarole_,
+ And old Scotch songs, _When the Kye Come Hame_,
+ And _The Moon Had Climbed the Highest Hill_,
+ The Musseta Waltz and Rudolph's Narrative;
+ Your great brow seemed Beethoven's
+ And the lust of life in your face Cellini's,
+ And your riotous fancy like Dumas.
+ I was nearer you now than ever before,
+ And finding each other thus I see to-day
+ How the human soul seeks the human soul
+ And finds the one it seeks at last.
+ For you know you can open a window
+ That looks upon embowered darkness,
+ When the flowers sleep and the trees are still
+ At Midnight, and no light burns in the room;
+ And you can hide your butterfly
+ Somewhere in the room, but soon you will see
+ A host of butterfly mates
+ Fluttering through the window to join
+ Your butterfly hid in the room.
+ It is somehow thus with souls....
+
+ This day then I understood it all:
+ Your vital democracy and love of men
+ And tolerance of life; and how the excess of these
+ Had wrought your sorrows in the days
+ When we were so poor, and the small of mind
+ Spoke of your sins and your connivance
+ With sinful men. You had lived it down,
+ Had triumphed over them, and you had grown.
+ Prosperous in the world and had passed
+ Into an easy mastery of life and beyond the thought
+ Of further conquests for things.
+ As the Brahmins say, no more you worshiped matter,
+ Or scarcely ghosts, or even the gods
+ With singleness of heart.
+ This day you worshiped Eternal Peace
+ Or Eternal Flame, with scarce a laugh or jest
+ To hide your worship; and I understood,
+ Seeing so many facets to you, why it was
+ Blind Condon always smiled to hear your voice,
+ And why it was in a greenroom years ago
+ Booth turned to you, marking your face
+ From all the rest, and said, "There is a man
+ Who might play Hamlet--better still Othello";
+ And why it was the women loved you; and the priest
+ Could feed his body and soul together drinking
+ A glass of beer and visiting with you....
+
+ Then something happened:
+ Your face grew smaller, your brow more narrow,
+ Dull fires burned in your eyes,
+ Your body shriveled, you walked with a cynical shuffle,
+ Your hands mixed the keys of life,
+ You had become a discord.
+ A monstrous hatred consumed you--
+ You had suffered the greatest wrong of all,
+ I knew and granted the wrong.
+ You had mounted up to sixty years, now breathing hard,
+ And just at the time that honor belonged to you
+ You were dishonored at the hands of a friend.
+ I wept for you, and still I wondered
+ If all I had grown to see in you and find in you
+ And love in you was just a fond illusion--
+ If after all I had not seen you aright as a boy:
+ Barbaric, hard, suspicious, cruel, redeemed
+ Alone by bubbling animal spirits--
+ Even these gone now, all of you smoke
+ Laden with stinging gas and lethal vapor....
+ Then you came forth again like the sun after storm--
+ The deadly uric acid driven out at last
+ Which had poisoned you and dwarfed your soul--
+ So much for soul!
+
+ The last time I saw you
+ Your face was full of golden light,
+ Something between flame and the richness of flesh.
+ You were yourself again, wholly yourself.
+ And oh, to find you again and resume
+ Our understanding we had worked so long to reach--
+ You calm and luminant and rich in thought!
+ This time it seemed we said but "yes" or "no"--
+ That was enough; we smoked together
+ And drank a glass of wine and watched
+ The leaves fall sitting on the porch....
+ Then life whirled me away like a leaf,
+ And I went about the crowded ways of New York.
+
+ And one night Alberta and I took dinner
+ At a place near Fourteenth Street where the music
+ Was like the sun on a breeze-swept lake
+ When every wave is a patine of fire,
+ And I thought of you not at all
+ Looking at Alberta and watching her white teeth
+ Bite off bits of Italian bread,
+ And watching her smile and the wide pupils
+ Of her eyes, electrified by wine
+ And music and the touch of our hands
+ Now and then across the table.
+ We went to her house at last.
+ And through a languorous evening.
+ Where no light was but a single candle,
+ We circled about and about a pending theme
+ Till at last we solved it suddenly in rapture
+ Almost by chance; and when I left
+ She followed me to the hall and leaned above
+ The railing about the stair for the farewell kiss--
+ And I went into the open air ecstatically,
+ With the stars in the spaces of sky between
+ The towering buildings, and the rush
+ Of wheels and clang of bells,
+ Still with the fragrance of her lips and cheeks
+ And glinting hair about me, delicate
+ And keen in spite of the open air.
+ And just as I entered the brilliant car
+ Something said to me you are dead--
+ I had not thought of you, was not thinking of you.
+ But I knew it was true, as it was,
+ For the telegram waited me at my room....
+ I didn't come back.
+ I could not bear to see the breathless breath
+ Over your brow--nor look at your face--
+ However you fared or where
+ To what victories soever--
+ Vanquished or seemingly vanquished!
+
+
+
+
+RAIN IN MY HEART
+
+
+ There is a quiet in my heart
+ Like one who rests from days of pain.
+ Outside, the sparrows on the roof
+ Are chirping in the dripping rain.
+
+ Rain in my heart; rain on the roof;
+ And memory sleeps beneath the gray
+ And windless sky and brings no dreams
+ Of any well remembered day.
+
+ I would not have the heavens fair,
+ Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild,
+ But days like this, until my heart
+ To loss of you is reconciled.
+
+ I would not see you. Every hope
+ To know you as you were has ranged.
+ I, who am altered, would not find
+ The face I loved so greatly changed.
+
+
+
+
+THE LOOP
+
+
+ From State street bridge a snow-white glimpse of sea
+ Beyond the river walled in by red buildings,
+ O'ertopped by masts that take the sunset's gildings,
+ Roped to the wharf till spring shall set them free.
+ Great floes make known how swift the river's current.
+ Out of the north sky blows a cutting wind.
+ Smoke from the stacks and engines in a torrent
+ Whirls downward, by the eddying breezes thinned.
+ Enskyed are sign boards advertising soap,
+ Tobacco, coal, transcontinental trains.
+ A tug is whistling, straining at a rope,
+ Fixed to a dredge with derricks, scoops and cranes.
+ Down in the loop the blue-gray air enshrouds,
+ As with a cyclops' cape, the man-made hills
+ And towers of granite where the city crowds.
+ Above the din a copper's whistle shrills.
+ There is a smell of coffee and of spices.
+ We near the market place of trade's devices.
+ Blue smoke from out a roasting room is pouring.
+ A rooster crows, geese cackle, men are bawling.
+ Whips crack, trucks creak, it is the place of storing,
+ And drawing out and loading up and hauling
+ Fruit, vegetables and fowls and steaks and hams,
+ Oysters and lobsters, fish and crabs and clams.
+ And near at hand are restaurants and bars,
+ Hotels with rooms at fifty cents a day,
+ Beer tunnels, pool rooms, places where cigars
+ And cigarettes their window signs display;
+ Mixed in with letterings of printed tags,
+ Twine, boxes, cartels, sacks and leather bags,
+ Wigs, telescopes, eyeglasses, ladies' tresses,
+ Or those who manicure or fashion dresses,
+ Or sell us putters, tennis balls or brassies,
+ Make shoes, pull teeth, or fit the eye with glasses.
+
+ And now the rows of windows showing laces,
+ Silks, draperies and furs and costly vases,
+ Watches and mirrors, silver cups and mugs,
+ Emeralds, diamonds, Indian, Persian rugs,
+ Hats, velvets, silver buckles, ostrich-plumes,
+ Drugs, violet water, powder and perfumes.
+ Here is a monstrous winking eye--beneath
+ A showcase by an entrance full of teeth.
+ Here rubber coats, umbrellas, mackintoshes,
+ Hoods, rubber boots and arctics and galoshes.
+ Here is half a block of overcoats,
+ In this bleak time of snow and slender throats.
+ Then windows of fine linen, snakewood canes,
+ Scarfs, opera hats, in use where fashion reigns.
+ As when the hive swarms, so the crowded street
+ Roars to the shuffling of innumerable feet.
+ Skyscrapers soar above them; they go by
+ As bees crawl, little scales upon the skin
+ Of a great dragon winding out and in.
+ Above them hangs a tangled tree of signs,
+ Suspended or uplifted like dædalian
+ Hieroglyphics when the saturnalian
+ Night commences, and their racing lines
+ Run fire of blue and yellow in a puzzle,
+ Bewildering to the eyes of those who guzzle,
+ And gourmandize and stroll and seek the bubble
+ Of happiness to put away their trouble.
+
+ Around the loop the elevated crawls,
+ And giant shadows sink against the walls
+ Where ten to twenty stories strive to hold
+ The pale refraction of the sunset's gold.
+ Slop underfoot, we pass beneath the loop.
+ The crowd is uglier, poorer; there are smells
+ As from the depths of unsuspected hells,
+ And from a groggery where beer and soup
+ Are sold for five cents to the thieves and bums.
+ Here now are huge cartoons in red and blue
+ Of obese women and of skeleton men,
+ Egyptian dancers, twined with monstrous snakes,
+ Before the door a turbaned lithe Hindoo,
+ A bagpipe shrilling, underneath a den
+ Of opium, whence a man with hand that shakes,
+ Rolling a cigarette, so palely comes.
+ The clang of car bells and the beat of drums.
+ Draft horses clamping with their steel-shod hoofs.
+ The buildings have grown small and black and worn;
+ The sky is more beholden; o'er the roofs
+ A flock of pigeons soars; with dresses torn
+ And yellow faces, labor women pass
+ Some Chinese gabbling; and there, buying fruit,
+ Stands a fair girl who is a late recruit
+ To those poor women slain each year by lust.
+ 'Tis evening now and trade will soon begin.
+ The family entrance beckons for a glass
+ Of hopeful mockery, the piano's din
+ Into the street with sounds of rasping wires
+ Filters, and near a pawner's window shows
+ Pistols, accordions; and, luring buyers,
+ A Jew stands mumbling to the passer-by
+ Of jewelry and watches and old clothes.
+ A limousine gleams quickly--with a cry
+ A legless man fastened upon a board
+ With casters 'neath it by a sudden shove
+ Darts out of danger. And upon the corner
+ A lassie tells a man that God is love,
+ Holding a tambourine with its copper hoard
+ To be augmented by the drunken scorner.
+ A woman with no eyeballs in her sockets
+ Plays "Rock of Ages" on a wheezy organ.
+ A newsboy with cold hands thrust in his pockets
+ Cries, "All about the will of Pierpont Morgan!"
+ The roofline of the street now sinks and dwindles.
+ The windows are begrimed with dust and beer.
+ A child half clothed, with legs as thin as spindles,
+ Carries a basket with some bits of coal.
+ Between lace curtains eyes of yellow leer,
+ The cheeks splotched with white places like the skin
+ Inside an eggshell--destitute of soul.
+ One sees a brass lamp oozing kerosene
+ Upon a stand whereon her elbows lean;
+ Lighted, it soon will welcome negroes in.
+
+ The railroad tracks are near. We almost choke
+ From filth whirled from the street and stinging vapors.
+ Great engines vomit gas and heavy smoke
+ Upon a north wind driving tattered papers,
+ Dry dung and dust and refuse down the street.
+ A circumambient roar as of a wheel
+ Whirring far off--a monster's heart whose beat
+ Is full of murmurs, comes as we retreat
+ Towards Twenty-second. And a man with jaw
+ Set like a tiger's, with a dirty beard,
+ Skulks toward the loop, with heavy wrists red-raw
+ Glowing above his pockets where his hands
+ Pushed tensely round his hips the coat tails draw,
+ And show what seems a slender piece of metal
+ In his hip pocket. On these barren strands
+ He waits for midnight for old scores to settle
+ Against his ancient foe society,
+ Who keeps the soup house and who builds the jails.
+ Switchmen and firemen with their dinner pails
+ Go by him homeward, and he wonders if
+ These fellows know a hundred thousand workers
+ Walk up and down the city's highways, stiff
+ From cold and hunger, doomed to poverty,
+ As wretched as the thieves and crooks and shirkers.
+ He scurries to the lake front, loiters past
+ The windows of wax lights with scarlet shades,
+ Where smiling diners back of ambuscades
+ Of silk and velvet hear not winter's blast
+ Blowing across the lake. He has a thought
+ Of Michigan, where once at picking berries
+ He spent a summer--then his eye is caught
+ At Randolph street by written light which tarries,
+ Then like a film runs into sentences.
+ He sees it all as from a black abyss.
+ Taxis with skid chains rattle, limousines
+ Draw up to awnings; for a space he catches
+ A scent of musk or violets, sees the patches
+ On powdered cheeks of furred and jeweled queens.
+ The color round his cruel mouth grows whiter,
+ He thrusts his coarse hands in his pockets tighter:
+ He is a thief, he knows he is a thief,
+ He is a thief found out, and, as he knows,
+ The whole loop is a kingdom held in fief
+ By men who work with laws instead of blows
+ From sling shots, so he curses under breath
+ The money and the invisible hand that owns
+ From year to year, in spite of change and death,
+ The wires for the lights and telephones,
+ The railways on the streets, and overhead
+ The railways, and beneath the winding tunnel
+ Which crooks stole from the city for a runnel
+ To drain her nickels; and the pipes of lead
+ Which carry gas, wrapped round us like a snake,
+ And round the courts, whose grip no court can break.
+ He curses bitterly all those who rise,
+ And rule by just the spirit which he plies
+ Coarsely against the world's great store of wealth;
+ Bankers and usurers and cliques whose stealth
+ Works witchcraft through the market and the press,
+ And hires editors, or owns the stock
+ Controlling papers, playing with finesse
+ The city's thinking, that they may unlock
+ Treasures and powers like burglars in the dark.
+ And thinking thus and cursing, through a flurry
+ Of sudden snow he hastens on to Clark.
+ In a cheap room there is an eye to mark
+ His coming and be glad. His footsteps hurry.
+ She will have money, earned this afternoon
+ Through men who took her from a near saloon
+ Wherein she sits at table to dragoon
+ Roughnecks or simpletons upon a lark.
+ Within a little hall a fierce-eyed youth
+ Rants of the burdens on the people's backs--
+ He would cure all things with the single tax.
+ A clergyman demands more gospel truth,
+ Speaking to Christians at a weekly dinner.
+ A parlor Marxian, for a beginner
+ Would take the railways. And amid applause
+ Where lawyers dine, a judge says all will be
+ Well if we hand down to posterity
+ Respect for courts and judges and the laws.
+ An anarchist would fight. Upon the whole,
+ Another thinks, to cultivate one's soul
+ Is most important--let the passing show
+ Go where it wills, and where it wills to go.
+
+ Outside the stars look down. Stars are content
+ To be so quiet and indifferent.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES
+
+
+ When under the icy eaves
+ The swallow heralds the sun,
+ And the dove for its lost mate grieves
+ And the young lambs play and run;
+ When the sea is a plane of glass,
+ And the blustering winds are still,
+ And the strength of the thin snows pass
+ In mists o'er the tawny hill--
+ The spirit of life awakes
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+ When the sick man seeks the air,
+ And the graves of the dead grow green,
+ Where the children play unaware
+ Of the faces no longer seen;
+ When all we have felt or can feel,
+ And all we are or have been,
+ And all the heart can hide or reveal,
+ Knocks gently, and enters in:--
+ The spirit of life awakes,
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAR
+
+
+ We paused to say good-by,
+ As we thought for a little while,
+ Alone in the car, in the corner
+ Around the turn of the aisle.
+
+ A quiver came in your voice,
+ Your eyes were sorrowful too;
+ 'Twas over--I strode to the doorway,
+ Then turned to wave an adieu.
+
+ But you had not come from the corner,
+ And though I had gone so far,
+ I retraced, and faced you coming
+ Into the aisle of the car.
+
+ You stopped as one who was caught
+ In an evil mood by surprise.--
+ I want to forget, I am trying
+ To forget the look in your eyes.
+
+ Your face was blank and cold,
+ Like Lot's wife turned to salt.
+ I suddenly trapped and discovered
+ Your soul in a hidden fault.
+
+ Your eyes were tearless and wide,
+ And your wide eyes looked on me
+ Like a Mænad musing murder,
+ Or the mask of Melpomene.
+
+ And there in a flash of lightning
+ I learned what I never could prove:
+ That your heart contained no sorrow,
+ And your heart contained no love.
+
+ And my heart is light and heavy,
+ And this is the reason why:
+ I am glad we parted forever,
+ And sad for the last good-by.
+
+
+
+
+SIMON SURNAMED PETER
+
+
+ Time that has lifted you over them all--
+ O'er John and o'er Paul;
+ Writ you in capitals, made you the chief
+ Word on the leaf--
+ How did you, Peter, when ne'er on His breast
+ You leaned and were blest--
+ And none except Judas and you broke the faith
+ To the day of His death,--
+ You, Peter, the fisherman, worthy of blame,
+ Arise to this fame?
+
+ 'Twas you in the garden who fell into sleep
+ And the watch failed to keep,
+ When Jesus was praying and pressed with the weight
+ Of the oncoming fate.
+ 'Twas you in the court of the palace who warmed
+ Your hands as you stormed
+ At the damsel, denying Him thrice, when she cried:
+ "He walked at his side!"
+ You, Peter, a wave, a star among clouds, a reed in the wind,
+ A guide of the blind,
+ Both smiter and flyer, but human alway, I protest,
+ Beyond all the rest.
+
+ When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared
+ Did you wait till he neared?
+ You leaped in the water, not dreading the worst
+ In your joy to be first
+ To greet Him and tell Him of all that had passed
+ Since you saw Him the last.
+ You had slept while He watched, but fierce were you, fierce and awake
+ When they sought Him to take,
+ And cursing, no doubt, as you smote off, as one of the least,
+ The ear of the priest.
+ Then Andrew and all of them fled, but you followed Him,
+ hoping for strength
+ To save him at length
+ Till you lied to the damsel, oh penitent Peter, and crept,
+ Into hiding and wept.
+
+ Oh well! But he asked all the twelve, "Who am I?"
+ And who made reply?
+ As you leaped in the sea, so you spoke as you smote with the sword;
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+ John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,
+ "Nay, lovest thou me?"
+ Thrice over, as thrice you denied Him, and chose you to lead
+ His sheep and to feed;
+ And gave you, He said, the keys of the den and the fold
+ To have and to hold.
+ You were a poor jailer, oh Peter, the dreamer, who saw
+ The death of the law
+ In the dream of the vessel that held all the four-footed beasts,
+ Unclean for the priests;
+ And heard in the vision a trumpet that all men are worth
+ The peace of the earth
+ And rapture of heaven hereafter,--oh Peter, what power
+ Was yours in that hour:
+ You warder and jailer and sealer of fates and decrees,
+ To use the big keys
+ With which to reveal and fling wide all the soul and the scheme
+ Of the Galilee dream,
+ When you flashed in a trice, as later you smote with the sword:
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+
+ We men, Simon Peter, we men also give you the crown
+ O'er Paul and o'er John.
+ We write you in capitals, make you the chief
+ Word on the leaf.
+ We know you as one of our flesh, and 'tis well
+ You are warder of hell,
+ And heaven's gatekeeper forever to bind and to loose--
+ Keep the keys if you choose.
+ Not rock of you, fire of you make you sublime
+ In the annals of time.
+ You were called by Him, Peter, a rock, but we give you the name
+ Of Peter the Flame.
+ For you struck a spark, as the spark from the shock
+ Of steel upon rock.
+ The rock has his use but the flame gives the light
+ In the way in the night:--
+ Oh Peter, the dreamer, impetuous, human, divine,
+ Gnarled branch of the vine!
+
+
+
+
+ALL LIFE IN A LIFE
+
+
+ His father had a large family
+ Of girls and boys and he was born and bred
+ In a barn or kind of cattle shed.
+ But he was a hardy youngster and grew to be
+ A boy with eyes that sparkled like a rod
+ Of white hot iron in the blacksmith shop.
+ His face was ruddy like a rising moon,
+ And his hair was black as sheep's wool that is black.
+ And he had rugged arms and legs and a strong back.
+ And he had a voice half flute and half bassoon.
+ And from his toes up to his head's top
+ He was a man, simple but intricate.
+ And most men differ who try to delineate
+ His life and fate.
+
+ He never seemed ashamed
+ Of poverty or of his origin. He was a wayward child,
+ Nevertheless though wise and mild,
+ And thoughtful but when angered then he flamed
+ As fire does in a forge.
+ When he was ten years old he ran away
+ To be alone and watch the sea, and the stars
+ At midnight from a mountain gorge.
+
+ When he returned his parents scolded him
+ And threatened him with bolts and bars.
+ Then they grew soft for his return and gay
+ And with their love would have enfolded him.
+ But even at ten years old he had a way
+ Of gazing at you with a look austere
+ Which gave his kinfolk fear.
+ He had no childlike love for father or mother,
+ Sister or brother,
+ They were the same to him as any other.
+ He was a little cold, a little queer.
+
+ His father was a laborer and now
+ They made the boy work for his daily bread.
+ They say he read
+ A book or two during these years of work.
+ But if there was a secret prone to lurk
+ Between the pages under the light of his brow
+ It came forth. And if he had a woman
+ In love or out of love, or a companion or a chum,
+ History is dumb.
+ So far as we know he dreamed and worked with hands
+ And learned to know his genius' commands
+ Or what is called one's dæmon.
+
+ And this became at last the city's call.
+ He had now reached the age of thirty years,
+ And found a Dream of Life and a solution
+ For slavery of soul and even all
+ Miseries that flow from things material.
+ To free the world was his soul's resolution.
+ But his family had great fears
+ For him, knowing the evil
+ Which might befall him, seeing that the light
+ Of his own dream had blinded his mind's eyes.
+ They could not tell but what he had a devil.
+ But still in their tears despite,
+ And warnings he departed with replies
+ That when a man's genius calls him
+ He must obey no matter what befalls him.
+
+ What he had in his mind was growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in his mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of Falsehood and Unbrotherly Desire.--
+ What he had in his mind was simply Love.
+ And it was strange he preached the sword and force
+ To establish Love, but it was not strange,
+ Since he did this, his life took on a change.
+ And what he taught seems muddled at its source
+ With moralizing and with moral strife.
+ For morals are merely the Truth diluted
+ And sweetened up and suited
+ To the business and bread of Life.
+
+ And now this City was just what you'd find
+ A city anywhere,
+ A turmoil and a Vanity Fair,
+ A sort of heaven and a sort of Tophet.
+ There were so many leaders of his kind
+ The city didn't care
+ For one additional prophet.
+ He said some extravagant things
+ And planted a few stings
+ Under the rich man's hide.
+ And one of the sensational newspapers
+ Gave him a line or two for cutting capers
+ In front of the Palace of Justice and the Church.
+ But all of the first grade people took the other side
+ Of the street when they saw him coming
+ With a rag tag crowd singing and humming,
+ And curious boys and men up in a perch
+ Of a tree or window taking the spectacle in,
+ And the Corybantic din
+ Of a Salvation Army as it were.
+ And whatever he dreamed when he lived in a little town
+ The intelligent people ignored him, and this is the stir
+ And the only stir he made in the city.
+
+ But there was a certain sinister
+ Fellow who came to him hearing of his renown
+ And said "You can be Mayor of this city,
+ We need a man like you for Mayor."
+ And others said "You'd make a lawyer or a politician,
+ Look how the people follow you;
+ Why don't you hire out as a special writer,
+ You could become a business man, a rhetorician,
+ You could become a player,
+ You can grow rich. There's nothing for a fighter,
+ Fighting as you are, but to end in ruin."
+ But he turned from them on his way pursuing
+ The dream he had in view.
+
+ He had a rich man or two
+ Who took up with him against the powerful frown
+ Which looked him down.
+ For you'll always find a rich man or two
+ To take up with anything.
+ There are those who can't get into society or bring
+ Their riches to a social recognition;
+ Or ill-formed souls who lack the real patrician
+ Spirit for life.
+ But as for him he didn't care, he passed
+ Where the richness of living was rife.
+ And like wise Goethe talking to the last
+ With cabmen rather than with lords
+ He sat about the markets and the fountains,
+ He walked about the country and the mountains,
+ Took trips upon the lakes and waded fords
+ Barefooted, laughing as a young animal
+ Disports itself amid the festival
+ Of warm winds, sunshine, summer's carnival--
+ With laborers, carpenters, seamen
+ And some loose women.
+ And certain notable sinners
+ Gave him dinners.
+ And he went to weddings and to places where youth slakes
+ Its thirst for happiness, and they served him cakes
+ And wine wherever he went.
+ And he ate and drank and spent
+ His time in feasting and in telling stories,
+ And singing poems of lilies and of trees,
+ With crowds of people crowded around his knees
+ That searched with lightning secrets hidden
+ Of life and of life's glories,
+ Of death and of the soul's way after death.
+
+ Time makes amends usually for scandal's breath,
+ Which touched him to his earthly ruination.
+ But this city had a Civic Federation,
+ And a certain social order which intrigues
+ Through churches, courts, with an endless ramification
+ Of money and morals to save itself.
+ And this city had a Bar Association,
+ Also its Public Efficiency Leagues
+ For laying honest men upon the shelf
+ While making private pelf
+ Secure and free to increase.
+ And this city had illustrious Pharisees
+ And this city had a legion
+ Of men who make a business of religion,
+ With eyes one inch apart,
+ Dark and narrow of heart,
+ Who give themselves and give the city no peace,
+ And who are everywhere the best police
+ For Life as business.
+ And when they saw this youth
+ Was telling the truth,
+ And that his followers were multiplying,
+ And were going about rejoicing and defying
+ The social order and were stirring up
+ The dregs of discontent in the cup
+ With the hand of their own happiness,
+ They saw dynamic mysteries
+ In the poems of lilies and trees,
+ Therefore they held him for a felony.
+
+ If you will take a kernel of wheat
+ And first make free
+ The outer flake and then pare off the meat
+ Of edible starch you'll find at the kernel's core
+ The life germ. And this young man's words were dim
+ With blasphemy, sedition at the rim,
+ Which fired the heads of dreamers like new wine.
+ But this was just the outward force of him.
+ For this young man's philosophy was more
+ Than such external ferment, being divine
+ With secrets so profound no plummet line
+ Can altogether sound it. It means growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of falsehood and unbrotherly Desire.
+ What he had in mind was simply Love.
+
+ But he was prosecuted
+ As a rebel and as a rebel executed
+ Right in a public place where all could see.
+ And his mother watched him hang for the felony.
+ He hated to die being but thirty-three,
+ And fearing that his poems might be lost.
+ And certain members of the Bar Association,
+ And of the Civic Federation,
+ And of the League of Public Efficiency,
+ And a legion
+ Of men devoted to religion,
+ With policemen, soldiers, roughs,
+ Loose women, thieves and toughs,
+ Came out to see him die,
+ And hooted at him giving up the ghost
+ In great despair and with a fearful cry!
+
+ And after him there was a man named Paul
+ Who almost spoiled it all.
+
+ And protozoan things like hypocrites,
+ And parasitic things who make a food
+ Of the mysteries of God for earthly power
+ Must wonder how before this young man's hour
+ They lived without his blood,
+ Shed on that day, and which
+ In red cells is so rich.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT YOU WILL
+
+
+ April rain, delicious weeping,
+ Washes white bones from the grave,
+ Long enough have they been sleeping.
+ They are cleansed, and now they crave
+ Once more on the earth to gather
+ Pleasure from the springtime weather.
+
+ The pine trees and the long dark grass
+ Feed on what is placed below.
+ Think you not that there doth pass
+ In them something we did know?
+ This spell--well, friends, I greet ye once again
+ With joy--but with a most unuttered pain.
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY
+
+
+ The Sun hung like a red balloon
+ As if he would not rise;
+ For listless Helios drowsed and yawned.
+ He cared not whether the morning dawned,
+ The brother of Eos and the Moon
+ Stretched him and rubbed his eyes.
+
+ He would have dreamed the dream again
+ That found him under sea:
+ He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side,
+ He saw Hæphestos with his bride;
+ He traced from Enna's flowery plain
+ The child Persephone.
+
+ There was a time when heaven's vault
+ Cracked like a temple's roof.
+ A new hierarchy burst its shell,
+ And as the sapphire ceiling fell,
+ From stern Jehovah's mad assault,
+ Vast spaces stretched aloof:
+
+ Great blue black depths of frozen air
+ Engulfed the soul of Zeus.
+ And then Jehovah reigned instead.
+ For Judah was living and Greece was dead.
+ And Hope was born to nurse Despair,
+ And the Devil was let loose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Far off in the waste empyrean
+ The world was a golden mote.
+ And the Sun hung like a red balloon,
+ Or a bomb afire o'er a barracoon.
+ And the sea was drab, and the sea was green
+ Like a many colored coat.
+
+ The sea was pink like cyclamen,
+ And red as a blushing rose.
+ It shook anon like the sensitive plant,
+ Under the golden light aslant.
+ The little waves patted the shore again
+ Where the restless river flows.
+
+ And thus it has been for ages gone--
+ For a hundred thousand years;
+ Ere Buddha lived or Jesus came,
+ Or ever the city had place or name,
+ The sea thrilled through at the kiss of dawn
+ Like a soul of smiles and tears.
+
+ When the city's seat was a waste of sand,
+ And the hydra lived alone,
+ The sound of the sea was here to be heard,
+ And the moon rose up like a great white bird,
+ Sailing aloft from the yellow strand
+ To her silent midnight throne.
+
+ Now Helios eyes the universe,
+ And he knows the world is small.
+ Of old he walked through pagan Tyre,
+ Babylon, Sodom destroyed by fire,
+ And sought to unriddle the primal curse
+ That holds the race in thrall.
+
+ So he stepped from the Sun in robes of flame
+ As the city woke from sleep.
+ He walked the markets, walked the squares,
+ He walked the places of sweets and snares,
+ Where men buy honor and barter shame,
+ And the weak are killed as sheep.
+
+ He saw the city is one great mart
+ Where life is bought and sold.
+ Men rise to get them meat and bread
+ To barter for drugs or coffin the dead.
+ And dawn is but a plucked-up heart
+ For the dreary game of gold.
+
+ "Ho! ho!" said Helios, "father Zeus
+ Would never botch it so.
+ If he had stolen Joseph's bride,
+ And let his son be crucified
+ The son's blood had been put to use
+ To ease the people's woe."
+
+ "He of the pest and the burning bush,
+ Of locusts, lice, and frogs,
+ Who made me stand, veiling my light,
+ While Joshua slaughtered the Amorite,
+ Who blacked the skin of the sons of Cush,
+ And builded the synagogues."
+
+ "And Jehovah the great is omnipotent,
+ While Zeus was bound by Fate.
+ But Athens fell when Peter took Rome,
+ And Chicago is made His hecatomb.
+ And since from the hour His son was sent
+ The hypocrite holds the state."
+
+ Helios traversed the city streets
+ And this is what he saw:
+ Some sold their honor, some their skill,
+ The soldier hired himself to kill,
+ The judges bartered the judgment seats
+ And trafficked in the law.
+
+ The starving artist sold his youth,
+ The writer sold his pen;
+ The lawyer sharpened up his wits
+ Like a burglar filing auger bits,
+ And Jesus' vicar sold the truth
+ To the famished sons of men.
+
+ In every heart flamed cruelty
+ Like a little emerald snake.
+ And each one knew if he should stand
+ In another's way the dagger-hand
+ Would make the stronger the feofee
+ Of the coveted wapentake.
+
+ There's not a thing men will not do
+ For honor, gold, or power.
+ We smile and call the city fair,
+ We call life lovely and debonair,
+ But Proserpina never grew
+ So deadly a passion flower.
+
+ Go live for an hour in a tropic land
+ Hid near a sinking pool:
+ The lion and tiger come to drink,
+ The boa crawls to the water's brink,
+ The elephant bull kneels down in the sand
+ And drinks till his throat is cool.
+
+ Jehovah will keep you awhile unseen
+ As you lie behind the rocks.
+ But go, if you dare, to slake your thirst,
+ Though Jesus died for our life accursed
+ Your bones by the tiger will be licked clean
+ As he licks the bones of an ox.
+
+ And the sky may be blue as fleur de lis,
+ And the earth be tulip red;
+ And God in heaven, and life all good
+ While you lie hid in the underwood:
+ And the city may leave you sorrow free
+ If you ask it not for bread.
+
+ One day Achilles lost a horse
+ While the pest at Troy was rife,
+ And a million maggots fought and ate
+ Like soldiers storming a city's gate,
+ And Thersites said, as he looked at the corse,
+ "Achilles, that is life."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Day fades and from a million cells
+ The office people pour.
+ Like bees that crawl on the honeycomb
+ The workers scurry to what is home,
+ And trains and traffic and clanging bells
+ Make the cañon highways roar.
+
+ Helios walked the city's ways
+ Till the lights began to shine.
+ Then the janitor women start to scrub
+ And the Pharisees up and enter the club,
+ And the harlot wakes, and the music plays
+ And the glasses glow with wine.
+
+ Now we're good fellows one and all,
+ And the buffet storms with talk.
+ "The market's closed and trade's at end
+ We had our battle, now I'm your friend."
+ And thanks to the spirit of alcohol
+ Men go for a ride or walk.
+
+ Oh but traffic is not all done
+ Nor everything yet sold.
+ There's woman to win, and plots to weave,
+ There's a heart to hurt, or one to deceive,
+ And bargains to bind ere rise of Sun
+ To garner the morrow's gold.
+
+ The market at night is as full of fraud
+ As the market kept by day.
+ The courtesan buys a soul with a look,
+ A dinner tempers the truth in a book,
+ And love is sold till love is a bawd,
+ And falsehood froths in the play.
+
+ And men and women sell their smiles
+ For friendship's lifeless dregs.
+ For fear of the morrow we bend and bow
+ To moneybags with the slanting brow.
+ For the heart that knows life's little wiles
+ Seldom or never begs.
+
+ "Poor men," sighed Helios, "how they long
+ For the ultimate fire of love.
+ They yearn, through life, like the peacock moth,
+ And die worn out in search of the troth.
+ For love in the soul is the siren song
+ That wrecks the peace thereof."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Helios turned from the world and fled
+ As the convent bell tolled six.
+ For he caught a glimpse of an agéd crone
+ Who knelt beside a coffin alone;
+ She had sold her cloak to shrive the dead
+ And buy a crucifix!
+
+
+
+
+THE IDIOT
+
+
+ Two children in a garden
+ Shouting for joy
+ Were playing dolls and houses,
+ A girl and boy.
+ I smiled at a neighbor window,
+ And watched them play
+ Under a budding oak tree
+ On a wintry day.
+
+ And then a board half broken
+ In the high fence
+ Fell over and there entered,
+ I know not whence,
+ A jailbird face of yellow
+ With a vacant sulk,
+ His body was a sickly
+ Thing of bulk.
+
+ His open mouth was slavering,
+ And a green light
+ Turned disc-like in his eyeballs,
+ Like a dog's at night.
+ His teeth were like a giant's,
+ And far apart;
+ I saw him reel on the children
+ With a stopping heart.
+ He trampled their dolls and ruined
+ The house they made;
+ He struck to earth the children
+ With a dirty spade.
+ As a tiger growls with an antelope
+ After the hunt,
+ Over the little faces
+ I heard him grunt.
+
+ I stood at the window frozen,
+ And short of breath,
+ And then I saw the idiot
+ Was Master Death!
+
+ A bird in the lilac bushes
+ Began to sing.
+ The garden colored before me
+ To the kiss of spring.
+ And the yellow face in a moment
+ Was a mystic white;
+ The matted hair was softened
+ To starry light.
+ The ragged coat flowed downward
+ Into a robe;
+ He carried a sword and a balance
+ And stood on a globe.
+ I watched him from the window
+ Under a spell;
+ The idiot was the angel
+ Azrael!
+
+
+
+
+HELEN OF TROY
+
+On an ancient vase representing in bas-relief the flight of
+Helen.
+
+
+ This is the vase of Love
+ Whose feet would ever rove
+ O'er land and sea;
+ Whose hopes forever seek
+ Bright eyes, the vermeiled cheek,
+ And ways made free.
+
+ Do we not understand
+ Why thou didst leave thy land,
+ Thy spouse, thy hearth?
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy mirth our mirth.
+
+ For Paris did appear,--
+ Curled hair and rosy ear
+ And tapering hands.
+ He spoke--the blood ran fast,
+ He touched, and killed the past,
+ And clove its bands.
+
+ And this, I deem, is why
+ The restless ages sigh,
+ Helen, for thee.
+ Whate'er we do or dream,
+ Whate'er we say or seem,
+ We would be free.
+
+ We would forsake old love,
+ And all the pain thereof,
+ And all the care;
+ We would find out new seas,
+ And lands more strange than these,
+ And flowers more fair.
+
+ We would behold fresh skies
+ Where summer never dies
+ And amaranths spring;
+ Lands where the halcyon hours
+ Nest over scented bowers
+ On folded wing.
+
+ We would be crowned with bays,
+ And spend the long bright days
+ On sea or shore;
+ Or sit by haunted woods,
+ And watch the deep sea's moods,
+ And hear its roar.
+
+ Beneath that ancient sky
+ Who is not fain to fly
+ As men have fled?
+ Ah! we would know relief
+ From marts of wine and beef,
+ And oil and bread.
+
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy love our love.
+ For poesy, like thee,
+ Must fly and wander free
+ As the wild dove.
+
+
+
+
+O GLORIOUS FRANCE
+
+
+ You have become a forge of snow white fire,
+ A crucible of molten steel, O France!
+ Your sons are stars who cluster to a dawn
+ And fade in light for you, O glorious France!
+ They pass through meteor changes with a song
+ Which to all islands and all continents
+ Says life is neither comfort, wealth, nor fame,
+ Nor quiet hearthstones, friendship, wife nor child
+ Nor love, nor youth's delight, nor manhood's power,
+ Nor many days spent in a chosen work,
+ Nor honored merit, nor the patterned theme
+ Of daily labor, nor the crowns nor wreaths
+ Or seventy years.
+
+ These are not all of life,
+ O France, whose sons amid the rolling thunder
+ Of cannon stand in trenches where the dead
+ Clog the ensanguinéd ice. But life to these
+ Prophetic and enraptured souls is vision,
+ And the keen ecstasy of fated strife,
+ And divination of the loss as gain,
+ And reading mysteries with brightened eyes
+ In fiery shock and dazzling pain before
+ The orient splendor of the face of Death,
+ As a great light beside a shadowy sea;
+ And in a high will's strenuous exercise,
+ Where the warmed spirit finds its fullest strength
+ And is no more afraid. And in the stroke
+ Of azure lightning when the hidden essence
+ And shifting meaning of man's spiritual worth
+ And mystical significance in time
+ Are instantly distilled to one clear drop
+ Which mirrors earth and heaven.
+
+ This is life
+ Flaming to heaven in a minute's span
+ When the breath of battle blows the smoldering spark.
+ And across these seas
+ We who cry Peace and treasure life and cling
+ To cities, happiness, or daily toil
+ For daily bread, or trail the long routine
+ Of seventy years, taste not the terrible wine
+ Whereof you drink, who drain and toss the cup
+ Empty and ringing by the finished feast;
+ Or have it shaken from your hand by sight
+ Of God against the olive woods.
+
+ As Joan of Arc amid the apple trees
+ With sacred joy first heard the voices, then
+ Obeying plunged at Orleans in a field
+ Of spears and lived her dream and died in fire,
+ Thou, France, hast heard the voices and hast lived
+ The dream and known the meaning of the dream,
+ And read its riddle: How the soul of man
+ May to one greatest purpose make itself
+ A lens of clearness, how it loves the cup
+ Of deepest truth, and how its bitterest gall
+ Turns sweet to soul's surrender.
+
+ And you say:
+ Take days for repetition, stretch your hands
+ For mocked renewal of familiar things:
+ The beaten path, the chair beside the window,
+ The crowded street, the task, the accustomed sleep,
+ And waking to the task, or many springs
+ Of lifted cloud, blue water, flowering fields--
+ The prison house grows close no less, the feast
+ A place of memory sick for senses dulled
+ Down to the dusty end where pitiful Time
+ Grown weary cries Enough!
+
+
+
+
+FOR A DANCE
+
+
+ There is in the dance
+ The joy of children on a May day lawn.
+ The fragments of old dreams and dead romance
+ Come to us from the dancers who are gone.
+
+ What strains of ancient blood
+ Move quicker to the music's passionate beat?
+ I see the gulls fly over a shadowy flood
+ And Munster fields of barley and of wheat.
+
+ And I see sunny France,
+ And the vine's tendrils quivering to the light,
+ And faces, faces, yearning for the dance
+ With wistful eyes that look on our delight.
+
+ They live through us again
+ And we through them, who wish for lips and eyes
+ Wherewith to feel, not fancy, the old pain
+ Passed with reluctance through the centuries
+
+ To us, who in the maze
+ Of dancing and hushed music woven afresh
+ Amid the shifting mirrors of hours and days
+ Know not our spirit, neither know our flesh;
+
+ Nor what ourselves have been,
+ Through the long way that brought us to the dance:
+ I see a little green by Camolin
+ And odorous orchards blooming in Provence.
+
+ Two listen to the roar
+ Of waves moon-smitten, where no steps intrude.
+ Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?
+ Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LIFE IS REAL
+
+
+ We rode, we rode against the wind.
+ The countless lights along the town
+ Made the town blacker for their fire,
+ And you were always looking down.
+
+ To 'scape the blustering breath of March,
+ Or was it for your mind's disguise?
+ Still I could shut my eyes and see
+ The turquoise color of your eyes.
+
+ Surely your ermine furs were warm,
+ And warm your flowing cloak of red;
+ Was it the wild wind kept you thus
+ Pensive and with averted head?
+
+ I scarcely spoke, my words were swept
+ Like winged things in the wind's despite.
+ We rode, and with what shadow speed
+ Across the darkness of the night!
+
+ Without a word, without a look.
+ What was the charm and what the spell
+ That made one hour of life become
+ A memory ever memorable?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All craft, all labor, all desire,
+ All toil of age, all hope of youth
+ Are shadows from the fount of fire
+ And mummers of the truth.
+
+ How bloodless books, how pulseless art,
+ Vain kingly and imperial zeal,
+ Vain all memorials of the heart!
+ When Life itself is real!
+
+ We traced the golden clouds of spring,
+ We roved the beach, we walked the land.
+ What was the world? A Phantom thing
+ That vanished in your hand.
+
+ You were as quiet as the sky.
+ Your eyes were liquid as the sea.
+ And in that hour that passed us by
+ We lived eternally.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUESTION
+
+
+ I
+
+ The sea moans and the stars are bright,
+ The leaves lisp 'neath a rolling moon.
+ I shut my eyes against the night
+ And make believe the time is June--
+ The June that left us over-soon.
+
+ This is the path and this the place
+ We sat and watched the moving sea,
+ And I the moonlight on your face.
+ We were not happy--woe is me,
+ Happiness is but memory!
+
+ It seemeth, now that you are gone,
+ My heart a measured pain doth keep:--
+ Are you now, as I am, alone?
+ Do you make merry, do you weep?
+ In whose arms are you now asleep?
+
+
+
+
+THE ANSWER
+
+
+ II
+
+ I made my bed beneath the pines
+ Where the sea washed the sandy bars;
+ I heard the music of the winds,
+ And blest the aureate face of Mars.
+ All night a lilac splendor throve
+ Above the heaven's shadowy verge;
+ And in my heart the voice of love
+ Kept music with the dreaming surge.
+
+ A little maid was at my side--
+ She slept--I scarcely slept at all;
+ Until toward the morning-tide
+ A dream possessed me with its thrall.
+ She sweetly breathed; around my breast
+ I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss,
+ Then came the vision of unrest--
+ I saw your face and felt your kiss.
+
+ I woke and knew with what dismay
+ She read my secret and surprise;
+ She only said, "Again 'tis day!
+ How red your cheeks, how bright your eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+THE SIGN
+
+
+ There's not a soul on the square,
+ And the snow blows up like a sail,
+ Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man
+ Falling, before the gale.
+
+ And when the wind eddies it rifts
+ The snow that lies in drifts;
+ And it skims along the walk and sifts
+ In stairways, doorways all about
+ The steps of the church in an angry rout.
+ And one would think that a hungry hound
+ Was out in the cold for the sound.
+
+ But I do not seem to mind
+ The snow that makes one blind,
+ Nor the crying voice of the wind--
+ I hate to hear the creak of the sign
+ Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:
+ With its rhythmic monotone of awe.
+ And neither a moan nor yet a whine,
+ Nor a cry of pain--one can't define
+ The sound of a creaking sign.
+
+ Especially if the sky be bleak,
+ And no one stirs however you seek,
+ And every time you hear it creak
+ You wonder why they leave it stay
+ When a man is buried and hidden away
+ Many a day!
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM MARION REEDY
+
+
+ He sits before you silent as Buddha,
+ And then you say
+ This man is Rabelais.
+ And while you wonder what his stock is,
+ English or Irish, you behold his eyes
+ As big and brown as those desirable crockies
+ With which as boys we used to play.
+ And then you see the spherical light that lies
+ Just under the iris coloring,
+ Before which everything,
+ Becomes as plain as day.
+
+ If you have noticed the rolling jowls
+ And the face that speaks its chief
+ Delight in beer and roast beef
+ Before you have seen his eyes, you see
+ A man of fleshly jollity,
+ Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls
+ To make a show of scowls.
+ And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls
+ In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett
+ That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette
+ Or retraces to Thales of Crete,
+ And touches upon Descartes coming back
+ Through the intellectual Zodiac
+ That's something of a feat.
+ And you see that the eyes are really the man,
+ For the thought of him proliferates
+ This way over to Hindostan,
+ And that way descanting on Yeats.
+ With a word on Plato's symposium,
+ And a little glimpse of Theocritus,
+ Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,
+ Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant
+ By a certain line obscure to us.
+ And then he'll take up Horace's odes
+ Or the Roman civilization;
+ Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,
+ Or the Greek deterioration.
+ Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,
+ Which Benjamin Moore and others think
+ Is the origin of life. Then Shelley
+ Comes in a for a look of understanding.
+ Or he'll tell you about the orientation
+ Of the ancient dream of Zion.
+ Or what's the matter with Bryan.
+ And while the porter is bringing a drink
+ Something into his fancy skips
+ And he talks about the Apocalypse,
+ Or a painter or writer now unknown
+ In France or Germany who will soon
+ Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.
+
+ It's not so hard a thing to be wise
+ In the lore of books.
+ It's a different thing to be all eyes,
+ Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks
+ Over the land and out to sea:
+ And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!
+ Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,
+ Young as the light of the sun is young,
+ And taking the even with the odd
+ As a matter of course, and the path he's trod
+ As a path that was good enough.
+ With a sort of transcendental sense
+ Whose hatred is less than indifference,
+ And a gift of wisdom in love.
+ And who can say as he classifies
+ Men and ages with his eyes
+ With cool detachment: this is dung,
+ And that poor fellow is just a fool.
+ And say what you will death is a rod.
+ But I see a light that shines and shines
+ And I rather think it's God.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY
+
+
+ If your thoughts were as clear as your eyes,
+ And the whole of your heart were true,
+ You were fitter by far for winning--
+ But then that would not be you.
+
+ If your pulse beat time to love
+ As fast as you think and plan,
+ You could kindle a lasting passion
+ In the breast of the strongest man.
+
+ If you felt as much as you thought,
+ And dreamed what you seem to dream,
+ A world of elysian beauty
+ Your ruined heart would redeem.
+
+ If you thought in the light of the sun,
+ Or the blood in your veins flowed free,
+ If you gave your kisses but gladly,
+ We two could better agree.
+
+ If you were strong where I counted,
+ And weak where yourself were at stake,
+ You would have my strength for your giving,
+ You would gain and not lose for my sake.
+
+ If your heart overruled your head,
+ Or your head were lord of your heart,
+ Or the two were lovingly balanced,
+ I think we never should part.
+
+ If you came to me spite of yourself,
+ And staid not away through design,
+ These days of loving and living
+ Were sweet as Olympian wine.
+
+ If you could weep with another,
+ And tears for yourself controlled,
+ You could waken and hold to a pity
+ You waken, but do not hold.
+
+ If your lips were as fain to speak
+ As your face is fashioned to hide--
+ You would know that to lay up treasure
+ A woman's heart must confide.
+
+ If your bosom were something richer,
+ Or your hands more fragile and thin,
+ You would call what the world calls evil,
+ Or sin and be glad of the sin.
+
+ If your soul were aflame with love,
+ Or your head were devoted to truth,
+ You never would toss on your pillow
+ Bewildered 'twixt rapture and ruth.
+
+ If you were the you of my dreams,
+ And the you of my dreams were mine,
+ These days, half sweet and half bitter,
+ Would taste like Olympian wine.
+
+ Oh, subtle and mystic Egyptians!
+ Who chiseled the Sphinx in the East,
+ With head and the breasts of a woman,
+ And body and claws of a beast.
+
+ And gave her a marvellous riddle
+ That the eyeless should read as he ran:
+ What crawls and runs and is baffled
+ By woman, the sphinx--but a man?
+
+ Many look in her face and are conquered,
+ Where one all her heart has explored;
+ A thousand have made her their sovereign,
+ But one is her sovereign and lord.
+
+ For him she leaps from her standard
+ And fawns at his feet in the sand,
+ Who sees that himself is her riddle,
+ And she but the work of his hand.
+
+
+
+
+PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN
+
+
+ The pathos in your face is like a peace,
+ It is like resignation or a grace
+ Which smiles at the surcease
+ Of hope. But there is in your face
+ The shadow of pain, and there is a trace
+ Of memory of pain.
+
+ I look at you again and again,
+ And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives
+ My search for your despair.
+ I look at your pale hands--I look at your hair;
+ And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare
+ Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves
+ A flutter of color running under leaves--
+ Such anguished dreams in your eyes!
+ And I listen to you speak
+ Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle,
+ Or a star's twinkle.
+ Sometimes as we talk you rise
+ And leave the room, and then I rub a streak
+ Of a tear from my cheek.
+
+ You tell me such magical things
+ Of pictures, books, romance
+ And of your life in France
+ In the varied music of exquisite words,
+ And in a voice that sings.
+
+ All things are memory now with you,
+ For poverty girds
+ Your hopes, and only your dreams remain.
+ And sometimes here and there
+ I see as you turn your head a whitened hair,
+ Even when you are smiling most.
+ And a light comes in your eyes like a passing ghost,
+ And a color runs through your cheeks as fresh
+ As burns in a girl's flesh.
+ Then I can shut my eyes and feel the pain
+ That has become a part of you, though I feign
+ Laughter myself. One sees another's bruise
+ And shakes his thought out of it shuddering.
+ So I turn and clamp my will lest I bring
+ Your sorrow into my flesh, who cannot choose
+ But hear your words and laughter,
+ And watch your hands and eyes.
+
+ Then as I think you over after
+ I have gone from you, and your face
+ Comes to me with its grace
+ Of memory of unfound love:
+ You seem to me the image of all women
+ Who dream and keep under smiles the grief thereof,
+ Or sew, or sit by windows, or read books
+ To hide their Secret's looks.
+ And after a time go out of life and leave
+ No uttered words but in their silence grieve
+ For Life and for the things no tongue can tell:
+ Why Life hurts so, and why Love haunts and hurts
+ Poor men and women in this demi-hell.
+
+ Perhaps your pathos means that it is well
+ Death in his time the aspiring torch inverts,
+ And all tired flesh and haunted eyes and hands
+ Moving in painéd whiteness are put under
+ The soothing earth to brighten April's wonder.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAGE
+
+
+ The sounds of mid-night trickle into the roar
+ Of morning over the water growing blue.
+ At ten o'clock the August sunbeams pour
+ A blinding flood on Michigan Avenue.
+
+ But yet the half-drawn shades of bottle green
+ Leave the recesses of the room
+ With misty auras drawn around their gloom
+ Where things lie undistinguished, scarcely seen.
+
+ You, standing between the window and the bed
+ Are edged with rainbow colors. And I lie
+ Drowsy with quizzical half-open eye
+ Musing upon the contour of your head,
+ Watching you comb your hair,
+ Clothed in a corset waist and skirt of silk,
+ Tied with white braid above your slender hips
+ Which reaches to your knees and makes your bare
+ And delicate legs by contrast white as milk.
+ And as you toss your head to comb its tresses
+ They flash upon me like long strips of sand
+ Between a moonlit sea, pale as your hand,
+ And a red sun that on a high dune stresses
+ Its sanguine heat.
+
+ And then at times your lips,
+ Protruding half unconscious half in scorn
+ Engage my eyes while looking through the morn
+ At the clear oval of your brow brought full
+ Over the sovereign largeness of your eyes;
+ Or at your breasts that shake not as you pull
+ The comb through stubborn tangles, only rise
+ Scarcely perceptible with breath or signs,
+ Firm unmaternal like a young Bacchante's,
+ Or at your nose profoundly dipped like Dante's
+ Over your chin that softly melts away.
+
+ Now you seem fully under my heart's sway.
+ I have slipped through the magic of your mesh
+ Freed once again and strengthened by your flesh,
+ You seem a weak thing for a strong man's play.
+ Yet I know now that we shall scarce have parted
+ When I shall think of you half heavy hearted.
+ I know our partings. You will faintly smile
+ And look at me with eyes that have no guile,
+ Or have too much, and pass into the sphere
+ Where you keep independent life meanwhile.
+ How do you live without me, is the fear?
+ You do not lean upon me, ask my love, or wonder
+ Of other loves I may have hidden under
+ These casual renewals of our love.
+ And if I loved you I should lie in flame,
+ Ari, go about re-murmuring your name,
+ And these are things a man should be above.
+
+ And as I lie here on the imminent brink
+ Of soul's surrender into your soul's power,
+ And in the white light of the morning hour
+ I see what life would be if we should link
+ Our lives together in a marriage pact:
+ For we would walk along a boundless tract
+ Of perfect hell; but your disloyalty
+ Would be of spirit, for I have not won
+ Mastered and bound your spirit unto me.
+ And if you had a lover in the way
+ I have you it would not by half betray
+ My love as does your vague and chainless thought,
+ Which wanders, soars or vanishes, returns,
+ Changes, astonishes, or chills or burns,
+ Is unresisting, plastic, freely wrought
+ Under my hands yet to no unison
+ Of my life and of yours. Upon this brink
+ I watch you now and think
+ Of all that has been preached or sung or spoken
+ Of woman's tragedy in woman's fall;
+ And all the pictures of a woman broken
+ By man's superior strength.
+
+ And there you stand
+ Your heart and life as firmly in command
+ Of your resolve as mine is, knowing all
+ Of man, the master, and his power to harm,
+ His rulership of spheres material,
+ Bread, customs, rules of fair repute--
+ What are they all against your slender arm?
+ Which long since plucked the fruit
+ Of good and evil, and of life at last
+ And now of Life. For dancing you have cast
+ Veil after veil of ideals or pretense
+ With which men clothe the being feminine
+ To satisfy their lordship or their sense
+ Of ownership and hide the things of sin--
+ You have thrown them aside veil after veil;
+ And there you stand unarmored, weirdly frail,
+ Yet strong as nature, making comical
+ The poems and the tales of woman's fall....
+ You nod your head, you smile, I feel the air
+ Made by the closing door. I lie and stare
+ At the closed door. One, two, your tuftèd steps
+ Die on the velvet of the outer hall.
+ You have escaped. And I would not pursue.
+ Though we are but caged creatures, I and you--
+ A male and female tiger in a zoo.
+ For I shall wait you. Life himself will track
+ Your wanderings and bring you back,
+ And shut you up again with me and cage
+ Our love and hatred and our silent rage.
+
+
+
+
+SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE
+
+
+ To a lustful thirst she came at first
+ And gave him her maiden's pride;
+ And the first man scattered the flower of her love,
+ Then turned to his chosen bride.
+
+ She waned with grief as a fading star,
+ And waxed as a shining flame;
+ And the second man had her woman's love,
+ But the second was playing the game.
+
+ With passion she stirred the man who was third;
+ Woe's me! what delicate skill
+ She plied to the heart that knew her art
+ And fled from her wanton will.
+
+ Now calm and demure, oh fair, oh pure,
+ Oh subtle, patient and wise,
+ She trod the weary round of life,
+ With a sorrow deep in her eyes.
+
+ Now a hero who knew how false, how true
+ Was the speech that fell from her lips,
+ With a Norseman's strength took sail with her,
+ And landed and burnt his ships.
+
+ He gave her pity, he gave her mirth,
+ And the hurt in her heart he nursed;
+ But under the silence of her brows
+ Was a dream of the man who was first.
+
+ And all the deceit and lust of men
+ Had sharpened her own deceit;
+ And down to the gates of hell she led
+ Her friend with her flying feet.
+
+ For a bitten bud will never bloom,
+ And a woman lost is lost!
+ And the first and the third may go unscathed,
+ But some man pays the cost.
+
+ And the books of life are full of the rune,
+ And this is the truth of the song:
+ No man can save a woman's soul,
+ Nor right a woman's wrong.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IS A MADNESS
+
+
+ Love is a madness, love is a fevered dream,
+ A white soul lost in a field of scarlet flowers--
+ Love is a search for the lost, the ever vanishing gleam
+ Of wings, desires and sorrows and haunted hours.
+
+ Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?
+ Love is a doubt, an ache, love is a writhing fear.
+ Love is a potion drunk when the ship puts out from land,
+ Rudderless, sails at full, and with none to steer.
+
+ The end is a shattered lamp, a drunken seraph asleep,
+ The upturned face of the drowned on a barren beach.
+ The glare of noon is o'er us, we are ashamed to weep--
+ The beginning and end of love are devoid of speech.
+
+
+
+
+ON A BUST
+
+
+ Your speeches seemed to answer for the nonce--
+ They do not justify your head in bronze!
+ Your essays! talent's failures were to you
+ Your philosophic gamut, but things true,
+ Or beautiful, oh never! What's the pons
+ For you to cross to fame?--Your head in bronze?
+
+ What has the artist caught? The sensual chin
+ That melts away in weakness from the skin,
+ Sagging from your indifference of mind;
+ The sullen mouth that sneers at human kind
+ For lack of genius to create or rule;
+ The superficial scorn that says "you fool!"
+ The deep-set eyes that have the mud-cat look
+ Which might belong to Tolstoi or a crook.
+ The nose half-thickly fleshed and half in point,
+ And lightly turned awry as out of joint;
+ The eyebrows pointing upward satyr-wise,
+ Scarce like Mephisto, for you scarcely rise
+ To cosmic irony in what you dream--
+ More like a tomcat sniffing yellow cream.
+ The brow! 'Tis worth the bronze it's molded in
+ Save for the flat-top head and narrow thin
+ Backhead which shows your spirit has not soared.
+ You are a Packard engine in a Ford,
+ Which wrecks itself and turtles with its load,
+ Too light and powerful to keep the road.
+ The master strength for twisting words is caught
+ In the swift turning wheels of iron thought.
+ With butcher knives your hands can vivisect
+ Our butterflies, but you can not erect
+ Temples of beauty, wisdom. You can crawl
+ Hungry and subtle over Eden's wall,
+ And shame half grown up truth, or make a lie
+ Full grown as good. You cannot glorify
+ Our dreams, or aspirations, or deep thirst.
+ To you the world's a fig tree which is curst.
+ You have preached every faith but to betray;
+ The artist shows us you have had your day.
+
+ A giant as we hoped, in truth a dwarf;
+ A barrel of slop that shines on Lethe's wharf,
+ Which seemed at first a vessel with sweet wine
+ For thirsty lips. So down the swift decline
+ You went through sloven spirit, craven heart
+ And cynic indolence. And here the art
+ Of molding clay has caught you for the nonce
+ And made your shame our shame--your head in bronze!
+ Some day this bust will lie amid old metals
+ Old copper boilers, wires, faucets, kettles.
+ Some day it will be melted up and molded
+ In door knobs, inkwells, paper knives, or folded
+ In leaves and wreaths around the capitals
+ Of marble columns, or for arsenals
+ Fashioned in something, or in course of time
+ Successively made each of these, from grime
+ Rescued successively, or made a bell
+ For fire or worship, who on earth can tell?
+ One thing is sure, you will not long be dust
+ When this bronze will be broken as a bust
+ And given to the junkman to re-sell.
+ You know this and the thought of it is hell!
+
+
+
+
+ARABEL
+
+
+ Twists of smoke rise from the limpness of jewelled fingers,
+ The softness of Persian rugs hushes the room.
+ Under a dragon lamp with a shade the color of coral
+ Sit the readers of poems one by one.
+ And all the room is in shadow except for the blur
+ Of mahogany surface, and tapers against the wall.
+
+ And a youth reads a poem of love: forever and ever
+ Is his soul the soul of the loved one; a woman sings
+ Of the nine months which go to the birth of a soul.
+ And after a time under the lamp a man
+ Begins to read a letter having no poem to read.
+ And the words of the letter flash and die like a fuse
+ Dampened by rain--it's a dying mind that writes
+ What Byron did for the Greeks against the Turks.
+ And a sickness enters our hearts. The jewelled hands
+ Clutch at the arms of the chairs--about the room
+ One hears the parting of lips, and a nervous shifting
+ Of feet and arms.
+
+ And I look up and over
+ The reader's shoulder and see the name of the writer.
+ What is it I see? The name of a man I knew!
+ You are an ironical trickster, Time, to bring
+ After so many years and into a place like this
+ This face before me: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness,
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ Such was your look in a photograph I saw
+ In a silver frame on a woman's dresser--and such
+ Your look in life, you thing of flesh alone!
+
+ And then
+ As a soul looks down on the body it leaves--
+ A body by fever slain--I look on myself
+ As I was a decade ago, while the letter is read:
+
+ I enter a box
+ Of a theater with Jim, my friend of fifty,
+ I being twenty-two. Two women are in the box
+ One of an age for Jim and one of an age for me.
+ And mine is dressed in a dainty gown of dimity,
+ And she fans herself with a fan of silver spangles
+ Till a subtle odor of delicate powder or of herself
+ Enters my blood and I stare at her snowy neck,
+ And the glossy brownness of her hair until
+ She feels my stare, and turns half-view and I see
+ How like a Greek's is her nose, with just a little
+ Aquiline touch; and I catch the flash of an eye,
+ And the glint of a smile on the richness of her lips.
+ The company now discourses upon the letter
+ But my dream goes on:
+
+ I re-live a rapture
+ Which may be madness, and no man understands
+ Until he feels it no more. The youth that was I
+ From the theater under the city's lights follows the girl
+ Desperate lest in the city's curious chances
+ He never sees her again. And boldly he speaks.
+ And she and the older woman, her sister
+ Smile and speak in turn, and Jim who stands
+ While I break the ice comes up--and so
+ Arm in arm we go to the restaurant,
+ I in heaven walking with Arabel,
+ And Jim with her older sister.
+ We drive them home under a summer moon,
+ And while I explain to Arabel my boldness,
+ And crave her pardon for it, Jim, the devil,
+ Laughs apart with her sister while I wonder
+ What Jim, the devil, is laughing at. No matter
+ To-morrow I walk in the park with Arabel.
+
+ Just now the reader of the letter
+ Tells of the writer's swift descent
+ From wealth to want.
+
+ We are in the park next afternoon by the water.
+ I look at her white throat full as it were of song.
+ And her rounded virginal bosom, beautiful!
+ And I study her eyes, I search to the depths her eyes
+ In the light of the sun. They are full of little rays
+ Like the edge of a fleur de lys, and she smiles
+ At first when I fling my soul at her feet.
+
+ But when I repeat I love her, love her only,
+ A cloud of wonder passes over her face,
+ She veils her eyes. The color comes to her cheeks.
+ And when she picks some clover blossoms and tears them
+ Her hand is trembling. And when I tell her again
+ I love her, love her only, she blots her eyes
+ With a handkerchief to hide a tear that starts.
+
+ And she says to me: "You do not know me at all,
+ How can you love me? You never saw me before
+ Last night." "Well, tell me about yourself."
+ And after a time she tells me the story:
+ About her father who ran away from her mother;
+ And how she hated her father, and how she grieved
+ When her mother died; and how a good grandmother
+ Helped her and helps her now. And how her sister
+ Divorced her husband. And then she paused a moment:
+ "I am not strong, you'd have to guard me gently,
+ And that takes money, dear, as well as love.
+ Two years ago I was very ill, and since then
+ I am not strong."
+
+ "Well I can work," I said.
+ "And what would you think of a little cottage
+ Not too far out with a yard and hosts of roses,
+ And a vine on the porch, and a little garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ When a morning breeze blows over your brow,
+ And you sit across the table and serve me
+ And neither of us can speak for happiness
+ Without our voices breaking, or lips trembling."
+
+ She is looking down with little frowns on her brow.
+ "But if ever I had to work, I could not do it,
+ I am not really well."
+
+ "But I can work," I said.
+ I rise and lift her up, holding her hand.
+ She slips her arm through mine and presses it.
+ "What a good man you are," she said. "Just like a brother--
+ I almost love you, I believe I love you."
+
+ The reader of the letter, being a doctor,
+ Is talking learnedly of the writer's case
+ Which has the classical marks of paresis.
+
+ Next day I look up Jim and rhapsodize
+ About a cottage with roses and a garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ And Arabel across the table. Jim is smoking
+ And flicking the ashes, but never says a word
+ Till I have finished. Then in a quiet voice:
+ "Arabel's sister says that Arabel's straight,
+ But she isn't, my boy--she's just like Arabel's sister.
+ She knew you had the madness for Arabel.
+ That's why we laughed and stood apart as we talked.
+ And I'll tell you now I didn't go home that night,
+ I shook you at the corner and went back,
+ And staid that night. Now be a man, my boy,
+ Go have your fling with Arabel, but drop
+ The cottage and the roses."
+
+ They are still discussing the madman's letter.
+
+ And memory permeates me like a subtle drug:
+ The memory of my love for Arabel,
+ The torture, the doubt, the fear, the restless longing,
+ The sleepless nights, the pity for all her sorrows,
+ The speculation about her and her sister,
+ And what her illness was;
+ And whether the man I saw one time was leaving
+ Her door or the next door to it, and if her door
+ Whether he saw my Arabel or her sister....
+
+ The reader of the letter is telling how the writer
+ Left his wife chasing the lure of women.
+
+ And it all comes back to me as clear as a vision:
+ The night I sat with Arabel strong but conquered.
+ Whatever I did, I loved her, whatever she was.
+ Madness or love the terrible struggle must end.
+ She took my hand and said, "You must see my room."
+ We stood in the doorway together and on her dresser
+ Was a silver frame with the photograph of a man--
+ I had seen him in life: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ "There is his picture," she said, "ask me whatever you will.
+ Take me as mistress or wife, it is yours to decide.
+ But take me as mistress and grow like the picture before you,
+ Take me as wife and be the good man you can be.
+ Choose me as mistress--how can I do less for dearest?
+ Or make me your wife--fate makes me your mistress or wife."
+ "I can leave you," I said. "You can leave me," she echoed,
+ "But how about hate in your heart."
+
+ "You are right," I replied.
+
+ The company is now discussing the subject of love--
+ They seem to know little about it.
+
+ But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:
+ "Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness,
+ What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"
+
+ "Well, it's life," Arabel.
+ "There's the story of Hamlet, for instance," I added.
+ Then fell into silence.
+
+
+
+
+JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER
+
+
+ Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,
+ When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.
+ So we came out and he went home to wife
+ And children, and I started for the club
+ Which I call home; and then just like a flash
+ You came into my mind. I bought a slug
+ And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard
+ The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me
+ To hear your voice at last--it was so drowsy,
+ Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes
+ Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing
+ In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....
+
+ Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice
+ Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine--
+ It showed your understanding, that you know
+ How it is with a man, and how it is with me
+ Who work by day and sometimes drift by night
+ About this hellish city. Though you know
+ That I am fifty-one, can you imagine
+ My feeling with no children growing up?
+ My feeling as of one who sees a play
+ And afterwards sits somewhere at a table
+ And talks with friends about the different parts
+ Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?
+ My feeling with this money which I've made
+ And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working
+ The money dulls the fancy which could use it
+ In splendid dreams or in the art of life.
+ Well, here was I ringing your bell at last
+ At half-past one, and there you stood before me
+ With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands
+ So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,
+ But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you
+ With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you
+ Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,
+ For that kiss which you gave me at the door....
+
+ Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,
+ My heart acts queer of late....
+
+ I want to say
+ Lest I forget it, if you ever hear
+ From Arabel or Francis what I said
+ To Francis when he told me he intended
+ To marry Arabel, why just remember
+ Our talk this morning and forget I said it--
+ I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,
+ That night we met, I being fifty-one
+ And old at what men call the game, looked on
+ With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you
+ Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;
+ And I found you as I'd found others before you,
+ But with this difference so it seemed to me:
+ What had been false with them was real with you,
+ What had been shame with them with you was life,
+ What had been craft with them with you was nature,
+ What had been sin with them to you was good,
+ What had been vice with them to you the honest
+ And uncorrupted innocence of a human
+ Heart so human looking on our souls.
+ What had been coarse to them to you was clean
+ As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow
+ And move and sing along creation's way.
+ You came to me like friendship, what you gave
+ Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self
+ And least of motive. And it is through you
+ That I have risen out of the pit where sneers
+ And laughter, looks and words obscene,
+ Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,
+ As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses
+ Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds
+ Upon their infinite sailings and the lake
+ Washes beneath us, and we lie and think
+ How this has been forever and will be
+ When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,
+ Yet how life is eternal--just as one
+ Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy
+ Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme
+ The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme
+ The gospel hymns and ritual) that I
+ Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.
+ For what is our communion, yours and mine,
+ If it be not a way of laying hold
+ On that mysterious essence which makes one
+ Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....
+ Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!
+ Pour me a little coffee, if you please.
+
+ I'll take from my herbarium certain species
+ To make my points: Now here there is the woman
+ Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.
+ She fixes her design upon a man,
+ Who's married and the riotous game begins.
+ They go along a year or two perhaps.
+ Then psychic chemistry performs its part:
+ They are in love, or he's in love with her.
+ What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:
+ That which she gave without love at the first
+ She now withdraws in spite of love unless
+ He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties
+ And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men
+ Kill women with a knife or strangle them?
+ Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,
+ You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.
+ She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;
+ She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.
+ And when you dance with her she has a way
+ Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,
+ Which almost lisps as she caresses you
+ With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says
+ Things with a double meaning, and she smiles
+ To carry out her meaning. Well, you think
+ The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing
+ She lands you up at the appointed place
+ With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,
+ That have a nervous way of opening
+ And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,
+ From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;
+ Which meeting is a way of saying to you:
+ The girl is yours if you will marry her,
+ And let her have your money.
+
+ Julia, be still;
+ I can't go on while you are laughing so.
+ I know that men are easy, but to see
+ Women as women see them is a gift
+ That comes to men who reach my age in life....
+
+ Well, here's another, here's the type of woman
+ Whose power of motherhood conceals the art
+ By which she thrives, through which she reaches also
+ An apotheosis in society.
+ Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.
+ And her strength is the race's, and she draws
+ The urgings of posterity and leans
+ Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.
+ To her a man must sacrifice his life.
+ But women, Julia, of whatever type,
+ Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,
+ And man's life to develop, even to live.
+ And like the praying mantis who's devoured
+ In the embrace, man is devoured by women
+ In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame
+ In man's life where he warms him but to suck
+ The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,
+ Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates--
+ Love is not free which should be wholly free
+ For Life's sake.
+
+ On Michigan Avenue
+ At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see
+ In rain or shine a certain tailor walk
+ In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.
+ That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.
+ He has no woman, cannot find a woman,
+ Because all women, seeing him, divine
+ What surges through him, and within their hearts
+ Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun
+ Of seeing how denial keeps him walking
+ All up and down the boulevard. He's found
+ No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.
+ I use him for my point. If we could make
+ Some fine erotometer one could sit
+ And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands
+ Record the waves of longing in the city,
+ And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows
+ Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,
+ Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.
+
+ Julia.
+ So much for all these things, and now for you
+ To whom they lead.
+
+ You'll find among the marshes
+ The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,
+ Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find
+ The water lily with white petals and
+ A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches
+ The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,
+ Impales them on its tiny spines, in time
+ Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out
+ Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall
+ Into the water, treasured there like tears
+ Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed
+ Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.
+ The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily
+ Well typify the nature of most women
+ Who must have blood or soul of man to live--
+ Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale
+ Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.
+ He read somewhere that primroses will change
+ Under your eyes sometimes to something else,
+ Become another flower and not a primrose,
+ Another species even. So he watched
+ And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed
+ Has somewhere in its vital self the power
+ Of this mutation. What is the origin
+ Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,
+ Who has mutated: You are not a mother;
+ Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;
+ Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;
+ Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon
+ Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down
+ To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who
+ Rejoices in the secret of man's strength
+ And in subduing it.
+
+ You are a flower
+ Designed to comfort such poor men as I,
+ And show the world how love can be a thing
+ That asks no more than what it freely gives,
+ And gives all--all some women call the prize
+ For life or honor, riches, power or place.
+ You are a blossom in the primrose bed
+ So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.
+ You have mutated, Julia, that is it,
+ This flower of you is what I call _The Lover_!
+
+
+
+
+THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES
+
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death--
+ But never a face like Harold's who passed in a throe of pain.
+ There were maidens and youths in the bud, and men in the lust of life;
+ And women whom child-birth racked till the crying soul slipped through;
+ Patriarchs withered with age and nuns ascetical white;
+ And one who wasted her virgin wealth in a riot of joy.
+ Brothers and sisters at last in a quiet and purple pall,
+ Fellow voyagers bound to a port on an ash-blue sea,
+ Locked in an utterless grief, in a mystery fearful to dream.
+ All of these I have seen--but the face of Harold the bold
+ Looked with a penitent pallor and stared with a sad surprise.
+
+ For now at last he was still who never knew rest in life.
+ And the ardent heat of his blood was cold as the sweat of a stone.
+ Life came in an evil hour and stabbed with a poisoned word
+ The heart of a girl who faintly smiled through her tears.
+ And her little life was tossed as the eddies that whirl in the hollows
+ From the great world-currents that wreck the battle ships at sea.
+ And the face of dead Lillian seemed like a rain-ruined flower.
+
+ Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day
+ When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?
+
+ But the face of William the Great was fashioned by life and thought;
+ And death made it massive as bronze, and deepened the lines thereof:
+ Some for the will and some for patience, and some for hope--
+ Hope for the weal of the world wherein he mightily strove--
+ Yet what did it all bespeak--what but submission and awe,
+ And a trace of pain as one with a sword in his side?
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death
+ But the sorrow thereof is dumb like the cloth that lies on the brow.
+ So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances,
+ Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?
+
+
+
+
+THE CRY
+
+
+ There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears.
+ It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears.
+ It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres.
+
+ It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise,
+ That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries,
+ Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise.
+
+ It may be myself as I was in another life,
+ Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife,
+ Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife.
+
+ The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul
+ Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control,
+ When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal.
+
+ Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod
+ Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;
+ Perhaps this cry in my heart is nothing but God!
+
+
+
+
+THE HELPING HAND
+
+
+ Mother, my head is bloody, my breast is red with scars.
+ Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?
+
+ Mother, my soul is crucified, my thirst is past belief.
+ How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?
+
+ Mother, I feel the terror and the loveliness of life.
+ Tell me of the children, son, and tell me of the wife.
+
+ Mother, your face is but a face among a million more.
+ You're standing on the deck, my son, and looking at the shore.
+
+ I lean against the wall, mother, and struggle hard for breath.
+ You must have heard the step, my son, of the patrolman Death.
+
+ Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?
+ Well, kiss the crucifix, my son, and pass beneath the rod.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOOR
+
+
+ This is the room that thou wast ushered in.
+ Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?
+ Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?
+ Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight
+ Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore,
+ There is no less one door.
+
+ Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom,
+ The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?
+ Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth--
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof
+ Above the rents within the stairless roof.
+ Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor--
+ Who knocks? Unbolt the door!
+
+
+
+
+SUPPLICATION
+
+_For He knoweth our frame, He remembereth that we are dust._--PSALM
+CIII. 14.
+
+
+ Oh Lord, when all our bones are thrust
+ Beyond the gaze of all but Thine;
+ And these blaspheming tongues are dust
+ Which babbled of Thy name divine,
+ How helpless then to carp or rail
+ Against the canons of Thy word;
+ Wilt Thou, when thus our spirits fail,
+ Have mercy, Lord?
+
+ Here from this ebon speck that floats
+ As but a mote within Thine eye,
+ Vain sneers and curses from our throats
+ Rise to the vault of Thy fair sky:
+ Yet when this world of ours is still
+ Of this all-wondering, tortured horde,
+ And none is left for Thee to kill--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou knowest that our flesh is grass;
+ Ah! let our withered souls remain
+ Like stricken reeds of some morass,
+ Bleached, in Thy will, by ceaseless rain.
+ Have we not had enough of fire,
+ Enough of torment and the sword?--
+ If these accrue from Thy desire--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Dost Thou not see about our feet
+ The tangles of our erring thought?
+ Thou knowest that we run to greet
+ High hopes that vanish into naught.
+ We bleed, we fall, we rise again;
+ How can we be of Thee abhorred?
+ We are Thy breed, we little men--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay,
+ Wilt Thou deny when we deny?
+ A thousand years are but a day,
+ A little day within Thine eye:
+ We thirst for love, we yearn for life;
+ We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?
+ We, beaten, fall upon the knife--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou givest us youth that turns to age;
+ And strength that leaves us while we seek.
+ Thou pourest the fire of sacred rage
+ In costly vessels all too weak.
+ Great works we planned in hopes that Thou
+ Fit wisdom therefor wouldst accord;
+ Thou wrotest failure on our brow--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Could we but know, as Thou dost know--
+ Hold the whole scheme at once in mind!
+ Yet, dost Thou watch our anxious woe
+ Who piece with palsied hands and blind
+ The fragments of our little plan,
+ To thrive and earn Thy blest reward,
+ And make and keep the world of man--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou settest the sun within his place
+ To light the world, the world is Thine,
+ Put in our hands and through Thy grace
+ To be subdued and made divine.
+ Whether we serve Thee ill or well,
+ Thou knowest our frame, nor canst afford
+ To leave Thy own for long in hell--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+
+
+
+THE CONVERSATION
+
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew then, starting let us say with ether,
+ You would become electrons, out of whirling
+ Would rise to atoms; then as an atom resting
+ Till through Yourself in other atoms moving
+ And by the fine affinity of power
+ Atom with atom massed, You would go on
+ Over the crest of visible forms transformed,
+ Would be a molecule, a little system
+ Wherein the atoms move like suns and planets
+ With satellites, electrons. So as worlds build
+ From star-dust, as electron to electron,
+ The same attraction drawing, molecules
+ Would wed and pass over the crest again
+ Of visible forms, lying content as crystals,
+ Or colloids--ready now to use the gleam
+ Of life. As 'twere I see You with a match,
+ As one in darkness lights a candle, and one
+ Sees not his friend's form in the shadowed room
+ Until the candle's lighted? Even his form
+ Is darkened by the new-made light, he stands
+ So near it! Well, I add to all I've asked
+ Whether You knew the cell born to the glint
+ Of that same lighted candle would not rest
+ Even as electrons rest not--but would surge
+ Over the crest of visible forms, become
+ Beneath our feet things hidden from the eye
+ However aided,--as above our heads
+ Beyond the Milky Way great systems whirl
+ Beyond the telescope,--become bacilli,
+ Amoeba, starfish, swimming things, on land
+ The serpent, and then birds, and beasts of prey
+ The tiger (You in the tiger) on and on
+ Surging above the crest of visible forms until
+ The ape came--oh what ages they are to us--
+ But still creation flies on wings of light--
+ Then to the man who roamed the frozen fields
+ Neither man nor ape,--we found his jaw, You know,
+ At Heidelberg, in a sand-pit. On and on
+ Till Babylon was builded, and arose
+ Jerusalem and Memphis, Athens, Rome,
+ Venice and Florence, Paris, London, Berlin,
+ New York, Chicago--did You know, I ask,
+ All this would come of You in ether moving?
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew that man was born to be destroyed,
+ That as an atom perfect, whole, at ease,
+ Drawn to some other atom, is broken, changed
+ And rises o'er the crest of visible things
+ To something else--that man must pass as well
+ Through equal transformation. And You knew
+ The unutterable things of man's life: From the first
+ You saw his wracked Deucalion-soul that looks
+ Backward on life that rises, where he rose
+ Out of the stones. You saw him looking forward
+ Over the purple mists that hide the gulf.
+ Ere the green cell rose, even in the green cell
+ You saw the sequences of thought--You saw
+ That one would say, "All's matter" and another,
+ "All's mind," and man's mind which reflects the image,
+ Could not envision it. That even worship
+ Of what you are would be confused by cries
+ From India or Palestine. That love
+ Which sees itself beginning in the seeds,
+ Which fly and seek each other, maims
+ The soul at the last in loss of child or friend
+ Father or mother. And You knew that sex,
+ Ranging from plants through beasts and up to us
+ Had ties of filth--And out of them would rise
+ Diverse philosophies to tear the world.
+ You knew, when the green cell arose, that even
+ The You which formed it moving on would bring
+ Races and breeds, madmen, tyrants, slaves,
+ The idiot child, the murderer, the insane--
+ All springing from the action of one law.
+ You knew the enmity that lies between
+ The lives of micro-beings and our own. You knew
+ How man would rise to vision of himself:
+ Immortal only in the race's life.
+ And past the atom and the first glint of life,
+ Saw him with soul enraptured, yet o'ershadowed
+ Amid self-consciousness!
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+ But this your fault: You see me as apart,
+ Over, removed, at enmity with You.
+ You are in Me, and of Me, even at one
+ With Me. But there's your soul--your soul may be
+ The germinal cell of vaster evolution.
+ Why try to tell you? If I gave a cell
+ Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:
+ "After me what, a stalk, a flower, life
+ That swims or crawls?" And if I gave to you
+ Wisdom to say: "You shall become a reed
+ By the water's edge"--how could the cell foresee
+ What the reed is, bending beneath the wind
+ When the lake ripples and the skies are blue
+ As larkspur? Therefore I, who moved in darkness
+ Becoming light in suns and light in souls
+ And mind with thought--for what is thought but light
+ Sprung from the clash of ether?--I am with you.
+ And if beyond this stable state that stands
+ For your life here (as cells are whole and balanced
+ Till the inner urge bring union, then a breaking
+ And building up to higher life), there is
+ No memory of this world nor of your thought,
+ Nor sense of life on this world lived and borne;
+ Or whether you remember, know yourself
+ As one who lived here, suffered here, aspired--
+ What does it matter?--you cannot be lost,
+ As I am lost not. Therefore be at peace.
+ And from the laws whose orbits cross and run
+ To seeming tangles, find the law through which
+ Your soul shall be perfected till it draw,--
+ As the green cell the sunlight draws and turns
+ Its chemical effulgence into life--
+ My inner splendor. All the rest is mine
+ In infinite time. For if I should unroll
+ The parchment of the future, it were vain--
+ You could not read it.
+
+
+
+
+TERMINUS
+
+
+ Terminus shows the ways and says,
+ "All things must have an end."
+ Oh, bitter thought we hid away
+ When first you were my friend.
+
+ We hid it in the darkest place
+ Our hearts had place to hide,
+ And took the sweet as from a spring
+ Whose waters would abide.
+
+ For neither life nor the wide world
+ Has greater store than this:--
+ The thought that runs through hands and eyes
+ And fills the silences.
+
+ There is a void the agéd world
+ Throws over the spent heart;
+ When Life has given all she has,
+ And Terminus says depart.
+
+ When we must sit with folded hands,
+ And see with inward eye
+ A void rise like an arctic breath
+ To hollow the morrow's sky.
+
+ To-morrow is, and trembling leaves,
+ And 'wildered winds from Thrace
+ Look for you where your face has bloomed,
+ And where may bloom your face.
+
+ Beyond the city, over the hill,
+ Under the anguished moon,
+ The winds and my dreams seek after you
+ By meadow, water and dune.
+
+ All things must have an end, we know;
+ But oh, the dreaded end;
+ Whether in life, whether in death,
+ To lose the cherished friend.
+
+ To lose in life the cherished friend,
+ While the myrtle tree is green;
+ To live and have the cherished friend
+ With only the world between.
+
+ With only the wide, wide world between,
+ Where memory has mortmain.
+ Life pours more wine in the heart of man
+ Than the heart of man can contain.
+
+ Oh, heart of man and heart of woman,
+ Thirsting for blood of the vine,
+ Life waits till the heart has lived too much
+ And then pours in new wine!
+
+
+
+
+MADELINE
+
+
+ I almost heard your little heart
+ Begin to beat, and since that hour
+ Your life has grown apace and blossomed,
+ Fed by the same miraculous power,
+
+ That moved the rivulet of your life,
+ And made your heart begin to beat.
+ Now all day your steps are a-patter.
+ Oh, what swift and musical feet!
+
+ You sleep. I wait to see you wake,
+ With wonder-eyes and hands that reach.
+ I laugh to hear your thoughts that gather
+ Too fast on your budding lips for speech.
+
+ Your sunny hair is cut as if
+ 'Twere trimmed around a yellow crock.
+ How gay the ribbon, and oh, how cunning
+ The flaring skirt of the little frock!
+
+ You build and play and search and pry,
+ And hunt for dolls and forgotten toys.
+ Why do you never tire of playing,
+ Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?
+
+ You will not sleep? You are tired of the house?
+ You are just as naughty as you can be.
+ Madeline, Madeline, come to the garden,
+ And play with Marcia under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+MARCIA
+
+
+ Madeline's hair is straight and yours
+ Is just as curly as tendril vines;
+ And she is fair, but a deeper color
+ Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.
+
+ A serious wisdom burns and glows
+ Steadily in your dark-eyed look.
+ Already a wit and a little stoic--
+ Perhaps you are going to write a book,
+
+ Or paint a picture, or sing or act
+ The part of Katherine or Juliet.
+ I believe you were born with the gift of knowing
+ When to remember and when to forget.
+
+ And when to stifle and kill a grief,
+ And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.
+ The heart that has most strength for feeling
+ Must have the strength to conquer the pain.
+
+ You understand? It seems that you do--
+ Though you cannot utter a word to me.
+ Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline
+ Building a doll-house under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+THE ALTAR
+
+
+ My heart is an altar whereon
+ Many sacrificial fires have been kindled
+ In praise of spring and Aphrodite.
+
+ My heart is an altar of chalcedony,
+ Crowned with a tablet of bronze,
+ Blacked with smoke, scarred with fire,
+ And scented with the aromatic bitterness
+ Of dead incense.
+
+ Albeit let us murmur a little Doric prayer
+ Over the ashes which lie scattered around the altar;
+ For the April rain has wept over them,
+ And from them the crocus smelts its Roman gold.
+
+ What though there are remnants here
+ Of faded coronals,
+ And bits of silver string
+ Torn from forgotten harps?
+ Perfect amid the ashes sleeps a cup of amethyst.
+ Let us take it and pour the sea from it,
+ And while the savor of dead lips is washed away,
+ Let us lift our hands to this sky of hyacinth.
+ Let us light the altar newly, for lo! it is spring.
+
+ Bring from the re-kindled woodland
+ Flames of columbine, jewel-weed and trumpet-creeper,
+ There where the woodman burns the fallen tree,
+ And scented smoke arises
+ On azure wings between the branches,
+ Budding with adolescent life.
+ With these let us light the altar,
+ That a scarlet flame may lean
+ Against the silver sea.
+
+ For thou art fire also,
+ And air, and water, and the resurgent earth,
+ For thou art woman, thou art love.
+ Thou art April of the Arcadian moon,
+ Thou art the swift sun racing through snowy clouds,
+ Thou art the creative silence of flowering valleys.
+ Thy face is the apple tree in bloom;
+ Thine eyes the glimpses of green water
+ When the tree's blossoms shake
+ As soft winds fan them.
+ Thy hair is flame blown against the sea's mist--
+ Thou art spring.
+
+ The fire on the altar burns brightly,
+ And the sea sparkles in the sun.
+ Let us murmur a Doric prayer
+ For the gift of love,
+ For the gift of life,
+ Oh Life! Oh Love! We lift our hands to thee!
+
+
+
+
+SOUL'S DESIRE
+
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that stands
+ Where sunlight falls between the trees
+ Of a sparse forest's leafless edge,
+ When Spring's first magic moveth these.
+
+ Her soul is like a little brook,
+ Thin edged with ice against the leaves,
+ Where the wolf drinks and is alone,
+ And where the woodbine interweaves.
+
+ A bank late covered by the snow,
+ But lighted by the frozen North;
+ Her soul is like a little plot
+ That one white blossom bringeth forth.
+
+ Her soul is slim, like silver slips,
+ And straight, like flags beside a stream.
+ Her soul is like a shape that moves
+ And changes in a wonder dream.
+
+ Who would pursue her clasps a cloud,
+ And taketh sorrow for his zeal.
+ Memory shall sing him many songs
+ While bound upon the torture wheel.
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that glides
+ By moonlight o'er a phantom ridge;
+ Her face is like a light that runs
+ Beneath the shadow of a bridge.
+
+ Her voice is like a woodland cry
+ Heard in a summer's desolate hour.
+ Her eyes are dim; her lips are faint,
+ And tinctured like the cuckoo flower.
+
+ Her little breasts are like the buds
+ Of tulips in a place forlorn.
+ Her soul is like a mandrake bloom
+ Standing against the crimson moon.
+
+ Her dream is like the fenny snake's,
+ That warms him in the noonday's fire.
+ She hath no thought, nor any hope,
+ Save of herself and her desire.
+
+ She is not life; she is not death;
+ She is not fear, or joy or grief.
+ Her soul is like a quiet sea
+ Beneath a ruin-haunted reef.
+
+ She is the shape the sailor sees,
+ That slips the rock without a sound.
+ She is the soul that comes and goes
+ And leaves no mark, yet makes a wound.
+
+ She is the soul that hunts and flies;
+ She is a world-wide mist of care.
+ She is the restlessness of life,
+ Its rapture and despair.
+
+
+
+
+BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE
+
+
+ It was a hermit on Whitsunday
+ That came to the Table Round.
+ "King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight
+ May the Holy Grail be found?"
+
+ "By never a Knight that liveth now;
+ By none that feasteth here."
+ King Arthur marvelled when he said,
+ "He shall be got this year."
+
+ Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot
+ And there did mount his steed,
+ And hastened to a pleasant town
+ That stood in knightly need.
+
+ Where many people him acclaimed,
+ He passed the Corbin pounte,
+ And there he saw a fairer tower
+ Than ever was his wont.
+
+ And in that tower for many years
+ A dolorous lady lay,
+ Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched,
+ And also Queen le Fay.
+
+ And Launcelot loosed her from those pains,
+ And there a dragon slew.
+ Then came King Pelles out and said,
+ "Your name, brave Knight and true?"
+
+ "My name is Pelles, wit ye well,
+ And King of the far country;
+ And I, Sir Knight, am cousin nigh
+ To Joseph of Armathie."
+
+ "I am Sir Launcelot du Lake."
+ And then they clung them fast;
+ And yede into the castle hall
+ To take the king's repast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer,
+ That shone like Ophir gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor
+ As bloweth over sea
+ From a land of many colored flowers
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of tulip-white,
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," said Pelles, "richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said King Pelles,
+ "That was the Holy Grail."
+
+ Then by this sign King Pelles knew
+ Elaine his fair daughter
+ Should lie with Launcelot that night,
+ And Launcelot with her.
+
+ And that this twain should get a child
+ Before the night should fail,
+ Who would be named Sir Galahad,
+ And find the Holy Grail.
+
+ Then cometh one hight Dame Brisen
+ With Pelles to confer,
+ "Now, wit ye well, Sir Launcelot
+ Loveth but Guinevere."
+
+ "But if ye keep him well in hand,
+ The while I work my charms,
+ The maid Elaine, ere spring of morn,
+ Shall lie within his arms."
+
+ Dame Brisen was the subtlest witch
+ That was that time in life;
+ She was as if Beelzebub
+ Had taken her to wife.
+
+ Then did she cause one known of face
+ To Launcelot to bring,
+ As if it came from Guinevere,
+ Her wonted signet ring.
+
+ "By Holy Rood, thou comest true,
+ For well I know thy face.
+ Where is my lady?" asked the Knight,
+ "There in the Castle Case?"
+
+ "'Tis five leagues scarcely from this hall,"
+ Up spoke that man of guile.
+ "I go this hour," said Launcelot,
+ "Though it were fifty mile."
+
+ Then sped Dame Brisen to the king
+ And whispered, "An we thrive,
+ Elaine must reach the Castle Case
+ Ere Launcelot arrive."
+
+ Elaine stole forth with twenty knights
+ And a goodly company.
+ Sir Launcelot rode fast behind,
+ Queen Guinevere to see.
+
+ Anon he reached the castle door.
+ Oh! fond and well deceived.
+ And there it seemed the queen's own train
+ Sir Launcelot received.
+
+ "Where is the queen?" quoth Launcelot,
+ "For I am sore bestead,"
+ "Have not such haste," said Dame Brisen,
+ "The queen is now in bed."
+
+ "Then lead me thither," saith he,
+ "And cease this jape of thine."
+ "Now sit thee down," said Dame Brisen,
+ "And have a cup of wine."
+
+ "For wit ye not that many eyes
+ Upon you here have stared;
+ Now have a cup of wine until
+ All things may be prepared."
+
+ Elaine lay in a fair chamber,
+ 'Twixt linen sweet and clene.
+ Dame Brisen all the windows stopped,
+ That no day might be seen.
+
+ Dame Brisen fetched a cup of wine
+ And Launcelot drank thereof.
+ "No more of flagons," saith he,
+ "For I am mad for love."
+
+ Dame Brisen took Sir Launcelot
+ Where lay the maid Elaine.
+ Sir Launcelot entered the bed chamber
+ The queen's love for to gain.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the maid Elaine,
+ And her cheeks and brows did burn;
+ And then they lay in other's arms
+ Until the morn's underne.
+
+ Anon Sir Launcelot arose
+ And toward the window groped,
+ And then he saw the maid Elaine
+ When he the window oped.
+
+ "Ah, traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he gat his sword,
+ "That I should live so long and now
+ Become a knight abhorred."
+
+ "False traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he shook the steel.
+ Elaine skipped naked from the bed
+ And 'fore the knight did kneel.
+
+ "I am King Pelles own daughter
+ And thou art Launcelot,
+ The greatest knight of all the world.
+ This hour we have begot."
+
+ "Oh, traitoress Brisen," cried the knight,
+ "Oh, charmed cup of wine;
+ That I this treasonous thing should do
+ For treasures such as thine."
+
+ "Have mercy," saith maid Elaine,
+ "Thy child is in my womb."
+ Thereat the morning's silvern light
+ Flooded the bridal room.
+
+ That light it was a benison;
+ It seemed a holy boon,
+ As when behind a wrack of cloud
+ Shineth the summer moon.
+
+ And in the eyes of maid Elaine
+ Looked forth so sweet a faith,
+ Sir Launcelot took his glittering sword,
+ And thrust it in the sheath.
+
+ "So God me help, I spare thy life,
+ But I am wretch and thrall,
+ If any let my sword to make
+ Dame Brisen's head to fall."
+
+ "So have thy will of her," she said,
+ "But do to me but good;
+ For thou hast had my fairest flower,
+ Which is my maidenhood."
+
+ "And we have done the will of God,
+ And the will of God is best."
+ Sir Launcelot lifted the maid Elaine
+ And hid her on his breast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove,
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer
+ That shone like beaten gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor,
+ As bloweth over sea,
+ From a land of many colored flowers,
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of silver white
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," she said, "the richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said maid Elaine,
+ "This is the Holy Grail."
+
+ And then a nimbus light hung o'er
+ Her brow so fair and meek;
+ And turned to orient pearls the tears
+ That glistered down her cheek.
+
+ And a sound of music passing sweet
+ Went in and out again.
+ Sir Launcelot made the sign of the cross,
+ And knelt to maid Elaine.
+
+ "Name him whatever name thou wilt,
+ But be his sword and mail
+ Thrice tempered 'gainst a wayward world,
+ That lost the Holy Grail."
+
+ Sir Launcelot sadly took his leave
+ And rode against the morn.
+ And when the time was fully come
+ Sir Galahad was born.
+
+ Also he was from Jesu Christ,
+ Our Lord, the eighth degree;
+ Likewise the greatest knight this world
+ May ever hope to see.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF SIR LAUNCELOT
+
+
+ Sir Launcelot had fled to France
+ For the peace of Guinevere,
+ And many a noble knight was slain,
+ And Arthur lay on his bier.
+
+ Sir Launcelot took ship from France
+ And sailed across the sea.
+ He rode seven days through fair England
+ Till he came to Almesbury.
+
+ Then spake Sir Bors to Launcelot:
+ The old time is at end;
+ You have no more in England's realm
+ In east nor west a friend.
+
+ You have no friend in all England
+ Sith Mordred's war hath been,
+ And Queen Guinevere became a nun
+ To heal her soul of sin.
+
+ Sir Launcelot answered never a word
+ But rode to the west countree
+ Until through the forest he saw a light
+ That shone from a nunnery.
+
+ Sir Launcelot entered the cloister,
+ And the queen fell down in a swoon.
+ Oh blessed Jesu, saith the queen,
+ For thy mother's love, a boon.
+
+ Go hence, Sir Launcelot, saith the queen,
+ And let me win God's grace.
+ My heavy heart serves me no more
+ To look upon thy face.
+
+ Through you was wrought King Arthur's death,
+ Through you great war and wrake.
+ Leave me alone, let me bleed,
+ Pass by for Jesu's sake.
+
+ Then fare you well, saith Launcelot,
+ Sweet Madam, fare you well.
+ And sythen you have left the world
+ No more in the world I dwell.
+
+ Then up rose sad Sir Launcelot
+ And rode by wold and mere
+ Until he came to a hermitage
+ Where bode Sir Bedivere.
+
+ And there he put a habit on
+ And there did pray and fast.
+ And when Sir Bedivere told him all
+ His heart for sorrow brast.
+
+ How that Sir Mordred, traitorous knight
+ Betrayed his King and sire;
+ And how King Arthur wounded, died
+ Broken in heart's desire.
+
+ And so Sir Launcelot penance made,
+ And worked at servile toil;
+ And prayed the Bishop of Canterbury
+ His sins for to assoil.
+
+ His shield went clattering on the wall
+ To a dolorous wail of wind;
+ His casque was rust, his mantle dust
+ With spider webs entwined.
+
+ His listless horses left alone
+ Went cropping where they would,
+ To see the noblest knight of the world
+ Upon his sorrow brood.
+
+ Anon a Vision came in his sleep,
+ And thrice the Vision saith:
+ Go thou to Almesbury for thy sin,
+ Where lieth the queen in death.
+
+ Sir Launcelot cometh to Almesbury
+ And knelt by the dead queen's bier;
+ Oh none may know, moaned Launcelot,
+ What sorrow lieth here.
+
+ What love, what honor, what defeat
+ What hope of the Holy Grail.
+ The moon looked through the latticed glass
+ On the queen's face cold and pale.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the ceréd cloth,
+ And none could stay his woe,
+ Her hair lay back from the oval brow,
+ And her nose was clear as snow.
+
+ They wrapped her body in cloth of Raines,
+ They put her in webs of lead.
+ They coffined her in white marble,
+ And sang a mass for the dead.
+
+ Sir Launcelot and seven knights
+ Bore torches around the bier.
+ They scattered myrrh and frankincense
+ On the corpse of Guinevere.
+
+ They put her in earth by King Arthur
+ To the chant of a doleful tune.
+ They heaped the earth on Guinevere
+ And Launcelot fell in a swoon.
+
+ Sir Launcelot went to the hermitage
+ Some Grace of God to find;
+ But never he ate, and never he drank
+ And there he sickened and dwined.
+
+ Sir Launcelot lay in a painful bed,
+ And spake with a dreary steven;
+ Sir Bishop, I pray you shrive my soul
+ And make it clean for heaven.
+
+ The Bishop houseled Sir Launcelot,
+ The Bishop kept watch and ward.
+ Bury me, saith Sir Launcelot,
+ In the earth of Joyous Guard.
+
+ Three candles burned the whole night through
+ Till the red dawn looked in the room.
+ And the white, white soul of Launcelot
+ Strove with a black, black doom.
+
+ I see the old witch Dame Brisen,
+ And Elaine so straight and tall--
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The shadows dance on the wall.
+
+ I see long hands of dead women,
+ They clutch for my soul eftsoon;
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ 'Tis the drifting light of the moon.
+
+ I see three angels, saith he,
+ Before a silver urn.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The candles do but burn.
+
+ I see a cloth of red samite
+ O'er the holy vessels spread.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The great dawn groweth red.
+
+ I see all the torches of the world
+ Shine in the room so clear.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The white dawn draweth near.
+
+ Sweet lady, I behold the face
+ Of thy dear son, our Lord,
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The sun shines on your sword.
+
+ Sir Galahad outstretcheth hands
+ And taketh me ere I fail--
+ Sir Launcelot's body lay in death
+ As his soul found the Holy Grail.
+
+ They laid his body in the quire
+ Upon a purple pall.
+ He was the meekest, gentlest knight
+ That ever ate in hall.
+
+ He was the kingliest, goodliest knight
+ That ever England roved,
+ The truest lover of sinful man
+ That ever woman loved.
+
+ I pray you all, fair gentlemen,
+ Pray for his soul and mine.
+ He lived to lose the heart he loved
+ And drink but bitter wine.
+
+ He wrought a woe he knew not of,
+ He failed his fondest quest,
+ Now sing a psalter, read a prayer
+ May all souls find their rest.
+ Amen.
+
+
+
+
+IN MICHIGAN
+
+
+ You wrote:
+ "Come over to Saugatuck
+ And be with me on the warm sand,
+ And under cool beeches and aromatic cedars."
+ And just then no one could do a thing in the city
+ For the lure of far places, and something that tugged
+ At one's heart because of a June sky,
+ And stretches of blue water,
+ And a warm wind blowing from the south.
+ What could I do but take a boat
+ And go to meet you?
+
+ And when to-day is not enough,
+ But you must live to-morrow also;
+ And when the present stands in the way
+ Of something to come,
+ And there is but one you would see,
+ All the interval of waiting is a wall.
+ And so it was I walked the landward deck
+ With flapping coat and hat pulled down;
+ And I sat on the leeward deck and looked
+ At the streaming smoke of the funnels,
+ And the far waste of rhythmical water,
+ And at the gulls flying by our side.
+
+ There was music on board and dancing,
+ But I could not take part.
+ For above all there was the bluest sky,
+ And around us the urge of magical distances.
+ And just because you were in the violins,
+ And in everything, and were wholly the world
+ Of sense and sight,
+ It was too much. One could not live it
+ And make it all his own--
+ It was too much.
+ And I wondered where the rest could be going,
+ Or what they thought of water and sky
+ Without knowing you.
+
+ But at four o'clock there was a rim,
+ A circled edge of rainbow color
+ Which suspired, widened and narrowed under your gaze:
+ It was the phantasy of straining eyes,
+ Or land--and it was land.
+ It was distant trees.
+ And then it was dunes, bluffs of yellow sand.
+ We began to wonder how far it was--
+ Five miles, or ten miles--
+ Surely only five miles!--
+ But at last whatever it was we swung to the end.
+ We rounded the lighthouse pier,
+ Almost before we knew.
+ We slowed our speed in a dizzy river of black,
+ We drifted softly to dock.
+
+ I took the ferry,
+ I crossed the river,
+ I ran almost through the little batch
+ Of fishermen's shacks.
+ I climbed the winding road of the hill,
+ And dove in a shadowy quiet
+ Of paths of moss and dancing leaves,
+ And straight stretched limbs of giant pines
+ On patches of sky.
+ I ran to the top of the bluff
+ Where the lodge-house stood.
+ And there the sunlit lake burst on me
+ And wine-like air.
+ And below me was the beach
+ Where the serried lines of hurrying water
+ Came up like rank on rank of men
+ And fell with a shout on the rocks!
+ I plunged, I stumbled, I ran
+ Down the hill,
+ For I thought I saw you,
+ And it was you, you were there!
+ And I shall never forget your cry,
+ Nor how you raised your arms and cried,
+ And laughed when you saw me.
+ And there we were with the lake
+ And the sun with his ruddy search-light blaze
+ Stretching back to lost Chicago.
+ The sun, the lake, the beach, and ourselves
+ Were all that was left of Time,
+ All else was lost.
+
+ You were making a camp.
+ You had bent from the bank a cedar bough
+ And tied it down.
+ And over it flung a quilt of many colors,
+ And under it spread on the voluptuous silt
+ Gray blankets and canvas pillows.
+ I saw it all in a glance.
+ And there in dread of eyes we stood
+ Scanning the bluff and the beach,
+ Lest in the briefest touch of lips
+ We might be seen.
+
+ For there were eyes, or we thought
+ There were eyes, on the porch of the lodge,
+ And eyes along the forest's rim on the hill,
+ And eyes on the shore.
+ But a minute past there was no sun,
+ Only a star that shone like a match which lights
+ To a blue intenseness amid the glow of a hearth.
+ And we sat on the sand as dusk came down
+ In a communion of silence and low words.
+ Till you said at last: "We'll sup at the lodge,
+ Then say good night to me and leave
+ As if to stay overnight in the village.
+ But instead make a long detour through the wood
+ And come to the shore through that ravine,
+ Be here at the tent at midnight."
+
+ And so I did.
+ I stole through echoless ways,
+ Where no twigs broke and where I heard
+ My heart beat like a watch under a pillow.
+ And the whippoorwills were singing.
+ And the sound of the surf below me
+ Was the sound of silver-poplar leaves
+ In a wind that makes no pause....
+ I hurried down the steep ravine,
+ And a bat flew up at my feet from the brush
+ And crossed the moon.
+ To my left was the lighthouse,
+ And black and deep purples far away,
+ And all was still.
+ Till I stood breathless by the tent
+ And heard your whispered welcome,
+ And felt your kiss.
+
+ Lovers lay at mid-night
+ On roofs of Memphis and Athens
+ And looked at tropical stars
+ As large as golden beetles.
+ Nothing is new, save this,
+ And this is always new.
+ And there in your tent
+ With the balm of the mid-night breeze
+ Sweeping over us,
+ We looked at one great star
+ Through a flap of your many-colored tent,
+ And the eternal quality of rapture
+ And mystery and vision flowed through us.
+
+ Next day we went to Grand Haven,
+ For my desire was your desire,
+ Whatever wish one had the other had.
+ And up the Grand River we rowed,
+ With rushes and lily pads about us,
+ And the sand hills back of us,
+ Till we came to a quiet land,
+ A lotus place of farms and meadows.
+ And we tied our boat to Schmitty's dock,
+ Where we had a dinner of fish.
+ And where, after resting, to follow your will
+ We drifted back to Spring Lake--
+ And under a larger moon,
+ Now almost full,
+ Walked three miles to The Beeches,
+ By a winding country road,
+ Where we had supper.
+ And afterwards a long sleep,
+ Waking to the song of robins.
+
+ And that day I said:
+ There are wild places, blue water, pine forests,
+ There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads
+ Around Elk Lake--shall we go?
+ And we went, for your desire was mine.
+ And there we climbed hills,
+ And ate apples along the shaded ways,
+ And rolled great boulders down the steeps
+ To watch them splash in the water.
+ And we stood and wondered what was beyond
+ The farther shore two miles away.
+ And we came to a place on the shore
+ Where four great pine trees stood,
+ And underneath them wild flowers to the edge
+ Of sand so soft for naked feet.
+ And here, for not a soul was near,
+ We stripped and swam far out, laughing, rejoicing,
+ Rolling and diving in those great depths
+ Of bracing water under a glittering sun.
+
+ There were farm houses enough
+ For food and shelter.
+ But something urged us on.
+ One knows the end and dreads the end
+ Yet seeks the end.
+ And you asked, "Is there a town near?
+ Let's see a town."
+ So we walked to Traverse City
+ Through cut-over land and blasted
+ Trunks and stumps of pine,
+ And by the side of desolate hills.
+ But when we got to Traverse City
+ You were not content, nor was I.
+ Something urged us on.
+ Then you thought of Northport
+ And of its Norse and German fishermen,
+ And its quaint piers where they smoke fish.
+ So we drove for thirty miles
+ In a speeding automobile
+ Over hills, around sudden curves, into warm coverts,
+ Or hollows, sometimes at the edge of the Bay,
+ Again on the hill,
+ From where we could see Old Mission
+ Amid blues and blacks, across a score of miles of the Bay,
+ Waving like watered silk under the moon!
+ And by meadows of clover newly cut,
+ And by peach orchards and vineyards.
+ But when we came to the little town
+ Already asleep, though it was but eight o'clock,
+ And only a few drowsy lamps
+ With misty eyelids shone from a store or two,
+ I said, "Do you see those twinkling lights?
+ That's Northport Point, that's the Cedar Cabin--
+ Let's go to the Cedar Cabin."
+ And so we crossed the Bay
+ Amid great waves in a plunging launch,
+ And a roaring breeze and a great moon,
+ For now the moon was full.
+
+ So here was the Cedar Cabin
+ On a strip of land as wide as a house and lawn,
+ And on one side Lake Michigan,
+ And on one side the Bay.
+ There were distances of color all around,
+ And stars and darknesses of land and trees,
+ And at the point the lighthouse.
+ And over us the moon,
+ And over the balcony of our room
+ All of these, where we lay till I slept,
+ Listening to the water of the lake,
+ And the water of the Bay.
+ And we saw the moon sink like a red bomb,
+ And we saw the stars change
+ As the sky wheeled....
+ Now this was the end of the earth,
+ For this strip of land
+ Ran out to a point no larger than one of the stumps
+ We saw on the desolate hills.
+ And moreover it seemed to dive under,
+ Or waste away in a sudden depth of water.
+ And around it was a swirl,
+ To the north the bounding waves of the Lake,
+ And to the south the Bay which seemed the Lake.
+ But could we speak of it, even though
+ I saw your eyes when you thought of it?
+ A sigh of wind blew through the rustic temple
+ When we saw this symbol together,
+ And neither spoke.
+ But that night, somewhere in the beginning of drowsiness,
+ You said: "There is no further place to go,
+ We must retrace."
+ And I awoke in a torrent of light in the room,
+ Hearing voices and steps on the walk:
+ I looked for you,
+ But you had arisen.
+ Then I dressed and searched for you,
+ But you were gone.
+ Then I stood for long minutes
+ Looking at a sail far out at sea
+ And departed too.
+
+
+
+
+THE STAR
+
+
+ I am a certain god
+ Who slipped down from a remote height
+ To a place of pools and stars.
+ And I sat invisible
+ Amid a clump of trees
+ To watch the madmen.
+
+ There were cries and groans about me,
+ And shouts of laughter and curses.
+ Figures passed by with self-absorbed contempt,
+ Wrinkling in bitter smiles about their lips.
+ Others hurried on with set eyes
+ Pursuing something.
+ Then I said this is the place for mad Frederick--
+ Mad Frederick will be here.
+
+ But everywhere I could see
+ Figures sitting or standing
+ By little pools.
+ Some seemed grown into the soil
+ And were helpless.
+ And of these some were asleep.
+ Others laughed the laughter
+ That comes from dying men
+ Trying to face Death.
+ And others said "I should be content,"
+ And others said "I will fly."
+ Whereupon sepulchral voices muttered,
+ As of creatures sitting or hanging head down
+ From limbs of the trees,
+ "We will not let you."
+ And others looked in their pools
+ And clasped hands and said "Gone, all gone."
+ By other pools there were dead bodies:
+ Some of youth, some of age.
+ They had given up the fight,
+ They had drunk poisoned water,
+ They had searched
+ Until they fell--
+ All had gone mad!
+
+ Then I, a certain god,
+ Curious to know
+ What it is in pools and stars
+ That drives men and women
+ Over the earth in this quest
+ Waited for mad Frederick.
+ And then I heard his step.
+
+ I knew that long ago
+ He sat by one of these pools
+ Enraptured of a star's image.
+ And that hands, for his own good,
+ As they said,
+ Dumped clay into the pool
+ And blotted his star.
+ And I knew that after that
+ He had said, "They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy.
+ They will never see me watching one star.
+ I will fly by rivers,
+ And by little brooks,
+ And by the edge of lakes,
+ And by little bends of water,
+ Where no wind blows,
+ And glance at stars as I pass.
+ They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy."
+
+ And I knew that mad Frederick
+ In this flight
+ Through years of restless and madness
+ Was caught by the image of a star
+ In a mere beyond a meadow
+ Down from a hill, under a forest,
+ And had said,
+ "No one sees;
+ Here I can find life,
+ Through vision of eternal things."
+ But they had followed him.
+ They stood on the brow of the hill,
+ And when they saw him gazing in the water
+ They rolled a great stone down the hill,
+ And shattered the star's image.
+ Then mad Frederick fled with laughter.
+ It echoed through the wood.
+ And he said, "I will look for moons,
+ I will punish them who disturb me,
+ By worshiping moons."
+ But when he sought moons
+ They left him alone,
+ And he did not want the moons.
+ And he was alone, and sick from the moons,
+ And covered as with a white blankness,
+ Which was the worst madness of all.
+
+ And I, a certain god,
+ Waiting for mad Frederick
+ To enter this place of pools and stars,
+ Saw him at last.
+ With a sigh he looked about upon his fellows
+ Sitting or standing by their pools.
+ And some of the pools were covered with scum,
+ And some were glazed as of filth,
+ And some were grown with weeds,
+ And some were congealed as of the north wind,
+ And a few were yet pure,
+ And held the star's image.
+ And by these some sat and were glad,
+ Others had lost the vision.
+ The star was there, but its meaning vanished.
+ And mad Frederick, going here and there,
+ With no purpose,
+ Only curious and interested
+ As I was, a certain god,
+ Came by a certain pool
+ And saw a star.
+
+ He shivered,
+ He clasped his hands,
+ He sank to his knees,
+ He touched his lips to the water.
+
+ Then voices from the limbs of the trees muttered:
+ "There he is again."
+ "He must be driven away."
+ "The pool is not his."
+ "He does not belong here."
+ So as when bats fly in a cave
+ They swooped from their hidings in the trees
+ And dashed themselves in the pool.
+ Then I saw what these flying things were--
+ But no matter.
+ They were illusions, evil and envious
+ And dull,
+ But with power to destroy.
+ And mad Frederick turned away from the pool
+ And covered his eyes with his arms.
+ Then a certain god,
+ Of less power than mine,
+ Came and sat beside me and said:
+ "Why do you allow this to be?
+ They are all seeking,
+ Why do you not let them find their heart's delight?
+ Why do you allow this to be?"
+ But I did not answer.
+ The lesser god did not know
+ That I have no power,
+ That only the God has the power.
+ And that this must be
+ In spite of all lesser gods.
+
+ And I saw mad Frederick
+ Arise and ascend to the top of a high hill,
+ And I saw him find the star
+ Whose image he had seen in the pool.
+ Then he knelt and prayed:
+ "Give me to understand, O Star,
+ Your inner self, your eternal spirit,
+ That I may have you and not images of you,
+ So that I may know what has driven me through the world,
+ And may cure my soul.
+ For I know you are Eternal Love,
+ And I can never escape you.
+ And if I cannot escape you,
+ Then I must serve you.
+ And if I must serve you,
+ It must be to good and not ill--
+ You have brought me from the forest of pools
+ And the images of stars,
+ Here to the hill's top.
+ Where now do I go?
+ And what shall I do?"
+
+
+THE END
+
+Printed in the United States of America.
+
+
+
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of books by the same author
+or on kindred subjects
+
+
+
+
+ _EDGAR LEE MASTERS' REMARKABLE BOOK_
+
+ Spoon River Anthology
+
+ _Mr. Masters' book is considered by many to be the most striking and
+ important contribution to American letters in recent years_:--
+
+ "An American 'Comedie Humaine' brings more characters into its pages
+ than any American novel.... Takes its place among the masterpieces
+ which are not of a time or a locality."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ "A work splendid in observation, marvelous in the artistry of
+ exclusion, yet of democratic inclusiveness, piercingly analytic of
+ character, of plastic facility of handling, sympathetic underneath
+ irony, humorous, pathetic, tragic, comic, particular yet
+ universal--a Comedie Humaine--a creation of a whole community of
+ personalities."--_William Marion Reedy._
+
+ "We find a strange impressiveness, akin to greatness, in the 'Spoon
+ River Anthology' of Edgar Lee Masters.... It is a book which,
+ whether one likes it or not, one must respect."--_The New Republic._
+
+ "Mr. Masters speaks with a new and authentic voice. It is an
+ illuminating piece of work, and an unforgettable one."--_Chicago
+ Evening Post._
+
+ "The natural child of Wait Whitman ... the only poet with true
+ Americanism in his bones."--_New York Times._
+
+ _Cloth, $1.25; leather, $1.50_
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Good Friday and Other Poems
+
+ BY JOHN MASEFIELD
+
+ Author of "The Everlasting Mercy" and "The Widow in the Bye Street,"
+ etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ The title piece in this volume is a dramatic poem of sixty pages, the
+ action of which takes place in the time of Christ. The characters
+ introduced include Pontius Pilate, Joseph of Ramah and Herod. The
+ play, for it is really such, is written in rhyme and is one of Mr.
+ Masefield's most interesting and important contributions to
+ literature. In addition to this there are in the book many sonnets and
+ short poems.
+
+ "Reveals an interesting development in poetic thought and expression
+ ... a new Masefield ... who has never written with more dignity, nor
+ with more artistry. Those who go in quest of Beauty will find her
+ here.... Here is beauty of impression, beauty of expression, beauty
+ of thought, and beauty of phrase."--_The New York Times._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Man Against the Sky
+
+ BY EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON
+
+ Author of "The Porcupine," "Captain Craig and Other Poems," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.00_
+
+ It has been some years since Mr. Robinson has given us a new
+ collection of poems. Those who remember "Captain Craig and Other
+ Poems," a volume which brought to its author the heartiest of
+ congratulations, placing him at once in the rank of those American
+ writers whose contributions to literature are of permanent value, will
+ welcome this new work and will find that their anticipation of it and
+ hopes for it are to be pleasantly realized. It is a book which well
+ carries out that early promise and which helps to maintain Mr.
+ Robinson's position in letters to-day.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Battle and Other Poems
+
+ BY WILFRID WILSON GIBSON
+
+ Author of "Daily Bread," "Fires," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo_
+
+ Here with that intensely human note exhibited in his poems of the
+ working classes, Mr. Gibson sings of the life of the soldier. There
+ are many moods in the book, for the author has well caught the flow of
+ spirits from gaiety to despair which makes up the soldier's days. The
+ chief characteristic of the little pen pictures is their vividness,
+ the way in which they bring before the reader the thoughts and
+ feelings of those whose lives may be offered up for their country any
+ moment. In addition to these poems of battle there are others in the
+ collection on varying themes.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Six French Poets
+
+ BY AMY LOWELL
+
+ Author of "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed," "A Dome of Many-Coloured
+ Glass," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 8vo, $2.50_
+
+ A brilliant series of biographical and critical essays dealing with
+ Émile Verhaeren, Albert Samain, Remy de Gourmont, Henri de Régnier,
+ Francis Jammes, and Paul Fort, by one of the foremost living American
+ poets.
+
+ The translations make up an important part of the book, and together
+ with the French originals constitute a representative anthology of the
+ poetry of the period.
+
+ Professor Barrett Wendell, of Harvard University, says:
+
+ "Seems to me as unusual--in the happiest sense of the word, ... I
+ find the book a model, in total effect, of what a work with such
+ purpose ought to be."
+
+ William Lyon Phelps, Professor of English Literature, Yale University,
+ says:
+
+ "This is, I think, the most valuable work on contemporary French
+ literature that I have seen for a long time. It is written by one
+ who has a thorough knowledge of the subject and who is herself an
+ American poet of distinction. She has the knowledge, the sympathy,
+ the penetration, and the insight--all necessary to make a notable
+ book of criticism. It is a work that should be widely read in
+ America."
+
+
+ OTHER BOOKS BY AMY LOWELL
+
+
+ Sword Blades and Poppy Seed
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The Book of
+ the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in our poetry,
+ worthy of companionship to the great romantic lyrics of
+ Coleridge."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+
+ A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal flavor, a
+ loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality.... The child
+ poems are particularly graceful."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
+
+Punctuation has been corrected without note.
+
+Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the
+original.
+
+It is not always possible to determine if a new stanza begins at the top
+of a printed page, but every effort has been made by the transcriber to
+retain stanza breaks where appropriate.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+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: Songs and Satires
+
+Author: Edgar Lee Masters
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36149]
+ [Most recently updated: November 22, 2023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><strong>SONGS AND SATIRES</strong></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/logo.png" alt="" /></div>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+NEW YORK&nbsp;·&nbsp;BOSTON&nbsp;·&nbsp;CHICAGO&nbsp;·&nbsp;DALLAS<br/>
+ATLANTA&nbsp;·&nbsp;SAN FRANCISCO</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><span class="smcap">MACMILLAN &amp; CO., Limited</span></span><br/>
+LONDON&nbsp;·&nbsp;BOMBAY&nbsp;·&nbsp;CALCUTTA<br/>
+MELBOURNE</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><span class="smcap">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.</span></span><br/>
+TORONTO</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>By</i></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">EDGAR LEE MASTERS</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+<p class="center">"SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">New York</p>
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</p>
+<p class="center">1916</p>
+<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1916,</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1916.</p>
+<p class="center">Reprinted March, June, 1916.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">Norwood Press</p>
+<p class="center">J. S. Cushing Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.</p>
+<p class="center">Norwood, Mass., U.S.A</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+<p class="blockquot">For permission to print in book form certain of
+these poems I wish to acknowledge an indebtedness to <i>Poetry</i>, <i>The Smart Set</i>, <i>The Little Review</i>,
+<i>The Cosmopolitan Magazine</i>, and William Marion Reedy, Editor of <i>Reedy's Mirror</i>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">CONTENTS</span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Silence</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">St. Francis and Lady Clare</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Cocked Hat</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Vision</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">So We Grew Together</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Rain in My Heart</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Loop</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">When Under the Icy Eaves</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Car</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Simon Surnamed Peter</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">All Life in a Life</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">What You Will</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The City</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Idiot</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Helen of Troy</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">O Glorious France</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">For a Dance</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">When Life is Real</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Question</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Answer</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Sign</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">William Marion Reedy</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Study</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Portrait of a Woman</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Cage</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></td><td></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Saving a Woman: One Phase</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Love is a Madness</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">On a Bust</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Arabel</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Jim and Arabel's Sister</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Sorrow of Dead Faces</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Cry</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Helping Hand</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Door</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Supplication</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Conversation</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Terminus</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Madeline</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Marcia</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Altar</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Soul's Desire</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Ballad of Launcelot and Elaine&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Death of Launcelot</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In Michigan</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Star</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr style="width: 90%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 90%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SILENCE</span><br/></p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,</span><br />
+And the silence of the city when it pauses,<br />
+And the silence of a man and a maid,<br />
+And the silence for which music alone finds the word,<br />
+And the silence of the woods before the winds of spring begin,<br />
+And the silence of the sick<br />
+When their eyes roam about the room.<br />
+And I ask: For the depths<br />
+Of what use is language?<br />
+A beast of the field moans a few times<br />
+When death takes its young:<br />
+And we are voiceless in the presence of realities&mdash;<br />
+We cannot speak.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A curious boy asks an old soldier</span><br />
+Sitting in front of the grocery store,<br />
+"How did you lose your leg?"<br />
+And the old soldier is struck with silence,<br />
+Or his mind flies away,<br />
+Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>It comes back jocosely<br />
+And he says, "A bear bit it off."<br />
+And the boy wonders, while the old soldier<br />
+Dumbly, feebly lives over<br />
+The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,<br />
+The shrieks of the slain,<br />
+And himself lying on the ground,<br />
+And the hospital surgeons, the knives,<br />
+And the long days in bed.<br />
+But if he could describe it all<br />
+He would be an artist.<br />
+But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds<br />
+Which he could not describe.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">There is the silence of a great hatred,</span><br />
+And the silence of a great love,<br />
+And the silence of a deep peace of mind,<br />
+And the silence of an embittered friendship.<br />
+There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,<br />
+Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,<br />
+Comes with visions not to be uttered<br />
+Into a realm of higher life.<br />
+And the silence of the gods who understand each other without speech.<br />
+There is the silence of defeat.<br />
+There is the silence of those unjustly punished;<br />
+And the silence of the dying whose hand<br />
+Suddenly grips yours.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+There is the silence between father and son,<br />
+When the father cannot explain his life,<br />
+Even though he be misunderstood for it.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.</span><br />
+There is the silence of those who have failed;<br />
+And the vast silence that covers<br />
+Broken nations and vanquished leaders.<br />
+There is the silence of Lincoln,<br />
+Thinking of the poverty of his youth.<br />
+And the silence of Napoleon<br />
+After Waterloo.<br />
+And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc<br />
+Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus"&mdash;<br />
+Revealing in two words all sorrow, all hope.<br />
+And there is the silence of age,<br />
+Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it<br />
+In words intelligible to those who have not lived<br />
+The great range of life.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And there is the silence of the dead.</span><br />
+If we who are in life cannot speak<br />
+Of profound experiences,<br />
+Why do you marvel that the dead<br />
+Do not tell you of death?<br />
+Their silence shall be interpreted<br />
+As we approach them.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE</span><br/></p>
+
+
+<p>Antonio loved the Lady Clare.<br />
+He caught her to him on the stair<br />
+And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,<br />
+And drew her lips in his, and drew<br />
+Her soul out like a torch's flare.<br />
+Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;<br />
+Her senses in a vortex swound.<br />
+She tore him loose and turned around,<br />
+And reached her chamber in a bound<br />
+Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.<br />
+<br />
+She closed the door and turned the lock,<br />
+Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.<br />
+She reeled as drunken from the shock.<br />
+Before her eyes the devils skipped,<br />
+She thought she heard the devils mock.<br />
+For had her soul not been as pure<br />
+As sifted snow, could she endure<br />
+Antonio's passion and be sure<br />
+Against his passion's strength and lure?<br />
+Lean fears along her wonder slipped.<br />
+<br />
+Outside she heard a drunkard call,<br />
+She heard a beggar against the wall<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall<br />
+Struck through the riot like a sword,<br />
+And gashed the midnight's festival.<br />
+She watched the city through the pane,<br />
+The old Silenus half insane,<br />
+The idiot crowd that drags its chain&mdash;<br />
+And then she heard the bells again,<br />
+And heard the voices with the word:<br />
+<br />
+Ecco il santo! Up the street<br />
+There was the sound of running feet<br />
+From closing door and window seat,<br />
+And all the crowd turned on its way<br />
+The Saint of Poverty to greet.<br />
+He passed. And then a circling thrill,<br />
+As water troubled which was still,<br />
+Went through her body like a chill,<br />
+Who of Antonio thought until<br />
+She heard the Saint begin to pray.<br />
+<br />
+And then she turned into the room<br />
+Her soul was cloven through with doom,<br />
+Treading the softness and the gloom<br />
+Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,<br />
+And China's magical perfume.<br />
+She sickened from the vases hued<br />
+In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd<br />
+Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>And tapestries that showed a brood<br />
+Of leopards by a pool!<br />
+<br />
+Candles of wax she lit before<br />
+A pier glass standing from the floor;<br />
+Up to the ceiling, off she tore<br />
+With eager hands her jewels, then<br />
+The silken vesture which she wore.<br />
+Her little breasts so round to see<br />
+Were budded like the peony.<br />
+Her arms were white as ivory,<br />
+And all her sunny hair lay free<br />
+As marigold or celandine.<br />
+<br />
+Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase<br />
+Of crackled turquoise, in her face<br />
+Was memory of the mad embrace<br />
+Antonio gave her on the stair,<br />
+And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.<br />
+Like pigeon blood her lips were red.<br />
+She clasped her bands above her head.<br />
+Under her arms the waxlight shed<br />
+Delicate halos where was spread<br />
+The downy growth of hair.<br />
+<br />
+Such sudden sin the virgin knew<br />
+She quenched the tapers as she blew<br />
+Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw<br />
+Herself in tears upon her knees,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>And round her couch the curtain drew.<br />
+She called upon St. Francis' name,<br />
+Feeling Antonio's passion maim<br />
+Her body with his passion's flame<br />
+To save her, save her from the shame<br />
+Of fancies such as these!<br />
+<br />
+"Go by mad life and old pursuits,<br />
+The wine cup and the golden fruits,<br />
+The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,<br />
+I would praise God forevermore<br />
+With harps of gold and silver lutes."<br />
+She stripped the velvet from her couch<br />
+Her broken spirit to avouch.<br />
+She saw the devils slink and slouch,<br />
+And passion like a leopard crouch<br />
+Half mirrored on the polished floor.<br />
+<br />
+Next day she found the saint and said:<br />
+I would be God's bride, I would wed<br />
+Poverty and I would eat the bread<br />
+That you for anchorites prepare,<br />
+For my soul's sake I am in dread.<br />
+Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,<br />
+Put off this gown of green snake cloth,<br />
+Put on one somber as a moth,<br />
+Then come to me and make your troth<br />
+And I will clip your golden hair.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span><br />
+She went and came. But still there lay,<br />
+A gem she did not put away,<br />
+A locket twixt her breasts, all gay<br />
+In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,<br />
+And inlay work of fruit and spray.<br />
+St. Francis felt it as he slipped<br />
+His hand across her breast and whipped<br />
+Her golden tresses ere he clipped&mdash;<br />
+He closed his eyes then as he gripped<br />
+The shears, plunged the shears through.<br />
+<br />
+The waterfall of living gold.<br />
+The locks fell to the floor and rolled,<br />
+And curled like serpents which unfold.<br />
+And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.<br />
+Of worldly glory manifold.<br />
+She thrilled to feel him take and hide<br />
+The locket from her breast, a tide<br />
+Of passion caught them side by side.<br />
+He was the bridegroom, she the bride&mdash;<br />
+Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.<br />
+<br />
+Thus was the Lady Clare debased<br />
+To sack cloth and around her waist<br />
+A rope the jeweled belt replaced.<br />
+Her feet made free of silken hose<br />
+Naked in wooden sandals cased<br />
+Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>They housed her in St. Damian<br />
+And here she prayed for poor women<br />
+And here St. Francis sought her when<br />
+His faith sank under earthly woes.<br />
+<br />
+Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme<br />
+And took to wine and got the lime<br />
+Of hatred on his soul, in time<br />
+Grew healed though left a little lame,<br />
+And laughed about it in his prime;<br />
+When he could see with crystal eyes<br />
+That love is a winged thing which flies;<br />
+Some break the wings, some let them rise<br />
+From earth like God's dove to the skies<br />
+Diffused in heavenly flame.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE COCKED HAT</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">Would that someone would knock Mr. Bryan into a cocked
+hat.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Woodrow Wilson.</span><br/></p>
+
+<p>It ain't really a hat at all, Ed:<br />
+You know that, don't you?<br />
+When you bowl over six out of the nine pins,<br />
+And the three that are standing<br />
+Are the triangular three in front,<br />
+You've knocked the nine into a cocked hat.<br />
+If it was really a hat, he would be knocked in, too.<br />
+Which he hardly is. For a man with money,<br />
+And a man who can draw a crowd to listen<br />
+To what he says, ain't all-in yet....<br />
+Oh yes, defeated<br />
+And killed off a dozen times, but still<br />
+He's one of the three nine pins that's standing ...<br />
+Eh? Why, the other is Teddy, the other<br />
+Wilson, we'll say. We'll see, perhaps.<br />
+But six are down to make the cocked hat&mdash;<br />
+That's me and thousands of others like me,<br />
+And the first-rate men who were cuffed about<br />
+After the Civil War,<br />
+And most of the more than six million men<br />
+Who followed this fellow into the ditch,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+While he walked down the ditch and stepped to the level&mdash;<br />
+Following an ideal!<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+<p>Do you remember how slim he was,<br />
+And trim he was,<br />
+With black hair and pale brow,<br />
+And the hawk-like nose and flashing eyes,<br />
+Not turning slowly like an owl<br />
+But with a sudden eagle motion?...<br />
+<br />
+One time, in '96, he came here<br />
+And we had just a dollar and sixty cents<br />
+In the treasury of the organization.<br />
+So I stuck his lithograph on a pole<br />
+And started out for the station.<br />
+By the time we got back here to Clark street<br />
+Four thousand men were marching in line,<br />
+And a band that was playing for an opening<br />
+Of a restaurant on Franklin street<br />
+Had left the job and was following his carriage.<br />
+Why, it took all the money Mark Hanna could raise<br />
+To beat me, with nothing but a pole<br />
+And a lithograph.<br />
+And it wasn't because he was one of the prophets<br />
+Come back to earth again.<br />
+It shows how human hearts are hungry<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+How wonderfully true they are&mdash;<br />
+And how they will rise and follow a man<br />
+Who seems to see the truth!<br />
+Well, these fellows who marched are the cocked hat,<br />
+And I am the cocked hat and the six millions,<br />
+And more are the cocked hat,<br />
+Who got themselves despised or suspected<br />
+Of ignorance or something for being with him.<br />
+But still, he's one of the pins that's standing.<br />
+He got the money that he went after,<br />
+And he has a place in history, perhaps&mdash;<br />
+Because we took the blow and fell down<br />
+When the ripping ball went wild on the alley.<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+<p>For we were radicals,<br />
+And he wasn't a radical.<br />
+Eh? Why, a radical stands for freedom,<br />
+And for truth&mdash;which he never finds<br />
+But always looks for.<br />
+A radical is not a moralist.<br />
+A radical doesn't say:<br />
+"This is true and you must believe it;<br />
+This is good and you must accept it,<br />
+And if you don't believe it and accept it<br />
+We'll get a law and make you,<br />
+And if you don't obey the law, we'll kill you&mdash;"<br />
+Oh no! A radical stands for freedom.<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont<br />
+In '97 on Jackson's day?<br />
+Bryan and Altgeld walked together<br />
+Out to the banquet room.<br />
+That's the time he said the bolters must<br />
+Bring fruits meet for repentance&mdash;ha! ha! Oh, Gawd!&mdash;<br />
+They never did it and they didn't have to,<br />
+For they had made friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,<br />
+Even as he did, a little later, in his own way.<br />
+Well, Darrow was there that night.<br />
+I thought it was terribly raw in him,<br />
+But he said to Bryan, there, in a group:<br />
+"You'd better go back to Lincoln and study<br />
+Science, history, philosophy,<br />
+And read Flaubert's Madam something-or-other,<br />
+And quit this village religious stuff.<br />
+You're head of the party before you are ready<br />
+And a leader should lead with thought."<br />
+And Bryan turned to the others and said:<br />
+"Darrow's the only man in the world<br />
+Who looks down on me for believing in God."<br />
+"Your kind of a God," snapped Darrow.<br />
+Honest, Ed, I didn't see this religious business<br />
+In Bryan in '96 or 1900.<br />
+Oh well, I knew he went to Church,<br />
+And talked as statesmen do of God&mdash;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+But McKinley did it, and I used to laugh:<br />
+"We've got a man to match McKinley,<br />
+And it's good for us, in a squeeze like this,<br />
+We didn't nominate some fellow<br />
+Ethical culture or Unitarian."<br />
+You see, the newspapers and preachers then<br />
+Were raising such a hullabaloo<br />
+About irreligion and dishonesty,<br />
+And calling old Altgeld an anarchist,<br />
+And comparing us to Robespierre<br />
+And the guillotine boys in France.<br />
+And a little of this religion came in handy.<br />
+The same as if you saw a Mason button on me,<br />
+You'd know, you see&mdash;but Gee!<br />
+He was 24-carat religious,<br />
+A cover-to-cover man....<br />
+He was a trained collie,<br />
+And he looked like a lion,<br />
+There in the convention of '96&mdash;What do you know about that?<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+But right here, I tell you he ain't a hypocrite,<br />
+This ain't a pose. But I'll tell you:<br />
+In '96 when they knocked him out,<br />
+I know what he said to himself as well<br />
+As if I heard him say it ...<br />
+I'll tell you in a minute.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+But suppose you were giving a lecture on the constitution,<br />
+And you got mixed on your dates,<br />
+And the audience rotten-egged you,<br />
+And some one in the confusion<br />
+Stole the door receipts,<br />
+And there you were, disgraced and broke!<br />
+But suppose you could just change your clothes,<br />
+And lecture to the same audience<br />
+On the religious nature of Washington,<br />
+And be applauded and make money&mdash;<br />
+You'd do it, wouldn't you?<br />
+Well, this is what Bill said to himself:<br />
+"I'm naturally regular and religious.<br />
+I'm a moral man and I can prove it<br />
+By any one in Marion County,<br />
+Or Jacksonville or Lincoln, Nebraska.<br />
+I'm a radical, but a radical<br />
+Alone can be religious.<br />
+I belong to the church, if not to the bank,<br />
+Of the people who defeated me.<br />
+And I'll prove to religious people<br />
+That I'm a man to be trusted&mdash;<br />
+And just what a radical is.<br />
+And I'll make some money while winning the votes<br />
+Of the churches over the country."...<br />
+<br />
+That's it&mdash;it ain't hypocrisy,<br />
+It's using what you are for ends,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+When you find yourself in trouble.<br />
+And this accounts for "The Prince of Peace"&mdash;<br />
+Except no one but him could write it&mdash;<br />
+And "The Value of an Ideal"&mdash;<br />
+(Which is money in bank and several farms) ...<br />
+<br />
+His place in history?<br />
+One time my grandfather, who was nearly blind,<br />
+Went out to sow some grass seed.<br />
+They had two sacks in the barn,<br />
+One with grass seed, one with fertilizer,<br />
+And he got the sack with fertilizer,<br />
+And scattered it over the ground,<br />
+Thinking he was sowing grass.<br />
+And as he was finishing up, a grandchild,<br />
+Dorothy, eight years old,<br />
+Followed him, dropping flower seeds.<br />
+Well, after a time<br />
+That was the greatest patch of weeds<br />
+You ever saw! And the old man sat,<br />
+Half blind, on the porch, and said:<br />
+"Good land, that grass is growing!"<br />
+And there was nothing but weeds except<br />
+A few nasturtiums here and there<br />
+That Dorothy had sown....<br />
+Well, I forgot.<br />
+There was a sunflower in one corner<br />
+That looked like a man with a golden beard<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+And a mass of tangled, curly hair&mdash;<br />
+And a pumpkin growing near it....<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+Say, Ed! lend me eighty dollars<br />
+To pay my life insurance.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE VISION</span><br/></p>
+
+<p>Of that dear vale where you and I have lain<br />
+Scanning the mysteries of life and death<br />
+I dreamed, though how impassable the space<br />
+Of time between the present and the past!<br />
+This was the vision that possessed my mind;<br />
+I thought the weird and gusty days of March<br />
+Had eased themselves in melody and peace.<br />
+Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,<br />
+Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh<br />
+Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs<br />
+Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;<br />
+And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;<br />
+The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;<br />
+The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;<br />
+Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries<br />
+Of awakened life had blossomed into May,<br />
+Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair<br />
+Blew music from the stops of watery stems,<br />
+And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,<br />
+Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.<br />
+Now as I lay in vision by the stream<br />
+That flows amidst our well beloved vale,<br />
+I looked throughout the vista stretched between<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;<br />
+The other wooded, thick and quite obscure<br />
+With overgrowth, rank in the luxury<br />
+Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse<br />
+Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope<br />
+That met the grassy level of the vale;&mdash;<br />
+But still within the shadow of those woods,<br />
+Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,<br />
+There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths<br />
+Between them, up and on into the wood.<br />
+Here, as the sun had left his midday peak<br />
+The incommunicable blue of heaven blent<br />
+With his fierce splendor, filling all the air<br />
+With softened glory, while the pasturage<br />
+Trembled with color of the poppy blooms<br />
+Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.<br />
+Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream<br />
+Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.<br />
+Then as I looked upon the widest space<br />
+Of open meadow where the sunlight fell<br />
+In veils of tempered radiance, I saw<br />
+The form of one who had escaped the care<br />
+And equal dullness of our common day.<br />
+For like a bright mist rising from the earth<br />
+He made appearance, growing more distinct<br />
+Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre<br />
+Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.<br />
+Yea, I did see the glory of his hair<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting<br />
+The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale<br />
+His figure stood distinct and his own shade<br />
+Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach<br />
+Augur of good, as if in hidden ways<br />
+Of loveliness the gods do still appear<br />
+The counselors of men, and even where<br />
+Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,<br />
+I cried, "Apollo"&mdash;and his form dissolved,<br />
+As if the nymphs of echo, who took up<br />
+The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,<br />
+By that same flight had startled the great god<br />
+To vanishment. And thereupon I woke<br />
+And disarrayed the figment of my thought.<br />
+For of the very air, magic with hues,<br />
+Blent with the distant objects, I had formed<br />
+The splendid apparition, and so knew<br />
+It was, alas! a dream within a dream!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">"SO WE GREW TOGETHER"</span><br/></p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Reading over your letters I find you wrote me</span><br />
+"My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope<br />
+Said "master"&mdash;all as I had been your very son,<br />
+And not the orphan whom you adopted.<br />
+Well, you were father to me! And I can recall<br />
+The things you did for me or gave me:<br />
+One time we rode in a box car to Springfield<br />
+To see the greatest show on earth;<br />
+And one time you gave me redtop boots,<br />
+And one time a watch, and one time a gun.<br />
+Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice<br />
+Like a rooster trying to crow in August<br />
+Hatched in April, we'll say.<br />
+And you went about wrapped up in silence<br />
+With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors<br />
+Of what they were doing to you, and how<br />
+They wronged you&mdash;and we were poor&mdash;so poor!<br />
+And I could not understand why you failed,<br />
+And why if you did good things for the people<br />
+The people did not sustain you.<br />
+And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan,<br />
+So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser,<br />
+Or so little to be forgiven?...<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">They crowded you hard in those days.</span><br />
+But you fought like a wounded lion<br />
+For yourself I know, but for us, for me.<br />
+At last you fell ill, and for months you tottered<br />
+Around the streets as thin as death,<br />
+Trying to earn our bread, your great eyes glowing<br />
+And the silence around you like a shawl!<br />
+But something in you kept you up.<br />
+You grew well again and rosy with cheeks<br />
+Like an Indian peach almost, and eyes<br />
+Full of moonlight and sunlight, and a voice<br />
+That sang, and a humor that warded<br />
+The arrows off. But still between us<br />
+There was reticence; you kept me away<br />
+With a glittering hardness; perhaps you thought<br />
+I kept you away&mdash;for I was moving<br />
+In spheres you knew not, living through<br />
+Beliefs you believed in no more, and ideals<br />
+That were just mirrors of unrealities.<br />
+As a boy can be I was critical of you.<br />
+And reasons for your failures began to arise<br />
+In my mind&mdash;I saw specific facts here and there<br />
+With no philosophy at hand to weld them<br />
+And synthesize them into one truth&mdash;<br />
+And a rush of the strength of youth<br />
+Deluded me into thinking the world<br />
+Was something so easily understood and managed<br />
+While I knew it not at all in truth.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+And an adolescent egotism<br />
+Made me feel you did not know me<br />
+Or comprehend the all that I was.<br />
+All this you divined....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">So it went. And when I left you and passed</span><br />
+To the world, the city&mdash;still I see you<br />
+With eyes averted, and feel your hand<br />
+Limp with sorrow&mdash;you could not speak.<br />
+You thought of what I might be, and where<br />
+Life would take me, and how it would end&mdash;<br />
+There was longer silence. A year or two<br />
+Brought me closer to you. I saw the play now<br />
+And the game somewhat and understood your fights<br />
+And enmities, and hardnesses and silences,<br />
+And wild humor that had kept you whole&mdash;<br />
+For your soul had made it as an antitoxin<br />
+To the world's infections. And you swung to me<br />
+Closer than before&mdash;and a chumship began<br />
+Between us....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">What vital power was yours!</span><br />
+You never tired, or needed sleep, or had a pain,<br />
+Or refused a delight. I loved the things now<br />
+You had always loved, a winning horse,<br />
+A roulette wheel, a contest of skill<br />
+In games or sports ... long talks on the corner<br />
+With men who have lived and tell you<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>Things with a rich flavor of old wisdom or humor;<br />
+A woman, a glass of whisky at a table<br />
+Where the fatigue of life falls, and our reserves<br />
+That wait for happiness come up in smiles,<br />
+Laughter, gentle confidences. Here you were<br />
+A man with youth, and I a youth was a man,<br />
+Exulting in your braveries and delight in life.<br />
+How you knocked that scamp over at Harry Varnell's<br />
+When he tried to take your chips! And how I,<br />
+Who had thought the devil in cards as a boy,<br />
+Loved to play with you now and watch you play;<br />
+And watch the subtle mathematics of your mind<br />
+Prophecy, divine the plays. Who was it<br />
+In your ancestry that you harked back to<br />
+And reproduced with such various gifts<br />
+Of flesh and spirit, Anglo-Saxon, Celt?&mdash;<br />
+You with such rapid wit and powerful skill<br />
+For catching illogic and whipping Error's<br />
+Fangéd head from the body?...<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">I was really ahead of you</span><br />
+At this stage, with more self-consciousness<br />
+Of what man is, and what life is at last,<br />
+And how the spirit works, and by what laws,<br />
+With what inevitable force. But still I was<br />
+Behind you in that strength which in our youth,<br />
+If ever we have it, squeezes all the nectar<br />
+From the grapes. It seemed you'd never lose<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+This power and sense of joy, but yet at times<br />
+I saw another phase of you....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">There was the day</span><br />
+We rode together north of the old town,<br />
+Past the old farm houses that I knew&mdash;<br />
+Past maple groves, and fields of corn in the shock,<br />
+And fields of wheat with the fall green.<br />
+It was October, but the clouds were summer's,<br />
+Lazily floating in a sky of June;<br />
+And a few crows flying here and there,<br />
+And a quail's call, and around us a great silence<br />
+That held at its core old memories<br />
+Of pioneers, and dead days, forgotten things!<br />
+I'll never forget how you looked that day. Your hair<br />
+Was turning silver now, but still your eyes<br />
+Burned as of old, and the rich olive glow<br />
+In your cheeks shone, with not a line or wrinkle!&mdash;<br />
+You seemed to me perfection&mdash;a youth, a man!<br />
+And now you talked of the world with the old wit,<br />
+And now of the soul&mdash;how such a man went down<br />
+Through folly or wrong done by him, and how<br />
+Man's death cannot end all,<br />
+There must be life hereafter!...<br />
+<br />
+As you were that day, as you looked and spoke,<br />
+As the earth was, I hear as the soul of it all<br />
+Godard's <i>Dawn</i>, Dvorák's <i>Humoresque</i>,<br />
+The Morris Dances, Mendelssohn's <i>Barcarole</i>,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+And old Scotch songs, <i>When the Kye Come Hame</i>,<br />
+And <i>The Moon Had Climbed the Highest Hill</i>,<br />
+The Musseta Waltz and Rudolph's Narrative;<br />
+Your great brow seemed Beethoven's<br />
+And the lust of life in your face Cellini's,<br />
+And your riotous fancy like Dumas.<br />
+I was nearer you now than ever before,<br />
+And finding each other thus I see to-day<br />
+How the human soul seeks the human soul<br />
+And finds the one it seeks at last.<br />
+For you know you can open a window<br />
+That looks upon embowered darkness,<br />
+When the flowers sleep and the trees are still<br />
+At Midnight, and no light burns in the room;<br />
+And you can hide your butterfly<br />
+Somewhere in the room, but soon you will see<br />
+A host of butterfly mates<br />
+Fluttering through the window to join<br />
+Your butterfly hid in the room.<br />
+It is somehow thus with souls....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">This day then I understood it all:</span><br />
+Your vital democracy and love of men<br />
+And tolerance of life; and how the excess of these<br />
+Had wrought your sorrows in the days<br />
+When we were so poor, and the small of mind<br />
+Spoke of your sins and your connivance<br />
+With sinful men. You had lived it down,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+Had triumphed over them, and you had grown.<br />
+Prosperous in the world and had passed<br />
+Into an easy mastery of life and beyond the thought<br />
+Of further conquests for things.<br />
+As the Brahmins say, no more you worshiped matter,<br />
+Or scarcely ghosts, or even the gods<br />
+With singleness of heart.<br />
+This day you worshiped Eternal Peace<br />
+Or Eternal Flame, with scarce a laugh or jest<br />
+To hide your worship; and I understood,<br />
+Seeing so many facets to you, why it was<br />
+Blind Condon always smiled to hear your voice,<br />
+And why it was in a greenroom years ago<br />
+Booth turned to you, marking your face<br />
+From all the rest, and said, "There is a man<br />
+Who might play Hamlet&mdash;better still Othello";<br />
+And why it was the women loved you; and the priest<br />
+Could feed his body and soul together drinking<br />
+A glass of beer and visiting with you....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">Then something happened:</span><br />
+Your face grew smaller, your brow more narrow,<br />
+Dull fires burned in your eyes,<br />
+Your body shriveled, you walked with a cynical shuffle,<br />
+Your hands mixed the keys of life,<br />
+You had become a discord.<br />
+A monstrous hatred consumed you&mdash;<br />
+You had suffered the greatest wrong of all,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+I knew and granted the wrong.<br />
+You had mounted up to sixty years, now breathing hard,<br />
+And just at the time that honor belonged to you<br />
+You were dishonored at the hands of a friend.<br />
+I wept for you, and still I wondered<br />
+If all I had grown to see in you and find in you<br />
+And love in you was just a fond illusion&mdash;<br />
+If after all I had not seen you aright as a boy:<br />
+Barbaric, hard, suspicious, cruel, redeemed<br />
+Alone by bubbling animal spirits&mdash;<br />
+Even these gone now, all of you smoke<br />
+Laden with stinging gas and lethal vapor....<br />
+Then you came forth again like the sun after storm&mdash;<br />
+The deadly uric acid driven out at last<br />
+Which had poisoned you and dwarfed your soul&mdash;<br />
+So much for soul!<br />
+<br />
+The last time I saw you<br />
+Your face was full of golden light,<br />
+Something between flame and the richness of flesh.<br />
+You were yourself again, wholly yourself.<br />
+And oh, to find you again and resume<br />
+Our understanding we had worked so long to reach&mdash;<br />
+You calm and luminant and rich in thought!<br />
+This time it seemed we said but "yes" or "no"&mdash;<br />
+That was enough; we smoked together<br />
+And drank a glass of wine and watched<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+The leaves fall sitting on the porch....<br />
+Then life whirled me away like a leaf,<br />
+And I went about the crowded ways of New York.<br />
+<br />
+And one night Alberta and I took dinner<br />
+At a place near Fourteenth Street where the music<br />
+Was like the sun on a breeze-swept lake<br />
+When every wave is a patine of fire,<br />
+And I thought of you not at all<br />
+Looking at Alberta and watching her white teeth<br />
+Bite off bits of Italian bread,<br />
+And watching her smile and the wide pupils<br />
+Of her eyes, electrified by wine<br />
+And music and the touch of our hands<br />
+Now and then across the table.<br />
+We went to her house at last.<br />
+And through a languorous evening.<br />
+Where no light was but a single candle,<br />
+We circled about and about a pending theme<br />
+Till at last we solved it suddenly in rapture<br />
+Almost by chance; and when I left<br />
+She followed me to the hall and leaned above<br />
+The railing about the stair for the farewell kiss&mdash;<br />
+And I went into the open air ecstatically,<br />
+With the stars in the spaces of sky between<br />
+The towering buildings, and the rush<br />
+Of wheels and clang of bells,<br />
+Still with the fragrance of her lips and cheeks<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+And glinting hair about me, delicate<br />
+And keen in spite of the open air.<br />
+And just as I entered the brilliant car<br />
+Something said to me you are dead&mdash;<br />
+I had not thought of you, was not thinking of you.<br />
+But I knew it was true, as it was,<br />
+For the telegram waited me at my room....<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">I didn't come back.</span><br />
+I could not bear to see the breathless breath<br />
+Over your brow&mdash;nor look at your face&mdash;<br />
+However you fared or where<br />
+To what victories soever&mdash;<br />
+Vanquished or seemingly vanquished!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">RAIN IN MY HEART</span></p>
+
+<p>There is a quiet in my heart<br />
+Like one who rests from days of pain.<br />
+Outside, the sparrows on the roof<br />
+Are chirping in the dripping rain.<br />
+<br />
+Rain in my heart; rain on the roof;<br />
+And memory sleeps beneath the gray<br />
+And windless sky and brings no dreams<br />
+Of any well remembered day.<br />
+<br />
+I would not have the heavens fair,<br />
+Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild,<br />
+But days like this, until my heart<br />
+To loss of you is reconciled.<br />
+<br />
+I would not see you. Every hope<br />
+To know you as you were has ranged.<br />
+I, who am altered, would not find<br />
+The face I loved so greatly changed.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE LOOP</span></p>
+
+<p>From State street bridge a snow-white glimpse of sea<br />
+Beyond the river walled in by red buildings,<br />
+O'ertopped by masts that take the sunset's gildings,<br />
+Roped to the wharf till spring shall set them free.<br />
+Great floes make known how swift the river's current.<br />
+Out of the north sky blows a cutting wind.<br />
+Smoke from the stacks and engines in a torrent<br />
+Whirls downward, by the eddying breezes thinned.<br />
+Enskyed are sign boards advertising soap,<br />
+Tobacco, coal, transcontinental trains.<br />
+A tug is whistling, straining at a rope,<br />
+Fixed to a dredge with derricks, scoops and cranes.<br />
+Down in the loop the blue-gray air enshrouds,<br />
+As with a cyclops' cape, the man-made hills<br />
+And towers of granite where the city crowds.<br />
+Above the din a copper's whistle shrills.<br />
+There is a smell of coffee and of spices.<br />
+We near the market place of trade's devices.<br />
+Blue smoke from out a roasting room is pouring.<br />
+A rooster crows, geese cackle, men are bawling.<br />
+Whips crack, trucks creak, it is the place of storing,<br />
+And drawing out and loading up and hauling<br />
+Fruit, vegetables and fowls and steaks and hams,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+Oysters and lobsters, fish and crabs and clams.<br />
+And near at hand are restaurants and bars,<br />
+Hotels with rooms at fifty cents a day,<br />
+Beer tunnels, pool rooms, places where cigars<br />
+And cigarettes their window signs display;<br />
+Mixed in with letterings of printed tags,<br />
+Twine, boxes, cartels, sacks and leather bags,<br />
+Wigs, telescopes, eyeglasses, ladies' tresses,<br />
+Or those who manicure or fashion dresses,<br />
+Or sell us putters, tennis balls or brassies,<br />
+Make shoes, pull teeth, or fit the eye with glasses.<br />
+<br />
+And now the rows of windows showing laces,<br />
+Silks, draperies and furs and costly vases,<br />
+Watches and mirrors, silver cups and mugs,<br />
+Emeralds, diamonds, Indian, Persian rugs,<br />
+Hats, velvets, silver buckles, ostrich-plumes,<br />
+Drugs, violet water, powder and perfumes.<br />
+Here is a monstrous winking eye&mdash;beneath<br />
+A showcase by an entrance full of teeth.<br />
+Here rubber coats, umbrellas, mackintoshes,<br />
+Hoods, rubber boots and arctics and galoshes.<br />
+Here is half a block of overcoats,<br />
+In this bleak time of snow and slender throats.<br />
+Then windows of fine linen, snakewood canes,<br />
+Scarfs, opera hats, in use where fashion reigns.<br />
+As when the hive swarms, so the crowded street<br />
+Roars to the shuffling of innumerable feet.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+Skyscrapers soar above them; they go by<br />
+As bees crawl, little scales upon the skin<br />
+Of a great dragon winding out and in.<br />
+Above them hangs a tangled tree of signs,<br />
+Suspended or uplifted like dædalian<br />
+Hieroglyphics when the saturnalian<br />
+Night commences, and their racing lines<br />
+Run fire of blue and yellow in a puzzle,<br />
+Bewildering to the eyes of those who guzzle,<br />
+And gourmandize and stroll and seek the bubble<br />
+Of happiness to put away their trouble.<br />
+<br />
+Around the loop the elevated crawls,<br />
+And giant shadows sink against the walls<br />
+Where ten to twenty stories strive to hold<br />
+The pale refraction of the sunset's gold.<br />
+Slop underfoot, we pass beneath the loop.<br />
+The crowd is uglier, poorer; there are smells<br />
+As from the depths of unsuspected hells,<br />
+And from a groggery where beer and soup<br />
+Are sold for five cents to the thieves and bums.<br />
+Here now are huge cartoons in red and blue<br />
+Of obese women and of skeleton men,<br />
+Egyptian dancers, twined with monstrous snakes,<br />
+Before the door a turbaned lithe Hindoo,<br />
+A bagpipe shrilling, underneath a den<br />
+Of opium, whence a man with hand that shakes,<br />
+Rolling a cigarette, so palely comes.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+The clang of car bells and the beat of drums.<br />
+Draft horses clamping with their steel-shod hoofs.<br />
+The buildings have grown small and black and worn;<br />
+The sky is more beholden; o'er the roofs<br />
+A flock of pigeons soars; with dresses torn<br />
+And yellow faces, labor women pass<br />
+Some Chinese gabbling; and there, buying fruit,<br />
+Stands a fair girl who is a late recruit<br />
+To those poor women slain each year by lust.<br />
+'Tis evening now and trade will soon begin.<br />
+The family entrance beckons for a glass<br />
+Of hopeful mockery, the piano's din<br />
+Into the street with sounds of rasping wires<br />
+Filters, and near a pawner's window shows<br />
+Pistols, accordions; and, luring buyers,<br />
+A Jew stands mumbling to the passer-by<br />
+Of jewelry and watches and old clothes.<br />
+A limousine gleams quickly&mdash;with a cry<br />
+A legless man fastened upon a board<br />
+With casters 'neath it by a sudden shove<br />
+Darts out of danger. And upon the corner<br />
+A lassie tells a man that God is love,<br />
+Holding a tambourine with its copper hoard<br />
+To be augmented by the drunken scorner.<br />
+A woman with no eyeballs in her sockets<br />
+Plays "Rock of Ages" on a wheezy organ.<br />
+A newsboy with cold hands thrust in his pockets<br />
+Cries, "All about the will of Pierpont Morgan!"<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+The roofline of the street now sinks and dwindles.<br />
+The windows are begrimed with dust and beer.<br />
+A child half clothed, with legs as thin as spindles,<br />
+Carries a basket with some bits of coal.<br />
+Between lace curtains eyes of yellow leer,<br />
+The cheeks splotched with white places like the skin<br />
+Inside an eggshell&mdash;destitute of soul.<br />
+One sees a brass lamp oozing kerosene<br />
+Upon a stand whereon her elbows lean;<br />
+Lighted, it soon will welcome negroes in.<br />
+<br />
+The railroad tracks are near. We almost choke<br />
+From filth whirled from the street and stinging vapors.<br />
+Great engines vomit gas and heavy smoke<br />
+Upon a north wind driving tattered papers,<br />
+Dry dung and dust and refuse down the street.<br />
+A circumambient roar as of a wheel<br />
+Whirring far off&mdash;a monster's heart whose beat<br />
+Is full of murmurs, comes as we retreat<br />
+Towards Twenty-second. And a man with jaw<br />
+Set like a tiger's, with a dirty beard,<br />
+Skulks toward the loop, with heavy wrists red-raw<br />
+Glowing above his pockets where his hands<br />
+Pushed tensely round his hips the coat tails draw,<br />
+And show what seems a slender piece of metal<br />
+In his hip pocket. On these barren strands<br />
+He waits for midnight for old scores to settle<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+Against his ancient foe society,<br />
+Who keeps the soup house and who builds the jails.<br />
+Switchmen and firemen with their dinner pails<br />
+Go by him homeward, and he wonders if<br />
+These fellows know a hundred thousand workers<br />
+Walk up and down the city's highways, stiff<br />
+From cold and hunger, doomed to poverty,<br />
+As wretched as the thieves and crooks and shirkers.<br />
+He scurries to the lake front, loiters past<br />
+The windows of wax lights with scarlet shades,<br />
+Where smiling diners back of ambuscades<br />
+Of silk and velvet hear not winter's blast<br />
+Blowing across the lake. He has a thought<br />
+Of Michigan, where once at picking berries<br />
+He spent a summer&mdash;then his eye is caught<br />
+At Randolph street by written light which tarries,<br />
+Then like a film runs into sentences.<br />
+He sees it all as from a black abyss.<br />
+Taxis with skid chains rattle, limousines<br />
+Draw up to awnings; for a space he catches<br />
+A scent of musk or violets, sees the patches<br />
+On powdered cheeks of furred and jeweled queens.<br />
+The color round his cruel mouth grows whiter,<br />
+He thrusts his coarse hands in his pockets tighter:<br />
+He is a thief, he knows he is a thief,<br />
+He is a thief found out, and, as he knows,<br />
+The whole loop is a kingdom held in fief<br />
+By men who work with laws instead of blows<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+From sling shots, so he curses under breath<br />
+The money and the invisible hand that owns<br />
+From year to year, in spite of change and death,<br />
+The wires for the lights and telephones,<br />
+The railways on the streets, and overhead<br />
+The railways, and beneath the winding tunnel<br />
+Which crooks stole from the city for a runnel<br />
+To drain her nickels; and the pipes of lead<br />
+Which carry gas, wrapped round us like a snake,<br />
+And round the courts, whose grip no court can break.<br />
+He curses bitterly all those who rise,<br />
+And rule by just the spirit which he plies<br />
+Coarsely against the world's great store of wealth;<br />
+Bankers and usurers and cliques whose stealth<br />
+Works witchcraft through the market and the press,<br />
+And hires editors, or owns the stock<br />
+Controlling papers, playing with finesse<br />
+The city's thinking, that they may unlock<br />
+Treasures and powers like burglars in the dark.<br />
+And thinking thus and cursing, through a flurry<br />
+Of sudden snow he hastens on to Clark.<br />
+In a cheap room there is an eye to mark<br />
+His coming and be glad. His footsteps hurry.<br />
+She will have money, earned this afternoon<br />
+Through men who took her from a near saloon<br />
+Wherein she sits at table to dragoon<br />
+Roughnecks or simpletons upon a lark.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+Within a little hall a fierce-eyed youth<br />
+Rants of the burdens on the people's backs&mdash;<br />
+He would cure all things with the single tax.<br />
+A clergyman demands more gospel truth,<br />
+Speaking to Christians at a weekly dinner.<br />
+A parlor Marxian, for a beginner<br />
+Would take the railways. And amid applause<br />
+Where lawyers dine, a judge says all will be<br />
+Well if we hand down to posterity<br />
+Respect for courts and judges and the laws.<br />
+An anarchist would fight. Upon the whole,<br />
+Another thinks, to cultivate one's soul<br />
+Is most important&mdash;let the passing show<br />
+Go where it wills, and where it wills to go.<br />
+<br />
+Outside the stars look down. Stars are content<br />
+To be so quiet and indifferent.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES</span></p>
+
+<p>When under the icy eaves<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The swallow heralds the sun,</span><br />
+And the dove for its lost mate grieves<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the young lambs play and run;</span><br />
+When the sea is a plane of glass,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the blustering winds are still,</span><br />
+And the strength of the thin snows pass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In mists o'er the tawny hill&mdash;</span><br />
+The spirit of life awakes<br />
+In the fresh flags by the lakes.<br />
+<br />
+When the sick man seeks the air,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the graves of the dead grow green,</span><br />
+Where the children play unaware<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of the faces no longer seen;</span><br />
+When all we have felt or can feel,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all we are or have been,</span><br />
+And all the heart can hide or reveal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Knocks gently, and enters in:&mdash;</span><br />
+The spirit of life awakes,<br />
+In the fresh flags by the lakes.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN THE CAR</span></p>
+
+<p>We paused to say good-by,<br />
+As we thought for a little while,<br />
+Alone in the car, in the corner<br />
+Around the turn of the aisle.<br />
+<br />
+A quiver came in your voice,<br />
+Your eyes were sorrowful too;<br />
+'Twas over&mdash;I strode to the doorway,<br />
+Then turned to wave an adieu.<br />
+<br />
+But you had not come from the corner,<br />
+And though I had gone so far,<br />
+I retraced, and faced you coming<br />
+Into the aisle of the car.<br />
+<br />
+You stopped as one who was caught<br />
+In an evil mood by surprise.&mdash;<br />
+I want to forget, I am trying<br />
+To forget the look in your eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Your face was blank and cold,<br />
+Like Lot's wife turned to salt.<br />
+I suddenly trapped and discovered<br />
+Your soul in a hidden fault.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+Your eyes were tearless and wide,<br />
+And your wide eyes looked on me<br />
+Like a Mænad musing murder,<br />
+Or the mask of Melpomene.<br />
+<br />
+And there in a flash of lightning<br />
+I learned what I never could prove:<br />
+That your heart contained no sorrow,<br />
+And your heart contained no love.<br />
+<br />
+And my heart is light and heavy,<br />
+And this is the reason why:<br />
+I am glad we parted forever,<br />
+And sad for the last good-by.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SIMON SURNAMED PETER</span></p>
+
+<p>Time that has lifted you over them all&mdash;<br />
+O'er John and o'er Paul;<br />
+Writ you in capitals, made you the chief<br />
+Word on the leaf&mdash;<br />
+How did you, Peter, when ne'er on His breast<br />
+You leaned and were blest&mdash;<br />
+And none except Judas and you broke the faith<br />
+To the day of His death,&mdash;<br />
+You, Peter, the fisherman, worthy of blame,<br />
+Arise to this fame?<br />
+<br />
+'Twas you in the garden who fell into sleep<br />
+And the watch failed to keep,<br />
+When Jesus was praying and pressed with the weight<br />
+Of the oncoming fate.<br />
+'Twas you in the court of the palace who warmed<br />
+Your hands as you stormed<br />
+At the damsel, denying Him thrice, when she cried:<br />
+"He walked at his side!"<br />
+You, Peter, a wave, a star among clouds, a reed in the wind,<br />
+A guide of the blind,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Both smiter and flyer, but human alway, I protest,<br />
+Beyond all the rest.<br />
+<br />
+When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared<br />
+Did you wait till he neared?<br />
+You leaped in the water, not dreading the worst<br />
+In your joy to be first<br />
+To greet Him and tell Him of all that had passed<br />
+Since you saw Him the last.<br />
+You had slept while He watched, but fierce were you, fierce and awake<br />
+When they sought Him to take,<br />
+And cursing, no doubt, as you smote off, as one of the least,<br />
+The ear of the priest.<br />
+Then Andrew and all of them fled, but you followed Him, hoping for strength<br />
+To save him at length<br />
+Till you lied to the damsel, oh penitent Peter, and crept,<br />
+Into hiding and wept.<br />
+<br />
+Oh well! But he asked all the twelve, "Who am I?"<br />
+And who made reply?<br />
+As you leaped in the sea, so you spoke as you smote with the sword;<br />
+"Thou art Christ, even Lord!"<br />
+John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+"Nay, lovest thou me?"<br />
+Thrice over, as thrice you denied Him, and chose you to lead<br />
+His sheep and to feed;<br />
+And gave you, He said, the keys of the den and the fold<br />
+To have and to hold.<br />
+You were a poor jailer, oh Peter, the dreamer, who saw<br />
+The death of the law<br />
+In the dream of the vessel that held all the four-footed beasts,<br />
+Unclean for the priests;<br />
+And heard in the vision a trumpet that all men are worth<br />
+The peace of the earth<br />
+And rapture of heaven hereafter,&mdash;oh Peter, what power<br />
+Was yours in that hour:<br />
+You warder and jailer and sealer of fates and decrees,<br />
+To use the big keys<br />
+With which to reveal and fling wide all the soul and the scheme<br />
+Of the Galilee dream,<br />
+When you flashed in a trice, as later you smote with the sword:<br />
+"Thou art Christ, even Lord!"<br />
+<br />
+We men, Simon Peter, we men also give you the crown<br />
+O'er Paul and o'er John.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+We write you in capitals, make you the chief<br />
+Word on the leaf.<br />
+We know you as one of our flesh, and 'tis well<br />
+You are warder of hell,<br />
+And heaven's gatekeeper forever to bind and to loose&mdash;<br />
+Keep the keys if you choose.<br />
+Not rock of you, fire of you make you sublime<br />
+In the annals of time.<br />
+You were called by Him, Peter, a rock, but we give you the name<br />
+Of Peter the Flame.<br />
+For you struck a spark, as the spark from the shock<br />
+Of steel upon rock.<br />
+The rock has his use but the flame gives the light<br />
+In the way in the night:&mdash;<br />
+Oh Peter, the dreamer, impetuous, human, divine,<br />
+Gnarled branch of the vine!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ALL LIFE IN A LIFE</span></p>
+
+<p>His father had a large family<br />
+Of girls and boys and he was born and bred<br />
+In a barn or kind of cattle shed.<br />
+But he was a hardy youngster and grew to be<br />
+A boy with eyes that sparkled like a rod<br />
+Of white hot iron in the blacksmith shop.<br />
+His face was ruddy like a rising moon,<br />
+And his hair was black as sheep's wool that is black.<br />
+And he had rugged arms and legs and a strong back.<br />
+And he had a voice half flute and half bassoon.<br />
+And from his toes up to his head's top<br />
+He was a man, simple but intricate.<br />
+And most men differ who try to delineate<br />
+His life and fate.<br />
+<br />
+He never seemed ashamed<br />
+Of poverty or of his origin. He was a wayward child,<br />
+Nevertheless though wise and mild,<br />
+And thoughtful but when angered then he flamed<br />
+As fire does in a forge.<br />
+When he was ten years old he ran away<br />
+To be alone and watch the sea, and the stars<br />
+At midnight from a mountain gorge.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span><br />
+When he returned his parents scolded him<br />
+And threatened him with bolts and bars.<br />
+Then they grew soft for his return and gay<br />
+And with their love would have enfolded him.<br />
+But even at ten years old he had a way<br />
+Of gazing at you with a look austere<br />
+Which gave his kinfolk fear.<br />
+He had no childlike love for father or mother,<br />
+Sister or brother,<br />
+They were the same to him as any other.<br />
+He was a little cold, a little queer.<br />
+<br />
+His father was a laborer and now<br />
+They made the boy work for his daily bread.<br />
+They say he read<br />
+A book or two during these years of work.<br />
+But if there was a secret prone to lurk<br />
+Between the pages under the light of his brow<br />
+It came forth. And if he had a woman<br />
+In love or out of love, or a companion or a chum,<br />
+History is dumb.<br />
+So far as we know he dreamed and worked with hands<br />
+And learned to know his genius' commands<br />
+Or what is called one's dæmon.<br />
+<br />
+And this became at last the city's call.<br />
+He had now reached the age of thirty years,<br />
+And found a Dream of Life and a solution<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+For slavery of soul and even all<br />
+Miseries that flow from things material.<br />
+To free the world was his soul's resolution.<br />
+But his family had great fears<br />
+For him, knowing the evil<br />
+Which might befall him, seeing that the light<br />
+Of his own dream had blinded his mind's eyes.<br />
+They could not tell but what he had a devil.<br />
+But still in their tears despite,<br />
+And warnings he departed with replies<br />
+That when a man's genius calls him<br />
+He must obey no matter what befalls him.<br />
+<br />
+What he had in his mind was growth<br />
+Of soul by watching,<br />
+And the creation of eyes<br />
+Over your mind's eyes to supervise<br />
+A clear activity and to ward off sloth.<br />
+What he had in his mind was scotching<br />
+And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove<br />
+From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire<br />
+Of Falsehood and Unbrotherly Desire.&mdash;<br />
+What he had in his mind was simply Love.<br />
+And it was strange he preached the sword and force<br />
+To establish Love, but it was not strange,<br />
+Since he did this, his life took on a change.<br />
+And what he taught seems muddled at its source<br />
+With moralizing and with moral strife.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+For morals are merely the Truth diluted<br />
+And sweetened up and suited<br />
+To the business and bread of Life.<br />
+<br />
+And now this City was just what you'd find<br />
+A city anywhere,<br />
+A turmoil and a Vanity Fair,<br />
+A sort of heaven and a sort of Tophet.<br />
+There were so many leaders of his kind<br />
+The city didn't care<br />
+For one additional prophet.<br />
+He said some extravagant things<br />
+And planted a few stings<br />
+Under the rich man's hide.<br />
+And one of the sensational newspapers<br />
+Gave him a line or two for cutting capers<br />
+In front of the Palace of Justice and the Church.<br />
+But all of the first grade people took the other side<br />
+Of the street when they saw him coming<br />
+With a rag tag crowd singing and humming,<br />
+And curious boys and men up in a perch<br />
+Of a tree or window taking the spectacle in,<br />
+And the Corybantic din<br />
+Of a Salvation Army as it were.<br />
+And whatever he dreamed when he lived in a little town<br />
+The intelligent people ignored him, and this is the stir<br />
+And the only stir he made in the city.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+But there was a certain sinister<br />
+Fellow who came to him hearing of his renown<br />
+And said "You can be Mayor of this city,<br />
+We need a man like you for Mayor."<br />
+And others said "You'd make a lawyer or a politician,<br />
+Look how the people follow you;<br />
+Why don't you hire out as a special writer,<br />
+You could become a business man, a rhetorician,<br />
+You could become a player,<br />
+You can grow rich. There's nothing for a fighter,<br />
+Fighting as you are, but to end in ruin."<br />
+But he turned from them on his way pursuing<br />
+The dream he had in view.<br />
+<br />
+He had a rich man or two<br />
+Who took up with him against the powerful frown<br />
+Which looked him down.<br />
+For you'll always find a rich man or two<br />
+To take up with anything.<br />
+There are those who can't get into society or bring<br />
+Their riches to a social recognition;<br />
+Or ill-formed souls who lack the real patrician<br />
+Spirit for life.<br />
+But as for him he didn't care, he passed<br />
+Where the richness of living was rife.<br />
+And like wise Goethe talking to the last<br />
+With cabmen rather than with lords<br />
+He sat about the markets and the fountains,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+He walked about the country and the mountains,<br />
+Took trips upon the lakes and waded fords<br />
+Barefooted, laughing as a young animal<br />
+Disports itself amid the festival<br />
+Of warm winds, sunshine, summer's carnival&mdash;<br />
+With laborers, carpenters, seamen<br />
+And some loose women.<br />
+And certain notable sinners<br />
+Gave him dinners.<br />
+And he went to weddings and to places where youth slakes<br />
+Its thirst for happiness, and they served him cakes<br />
+And wine wherever he went.<br />
+And he ate and drank and spent<br />
+His time in feasting and in telling stories,<br />
+And singing poems of lilies and of trees,<br />
+With crowds of people crowded around his knees<br />
+That searched with lightning secrets hidden<br />
+Of life and of life's glories,<br />
+Of death and of the soul's way after death.<br />
+<br />
+Time makes amends usually for scandal's breath,<br />
+Which touched him to his earthly ruination.<br />
+But this city had a Civic Federation,<br />
+And a certain social order which intrigues<br />
+Through churches, courts, with an endless ramification<br />
+Of money and morals to save itself.<br />
+And this city had a Bar Association,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+Also its Public Efficiency Leagues<br />
+For laying honest men upon the shelf<br />
+While making private pelf<br />
+Secure and free to increase.<br />
+And this city had illustrious Pharisees<br />
+And this city had a legion<br />
+Of men who make a business of religion,<br />
+With eyes one inch apart,<br />
+Dark and narrow of heart,<br />
+Who give themselves and give the city no peace,<br />
+And who are everywhere the best police<br />
+For Life as business.<br />
+And when they saw this youth<br />
+Was telling the truth,<br />
+And that his followers were multiplying,<br />
+And were going about rejoicing and defying<br />
+The social order and were stirring up<br />
+The dregs of discontent in the cup<br />
+With the hand of their own happiness,<br />
+They saw dynamic mysteries<br />
+In the poems of lilies and trees,<br />
+Therefore they held him for a felony.<br />
+<br />
+If you will take a kernel of wheat<br />
+And first make free<br />
+The outer flake and then pare off the meat<br />
+Of edible starch you'll find at the kernel's core<br />
+The life germ. And this young man's words were dim<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+With blasphemy, sedition at the rim,<br />
+Which fired the heads of dreamers like new wine.<br />
+But this was just the outward force of him.<br />
+For this young man's philosophy was more<br />
+Than such external ferment, being divine<br />
+With secrets so profound no plummet line<br />
+Can altogether sound it. It means growth<br />
+Of soul by watching,<br />
+And the creation of eyes<br />
+Over your mind's eyes to supervise<br />
+A clear activity and to ward off sloth.<br />
+What he had in mind was scotching<br />
+And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove<br />
+From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire<br />
+Of falsehood and unbrotherly Desire.<br />
+What he had in mind was simply Love.<br />
+<br />
+But he was prosecuted<br />
+As a rebel and as a rebel executed<br />
+Right in a public place where all could see.<br />
+And his mother watched him hang for the felony.<br />
+He hated to die being but thirty-three,<br />
+And fearing that his poems might be lost.<br />
+And certain members of the Bar Association,<br />
+And of the Civic Federation,<br />
+And of the League of Public Efficiency,<br />
+And a legion<br />
+Of men devoted to religion,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+With policemen, soldiers, roughs,<br />
+Loose women, thieves and toughs,<br />
+Came out to see him die,<br />
+And hooted at him giving up the ghost<br />
+In great despair and with a fearful cry!<br />
+<br />
+And after him there was a man named Paul<br />
+Who almost spoiled it all.<br />
+<br />
+And protozoan things like hypocrites,<br />
+And parasitic things who make a food<br />
+Of the mysteries of God for earthly power<br />
+Must wonder how before this young man's hour<br />
+They lived without his blood,<br />
+Shed on that day, and which<br />
+In red cells is so rich.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHAT YOU WILL</span></p>
+
+<p>April rain, delicious weeping,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Washes white bones from the grave,</span><br />
+Long enough have they been sleeping.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">They are cleansed, and now they crave</span><br />
+Once more on the earth to gather<br />
+Pleasure from the springtime weather.<br />
+<br />
+The pine trees and the long dark grass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Feed on what is placed below.</span><br />
+Think you not that there doth pass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In them something we did know?</span><br />
+This spell&mdash;well, friends, I greet ye once again<br />
+With joy&mdash;but with a most unuttered pain.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CITY</span></p>
+
+<p>The Sun hung like a red balloon<br />
+As if he would not rise;<br />
+For listless Helios drowsed and yawned.<br />
+He cared not whether the morning dawned,<br />
+The brother of Eos and the Moon<br />
+Stretched him and rubbed his eyes.<br />
+<br />
+He would have dreamed the dream again<br />
+That found him under sea:<br />
+He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side,<br />
+He saw Hæphestos with his bride;<br />
+He traced from Enna's flowery plain<br />
+The child Persephone.<br />
+<br />
+There was a time when heaven's vault<br />
+Cracked like a temple's roof.<br />
+A new hierarchy burst its shell,<br />
+And as the sapphire ceiling fell,<br />
+From stern Jehovah's mad assault,<br />
+Vast spaces stretched aloof:<br />
+<br />
+Great blue black depths of frozen air<br />
+Engulfed the soul of Zeus.<br />
+And then Jehovah reigned instead.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+For Judah was living and Greece was dead.<br />
+And Hope was born to nurse Despair,<br />
+And the Devil was let loose.<br /></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+Far off in the waste empyrean<br />
+The world was a golden mote.<br />
+And the Sun hung like a red balloon,<br />
+Or a bomb afire o'er a barracoon.<br />
+And the sea was drab, and the sea was green<br />
+Like a many colored coat.<br />
+<br />
+The sea was pink like cyclamen,<br />
+And red as a blushing rose.<br />
+It shook anon like the sensitive plant,<br />
+Under the golden light aslant.<br />
+The little waves patted the shore again<br />
+Where the restless river flows.<br />
+<br />
+And thus it has been for ages gone&mdash;<br />
+For a hundred thousand years;<br />
+Ere Buddha lived or Jesus came,<br />
+Or ever the city had place or name,<br />
+The sea thrilled through at the kiss of dawn<br />
+Like a soul of smiles and tears.<br />
+<br />
+When the city's seat was a waste of sand,<br />
+And the hydra lived alone,<br />
+The sound of the sea was here to be heard,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+And the moon rose up like a great white bird,<br />
+Sailing aloft from the yellow strand<br />
+To her silent midnight throne.<br />
+<br />
+Now Helios eyes the universe,<br />
+And he knows the world is small.<br />
+Of old he walked through pagan Tyre,<br />
+Babylon, Sodom destroyed by fire,<br />
+And sought to unriddle the primal curse<br />
+That holds the race in thrall.<br />
+<br />
+So he stepped from the Sun in robes of flame<br />
+As the city woke from sleep.<br />
+He walked the markets, walked the squares,<br />
+He walked the places of sweets and snares,<br />
+Where men buy honor and barter shame,<br />
+And the weak are killed as sheep.<br />
+<br />
+He saw the city is one great mart<br />
+Where life is bought and sold.<br />
+Men rise to get them meat and bread<br />
+To barter for drugs or coffin the dead.<br />
+And dawn is but a plucked-up heart<br />
+For the dreary game of gold.<br />
+<br />
+"Ho! ho!" said Helios, "father Zeus<br />
+Would never botch it so.<br />
+If he had stolen Joseph's bride,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+And let his son be crucified<br />
+The son's blood had been put to use<br />
+To ease the people's woe."<br />
+<br />
+"He of the pest and the burning bush,<br />
+Of locusts, lice, and frogs,<br />
+Who made me stand, veiling my light,<br />
+While Joshua slaughtered the Amorite,<br />
+Who blacked the skin of the sons of Cush,<br />
+And builded the synagogues."<br />
+<br />
+"And Jehovah the great is omnipotent,<br />
+While Zeus was bound by Fate.<br />
+But Athens fell when Peter took Rome,<br />
+And Chicago is made His hecatomb.<br />
+And since from the hour His son was sent<br />
+The hypocrite holds the state."<br />
+<br />
+Helios traversed the city streets<br />
+And this is what he saw:<br />
+Some sold their honor, some their skill,<br />
+The soldier hired himself to kill,<br />
+The judges bartered the judgment seats<br />
+And trafficked in the law.<br />
+<br />
+The starving artist sold his youth,<br />
+The writer sold his pen;<br />
+The lawyer sharpened up his wits<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+Like a burglar filing auger bits,<br />
+And Jesus' vicar sold the truth<br />
+To the famished sons of men.<br />
+<br />
+In every heart flamed cruelty<br />
+Like a little emerald snake.<br />
+And each one knew if he should stand<br />
+In another's way the dagger-hand<br />
+Would make the stronger the feofee<br />
+Of the coveted wapentake.<br />
+<br />
+There's not a thing men will not do<br />
+For honor, gold, or power.<br />
+We smile and call the city fair,<br />
+We call life lovely and debonair,<br />
+But Proserpina never grew<br />
+So deadly a passion flower.<br />
+<br />
+Go live for an hour in a tropic land<br />
+Hid near a sinking pool:<br />
+The lion and tiger come to drink,<br />
+The boa crawls to the water's brink,<br />
+The elephant bull kneels down in the sand<br />
+And drinks till his throat is cool.<br />
+<br />
+Jehovah will keep you awhile unseen<br />
+As you lie behind the rocks.<br />
+But go, if you dare, to slake your thirst,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Though Jesus died for our life accursed<br />
+Your bones by the tiger will be licked clean<br />
+As he licks the bones of an ox.<br />
+<br />
+And the sky may be blue as fleur de lis,<br />
+And the earth be tulip red;<br />
+And God in heaven, and life all good<br />
+While you lie hid in the underwood:<br />
+And the city may leave you sorrow free<br />
+If you ask it not for bread.<br />
+<br />
+One day Achilles lost a horse<br />
+While the pest at Troy was rife,<br />
+And a million maggots fought and ate<br />
+Like soldiers storming a city's gate,<br />
+And Thersites said, as he looked at the corse,<br />
+"Achilles, that is life."</p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+Day fades and from a million cells<br />
+The office people pour.<br />
+Like bees that crawl on the honeycomb<br />
+The workers scurry to what is home,<br />
+And trains and traffic and clanging bells<br />
+Make the cañon highways roar.<br />
+<br />
+Helios walked the city's ways<br />
+Till the lights began to shine.<br />
+Then the janitor women start to scrub<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+And the Pharisees up and enter the club,<br />
+And the harlot wakes, and the music plays<br />
+And the glasses glow with wine.<br />
+<br />
+Now we're good fellows one and all,<br />
+And the buffet storms with talk.<br />
+"The market's closed and trade's at end<br />
+We had our battle, now I'm your friend."<br />
+And thanks to the spirit of alcohol<br />
+Men go for a ride or walk.<br />
+<br />
+Oh but traffic is not all done<br />
+Nor everything yet sold.<br />
+There's woman to win, and plots to weave,<br />
+There's a heart to hurt, or one to deceive,<br />
+And bargains to bind ere rise of Sun<br />
+To garner the morrow's gold.<br />
+<br />
+The market at night is as full of fraud<br />
+As the market kept by day.<br />
+The courtesan buys a soul with a look,<br />
+A dinner tempers the truth in a book,<br />
+And love is sold till love is a bawd,<br />
+And falsehood froths in the play.<br />
+<br />
+And men and women sell their smiles<br />
+For friendship's lifeless dregs.<br />
+For fear of the morrow we bend and bow<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+To moneybags with the slanting brow.<br />
+For the heart that knows life's little wiles<br />
+Seldom or never begs.<br />
+<br />
+"Poor men," sighed Helios, "how they long<br />
+For the ultimate fire of love.<br />
+They yearn, through life, like the peacock moth,<br />
+And die worn out in search of the troth.<br />
+For love in the soul is the siren song<br />
+That wrecks the peace thereof."</p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+Helios turned from the world and fled<br />
+As the convent bell tolled six.<br />
+For he caught a glimpse of an agéd crone<br />
+Who knelt beside a coffin alone;<br />
+She had sold her cloak to shrive the dead<br />
+And buy a crucifix!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE IDIOT</span></p>
+
+<p>Two children in a garden<br />
+Shouting for joy<br />
+Were playing dolls and houses,<br />
+A girl and boy.<br />
+I smiled at a neighbor window,<br />
+And watched them play<br />
+Under a budding oak tree<br />
+On a wintry day.<br />
+<br />
+And then a board half broken<br />
+In the high fence<br />
+Fell over and there entered,<br />
+I know not whence,<br />
+A jailbird face of yellow<br />
+With a vacant sulk,<br />
+His body was a sickly<br />
+Thing of bulk.<br />
+<br />
+His open mouth was slavering,<br />
+And a green light<br />
+Turned disc-like in his eyeballs,<br />
+Like a dog's at night.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+His teeth were like a giant's,<br />
+And far apart;<br />
+I saw him reel on the children<br />
+With a stopping heart.<br />
+He trampled their dolls and ruined<br />
+The house they made;<br />
+He struck to earth the children<br />
+With a dirty spade.<br />
+As a tiger growls with an antelope<br />
+After the hunt,<br />
+Over the little faces<br />
+I heard him grunt.<br />
+<br />
+I stood at the window frozen,<br />
+And short of breath,<br />
+And then I saw the idiot<br />
+Was Master Death!<br />
+<br />
+A bird in the lilac bushes<br />
+Began to sing.<br />
+The garden colored before me<br />
+To the kiss of spring.<br />
+And the yellow face in a moment<br />
+Was a mystic white;<br />
+The matted hair was softened<br />
+To starry light.<br />
+The ragged coat flowed downward<br />
+Into a robe;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+He carried a sword and a balance<br />
+And stood on a globe.<br />
+I watched him from the window<br />
+Under a spell;<br />
+The idiot was the angel<br />
+Azrael!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">HELEN OF TROY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">On an ancient vase representing in bas-relief the flight
+of Helen.</p>
+
+<p>This is the vase of Love<br />
+Whose feet would ever rove<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">O'er land and sea;</span><br />
+Whose hopes forever seek<br />
+Bright eyes, the vermeiled cheek,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And ways made free.</span><br />
+<br />
+Do we not understand<br />
+Why thou didst leave thy land,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy spouse, thy hearth?</span><br />
+Helen of Troy, Greek art<br />
+Hath made our heart thy heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy mirth our mirth.</span><br />
+<br />
+For Paris did appear,&mdash;<br />
+Curled hair and rosy ear<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And tapering hands.</span><br />
+He spoke&mdash;the blood ran fast,<br />
+He touched, and killed the past,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And clove its bands.</span><br />
+<br/>
+And this, I deem, is why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span><br />
+The restless ages sigh,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Helen, for thee.</span><br />
+Whate'er we do or dream,<br />
+Whate'er we say or seem,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We would be free.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would forsake old love,<br />
+And all the pain thereof,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all the care;</span><br />
+We would find out new seas,<br />
+And lands more strange than these,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And flowers more fair.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would behold fresh skies<br />
+Where summer never dies<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And amaranths spring;</span><br />
+Lands where the halcyon hours<br />
+Nest over scented bowers<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On folded wing.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would be crowned with bays,<br />
+And spend the long bright days<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On sea or shore;</span><br />
+Or sit by haunted woods,<br />
+And watch the deep sea's moods,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And hear its roar.</span><br />
+<br/>
+Beneath that ancient sky<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span><br />
+Who is not fain to fly<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As men have fled?</span><br />
+Ah! we would know relief<br />
+From marts of wine and beef,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And oil and bread.</span><br />
+<br />
+Helen of Troy, Greek art<br />
+Hath made our heart thy heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy love our love.</span><br />
+For poesy, like thee,<br />
+Must fly and wander free<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As the wild dove.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">O GLORIOUS FRANCE</span></p>
+
+<p>You have become a forge of snow white fire,<br />
+A crucible of molten steel, O France!<br />
+Your sons are stars who cluster to a dawn<br />
+And fade in light for you, O glorious France!<br />
+They pass through meteor changes with a song<br />
+Which to all islands and all continents<br />
+Says life is neither comfort, wealth, nor fame,<br />
+Nor quiet hearthstones, friendship, wife nor child<br />
+Nor love, nor youth's delight, nor manhood's power,<br />
+Nor many days spent in a chosen work,<br />
+Nor honored merit, nor the patterned theme<br />
+Of daily labor, nor the crowns nor wreaths<br />
+Or seventy years.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">These are not all of life,</span><br />
+O France, whose sons amid the rolling thunder<br />
+Of cannon stand in trenches where the dead<br />
+Clog the ensanguinéd ice. But life to these<br />
+Prophetic and enraptured souls is vision,<br />
+And the keen ecstasy of fated strife,<br />
+And divination of the loss as gain,<br />
+And reading mysteries with brightened eyes<br />
+In fiery shock and dazzling pain before<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+The orient splendor of the face of Death,<br />
+As a great light beside a shadowy sea;<br />
+And in a high will's strenuous exercise,<br />
+Where the warmed spirit finds its fullest strength<br />
+And is no more afraid. And in the stroke<br />
+Of azure lightning when the hidden essence<br />
+And shifting meaning of man's spiritual worth<br />
+And mystical significance in time<br />
+Are instantly distilled to one clear drop<br />
+Which mirrors earth and heaven.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13em;">This is life</span><br />
+Flaming to heaven in a minute's span<br />
+When the breath of battle blows the smoldering spark.<br />
+And across these seas<br />
+We who cry Peace and treasure life and cling<br />
+To cities, happiness, or daily toil<br />
+For daily bread, or trail the long routine<br />
+Of seventy years, taste not the terrible wine<br />
+Whereof you drink, who drain and toss the cup<br />
+Empty and ringing by the finished feast;<br />
+Or have it shaken from your hand by sight<br />
+Of God against the olive woods.<br />
+<br />
+As Joan of Arc amid the apple trees<br />
+With sacred joy first heard the voices, then<br />
+Obeying plunged at Orleans in a field<br />
+Of spears and lived her dream and died in fire,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+Thou, France, hast heard the voices and hast lived<br />
+The dream and known the meaning of the dream,<br />
+And read its riddle: How the soul of man<br />
+May to one greatest purpose make itself<br />
+A lens of clearness, how it loves the cup<br />
+Of deepest truth, and how its bitterest gall<br />
+Turns sweet to soul's surrender.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">And you say:</span><br />
+Take days for repetition, stretch your hands<br />
+For mocked renewal of familiar things:<br />
+The beaten path, the chair beside the window,<br />
+The crowded street, the task, the accustomed sleep,<br />
+And waking to the task, or many springs<br />
+Of lifted cloud, blue water, flowering fields&mdash;<br />
+The prison house grows close no less, the feast<br />
+A place of memory sick for senses dulled<br />
+Down to the dusty end where pitiful Time<br />
+Grown weary cries Enough!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">FOR A DANCE</span></p>
+
+<p>There is in the dance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The joy of children on a May day lawn.</span><br />
+The fragments of old dreams and dead romance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Come to us from the dancers who are gone.</span><br />
+<br />
+What strains of ancient blood<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Move quicker to the music's passionate beat?</span><br />
+I see the gulls fly over a shadowy flood<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And Munster fields of barley and of wheat.</span><br />
+<br />
+And I see sunny France,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the vine's tendrils quivering to the light,</span><br />
+And faces, faces, yearning for the dance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With wistful eyes that look on our delight.</span><br />
+<br />
+They live through us again<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And we through them, who wish for lips and eyes</span><br />
+Wherewith to feel, not fancy, the old pain<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Passed with reluctance through the centuries</span><br />
+<br />
+To us, who in the maze<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of dancing and hushed music woven afresh</span><br />
+Amid the shifting mirrors of hours and days<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Know not our spirit, neither know our flesh;</span><br />
+<br/>
+Nor what ourselves have been,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Through the long way that brought us to the dance:</span><br />
+I see a little green by Camolin<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And odorous orchards blooming in Provence.</span><br />
+<br />
+Two listen to the roar<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of waves moon-smitten, where no steps intrude.</span><br />
+Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHEN LIFE IS REAL</span></p>
+
+<p>We rode, we rode against the wind.<br />
+The countless lights along the town<br />
+Made the town blacker for their fire,<br />
+And you were always looking down.<br />
+<br />
+To 'scape the blustering breath of March,<br />
+Or was it for your mind's disguise?<br />
+Still I could shut my eyes and see<br />
+The turquoise color of your eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Surely your ermine furs were warm,<br />
+And warm your flowing cloak of red;<br />
+Was it the wild wind kept you thus<br />
+Pensive and with averted head?<br />
+<br />
+I scarcely spoke, my words were swept<br />
+Like winged things in the wind's despite.<br />
+We rode, and with what shadow speed<br />
+Across the darkness of the night!<br />
+<br />
+Without a word, without a look.<br />
+What was the charm and what the spell<br />
+That made one hour of life become<br />
+A memory ever memorable?<br/></p>
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+All craft, all labor, all desire,<br/>
+All toil of age, all hope of youth<br />
+Are shadows from the fount of fire<br />
+And mummers of the truth.<br />
+<br />
+How bloodless books, how pulseless art,<br />
+Vain kingly and imperial zeal,<br />
+Vain all memorials of the heart!<br />
+When Life itself is real!<br />
+<br />
+We traced the golden clouds of spring,<br />
+We roved the beach, we walked the land.<br />
+What was the world? A Phantom thing<br />
+That vanished in your hand.<br />
+<br />
+You were as quiet as the sky.<br />
+Your eyes were liquid as the sea.<br />
+And in that hour that passed us by<br />
+We lived eternally.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE QUESTION</span></p>
+<p class="center">I</p>
+
+<p>The sea moans and the stars are bright,<br />
+The leaves lisp 'neath a rolling moon.<br />
+I shut my eyes against the night<br />
+And make believe the time is June&mdash;<br />
+The June that left us over-soon.<br />
+<br />
+This is the path and this the place<br />
+We sat and watched the moving sea,<br />
+And I the moonlight on your face.<br />
+We were not happy&mdash;woe is me,<br />
+Happiness is but memory!<br />
+<br />
+It seemeth, now that you are gone,<br />
+My heart a measured pain doth keep:&mdash;<br />
+Are you now, as I am, alone?<br />
+Do you make merry, do you weep?<br />
+In whose arms are you now asleep?<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE ANSWER</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center">II</p>
+
+<p>I made my bed beneath the pines<br />
+Where the sea washed the sandy bars;<br />
+I heard the music of the winds,<br />
+And blest the aureate face of Mars.<br />
+All night a lilac splendor throve<br />
+Above the heaven's shadowy verge;<br />
+And in my heart the voice of love<br />
+Kept music with the dreaming surge.<br />
+<br />
+A little maid was at my side&mdash;<br />
+She slept&mdash;I scarcely slept at all;<br />
+Until toward the morning-tide<br />
+A dream possessed me with its thrall.<br />
+She sweetly breathed; around my breast<br />
+I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss,<br />
+Then came the vision of unrest&mdash;<br />
+I saw your face and felt your kiss.<br />
+<br />
+I woke and knew with what dismay<br />
+She read my secret and surprise;<br />
+She only said, "Again 'tis day!<br />
+How red your cheeks, how bright your eyes!"<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE SIGN</span></p>
+
+<p>There's not a soul on the square,<br />
+And the snow blows up like a sail,<br />
+Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man<br />
+Falling, before the gale.<br />
+<br />
+And when the wind eddies it rifts<br />
+The snow that lies in drifts;<br />
+And it skims along the walk and sifts<br />
+In stairways, doorways all about<br />
+The steps of the church in an angry rout.<br />
+And one would think that a hungry hound<br />
+Was out in the cold for the sound.<br />
+<br />
+But I do not seem to mind<br />
+The snow that makes one blind,<br />
+Nor the crying voice of the wind&mdash;<br />
+I hate to hear the creak of the sign<br />
+Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:<br />
+With its rhythmic monotone of awe.<br />
+And neither a moan nor yet a whine,<br />
+Nor a cry of pain&mdash;one can't define<br />
+The sound of a creaking sign.<br />
+<br/>
+Especially if the sky be bleak,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span><br />
+And no one stirs however you seek,<br />
+And every time you hear it creak<br />
+You wonder why they leave it stay<br />
+When a man is buried and hidden away<br />
+Many a day!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WILLIAM MARION REEDY</span></p>
+
+<p>He sits before you silent as Buddha,<br />
+And then you say<br />
+This man is Rabelais.<br />
+And while you wonder what his stock is,<br />
+English or Irish, you behold his eyes<br />
+As big and brown as those desirable crockies<br />
+With which as boys we used to play.<br />
+And then you see the spherical light that lies<br />
+Just under the iris coloring,<br />
+Before which everything,<br />
+Becomes as plain as day.<br />
+<br />
+If you have noticed the rolling jowls<br />
+And the face that speaks its chief<br />
+Delight in beer and roast beef<br />
+Before you have seen his eyes, you see<br />
+A man of fleshly jollity,<br />
+Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls<br />
+To make a show of scowls.<br />
+And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls<br />
+In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett<br />
+That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+Or retraces to Thales of Crete,<br />
+And touches upon Descartes coming back<br />
+Through the intellectual Zodiac<br />
+That's something of a feat.<br />
+And you see that the eyes are really the man,<br />
+For the thought of him proliferates<br />
+This way over to Hindostan,<br />
+And that way descanting on Yeats.<br />
+With a word on Plato's symposium,<br />
+And a little glimpse of Theocritus,<br />
+Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,<br />
+Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant<br />
+By a certain line obscure to us.<br />
+And then he'll take up Horace's odes<br />
+Or the Roman civilization;<br />
+Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,<br />
+Or the Greek deterioration.<br />
+Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,<br />
+Which Benjamin Moore and others think<br />
+Is the origin of life. Then Shelley<br />
+Comes in a for a look of understanding.<br />
+Or he'll tell you about the orientation<br />
+Of the ancient dream of Zion.<br />
+Or what's the matter with Bryan.<br />
+And while the porter is bringing a drink<br />
+Something into his fancy skips<br />
+And he talks about the Apocalypse,<br />
+Or a painter or writer now unknown<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+In France or Germany who will soon<br />
+Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.<br />
+<br />
+It's not so hard a thing to be wise<br />
+In the lore of books.<br />
+It's a different thing to be all eyes,<br />
+Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks<br />
+Over the land and out to sea:<br />
+And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!<br />
+Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,<br />
+Young as the light of the sun is young,<br />
+And taking the even with the odd<br />
+As a matter of course, and the path he's trod<br />
+As a path that was good enough.<br />
+With a sort of transcendental sense<br />
+Whose hatred is less than indifference,<br />
+And a gift of wisdom in love.<br />
+And who can say as he classifies<br />
+Men and ages with his eyes<br />
+With cool detachment: this is dung,<br />
+And that poor fellow is just a fool.<br />
+And say what you will death is a rod.<br />
+But I see a light that shines and shines<br />
+And I rather think it's God.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">A STUDY</span></p>
+
+<p>If your thoughts were as clear as your eyes,<br />
+And the whole of your heart were true,<br />
+You were fitter by far for winning&mdash;<br />
+But then that would not be you.<br />
+<br />
+If your pulse beat time to love<br />
+As fast as you think and plan,<br />
+You could kindle a lasting passion<br />
+In the breast of the strongest man.<br />
+<br />
+If you felt as much as you thought,<br />
+And dreamed what you seem to dream,<br />
+A world of elysian beauty<br />
+Your ruined heart would redeem.<br />
+<br />
+If you thought in the light of the sun,<br />
+Or the blood in your veins flowed free,<br />
+If you gave your kisses but gladly,<br />
+We two could better agree.<br />
+<br />
+If you were strong where I counted,<br />
+And weak where yourself were at stake,<br />
+You would have my strength for your giving,<br />
+You would gain and not lose for my sake.<br />
+<br/>
+If your heart overruled your head,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span><br />
+Or your head were lord of your heart,<br />
+Or the two were lovingly balanced,<br />
+I think we never should part.<br />
+<br />
+If you came to me spite of yourself,<br />
+And staid not away through design,<br />
+These days of loving and living<br />
+Were sweet as Olympian wine.<br />
+<br />
+If you could weep with another,<br />
+And tears for yourself controlled,<br />
+You could waken and hold to a pity<br />
+You waken, but do not hold.<br />
+<br />
+If your lips were as fain to speak<br />
+As your face is fashioned to hide&mdash;<br />
+You would know that to lay up treasure<br />
+A woman's heart must confide.<br />
+<br />
+If your bosom were something richer,<br />
+Or your hands more fragile and thin,<br />
+You would call what the world calls evil,<br />
+Or sin and be glad of the sin.<br />
+<br />
+If your soul were aflame with love,<br />
+Or your head were devoted to truth,<br />
+You never would toss on your pillow<br />
+Bewildered 'twixt rapture and ruth.<br />
+<br/>
+If you were the you of my dreams,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span><br />
+And the you of my dreams were mine,<br />
+These days, half sweet and half bitter,<br />
+Would taste like Olympian wine.<br />
+<br />
+Oh, subtle and mystic Egyptians!<br />
+Who chiseled the Sphinx in the East,<br />
+With head and the breasts of a woman,<br />
+And body and claws of a beast.<br />
+<br />
+And gave her a marvellous riddle<br />
+That the eyeless should read as he ran:<br />
+What crawls and runs and is baffled<br />
+By woman, the sphinx&mdash;but a man?<br />
+<br />
+Many look in her face and are conquered,<br />
+Where one all her heart has explored;<br />
+A thousand have made her their sovereign,<br />
+But one is her sovereign and lord.<br />
+<br />
+For him she leaps from her standard<br />
+And fawns at his feet in the sand,<br />
+Who sees that himself is her riddle,<br />
+And she but the work of his hand.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN</span></p>
+
+<p>The pathos in your face is like a peace,<br />
+It is like resignation or a grace<br />
+Which smiles at the surcease<br />
+Of hope. But there is in your face<br />
+The shadow of pain, and there is a trace<br />
+Of memory of pain.<br />
+<br />
+I look at you again and again,<br />
+And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives<br />
+My search for your despair.<br />
+I look at your pale hands&mdash;I look at your hair;<br />
+And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare<br />
+Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves<br />
+A flutter of color running under leaves&mdash;<br />
+Such anguished dreams in your eyes!<br />
+And I listen to you speak<br />
+Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle,<br />
+Or a star's twinkle.<br />
+Sometimes as we talk you rise<br />
+And leave the room, and then I rub a streak<br />
+Of a tear from my cheek.<br />
+<br />
+You tell me such magical things<br />
+Of pictures, books, romance<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+And of your life in France<br />
+In the varied music of exquisite words,<br />
+And in a voice that sings.<br />
+<br />
+All things are memory now with you,<br />
+For poverty girds<br />
+Your hopes, and only your dreams remain.<br />
+And sometimes here and there<br />
+I see as you turn your head a whitened hair,<br />
+Even when you are smiling most.<br />
+And a light comes in your eyes like a passing ghost,<br />
+And a color runs through your cheeks as fresh<br />
+As burns in a girl's flesh.<br />
+Then I can shut my eyes and feel the pain<br />
+That has become a part of you, though I feign<br />
+Laughter myself. One sees another's bruise<br />
+And shakes his thought out of it shuddering.<br />
+So I turn and clamp my will lest I bring<br />
+Your sorrow into my flesh, who cannot choose<br />
+But hear your words and laughter,<br />
+And watch your hands and eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Then as I think you over after<br />
+I have gone from you, and your face<br />
+Comes to me with its grace<br />
+Of memory of unfound love:<br />
+You seem to me the image of all women<br />
+Who dream and keep under smiles the grief thereof,<br />
+Or sew, or sit by windows, or read books<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+To hide their Secret's looks.<br />
+And after a time go out of life and leave<br />
+No uttered words but in their silence grieve<br />
+For Life and for the things no tongue can tell:<br />
+Why Life hurts so, and why Love haunts and hurts<br />
+Poor men and women in this demi-hell.<br />
+<br />
+Perhaps your pathos means that it is well<br />
+Death in his time the aspiring torch inverts,<br />
+And all tired flesh and haunted eyes and hands<br />
+Moving in painéd whiteness are put under<br />
+The soothing earth to brighten April's wonder.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN THE CAGE</span></p>
+
+<p>The sounds of mid-night trickle into the roar<br />
+Of morning over the water growing blue.<br />
+At ten o'clock the August sunbeams pour<br />
+A blinding flood on Michigan Avenue.<br />
+<br />
+But yet the half-drawn shades of bottle green<br />
+Leave the recesses of the room<br />
+With misty auras drawn around their gloom<br />
+Where things lie undistinguished, scarcely seen.<br />
+<br />
+You, standing between the window and the bed<br />
+Are edged with rainbow colors. And I lie<br />
+Drowsy with quizzical half-open eye<br />
+Musing upon the contour of your head,<br />
+Watching you comb your hair,<br />
+Clothed in a corset waist and skirt of silk,<br />
+Tied with white braid above your slender hips<br />
+Which reaches to your knees and makes your bare<br />
+And delicate legs by contrast white as milk.<br />
+And as you toss your head to comb its tresses<br />
+They flash upon me like long strips of sand<br />
+Between a moonlit sea, pale as your hand,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+And a red sun that on a high dune stresses<br />
+Its sanguine heat.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">And then at times your lips,</span><br />
+Protruding half unconscious half in scorn<br />
+Engage my eyes while looking through the morn<br />
+At the clear oval of your brow brought full<br />
+Over the sovereign largeness of your eyes;<br />
+Or at your breasts that shake not as you pull<br />
+The comb through stubborn tangles, only rise<br />
+Scarcely perceptible with breath or signs,<br />
+Firm unmaternal like a young Bacchante's,<br />
+Or at your nose profoundly dipped like Dante's<br />
+Over your chin that softly melts away.<br />
+<br />
+Now you seem fully under my heart's sway.<br />
+I have slipped through the magic of your mesh<br />
+Freed once again and strengthened by your flesh,<br />
+You seem a weak thing for a strong man's play.<br />
+Yet I know now that we shall scarce have parted<br />
+When I shall think of you half heavy hearted.<br />
+I know our partings. You will faintly smile<br />
+And look at me with eyes that have no guile,<br />
+Or have too much, and pass into the sphere<br />
+Where you keep independent life meanwhile.<br />
+How do you live without me, is the fear?<br />
+You do not lean upon me, ask my love, or wonder<br />
+Of other loves I may have hidden under<br />
+These casual renewals of our love.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+And if I loved you I should lie in flame,<br />
+Ari, go about re-murmuring your name,<br />
+And these are things a man should be above.<br />
+<br />
+And as I lie here on the imminent brink<br />
+Of soul's surrender into your soul's power,<br />
+And in the white light of the morning hour<br />
+I see what life would be if we should link<br />
+Our lives together in a marriage pact:<br />
+For we would walk along a boundless tract<br />
+Of perfect hell; but your disloyalty<br />
+Would be of spirit, for I have not won<br />
+Mastered and bound your spirit unto me.<br />
+And if you had a lover in the way<br />
+I have you it would not by half betray<br />
+My love as does your vague and chainless thought,<br />
+Which wanders, soars or vanishes, returns,<br />
+Changes, astonishes, or chills or burns,<br />
+Is unresisting, plastic, freely wrought<br />
+Under my hands yet to no unison<br />
+Of my life and of yours. Upon this brink<br />
+I watch you now and think<br />
+Of all that has been preached or sung or spoken<br />
+Of woman's tragedy in woman's fall;<br />
+And all the pictures of a woman broken<br />
+By man's superior strength.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And there you stand</span><br />
+Your heart and life as firmly in command<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+Of your resolve as mine is, knowing all<br />
+Of man, the master, and his power to harm,<br />
+His rulership of spheres material,<br />
+Bread, customs, rules of fair repute&mdash;<br />
+What are they all against your slender arm?<br />
+Which long since plucked the fruit<br />
+Of good and evil, and of life at last<br />
+And now of Life. For dancing you have cast<br />
+Veil after veil of ideals or pretense<br />
+With which men clothe the being feminine<br />
+To satisfy their lordship or their sense<br />
+Of ownership and hide the things of sin&mdash;<br />
+You have thrown them aside veil after veil;<br />
+And there you stand unarmored, weirdly frail,<br />
+Yet strong as nature, making comical<br />
+The poems and the tales of woman's fall....<br />
+You nod your head, you smile, I feel the air<br />
+Made by the closing door. I lie and stare<br />
+At the closed door. One, two, your tuftèd steps<br />
+Die on the velvet of the outer hall.<br />
+You have escaped. And I would not pursue.<br />
+Though we are but caged creatures, I and you&mdash;<br />
+A male and female tiger in a zoo.<br />
+For I shall wait you. Life himself will track<br />
+Your wanderings and bring you back,<br />
+And shut you up again with me and cage<br />
+Our love and hatred and our silent rage.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE</span></p>
+
+<p>To a lustful thirst she came at first<br />
+And gave him her maiden's pride;<br />
+And the first man scattered the flower of her love,<br />
+Then turned to his chosen bride.<br />
+<br />
+She waned with grief as a fading star,<br />
+And waxed as a shining flame;<br />
+And the second man had her woman's love,<br />
+But the second was playing the game.<br />
+<br />
+With passion she stirred the man who was third;<br />
+Woe's me! what delicate skill<br />
+She plied to the heart that knew her art<br />
+And fled from her wanton will.<br />
+<br />
+Now calm and demure, oh fair, oh pure,<br />
+Oh subtle, patient and wise,<br />
+She trod the weary round of life,<br />
+With a sorrow deep in her eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Now a hero who knew how false, how true<br />
+Was the speech that fell from her lips,<br />
+With a Norseman's strength took sail with her,<br />
+And landed and burnt his ships.<br />
+<br/>
+He gave her pity, he gave her mirth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span><br />
+And the hurt in her heart he nursed;<br />
+But under the silence of her brows<br />
+Was a dream of the man who was first.<br />
+<br />
+And all the deceit and lust of men<br />
+Had sharpened her own deceit;<br />
+And down to the gates of hell she led<br />
+Her friend with her flying feet.<br />
+<br />
+For a bitten bud will never bloom,<br />
+And a woman lost is lost!<br />
+And the first and the third may go unscathed,<br />
+But some man pays the cost.<br />
+<br />
+And the books of life are full of the rune,<br />
+And this is the truth of the song:<br />
+No man can save a woman's soul,<br />
+Nor right a woman's wrong.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">LOVE IS A MADNESS</span></p>
+
+<p>Love is a madness, love is a fevered dream,<br />
+A white soul lost in a field of scarlet flowers&mdash;<br />
+Love is a search for the lost, the ever vanishing gleam<br />
+Of wings, desires and sorrows and haunted hours.<br />
+<br />
+Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?<br />
+Love is a doubt, an ache, love is a writhing fear.<br />
+Love is a potion drunk when the ship puts out from land,<br />
+Rudderless, sails at full, and with none to steer.<br />
+<br />
+The end is a shattered lamp, a drunken seraph asleep,<br />
+The upturned face of the drowned on a barren beach.<br />
+The glare of noon is o'er us, we are ashamed to weep&mdash;<br />
+The beginning and end of love are devoid of speech.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ON A BUST</span></p>
+
+<p>Your speeches seemed to answer for the nonce&mdash;<br />
+They do not justify your head in bronze!<br />
+Your essays! talent's failures were to you<br />
+Your philosophic gamut, but things true,<br />
+Or beautiful, oh never! What's the pons<br />
+For you to cross to fame?&mdash;Your head in bronze?<br />
+<br />
+What has the artist caught? The sensual chin<br />
+That melts away in weakness from the skin,<br />
+Sagging from your indifference of mind;<br />
+The sullen mouth that sneers at human kind<br />
+For lack of genius to create or rule;<br />
+The superficial scorn that says "you fool!"<br />
+The deep-set eyes that have the mud-cat look<br />
+Which might belong to Tolstoi or a crook.<br />
+The nose half-thickly fleshed and half in point,<br />
+And lightly turned awry as out of joint;<br />
+The eyebrows pointing upward satyr-wise,<br />
+Scarce like Mephisto, for you scarcely rise<br />
+To cosmic irony in what you dream&mdash;<br />
+More like a tomcat sniffing yellow cream.<br />
+The brow! 'Tis worth the bronze it's molded in<br />
+Save for the flat-top head and narrow thin<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+Backhead which shows your spirit has not soared.<br />
+You are a Packard engine in a Ford,<br />
+Which wrecks itself and turtles with its load,<br />
+Too light and powerful to keep the road.<br />
+The master strength for twisting words is caught<br />
+In the swift turning wheels of iron thought.<br />
+With butcher knives your hands can vivisect<br />
+Our butterflies, but you can not erect<br />
+Temples of beauty, wisdom. You can crawl<br />
+Hungry and subtle over Eden's wall,<br />
+And shame half grown up truth, or make a lie<br />
+Full grown as good. You cannot glorify<br />
+Our dreams, or aspirations, or deep thirst.<br />
+To you the world's a fig tree which is curst.<br />
+You have preached every faith but to betray;<br />
+The artist shows us you have had your day.<br />
+<br />
+A giant as we hoped, in truth a dwarf;<br />
+A barrel of slop that shines on Lethe's wharf,<br />
+Which seemed at first a vessel with sweet wine<br />
+For thirsty lips. So down the swift decline<br />
+You went through sloven spirit, craven heart<br />
+And cynic indolence. And here the art<br />
+Of molding clay has caught you for the nonce<br />
+And made your shame our shame&mdash;your head in bronze!<br />
+Some day this bust will lie amid old metals<br />
+Old copper boilers, wires, faucets, kettles.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+Some day it will be melted up and molded<br />
+In door knobs, inkwells, paper knives, or folded<br />
+In leaves and wreaths around the capitals<br />
+Of marble columns, or for arsenals<br />
+Fashioned in something, or in course of time<br />
+Successively made each of these, from grime<br />
+Rescued successively, or made a bell<br />
+For fire or worship, who on earth can tell?<br />
+One thing is sure, you will not long be dust<br />
+When this bronze will be broken as a bust<br />
+And given to the junkman to re-sell.<br />
+You know this and the thought of it is hell!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ARABEL</span></p>
+
+<p>Twists of smoke rise from the limpness of jewelled fingers,<br />
+The softness of Persian rugs hushes the room.<br />
+Under a dragon lamp with a shade the color of coral<br />
+Sit the readers of poems one by one.<br />
+And all the room is in shadow except for the blur<br />
+Of mahogany surface, and tapers against the wall.<br />
+<br />
+And a youth reads a poem of love: forever and ever<br />
+Is his soul the soul of the loved one; a woman sings<br />
+Of the nine months which go to the birth of a soul.<br />
+And after a time under the lamp a man<br />
+Begins to read a letter having no poem to read.<br />
+And the words of the letter flash and die like a fuse<br />
+Dampened by rain&mdash;it's a dying mind that writes<br />
+What Byron did for the Greeks against the Turks.<br />
+And a sickness enters our hearts. The jewelled hands<br />
+Clutch at the arms of the chairs&mdash;about the room<br />
+One hears the parting of lips, and a nervous shifting<br />
+Of feet and arms.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">And I look up and over</span><br />
+The reader's shoulder and see the name of the writer.<br />
+What is it I see? The name of a man I knew!<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>You are an ironical trickster, Time, to bring<br />
+After so many years and into a place like this<br />
+This face before me: hair slicked down and parted<br />
+In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness,<br />
+Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids<br />
+Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.<br />
+Such was your look in a photograph I saw<br />
+In a silver frame on a woman's dresser&mdash;and such<br />
+Your look in life, you thing of flesh alone!<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And then</span><br />
+As a soul looks down on the body it leaves&mdash;<br />
+A body by fever slain&mdash;I look on myself<br />
+As I was a decade ago, while the letter is read:<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">I enter a box</span><br />
+Of a theater with Jim, my friend of fifty,<br />
+I being twenty-two. Two women are in the box<br />
+One of an age for Jim and one of an age for me.<br />
+And mine is dressed in a dainty gown of dimity,<br />
+And she fans herself with a fan of silver spangles<br />
+Till a subtle odor of delicate powder or of herself<br />
+Enters my blood and I stare at her snowy neck,<br />
+And the glossy brownness of her hair until<br />
+She feels my stare, and turns half-view and I see<br />
+How like a Greek's is her nose, with just a little<br />
+Aquiline touch; and I catch the flash of an eye,<br />
+And the glint of a smile on the richness of her lips.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>The company now discourses upon the letter<br />
+But my dream goes on:<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 9em;">I re-live a rapture</span><br />
+Which may be madness, and no man understands<br />
+Until he feels it no more. The youth that was I<br />
+From the theater under the city's lights follows the girl<br />
+Desperate lest in the city's curious chances<br />
+He never sees her again. And boldly he speaks.<br />
+And she and the older woman, her sister<br />
+Smile and speak in turn, and Jim who stands<br />
+While I break the ice comes up&mdash;and so<br />
+Arm in arm we go to the restaurant,<br />
+I in heaven walking with Arabel,<br />
+And Jim with her older sister.<br />
+We drive them home under a summer moon,<br />
+And while I explain to Arabel my boldness,<br />
+And crave her pardon for it, Jim, the devil,<br />
+Laughs apart with her sister while I wonder<br />
+What Jim, the devil, is laughing at. No matter<br />
+To-morrow I walk in the park with Arabel.<br />
+<br />
+Just now the reader of the letter<br />
+Tells of the writer's swift descent<br />
+From wealth to want.<br />
+<br />
+We are in the park next afternoon by the water.<br />
+I look at her white throat full as it were of song.<br />
+And her rounded virginal bosom, beautiful!<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+And I study her eyes, I search to the depths her eyes<br />
+In the light of the sun. They are full of little rays<br />
+Like the edge of a fleur de lys, and she smiles<br />
+At first when I fling my soul at her feet.<br />
+<br />
+But when I repeat I love her, love her only,<br />
+A cloud of wonder passes over her face,<br />
+She veils her eyes. The color comes to her cheeks.<br />
+And when she picks some clover blossoms and tears them<br />
+Her hand is trembling. And when I tell her again<br />
+I love her, love her only, she blots her eyes<br />
+With a handkerchief to hide a tear that starts.<br />
+<br />
+And she says to me: "You do not know me at all,<br />
+How can you love me? You never saw me before<br />
+Last night." "Well, tell me about yourself."<br />
+And after a time she tells me the story:<br />
+About her father who ran away from her mother;<br />
+And how she hated her father, and how she grieved<br />
+When her mother died; and how a good grandmother<br />
+Helped her and helps her now. And how her sister<br />
+Divorced her husband. And then she paused a moment:<br />
+"I am not strong, you'd have to guard me gently,<br />
+And that takes money, dear, as well as love.<br />
+Two years ago I was very ill, and since then<br />
+I am not strong."<br />
+<br/>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">"Well I can work," I said.</span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span><br />
+"And what would you think of a little cottage<br />
+Not too far out with a yard and hosts of roses,<br />
+And a vine on the porch, and a little garden,<br />
+And a dining room where the sun comes in,<br />
+When a morning breeze blows over your brow,<br />
+And you sit across the table and serve me<br />
+And neither of us can speak for happiness<br />
+Without our voices breaking, or lips trembling."<br />
+<br />
+She is looking down with little frowns on her brow.<br />
+"But if ever I had to work, I could not do it,<br />
+I am not really well."<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">"But I can work," I said.</span><br />
+I rise and lift her up, holding her hand.<br />
+She slips her arm through mine and presses it.<br />
+"What a good man you are," she said. "Just like a brother&mdash;<br />
+I almost love you, I believe I love you."<br />
+<br />
+The reader of the letter, being a doctor,<br />
+Is talking learnedly of the writer's case<br />
+Which has the classical marks of paresis.<br />
+<br />
+Next day I look up Jim and rhapsodize<br />
+About a cottage with roses and a garden,<br />
+And a dining room where the sun comes in,<br />
+And Arabel across the table. Jim is smoking<br />
+And flicking the ashes, but never says a word<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+Till I have finished. Then in a quiet voice:<br />
+"Arabel's sister says that Arabel's straight,<br />
+But she isn't, my boy&mdash;she's just like Arabel's sister.<br />
+She knew you had the madness for Arabel.<br />
+That's why we laughed and stood apart as we talked.<br />
+And I'll tell you now I didn't go home that night,<br />
+I shook you at the corner and went back,<br />
+And staid that night. Now be a man, my boy,<br />
+Go have your fling with Arabel, but drop<br />
+The cottage and the roses."<br />
+<br />
+They are still discussing the madman's letter.<br />
+<br />
+And memory permeates me like a subtle drug:<br />
+The memory of my love for Arabel,<br />
+The torture, the doubt, the fear, the restless longing,<br />
+The sleepless nights, the pity for all her sorrows,<br />
+The speculation about her and her sister,<br />
+And what her illness was;<br />
+And whether the man I saw one time was leaving<br />
+Her door or the next door to it, and if her door<br />
+Whether he saw my Arabel or her sister....<br />
+<br />
+The reader of the letter is telling how the writer<br />
+Left his wife chasing the lure of women.<br />
+<br />
+And it all comes back to me as clear as a vision:<br />
+The night I sat with Arabel strong but conquered.<br />
+Whatever I did, I loved her, whatever she was.<br />
+Madness or love the terrible struggle must end.<br />
+She took my hand and said, "You must see my room."<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+We stood in the doorway together and on her dresser<br />
+Was a silver frame with the photograph of a man&mdash;<br />
+I had seen him in life: hair slicked down and parted<br />
+In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness<br />
+Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids<br />
+Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.<br />
+"There is his picture," she said, "ask me whatever you will.<br />
+Take me as mistress or wife, it is yours to decide.<br />
+But take me as mistress and grow like the picture before you,<br />
+Take me as wife and be the good man you can be.<br />
+Choose me as mistress&mdash;how can I do less for dearest?<br />
+Or make me your wife&mdash;fate makes me your mistress or wife."<br />
+"I can leave you," I said. "You can leave me," she echoed,<br />
+"But how about hate in your heart."<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">"You are right," I replied.</span><br />
+The company is now discussing the subject of love&mdash;<br />
+They seem to know little about it.<br />
+<br />
+But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:<br />
+"Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness,<br />
+What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">"Well, it's life," Arabel.</span><br />
+"There's the story of Hamlet, for instance," I added.<br />
+Then fell into silence.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER</span></p>
+
+<p>Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,<br />
+When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.<br />
+So we came out and he went home to wife<br />
+And children, and I started for the club<br />
+Which I call home; and then just like a flash<br />
+You came into my mind. I bought a slug<br />
+And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard<br />
+The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me<br />
+To hear your voice at last&mdash;it was so drowsy,<br />
+Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes<br />
+Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing<br />
+In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....<br />
+<br />
+Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice<br />
+Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine&mdash;<br />
+It showed your understanding, that you know<br />
+How it is with a man, and how it is with me<br />
+Who work by day and sometimes drift by night<br />
+About this hellish city. Though you know<br />
+That I am fifty-one, can you imagine<br />
+My feeling with no children growing up?<br />
+My feeling as of one who sees a play<br />
+And afterwards sits somewhere at a table<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+And talks with friends about the different parts<br />
+Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?<br />
+My feeling with this money which I've made<br />
+And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working<br />
+The money dulls the fancy which could use it<br />
+In splendid dreams or in the art of life.<br />
+Well, here was I ringing your bell at last<br />
+At half-past one, and there you stood before me<br />
+With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands<br />
+So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,<br />
+But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you<br />
+With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you<br />
+Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,<br />
+For that kiss which you gave me at the door....<br />
+<br />
+Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,<br />
+My heart acts queer of late....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">I want to say</span><br />
+Lest I forget it, if you ever hear<br />
+From Arabel or Francis what I said<br />
+To Francis when he told me he intended<br />
+To marry Arabel, why just remember<br />
+Our talk this morning and forget I said it&mdash;<br />
+I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,<br />
+That night we met, I being fifty-one<br />
+And old at what men call the game, looked on<br />
+With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you<br />
+Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;<br />
+Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+And I found you as I'd found others before you,<br />
+But with this difference so it seemed to me:<br />
+What had been false with them was real with you,<br />
+What had been shame with them with you was life,<br />
+What had been craft with them with you was nature,<br />
+What had been sin with them to you was good,<br />
+What had been vice with them to you the honest<br />
+And uncorrupted innocence of a human<br />
+Heart so human looking on our souls.<br />
+What had been coarse to them to you was clean<br />
+As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow<br />
+And move and sing along creation's way.<br />
+You came to me like friendship, what you gave<br />
+Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self<br />
+And least of motive. And it is through you<br />
+That I have risen out of the pit where sneers<br />
+And laughter, looks and words obscene,<br />
+Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,<br />
+As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses<br />
+Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds<br />
+Upon their infinite sailings and the lake<br />
+Washes beneath us, and we lie and think<br />
+How this has been forever and will be<br />
+When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,<br />
+Yet how life is eternal&mdash;just as one<br />
+Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy<br />
+Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme<br />
+The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+The gospel hymns and ritual) that I<br />
+Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.<br />
+For what is our communion, yours and mine,<br />
+If it be not a way of laying hold<br />
+On that mysterious essence which makes one<br />
+Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....<br />
+Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!<br />
+Pour me a little coffee, if you please.<br />
+<br />
+I'll take from my herbarium certain species<br />
+To make my points: Now here there is the woman<br />
+Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.<br />
+She fixes her design upon a man,<br />
+Who's married and the riotous game begins.<br />
+They go along a year or two perhaps.<br />
+Then psychic chemistry performs its part:<br />
+They are in love, or he's in love with her.<br />
+What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:<br />
+That which she gave without love at the first<br />
+She now withdraws in spite of love unless<br />
+He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties<br />
+And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men<br />
+Kill women with a knife or strangle them?<br />
+Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,<br />
+You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.<br />
+She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;<br />
+She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+And when you dance with her she has a way<br />
+Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,<br />
+Which almost lisps as she caresses you<br />
+With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says<br />
+Things with a double meaning, and she smiles<br />
+To carry out her meaning. Well, you think<br />
+The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing<br />
+She lands you up at the appointed place<br />
+With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,<br />
+That have a nervous way of opening<br />
+And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,<br />
+From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;<br />
+Which meeting is a way of saying to you:<br />
+The girl is yours if you will marry her,<br />
+And let her have your money.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Julia, be still;</span><br />
+I can't go on while you are laughing so.<br />
+I know that men are easy, but to see<br />
+Women as women see them is a gift<br />
+That comes to men who reach my age in life....<br />
+<br />
+Well, here's another, here's the type of woman<br />
+Whose power of motherhood conceals the art<br />
+By which she thrives, through which she reaches also<br />
+An apotheosis in society.<br />
+Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.<br />
+And her strength is the race's, and she draws<br />
+The urgings of posterity and leans<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.<br />
+To her a man must sacrifice his life.<br />
+But women, Julia, of whatever type,<br />
+Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,<br />
+And man's life to develop, even to live.<br />
+And like the praying mantis who's devoured<br />
+In the embrace, man is devoured by women<br />
+In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame<br />
+In man's life where he warms him but to suck<br />
+The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,<br />
+Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates&mdash;<br />
+Love is not free which should be wholly free<br />
+For Life's sake.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">On Michigan Avenue</span><br />
+At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see<br />
+In rain or shine a certain tailor walk<br />
+In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.<br />
+That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.<br />
+He has no woman, cannot find a woman,<br />
+Because all women, seeing him, divine<br />
+What surges through him, and within their hearts<br />
+Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun<br />
+Of seeing how denial keeps him walking<br />
+All up and down the boulevard. He's found<br />
+No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.<br />
+I use him for my point. If we could make<br />
+Some fine erotometer one could sit<br />
+And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+Record the waves of longing in the city,<br />
+And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows<br />
+Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,<br />
+Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Julia.</span><br />
+So much for all these things, and now for you<br />
+To whom they lead.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">You'll find among the marshes</span><br />
+The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,<br />
+Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find<br />
+The water lily with white petals and<br />
+A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches<br />
+The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,<br />
+Impales them on its tiny spines, in time<br />
+Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out<br />
+Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall<br />
+Into the water, treasured there like tears<br />
+Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed<br />
+Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.<br />
+The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily<br />
+Well typify the nature of most women<br />
+Who must have blood or soul of man to live&mdash;<br />
+Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale<br />
+Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.<br />
+He read somewhere that primroses will change<br />
+Under your eyes sometimes to something else,<br />
+Become another flower and not a primrose,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+Another species even. So he watched<br />
+And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed<br />
+Has somewhere in its vital self the power<br />
+Of this mutation. What is the origin<br />
+Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,<br />
+Who has mutated: You are not a mother;<br />
+Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;<br />
+Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;<br />
+Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon<br />
+Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down<br />
+To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who<br />
+Rejoices in the secret of man's strength<br />
+And in subduing it.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">You are a flower</span><br />
+Designed to comfort such poor men as I,<br />
+And show the world how love can be a thing<br />
+That asks no more than what it freely gives,<br />
+And gives all&mdash;all some women call the prize<br />
+For life or honor, riches, power or place.<br />
+You are a blossom in the primrose bed<br />
+So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.<br />
+You have mutated, Julia, that is it,<br />
+This flower of you is what I call <i>The Lover</i>!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES</span></p>
+
+<p>I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death&mdash;<br />
+But never a face like Harold's who passed in a throe of pain.<br />
+There were maidens and youths in the bud, and men in the lust of life;<br />
+And women whom child-birth racked till the crying soul slipped through;<br />
+Patriarchs withered with age and nuns ascetical white;<br />
+And one who wasted her virgin wealth in a riot of joy.<br />
+Brothers and sisters at last in a quiet and purple pall,<br />
+Fellow voyagers bound to a port on an ash-blue sea,<br />
+Locked in an utterless grief, in a mystery fearful to dream.<br />
+All of these I have seen&mdash;but the face of Harold the bold<br />
+Looked with a penitent pallor and stared with a sad surprise.<br />
+<br />
+For now at last he was still who never knew rest in life.<br />
+And the ardent heat of his blood was cold as the sweat of a stone.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+Life came in an evil hour and stabbed with a poisoned word<br />
+The heart of a girl who faintly smiled through her tears.<br />
+And her little life was tossed as the eddies that whirl in the hollows<br />
+From the great world-currents that wreck the battle ships at sea.<br />
+And the face of dead Lillian seemed like a rain-ruined flower.<br />
+<br />
+Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day<br />
+When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?<br />
+<br />
+But the face of William the Great was fashioned by life and thought;<br />
+And death made it massive as bronze, and deepened the lines thereof:<br />
+Some for the will and some for patience, and some for hope&mdash;<br />
+Hope for the weal of the world wherein he mightily strove&mdash;<br />
+Yet what did it all bespeak&mdash;what but submission and awe,<br />
+And a trace of pain as one with a sword in his side?<br />
+<br/>
+I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span><br />
+But the sorrow thereof is dumb like the cloth that lies on the brow.<br />
+So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances,<br />
+Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CRY</span></p>
+
+<p>There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears.<br />
+It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears.<br />
+It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres.<br />
+<br />
+It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise,<br />
+That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries,<br />
+Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise.<br />
+<br />
+It may be myself as I was in another life,<br />
+Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife,<br />
+Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife.<br />
+<br />
+The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul<br />
+Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control,<br />
+When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal.<br />
+<br />
+Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod<br />
+Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;<br />
+Perhaps this cry in my heart is nothing but God!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE HELPING HAND</span></p>
+
+<p>Mother, my head is bloody, my breast is red with scars.<br />
+Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?<br />
+<br />
+Mother, my soul is crucified, my thirst is past belief.<br />
+How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?<br />
+<br />
+Mother, I feel the terror and the loveliness of life.<br />
+Tell me of the children, son, and tell me of the wife.<br />
+<br />
+Mother, your face is but a face among a million more.<br />
+You're standing on the deck, my son, and looking at the shore.<br />
+<br />
+I lean against the wall, mother, and struggle hard for breath.<br />
+You must have heard the step, my son, of the patrolman Death.<br />
+<br />
+Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?<br />
+Well, kiss the crucifix, my son, and pass beneath the rod.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE DOOR</span></p>
+
+<p>This is the room that thou wast ushered in.<br />
+Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?<br />
+Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?<br />
+There is no door but death.<br />
+<br />
+Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?<br />
+Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight<br />
+Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore,<br />
+There is no less one door.<br />
+<br />
+Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom,<br />
+The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?<br />
+Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth&mdash;<br />
+There is no door but death.<br />
+<br />
+There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof<br />
+Above the rents within the stairless roof.<br />
+Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor&mdash;<br />
+Who knocks? Unbolt the door!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SUPPLICATION</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>For He knoweth our frame, He remembereth that we are dust.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Psalm
+ciii. 14.</span></p>
+
+<p>Oh Lord, when all our bones are thrust<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beyond the gaze of all but Thine;</span><br />
+And these blaspheming tongues are dust<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which babbled of Thy name divine,</span><br />
+How helpless then to carp or rail<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Against the canons of Thy word;</span><br />
+Wilt Thou, when thus our spirits fail,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord?</span><br />
+<br />
+Here from this ebon speck that floats<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As but a mote within Thine eye,</span><br />
+Vain sneers and curses from our throats<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rise to the vault of Thy fair sky:</span><br />
+Yet when this world of ours is still<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of this all-wondering, tortured horde,</span><br />
+And none is left for Thee to kill&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou knowest that our flesh is grass;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ah! let our withered souls remain</span><br />
+Like stricken reeds of some morass,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bleached, in Thy will, by ceaseless rain.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+Have we not had enough of fire,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enough of torment and the sword?&mdash;</span><br />
+If these accrue from Thy desire&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Dost Thou not see about our feet<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The tangles of our erring thought?</span><br />
+Thou knowest that we run to greet<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">High hopes that vanish into naught.</span><br />
+We bleed, we fall, we rise again;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">How can we be of Thee abhorred?</span><br />
+We are Thy breed, we little men&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilt Thou deny when we deny?</span><br />
+A thousand years are but a day,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A little day within Thine eye:</span><br />
+We thirst for love, we yearn for life;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?</span><br />
+We, beaten, fall upon the knife&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou givest us youth that turns to age;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And strength that leaves us while we seek.</span><br />
+Thou pourest the fire of sacred rage<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In costly vessels all too weak.</span><br />
+Great works we planned in hopes that Thou<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fit wisdom therefor wouldst accord;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+Thou wrotest failure on our brow&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Could we but know, as Thou dost know&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hold the whole scheme at once in mind!</span><br />
+Yet, dost Thou watch our anxious woe<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who piece with palsied hands and blind</span><br />
+The fragments of our little plan,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To thrive and earn Thy blest reward,</span><br />
+And make and keep the world of man&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou settest the sun within his place<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To light the world, the world is Thine,</span><br />
+Put in our hands and through Thy grace<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To be subdued and made divine.</span><br />
+Whether we serve Thee ill or well,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thou knowest our frame, nor canst afford</span><br />
+To leave Thy own for long in hell&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CONVERSATION</span></p>
+<p class="center"><i>The Human Voice</i></p>
+
+<p>You knew then, starting let us say with ether,<br />
+You would become electrons, out of whirling<br />
+Would rise to atoms; then as an atom resting<br />
+Till through Yourself in other atoms moving<br />
+And by the fine affinity of power<br />
+Atom with atom massed, You would go on<br />
+Over the crest of visible forms transformed,<br />
+Would be a molecule, a little system<br />
+Wherein the atoms move like suns and planets<br />
+With satellites, electrons. So as worlds build<br />
+From star-dust, as electron to electron,<br />
+The same attraction drawing, molecules<br />
+Would wed and pass over the crest again<br />
+Of visible forms, lying content as crystals,<br />
+Or colloids&mdash;ready now to use the gleam<br />
+Of life. As 'twere I see You with a match,<br />
+As one in darkness lights a candle, and one<br />
+Sees not his friend's form in the shadowed room<br />
+Until the candle's lighted? Even his form<br />
+Is darkened by the new-made light, he stands<br />
+So near it! Well, I add to all I've asked<br />
+Whether You knew the cell born to the glint<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Of that same lighted candle would not rest<br />
+Even as electrons rest not&mdash;but would surge<br />
+Over the crest of visible forms, become<br />
+Beneath our feet things hidden from the eye<br />
+However aided,&mdash;as above our heads<br />
+Beyond the Milky Way great systems whirl<br />
+Beyond the telescope,&mdash;become bacilli,<br />
+Am&oelig;ba, starfish, swimming things, on land<br />
+The serpent, and then birds, and beasts of prey<br />
+The tiger (You in the tiger) on and on<br />
+Surging above the crest of visible forms until<br />
+The ape came&mdash;oh what ages they are to us&mdash;<br />
+But still creation flies on wings of light&mdash;<br />
+Then to the man who roamed the frozen fields<br />
+Neither man nor ape,&mdash;we found his jaw, You know,<br />
+At Heidelberg, in a sand-pit. On and on<br />
+Till Babylon was builded, and arose<br />
+Jerusalem and Memphis, Athens, Rome,<br />
+Venice and Florence, Paris, London, Berlin,<br />
+New York, Chicago&mdash;did You know, I ask,<br />
+All this would come of You in ether moving?<br />
+<br /></p>
+<p class="center"><i>A Voice</i><br />
+I knew.<br />
+<br /></p>
+<p class="center"><i>The Human Voice</i><br />
+You knew that man was born to be destroyed,<br />
+That as an atom perfect, whole, at ease,<br />
+Drawn to some other atom, is broken, changed<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+And rises o'er the crest of visible things<br />
+To something else&mdash;that man must pass as well<br />
+Through equal transformation. And You knew<br />
+The unutterable things of man's life: From the first<br />
+You saw his wracked Deucalion-soul that looks<br />
+Backward on life that rises, where he rose<br />
+Out of the stones. You saw him looking forward<br />
+Over the purple mists that hide the gulf.<br />
+Ere the green cell rose, even in the green cell<br />
+You saw the sequences of thought&mdash;You saw<br />
+That one would say, "All's matter" and another,<br />
+"All's mind," and man's mind which reflects the image,<br />
+Could not envision it. That even worship<br />
+Of what you are would be confused by cries<br />
+From India or Palestine. That love<br />
+Which sees itself beginning in the seeds,<br />
+Which fly and seek each other, maims<br />
+The soul at the last in loss of child or friend<br />
+Father or mother. And You knew that sex,<br />
+Ranging from plants through beasts and up to us<br />
+Had ties of filth&mdash;And out of them would rise<br />
+Diverse philosophies to tear the world.<br />
+You knew, when the green cell arose, that even<br />
+The You which formed it moving on would bring<br />
+Races and breeds, madmen, tyrants, slaves,<br />
+The idiot child, the murderer, the insane&mdash;<br />
+All springing from the action of one law.<br />
+You knew the enmity that lies between<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+The lives of micro-beings and our own. You knew<br />
+How man would rise to vision of himself:<br />
+Immortal only in the race's life.<br />
+And past the atom and the first glint of life,<br />
+Saw him with soul enraptured, yet o'ershadowed<br />
+Amid self-consciousness!<br />
+<br /></p>
+<p class="center"><i>A Voice</i><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">I knew.</span><br />
+But this your fault: You see me as apart,<br />
+Over, removed, at enmity with You.<br />
+You are in Me, and of Me, even at one<br />
+With Me. But there's your soul&mdash;your soul may be<br />
+The germinal cell of vaster evolution.<br />
+Why try to tell you? If I gave a cell<br />
+Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:<br />
+"After me what, a stalk, a flower, life<br />
+That swims or crawls?" And if I gave to you<br />
+Wisdom to say: "You shall become a reed<br />
+By the water's edge"&mdash;how could the cell foresee<br />
+What the reed is, bending beneath the wind<br />
+When the lake ripples and the skies are blue<br />
+As larkspur? Therefore I, who moved in darkness<br />
+Becoming light in suns and light in souls<br />
+And mind with thought&mdash;for what is thought but light<br />
+Sprung from the clash of ether?&mdash;I am with you.<br />
+And if beyond this stable state that stands<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+For your life here (as cells are whole and balanced<br />
+Till the inner urge bring union, then a breaking<br />
+And building up to higher life), there is<br />
+No memory of this world nor of your thought,<br />
+Nor sense of life on this world lived and borne;<br />
+Or whether you remember, know yourself<br />
+As one who lived here, suffered here, aspired&mdash;<br />
+What does it matter?&mdash;you cannot be lost,<br />
+As I am lost not. Therefore be at peace.<br />
+And from the laws whose orbits cross and run<br />
+To seeming tangles, find the law through which<br />
+Your soul shall be perfected till it draw,&mdash;<br />
+As the green cell the sunlight draws and turns<br />
+Its chemical effulgence into life&mdash;<br />
+My inner splendor. All the rest is mine<br />
+In infinite time. For if I should unroll<br />
+The parchment of the future, it were vain&mdash;<br />
+You could not read it.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">TERMINUS</span></p>
+
+<p>Terminus shows the ways and says,<br />
+"All things must have an end."<br />
+Oh, bitter thought we hid away<br />
+When first you were my friend.<br />
+<br />
+We hid it in the darkest place<br />
+Our hearts had place to hide,<br />
+And took the sweet as from a spring<br />
+Whose waters would abide.<br />
+<br />
+For neither life nor the wide world<br />
+Has greater store than this:&mdash;<br />
+The thought that runs through hands and eyes<br />
+And fills the silences.<br />
+<br />
+There is a void the agéd world<br />
+Throws over the spent heart;<br />
+When Life has given all she has,<br />
+And Terminus says depart.<br />
+<br />
+When we must sit with folded hands,<br />
+And see with inward eye<br />
+A void rise like an arctic breath<br />
+To hollow the morrow's sky.<br />
+<br/>
+To-morrow is, and trembling leaves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span><br />
+And 'wildered winds from Thrace<br />
+Look for you where your face has bloomed,<br />
+And where may bloom your face.<br />
+<br />
+Beyond the city, over the hill,<br />
+Under the anguished moon,<br />
+The winds and my dreams seek after you<br />
+By meadow, water and dune.<br />
+<br />
+All things must have an end, we know;<br />
+But oh, the dreaded end;<br />
+Whether in life, whether in death,<br />
+To lose the cherished friend.<br />
+<br />
+To lose in life the cherished friend,<br />
+While the myrtle tree is green;<br />
+To live and have the cherished friend<br />
+With only the world between.<br />
+<br />
+With only the wide, wide world between,<br />
+Where memory has mortmain.<br />
+Life pours more wine in the heart of man<br />
+Than the heart of man can contain.<br />
+<br />
+Oh, heart of man and heart of woman,<br />
+Thirsting for blood of the vine,<br />
+Life waits till the heart has lived too much<br />
+And then pours in new wine!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">MADELINE</span></p>
+
+<p>I almost heard your little heart<br />
+Begin to beat, and since that hour<br />
+Your life has grown apace and blossomed,<br />
+Fed by the same miraculous power,<br />
+<br />
+That moved the rivulet of your life,<br />
+And made your heart begin to beat.<br />
+Now all day your steps are a-patter.<br />
+Oh, what swift and musical feet!<br />
+<br />
+You sleep. I wait to see you wake,<br />
+With wonder-eyes and hands that reach.<br />
+I laugh to hear your thoughts that gather<br />
+Too fast on your budding lips for speech.<br />
+<br />
+Your sunny hair is cut as if<br />
+'Twere trimmed around a yellow crock.<br />
+How gay the ribbon, and oh, how cunning<br />
+The flaring skirt of the little frock!<br />
+<br />
+You build and play and search and pry,<br />
+And hunt for dolls and forgotten toys.<br />
+Why do you never tire of playing,<br />
+Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?<br />
+<br/>
+You will not sleep? You are tired of the house?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span><br />
+You are just as naughty as you can be.<br />
+Madeline, Madeline, come to the garden,<br />
+And play with Marcia under the tree!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">MARCIA</span></p>
+
+<p>Madeline's hair is straight and yours<br />
+Is just as curly as tendril vines;<br />
+And she is fair, but a deeper color<br />
+Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.<br />
+<br />
+A serious wisdom burns and glows<br />
+Steadily in your dark-eyed look.<br />
+Already a wit and a little stoic&mdash;<br />
+Perhaps you are going to write a book,<br />
+<br />
+Or paint a picture, or sing or act<br />
+The part of Katherine or Juliet.<br />
+I believe you were born with the gift of knowing<br />
+When to remember and when to forget.<br />
+<br />
+And when to stifle and kill a grief,<br />
+And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.<br />
+The heart that has most strength for feeling<br />
+Must have the strength to conquer the pain.<br />
+<br />
+You understand? It seems that you do&mdash;<br />
+Though you cannot utter a word to me.<br />
+Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline<br />
+Building a doll-house under the tree!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE ALTAR</span></p>
+
+<p>My heart is an altar whereon<br />
+Many sacrificial fires have been kindled<br />
+In praise of spring and Aphrodite.<br />
+<br />
+My heart is an altar of chalcedony,<br />
+Crowned with a tablet of bronze,<br />
+Blacked with smoke, scarred with fire,<br />
+And scented with the aromatic bitterness<br />
+Of dead incense.<br />
+<br />
+Albeit let us murmur a little Doric prayer<br />
+Over the ashes which lie scattered around the altar;<br />
+For the April rain has wept over them,<br />
+And from them the crocus smelts its Roman gold.<br />
+<br />
+What though there are remnants here<br />
+Of faded coronals,<br />
+And bits of silver string<br />
+Torn from forgotten harps?<br />
+Perfect amid the ashes sleeps a cup of amethyst.<br />
+Let us take it and pour the sea from it,<br />
+And while the savor of dead lips is washed away,<br />
+Let us lift our hands to this sky of hyacinth.<br />
+Let us light the altar newly, for lo! it is spring.<br />
+<br/>
+Bring from the re-kindled woodland<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span><br />
+Flames of columbine, jewel-weed and trumpet-creeper,<br />
+There where the woodman burns the fallen tree,<br />
+And scented smoke arises<br />
+On azure wings between the branches,<br />
+Budding with adolescent life.<br />
+With these let us light the altar,<br />
+That a scarlet flame may lean<br />
+Against the silver sea.<br />
+<br />
+For thou art fire also,<br />
+And air, and water, and the resurgent earth,<br />
+For thou art woman, thou art love.<br />
+Thou art April of the Arcadian moon,<br />
+Thou art the swift sun racing through snowy clouds,<br />
+Thou art the creative silence of flowering valleys.<br />
+Thy face is the apple tree in bloom;<br />
+Thine eyes the glimpses of green water<br />
+When the tree's blossoms shake<br />
+As soft winds fan them.<br />
+Thy hair is flame blown against the sea's mist&mdash;<br />
+Thou art spring.<br />
+<br />
+The fire on the altar burns brightly,<br />
+And the sea sparkles in the sun.<br />
+Let us murmur a Doric prayer<br />
+For the gift of love,<br />
+For the gift of life,<br />
+Oh Life! Oh Love! We lift our hands to thee!<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SOUL'S DESIRE</span></p>
+
+<p>Her soul is like a wolf that stands<br />
+Where sunlight falls between the trees<br />
+Of a sparse forest's leafless edge,<br />
+When Spring's first magic moveth these.<br />
+<br />
+Her soul is like a little brook,<br />
+Thin edged with ice against the leaves,<br />
+Where the wolf drinks and is alone,<br />
+And where the woodbine interweaves.<br />
+<br />
+A bank late covered by the snow,<br />
+But lighted by the frozen North;<br />
+Her soul is like a little plot<br />
+That one white blossom bringeth forth.<br />
+<br />
+Her soul is slim, like silver slips,<br />
+And straight, like flags beside a stream.<br />
+Her soul is like a shape that moves<br />
+And changes in a wonder dream.<br />
+<br />
+Who would pursue her clasps a cloud,<br />
+And taketh sorrow for his zeal.<br />
+Memory shall sing him many songs<br />
+While bound upon the torture wheel.<br />
+<br/>
+Her soul is like a wolf that glides<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span><br />
+By moonlight o'er a phantom ridge;<br />
+Her face is like a light that runs<br />
+Beneath the shadow of a bridge.<br />
+<br />
+Her voice is like a woodland cry<br />
+Heard in a summer's desolate hour.<br />
+Her eyes are dim; her lips are faint,<br />
+And tinctured like the cuckoo flower.<br />
+<br />
+Her little breasts are like the buds<br />
+Of tulips in a place forlorn.<br />
+Her soul is like a mandrake bloom<br />
+Standing against the crimson moon.<br />
+<br />
+Her dream is like the fenny snake's,<br />
+That warms him in the noonday's fire.<br />
+She hath no thought, nor any hope,<br />
+Save of herself and her desire.<br />
+<br />
+She is not life; she is not death;<br />
+She is not fear, or joy or grief.<br />
+Her soul is like a quiet sea<br />
+Beneath a ruin-haunted reef.<br />
+<br />
+She is the shape the sailor sees,<br />
+That slips the rock without a sound.<br />
+She is the soul that comes and goes<br />
+And leaves no mark, yet makes a wound.<br />
+<br/>
+She is the soul that hunts and flies;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span><br />
+She is a world-wide mist of care.<br />
+She is the restlessness of life,<br />
+Its rapture and despair.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE</span></p>
+
+<p>It was a hermit on Whitsunday<br />
+That came to the Table Round.<br />
+"King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight<br />
+May the Holy Grail be found?"<br />
+<br />
+"By never a Knight that liveth now;<br />
+By none that feasteth here."<br />
+King Arthur marvelled when he said,<br />
+"He shall be got this year."<br />
+<br />
+Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot<br />
+And there did mount his steed,<br />
+And hastened to a pleasant town<br />
+That stood in knightly need.<br />
+<br />
+Where many people him acclaimed,<br />
+He passed the Corbin pounte,<br />
+And there he saw a fairer tower<br />
+Than ever was his wont.<br />
+<br />
+And in that tower for many years<br />
+A dolorous lady lay,<br />
+Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched,<br />
+And also Queen le Fay.<br />
+<br/>
+And Launcelot loosed her from those pains,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span><br />
+And there a dragon slew.<br />
+Then came King Pelles out and said,<br />
+"Your name, brave Knight and true?"<br />
+<br />
+"My name is Pelles, wit ye well,<br />
+And King of the far country;<br />
+And I, Sir Knight, am cousin nigh<br />
+To Joseph of Armathie."<br />
+<br />
+"I am Sir Launcelot du Lake."<br />
+And then they clung them fast;<br />
+And yede into the castle hall<br />
+To take the king's repast.<br />
+<br />
+Anon there cometh in a dove<br />
+By the window's open fold,<br />
+And in her mouth was a rich censer,<br />
+That shone like Ophir gold.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was such savor<br />
+As bloweth over sea<br />
+From a land of many colored flowers<br />
+And trees of spicery.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was meat and drink,<br />
+And a damsel passing fair,<br />
+Betwixt her hands of tulip-white,<br />
+A golden cup did bear.<br />
+<br/>
+"O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span><br />
+"What may this marvel mean?"<br />
+"That is," said Pelles, "richest thing<br />
+That any man hath seen."<br />
+<br />
+"O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this sight avail?"<br />
+"Now wit ye well," said King Pelles,<br />
+"That was the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br />
+Then by this sign King Pelles knew<br />
+Elaine his fair daughter<br />
+Should lie with Launcelot that night,<br />
+And Launcelot with her.<br />
+<br />
+And that this twain should get a child<br />
+Before the night should fail,<br />
+Who would be named Sir Galahad,<br />
+And find the Holy Grail.<br />
+<br />
+Then cometh one hight Dame Brisen<br />
+With Pelles to confer,<br />
+"Now, wit ye well, Sir Launcelot<br />
+Loveth but Guinevere."<br />
+<br />
+"But if ye keep him well in hand,<br />
+The while I work my charms,<br />
+The maid Elaine, ere spring of morn,<br />
+Shall lie within his arms."<br />
+<br/>
+Dame Brisen was the subtlest witch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span><br />
+That was that time in life;<br />
+She was as if Beelzebub<br />
+Had taken her to wife.<br />
+<br />
+Then did she cause one known of face<br />
+To Launcelot to bring,<br />
+As if it came from Guinevere,<br />
+Her wonted signet ring.<br />
+<br />
+"By Holy Rood, thou comest true,<br />
+For well I know thy face.<br />
+Where is my lady?" asked the Knight,<br />
+"There in the Castle Case?"<br />
+<br />
+"'Tis five leagues scarcely from this hall,"<br />
+Up spoke that man of guile.<br />
+"I go this hour," said Launcelot,<br />
+"Though it were fifty mile."<br />
+<br />
+Then sped Dame Brisen to the king<br />
+And whispered, "An we thrive,<br />
+Elaine must reach the Castle Case<br />
+Ere Launcelot arrive."<br />
+<br />
+Elaine stole forth with twenty knights<br />
+And a goodly company.<br />
+Sir Launcelot rode fast behind,<br />
+Queen Guinevere to see.<br />
+<br/>
+Anon he reached the castle door.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><br />
+Oh! fond and well deceived.<br />
+And there it seemed the queen's own train<br />
+Sir Launcelot received.<br />
+<br />
+"Where is the queen?" quoth Launcelot,<br />
+"For I am sore bestead,"<br />
+"Have not such haste," said Dame Brisen,<br />
+"The queen is now in bed."<br />
+<br />
+"Then lead me thither," saith he,<br />
+"And cease this jape of thine."<br />
+"Now sit thee down," said Dame Brisen,<br />
+"And have a cup of wine."<br />
+<br />
+"For wit ye not that many eyes<br />
+Upon you here have stared;<br />
+Now have a cup of wine until<br />
+All things may be prepared."<br />
+<br />
+Elaine lay in a fair chamber,<br />
+'Twixt linen sweet and clene.<br />
+Dame Brisen all the windows stopped,<br />
+That no day might be seen.<br />
+<br />
+Dame Brisen fetched a cup of wine<br />
+And Launcelot drank thereof.<br />
+"No more of flagons," saith he,<br />
+"For I am mad for love."<br />
+<br/>
+Dame Brisen took Sir Launcelot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span><br />
+Where lay the maid Elaine.<br />
+Sir Launcelot entered the bed chamber<br />
+The queen's love for to gain.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot kissed the maid Elaine,<br />
+And her cheeks and brows did burn;<br />
+And then they lay in other's arms<br />
+Until the morn's underne.<br />
+<br />
+Anon Sir Launcelot arose<br />
+And toward the window groped,<br />
+And then he saw the maid Elaine<br />
+When he the window oped.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah, traitoress," saith Launcelot,<br />
+And then he gat his sword,<br />
+"That I should live so long and now<br />
+Become a knight abhorred."<br />
+<br />
+"False traitoress," saith Launcelot,<br />
+And then he shook the steel.<br />
+Elaine skipped naked from the bed<br />
+And 'fore the knight did kneel.<br />
+<br />
+"I am King Pelles own daughter<br />
+And thou art Launcelot,<br />
+The greatest knight of all the world.<br />
+This hour we have begot."<br />
+<br/>
+"Oh, traitoress Brisen," cried the knight,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span><br />
+"Oh, charmed cup of wine;<br />
+That I this treasonous thing should do<br />
+For treasures such as thine."<br />
+<br />
+"Have mercy," saith maid Elaine,<br />
+"Thy child is in my womb."<br />
+Thereat the morning's silvern light<br />
+Flooded the bridal room.<br />
+<br />
+That light it was a benison;<br />
+It seemed a holy boon,<br />
+As when behind a wrack of cloud<br />
+Shineth the summer moon.<br />
+<br />
+And in the eyes of maid Elaine<br />
+Looked forth so sweet a faith,<br />
+Sir Launcelot took his glittering sword,<br />
+And thrust it in the sheath.<br />
+<br />
+"So God me help, I spare thy life,<br />
+But I am wretch and thrall,<br />
+If any let my sword to make<br />
+Dame Brisen's head to fall."<br />
+<br />
+"So have thy will of her," she said,<br />
+"But do to me but good;<br />
+For thou hast had my fairest flower,<br />
+Which is my maidenhood."<br />
+<br/>
+"And we have done the will of God,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span><br />
+And the will of God is best."<br />
+Sir Launcelot lifted the maid Elaine<br />
+And hid her on his breast.<br />
+<br />
+Anon there cometh in a dove,<br />
+By the window's open fold,<br />
+And in her mouth was a rich censer<br />
+That shone like beaten gold.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was such savor,<br />
+As bloweth over sea,<br />
+From a land of many colored flowers,<br />
+And trees of spicery.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was meat and drink,<br />
+And a damsel passing fair,<br />
+Betwixt her hands of silver white<br />
+A golden cup did bear.<br />
+<br />
+"O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this marvel mean?"<br />
+"That is," she said, "the richest thing<br />
+That any man hath seen."<br />
+<br />
+"O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this sight avail?"<br />
+"Now wit ye well," said maid Elaine,<br />
+"This is the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br/>
+And then a nimbus light hung o'er<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span><br />
+Her brow so fair and meek;<br />
+And turned to orient pearls the tears<br />
+That glistered down her cheek.<br />
+<br />
+And a sound of music passing sweet<br />
+Went in and out again.<br />
+Sir Launcelot made the sign of the cross,<br />
+And knelt to maid Elaine.<br />
+<br />
+"Name him whatever name thou wilt,<br />
+But be his sword and mail<br />
+Thrice tempered 'gainst a wayward world,<br />
+That lost the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot sadly took his leave<br />
+And rode against the morn.<br />
+And when the time was fully come<br />
+Sir Galahad was born.<br />
+<br />
+Also he was from Jesu Christ,<br />
+Our Lord, the eighth degree;<br />
+Likewise the greatest knight this world<br />
+May ever hope to see.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE DEATH OF SIR LAUNCELOT</span></p>
+
+<p>Sir Launcelot had fled to France<br />
+For the peace of Guinevere,<br />
+And many a noble knight was slain,<br />
+And Arthur lay on his bier.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot took ship from France<br />
+And sailed across the sea.<br />
+He rode seven days through fair England<br />
+Till he came to Almesbury.<br />
+<br />
+Then spake Sir Bors to Launcelot:<br />
+The old time is at end;<br />
+You have no more in England's realm<br />
+In east nor west a friend.<br />
+<br />
+You have no friend in all England<br />
+Sith Mordred's war hath been,<br />
+And Queen Guinevere became a nun<br />
+To heal her soul of sin.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot answered never a word<br />
+But rode to the west countree<br />
+Until through the forest he saw a light<br />
+That shone from a nunnery.<br />
+<br/>
+Sir Launcelot entered the cloister,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span><br />
+And the queen fell down in a swoon.<br />
+Oh blessed Jesu, saith the queen,<br />
+For thy mother's love, a boon.<br />
+<br />
+Go hence, Sir Launcelot, saith the queen,<br />
+And let me win God's grace.<br />
+My heavy heart serves me no more<br />
+To look upon thy face.<br />
+<br />
+Through you was wrought King Arthur's death,<br />
+Through you great war and wrake.<br />
+Leave me alone, let me bleed,<br />
+Pass by for Jesu's sake.<br />
+<br />
+Then fare you well, saith Launcelot,<br />
+Sweet Madam, fare you well.<br />
+And sythen you have left the world<br />
+No more in the world I dwell.<br />
+<br />
+Then up rose sad Sir Launcelot<br />
+And rode by wold and mere<br />
+Until he came to a hermitage<br />
+Where bode Sir Bedivere.<br />
+<br />
+And there he put a habit on<br />
+And there did pray and fast.<br />
+And when Sir Bedivere told him all<br />
+His heart for sorrow brast.<br />
+<br/>
+How that Sir Mordred, traitorous knight
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span><br/>
+Betrayed his King and sire;<br />
+And how King Arthur wounded, died<br />
+Broken in heart's desire.<br />
+<br />
+And so Sir Launcelot penance made,<br />
+And worked at servile toil;<br />
+And prayed the Bishop of Canterbury<br />
+His sins for to assoil.<br />
+<br />
+His shield went clattering on the wall<br />
+To a dolorous wail of wind;<br />
+His casque was rust, his mantle dust<br />
+With spider webs entwined.<br />
+<br />
+His listless horses left alone<br />
+Went cropping where they would,<br />
+To see the noblest knight of the world<br />
+Upon his sorrow brood.<br />
+<br />
+Anon a Vision came in his sleep,<br />
+And thrice the Vision saith:<br />
+Go thou to Almesbury for thy sin,<br />
+Where lieth the queen in death.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot cometh to Almesbury<br />
+And knelt by the dead queen's bier;<br />
+Oh none may know, moaned Launcelot,<br />
+What sorrow lieth here.<br />
+<br/>
+What love, what honor, what defeat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span><br />
+What hope of the Holy Grail.<br />
+The moon looked through the latticed glass<br />
+On the queen's face cold and pale.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot kissed the ceréd cloth,<br />
+And none could stay his woe,<br />
+Her hair lay back from the oval brow,<br />
+And her nose was clear as snow.<br />
+<br />
+They wrapped her body in cloth of Raines,<br />
+They put her in webs of lead.<br />
+They coffined her in white marble,<br />
+And sang a mass for the dead.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot and seven knights<br />
+Bore torches around the bier.<br />
+They scattered myrrh and frankincense<br />
+On the corpse of Guinevere.<br />
+<br />
+They put her in earth by King Arthur<br />
+To the chant of a doleful tune.<br />
+They heaped the earth on Guinevere<br />
+And Launcelot fell in a swoon.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot went to the hermitage<br />
+Some Grace of God to find;<br />
+But never he ate, and never he drank<br />
+And there he sickened and dwined.<br />
+<br/>
+Sir Launcelot lay in a painful bed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span><br />
+And spake with a dreary steven;<br />
+Sir Bishop, I pray you shrive my soul<br />
+And make it clean for heaven.<br />
+<br />
+The Bishop houseled Sir Launcelot,<br />
+The Bishop kept watch and ward.<br />
+Bury me, saith Sir Launcelot,<br />
+In the earth of Joyous Guard.<br />
+<br />
+Three candles burned the whole night through<br />
+Till the red dawn looked in the room.<br />
+And the white, white soul of Launcelot<br />
+Strove with a black, black doom.<br />
+<br />
+I see the old witch Dame Brisen,<br />
+And Elaine so straight and tall&mdash;<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The shadows dance on the wall.<br />
+<br />
+I see long hands of dead women,<br />
+They clutch for my soul eftsoon;<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+'Tis the drifting light of the moon.<br />
+<br />
+I see three angels, saith he,<br />
+Before a silver urn.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The candles do but burn.<br />
+<br/>
+I see a cloth of red samite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span><br />
+O'er the holy vessels spread.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The great dawn groweth red.<br />
+<br />
+I see all the torches of the world<br />
+Shine in the room so clear.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The white dawn draweth near.<br />
+<br />
+Sweet lady, I behold the face<br />
+Of thy dear son, our Lord,<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The sun shines on your sword.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Galahad outstretcheth hands<br />
+And taketh me ere I fail&mdash;<br />
+Sir Launcelot's body lay in death<br />
+As his soul found the Holy Grail.<br />
+<br />
+They laid his body in the quire<br />
+Upon a purple pall.<br />
+He was the meekest, gentlest knight<br />
+That ever ate in hall.<br />
+<br />
+He was the kingliest, goodliest knight<br />
+That ever England roved,<br />
+The truest lover of sinful man<br />
+That ever woman loved.<br />
+<br/>
+I pray you all, fair gentlemen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span><br />
+Pray for his soul and mine.<br />
+He lived to lose the heart he loved<br />
+And drink but bitter wine.<br />
+<br />
+He wrought a woe he knew not of,<br />
+He failed his fondest quest,<br />
+Now sing a psalter, read a prayer<br />
+May all souls find their rest.<br /></p>
+<p class="right">Amen.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN MICHIGAN</span></p>
+
+<p>You wrote:<br />
+"Come over to Saugatuck<br />
+And be with me on the warm sand,<br />
+And under cool beeches and aromatic cedars."<br />
+And just then no one could do a thing in the city<br />
+For the lure of far places, and something that tugged<br />
+At one's heart because of a June sky,<br />
+And stretches of blue water,<br />
+And a warm wind blowing from the south.<br />
+What could I do but take a boat<br />
+And go to meet you?<br />
+<br />
+And when to-day is not enough,<br />
+But you must live to-morrow also;<br />
+And when the present stands in the way<br />
+Of something to come,<br />
+And there is but one you would see,<br />
+All the interval of waiting is a wall.<br />
+And so it was I walked the landward deck<br />
+With flapping coat and hat pulled down;<br />
+And I sat on the leeward deck and looked<br />
+At the streaming smoke of the funnels,<br />
+And the far waste of rhythmical water,<br />
+And at the gulls flying by our side.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+There was music on board and dancing,<br />
+But I could not take part.<br />
+For above all there was the bluest sky,<br />
+And around us the urge of magical distances.<br />
+And just because you were in the violins,<br />
+And in everything, and were wholly the world<br />
+Of sense and sight,<br />
+It was too much. One could not live it<br />
+And make it all his own&mdash;<br />
+It was too much.<br />
+And I wondered where the rest could be going,<br />
+Or what they thought of water and sky<br />
+Without knowing you.<br />
+<br />
+But at four o'clock there was a rim,<br />
+A circled edge of rainbow color<br />
+Which suspired, widened and narrowed under your gaze:<br />
+It was the phantasy of straining eyes,<br />
+Or land&mdash;and it was land.<br />
+It was distant trees.<br />
+And then it was dunes, bluffs of yellow sand.<br />
+We began to wonder how far it was&mdash;<br />
+Five miles, or ten miles&mdash;<br />
+Surely only five miles!&mdash;<br />
+But at last whatever it was we swung to the end.<br />
+We rounded the lighthouse pier,<br />
+Almost before we knew.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+We slowed our speed in a dizzy river of black,<br />
+We drifted softly to dock.<br />
+<br />
+I took the ferry,<br />
+I crossed the river,<br />
+I ran almost through the little batch<br />
+Of fishermen's shacks.<br />
+I climbed the winding road of the hill,<br />
+And dove in a shadowy quiet<br />
+Of paths of moss and dancing leaves,<br />
+And straight stretched limbs of giant pines<br />
+On patches of sky.<br />
+I ran to the top of the bluff<br />
+Where the lodge-house stood.<br />
+And there the sunlit lake burst on me<br />
+And wine-like air.<br />
+And below me was the beach<br />
+Where the serried lines of hurrying water<br />
+Came up like rank on rank of men<br />
+And fell with a shout on the rocks!<br />
+I plunged, I stumbled, I ran<br />
+Down the hill,<br />
+For I thought I saw you,<br />
+And it was you, you were there!<br />
+And I shall never forget your cry,<br />
+Nor how you raised your arms and cried,<br />
+And laughed when you saw me.<br />
+And there we were with the lake<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+And the sun with his ruddy search-light blaze<br />
+Stretching back to lost Chicago.<br />
+The sun, the lake, the beach, and ourselves<br />
+Were all that was left of Time,<br />
+All else was lost.<br />
+<br />
+You were making a camp.<br />
+You had bent from the bank a cedar bough<br />
+And tied it down.<br />
+And over it flung a quilt of many colors,<br />
+And under it spread on the voluptuous silt<br />
+Gray blankets and canvas pillows.<br />
+I saw it all in a glance.<br />
+And there in dread of eyes we stood<br />
+Scanning the bluff and the beach,<br />
+Lest in the briefest touch of lips<br />
+We might be seen.<br />
+<br />
+For there were eyes, or we thought<br />
+There were eyes, on the porch of the lodge,<br />
+And eyes along the forest's rim on the hill,<br />
+And eyes on the shore.<br />
+But a minute past there was no sun,<br />
+Only a star that shone like a match which lights<br />
+To a blue intenseness amid the glow of a hearth.<br />
+And we sat on the sand as dusk came down<br />
+In a communion of silence and low words.<br />
+Till you said at last: "We'll sup at the lodge,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+Then say good night to me and leave<br />
+As if to stay overnight in the village.<br />
+But instead make a long detour through the wood<br />
+And come to the shore through that ravine,<br />
+Be here at the tent at midnight."<br />
+<br />
+And so I did.<br />
+I stole through echoless ways,<br />
+Where no twigs broke and where I heard<br />
+My heart beat like a watch under a pillow.<br />
+And the whippoorwills were singing.<br />
+And the sound of the surf below me<br />
+Was the sound of silver-poplar leaves<br />
+In a wind that makes no pause....<br />
+I hurried down the steep ravine,<br />
+And a bat flew up at my feet from the brush<br />
+And crossed the moon.<br />
+To my left was the lighthouse,<br />
+And black and deep purples far away,<br />
+And all was still.<br />
+Till I stood breathless by the tent<br />
+And heard your whispered welcome,<br />
+And felt your kiss.<br />
+<br />
+Lovers lay at mid-night<br />
+On roofs of Memphis and Athens<br />
+And looked at tropical stars<br />
+As large as golden beetles.<br />
+Nothing is new, save this,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+And this is always new.<br />
+And there in your tent<br />
+With the balm of the mid-night breeze<br />
+Sweeping over us,<br />
+We looked at one great star<br />
+Through a flap of your many-colored tent,<br />
+And the eternal quality of rapture<br />
+And mystery and vision flowed through us.<br />
+<br />
+Next day we went to Grand Haven,<br />
+For my desire was your desire,<br />
+Whatever wish one had the other had.<br />
+And up the Grand River we rowed,<br />
+With rushes and lily pads about us,<br />
+And the sand hills back of us,<br />
+Till we came to a quiet land,<br />
+A lotus place of farms and meadows.<br />
+And we tied our boat to Schmitty's dock,<br />
+Where we had a dinner of fish.<br />
+And where, after resting, to follow your will<br />
+We drifted back to Spring Lake&mdash;<br />
+And under a larger moon,<br />
+Now almost full,<br />
+Walked three miles to The Beeches,<br />
+By a winding country road,<br />
+Where we had supper.<br />
+And afterwards a long sleep,<br />
+Waking to the song of robins.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+And that day I said:<br />
+There are wild places, blue water, pine forests,<br />
+There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads<br />
+Around Elk Lake&mdash;shall we go?<br />
+And we went, for your desire was mine.<br />
+And there we climbed hills,<br />
+And ate apples along the shaded ways,<br />
+And rolled great boulders down the steeps<br />
+To watch them splash in the water.<br />
+And we stood and wondered what was beyond<br />
+The farther shore two miles away.<br />
+And we came to a place on the shore<br />
+Where four great pine trees stood,<br />
+And underneath them wild flowers to the edge<br />
+Of sand so soft for naked feet.<br />
+And here, for not a soul was near,<br />
+We stripped and swam far out, laughing, rejoicing,<br />
+Rolling and diving in those great depths<br />
+Of bracing water under a glittering sun.<br />
+<br />
+There were farm houses enough<br />
+For food and shelter.<br />
+But something urged us on.<br />
+One knows the end and dreads the end<br />
+Yet seeks the end.<br />
+And you asked, "Is there a town near?<br />
+Let's see a town."<br />
+So we walked to Traverse City<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Through cut-over land and blasted<br />
+Trunks and stumps of pine,<br />
+And by the side of desolate hills.<br />
+But when we got to Traverse City<br />
+You were not content, nor was I.<br />
+Something urged us on.<br />
+Then you thought of Northport<br />
+And of its Norse and German fishermen,<br />
+And its quaint piers where they smoke fish.<br />
+So we drove for thirty miles<br />
+In a speeding automobile<br />
+Over hills, around sudden curves, into warm coverts,<br />
+Or hollows, sometimes at the edge of the Bay,<br />
+Again on the hill,<br />
+From where we could see Old Mission<br />
+Amid blues and blacks, across a score of miles of the Bay,<br />
+Waving like watered silk under the moon!<br />
+And by meadows of clover newly cut,<br />
+And by peach orchards and vineyards.<br />
+But when we came to the little town<br />
+Already asleep, though it was but eight o'clock,<br />
+And only a few drowsy lamps<br />
+With misty eyelids shone from a store or two,<br />
+I said, "Do you see those twinkling lights?<br />
+That's Northport Point, that's the Cedar Cabin&mdash;<br />
+Let's go to the Cedar Cabin."<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+And so we crossed the Bay<br />
+Amid great waves in a plunging launch,<br />
+And a roaring breeze and a great moon,<br />
+For now the moon was full.<br />
+<br />
+So here was the Cedar Cabin<br />
+On a strip of land as wide as a house and lawn,<br />
+And on one side Lake Michigan,<br />
+And on one side the Bay.<br />
+There were distances of color all around,<br />
+And stars and darknesses of land and trees,<br />
+And at the point the lighthouse.<br />
+And over us the moon,<br />
+And over the balcony of our room<br />
+All of these, where we lay till I slept,<br />
+Listening to the water of the lake,<br />
+And the water of the Bay.<br />
+And we saw the moon sink like a red bomb,<br />
+And we saw the stars change<br />
+As the sky wheeled....<br />
+Now this was the end of the earth,<br />
+For this strip of land<br />
+Ran out to a point no larger than one of the stumps<br />
+We saw on the desolate hills.<br />
+And moreover it seemed to dive under,<br />
+Or waste away in a sudden depth of water.<br />
+And around it was a swirl,<br />
+To the north the bounding waves of the Lake,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+And to the south the Bay which seemed the Lake.<br />
+But could we speak of it, even though<br />
+I saw your eyes when you thought of it?<br />
+A sigh of wind blew through the rustic temple<br />
+When we saw this symbol together,<br />
+And neither spoke.<br />
+But that night, somewhere in the beginning of drowsiness,<br />
+You said: "There is no further place to go,<br />
+We must retrace."<br />
+And I awoke in a torrent of light in the room,<br />
+Hearing voices and steps on the walk:<br />
+I looked for you,<br />
+But you had arisen.<br />
+Then I dressed and searched for you,<br />
+But you were gone.<br />
+Then I stood for long minutes<br />
+Looking at a sail far out at sea<br />
+And departed too.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE STAR</span></p>
+
+<p>I am a certain god<br />
+Who slipped down from a remote height<br />
+To a place of pools and stars.<br />
+And I sat invisible<br />
+Amid a clump of trees<br />
+To watch the madmen.<br />
+<br />
+There were cries and groans about me,<br />
+And shouts of laughter and curses.<br />
+Figures passed by with self-absorbed contempt,<br />
+Wrinkling in bitter smiles about their lips.<br />
+Others hurried on with set eyes<br />
+Pursuing something.<br />
+Then I said this is the place for mad Frederick&mdash;<br />
+Mad Frederick will be here.<br />
+<br />
+But everywhere I could see<br />
+Figures sitting or standing<br />
+By little pools.<br />
+Some seemed grown into the soil<br />
+And were helpless.<br />
+And of these some were asleep.<br />
+Others laughed the laughter<br />
+That comes from dying men<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+Trying to face Death.<br />
+And others said "I should be content,"<br />
+And others said "I will fly."<br />
+Whereupon sepulchral voices muttered,<br />
+As of creatures sitting or hanging head down<br />
+From limbs of the trees,<br />
+"We will not let you."<br />
+And others looked in their pools<br />
+And clasped hands and said "Gone, all gone."<br />
+By other pools there were dead bodies:<br />
+Some of youth, some of age.<br />
+They had given up the fight,<br />
+They had drunk poisoned water,<br />
+They had searched<br />
+Until they fell&mdash;<br />
+All had gone mad!<br />
+<br />
+Then I, a certain god,<br />
+Curious to know<br />
+What it is in pools and stars<br />
+That drives men and women<br />
+Over the earth in this quest<br />
+Waited for mad Frederick.<br />
+And then I heard his step.<br />
+<br />
+I knew that long ago<br />
+He sat by one of these pools<br />
+Enraptured of a star's image.<br />
+And that hands, for his own good,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+As they said,<br />
+Dumped clay into the pool<br />
+And blotted his star.<br />
+And I knew that after that<br />
+He had said, "They will never spy again<br />
+Upon my ecstasy.<br />
+They will never see me watching one star.<br />
+I will fly by rivers,<br />
+And by little brooks,<br />
+And by the edge of lakes,<br />
+And by little bends of water,<br />
+Where no wind blows,<br />
+And glance at stars as I pass.<br />
+They will never spy again<br />
+Upon my ecstasy."<br />
+<br />
+And I knew that mad Frederick<br />
+In this flight<br />
+Through years of restless and madness<br />
+Was caught by the image of a star<br />
+In a mere beyond a meadow<br />
+Down from a hill, under a forest,<br />
+And had said,<br />
+"No one sees;<br />
+Here I can find life,<br />
+Through vision of eternal things."<br />
+But they had followed him.<br />
+They stood on the brow of the hill,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+And when they saw him gazing in the water<br />
+They rolled a great stone down the hill,<br />
+And shattered the star's image.<br />
+Then mad Frederick fled with laughter.<br />
+It echoed through the wood.<br />
+And he said, "I will look for moons,<br />
+I will punish them who disturb me,<br />
+By worshiping moons."<br />
+But when he sought moons<br />
+They left him alone,<br />
+And he did not want the moons.<br />
+And he was alone, and sick from the moons,<br />
+And covered as with a white blankness,<br />
+Which was the worst madness of all.<br />
+<br />
+And I, a certain god,<br />
+Waiting for mad Frederick<br />
+To enter this place of pools and stars,<br />
+Saw him at last.<br />
+With a sigh he looked about upon his fellows<br />
+Sitting or standing by their pools.<br />
+And some of the pools were covered with scum,<br />
+And some were glazed as of filth,<br />
+And some were grown with weeds,<br />
+And some were congealed as of the north wind,<br />
+And a few were yet pure,<br />
+And held the star's image.<br />
+And by these some sat and were glad,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+Others had lost the vision.<br />
+The star was there, but its meaning vanished.<br />
+And mad Frederick, going here and there,<br />
+With no purpose,<br />
+Only curious and interested<br />
+As I was, a certain god,<br />
+Came by a certain pool<br />
+And saw a star.<br />
+<br />
+He shivered,<br />
+He clasped his hands,<br />
+He sank to his knees,<br />
+He touched his lips to the water.<br />
+<br />
+Then voices from the limbs of the trees muttered:<br />
+"There he is again."<br />
+"He must be driven away."<br />
+"The pool is not his."<br />
+"He does not belong here."<br />
+So as when bats fly in a cave<br />
+They swooped from their hidings in the trees<br />
+And dashed themselves in the pool.<br />
+Then I saw what these flying things were&mdash;<br />
+But no matter.<br />
+They were illusions, evil and envious<br />
+And dull,<br />
+But with power to destroy.<br />
+And mad Frederick turned away from the pool<br />
+And covered his eyes with his arms.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+Then a certain god,<br />
+Of less power than mine,<br />
+Came and sat beside me and said:<br />
+"Why do you allow this to be?<br />
+They are all seeking,<br />
+Why do you not let them find their heart's delight?<br />
+Why do you allow this to be?"<br />
+But I did not answer.<br />
+The lesser god did not know<br />
+That I have no power,<br />
+That only the God has the power.<br />
+And that this must be<br />
+In spite of all lesser gods.<br />
+<br />
+And I saw mad Frederick<br />
+Arise and ascend to the top of a high hill,<br />
+And I saw him find the star<br />
+Whose image he had seen in the pool.<br />
+Then he knelt and prayed:<br />
+"Give me to understand, O Star,<br />
+Your inner self, your eternal spirit,<br />
+That I may have you and not images of you,<br />
+So that I may know what has driven me through the world,<br />
+And may cure my soul.<br />
+For I know you are Eternal Love,<br />
+And I can never escape you.<br />
+And if I cannot escape you,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+Then I must serve you.<br />
+And if I must serve you,<br />
+It must be to good and not ill&mdash;<br />
+You have brought me from the forest of pools<br />
+And the images of stars,<br />
+Here to the hill's top.<br />
+Where now do I go?<br />
+And what shall I do?"<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">THE END</p>
+
+<p class="center">Printed in the United States of America.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p class="center">The following pages contain advertisements of
+books by the same author or on kindred subjects</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span><br/></p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>EDGAR LEE MASTERS' REMARKABLE BOOK</i></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Spoon River Anthology</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Masters' book is considered by many to be the most striking and
+important contribution to American letters in recent years</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="blockquot">"An American 'Comedie Humaine' brings more characters into its
+pages than any American novel.... Takes its place among the masterpieces
+which are not of a time or a locality."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"A work splendid in observation, marvelous in the artistry of exclusion,
+yet of democratic inclusiveness, piercingly analytic of character, of plastic
+facility of handling, sympathetic underneath irony, humorous, pathetic, tragic,
+comic, particular yet universal&mdash;a Comedie Humaine&mdash;a creation of
+a whole community of personalities."&mdash;<i>William Marion Reedy.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"We find a strange impressiveness, akin to greatness, in the 'Spoon
+River Anthology' of Edgar Lee Masters.... It is a book which, whether
+one likes it or not, one must respect."&mdash;<i>The New Republic.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Mr. Masters speaks with a new and authentic voice. It is an illuminating
+piece of work, and an unforgettable one."&mdash;<i>Chicago Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The natural child of Wait Whitman ... the only poet with true Americanism
+in his bones."&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, $1.25; leather, $1.50</i><br /></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Good Friday and Other Poems</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> JOHN MASEFIELD</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "The Everlasting Mercy" and "The Widow in the Bye
+Street," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>The title piece in this volume is a dramatic poem
+of sixty pages, the action of which takes place in the
+time of Christ. The characters introduced include
+Pontius Pilate, Joseph of Ramah and Herod. The
+play, for it is really such, is written in rhyme and is
+one of Mr. Masefield's most interesting and important
+contributions to literature. In addition to this there
+are in the book many sonnets and short poems.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Reveals an interesting development in poetic thought and expression
+... a new Masefield ... who has never written with more dignity, nor
+with more artistry. Those who go in quest of Beauty will find her here....
+Here is beauty of impression, beauty of expression, beauty of thought,
+and beauty of phrase."&mdash;<i>The New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">The Man Against the Sky</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "The Porcupine," "Captain Craig and Other Poems," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.00</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>It has been some years since Mr. Robinson has
+given us a new collection of poems. Those who
+remember "Captain Craig and Other Poems," a volume
+which brought to its author the heartiest of congratulations,
+placing him at once in the rank of those
+American writers whose contributions to literature
+are of permanent value, will welcome this new work
+and will find that their anticipation of it and hopes
+for it are to be pleasantly realized. It is a book
+which well carries out that early promise and which
+helps to maintain Mr. Robinson's position in letters
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Battle and Other Poems</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> WILFRID WILSON GIBSON</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Daily Bread," "Fires," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>Here with that intensely human note exhibited
+in his poems of the working classes, Mr. Gibson
+sings of the life of the soldier. There are many
+moods in the book, for the author has well caught
+the flow of spirits from gaiety to despair which
+makes up the soldier's days. The chief characteristic
+of the little pen pictures is their vividness, the
+way in which they bring before the reader the
+thoughts and feelings of those whose lives may be
+offered up for their country any moment. In addition
+to these poems of battle there are others in the
+collection on varying themes.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Six French Poets</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> AMY LOWELL</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed," "A Dome of Many-Coloured
+Glass," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 8vo, $2.50</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A brilliant series of biographical and critical essays dealing
+with &Eacute;mile Verhaeren, Albert Samain, Remy de Gourmont,
+Henri de Régnier, Francis Jammes, and Paul Fort, by one of the
+foremost living American poets.</p>
+
+<p>The translations make up an important part of the book, and
+together with the French originals constitute a representative
+anthology of the poetry of the period.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Barrett Wendell, of Harvard University, says:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Seems to me as unusual&mdash;in the happiest sense of the word,
+... I find the book a model, in total effect, of what a work
+with such purpose ought to be."</p>
+
+<p>William Lyon Phelps, Professor of English Literature, Yale University, says:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"This is, I think, the most valuable work on contemporary
+French literature that I have seen for a long time. It is written
+by one who has a thorough knowledge of the subject and who is
+herself an American poet of distinction. She has the knowledge,
+the sympathy, the penetration, and the insight&mdash;all necessary
+to make a notable book of criticism. It is a work that
+should be widely read in America."<br/></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">OTHER BOOKS BY AMY LOWELL</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="huge">Sword Blades and Poppy Seed</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boards, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The
+Book of the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in
+our poetry, worthy of companionship to the great romantic
+lyrics of Coleridge."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i><br/></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="huge">A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boards, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal flavor,
+a loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality.... The
+child poems are particularly graceful."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 75%;" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="big">Transcriber's Notes:</p>
+
+<p>Punctuation has been corrected without note.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the
+original.</p>
+
+<p>It is not always possible to determine if a new stanza begins at the top
+of a printed page, but every effort has been made by the transcriber to
+retain stanza breaks where appropriate.</p>
+
+
+<p>*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***</p>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+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: Songs and Satires
+
+Author: Edgar Lee Masters
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36149]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
+ ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
+
+ MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
+ LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
+ MELBOURNE
+
+ THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
+ TORONTO
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ _By_
+ EDGAR LEE MASTERS
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"
+
+
+ New York
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1916,
+ BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
+
+ Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1916.
+ Reprinted March, June, 1916.
+
+ Norwood Press
+ J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+ Norwood, Mass., U.S.A
+
+
+
+
+For permission to print in book form certain of these poems I wish to
+acknowledge an indebtedness to _Poetry_, _The Smart Set_, _The Little
+Review_, _The Cosmopolitan Magazine_, and William Marion Reedy, Editor
+of _Reedy's Mirror_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ SILENCE 1
+
+ ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE 4
+
+ THE COCKED HAT 10
+
+ THE VISION 18
+
+ SO WE GREW TOGETHER 21
+
+ RAIN IN MY HEART 31
+
+ THE LOOP 32
+
+ WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES 40
+
+ IN THE CAR 41
+
+ SIMON SURNAMED PETER 43
+
+ ALL LIFE IN A LIFE 47
+
+ WHAT YOU WILL 56
+
+ THE CITY 57
+
+ THE IDIOT 65
+
+ HELEN OF TROY 68
+
+ O GLORIOUS FRANCE 71
+
+ FOR A DANCE 74
+
+ WHEN LIFE IS REAL 76
+
+ THE QUESTION 78
+
+ THE ANSWER 79
+
+ THE SIGN 80
+
+ WILLIAM MARION REEDY 82
+
+ A STUDY 85
+
+ PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN 88
+
+ IN THE CAGE 91
+
+ SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE 95
+
+ LOVE IS A MADNESS 97
+
+ ON A BUST 98
+
+ ARABEL 101
+
+ JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER 108
+
+ THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES 116
+
+ THE CRY 119
+
+ THE HELPING HAND 120
+
+ THE DOOR 121
+
+ SUPPLICATION 122
+
+ THE CONVERSATION 125
+
+ TERMINUS 130
+
+ MADELINE 132
+
+ MARCIA 134
+
+ THE ALTAR 135
+
+ SOUL'S DESIRE 137
+
+ BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE 140
+
+ THE DEATH OF LAUNCELOT 149
+
+ IN MICHIGAN 156
+
+ THE STAR 166
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+
+
+SILENCE
+
+
+ I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,
+ And the silence of the city when it pauses,
+ And the silence of a man and a maid,
+ And the silence for which music alone finds the word,
+ And the silence of the woods before the winds of spring begin,
+ And the silence of the sick
+ When their eyes roam about the room.
+ And I ask: For the depths
+ Of what use is language?
+ A beast of the field moans a few times
+ When death takes its young:
+ And we are voiceless in the presence of realities--
+ We cannot speak.
+
+ A curious boy asks an old soldier
+ Sitting in front of the grocery store,
+ "How did you lose your leg?"
+ And the old soldier is struck with silence,
+ Or his mind flies away,
+ Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg.
+ It comes back jocosely
+ And he says, "A bear bit it off."
+ And the boy wonders, while the old soldier
+ Dumbly, feebly lives over
+ The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,
+ The shrieks of the slain,
+ And himself lying on the ground,
+ And the hospital surgeons, the knives,
+ And the long days in bed.
+ But if he could describe it all
+ He would be an artist.
+ But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds
+ Which he could not describe.
+
+ There is the silence of a great hatred,
+ And the silence of a great love,
+ And the silence of a deep peace of mind,
+ And the silence of an embittered friendship.
+ There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,
+ Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,
+ Comes with visions not to be uttered
+ Into a realm of higher life.
+ And the silence of the gods who understand each other without speech.
+ There is the silence of defeat.
+ There is the silence of those unjustly punished;
+ And the silence of the dying whose hand
+ Suddenly grips yours.
+ There is the silence between father and son,
+ When the father cannot explain his life,
+ Even though he be misunderstood for it.
+
+ There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.
+ There is the silence of those who have failed;
+ And the vast silence that covers
+ Broken nations and vanquished leaders.
+ There is the silence of Lincoln,
+ Thinking of the poverty of his youth.
+ And the silence of Napoleon
+ After Waterloo.
+ And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc
+ Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus"--
+ Revealing in two words all sorrow, all hope.
+ And there is the silence of age,
+ Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it
+ In words intelligible to those who have not lived
+ The great range of life.
+
+ And there is the silence of the dead.
+ If we who are in life cannot speak
+ Of profound experiences,
+ Why do you marvel that the dead
+ Do not tell you of death?
+ Their silence shall be interpreted
+ As we approach them.
+
+
+
+
+ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE
+
+
+ Antonio loved the Lady Clare.
+ He caught her to him on the stair
+ And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,
+ And drew her lips in his, and drew
+ Her soul out like a torch's flare.
+ Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;
+ Her senses in a vortex swound.
+ She tore him loose and turned around,
+ And reached her chamber in a bound
+ Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.
+
+ She closed the door and turned the lock,
+ Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.
+ She reeled as drunken from the shock.
+ Before her eyes the devils skipped,
+ She thought she heard the devils mock.
+ For had her soul not been as pure
+ As sifted snow, could she endure
+ Antonio's passion and be sure
+ Against his passion's strength and lure?
+ Lean fears along her wonder slipped.
+
+ Outside she heard a drunkard call,
+ She heard a beggar against the wall
+ Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall
+ Struck through the riot like a sword,
+ And gashed the midnight's festival.
+ She watched the city through the pane,
+ The old Silenus half insane,
+ The idiot crowd that drags its chain--
+ And then she heard the bells again,
+ And heard the voices with the word:
+
+ Ecco il santo! Up the street
+ There was the sound of running feet
+ From closing door and window seat,
+ And all the crowd turned on its way
+ The Saint of Poverty to greet.
+ He passed. And then a circling thrill,
+ As water troubled which was still,
+ Went through her body like a chill,
+ Who of Antonio thought until
+ She heard the Saint begin to pray.
+
+ And then she turned into the room
+ Her soul was cloven through with doom,
+ Treading the softness and the gloom
+ Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,
+ And China's magical perfume.
+ She sickened from the vases hued
+ In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd
+ Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,
+ And tapestries that showed a brood
+ Of leopards by a pool!
+
+ Candles of wax she lit before
+ A pier glass standing from the floor;
+ Up to the ceiling, off she tore
+ With eager hands her jewels, then
+ The silken vesture which she wore.
+ Her little breasts so round to see
+ Were budded like the peony.
+ Her arms were white as ivory,
+ And all her sunny hair lay free
+ As marigold or celandine.
+
+ Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase
+ Of crackled turquoise, in her face
+ Was memory of the mad embrace
+ Antonio gave her on the stair,
+ And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.
+ Like pigeon blood her lips were red.
+ She clasped her bands above her head.
+ Under her arms the waxlight shed
+ Delicate halos where was spread
+ The downy growth of hair.
+
+ Such sudden sin the virgin knew
+ She quenched the tapers as she blew
+ Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw
+ Herself in tears upon her knees,
+ And round her couch the curtain drew.
+ She called upon St. Francis' name,
+ Feeling Antonio's passion maim
+ Her body with his passion's flame
+ To save her, save her from the shame
+ Of fancies such as these!
+
+ "Go by mad life and old pursuits,
+ The wine cup and the golden fruits,
+ The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,
+ I would praise God forevermore
+ With harps of gold and silver lutes."
+ She stripped the velvet from her couch
+ Her broken spirit to avouch.
+ She saw the devils slink and slouch,
+ And passion like a leopard crouch
+ Half mirrored on the polished floor.
+
+ Next day she found the saint and said:
+ I would be God's bride, I would wed
+ Poverty and I would eat the bread
+ That you for anchorites prepare,
+ For my soul's sake I am in dread.
+ Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,
+ Put off this gown of green snake cloth,
+ Put on one somber as a moth,
+ Then come to me and make your troth
+ And I will clip your golden hair.
+
+ She went and came. But still there lay,
+ A gem she did not put away,
+ A locket twixt her breasts, all gay
+ In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,
+ And inlay work of fruit and spray.
+ St. Francis felt it as he slipped
+ His hand across her breast and whipped
+ Her golden tresses ere he clipped--
+ He closed his eyes then as he gripped
+ The shears, plunged the shears through.
+
+ The waterfall of living gold.
+ The locks fell to the floor and rolled,
+ And curled like serpents which unfold.
+ And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.
+ Of worldly glory manifold.
+ She thrilled to feel him take and hide
+ The locket from her breast, a tide
+ Of passion caught them side by side.
+ He was the bridegroom, she the bride--
+ Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.
+
+ Thus was the Lady Clare debased
+ To sack cloth and around her waist
+ A rope the jeweled belt replaced.
+ Her feet made free of silken hose
+ Naked in wooden sandals cased
+ Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then
+ They housed her in St. Damian
+ And here she prayed for poor women
+ And here St. Francis sought her when
+ His faith sank under earthly woes.
+
+ Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme
+ And took to wine and got the lime
+ Of hatred on his soul, in time
+ Grew healed though left a little lame,
+ And laughed about it in his prime;
+ When he could see with crystal eyes
+ That love is a winged thing which flies;
+ Some break the wings, some let them rise
+ From earth like God's dove to the skies
+ Diffused in heavenly flame.
+
+
+
+
+THE COCKED HAT
+
+Would that someone would knock Mr. Bryan into a cocked hat.--WOODROW
+WILSON.
+
+
+ It ain't really a hat at all, Ed:
+ You know that, don't you?
+ When you bowl over six out of the nine pins,
+ And the three that are standing
+ Are the triangular three in front,
+ You've knocked the nine into a cocked hat.
+ If it was really a hat, he would be knocked in, too.
+ Which he hardly is. For a man with money,
+ And a man who can draw a crowd to listen
+ To what he says, ain't all-in yet....
+ Oh yes, defeated
+ And killed off a dozen times, but still
+ He's one of the three nine pins that's standing ...
+ Eh? Why, the other is Teddy, the other
+ Wilson, we'll say. We'll see, perhaps.
+ But six are down to make the cocked hat--
+ That's me and thousands of others like me,
+ And the first-rate men who were cuffed about
+ After the Civil War,
+ And most of the more than six million men
+ Who followed this fellow into the ditch,
+ While he walked down the ditch and stepped to the level--
+ Following an ideal!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember how slim he was,
+ And trim he was,
+ With black hair and pale brow,
+ And the hawk-like nose and flashing eyes,
+ Not turning slowly like an owl
+ But with a sudden eagle motion?...
+
+ One time, in '96, he came here
+ And we had just a dollar and sixty cents
+ In the treasury of the organization.
+ So I stuck his lithograph on a pole
+ And started out for the station.
+ By the time we got back here to Clark street
+ Four thousand men were marching in line,
+ And a band that was playing for an opening
+ Of a restaurant on Franklin street
+ Had left the job and was following his carriage.
+ Why, it took all the money Mark Hanna could raise
+ To beat me, with nothing but a pole
+ And a lithograph.
+ And it wasn't because he was one of the prophets
+ Come back to earth again.
+ It shows how human hearts are hungry
+ How wonderfully true they are--
+ And how they will rise and follow a man
+ Who seems to see the truth!
+ Well, these fellows who marched are the cocked hat,
+ And I am the cocked hat and the six millions,
+ And more are the cocked hat,
+ Who got themselves despised or suspected
+ Of ignorance or something for being with him.
+ But still, he's one of the pins that's standing.
+ He got the money that he went after,
+ And he has a place in history, perhaps--
+ Because we took the blow and fell down
+ When the ripping ball went wild on the alley.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For we were radicals,
+ And he wasn't a radical.
+ Eh? Why, a radical stands for freedom,
+ And for truth--which he never finds
+ But always looks for.
+ A radical is not a moralist.
+ A radical doesn't say:
+ "This is true and you must believe it;
+ This is good and you must accept it,
+ And if you don't believe it and accept it
+ We'll get a law and make you,
+ And if you don't obey the law, we'll kill you--"
+ Oh no! A radical stands for freedom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont
+ In '97 on Jackson's day?
+ Bryan and Altgeld walked together
+ Out to the banquet room.
+ That's the time he said the bolters must
+ Bring fruits meet for repentance--ha! ha! Oh, Gawd!--
+ They never did it and they didn't have to,
+ For they had made friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,
+ Even as he did, a little later, in his own way.
+ Well, Darrow was there that night.
+ I thought it was terribly raw in him,
+ But he said to Bryan, there, in a group:
+ "You'd better go back to Lincoln and study
+ Science, history, philosophy,
+ And read Flaubert's Madam something-or-other,
+ And quit this village religious stuff.
+ You're head of the party before you are ready
+ And a leader should lead with thought."
+ And Bryan turned to the others and said:
+ "Darrow's the only man in the world
+ Who looks down on me for believing in God."
+ "Your kind of a God," snapped Darrow.
+ Honest, Ed, I didn't see this religious business
+ In Bryan in '96 or 1900.
+ Oh well, I knew he went to Church,
+ And talked as statesmen do of God--
+ But McKinley did it, and I used to laugh:
+ "We've got a man to match McKinley,
+ And it's good for us, in a squeeze like this,
+ We didn't nominate some fellow
+ Ethical culture or Unitarian."
+ You see, the newspapers and preachers then
+ Were raising such a hullabaloo
+ About irreligion and dishonesty,
+ And calling old Altgeld an anarchist,
+ And comparing us to Robespierre
+ And the guillotine boys in France.
+ And a little of this religion came in handy.
+ The same as if you saw a Mason button on me,
+ You'd know, you see--but Gee!
+ He was 24-carat religious,
+ A cover-to-cover man....
+ He was a trained collie,
+ And he looked like a lion,
+ There in the convention of '96--What do you know about that?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But right here, I tell you he ain't a hypocrite,
+ This ain't a pose. But I'll tell you:
+ In '96 when they knocked him out,
+ I know what he said to himself as well
+ As if I heard him say it ...
+ I'll tell you in a minute.
+ But suppose you were giving a lecture on the constitution,
+ And you got mixed on your dates,
+ And the audience rotten-egged you,
+ And some one in the confusion
+ Stole the door receipts,
+ And there you were, disgraced and broke!
+ But suppose you could just change your clothes,
+ And lecture to the same audience
+ On the religious nature of Washington,
+ And be applauded and make money--
+ You'd do it, wouldn't you?
+ Well, this is what Bill said to himself:
+ "I'm naturally regular and religious.
+ I'm a moral man and I can prove it
+ By any one in Marion County,
+ Or Jacksonville or Lincoln, Nebraska.
+ I'm a radical, but a radical
+ Alone can be religious.
+ I belong to the church, if not to the bank,
+ Of the people who defeated me.
+ And I'll prove to religious people
+ That I'm a man to be trusted--
+ And just what a radical is.
+ And I'll make some money while winning the votes
+ Of the churches over the country."...
+
+ That's it--it ain't hypocrisy,
+ It's using what you are for ends,
+ When you find yourself in trouble.
+ And this accounts for "The Prince of Peace"--
+ Except no one but him could write it--
+ And "The Value of an Ideal"--
+ (Which is money in bank and several farms) ...
+
+ His place in history?
+ One time my grandfather, who was nearly blind,
+ Went out to sow some grass seed.
+ They had two sacks in the barn,
+ One with grass seed, one with fertilizer,
+ And he got the sack with fertilizer,
+ And scattered it over the ground,
+ Thinking he was sowing grass.
+ And as he was finishing up, a grandchild,
+ Dorothy, eight years old,
+ Followed him, dropping flower seeds.
+ Well, after a time
+ That was the greatest patch of weeds
+ You ever saw! And the old man sat,
+ Half blind, on the porch, and said:
+ "Good land, that grass is growing!"
+ And there was nothing but weeds except
+ A few nasturtiums here and there
+ That Dorothy had sown....
+ Well, I forgot.
+ There was a sunflower in one corner
+ That looked like a man with a golden beard
+ And a mass of tangled, curly hair--
+ And a pumpkin growing near it....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Say, Ed! lend me eighty dollars
+ To pay my life insurance.
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION
+
+
+ Of that dear vale where you and I have lain
+ Scanning the mysteries of life and death
+ I dreamed, though how impassable the space
+ Of time between the present and the past!
+ This was the vision that possessed my mind;
+ I thought the weird and gusty days of March
+ Had eased themselves in melody and peace.
+ Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,
+ Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh
+ Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs
+ Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;
+ And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;
+ The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;
+ The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;
+ Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries
+ Of awakened life had blossomed into May,
+ Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair
+ Blew music from the stops of watery stems,
+ And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,
+ Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.
+ Now as I lay in vision by the stream
+ That flows amidst our well beloved vale,
+ I looked throughout the vista stretched between
+ Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;
+ The other wooded, thick and quite obscure
+ With overgrowth, rank in the luxury
+ Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse
+ Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope
+ That met the grassy level of the vale;--
+ But still within the shadow of those woods,
+ Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,
+ There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths
+ Between them, up and on into the wood.
+ Here, as the sun had left his midday peak
+ The incommunicable blue of heaven blent
+ With his fierce splendor, filling all the air
+ With softened glory, while the pasturage
+ Trembled with color of the poppy blooms
+ Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.
+ Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream
+ Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.
+ Then as I looked upon the widest space
+ Of open meadow where the sunlight fell
+ In veils of tempered radiance, I saw
+ The form of one who had escaped the care
+ And equal dullness of our common day.
+ For like a bright mist rising from the earth
+ He made appearance, growing more distinct
+ Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre
+ Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.
+ Yea, I did see the glory of his hair
+ Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting
+ The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale
+ His figure stood distinct and his own shade
+ Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach
+ Augur of good, as if in hidden ways
+ Of loveliness the gods do still appear
+ The counselors of men, and even where
+ Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,
+ I cried, "Apollo"--and his form dissolved,
+ As if the nymphs of echo, who took up
+ The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,
+ By that same flight had startled the great god
+ To vanishment. And thereupon I woke
+ And disarrayed the figment of my thought.
+ For of the very air, magic with hues,
+ Blent with the distant objects, I had formed
+ The splendid apparition, and so knew
+ It was, alas! a dream within a dream!
+
+
+
+
+"SO WE GREW TOGETHER"
+
+
+ Reading over your letters I find you wrote me
+ "My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope
+ Said "master"--all as I had been your very son,
+ And not the orphan whom you adopted.
+ Well, you were father to me! And I can recall
+ The things you did for me or gave me:
+ One time we rode in a box car to Springfield
+ To see the greatest show on earth;
+ And one time you gave me redtop boots,
+ And one time a watch, and one time a gun.
+ Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice
+ Like a rooster trying to crow in August
+ Hatched in April, we'll say.
+ And you went about wrapped up in silence
+ With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors
+ Of what they were doing to you, and how
+ They wronged you--and we were poor--so poor!
+ And I could not understand why you failed,
+ And why if you did good things for the people
+ The people did not sustain you.
+ And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan,
+ So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser,
+ Or so little to be forgiven?...
+
+ They crowded you hard in those days.
+ But you fought like a wounded lion
+ For yourself I know, but for us, for me.
+ At last you fell ill, and for months you tottered
+ Around the streets as thin as death,
+ Trying to earn our bread, your great eyes glowing
+ And the silence around you like a shawl!
+ But something in you kept you up.
+ You grew well again and rosy with cheeks
+ Like an Indian peach almost, and eyes
+ Full of moonlight and sunlight, and a voice
+ That sang, and a humor that warded
+ The arrows off. But still between us
+ There was reticence; you kept me away
+ With a glittering hardness; perhaps you thought
+ I kept you away--for I was moving
+ In spheres you knew not, living through
+ Beliefs you believed in no more, and ideals
+ That were just mirrors of unrealities.
+ As a boy can be I was critical of you.
+ And reasons for your failures began to arise
+ In my mind--I saw specific facts here and there
+ With no philosophy at hand to weld them
+ And synthesize them into one truth--
+ And a rush of the strength of youth
+ Deluded me into thinking the world
+ Was something so easily understood and managed
+ While I knew it not at all in truth.
+ And an adolescent egotism
+ Made me feel you did not know me
+ Or comprehend the all that I was.
+ All this you divined....
+
+ So it went. And when I left you and passed
+ To the world, the city--still I see you
+ With eyes averted, and feel your hand
+ Limp with sorrow--you could not speak.
+ You thought of what I might be, and where
+ Life would take me, and how it would end--
+ There was longer silence. A year or two
+ Brought me closer to you. I saw the play now
+ And the game somewhat and understood your fights
+ And enmities, and hardnesses and silences,
+ And wild humor that had kept you whole--
+ For your soul had made it as an antitoxin
+ To the world's infections. And you swung to me
+ Closer than before--and a chumship began
+ Between us....
+
+ What vital power was yours!
+ You never tired, or needed sleep, or had a pain,
+ Or refused a delight. I loved the things now
+ You had always loved, a winning horse,
+ A roulette wheel, a contest of skill
+ In games or sports ... long talks on the corner
+ With men who have lived and tell you
+ Things with a rich flavor of old wisdom or humor;
+ A woman, a glass of whisky at a table
+ Where the fatigue of life falls, and our reserves
+ That wait for happiness come up in smiles,
+ Laughter, gentle confidences. Here you were
+ A man with youth, and I a youth was a man,
+ Exulting in your braveries and delight in life.
+ How you knocked that scamp over at Harry Varnell's
+ When he tried to take your chips! And how I,
+ Who had thought the devil in cards as a boy,
+ Loved to play with you now and watch you play;
+ And watch the subtle mathematics of your mind
+ Prophecy, divine the plays. Who was it
+ In your ancestry that you harked back to
+ And reproduced with such various gifts
+ Of flesh and spirit, Anglo-Saxon, Celt?--
+ You with such rapid wit and powerful skill
+ For catching illogic and whipping Error's
+ Fangéd head from the body?...
+
+ I was really ahead of you
+ At this stage, with more self-consciousness
+ Of what man is, and what life is at last,
+ And how the spirit works, and by what laws,
+ With what inevitable force. But still I was
+ Behind you in that strength which in our youth,
+ If ever we have it, squeezes all the nectar
+ From the grapes. It seemed you'd never lose
+ This power and sense of joy, but yet at times
+ I saw another phase of you....
+
+ There was the day
+ We rode together north of the old town,
+ Past the old farm houses that I knew--
+ Past maple groves, and fields of corn in the shock,
+ And fields of wheat with the fall green.
+ It was October, but the clouds were summer's,
+ Lazily floating in a sky of June;
+ And a few crows flying here and there,
+ And a quail's call, and around us a great silence
+ That held at its core old memories
+ Of pioneers, and dead days, forgotten things!
+ I'll never forget how you looked that day. Your hair
+ Was turning silver now, but still your eyes
+ Burned as of old, and the rich olive glow
+ In your cheeks shone, with not a line or wrinkle!--
+ You seemed to me perfection--a youth, a man!
+ And now you talked of the world with the old wit,
+ And now of the soul--how such a man went down
+ Through folly or wrong done by him, and how
+ Man's death cannot end all,
+ There must be life hereafter!...
+
+ As you were that day, as you looked and spoke,
+ As the earth was, I hear as the soul of it all
+ Godard's _Dawn_, Dvorák's _Humoresque_,
+ The Morris Dances, Mendelssohn's _Barcarole_,
+ And old Scotch songs, _When the Kye Come Hame_,
+ And _The Moon Had Climbed the Highest Hill_,
+ The Musseta Waltz and Rudolph's Narrative;
+ Your great brow seemed Beethoven's
+ And the lust of life in your face Cellini's,
+ And your riotous fancy like Dumas.
+ I was nearer you now than ever before,
+ And finding each other thus I see to-day
+ How the human soul seeks the human soul
+ And finds the one it seeks at last.
+ For you know you can open a window
+ That looks upon embowered darkness,
+ When the flowers sleep and the trees are still
+ At Midnight, and no light burns in the room;
+ And you can hide your butterfly
+ Somewhere in the room, but soon you will see
+ A host of butterfly mates
+ Fluttering through the window to join
+ Your butterfly hid in the room.
+ It is somehow thus with souls....
+
+ This day then I understood it all:
+ Your vital democracy and love of men
+ And tolerance of life; and how the excess of these
+ Had wrought your sorrows in the days
+ When we were so poor, and the small of mind
+ Spoke of your sins and your connivance
+ With sinful men. You had lived it down,
+ Had triumphed over them, and you had grown.
+ Prosperous in the world and had passed
+ Into an easy mastery of life and beyond the thought
+ Of further conquests for things.
+ As the Brahmins say, no more you worshiped matter,
+ Or scarcely ghosts, or even the gods
+ With singleness of heart.
+ This day you worshiped Eternal Peace
+ Or Eternal Flame, with scarce a laugh or jest
+ To hide your worship; and I understood,
+ Seeing so many facets to you, why it was
+ Blind Condon always smiled to hear your voice,
+ And why it was in a greenroom years ago
+ Booth turned to you, marking your face
+ From all the rest, and said, "There is a man
+ Who might play Hamlet--better still Othello";
+ And why it was the women loved you; and the priest
+ Could feed his body and soul together drinking
+ A glass of beer and visiting with you....
+
+ Then something happened:
+ Your face grew smaller, your brow more narrow,
+ Dull fires burned in your eyes,
+ Your body shriveled, you walked with a cynical shuffle,
+ Your hands mixed the keys of life,
+ You had become a discord.
+ A monstrous hatred consumed you--
+ You had suffered the greatest wrong of all,
+ I knew and granted the wrong.
+ You had mounted up to sixty years, now breathing hard,
+ And just at the time that honor belonged to you
+ You were dishonored at the hands of a friend.
+ I wept for you, and still I wondered
+ If all I had grown to see in you and find in you
+ And love in you was just a fond illusion--
+ If after all I had not seen you aright as a boy:
+ Barbaric, hard, suspicious, cruel, redeemed
+ Alone by bubbling animal spirits--
+ Even these gone now, all of you smoke
+ Laden with stinging gas and lethal vapor....
+ Then you came forth again like the sun after storm--
+ The deadly uric acid driven out at last
+ Which had poisoned you and dwarfed your soul--
+ So much for soul!
+
+ The last time I saw you
+ Your face was full of golden light,
+ Something between flame and the richness of flesh.
+ You were yourself again, wholly yourself.
+ And oh, to find you again and resume
+ Our understanding we had worked so long to reach--
+ You calm and luminant and rich in thought!
+ This time it seemed we said but "yes" or "no"--
+ That was enough; we smoked together
+ And drank a glass of wine and watched
+ The leaves fall sitting on the porch....
+ Then life whirled me away like a leaf,
+ And I went about the crowded ways of New York.
+
+ And one night Alberta and I took dinner
+ At a place near Fourteenth Street where the music
+ Was like the sun on a breeze-swept lake
+ When every wave is a patine of fire,
+ And I thought of you not at all
+ Looking at Alberta and watching her white teeth
+ Bite off bits of Italian bread,
+ And watching her smile and the wide pupils
+ Of her eyes, electrified by wine
+ And music and the touch of our hands
+ Now and then across the table.
+ We went to her house at last.
+ And through a languorous evening.
+ Where no light was but a single candle,
+ We circled about and about a pending theme
+ Till at last we solved it suddenly in rapture
+ Almost by chance; and when I left
+ She followed me to the hall and leaned above
+ The railing about the stair for the farewell kiss--
+ And I went into the open air ecstatically,
+ With the stars in the spaces of sky between
+ The towering buildings, and the rush
+ Of wheels and clang of bells,
+ Still with the fragrance of her lips and cheeks
+ And glinting hair about me, delicate
+ And keen in spite of the open air.
+ And just as I entered the brilliant car
+ Something said to me you are dead--
+ I had not thought of you, was not thinking of you.
+ But I knew it was true, as it was,
+ For the telegram waited me at my room....
+ I didn't come back.
+ I could not bear to see the breathless breath
+ Over your brow--nor look at your face--
+ However you fared or where
+ To what victories soever--
+ Vanquished or seemingly vanquished!
+
+
+
+
+RAIN IN MY HEART
+
+
+ There is a quiet in my heart
+ Like one who rests from days of pain.
+ Outside, the sparrows on the roof
+ Are chirping in the dripping rain.
+
+ Rain in my heart; rain on the roof;
+ And memory sleeps beneath the gray
+ And windless sky and brings no dreams
+ Of any well remembered day.
+
+ I would not have the heavens fair,
+ Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild,
+ But days like this, until my heart
+ To loss of you is reconciled.
+
+ I would not see you. Every hope
+ To know you as you were has ranged.
+ I, who am altered, would not find
+ The face I loved so greatly changed.
+
+
+
+
+THE LOOP
+
+
+ From State street bridge a snow-white glimpse of sea
+ Beyond the river walled in by red buildings,
+ O'ertopped by masts that take the sunset's gildings,
+ Roped to the wharf till spring shall set them free.
+ Great floes make known how swift the river's current.
+ Out of the north sky blows a cutting wind.
+ Smoke from the stacks and engines in a torrent
+ Whirls downward, by the eddying breezes thinned.
+ Enskyed are sign boards advertising soap,
+ Tobacco, coal, transcontinental trains.
+ A tug is whistling, straining at a rope,
+ Fixed to a dredge with derricks, scoops and cranes.
+ Down in the loop the blue-gray air enshrouds,
+ As with a cyclops' cape, the man-made hills
+ And towers of granite where the city crowds.
+ Above the din a copper's whistle shrills.
+ There is a smell of coffee and of spices.
+ We near the market place of trade's devices.
+ Blue smoke from out a roasting room is pouring.
+ A rooster crows, geese cackle, men are bawling.
+ Whips crack, trucks creak, it is the place of storing,
+ And drawing out and loading up and hauling
+ Fruit, vegetables and fowls and steaks and hams,
+ Oysters and lobsters, fish and crabs and clams.
+ And near at hand are restaurants and bars,
+ Hotels with rooms at fifty cents a day,
+ Beer tunnels, pool rooms, places where cigars
+ And cigarettes their window signs display;
+ Mixed in with letterings of printed tags,
+ Twine, boxes, cartels, sacks and leather bags,
+ Wigs, telescopes, eyeglasses, ladies' tresses,
+ Or those who manicure or fashion dresses,
+ Or sell us putters, tennis balls or brassies,
+ Make shoes, pull teeth, or fit the eye with glasses.
+
+ And now the rows of windows showing laces,
+ Silks, draperies and furs and costly vases,
+ Watches and mirrors, silver cups and mugs,
+ Emeralds, diamonds, Indian, Persian rugs,
+ Hats, velvets, silver buckles, ostrich-plumes,
+ Drugs, violet water, powder and perfumes.
+ Here is a monstrous winking eye--beneath
+ A showcase by an entrance full of teeth.
+ Here rubber coats, umbrellas, mackintoshes,
+ Hoods, rubber boots and arctics and galoshes.
+ Here is half a block of overcoats,
+ In this bleak time of snow and slender throats.
+ Then windows of fine linen, snakewood canes,
+ Scarfs, opera hats, in use where fashion reigns.
+ As when the hive swarms, so the crowded street
+ Roars to the shuffling of innumerable feet.
+ Skyscrapers soar above them; they go by
+ As bees crawl, little scales upon the skin
+ Of a great dragon winding out and in.
+ Above them hangs a tangled tree of signs,
+ Suspended or uplifted like dædalian
+ Hieroglyphics when the saturnalian
+ Night commences, and their racing lines
+ Run fire of blue and yellow in a puzzle,
+ Bewildering to the eyes of those who guzzle,
+ And gourmandize and stroll and seek the bubble
+ Of happiness to put away their trouble.
+
+ Around the loop the elevated crawls,
+ And giant shadows sink against the walls
+ Where ten to twenty stories strive to hold
+ The pale refraction of the sunset's gold.
+ Slop underfoot, we pass beneath the loop.
+ The crowd is uglier, poorer; there are smells
+ As from the depths of unsuspected hells,
+ And from a groggery where beer and soup
+ Are sold for five cents to the thieves and bums.
+ Here now are huge cartoons in red and blue
+ Of obese women and of skeleton men,
+ Egyptian dancers, twined with monstrous snakes,
+ Before the door a turbaned lithe Hindoo,
+ A bagpipe shrilling, underneath a den
+ Of opium, whence a man with hand that shakes,
+ Rolling a cigarette, so palely comes.
+ The clang of car bells and the beat of drums.
+ Draft horses clamping with their steel-shod hoofs.
+ The buildings have grown small and black and worn;
+ The sky is more beholden; o'er the roofs
+ A flock of pigeons soars; with dresses torn
+ And yellow faces, labor women pass
+ Some Chinese gabbling; and there, buying fruit,
+ Stands a fair girl who is a late recruit
+ To those poor women slain each year by lust.
+ 'Tis evening now and trade will soon begin.
+ The family entrance beckons for a glass
+ Of hopeful mockery, the piano's din
+ Into the street with sounds of rasping wires
+ Filters, and near a pawner's window shows
+ Pistols, accordions; and, luring buyers,
+ A Jew stands mumbling to the passer-by
+ Of jewelry and watches and old clothes.
+ A limousine gleams quickly--with a cry
+ A legless man fastened upon a board
+ With casters 'neath it by a sudden shove
+ Darts out of danger. And upon the corner
+ A lassie tells a man that God is love,
+ Holding a tambourine with its copper hoard
+ To be augmented by the drunken scorner.
+ A woman with no eyeballs in her sockets
+ Plays "Rock of Ages" on a wheezy organ.
+ A newsboy with cold hands thrust in his pockets
+ Cries, "All about the will of Pierpont Morgan!"
+ The roofline of the street now sinks and dwindles.
+ The windows are begrimed with dust and beer.
+ A child half clothed, with legs as thin as spindles,
+ Carries a basket with some bits of coal.
+ Between lace curtains eyes of yellow leer,
+ The cheeks splotched with white places like the skin
+ Inside an eggshell--destitute of soul.
+ One sees a brass lamp oozing kerosene
+ Upon a stand whereon her elbows lean;
+ Lighted, it soon will welcome negroes in.
+
+ The railroad tracks are near. We almost choke
+ From filth whirled from the street and stinging vapors.
+ Great engines vomit gas and heavy smoke
+ Upon a north wind driving tattered papers,
+ Dry dung and dust and refuse down the street.
+ A circumambient roar as of a wheel
+ Whirring far off--a monster's heart whose beat
+ Is full of murmurs, comes as we retreat
+ Towards Twenty-second. And a man with jaw
+ Set like a tiger's, with a dirty beard,
+ Skulks toward the loop, with heavy wrists red-raw
+ Glowing above his pockets where his hands
+ Pushed tensely round his hips the coat tails draw,
+ And show what seems a slender piece of metal
+ In his hip pocket. On these barren strands
+ He waits for midnight for old scores to settle
+ Against his ancient foe society,
+ Who keeps the soup house and who builds the jails.
+ Switchmen and firemen with their dinner pails
+ Go by him homeward, and he wonders if
+ These fellows know a hundred thousand workers
+ Walk up and down the city's highways, stiff
+ From cold and hunger, doomed to poverty,
+ As wretched as the thieves and crooks and shirkers.
+ He scurries to the lake front, loiters past
+ The windows of wax lights with scarlet shades,
+ Where smiling diners back of ambuscades
+ Of silk and velvet hear not winter's blast
+ Blowing across the lake. He has a thought
+ Of Michigan, where once at picking berries
+ He spent a summer--then his eye is caught
+ At Randolph street by written light which tarries,
+ Then like a film runs into sentences.
+ He sees it all as from a black abyss.
+ Taxis with skid chains rattle, limousines
+ Draw up to awnings; for a space he catches
+ A scent of musk or violets, sees the patches
+ On powdered cheeks of furred and jeweled queens.
+ The color round his cruel mouth grows whiter,
+ He thrusts his coarse hands in his pockets tighter:
+ He is a thief, he knows he is a thief,
+ He is a thief found out, and, as he knows,
+ The whole loop is a kingdom held in fief
+ By men who work with laws instead of blows
+ From sling shots, so he curses under breath
+ The money and the invisible hand that owns
+ From year to year, in spite of change and death,
+ The wires for the lights and telephones,
+ The railways on the streets, and overhead
+ The railways, and beneath the winding tunnel
+ Which crooks stole from the city for a runnel
+ To drain her nickels; and the pipes of lead
+ Which carry gas, wrapped round us like a snake,
+ And round the courts, whose grip no court can break.
+ He curses bitterly all those who rise,
+ And rule by just the spirit which he plies
+ Coarsely against the world's great store of wealth;
+ Bankers and usurers and cliques whose stealth
+ Works witchcraft through the market and the press,
+ And hires editors, or owns the stock
+ Controlling papers, playing with finesse
+ The city's thinking, that they may unlock
+ Treasures and powers like burglars in the dark.
+ And thinking thus and cursing, through a flurry
+ Of sudden snow he hastens on to Clark.
+ In a cheap room there is an eye to mark
+ His coming and be glad. His footsteps hurry.
+ She will have money, earned this afternoon
+ Through men who took her from a near saloon
+ Wherein she sits at table to dragoon
+ Roughnecks or simpletons upon a lark.
+ Within a little hall a fierce-eyed youth
+ Rants of the burdens on the people's backs--
+ He would cure all things with the single tax.
+ A clergyman demands more gospel truth,
+ Speaking to Christians at a weekly dinner.
+ A parlor Marxian, for a beginner
+ Would take the railways. And amid applause
+ Where lawyers dine, a judge says all will be
+ Well if we hand down to posterity
+ Respect for courts and judges and the laws.
+ An anarchist would fight. Upon the whole,
+ Another thinks, to cultivate one's soul
+ Is most important--let the passing show
+ Go where it wills, and where it wills to go.
+
+ Outside the stars look down. Stars are content
+ To be so quiet and indifferent.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES
+
+
+ When under the icy eaves
+ The swallow heralds the sun,
+ And the dove for its lost mate grieves
+ And the young lambs play and run;
+ When the sea is a plane of glass,
+ And the blustering winds are still,
+ And the strength of the thin snows pass
+ In mists o'er the tawny hill--
+ The spirit of life awakes
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+ When the sick man seeks the air,
+ And the graves of the dead grow green,
+ Where the children play unaware
+ Of the faces no longer seen;
+ When all we have felt or can feel,
+ And all we are or have been,
+ And all the heart can hide or reveal,
+ Knocks gently, and enters in:--
+ The spirit of life awakes,
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAR
+
+
+ We paused to say good-by,
+ As we thought for a little while,
+ Alone in the car, in the corner
+ Around the turn of the aisle.
+
+ A quiver came in your voice,
+ Your eyes were sorrowful too;
+ 'Twas over--I strode to the doorway,
+ Then turned to wave an adieu.
+
+ But you had not come from the corner,
+ And though I had gone so far,
+ I retraced, and faced you coming
+ Into the aisle of the car.
+
+ You stopped as one who was caught
+ In an evil mood by surprise.--
+ I want to forget, I am trying
+ To forget the look in your eyes.
+
+ Your face was blank and cold,
+ Like Lot's wife turned to salt.
+ I suddenly trapped and discovered
+ Your soul in a hidden fault.
+
+ Your eyes were tearless and wide,
+ And your wide eyes looked on me
+ Like a Mænad musing murder,
+ Or the mask of Melpomene.
+
+ And there in a flash of lightning
+ I learned what I never could prove:
+ That your heart contained no sorrow,
+ And your heart contained no love.
+
+ And my heart is light and heavy,
+ And this is the reason why:
+ I am glad we parted forever,
+ And sad for the last good-by.
+
+
+
+
+SIMON SURNAMED PETER
+
+
+ Time that has lifted you over them all--
+ O'er John and o'er Paul;
+ Writ you in capitals, made you the chief
+ Word on the leaf--
+ How did you, Peter, when ne'er on His breast
+ You leaned and were blest--
+ And none except Judas and you broke the faith
+ To the day of His death,--
+ You, Peter, the fisherman, worthy of blame,
+ Arise to this fame?
+
+ 'Twas you in the garden who fell into sleep
+ And the watch failed to keep,
+ When Jesus was praying and pressed with the weight
+ Of the oncoming fate.
+ 'Twas you in the court of the palace who warmed
+ Your hands as you stormed
+ At the damsel, denying Him thrice, when she cried:
+ "He walked at his side!"
+ You, Peter, a wave, a star among clouds, a reed in the wind,
+ A guide of the blind,
+ Both smiter and flyer, but human alway, I protest,
+ Beyond all the rest.
+
+ When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared
+ Did you wait till he neared?
+ You leaped in the water, not dreading the worst
+ In your joy to be first
+ To greet Him and tell Him of all that had passed
+ Since you saw Him the last.
+ You had slept while He watched, but fierce were you, fierce and awake
+ When they sought Him to take,
+ And cursing, no doubt, as you smote off, as one of the least,
+ The ear of the priest.
+ Then Andrew and all of them fled, but you followed Him,
+ hoping for strength
+ To save him at length
+ Till you lied to the damsel, oh penitent Peter, and crept,
+ Into hiding and wept.
+
+ Oh well! But he asked all the twelve, "Who am I?"
+ And who made reply?
+ As you leaped in the sea, so you spoke as you smote with the sword;
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+ John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,
+ "Nay, lovest thou me?"
+ Thrice over, as thrice you denied Him, and chose you to lead
+ His sheep and to feed;
+ And gave you, He said, the keys of the den and the fold
+ To have and to hold.
+ You were a poor jailer, oh Peter, the dreamer, who saw
+ The death of the law
+ In the dream of the vessel that held all the four-footed beasts,
+ Unclean for the priests;
+ And heard in the vision a trumpet that all men are worth
+ The peace of the earth
+ And rapture of heaven hereafter,--oh Peter, what power
+ Was yours in that hour:
+ You warder and jailer and sealer of fates and decrees,
+ To use the big keys
+ With which to reveal and fling wide all the soul and the scheme
+ Of the Galilee dream,
+ When you flashed in a trice, as later you smote with the sword:
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+
+ We men, Simon Peter, we men also give you the crown
+ O'er Paul and o'er John.
+ We write you in capitals, make you the chief
+ Word on the leaf.
+ We know you as one of our flesh, and 'tis well
+ You are warder of hell,
+ And heaven's gatekeeper forever to bind and to loose--
+ Keep the keys if you choose.
+ Not rock of you, fire of you make you sublime
+ In the annals of time.
+ You were called by Him, Peter, a rock, but we give you the name
+ Of Peter the Flame.
+ For you struck a spark, as the spark from the shock
+ Of steel upon rock.
+ The rock has his use but the flame gives the light
+ In the way in the night:--
+ Oh Peter, the dreamer, impetuous, human, divine,
+ Gnarled branch of the vine!
+
+
+
+
+ALL LIFE IN A LIFE
+
+
+ His father had a large family
+ Of girls and boys and he was born and bred
+ In a barn or kind of cattle shed.
+ But he was a hardy youngster and grew to be
+ A boy with eyes that sparkled like a rod
+ Of white hot iron in the blacksmith shop.
+ His face was ruddy like a rising moon,
+ And his hair was black as sheep's wool that is black.
+ And he had rugged arms and legs and a strong back.
+ And he had a voice half flute and half bassoon.
+ And from his toes up to his head's top
+ He was a man, simple but intricate.
+ And most men differ who try to delineate
+ His life and fate.
+
+ He never seemed ashamed
+ Of poverty or of his origin. He was a wayward child,
+ Nevertheless though wise and mild,
+ And thoughtful but when angered then he flamed
+ As fire does in a forge.
+ When he was ten years old he ran away
+ To be alone and watch the sea, and the stars
+ At midnight from a mountain gorge.
+
+ When he returned his parents scolded him
+ And threatened him with bolts and bars.
+ Then they grew soft for his return and gay
+ And with their love would have enfolded him.
+ But even at ten years old he had a way
+ Of gazing at you with a look austere
+ Which gave his kinfolk fear.
+ He had no childlike love for father or mother,
+ Sister or brother,
+ They were the same to him as any other.
+ He was a little cold, a little queer.
+
+ His father was a laborer and now
+ They made the boy work for his daily bread.
+ They say he read
+ A book or two during these years of work.
+ But if there was a secret prone to lurk
+ Between the pages under the light of his brow
+ It came forth. And if he had a woman
+ In love or out of love, or a companion or a chum,
+ History is dumb.
+ So far as we know he dreamed and worked with hands
+ And learned to know his genius' commands
+ Or what is called one's dæmon.
+
+ And this became at last the city's call.
+ He had now reached the age of thirty years,
+ And found a Dream of Life and a solution
+ For slavery of soul and even all
+ Miseries that flow from things material.
+ To free the world was his soul's resolution.
+ But his family had great fears
+ For him, knowing the evil
+ Which might befall him, seeing that the light
+ Of his own dream had blinded his mind's eyes.
+ They could not tell but what he had a devil.
+ But still in their tears despite,
+ And warnings he departed with replies
+ That when a man's genius calls him
+ He must obey no matter what befalls him.
+
+ What he had in his mind was growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in his mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of Falsehood and Unbrotherly Desire.--
+ What he had in his mind was simply Love.
+ And it was strange he preached the sword and force
+ To establish Love, but it was not strange,
+ Since he did this, his life took on a change.
+ And what he taught seems muddled at its source
+ With moralizing and with moral strife.
+ For morals are merely the Truth diluted
+ And sweetened up and suited
+ To the business and bread of Life.
+
+ And now this City was just what you'd find
+ A city anywhere,
+ A turmoil and a Vanity Fair,
+ A sort of heaven and a sort of Tophet.
+ There were so many leaders of his kind
+ The city didn't care
+ For one additional prophet.
+ He said some extravagant things
+ And planted a few stings
+ Under the rich man's hide.
+ And one of the sensational newspapers
+ Gave him a line or two for cutting capers
+ In front of the Palace of Justice and the Church.
+ But all of the first grade people took the other side
+ Of the street when they saw him coming
+ With a rag tag crowd singing and humming,
+ And curious boys and men up in a perch
+ Of a tree or window taking the spectacle in,
+ And the Corybantic din
+ Of a Salvation Army as it were.
+ And whatever he dreamed when he lived in a little town
+ The intelligent people ignored him, and this is the stir
+ And the only stir he made in the city.
+
+ But there was a certain sinister
+ Fellow who came to him hearing of his renown
+ And said "You can be Mayor of this city,
+ We need a man like you for Mayor."
+ And others said "You'd make a lawyer or a politician,
+ Look how the people follow you;
+ Why don't you hire out as a special writer,
+ You could become a business man, a rhetorician,
+ You could become a player,
+ You can grow rich. There's nothing for a fighter,
+ Fighting as you are, but to end in ruin."
+ But he turned from them on his way pursuing
+ The dream he had in view.
+
+ He had a rich man or two
+ Who took up with him against the powerful frown
+ Which looked him down.
+ For you'll always find a rich man or two
+ To take up with anything.
+ There are those who can't get into society or bring
+ Their riches to a social recognition;
+ Or ill-formed souls who lack the real patrician
+ Spirit for life.
+ But as for him he didn't care, he passed
+ Where the richness of living was rife.
+ And like wise Goethe talking to the last
+ With cabmen rather than with lords
+ He sat about the markets and the fountains,
+ He walked about the country and the mountains,
+ Took trips upon the lakes and waded fords
+ Barefooted, laughing as a young animal
+ Disports itself amid the festival
+ Of warm winds, sunshine, summer's carnival--
+ With laborers, carpenters, seamen
+ And some loose women.
+ And certain notable sinners
+ Gave him dinners.
+ And he went to weddings and to places where youth slakes
+ Its thirst for happiness, and they served him cakes
+ And wine wherever he went.
+ And he ate and drank and spent
+ His time in feasting and in telling stories,
+ And singing poems of lilies and of trees,
+ With crowds of people crowded around his knees
+ That searched with lightning secrets hidden
+ Of life and of life's glories,
+ Of death and of the soul's way after death.
+
+ Time makes amends usually for scandal's breath,
+ Which touched him to his earthly ruination.
+ But this city had a Civic Federation,
+ And a certain social order which intrigues
+ Through churches, courts, with an endless ramification
+ Of money and morals to save itself.
+ And this city had a Bar Association,
+ Also its Public Efficiency Leagues
+ For laying honest men upon the shelf
+ While making private pelf
+ Secure and free to increase.
+ And this city had illustrious Pharisees
+ And this city had a legion
+ Of men who make a business of religion,
+ With eyes one inch apart,
+ Dark and narrow of heart,
+ Who give themselves and give the city no peace,
+ And who are everywhere the best police
+ For Life as business.
+ And when they saw this youth
+ Was telling the truth,
+ And that his followers were multiplying,
+ And were going about rejoicing and defying
+ The social order and were stirring up
+ The dregs of discontent in the cup
+ With the hand of their own happiness,
+ They saw dynamic mysteries
+ In the poems of lilies and trees,
+ Therefore they held him for a felony.
+
+ If you will take a kernel of wheat
+ And first make free
+ The outer flake and then pare off the meat
+ Of edible starch you'll find at the kernel's core
+ The life germ. And this young man's words were dim
+ With blasphemy, sedition at the rim,
+ Which fired the heads of dreamers like new wine.
+ But this was just the outward force of him.
+ For this young man's philosophy was more
+ Than such external ferment, being divine
+ With secrets so profound no plummet line
+ Can altogether sound it. It means growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of falsehood and unbrotherly Desire.
+ What he had in mind was simply Love.
+
+ But he was prosecuted
+ As a rebel and as a rebel executed
+ Right in a public place where all could see.
+ And his mother watched him hang for the felony.
+ He hated to die being but thirty-three,
+ And fearing that his poems might be lost.
+ And certain members of the Bar Association,
+ And of the Civic Federation,
+ And of the League of Public Efficiency,
+ And a legion
+ Of men devoted to religion,
+ With policemen, soldiers, roughs,
+ Loose women, thieves and toughs,
+ Came out to see him die,
+ And hooted at him giving up the ghost
+ In great despair and with a fearful cry!
+
+ And after him there was a man named Paul
+ Who almost spoiled it all.
+
+ And protozoan things like hypocrites,
+ And parasitic things who make a food
+ Of the mysteries of God for earthly power
+ Must wonder how before this young man's hour
+ They lived without his blood,
+ Shed on that day, and which
+ In red cells is so rich.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT YOU WILL
+
+
+ April rain, delicious weeping,
+ Washes white bones from the grave,
+ Long enough have they been sleeping.
+ They are cleansed, and now they crave
+ Once more on the earth to gather
+ Pleasure from the springtime weather.
+
+ The pine trees and the long dark grass
+ Feed on what is placed below.
+ Think you not that there doth pass
+ In them something we did know?
+ This spell--well, friends, I greet ye once again
+ With joy--but with a most unuttered pain.
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY
+
+
+ The Sun hung like a red balloon
+ As if he would not rise;
+ For listless Helios drowsed and yawned.
+ He cared not whether the morning dawned,
+ The brother of Eos and the Moon
+ Stretched him and rubbed his eyes.
+
+ He would have dreamed the dream again
+ That found him under sea:
+ He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side,
+ He saw Hæphestos with his bride;
+ He traced from Enna's flowery plain
+ The child Persephone.
+
+ There was a time when heaven's vault
+ Cracked like a temple's roof.
+ A new hierarchy burst its shell,
+ And as the sapphire ceiling fell,
+ From stern Jehovah's mad assault,
+ Vast spaces stretched aloof:
+
+ Great blue black depths of frozen air
+ Engulfed the soul of Zeus.
+ And then Jehovah reigned instead.
+ For Judah was living and Greece was dead.
+ And Hope was born to nurse Despair,
+ And the Devil was let loose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Far off in the waste empyrean
+ The world was a golden mote.
+ And the Sun hung like a red balloon,
+ Or a bomb afire o'er a barracoon.
+ And the sea was drab, and the sea was green
+ Like a many colored coat.
+
+ The sea was pink like cyclamen,
+ And red as a blushing rose.
+ It shook anon like the sensitive plant,
+ Under the golden light aslant.
+ The little waves patted the shore again
+ Where the restless river flows.
+
+ And thus it has been for ages gone--
+ For a hundred thousand years;
+ Ere Buddha lived or Jesus came,
+ Or ever the city had place or name,
+ The sea thrilled through at the kiss of dawn
+ Like a soul of smiles and tears.
+
+ When the city's seat was a waste of sand,
+ And the hydra lived alone,
+ The sound of the sea was here to be heard,
+ And the moon rose up like a great white bird,
+ Sailing aloft from the yellow strand
+ To her silent midnight throne.
+
+ Now Helios eyes the universe,
+ And he knows the world is small.
+ Of old he walked through pagan Tyre,
+ Babylon, Sodom destroyed by fire,
+ And sought to unriddle the primal curse
+ That holds the race in thrall.
+
+ So he stepped from the Sun in robes of flame
+ As the city woke from sleep.
+ He walked the markets, walked the squares,
+ He walked the places of sweets and snares,
+ Where men buy honor and barter shame,
+ And the weak are killed as sheep.
+
+ He saw the city is one great mart
+ Where life is bought and sold.
+ Men rise to get them meat and bread
+ To barter for drugs or coffin the dead.
+ And dawn is but a plucked-up heart
+ For the dreary game of gold.
+
+ "Ho! ho!" said Helios, "father Zeus
+ Would never botch it so.
+ If he had stolen Joseph's bride,
+ And let his son be crucified
+ The son's blood had been put to use
+ To ease the people's woe."
+
+ "He of the pest and the burning bush,
+ Of locusts, lice, and frogs,
+ Who made me stand, veiling my light,
+ While Joshua slaughtered the Amorite,
+ Who blacked the skin of the sons of Cush,
+ And builded the synagogues."
+
+ "And Jehovah the great is omnipotent,
+ While Zeus was bound by Fate.
+ But Athens fell when Peter took Rome,
+ And Chicago is made His hecatomb.
+ And since from the hour His son was sent
+ The hypocrite holds the state."
+
+ Helios traversed the city streets
+ And this is what he saw:
+ Some sold their honor, some their skill,
+ The soldier hired himself to kill,
+ The judges bartered the judgment seats
+ And trafficked in the law.
+
+ The starving artist sold his youth,
+ The writer sold his pen;
+ The lawyer sharpened up his wits
+ Like a burglar filing auger bits,
+ And Jesus' vicar sold the truth
+ To the famished sons of men.
+
+ In every heart flamed cruelty
+ Like a little emerald snake.
+ And each one knew if he should stand
+ In another's way the dagger-hand
+ Would make the stronger the feofee
+ Of the coveted wapentake.
+
+ There's not a thing men will not do
+ For honor, gold, or power.
+ We smile and call the city fair,
+ We call life lovely and debonair,
+ But Proserpina never grew
+ So deadly a passion flower.
+
+ Go live for an hour in a tropic land
+ Hid near a sinking pool:
+ The lion and tiger come to drink,
+ The boa crawls to the water's brink,
+ The elephant bull kneels down in the sand
+ And drinks till his throat is cool.
+
+ Jehovah will keep you awhile unseen
+ As you lie behind the rocks.
+ But go, if you dare, to slake your thirst,
+ Though Jesus died for our life accursed
+ Your bones by the tiger will be licked clean
+ As he licks the bones of an ox.
+
+ And the sky may be blue as fleur de lis,
+ And the earth be tulip red;
+ And God in heaven, and life all good
+ While you lie hid in the underwood:
+ And the city may leave you sorrow free
+ If you ask it not for bread.
+
+ One day Achilles lost a horse
+ While the pest at Troy was rife,
+ And a million maggots fought and ate
+ Like soldiers storming a city's gate,
+ And Thersites said, as he looked at the corse,
+ "Achilles, that is life."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Day fades and from a million cells
+ The office people pour.
+ Like bees that crawl on the honeycomb
+ The workers scurry to what is home,
+ And trains and traffic and clanging bells
+ Make the cañon highways roar.
+
+ Helios walked the city's ways
+ Till the lights began to shine.
+ Then the janitor women start to scrub
+ And the Pharisees up and enter the club,
+ And the harlot wakes, and the music plays
+ And the glasses glow with wine.
+
+ Now we're good fellows one and all,
+ And the buffet storms with talk.
+ "The market's closed and trade's at end
+ We had our battle, now I'm your friend."
+ And thanks to the spirit of alcohol
+ Men go for a ride or walk.
+
+ Oh but traffic is not all done
+ Nor everything yet sold.
+ There's woman to win, and plots to weave,
+ There's a heart to hurt, or one to deceive,
+ And bargains to bind ere rise of Sun
+ To garner the morrow's gold.
+
+ The market at night is as full of fraud
+ As the market kept by day.
+ The courtesan buys a soul with a look,
+ A dinner tempers the truth in a book,
+ And love is sold till love is a bawd,
+ And falsehood froths in the play.
+
+ And men and women sell their smiles
+ For friendship's lifeless dregs.
+ For fear of the morrow we bend and bow
+ To moneybags with the slanting brow.
+ For the heart that knows life's little wiles
+ Seldom or never begs.
+
+ "Poor men," sighed Helios, "how they long
+ For the ultimate fire of love.
+ They yearn, through life, like the peacock moth,
+ And die worn out in search of the troth.
+ For love in the soul is the siren song
+ That wrecks the peace thereof."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Helios turned from the world and fled
+ As the convent bell tolled six.
+ For he caught a glimpse of an agéd crone
+ Who knelt beside a coffin alone;
+ She had sold her cloak to shrive the dead
+ And buy a crucifix!
+
+
+
+
+THE IDIOT
+
+
+ Two children in a garden
+ Shouting for joy
+ Were playing dolls and houses,
+ A girl and boy.
+ I smiled at a neighbor window,
+ And watched them play
+ Under a budding oak tree
+ On a wintry day.
+
+ And then a board half broken
+ In the high fence
+ Fell over and there entered,
+ I know not whence,
+ A jailbird face of yellow
+ With a vacant sulk,
+ His body was a sickly
+ Thing of bulk.
+
+ His open mouth was slavering,
+ And a green light
+ Turned disc-like in his eyeballs,
+ Like a dog's at night.
+ His teeth were like a giant's,
+ And far apart;
+ I saw him reel on the children
+ With a stopping heart.
+ He trampled their dolls and ruined
+ The house they made;
+ He struck to earth the children
+ With a dirty spade.
+ As a tiger growls with an antelope
+ After the hunt,
+ Over the little faces
+ I heard him grunt.
+
+ I stood at the window frozen,
+ And short of breath,
+ And then I saw the idiot
+ Was Master Death!
+
+ A bird in the lilac bushes
+ Began to sing.
+ The garden colored before me
+ To the kiss of spring.
+ And the yellow face in a moment
+ Was a mystic white;
+ The matted hair was softened
+ To starry light.
+ The ragged coat flowed downward
+ Into a robe;
+ He carried a sword and a balance
+ And stood on a globe.
+ I watched him from the window
+ Under a spell;
+ The idiot was the angel
+ Azrael!
+
+
+
+
+HELEN OF TROY
+
+On an ancient vase representing in bas-relief the flight of
+Helen.
+
+
+ This is the vase of Love
+ Whose feet would ever rove
+ O'er land and sea;
+ Whose hopes forever seek
+ Bright eyes, the vermeiled cheek,
+ And ways made free.
+
+ Do we not understand
+ Why thou didst leave thy land,
+ Thy spouse, thy hearth?
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy mirth our mirth.
+
+ For Paris did appear,--
+ Curled hair and rosy ear
+ And tapering hands.
+ He spoke--the blood ran fast,
+ He touched, and killed the past,
+ And clove its bands.
+
+ And this, I deem, is why
+ The restless ages sigh,
+ Helen, for thee.
+ Whate'er we do or dream,
+ Whate'er we say or seem,
+ We would be free.
+
+ We would forsake old love,
+ And all the pain thereof,
+ And all the care;
+ We would find out new seas,
+ And lands more strange than these,
+ And flowers more fair.
+
+ We would behold fresh skies
+ Where summer never dies
+ And amaranths spring;
+ Lands where the halcyon hours
+ Nest over scented bowers
+ On folded wing.
+
+ We would be crowned with bays,
+ And spend the long bright days
+ On sea or shore;
+ Or sit by haunted woods,
+ And watch the deep sea's moods,
+ And hear its roar.
+
+ Beneath that ancient sky
+ Who is not fain to fly
+ As men have fled?
+ Ah! we would know relief
+ From marts of wine and beef,
+ And oil and bread.
+
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy love our love.
+ For poesy, like thee,
+ Must fly and wander free
+ As the wild dove.
+
+
+
+
+O GLORIOUS FRANCE
+
+
+ You have become a forge of snow white fire,
+ A crucible of molten steel, O France!
+ Your sons are stars who cluster to a dawn
+ And fade in light for you, O glorious France!
+ They pass through meteor changes with a song
+ Which to all islands and all continents
+ Says life is neither comfort, wealth, nor fame,
+ Nor quiet hearthstones, friendship, wife nor child
+ Nor love, nor youth's delight, nor manhood's power,
+ Nor many days spent in a chosen work,
+ Nor honored merit, nor the patterned theme
+ Of daily labor, nor the crowns nor wreaths
+ Or seventy years.
+
+ These are not all of life,
+ O France, whose sons amid the rolling thunder
+ Of cannon stand in trenches where the dead
+ Clog the ensanguinéd ice. But life to these
+ Prophetic and enraptured souls is vision,
+ And the keen ecstasy of fated strife,
+ And divination of the loss as gain,
+ And reading mysteries with brightened eyes
+ In fiery shock and dazzling pain before
+ The orient splendor of the face of Death,
+ As a great light beside a shadowy sea;
+ And in a high will's strenuous exercise,
+ Where the warmed spirit finds its fullest strength
+ And is no more afraid. And in the stroke
+ Of azure lightning when the hidden essence
+ And shifting meaning of man's spiritual worth
+ And mystical significance in time
+ Are instantly distilled to one clear drop
+ Which mirrors earth and heaven.
+
+ This is life
+ Flaming to heaven in a minute's span
+ When the breath of battle blows the smoldering spark.
+ And across these seas
+ We who cry Peace and treasure life and cling
+ To cities, happiness, or daily toil
+ For daily bread, or trail the long routine
+ Of seventy years, taste not the terrible wine
+ Whereof you drink, who drain and toss the cup
+ Empty and ringing by the finished feast;
+ Or have it shaken from your hand by sight
+ Of God against the olive woods.
+
+ As Joan of Arc amid the apple trees
+ With sacred joy first heard the voices, then
+ Obeying plunged at Orleans in a field
+ Of spears and lived her dream and died in fire,
+ Thou, France, hast heard the voices and hast lived
+ The dream and known the meaning of the dream,
+ And read its riddle: How the soul of man
+ May to one greatest purpose make itself
+ A lens of clearness, how it loves the cup
+ Of deepest truth, and how its bitterest gall
+ Turns sweet to soul's surrender.
+
+ And you say:
+ Take days for repetition, stretch your hands
+ For mocked renewal of familiar things:
+ The beaten path, the chair beside the window,
+ The crowded street, the task, the accustomed sleep,
+ And waking to the task, or many springs
+ Of lifted cloud, blue water, flowering fields--
+ The prison house grows close no less, the feast
+ A place of memory sick for senses dulled
+ Down to the dusty end where pitiful Time
+ Grown weary cries Enough!
+
+
+
+
+FOR A DANCE
+
+
+ There is in the dance
+ The joy of children on a May day lawn.
+ The fragments of old dreams and dead romance
+ Come to us from the dancers who are gone.
+
+ What strains of ancient blood
+ Move quicker to the music's passionate beat?
+ I see the gulls fly over a shadowy flood
+ And Munster fields of barley and of wheat.
+
+ And I see sunny France,
+ And the vine's tendrils quivering to the light,
+ And faces, faces, yearning for the dance
+ With wistful eyes that look on our delight.
+
+ They live through us again
+ And we through them, who wish for lips and eyes
+ Wherewith to feel, not fancy, the old pain
+ Passed with reluctance through the centuries
+
+ To us, who in the maze
+ Of dancing and hushed music woven afresh
+ Amid the shifting mirrors of hours and days
+ Know not our spirit, neither know our flesh;
+
+ Nor what ourselves have been,
+ Through the long way that brought us to the dance:
+ I see a little green by Camolin
+ And odorous orchards blooming in Provence.
+
+ Two listen to the roar
+ Of waves moon-smitten, where no steps intrude.
+ Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?
+ Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LIFE IS REAL
+
+
+ We rode, we rode against the wind.
+ The countless lights along the town
+ Made the town blacker for their fire,
+ And you were always looking down.
+
+ To 'scape the blustering breath of March,
+ Or was it for your mind's disguise?
+ Still I could shut my eyes and see
+ The turquoise color of your eyes.
+
+ Surely your ermine furs were warm,
+ And warm your flowing cloak of red;
+ Was it the wild wind kept you thus
+ Pensive and with averted head?
+
+ I scarcely spoke, my words were swept
+ Like winged things in the wind's despite.
+ We rode, and with what shadow speed
+ Across the darkness of the night!
+
+ Without a word, without a look.
+ What was the charm and what the spell
+ That made one hour of life become
+ A memory ever memorable?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All craft, all labor, all desire,
+ All toil of age, all hope of youth
+ Are shadows from the fount of fire
+ And mummers of the truth.
+
+ How bloodless books, how pulseless art,
+ Vain kingly and imperial zeal,
+ Vain all memorials of the heart!
+ When Life itself is real!
+
+ We traced the golden clouds of spring,
+ We roved the beach, we walked the land.
+ What was the world? A Phantom thing
+ That vanished in your hand.
+
+ You were as quiet as the sky.
+ Your eyes were liquid as the sea.
+ And in that hour that passed us by
+ We lived eternally.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUESTION
+
+
+ I
+
+ The sea moans and the stars are bright,
+ The leaves lisp 'neath a rolling moon.
+ I shut my eyes against the night
+ And make believe the time is June--
+ The June that left us over-soon.
+
+ This is the path and this the place
+ We sat and watched the moving sea,
+ And I the moonlight on your face.
+ We were not happy--woe is me,
+ Happiness is but memory!
+
+ It seemeth, now that you are gone,
+ My heart a measured pain doth keep:--
+ Are you now, as I am, alone?
+ Do you make merry, do you weep?
+ In whose arms are you now asleep?
+
+
+
+
+THE ANSWER
+
+
+ II
+
+ I made my bed beneath the pines
+ Where the sea washed the sandy bars;
+ I heard the music of the winds,
+ And blest the aureate face of Mars.
+ All night a lilac splendor throve
+ Above the heaven's shadowy verge;
+ And in my heart the voice of love
+ Kept music with the dreaming surge.
+
+ A little maid was at my side--
+ She slept--I scarcely slept at all;
+ Until toward the morning-tide
+ A dream possessed me with its thrall.
+ She sweetly breathed; around my breast
+ I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss,
+ Then came the vision of unrest--
+ I saw your face and felt your kiss.
+
+ I woke and knew with what dismay
+ She read my secret and surprise;
+ She only said, "Again 'tis day!
+ How red your cheeks, how bright your eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+THE SIGN
+
+
+ There's not a soul on the square,
+ And the snow blows up like a sail,
+ Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man
+ Falling, before the gale.
+
+ And when the wind eddies it rifts
+ The snow that lies in drifts;
+ And it skims along the walk and sifts
+ In stairways, doorways all about
+ The steps of the church in an angry rout.
+ And one would think that a hungry hound
+ Was out in the cold for the sound.
+
+ But I do not seem to mind
+ The snow that makes one blind,
+ Nor the crying voice of the wind--
+ I hate to hear the creak of the sign
+ Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:
+ With its rhythmic monotone of awe.
+ And neither a moan nor yet a whine,
+ Nor a cry of pain--one can't define
+ The sound of a creaking sign.
+
+ Especially if the sky be bleak,
+ And no one stirs however you seek,
+ And every time you hear it creak
+ You wonder why they leave it stay
+ When a man is buried and hidden away
+ Many a day!
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM MARION REEDY
+
+
+ He sits before you silent as Buddha,
+ And then you say
+ This man is Rabelais.
+ And while you wonder what his stock is,
+ English or Irish, you behold his eyes
+ As big and brown as those desirable crockies
+ With which as boys we used to play.
+ And then you see the spherical light that lies
+ Just under the iris coloring,
+ Before which everything,
+ Becomes as plain as day.
+
+ If you have noticed the rolling jowls
+ And the face that speaks its chief
+ Delight in beer and roast beef
+ Before you have seen his eyes, you see
+ A man of fleshly jollity,
+ Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls
+ To make a show of scowls.
+ And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls
+ In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett
+ That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette
+ Or retraces to Thales of Crete,
+ And touches upon Descartes coming back
+ Through the intellectual Zodiac
+ That's something of a feat.
+ And you see that the eyes are really the man,
+ For the thought of him proliferates
+ This way over to Hindostan,
+ And that way descanting on Yeats.
+ With a word on Plato's symposium,
+ And a little glimpse of Theocritus,
+ Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,
+ Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant
+ By a certain line obscure to us.
+ And then he'll take up Horace's odes
+ Or the Roman civilization;
+ Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,
+ Or the Greek deterioration.
+ Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,
+ Which Benjamin Moore and others think
+ Is the origin of life. Then Shelley
+ Comes in a for a look of understanding.
+ Or he'll tell you about the orientation
+ Of the ancient dream of Zion.
+ Or what's the matter with Bryan.
+ And while the porter is bringing a drink
+ Something into his fancy skips
+ And he talks about the Apocalypse,
+ Or a painter or writer now unknown
+ In France or Germany who will soon
+ Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.
+
+ It's not so hard a thing to be wise
+ In the lore of books.
+ It's a different thing to be all eyes,
+ Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks
+ Over the land and out to sea:
+ And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!
+ Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,
+ Young as the light of the sun is young,
+ And taking the even with the odd
+ As a matter of course, and the path he's trod
+ As a path that was good enough.
+ With a sort of transcendental sense
+ Whose hatred is less than indifference,
+ And a gift of wisdom in love.
+ And who can say as he classifies
+ Men and ages with his eyes
+ With cool detachment: this is dung,
+ And that poor fellow is just a fool.
+ And say what you will death is a rod.
+ But I see a light that shines and shines
+ And I rather think it's God.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY
+
+
+ If your thoughts were as clear as your eyes,
+ And the whole of your heart were true,
+ You were fitter by far for winning--
+ But then that would not be you.
+
+ If your pulse beat time to love
+ As fast as you think and plan,
+ You could kindle a lasting passion
+ In the breast of the strongest man.
+
+ If you felt as much as you thought,
+ And dreamed what you seem to dream,
+ A world of elysian beauty
+ Your ruined heart would redeem.
+
+ If you thought in the light of the sun,
+ Or the blood in your veins flowed free,
+ If you gave your kisses but gladly,
+ We two could better agree.
+
+ If you were strong where I counted,
+ And weak where yourself were at stake,
+ You would have my strength for your giving,
+ You would gain and not lose for my sake.
+
+ If your heart overruled your head,
+ Or your head were lord of your heart,
+ Or the two were lovingly balanced,
+ I think we never should part.
+
+ If you came to me spite of yourself,
+ And staid not away through design,
+ These days of loving and living
+ Were sweet as Olympian wine.
+
+ If you could weep with another,
+ And tears for yourself controlled,
+ You could waken and hold to a pity
+ You waken, but do not hold.
+
+ If your lips were as fain to speak
+ As your face is fashioned to hide--
+ You would know that to lay up treasure
+ A woman's heart must confide.
+
+ If your bosom were something richer,
+ Or your hands more fragile and thin,
+ You would call what the world calls evil,
+ Or sin and be glad of the sin.
+
+ If your soul were aflame with love,
+ Or your head were devoted to truth,
+ You never would toss on your pillow
+ Bewildered 'twixt rapture and ruth.
+
+ If you were the you of my dreams,
+ And the you of my dreams were mine,
+ These days, half sweet and half bitter,
+ Would taste like Olympian wine.
+
+ Oh, subtle and mystic Egyptians!
+ Who chiseled the Sphinx in the East,
+ With head and the breasts of a woman,
+ And body and claws of a beast.
+
+ And gave her a marvellous riddle
+ That the eyeless should read as he ran:
+ What crawls and runs and is baffled
+ By woman, the sphinx--but a man?
+
+ Many look in her face and are conquered,
+ Where one all her heart has explored;
+ A thousand have made her their sovereign,
+ But one is her sovereign and lord.
+
+ For him she leaps from her standard
+ And fawns at his feet in the sand,
+ Who sees that himself is her riddle,
+ And she but the work of his hand.
+
+
+
+
+PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN
+
+
+ The pathos in your face is like a peace,
+ It is like resignation or a grace
+ Which smiles at the surcease
+ Of hope. But there is in your face
+ The shadow of pain, and there is a trace
+ Of memory of pain.
+
+ I look at you again and again,
+ And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives
+ My search for your despair.
+ I look at your pale hands--I look at your hair;
+ And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare
+ Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves
+ A flutter of color running under leaves--
+ Such anguished dreams in your eyes!
+ And I listen to you speak
+ Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle,
+ Or a star's twinkle.
+ Sometimes as we talk you rise
+ And leave the room, and then I rub a streak
+ Of a tear from my cheek.
+
+ You tell me such magical things
+ Of pictures, books, romance
+ And of your life in France
+ In the varied music of exquisite words,
+ And in a voice that sings.
+
+ All things are memory now with you,
+ For poverty girds
+ Your hopes, and only your dreams remain.
+ And sometimes here and there
+ I see as you turn your head a whitened hair,
+ Even when you are smiling most.
+ And a light comes in your eyes like a passing ghost,
+ And a color runs through your cheeks as fresh
+ As burns in a girl's flesh.
+ Then I can shut my eyes and feel the pain
+ That has become a part of you, though I feign
+ Laughter myself. One sees another's bruise
+ And shakes his thought out of it shuddering.
+ So I turn and clamp my will lest I bring
+ Your sorrow into my flesh, who cannot choose
+ But hear your words and laughter,
+ And watch your hands and eyes.
+
+ Then as I think you over after
+ I have gone from you, and your face
+ Comes to me with its grace
+ Of memory of unfound love:
+ You seem to me the image of all women
+ Who dream and keep under smiles the grief thereof,
+ Or sew, or sit by windows, or read books
+ To hide their Secret's looks.
+ And after a time go out of life and leave
+ No uttered words but in their silence grieve
+ For Life and for the things no tongue can tell:
+ Why Life hurts so, and why Love haunts and hurts
+ Poor men and women in this demi-hell.
+
+ Perhaps your pathos means that it is well
+ Death in his time the aspiring torch inverts,
+ And all tired flesh and haunted eyes and hands
+ Moving in painéd whiteness are put under
+ The soothing earth to brighten April's wonder.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAGE
+
+
+ The sounds of mid-night trickle into the roar
+ Of morning over the water growing blue.
+ At ten o'clock the August sunbeams pour
+ A blinding flood on Michigan Avenue.
+
+ But yet the half-drawn shades of bottle green
+ Leave the recesses of the room
+ With misty auras drawn around their gloom
+ Where things lie undistinguished, scarcely seen.
+
+ You, standing between the window and the bed
+ Are edged with rainbow colors. And I lie
+ Drowsy with quizzical half-open eye
+ Musing upon the contour of your head,
+ Watching you comb your hair,
+ Clothed in a corset waist and skirt of silk,
+ Tied with white braid above your slender hips
+ Which reaches to your knees and makes your bare
+ And delicate legs by contrast white as milk.
+ And as you toss your head to comb its tresses
+ They flash upon me like long strips of sand
+ Between a moonlit sea, pale as your hand,
+ And a red sun that on a high dune stresses
+ Its sanguine heat.
+
+ And then at times your lips,
+ Protruding half unconscious half in scorn
+ Engage my eyes while looking through the morn
+ At the clear oval of your brow brought full
+ Over the sovereign largeness of your eyes;
+ Or at your breasts that shake not as you pull
+ The comb through stubborn tangles, only rise
+ Scarcely perceptible with breath or signs,
+ Firm unmaternal like a young Bacchante's,
+ Or at your nose profoundly dipped like Dante's
+ Over your chin that softly melts away.
+
+ Now you seem fully under my heart's sway.
+ I have slipped through the magic of your mesh
+ Freed once again and strengthened by your flesh,
+ You seem a weak thing for a strong man's play.
+ Yet I know now that we shall scarce have parted
+ When I shall think of you half heavy hearted.
+ I know our partings. You will faintly smile
+ And look at me with eyes that have no guile,
+ Or have too much, and pass into the sphere
+ Where you keep independent life meanwhile.
+ How do you live without me, is the fear?
+ You do not lean upon me, ask my love, or wonder
+ Of other loves I may have hidden under
+ These casual renewals of our love.
+ And if I loved you I should lie in flame,
+ Ari, go about re-murmuring your name,
+ And these are things a man should be above.
+
+ And as I lie here on the imminent brink
+ Of soul's surrender into your soul's power,
+ And in the white light of the morning hour
+ I see what life would be if we should link
+ Our lives together in a marriage pact:
+ For we would walk along a boundless tract
+ Of perfect hell; but your disloyalty
+ Would be of spirit, for I have not won
+ Mastered and bound your spirit unto me.
+ And if you had a lover in the way
+ I have you it would not by half betray
+ My love as does your vague and chainless thought,
+ Which wanders, soars or vanishes, returns,
+ Changes, astonishes, or chills or burns,
+ Is unresisting, plastic, freely wrought
+ Under my hands yet to no unison
+ Of my life and of yours. Upon this brink
+ I watch you now and think
+ Of all that has been preached or sung or spoken
+ Of woman's tragedy in woman's fall;
+ And all the pictures of a woman broken
+ By man's superior strength.
+
+ And there you stand
+ Your heart and life as firmly in command
+ Of your resolve as mine is, knowing all
+ Of man, the master, and his power to harm,
+ His rulership of spheres material,
+ Bread, customs, rules of fair repute--
+ What are they all against your slender arm?
+ Which long since plucked the fruit
+ Of good and evil, and of life at last
+ And now of Life. For dancing you have cast
+ Veil after veil of ideals or pretense
+ With which men clothe the being feminine
+ To satisfy their lordship or their sense
+ Of ownership and hide the things of sin--
+ You have thrown them aside veil after veil;
+ And there you stand unarmored, weirdly frail,
+ Yet strong as nature, making comical
+ The poems and the tales of woman's fall....
+ You nod your head, you smile, I feel the air
+ Made by the closing door. I lie and stare
+ At the closed door. One, two, your tuftèd steps
+ Die on the velvet of the outer hall.
+ You have escaped. And I would not pursue.
+ Though we are but caged creatures, I and you--
+ A male and female tiger in a zoo.
+ For I shall wait you. Life himself will track
+ Your wanderings and bring you back,
+ And shut you up again with me and cage
+ Our love and hatred and our silent rage.
+
+
+
+
+SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE
+
+
+ To a lustful thirst she came at first
+ And gave him her maiden's pride;
+ And the first man scattered the flower of her love,
+ Then turned to his chosen bride.
+
+ She waned with grief as a fading star,
+ And waxed as a shining flame;
+ And the second man had her woman's love,
+ But the second was playing the game.
+
+ With passion she stirred the man who was third;
+ Woe's me! what delicate skill
+ She plied to the heart that knew her art
+ And fled from her wanton will.
+
+ Now calm and demure, oh fair, oh pure,
+ Oh subtle, patient and wise,
+ She trod the weary round of life,
+ With a sorrow deep in her eyes.
+
+ Now a hero who knew how false, how true
+ Was the speech that fell from her lips,
+ With a Norseman's strength took sail with her,
+ And landed and burnt his ships.
+
+ He gave her pity, he gave her mirth,
+ And the hurt in her heart he nursed;
+ But under the silence of her brows
+ Was a dream of the man who was first.
+
+ And all the deceit and lust of men
+ Had sharpened her own deceit;
+ And down to the gates of hell she led
+ Her friend with her flying feet.
+
+ For a bitten bud will never bloom,
+ And a woman lost is lost!
+ And the first and the third may go unscathed,
+ But some man pays the cost.
+
+ And the books of life are full of the rune,
+ And this is the truth of the song:
+ No man can save a woman's soul,
+ Nor right a woman's wrong.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IS A MADNESS
+
+
+ Love is a madness, love is a fevered dream,
+ A white soul lost in a field of scarlet flowers--
+ Love is a search for the lost, the ever vanishing gleam
+ Of wings, desires and sorrows and haunted hours.
+
+ Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?
+ Love is a doubt, an ache, love is a writhing fear.
+ Love is a potion drunk when the ship puts out from land,
+ Rudderless, sails at full, and with none to steer.
+
+ The end is a shattered lamp, a drunken seraph asleep,
+ The upturned face of the drowned on a barren beach.
+ The glare of noon is o'er us, we are ashamed to weep--
+ The beginning and end of love are devoid of speech.
+
+
+
+
+ON A BUST
+
+
+ Your speeches seemed to answer for the nonce--
+ They do not justify your head in bronze!
+ Your essays! talent's failures were to you
+ Your philosophic gamut, but things true,
+ Or beautiful, oh never! What's the pons
+ For you to cross to fame?--Your head in bronze?
+
+ What has the artist caught? The sensual chin
+ That melts away in weakness from the skin,
+ Sagging from your indifference of mind;
+ The sullen mouth that sneers at human kind
+ For lack of genius to create or rule;
+ The superficial scorn that says "you fool!"
+ The deep-set eyes that have the mud-cat look
+ Which might belong to Tolstoi or a crook.
+ The nose half-thickly fleshed and half in point,
+ And lightly turned awry as out of joint;
+ The eyebrows pointing upward satyr-wise,
+ Scarce like Mephisto, for you scarcely rise
+ To cosmic irony in what you dream--
+ More like a tomcat sniffing yellow cream.
+ The brow! 'Tis worth the bronze it's molded in
+ Save for the flat-top head and narrow thin
+ Backhead which shows your spirit has not soared.
+ You are a Packard engine in a Ford,
+ Which wrecks itself and turtles with its load,
+ Too light and powerful to keep the road.
+ The master strength for twisting words is caught
+ In the swift turning wheels of iron thought.
+ With butcher knives your hands can vivisect
+ Our butterflies, but you can not erect
+ Temples of beauty, wisdom. You can crawl
+ Hungry and subtle over Eden's wall,
+ And shame half grown up truth, or make a lie
+ Full grown as good. You cannot glorify
+ Our dreams, or aspirations, or deep thirst.
+ To you the world's a fig tree which is curst.
+ You have preached every faith but to betray;
+ The artist shows us you have had your day.
+
+ A giant as we hoped, in truth a dwarf;
+ A barrel of slop that shines on Lethe's wharf,
+ Which seemed at first a vessel with sweet wine
+ For thirsty lips. So down the swift decline
+ You went through sloven spirit, craven heart
+ And cynic indolence. And here the art
+ Of molding clay has caught you for the nonce
+ And made your shame our shame--your head in bronze!
+ Some day this bust will lie amid old metals
+ Old copper boilers, wires, faucets, kettles.
+ Some day it will be melted up and molded
+ In door knobs, inkwells, paper knives, or folded
+ In leaves and wreaths around the capitals
+ Of marble columns, or for arsenals
+ Fashioned in something, or in course of time
+ Successively made each of these, from grime
+ Rescued successively, or made a bell
+ For fire or worship, who on earth can tell?
+ One thing is sure, you will not long be dust
+ When this bronze will be broken as a bust
+ And given to the junkman to re-sell.
+ You know this and the thought of it is hell!
+
+
+
+
+ARABEL
+
+
+ Twists of smoke rise from the limpness of jewelled fingers,
+ The softness of Persian rugs hushes the room.
+ Under a dragon lamp with a shade the color of coral
+ Sit the readers of poems one by one.
+ And all the room is in shadow except for the blur
+ Of mahogany surface, and tapers against the wall.
+
+ And a youth reads a poem of love: forever and ever
+ Is his soul the soul of the loved one; a woman sings
+ Of the nine months which go to the birth of a soul.
+ And after a time under the lamp a man
+ Begins to read a letter having no poem to read.
+ And the words of the letter flash and die like a fuse
+ Dampened by rain--it's a dying mind that writes
+ What Byron did for the Greeks against the Turks.
+ And a sickness enters our hearts. The jewelled hands
+ Clutch at the arms of the chairs--about the room
+ One hears the parting of lips, and a nervous shifting
+ Of feet and arms.
+
+ And I look up and over
+ The reader's shoulder and see the name of the writer.
+ What is it I see? The name of a man I knew!
+ You are an ironical trickster, Time, to bring
+ After so many years and into a place like this
+ This face before me: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness,
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ Such was your look in a photograph I saw
+ In a silver frame on a woman's dresser--and such
+ Your look in life, you thing of flesh alone!
+
+ And then
+ As a soul looks down on the body it leaves--
+ A body by fever slain--I look on myself
+ As I was a decade ago, while the letter is read:
+
+ I enter a box
+ Of a theater with Jim, my friend of fifty,
+ I being twenty-two. Two women are in the box
+ One of an age for Jim and one of an age for me.
+ And mine is dressed in a dainty gown of dimity,
+ And she fans herself with a fan of silver spangles
+ Till a subtle odor of delicate powder or of herself
+ Enters my blood and I stare at her snowy neck,
+ And the glossy brownness of her hair until
+ She feels my stare, and turns half-view and I see
+ How like a Greek's is her nose, with just a little
+ Aquiline touch; and I catch the flash of an eye,
+ And the glint of a smile on the richness of her lips.
+ The company now discourses upon the letter
+ But my dream goes on:
+
+ I re-live a rapture
+ Which may be madness, and no man understands
+ Until he feels it no more. The youth that was I
+ From the theater under the city's lights follows the girl
+ Desperate lest in the city's curious chances
+ He never sees her again. And boldly he speaks.
+ And she and the older woman, her sister
+ Smile and speak in turn, and Jim who stands
+ While I break the ice comes up--and so
+ Arm in arm we go to the restaurant,
+ I in heaven walking with Arabel,
+ And Jim with her older sister.
+ We drive them home under a summer moon,
+ And while I explain to Arabel my boldness,
+ And crave her pardon for it, Jim, the devil,
+ Laughs apart with her sister while I wonder
+ What Jim, the devil, is laughing at. No matter
+ To-morrow I walk in the park with Arabel.
+
+ Just now the reader of the letter
+ Tells of the writer's swift descent
+ From wealth to want.
+
+ We are in the park next afternoon by the water.
+ I look at her white throat full as it were of song.
+ And her rounded virginal bosom, beautiful!
+ And I study her eyes, I search to the depths her eyes
+ In the light of the sun. They are full of little rays
+ Like the edge of a fleur de lys, and she smiles
+ At first when I fling my soul at her feet.
+
+ But when I repeat I love her, love her only,
+ A cloud of wonder passes over her face,
+ She veils her eyes. The color comes to her cheeks.
+ And when she picks some clover blossoms and tears them
+ Her hand is trembling. And when I tell her again
+ I love her, love her only, she blots her eyes
+ With a handkerchief to hide a tear that starts.
+
+ And she says to me: "You do not know me at all,
+ How can you love me? You never saw me before
+ Last night." "Well, tell me about yourself."
+ And after a time she tells me the story:
+ About her father who ran away from her mother;
+ And how she hated her father, and how she grieved
+ When her mother died; and how a good grandmother
+ Helped her and helps her now. And how her sister
+ Divorced her husband. And then she paused a moment:
+ "I am not strong, you'd have to guard me gently,
+ And that takes money, dear, as well as love.
+ Two years ago I was very ill, and since then
+ I am not strong."
+
+ "Well I can work," I said.
+ "And what would you think of a little cottage
+ Not too far out with a yard and hosts of roses,
+ And a vine on the porch, and a little garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ When a morning breeze blows over your brow,
+ And you sit across the table and serve me
+ And neither of us can speak for happiness
+ Without our voices breaking, or lips trembling."
+
+ She is looking down with little frowns on her brow.
+ "But if ever I had to work, I could not do it,
+ I am not really well."
+
+ "But I can work," I said.
+ I rise and lift her up, holding her hand.
+ She slips her arm through mine and presses it.
+ "What a good man you are," she said. "Just like a brother--
+ I almost love you, I believe I love you."
+
+ The reader of the letter, being a doctor,
+ Is talking learnedly of the writer's case
+ Which has the classical marks of paresis.
+
+ Next day I look up Jim and rhapsodize
+ About a cottage with roses and a garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ And Arabel across the table. Jim is smoking
+ And flicking the ashes, but never says a word
+ Till I have finished. Then in a quiet voice:
+ "Arabel's sister says that Arabel's straight,
+ But she isn't, my boy--she's just like Arabel's sister.
+ She knew you had the madness for Arabel.
+ That's why we laughed and stood apart as we talked.
+ And I'll tell you now I didn't go home that night,
+ I shook you at the corner and went back,
+ And staid that night. Now be a man, my boy,
+ Go have your fling with Arabel, but drop
+ The cottage and the roses."
+
+ They are still discussing the madman's letter.
+
+ And memory permeates me like a subtle drug:
+ The memory of my love for Arabel,
+ The torture, the doubt, the fear, the restless longing,
+ The sleepless nights, the pity for all her sorrows,
+ The speculation about her and her sister,
+ And what her illness was;
+ And whether the man I saw one time was leaving
+ Her door or the next door to it, and if her door
+ Whether he saw my Arabel or her sister....
+
+ The reader of the letter is telling how the writer
+ Left his wife chasing the lure of women.
+
+ And it all comes back to me as clear as a vision:
+ The night I sat with Arabel strong but conquered.
+ Whatever I did, I loved her, whatever she was.
+ Madness or love the terrible struggle must end.
+ She took my hand and said, "You must see my room."
+ We stood in the doorway together and on her dresser
+ Was a silver frame with the photograph of a man--
+ I had seen him in life: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ "There is his picture," she said, "ask me whatever you will.
+ Take me as mistress or wife, it is yours to decide.
+ But take me as mistress and grow like the picture before you,
+ Take me as wife and be the good man you can be.
+ Choose me as mistress--how can I do less for dearest?
+ Or make me your wife--fate makes me your mistress or wife."
+ "I can leave you," I said. "You can leave me," she echoed,
+ "But how about hate in your heart."
+
+ "You are right," I replied.
+
+ The company is now discussing the subject of love--
+ They seem to know little about it.
+
+ But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:
+ "Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness,
+ What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"
+
+ "Well, it's life," Arabel.
+ "There's the story of Hamlet, for instance," I added.
+ Then fell into silence.
+
+
+
+
+JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER
+
+
+ Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,
+ When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.
+ So we came out and he went home to wife
+ And children, and I started for the club
+ Which I call home; and then just like a flash
+ You came into my mind. I bought a slug
+ And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard
+ The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me
+ To hear your voice at last--it was so drowsy,
+ Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes
+ Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing
+ In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....
+
+ Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice
+ Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine--
+ It showed your understanding, that you know
+ How it is with a man, and how it is with me
+ Who work by day and sometimes drift by night
+ About this hellish city. Though you know
+ That I am fifty-one, can you imagine
+ My feeling with no children growing up?
+ My feeling as of one who sees a play
+ And afterwards sits somewhere at a table
+ And talks with friends about the different parts
+ Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?
+ My feeling with this money which I've made
+ And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working
+ The money dulls the fancy which could use it
+ In splendid dreams or in the art of life.
+ Well, here was I ringing your bell at last
+ At half-past one, and there you stood before me
+ With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands
+ So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,
+ But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you
+ With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you
+ Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,
+ For that kiss which you gave me at the door....
+
+ Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,
+ My heart acts queer of late....
+
+ I want to say
+ Lest I forget it, if you ever hear
+ From Arabel or Francis what I said
+ To Francis when he told me he intended
+ To marry Arabel, why just remember
+ Our talk this morning and forget I said it--
+ I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,
+ That night we met, I being fifty-one
+ And old at what men call the game, looked on
+ With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you
+ Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;
+ And I found you as I'd found others before you,
+ But with this difference so it seemed to me:
+ What had been false with them was real with you,
+ What had been shame with them with you was life,
+ What had been craft with them with you was nature,
+ What had been sin with them to you was good,
+ What had been vice with them to you the honest
+ And uncorrupted innocence of a human
+ Heart so human looking on our souls.
+ What had been coarse to them to you was clean
+ As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow
+ And move and sing along creation's way.
+ You came to me like friendship, what you gave
+ Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self
+ And least of motive. And it is through you
+ That I have risen out of the pit where sneers
+ And laughter, looks and words obscene,
+ Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,
+ As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses
+ Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds
+ Upon their infinite sailings and the lake
+ Washes beneath us, and we lie and think
+ How this has been forever and will be
+ When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,
+ Yet how life is eternal--just as one
+ Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy
+ Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme
+ The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme
+ The gospel hymns and ritual) that I
+ Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.
+ For what is our communion, yours and mine,
+ If it be not a way of laying hold
+ On that mysterious essence which makes one
+ Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....
+ Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!
+ Pour me a little coffee, if you please.
+
+ I'll take from my herbarium certain species
+ To make my points: Now here there is the woman
+ Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.
+ She fixes her design upon a man,
+ Who's married and the riotous game begins.
+ They go along a year or two perhaps.
+ Then psychic chemistry performs its part:
+ They are in love, or he's in love with her.
+ What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:
+ That which she gave without love at the first
+ She now withdraws in spite of love unless
+ He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties
+ And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men
+ Kill women with a knife or strangle them?
+ Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,
+ You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.
+ She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;
+ She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.
+ And when you dance with her she has a way
+ Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,
+ Which almost lisps as she caresses you
+ With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says
+ Things with a double meaning, and she smiles
+ To carry out her meaning. Well, you think
+ The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing
+ She lands you up at the appointed place
+ With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,
+ That have a nervous way of opening
+ And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,
+ From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;
+ Which meeting is a way of saying to you:
+ The girl is yours if you will marry her,
+ And let her have your money.
+
+ Julia, be still;
+ I can't go on while you are laughing so.
+ I know that men are easy, but to see
+ Women as women see them is a gift
+ That comes to men who reach my age in life....
+
+ Well, here's another, here's the type of woman
+ Whose power of motherhood conceals the art
+ By which she thrives, through which she reaches also
+ An apotheosis in society.
+ Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.
+ And her strength is the race's, and she draws
+ The urgings of posterity and leans
+ Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.
+ To her a man must sacrifice his life.
+ But women, Julia, of whatever type,
+ Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,
+ And man's life to develop, even to live.
+ And like the praying mantis who's devoured
+ In the embrace, man is devoured by women
+ In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame
+ In man's life where he warms him but to suck
+ The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,
+ Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates--
+ Love is not free which should be wholly free
+ For Life's sake.
+
+ On Michigan Avenue
+ At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see
+ In rain or shine a certain tailor walk
+ In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.
+ That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.
+ He has no woman, cannot find a woman,
+ Because all women, seeing him, divine
+ What surges through him, and within their hearts
+ Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun
+ Of seeing how denial keeps him walking
+ All up and down the boulevard. He's found
+ No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.
+ I use him for my point. If we could make
+ Some fine erotometer one could sit
+ And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands
+ Record the waves of longing in the city,
+ And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows
+ Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,
+ Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.
+
+ Julia.
+ So much for all these things, and now for you
+ To whom they lead.
+
+ You'll find among the marshes
+ The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,
+ Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find
+ The water lily with white petals and
+ A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches
+ The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,
+ Impales them on its tiny spines, in time
+ Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out
+ Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall
+ Into the water, treasured there like tears
+ Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed
+ Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.
+ The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily
+ Well typify the nature of most women
+ Who must have blood or soul of man to live--
+ Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale
+ Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.
+ He read somewhere that primroses will change
+ Under your eyes sometimes to something else,
+ Become another flower and not a primrose,
+ Another species even. So he watched
+ And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed
+ Has somewhere in its vital self the power
+ Of this mutation. What is the origin
+ Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,
+ Who has mutated: You are not a mother;
+ Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;
+ Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;
+ Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon
+ Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down
+ To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who
+ Rejoices in the secret of man's strength
+ And in subduing it.
+
+ You are a flower
+ Designed to comfort such poor men as I,
+ And show the world how love can be a thing
+ That asks no more than what it freely gives,
+ And gives all--all some women call the prize
+ For life or honor, riches, power or place.
+ You are a blossom in the primrose bed
+ So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.
+ You have mutated, Julia, that is it,
+ This flower of you is what I call _The Lover_!
+
+
+
+
+THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES
+
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death--
+ But never a face like Harold's who passed in a throe of pain.
+ There were maidens and youths in the bud, and men in the lust of life;
+ And women whom child-birth racked till the crying soul slipped through;
+ Patriarchs withered with age and nuns ascetical white;
+ And one who wasted her virgin wealth in a riot of joy.
+ Brothers and sisters at last in a quiet and purple pall,
+ Fellow voyagers bound to a port on an ash-blue sea,
+ Locked in an utterless grief, in a mystery fearful to dream.
+ All of these I have seen--but the face of Harold the bold
+ Looked with a penitent pallor and stared with a sad surprise.
+
+ For now at last he was still who never knew rest in life.
+ And the ardent heat of his blood was cold as the sweat of a stone.
+ Life came in an evil hour and stabbed with a poisoned word
+ The heart of a girl who faintly smiled through her tears.
+ And her little life was tossed as the eddies that whirl in the hollows
+ From the great world-currents that wreck the battle ships at sea.
+ And the face of dead Lillian seemed like a rain-ruined flower.
+
+ Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day
+ When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?
+
+ But the face of William the Great was fashioned by life and thought;
+ And death made it massive as bronze, and deepened the lines thereof:
+ Some for the will and some for patience, and some for hope--
+ Hope for the weal of the world wherein he mightily strove--
+ Yet what did it all bespeak--what but submission and awe,
+ And a trace of pain as one with a sword in his side?
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death
+ But the sorrow thereof is dumb like the cloth that lies on the brow.
+ So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances,
+ Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?
+
+
+
+
+THE CRY
+
+
+ There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears.
+ It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears.
+ It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres.
+
+ It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise,
+ That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries,
+ Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise.
+
+ It may be myself as I was in another life,
+ Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife,
+ Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife.
+
+ The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul
+ Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control,
+ When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal.
+
+ Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod
+ Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;
+ Perhaps this cry in my heart is nothing but God!
+
+
+
+
+THE HELPING HAND
+
+
+ Mother, my head is bloody, my breast is red with scars.
+ Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?
+
+ Mother, my soul is crucified, my thirst is past belief.
+ How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?
+
+ Mother, I feel the terror and the loveliness of life.
+ Tell me of the children, son, and tell me of the wife.
+
+ Mother, your face is but a face among a million more.
+ You're standing on the deck, my son, and looking at the shore.
+
+ I lean against the wall, mother, and struggle hard for breath.
+ You must have heard the step, my son, of the patrolman Death.
+
+ Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?
+ Well, kiss the crucifix, my son, and pass beneath the rod.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOOR
+
+
+ This is the room that thou wast ushered in.
+ Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?
+ Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?
+ Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight
+ Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore,
+ There is no less one door.
+
+ Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom,
+ The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?
+ Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth--
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof
+ Above the rents within the stairless roof.
+ Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor--
+ Who knocks? Unbolt the door!
+
+
+
+
+SUPPLICATION
+
+_For He knoweth our frame, He remembereth that we are dust._--PSALM
+CIII. 14.
+
+
+ Oh Lord, when all our bones are thrust
+ Beyond the gaze of all but Thine;
+ And these blaspheming tongues are dust
+ Which babbled of Thy name divine,
+ How helpless then to carp or rail
+ Against the canons of Thy word;
+ Wilt Thou, when thus our spirits fail,
+ Have mercy, Lord?
+
+ Here from this ebon speck that floats
+ As but a mote within Thine eye,
+ Vain sneers and curses from our throats
+ Rise to the vault of Thy fair sky:
+ Yet when this world of ours is still
+ Of this all-wondering, tortured horde,
+ And none is left for Thee to kill--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou knowest that our flesh is grass;
+ Ah! let our withered souls remain
+ Like stricken reeds of some morass,
+ Bleached, in Thy will, by ceaseless rain.
+ Have we not had enough of fire,
+ Enough of torment and the sword?--
+ If these accrue from Thy desire--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Dost Thou not see about our feet
+ The tangles of our erring thought?
+ Thou knowest that we run to greet
+ High hopes that vanish into naught.
+ We bleed, we fall, we rise again;
+ How can we be of Thee abhorred?
+ We are Thy breed, we little men--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay,
+ Wilt Thou deny when we deny?
+ A thousand years are but a day,
+ A little day within Thine eye:
+ We thirst for love, we yearn for life;
+ We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?
+ We, beaten, fall upon the knife--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou givest us youth that turns to age;
+ And strength that leaves us while we seek.
+ Thou pourest the fire of sacred rage
+ In costly vessels all too weak.
+ Great works we planned in hopes that Thou
+ Fit wisdom therefor wouldst accord;
+ Thou wrotest failure on our brow--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Could we but know, as Thou dost know--
+ Hold the whole scheme at once in mind!
+ Yet, dost Thou watch our anxious woe
+ Who piece with palsied hands and blind
+ The fragments of our little plan,
+ To thrive and earn Thy blest reward,
+ And make and keep the world of man--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou settest the sun within his place
+ To light the world, the world is Thine,
+ Put in our hands and through Thy grace
+ To be subdued and made divine.
+ Whether we serve Thee ill or well,
+ Thou knowest our frame, nor canst afford
+ To leave Thy own for long in hell--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+
+
+
+THE CONVERSATION
+
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew then, starting let us say with ether,
+ You would become electrons, out of whirling
+ Would rise to atoms; then as an atom resting
+ Till through Yourself in other atoms moving
+ And by the fine affinity of power
+ Atom with atom massed, You would go on
+ Over the crest of visible forms transformed,
+ Would be a molecule, a little system
+ Wherein the atoms move like suns and planets
+ With satellites, electrons. So as worlds build
+ From star-dust, as electron to electron,
+ The same attraction drawing, molecules
+ Would wed and pass over the crest again
+ Of visible forms, lying content as crystals,
+ Or colloids--ready now to use the gleam
+ Of life. As 'twere I see You with a match,
+ As one in darkness lights a candle, and one
+ Sees not his friend's form in the shadowed room
+ Until the candle's lighted? Even his form
+ Is darkened by the new-made light, he stands
+ So near it! Well, I add to all I've asked
+ Whether You knew the cell born to the glint
+ Of that same lighted candle would not rest
+ Even as electrons rest not--but would surge
+ Over the crest of visible forms, become
+ Beneath our feet things hidden from the eye
+ However aided,--as above our heads
+ Beyond the Milky Way great systems whirl
+ Beyond the telescope,--become bacilli,
+ Amoeba, starfish, swimming things, on land
+ The serpent, and then birds, and beasts of prey
+ The tiger (You in the tiger) on and on
+ Surging above the crest of visible forms until
+ The ape came--oh what ages they are to us--
+ But still creation flies on wings of light--
+ Then to the man who roamed the frozen fields
+ Neither man nor ape,--we found his jaw, You know,
+ At Heidelberg, in a sand-pit. On and on
+ Till Babylon was builded, and arose
+ Jerusalem and Memphis, Athens, Rome,
+ Venice and Florence, Paris, London, Berlin,
+ New York, Chicago--did You know, I ask,
+ All this would come of You in ether moving?
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew that man was born to be destroyed,
+ That as an atom perfect, whole, at ease,
+ Drawn to some other atom, is broken, changed
+ And rises o'er the crest of visible things
+ To something else--that man must pass as well
+ Through equal transformation. And You knew
+ The unutterable things of man's life: From the first
+ You saw his wracked Deucalion-soul that looks
+ Backward on life that rises, where he rose
+ Out of the stones. You saw him looking forward
+ Over the purple mists that hide the gulf.
+ Ere the green cell rose, even in the green cell
+ You saw the sequences of thought--You saw
+ That one would say, "All's matter" and another,
+ "All's mind," and man's mind which reflects the image,
+ Could not envision it. That even worship
+ Of what you are would be confused by cries
+ From India or Palestine. That love
+ Which sees itself beginning in the seeds,
+ Which fly and seek each other, maims
+ The soul at the last in loss of child or friend
+ Father or mother. And You knew that sex,
+ Ranging from plants through beasts and up to us
+ Had ties of filth--And out of them would rise
+ Diverse philosophies to tear the world.
+ You knew, when the green cell arose, that even
+ The You which formed it moving on would bring
+ Races and breeds, madmen, tyrants, slaves,
+ The idiot child, the murderer, the insane--
+ All springing from the action of one law.
+ You knew the enmity that lies between
+ The lives of micro-beings and our own. You knew
+ How man would rise to vision of himself:
+ Immortal only in the race's life.
+ And past the atom and the first glint of life,
+ Saw him with soul enraptured, yet o'ershadowed
+ Amid self-consciousness!
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+ But this your fault: You see me as apart,
+ Over, removed, at enmity with You.
+ You are in Me, and of Me, even at one
+ With Me. But there's your soul--your soul may be
+ The germinal cell of vaster evolution.
+ Why try to tell you? If I gave a cell
+ Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:
+ "After me what, a stalk, a flower, life
+ That swims or crawls?" And if I gave to you
+ Wisdom to say: "You shall become a reed
+ By the water's edge"--how could the cell foresee
+ What the reed is, bending beneath the wind
+ When the lake ripples and the skies are blue
+ As larkspur? Therefore I, who moved in darkness
+ Becoming light in suns and light in souls
+ And mind with thought--for what is thought but light
+ Sprung from the clash of ether?--I am with you.
+ And if beyond this stable state that stands
+ For your life here (as cells are whole and balanced
+ Till the inner urge bring union, then a breaking
+ And building up to higher life), there is
+ No memory of this world nor of your thought,
+ Nor sense of life on this world lived and borne;
+ Or whether you remember, know yourself
+ As one who lived here, suffered here, aspired--
+ What does it matter?--you cannot be lost,
+ As I am lost not. Therefore be at peace.
+ And from the laws whose orbits cross and run
+ To seeming tangles, find the law through which
+ Your soul shall be perfected till it draw,--
+ As the green cell the sunlight draws and turns
+ Its chemical effulgence into life--
+ My inner splendor. All the rest is mine
+ In infinite time. For if I should unroll
+ The parchment of the future, it were vain--
+ You could not read it.
+
+
+
+
+TERMINUS
+
+
+ Terminus shows the ways and says,
+ "All things must have an end."
+ Oh, bitter thought we hid away
+ When first you were my friend.
+
+ We hid it in the darkest place
+ Our hearts had place to hide,
+ And took the sweet as from a spring
+ Whose waters would abide.
+
+ For neither life nor the wide world
+ Has greater store than this:--
+ The thought that runs through hands and eyes
+ And fills the silences.
+
+ There is a void the agéd world
+ Throws over the spent heart;
+ When Life has given all she has,
+ And Terminus says depart.
+
+ When we must sit with folded hands,
+ And see with inward eye
+ A void rise like an arctic breath
+ To hollow the morrow's sky.
+
+ To-morrow is, and trembling leaves,
+ And 'wildered winds from Thrace
+ Look for you where your face has bloomed,
+ And where may bloom your face.
+
+ Beyond the city, over the hill,
+ Under the anguished moon,
+ The winds and my dreams seek after you
+ By meadow, water and dune.
+
+ All things must have an end, we know;
+ But oh, the dreaded end;
+ Whether in life, whether in death,
+ To lose the cherished friend.
+
+ To lose in life the cherished friend,
+ While the myrtle tree is green;
+ To live and have the cherished friend
+ With only the world between.
+
+ With only the wide, wide world between,
+ Where memory has mortmain.
+ Life pours more wine in the heart of man
+ Than the heart of man can contain.
+
+ Oh, heart of man and heart of woman,
+ Thirsting for blood of the vine,
+ Life waits till the heart has lived too much
+ And then pours in new wine!
+
+
+
+
+MADELINE
+
+
+ I almost heard your little heart
+ Begin to beat, and since that hour
+ Your life has grown apace and blossomed,
+ Fed by the same miraculous power,
+
+ That moved the rivulet of your life,
+ And made your heart begin to beat.
+ Now all day your steps are a-patter.
+ Oh, what swift and musical feet!
+
+ You sleep. I wait to see you wake,
+ With wonder-eyes and hands that reach.
+ I laugh to hear your thoughts that gather
+ Too fast on your budding lips for speech.
+
+ Your sunny hair is cut as if
+ 'Twere trimmed around a yellow crock.
+ How gay the ribbon, and oh, how cunning
+ The flaring skirt of the little frock!
+
+ You build and play and search and pry,
+ And hunt for dolls and forgotten toys.
+ Why do you never tire of playing,
+ Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?
+
+ You will not sleep? You are tired of the house?
+ You are just as naughty as you can be.
+ Madeline, Madeline, come to the garden,
+ And play with Marcia under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+MARCIA
+
+
+ Madeline's hair is straight and yours
+ Is just as curly as tendril vines;
+ And she is fair, but a deeper color
+ Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.
+
+ A serious wisdom burns and glows
+ Steadily in your dark-eyed look.
+ Already a wit and a little stoic--
+ Perhaps you are going to write a book,
+
+ Or paint a picture, or sing or act
+ The part of Katherine or Juliet.
+ I believe you were born with the gift of knowing
+ When to remember and when to forget.
+
+ And when to stifle and kill a grief,
+ And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.
+ The heart that has most strength for feeling
+ Must have the strength to conquer the pain.
+
+ You understand? It seems that you do--
+ Though you cannot utter a word to me.
+ Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline
+ Building a doll-house under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+THE ALTAR
+
+
+ My heart is an altar whereon
+ Many sacrificial fires have been kindled
+ In praise of spring and Aphrodite.
+
+ My heart is an altar of chalcedony,
+ Crowned with a tablet of bronze,
+ Blacked with smoke, scarred with fire,
+ And scented with the aromatic bitterness
+ Of dead incense.
+
+ Albeit let us murmur a little Doric prayer
+ Over the ashes which lie scattered around the altar;
+ For the April rain has wept over them,
+ And from them the crocus smelts its Roman gold.
+
+ What though there are remnants here
+ Of faded coronals,
+ And bits of silver string
+ Torn from forgotten harps?
+ Perfect amid the ashes sleeps a cup of amethyst.
+ Let us take it and pour the sea from it,
+ And while the savor of dead lips is washed away,
+ Let us lift our hands to this sky of hyacinth.
+ Let us light the altar newly, for lo! it is spring.
+
+ Bring from the re-kindled woodland
+ Flames of columbine, jewel-weed and trumpet-creeper,
+ There where the woodman burns the fallen tree,
+ And scented smoke arises
+ On azure wings between the branches,
+ Budding with adolescent life.
+ With these let us light the altar,
+ That a scarlet flame may lean
+ Against the silver sea.
+
+ For thou art fire also,
+ And air, and water, and the resurgent earth,
+ For thou art woman, thou art love.
+ Thou art April of the Arcadian moon,
+ Thou art the swift sun racing through snowy clouds,
+ Thou art the creative silence of flowering valleys.
+ Thy face is the apple tree in bloom;
+ Thine eyes the glimpses of green water
+ When the tree's blossoms shake
+ As soft winds fan them.
+ Thy hair is flame blown against the sea's mist--
+ Thou art spring.
+
+ The fire on the altar burns brightly,
+ And the sea sparkles in the sun.
+ Let us murmur a Doric prayer
+ For the gift of love,
+ For the gift of life,
+ Oh Life! Oh Love! We lift our hands to thee!
+
+
+
+
+SOUL'S DESIRE
+
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that stands
+ Where sunlight falls between the trees
+ Of a sparse forest's leafless edge,
+ When Spring's first magic moveth these.
+
+ Her soul is like a little brook,
+ Thin edged with ice against the leaves,
+ Where the wolf drinks and is alone,
+ And where the woodbine interweaves.
+
+ A bank late covered by the snow,
+ But lighted by the frozen North;
+ Her soul is like a little plot
+ That one white blossom bringeth forth.
+
+ Her soul is slim, like silver slips,
+ And straight, like flags beside a stream.
+ Her soul is like a shape that moves
+ And changes in a wonder dream.
+
+ Who would pursue her clasps a cloud,
+ And taketh sorrow for his zeal.
+ Memory shall sing him many songs
+ While bound upon the torture wheel.
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that glides
+ By moonlight o'er a phantom ridge;
+ Her face is like a light that runs
+ Beneath the shadow of a bridge.
+
+ Her voice is like a woodland cry
+ Heard in a summer's desolate hour.
+ Her eyes are dim; her lips are faint,
+ And tinctured like the cuckoo flower.
+
+ Her little breasts are like the buds
+ Of tulips in a place forlorn.
+ Her soul is like a mandrake bloom
+ Standing against the crimson moon.
+
+ Her dream is like the fenny snake's,
+ That warms him in the noonday's fire.
+ She hath no thought, nor any hope,
+ Save of herself and her desire.
+
+ She is not life; she is not death;
+ She is not fear, or joy or grief.
+ Her soul is like a quiet sea
+ Beneath a ruin-haunted reef.
+
+ She is the shape the sailor sees,
+ That slips the rock without a sound.
+ She is the soul that comes and goes
+ And leaves no mark, yet makes a wound.
+
+ She is the soul that hunts and flies;
+ She is a world-wide mist of care.
+ She is the restlessness of life,
+ Its rapture and despair.
+
+
+
+
+BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE
+
+
+ It was a hermit on Whitsunday
+ That came to the Table Round.
+ "King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight
+ May the Holy Grail be found?"
+
+ "By never a Knight that liveth now;
+ By none that feasteth here."
+ King Arthur marvelled when he said,
+ "He shall be got this year."
+
+ Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot
+ And there did mount his steed,
+ And hastened to a pleasant town
+ That stood in knightly need.
+
+ Where many people him acclaimed,
+ He passed the Corbin pounte,
+ And there he saw a fairer tower
+ Than ever was his wont.
+
+ And in that tower for many years
+ A dolorous lady lay,
+ Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched,
+ And also Queen le Fay.
+
+ And Launcelot loosed her from those pains,
+ And there a dragon slew.
+ Then came King Pelles out and said,
+ "Your name, brave Knight and true?"
+
+ "My name is Pelles, wit ye well,
+ And King of the far country;
+ And I, Sir Knight, am cousin nigh
+ To Joseph of Armathie."
+
+ "I am Sir Launcelot du Lake."
+ And then they clung them fast;
+ And yede into the castle hall
+ To take the king's repast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer,
+ That shone like Ophir gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor
+ As bloweth over sea
+ From a land of many colored flowers
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of tulip-white,
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," said Pelles, "richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said King Pelles,
+ "That was the Holy Grail."
+
+ Then by this sign King Pelles knew
+ Elaine his fair daughter
+ Should lie with Launcelot that night,
+ And Launcelot with her.
+
+ And that this twain should get a child
+ Before the night should fail,
+ Who would be named Sir Galahad,
+ And find the Holy Grail.
+
+ Then cometh one hight Dame Brisen
+ With Pelles to confer,
+ "Now, wit ye well, Sir Launcelot
+ Loveth but Guinevere."
+
+ "But if ye keep him well in hand,
+ The while I work my charms,
+ The maid Elaine, ere spring of morn,
+ Shall lie within his arms."
+
+ Dame Brisen was the subtlest witch
+ That was that time in life;
+ She was as if Beelzebub
+ Had taken her to wife.
+
+ Then did she cause one known of face
+ To Launcelot to bring,
+ As if it came from Guinevere,
+ Her wonted signet ring.
+
+ "By Holy Rood, thou comest true,
+ For well I know thy face.
+ Where is my lady?" asked the Knight,
+ "There in the Castle Case?"
+
+ "'Tis five leagues scarcely from this hall,"
+ Up spoke that man of guile.
+ "I go this hour," said Launcelot,
+ "Though it were fifty mile."
+
+ Then sped Dame Brisen to the king
+ And whispered, "An we thrive,
+ Elaine must reach the Castle Case
+ Ere Launcelot arrive."
+
+ Elaine stole forth with twenty knights
+ And a goodly company.
+ Sir Launcelot rode fast behind,
+ Queen Guinevere to see.
+
+ Anon he reached the castle door.
+ Oh! fond and well deceived.
+ And there it seemed the queen's own train
+ Sir Launcelot received.
+
+ "Where is the queen?" quoth Launcelot,
+ "For I am sore bestead,"
+ "Have not such haste," said Dame Brisen,
+ "The queen is now in bed."
+
+ "Then lead me thither," saith he,
+ "And cease this jape of thine."
+ "Now sit thee down," said Dame Brisen,
+ "And have a cup of wine."
+
+ "For wit ye not that many eyes
+ Upon you here have stared;
+ Now have a cup of wine until
+ All things may be prepared."
+
+ Elaine lay in a fair chamber,
+ 'Twixt linen sweet and clene.
+ Dame Brisen all the windows stopped,
+ That no day might be seen.
+
+ Dame Brisen fetched a cup of wine
+ And Launcelot drank thereof.
+ "No more of flagons," saith he,
+ "For I am mad for love."
+
+ Dame Brisen took Sir Launcelot
+ Where lay the maid Elaine.
+ Sir Launcelot entered the bed chamber
+ The queen's love for to gain.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the maid Elaine,
+ And her cheeks and brows did burn;
+ And then they lay in other's arms
+ Until the morn's underne.
+
+ Anon Sir Launcelot arose
+ And toward the window groped,
+ And then he saw the maid Elaine
+ When he the window oped.
+
+ "Ah, traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he gat his sword,
+ "That I should live so long and now
+ Become a knight abhorred."
+
+ "False traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he shook the steel.
+ Elaine skipped naked from the bed
+ And 'fore the knight did kneel.
+
+ "I am King Pelles own daughter
+ And thou art Launcelot,
+ The greatest knight of all the world.
+ This hour we have begot."
+
+ "Oh, traitoress Brisen," cried the knight,
+ "Oh, charmed cup of wine;
+ That I this treasonous thing should do
+ For treasures such as thine."
+
+ "Have mercy," saith maid Elaine,
+ "Thy child is in my womb."
+ Thereat the morning's silvern light
+ Flooded the bridal room.
+
+ That light it was a benison;
+ It seemed a holy boon,
+ As when behind a wrack of cloud
+ Shineth the summer moon.
+
+ And in the eyes of maid Elaine
+ Looked forth so sweet a faith,
+ Sir Launcelot took his glittering sword,
+ And thrust it in the sheath.
+
+ "So God me help, I spare thy life,
+ But I am wretch and thrall,
+ If any let my sword to make
+ Dame Brisen's head to fall."
+
+ "So have thy will of her," she said,
+ "But do to me but good;
+ For thou hast had my fairest flower,
+ Which is my maidenhood."
+
+ "And we have done the will of God,
+ And the will of God is best."
+ Sir Launcelot lifted the maid Elaine
+ And hid her on his breast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove,
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer
+ That shone like beaten gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor,
+ As bloweth over sea,
+ From a land of many colored flowers,
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of silver white
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," she said, "the richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said maid Elaine,
+ "This is the Holy Grail."
+
+ And then a nimbus light hung o'er
+ Her brow so fair and meek;
+ And turned to orient pearls the tears
+ That glistered down her cheek.
+
+ And a sound of music passing sweet
+ Went in and out again.
+ Sir Launcelot made the sign of the cross,
+ And knelt to maid Elaine.
+
+ "Name him whatever name thou wilt,
+ But be his sword and mail
+ Thrice tempered 'gainst a wayward world,
+ That lost the Holy Grail."
+
+ Sir Launcelot sadly took his leave
+ And rode against the morn.
+ And when the time was fully come
+ Sir Galahad was born.
+
+ Also he was from Jesu Christ,
+ Our Lord, the eighth degree;
+ Likewise the greatest knight this world
+ May ever hope to see.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF SIR LAUNCELOT
+
+
+ Sir Launcelot had fled to France
+ For the peace of Guinevere,
+ And many a noble knight was slain,
+ And Arthur lay on his bier.
+
+ Sir Launcelot took ship from France
+ And sailed across the sea.
+ He rode seven days through fair England
+ Till he came to Almesbury.
+
+ Then spake Sir Bors to Launcelot:
+ The old time is at end;
+ You have no more in England's realm
+ In east nor west a friend.
+
+ You have no friend in all England
+ Sith Mordred's war hath been,
+ And Queen Guinevere became a nun
+ To heal her soul of sin.
+
+ Sir Launcelot answered never a word
+ But rode to the west countree
+ Until through the forest he saw a light
+ That shone from a nunnery.
+
+ Sir Launcelot entered the cloister,
+ And the queen fell down in a swoon.
+ Oh blessed Jesu, saith the queen,
+ For thy mother's love, a boon.
+
+ Go hence, Sir Launcelot, saith the queen,
+ And let me win God's grace.
+ My heavy heart serves me no more
+ To look upon thy face.
+
+ Through you was wrought King Arthur's death,
+ Through you great war and wrake.
+ Leave me alone, let me bleed,
+ Pass by for Jesu's sake.
+
+ Then fare you well, saith Launcelot,
+ Sweet Madam, fare you well.
+ And sythen you have left the world
+ No more in the world I dwell.
+
+ Then up rose sad Sir Launcelot
+ And rode by wold and mere
+ Until he came to a hermitage
+ Where bode Sir Bedivere.
+
+ And there he put a habit on
+ And there did pray and fast.
+ And when Sir Bedivere told him all
+ His heart for sorrow brast.
+
+ How that Sir Mordred, traitorous knight
+ Betrayed his King and sire;
+ And how King Arthur wounded, died
+ Broken in heart's desire.
+
+ And so Sir Launcelot penance made,
+ And worked at servile toil;
+ And prayed the Bishop of Canterbury
+ His sins for to assoil.
+
+ His shield went clattering on the wall
+ To a dolorous wail of wind;
+ His casque was rust, his mantle dust
+ With spider webs entwined.
+
+ His listless horses left alone
+ Went cropping where they would,
+ To see the noblest knight of the world
+ Upon his sorrow brood.
+
+ Anon a Vision came in his sleep,
+ And thrice the Vision saith:
+ Go thou to Almesbury for thy sin,
+ Where lieth the queen in death.
+
+ Sir Launcelot cometh to Almesbury
+ And knelt by the dead queen's bier;
+ Oh none may know, moaned Launcelot,
+ What sorrow lieth here.
+
+ What love, what honor, what defeat
+ What hope of the Holy Grail.
+ The moon looked through the latticed glass
+ On the queen's face cold and pale.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the ceréd cloth,
+ And none could stay his woe,
+ Her hair lay back from the oval brow,
+ And her nose was clear as snow.
+
+ They wrapped her body in cloth of Raines,
+ They put her in webs of lead.
+ They coffined her in white marble,
+ And sang a mass for the dead.
+
+ Sir Launcelot and seven knights
+ Bore torches around the bier.
+ They scattered myrrh and frankincense
+ On the corpse of Guinevere.
+
+ They put her in earth by King Arthur
+ To the chant of a doleful tune.
+ They heaped the earth on Guinevere
+ And Launcelot fell in a swoon.
+
+ Sir Launcelot went to the hermitage
+ Some Grace of God to find;
+ But never he ate, and never he drank
+ And there he sickened and dwined.
+
+ Sir Launcelot lay in a painful bed,
+ And spake with a dreary steven;
+ Sir Bishop, I pray you shrive my soul
+ And make it clean for heaven.
+
+ The Bishop houseled Sir Launcelot,
+ The Bishop kept watch and ward.
+ Bury me, saith Sir Launcelot,
+ In the earth of Joyous Guard.
+
+ Three candles burned the whole night through
+ Till the red dawn looked in the room.
+ And the white, white soul of Launcelot
+ Strove with a black, black doom.
+
+ I see the old witch Dame Brisen,
+ And Elaine so straight and tall--
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The shadows dance on the wall.
+
+ I see long hands of dead women,
+ They clutch for my soul eftsoon;
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ 'Tis the drifting light of the moon.
+
+ I see three angels, saith he,
+ Before a silver urn.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The candles do but burn.
+
+ I see a cloth of red samite
+ O'er the holy vessels spread.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The great dawn groweth red.
+
+ I see all the torches of the world
+ Shine in the room so clear.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The white dawn draweth near.
+
+ Sweet lady, I behold the face
+ Of thy dear son, our Lord,
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The sun shines on your sword.
+
+ Sir Galahad outstretcheth hands
+ And taketh me ere I fail--
+ Sir Launcelot's body lay in death
+ As his soul found the Holy Grail.
+
+ They laid his body in the quire
+ Upon a purple pall.
+ He was the meekest, gentlest knight
+ That ever ate in hall.
+
+ He was the kingliest, goodliest knight
+ That ever England roved,
+ The truest lover of sinful man
+ That ever woman loved.
+
+ I pray you all, fair gentlemen,
+ Pray for his soul and mine.
+ He lived to lose the heart he loved
+ And drink but bitter wine.
+
+ He wrought a woe he knew not of,
+ He failed his fondest quest,
+ Now sing a psalter, read a prayer
+ May all souls find their rest.
+ Amen.
+
+
+
+
+IN MICHIGAN
+
+
+ You wrote:
+ "Come over to Saugatuck
+ And be with me on the warm sand,
+ And under cool beeches and aromatic cedars."
+ And just then no one could do a thing in the city
+ For the lure of far places, and something that tugged
+ At one's heart because of a June sky,
+ And stretches of blue water,
+ And a warm wind blowing from the south.
+ What could I do but take a boat
+ And go to meet you?
+
+ And when to-day is not enough,
+ But you must live to-morrow also;
+ And when the present stands in the way
+ Of something to come,
+ And there is but one you would see,
+ All the interval of waiting is a wall.
+ And so it was I walked the landward deck
+ With flapping coat and hat pulled down;
+ And I sat on the leeward deck and looked
+ At the streaming smoke of the funnels,
+ And the far waste of rhythmical water,
+ And at the gulls flying by our side.
+
+ There was music on board and dancing,
+ But I could not take part.
+ For above all there was the bluest sky,
+ And around us the urge of magical distances.
+ And just because you were in the violins,
+ And in everything, and were wholly the world
+ Of sense and sight,
+ It was too much. One could not live it
+ And make it all his own--
+ It was too much.
+ And I wondered where the rest could be going,
+ Or what they thought of water and sky
+ Without knowing you.
+
+ But at four o'clock there was a rim,
+ A circled edge of rainbow color
+ Which suspired, widened and narrowed under your gaze:
+ It was the phantasy of straining eyes,
+ Or land--and it was land.
+ It was distant trees.
+ And then it was dunes, bluffs of yellow sand.
+ We began to wonder how far it was--
+ Five miles, or ten miles--
+ Surely only five miles!--
+ But at last whatever it was we swung to the end.
+ We rounded the lighthouse pier,
+ Almost before we knew.
+ We slowed our speed in a dizzy river of black,
+ We drifted softly to dock.
+
+ I took the ferry,
+ I crossed the river,
+ I ran almost through the little batch
+ Of fishermen's shacks.
+ I climbed the winding road of the hill,
+ And dove in a shadowy quiet
+ Of paths of moss and dancing leaves,
+ And straight stretched limbs of giant pines
+ On patches of sky.
+ I ran to the top of the bluff
+ Where the lodge-house stood.
+ And there the sunlit lake burst on me
+ And wine-like air.
+ And below me was the beach
+ Where the serried lines of hurrying water
+ Came up like rank on rank of men
+ And fell with a shout on the rocks!
+ I plunged, I stumbled, I ran
+ Down the hill,
+ For I thought I saw you,
+ And it was you, you were there!
+ And I shall never forget your cry,
+ Nor how you raised your arms and cried,
+ And laughed when you saw me.
+ And there we were with the lake
+ And the sun with his ruddy search-light blaze
+ Stretching back to lost Chicago.
+ The sun, the lake, the beach, and ourselves
+ Were all that was left of Time,
+ All else was lost.
+
+ You were making a camp.
+ You had bent from the bank a cedar bough
+ And tied it down.
+ And over it flung a quilt of many colors,
+ And under it spread on the voluptuous silt
+ Gray blankets and canvas pillows.
+ I saw it all in a glance.
+ And there in dread of eyes we stood
+ Scanning the bluff and the beach,
+ Lest in the briefest touch of lips
+ We might be seen.
+
+ For there were eyes, or we thought
+ There were eyes, on the porch of the lodge,
+ And eyes along the forest's rim on the hill,
+ And eyes on the shore.
+ But a minute past there was no sun,
+ Only a star that shone like a match which lights
+ To a blue intenseness amid the glow of a hearth.
+ And we sat on the sand as dusk came down
+ In a communion of silence and low words.
+ Till you said at last: "We'll sup at the lodge,
+ Then say good night to me and leave
+ As if to stay overnight in the village.
+ But instead make a long detour through the wood
+ And come to the shore through that ravine,
+ Be here at the tent at midnight."
+
+ And so I did.
+ I stole through echoless ways,
+ Where no twigs broke and where I heard
+ My heart beat like a watch under a pillow.
+ And the whippoorwills were singing.
+ And the sound of the surf below me
+ Was the sound of silver-poplar leaves
+ In a wind that makes no pause....
+ I hurried down the steep ravine,
+ And a bat flew up at my feet from the brush
+ And crossed the moon.
+ To my left was the lighthouse,
+ And black and deep purples far away,
+ And all was still.
+ Till I stood breathless by the tent
+ And heard your whispered welcome,
+ And felt your kiss.
+
+ Lovers lay at mid-night
+ On roofs of Memphis and Athens
+ And looked at tropical stars
+ As large as golden beetles.
+ Nothing is new, save this,
+ And this is always new.
+ And there in your tent
+ With the balm of the mid-night breeze
+ Sweeping over us,
+ We looked at one great star
+ Through a flap of your many-colored tent,
+ And the eternal quality of rapture
+ And mystery and vision flowed through us.
+
+ Next day we went to Grand Haven,
+ For my desire was your desire,
+ Whatever wish one had the other had.
+ And up the Grand River we rowed,
+ With rushes and lily pads about us,
+ And the sand hills back of us,
+ Till we came to a quiet land,
+ A lotus place of farms and meadows.
+ And we tied our boat to Schmitty's dock,
+ Where we had a dinner of fish.
+ And where, after resting, to follow your will
+ We drifted back to Spring Lake--
+ And under a larger moon,
+ Now almost full,
+ Walked three miles to The Beeches,
+ By a winding country road,
+ Where we had supper.
+ And afterwards a long sleep,
+ Waking to the song of robins.
+
+ And that day I said:
+ There are wild places, blue water, pine forests,
+ There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads
+ Around Elk Lake--shall we go?
+ And we went, for your desire was mine.
+ And there we climbed hills,
+ And ate apples along the shaded ways,
+ And rolled great boulders down the steeps
+ To watch them splash in the water.
+ And we stood and wondered what was beyond
+ The farther shore two miles away.
+ And we came to a place on the shore
+ Where four great pine trees stood,
+ And underneath them wild flowers to the edge
+ Of sand so soft for naked feet.
+ And here, for not a soul was near,
+ We stripped and swam far out, laughing, rejoicing,
+ Rolling and diving in those great depths
+ Of bracing water under a glittering sun.
+
+ There were farm houses enough
+ For food and shelter.
+ But something urged us on.
+ One knows the end and dreads the end
+ Yet seeks the end.
+ And you asked, "Is there a town near?
+ Let's see a town."
+ So we walked to Traverse City
+ Through cut-over land and blasted
+ Trunks and stumps of pine,
+ And by the side of desolate hills.
+ But when we got to Traverse City
+ You were not content, nor was I.
+ Something urged us on.
+ Then you thought of Northport
+ And of its Norse and German fishermen,
+ And its quaint piers where they smoke fish.
+ So we drove for thirty miles
+ In a speeding automobile
+ Over hills, around sudden curves, into warm coverts,
+ Or hollows, sometimes at the edge of the Bay,
+ Again on the hill,
+ From where we could see Old Mission
+ Amid blues and blacks, across a score of miles of the Bay,
+ Waving like watered silk under the moon!
+ And by meadows of clover newly cut,
+ And by peach orchards and vineyards.
+ But when we came to the little town
+ Already asleep, though it was but eight o'clock,
+ And only a few drowsy lamps
+ With misty eyelids shone from a store or two,
+ I said, "Do you see those twinkling lights?
+ That's Northport Point, that's the Cedar Cabin--
+ Let's go to the Cedar Cabin."
+ And so we crossed the Bay
+ Amid great waves in a plunging launch,
+ And a roaring breeze and a great moon,
+ For now the moon was full.
+
+ So here was the Cedar Cabin
+ On a strip of land as wide as a house and lawn,
+ And on one side Lake Michigan,
+ And on one side the Bay.
+ There were distances of color all around,
+ And stars and darknesses of land and trees,
+ And at the point the lighthouse.
+ And over us the moon,
+ And over the balcony of our room
+ All of these, where we lay till I slept,
+ Listening to the water of the lake,
+ And the water of the Bay.
+ And we saw the moon sink like a red bomb,
+ And we saw the stars change
+ As the sky wheeled....
+ Now this was the end of the earth,
+ For this strip of land
+ Ran out to a point no larger than one of the stumps
+ We saw on the desolate hills.
+ And moreover it seemed to dive under,
+ Or waste away in a sudden depth of water.
+ And around it was a swirl,
+ To the north the bounding waves of the Lake,
+ And to the south the Bay which seemed the Lake.
+ But could we speak of it, even though
+ I saw your eyes when you thought of it?
+ A sigh of wind blew through the rustic temple
+ When we saw this symbol together,
+ And neither spoke.
+ But that night, somewhere in the beginning of drowsiness,
+ You said: "There is no further place to go,
+ We must retrace."
+ And I awoke in a torrent of light in the room,
+ Hearing voices and steps on the walk:
+ I looked for you,
+ But you had arisen.
+ Then I dressed and searched for you,
+ But you were gone.
+ Then I stood for long minutes
+ Looking at a sail far out at sea
+ And departed too.
+
+
+
+
+THE STAR
+
+
+ I am a certain god
+ Who slipped down from a remote height
+ To a place of pools and stars.
+ And I sat invisible
+ Amid a clump of trees
+ To watch the madmen.
+
+ There were cries and groans about me,
+ And shouts of laughter and curses.
+ Figures passed by with self-absorbed contempt,
+ Wrinkling in bitter smiles about their lips.
+ Others hurried on with set eyes
+ Pursuing something.
+ Then I said this is the place for mad Frederick--
+ Mad Frederick will be here.
+
+ But everywhere I could see
+ Figures sitting or standing
+ By little pools.
+ Some seemed grown into the soil
+ And were helpless.
+ And of these some were asleep.
+ Others laughed the laughter
+ That comes from dying men
+ Trying to face Death.
+ And others said "I should be content,"
+ And others said "I will fly."
+ Whereupon sepulchral voices muttered,
+ As of creatures sitting or hanging head down
+ From limbs of the trees,
+ "We will not let you."
+ And others looked in their pools
+ And clasped hands and said "Gone, all gone."
+ By other pools there were dead bodies:
+ Some of youth, some of age.
+ They had given up the fight,
+ They had drunk poisoned water,
+ They had searched
+ Until they fell--
+ All had gone mad!
+
+ Then I, a certain god,
+ Curious to know
+ What it is in pools and stars
+ That drives men and women
+ Over the earth in this quest
+ Waited for mad Frederick.
+ And then I heard his step.
+
+ I knew that long ago
+ He sat by one of these pools
+ Enraptured of a star's image.
+ And that hands, for his own good,
+ As they said,
+ Dumped clay into the pool
+ And blotted his star.
+ And I knew that after that
+ He had said, "They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy.
+ They will never see me watching one star.
+ I will fly by rivers,
+ And by little brooks,
+ And by the edge of lakes,
+ And by little bends of water,
+ Where no wind blows,
+ And glance at stars as I pass.
+ They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy."
+
+ And I knew that mad Frederick
+ In this flight
+ Through years of restless and madness
+ Was caught by the image of a star
+ In a mere beyond a meadow
+ Down from a hill, under a forest,
+ And had said,
+ "No one sees;
+ Here I can find life,
+ Through vision of eternal things."
+ But they had followed him.
+ They stood on the brow of the hill,
+ And when they saw him gazing in the water
+ They rolled a great stone down the hill,
+ And shattered the star's image.
+ Then mad Frederick fled with laughter.
+ It echoed through the wood.
+ And he said, "I will look for moons,
+ I will punish them who disturb me,
+ By worshiping moons."
+ But when he sought moons
+ They left him alone,
+ And he did not want the moons.
+ And he was alone, and sick from the moons,
+ And covered as with a white blankness,
+ Which was the worst madness of all.
+
+ And I, a certain god,
+ Waiting for mad Frederick
+ To enter this place of pools and stars,
+ Saw him at last.
+ With a sigh he looked about upon his fellows
+ Sitting or standing by their pools.
+ And some of the pools were covered with scum,
+ And some were glazed as of filth,
+ And some were grown with weeds,
+ And some were congealed as of the north wind,
+ And a few were yet pure,
+ And held the star's image.
+ And by these some sat and were glad,
+ Others had lost the vision.
+ The star was there, but its meaning vanished.
+ And mad Frederick, going here and there,
+ With no purpose,
+ Only curious and interested
+ As I was, a certain god,
+ Came by a certain pool
+ And saw a star.
+
+ He shivered,
+ He clasped his hands,
+ He sank to his knees,
+ He touched his lips to the water.
+
+ Then voices from the limbs of the trees muttered:
+ "There he is again."
+ "He must be driven away."
+ "The pool is not his."
+ "He does not belong here."
+ So as when bats fly in a cave
+ They swooped from their hidings in the trees
+ And dashed themselves in the pool.
+ Then I saw what these flying things were--
+ But no matter.
+ They were illusions, evil and envious
+ And dull,
+ But with power to destroy.
+ And mad Frederick turned away from the pool
+ And covered his eyes with his arms.
+ Then a certain god,
+ Of less power than mine,
+ Came and sat beside me and said:
+ "Why do you allow this to be?
+ They are all seeking,
+ Why do you not let them find their heart's delight?
+ Why do you allow this to be?"
+ But I did not answer.
+ The lesser god did not know
+ That I have no power,
+ That only the God has the power.
+ And that this must be
+ In spite of all lesser gods.
+
+ And I saw mad Frederick
+ Arise and ascend to the top of a high hill,
+ And I saw him find the star
+ Whose image he had seen in the pool.
+ Then he knelt and prayed:
+ "Give me to understand, O Star,
+ Your inner self, your eternal spirit,
+ That I may have you and not images of you,
+ So that I may know what has driven me through the world,
+ And may cure my soul.
+ For I know you are Eternal Love,
+ And I can never escape you.
+ And if I cannot escape you,
+ Then I must serve you.
+ And if I must serve you,
+ It must be to good and not ill--
+ You have brought me from the forest of pools
+ And the images of stars,
+ Here to the hill's top.
+ Where now do I go?
+ And what shall I do?"
+
+
+THE END
+
+Printed in the United States of America.
+
+
+
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of books by the same author
+or on kindred subjects
+
+
+
+
+ _EDGAR LEE MASTERS' REMARKABLE BOOK_
+
+ Spoon River Anthology
+
+ _Mr. Masters' book is considered by many to be the most striking and
+ important contribution to American letters in recent years_:--
+
+ "An American 'Comedie Humaine' brings more characters into its pages
+ than any American novel.... Takes its place among the masterpieces
+ which are not of a time or a locality."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ "A work splendid in observation, marvelous in the artistry of
+ exclusion, yet of democratic inclusiveness, piercingly analytic of
+ character, of plastic facility of handling, sympathetic underneath
+ irony, humorous, pathetic, tragic, comic, particular yet
+ universal--a Comedie Humaine--a creation of a whole community of
+ personalities."--_William Marion Reedy._
+
+ "We find a strange impressiveness, akin to greatness, in the 'Spoon
+ River Anthology' of Edgar Lee Masters.... It is a book which,
+ whether one likes it or not, one must respect."--_The New Republic._
+
+ "Mr. Masters speaks with a new and authentic voice. It is an
+ illuminating piece of work, and an unforgettable one."--_Chicago
+ Evening Post._
+
+ "The natural child of Wait Whitman ... the only poet with true
+ Americanism in his bones."--_New York Times._
+
+ _Cloth, $1.25; leather, $1.50_
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Good Friday and Other Poems
+
+ BY JOHN MASEFIELD
+
+ Author of "The Everlasting Mercy" and "The Widow in the Bye Street,"
+ etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ The title piece in this volume is a dramatic poem of sixty pages, the
+ action of which takes place in the time of Christ. The characters
+ introduced include Pontius Pilate, Joseph of Ramah and Herod. The
+ play, for it is really such, is written in rhyme and is one of Mr.
+ Masefield's most interesting and important contributions to
+ literature. In addition to this there are in the book many sonnets and
+ short poems.
+
+ "Reveals an interesting development in poetic thought and expression
+ ... a new Masefield ... who has never written with more dignity, nor
+ with more artistry. Those who go in quest of Beauty will find her
+ here.... Here is beauty of impression, beauty of expression, beauty
+ of thought, and beauty of phrase."--_The New York Times._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Man Against the Sky
+
+ BY EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON
+
+ Author of "The Porcupine," "Captain Craig and Other Poems," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.00_
+
+ It has been some years since Mr. Robinson has given us a new
+ collection of poems. Those who remember "Captain Craig and Other
+ Poems," a volume which brought to its author the heartiest of
+ congratulations, placing him at once in the rank of those American
+ writers whose contributions to literature are of permanent value, will
+ welcome this new work and will find that their anticipation of it and
+ hopes for it are to be pleasantly realized. It is a book which well
+ carries out that early promise and which helps to maintain Mr.
+ Robinson's position in letters to-day.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Battle and Other Poems
+
+ BY WILFRID WILSON GIBSON
+
+ Author of "Daily Bread," "Fires," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo_
+
+ Here with that intensely human note exhibited in his poems of the
+ working classes, Mr. Gibson sings of the life of the soldier. There
+ are many moods in the book, for the author has well caught the flow of
+ spirits from gaiety to despair which makes up the soldier's days. The
+ chief characteristic of the little pen pictures is their vividness,
+ the way in which they bring before the reader the thoughts and
+ feelings of those whose lives may be offered up for their country any
+ moment. In addition to these poems of battle there are others in the
+ collection on varying themes.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Six French Poets
+
+ BY AMY LOWELL
+
+ Author of "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed," "A Dome of Many-Coloured
+ Glass," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 8vo, $2.50_
+
+ A brilliant series of biographical and critical essays dealing with
+ Émile Verhaeren, Albert Samain, Remy de Gourmont, Henri de Régnier,
+ Francis Jammes, and Paul Fort, by one of the foremost living American
+ poets.
+
+ The translations make up an important part of the book, and together
+ with the French originals constitute a representative anthology of the
+ poetry of the period.
+
+ Professor Barrett Wendell, of Harvard University, says:
+
+ "Seems to me as unusual--in the happiest sense of the word, ... I
+ find the book a model, in total effect, of what a work with such
+ purpose ought to be."
+
+ William Lyon Phelps, Professor of English Literature, Yale University,
+ says:
+
+ "This is, I think, the most valuable work on contemporary French
+ literature that I have seen for a long time. It is written by one
+ who has a thorough knowledge of the subject and who is herself an
+ American poet of distinction. She has the knowledge, the sympathy,
+ the penetration, and the insight--all necessary to make a notable
+ book of criticism. It is a work that should be widely read in
+ America."
+
+
+ OTHER BOOKS BY AMY LOWELL
+
+
+ Sword Blades and Poppy Seed
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The Book of
+ the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in our poetry,
+ worthy of companionship to the great romantic lyrics of
+ Coleridge."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+
+ A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal flavor, a
+ loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality.... The child
+ poems are particularly graceful."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
+
+Punctuation has been corrected without note.
+
+Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the
+original.
+
+It is not always possible to determine if a new stanza begins at the top
+of a printed page, but every effort has been made by the transcriber to
+retain stanza breaks where appropriate.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
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+***** This file should be named 36149-8.txt or 36149-8.zip *****
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Songs And Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters.
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+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: Songs and Satires
+
+Author: Edgar Lee Masters
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36149]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
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+</pre>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge"><strong>SONGS AND SATIRES</strong></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/logo.png" alt="" /></div>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+NEW YORK&nbsp;·&nbsp;BOSTON&nbsp;·&nbsp;CHICAGO&nbsp;·&nbsp;DALLAS<br/>
+ATLANTA&nbsp;·&nbsp;SAN FRANCISCO</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><span class="smcap">MACMILLAN &amp; CO., Limited</span></span><br/>
+LONDON&nbsp;·&nbsp;BOMBAY&nbsp;·&nbsp;CALCUTTA<br/>
+MELBOURNE</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><span class="smcap">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.</span></span><br/>
+TORONTO</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>By</i></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="big">EDGAR LEE MASTERS</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+<p class="center">"SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">New York</p>
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</p>
+<p class="center">1916</p>
+<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1916,</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1916.</p>
+<p class="center">Reprinted March, June, 1916.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">Norwood Press</p>
+<p class="center">J. S. Cushing Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.</p>
+<p class="center">Norwood, Mass., U.S.A</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+<p class="blockquot">For permission to print in book form certain of
+these poems I wish to acknowledge an indebtedness to <i>Poetry</i>, <i>The Smart Set</i>, <i>The Little Review</i>,
+<i>The Cosmopolitan Magazine</i>, and William Marion Reedy, Editor of <i>Reedy's Mirror</i>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">CONTENTS</span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Silence</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">St. Francis and Lady Clare</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Cocked Hat</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Vision</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">So We Grew Together</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Rain in My Heart</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Loop</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">When Under the Icy Eaves</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Car</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Simon Surnamed Peter</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">All Life in a Life</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">What You Will</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The City</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Idiot</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Helen of Troy</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">O Glorious France</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">For a Dance</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">When Life is Real</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Question</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Answer</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Sign</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">William Marion Reedy</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Study</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Portrait of a Woman</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Cage</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Saving a Woman: One Phase</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Love is a Madness</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">On a Bust</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Arabel</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Jim and Arabel's Sister</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Sorrow of Dead Faces</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Cry</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Helping Hand</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Door</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Supplication</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Conversation</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Terminus</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Madeline</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Marcia</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Altar</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Soul's Desire</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Ballad of Launcelot and Elaine&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Death of Launcelot</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">In Michigan</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Star</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr style="width: 90%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 90%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SONGS AND SATIRES</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SILENCE</span><br/></p>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 1em;">I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,</span><br />
+And the silence of the city when it pauses,<br />
+And the silence of a man and a maid,<br />
+And the silence for which music alone finds the word,<br />
+And the silence of the woods before the winds of spring begin,<br />
+And the silence of the sick<br />
+When their eyes roam about the room.<br />
+And I ask: For the depths<br />
+Of what use is language?<br />
+A beast of the field moans a few times<br />
+When death takes its young:<br />
+And we are voiceless in the presence of realities&mdash;<br />
+We cannot speak.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A curious boy asks an old soldier</span><br />
+Sitting in front of the grocery store,<br />
+"How did you lose your leg?"<br />
+And the old soldier is struck with silence,<br />
+Or his mind flies away,<br />
+Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>It comes back jocosely<br />
+And he says, "A bear bit it off."<br />
+And the boy wonders, while the old soldier<br />
+Dumbly, feebly lives over<br />
+The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,<br />
+The shrieks of the slain,<br />
+And himself lying on the ground,<br />
+And the hospital surgeons, the knives,<br />
+And the long days in bed.<br />
+But if he could describe it all<br />
+He would be an artist.<br />
+But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds<br />
+Which he could not describe.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">There is the silence of a great hatred,</span><br />
+And the silence of a great love,<br />
+And the silence of a deep peace of mind,<br />
+And the silence of an embittered friendship.<br />
+There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,<br />
+Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,<br />
+Comes with visions not to be uttered<br />
+Into a realm of higher life.<br />
+And the silence of the gods who understand each other without speech.<br />
+There is the silence of defeat.<br />
+There is the silence of those unjustly punished;<br />
+And the silence of the dying whose hand<br />
+Suddenly grips yours.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+There is the silence between father and son,<br />
+When the father cannot explain his life,<br />
+Even though he be misunderstood for it.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.</span><br />
+There is the silence of those who have failed;<br />
+And the vast silence that covers<br />
+Broken nations and vanquished leaders.<br />
+There is the silence of Lincoln,<br />
+Thinking of the poverty of his youth.<br />
+And the silence of Napoleon<br />
+After Waterloo.<br />
+And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc<br />
+Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus"&mdash;<br />
+Revealing in two words all sorrow, all hope.<br />
+And there is the silence of age,<br />
+Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it<br />
+In words intelligible to those who have not lived<br />
+The great range of life.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And there is the silence of the dead.</span><br />
+If we who are in life cannot speak<br />
+Of profound experiences,<br />
+Why do you marvel that the dead<br />
+Do not tell you of death?<br />
+Their silence shall be interpreted<br />
+As we approach them.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE</span><br/></p>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Antonio loved the Lady Clare.<br />
+He caught her to him on the stair<br />
+And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,<br />
+And drew her lips in his, and drew<br />
+Her soul out like a torch's flare.<br />
+Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;<br />
+Her senses in a vortex swound.<br />
+She tore him loose and turned around,<br />
+And reached her chamber in a bound<br />
+Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.<br />
+<br />
+She closed the door and turned the lock,<br />
+Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.<br />
+She reeled as drunken from the shock.<br />
+Before her eyes the devils skipped,<br />
+She thought she heard the devils mock.<br />
+For had her soul not been as pure<br />
+As sifted snow, could she endure<br />
+Antonio's passion and be sure<br />
+Against his passion's strength and lure?<br />
+Lean fears along her wonder slipped.<br />
+<br />
+Outside she heard a drunkard call,<br />
+She heard a beggar against the wall<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall<br />
+Struck through the riot like a sword,<br />
+And gashed the midnight's festival.<br />
+She watched the city through the pane,<br />
+The old Silenus half insane,<br />
+The idiot crowd that drags its chain&mdash;<br />
+And then she heard the bells again,<br />
+And heard the voices with the word:<br />
+<br />
+Ecco il santo! Up the street<br />
+There was the sound of running feet<br />
+From closing door and window seat,<br />
+And all the crowd turned on its way<br />
+The Saint of Poverty to greet.<br />
+He passed. And then a circling thrill,<br />
+As water troubled which was still,<br />
+Went through her body like a chill,<br />
+Who of Antonio thought until<br />
+She heard the Saint begin to pray.<br />
+<br />
+And then she turned into the room<br />
+Her soul was cloven through with doom,<br />
+Treading the softness and the gloom<br />
+Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,<br />
+And China's magical perfume.<br />
+She sickened from the vases hued<br />
+In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd<br />
+Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>And tapestries that showed a brood<br />
+Of leopards by a pool!<br />
+<br />
+Candles of wax she lit before<br />
+A pier glass standing from the floor;<br />
+Up to the ceiling, off she tore<br />
+With eager hands her jewels, then<br />
+The silken vesture which she wore.<br />
+Her little breasts so round to see<br />
+Were budded like the peony.<br />
+Her arms were white as ivory,<br />
+And all her sunny hair lay free<br />
+As marigold or celandine.<br />
+<br />
+Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase<br />
+Of crackled turquoise, in her face<br />
+Was memory of the mad embrace<br />
+Antonio gave her on the stair,<br />
+And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.<br />
+Like pigeon blood her lips were red.<br />
+She clasped her bands above her head.<br />
+Under her arms the waxlight shed<br />
+Delicate halos where was spread<br />
+The downy growth of hair.<br />
+<br />
+Such sudden sin the virgin knew<br />
+She quenched the tapers as she blew<br />
+Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw<br />
+Herself in tears upon her knees,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>And round her couch the curtain drew.<br />
+She called upon St. Francis' name,<br />
+Feeling Antonio's passion maim<br />
+Her body with his passion's flame<br />
+To save her, save her from the shame<br />
+Of fancies such as these!<br />
+<br />
+"Go by mad life and old pursuits,<br />
+The wine cup and the golden fruits,<br />
+The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,<br />
+I would praise God forevermore<br />
+With harps of gold and silver lutes."<br />
+She stripped the velvet from her couch<br />
+Her broken spirit to avouch.<br />
+She saw the devils slink and slouch,<br />
+And passion like a leopard crouch<br />
+Half mirrored on the polished floor.<br />
+<br />
+Next day she found the saint and said:<br />
+I would be God's bride, I would wed<br />
+Poverty and I would eat the bread<br />
+That you for anchorites prepare,<br />
+For my soul's sake I am in dread.<br />
+Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,<br />
+Put off this gown of green snake cloth,<br />
+Put on one somber as a moth,<br />
+Then come to me and make your troth<br />
+And I will clip your golden hair.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span><br />
+She went and came. But still there lay,<br />
+A gem she did not put away,<br />
+A locket twixt her breasts, all gay<br />
+In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,<br />
+And inlay work of fruit and spray.<br />
+St. Francis felt it as he slipped<br />
+His hand across her breast and whipped<br />
+Her golden tresses ere he clipped&mdash;<br />
+He closed his eyes then as he gripped<br />
+The shears, plunged the shears through.<br />
+<br />
+The waterfall of living gold.<br />
+The locks fell to the floor and rolled,<br />
+And curled like serpents which unfold.<br />
+And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.<br />
+Of worldly glory manifold.<br />
+She thrilled to feel him take and hide<br />
+The locket from her breast, a tide<br />
+Of passion caught them side by side.<br />
+He was the bridegroom, she the bride&mdash;<br />
+Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.<br />
+<br />
+Thus was the Lady Clare debased<br />
+To sack cloth and around her waist<br />
+A rope the jeweled belt replaced.<br />
+Her feet made free of silken hose<br />
+Naked in wooden sandals cased<br />
+Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>They housed her in St. Damian<br />
+And here she prayed for poor women<br />
+And here St. Francis sought her when<br />
+His faith sank under earthly woes.<br />
+<br />
+Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme<br />
+And took to wine and got the lime<br />
+Of hatred on his soul, in time<br />
+Grew healed though left a little lame,<br />
+And laughed about it in his prime;<br />
+When he could see with crystal eyes<br />
+That love is a winged thing which flies;<br />
+Some break the wings, some let them rise<br />
+From earth like God's dove to the skies<br />
+Diffused in heavenly flame.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE COCKED HAT</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">Would that someone would knock Mr. Bryan into a cocked
+hat.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Woodrow Wilson.</span><br/></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>It ain't really a hat at all, Ed:<br />
+You know that, don't you?<br />
+When you bowl over six out of the nine pins,<br />
+And the three that are standing<br />
+Are the triangular three in front,<br />
+You've knocked the nine into a cocked hat.<br />
+If it was really a hat, he would be knocked in, too.<br />
+Which he hardly is. For a man with money,<br />
+And a man who can draw a crowd to listen<br />
+To what he says, ain't all-in yet....<br />
+Oh yes, defeated<br />
+And killed off a dozen times, but still<br />
+He's one of the three nine pins that's standing ...<br />
+Eh? Why, the other is Teddy, the other<br />
+Wilson, we'll say. We'll see, perhaps.<br />
+But six are down to make the cocked hat&mdash;<br />
+That's me and thousands of others like me,<br />
+And the first-rate men who were cuffed about<br />
+After the Civil War,<br />
+And most of the more than six million men<br />
+Who followed this fellow into the ditch,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+While he walked down the ditch and stepped to the level&mdash;<br />
+Following an ideal!<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+Do you remember how slim he was,<br />
+And trim he was,<br />
+With black hair and pale brow,<br />
+And the hawk-like nose and flashing eyes,<br />
+Not turning slowly like an owl<br />
+But with a sudden eagle motion?...<br />
+<br />
+One time, in '96, he came here<br />
+And we had just a dollar and sixty cents<br />
+In the treasury of the organization.<br />
+So I stuck his lithograph on a pole<br />
+And started out for the station.<br />
+By the time we got back here to Clark street<br />
+Four thousand men were marching in line,<br />
+And a band that was playing for an opening<br />
+Of a restaurant on Franklin street<br />
+Had left the job and was following his carriage.<br />
+Why, it took all the money Mark Hanna could raise<br />
+To beat me, with nothing but a pole<br />
+And a lithograph.<br />
+And it wasn't because he was one of the prophets<br />
+Come back to earth again.<br />
+It shows how human hearts are hungry<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+How wonderfully true they are&mdash;<br />
+And how they will rise and follow a man<br />
+Who seems to see the truth!<br />
+Well, these fellows who marched are the cocked hat,<br />
+And I am the cocked hat and the six millions,<br />
+And more are the cocked hat,<br />
+Who got themselves despised or suspected<br />
+Of ignorance or something for being with him.<br />
+But still, he's one of the pins that's standing.<br />
+He got the money that he went after,<br />
+And he has a place in history, perhaps&mdash;<br />
+Because we took the blow and fell down<br />
+When the ripping ball went wild on the alley.<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+For we were radicals,<br />
+And he wasn't a radical.<br />
+Eh? Why, a radical stands for freedom,<br />
+And for truth&mdash;which he never finds<br />
+But always looks for.<br />
+A radical is not a moralist.<br />
+A radical doesn't say:<br />
+"This is true and you must believe it;<br />
+This is good and you must accept it,<br />
+And if you don't believe it and accept it<br />
+We'll get a law and make you,<br />
+And if you don't obey the law, we'll kill you&mdash;"<br />
+Oh no! A radical stands for freedom.<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont<br />
+In '97 on Jackson's day?<br />
+Bryan and Altgeld walked together<br />
+Out to the banquet room.<br />
+That's the time he said the bolters must<br />
+Bring fruits meet for repentance&mdash;ha! ha! Oh, Gawd!&mdash;<br />
+They never did it and they didn't have to,<br />
+For they had made friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,<br />
+Even as he did, a little later, in his own way.<br />
+Well, Darrow was there that night.<br />
+I thought it was terribly raw in him,<br />
+But he said to Bryan, there, in a group:<br />
+"You'd better go back to Lincoln and study<br />
+Science, history, philosophy,<br />
+And read Flaubert's Madam something-or-other,<br />
+And quit this village religious stuff.<br />
+You're head of the party before you are ready<br />
+And a leader should lead with thought."<br />
+And Bryan turned to the others and said:<br />
+"Darrow's the only man in the world<br />
+Who looks down on me for believing in God."<br />
+"Your kind of a God," snapped Darrow.<br />
+Honest, Ed, I didn't see this religious business<br />
+In Bryan in '96 or 1900.<br />
+Oh well, I knew he went to Church,<br />
+And talked as statesmen do of God&mdash;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+But McKinley did it, and I used to laugh:<br />
+"We've got a man to match McKinley,<br />
+And it's good for us, in a squeeze like this,<br />
+We didn't nominate some fellow<br />
+Ethical culture or Unitarian."<br />
+You see, the newspapers and preachers then<br />
+Were raising such a hullabaloo<br />
+About irreligion and dishonesty,<br />
+And calling old Altgeld an anarchist,<br />
+And comparing us to Robespierre<br />
+And the guillotine boys in France.<br />
+And a little of this religion came in handy.<br />
+The same as if you saw a Mason button on me,<br />
+You'd know, you see&mdash;but Gee!<br />
+He was 24-carat religious,<br />
+A cover-to-cover man....<br />
+He was a trained collie,<br />
+And he looked like a lion,<br />
+There in the convention of '96&mdash;What do you know about that?<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+But right here, I tell you he ain't a hypocrite,<br />
+This ain't a pose. But I'll tell you:<br />
+In '96 when they knocked him out,<br />
+I know what he said to himself as well<br />
+As if I heard him say it ...<br />
+I'll tell you in a minute.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+But suppose you were giving a lecture on the constitution,<br />
+And you got mixed on your dates,<br />
+And the audience rotten-egged you,<br />
+And some one in the confusion<br />
+Stole the door receipts,<br />
+And there you were, disgraced and broke!<br />
+But suppose you could just change your clothes,<br />
+And lecture to the same audience<br />
+On the religious nature of Washington,<br />
+And be applauded and make money&mdash;<br />
+You'd do it, wouldn't you?<br />
+Well, this is what Bill said to himself:<br />
+"I'm naturally regular and religious.<br />
+I'm a moral man and I can prove it<br />
+By any one in Marion County,<br />
+Or Jacksonville or Lincoln, Nebraska.<br />
+I'm a radical, but a radical<br />
+Alone can be religious.<br />
+I belong to the church, if not to the bank,<br />
+Of the people who defeated me.<br />
+And I'll prove to religious people<br />
+That I'm a man to be trusted&mdash;<br />
+And just what a radical is.<br />
+And I'll make some money while winning the votes<br />
+Of the churches over the country."...<br />
+<br />
+That's it&mdash;it ain't hypocrisy,<br />
+It's using what you are for ends,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+When you find yourself in trouble.<br />
+And this accounts for "The Prince of Peace"&mdash;<br />
+Except no one but him could write it&mdash;<br />
+And "The Value of an Ideal"&mdash;<br />
+(Which is money in bank and several farms) ...<br />
+<br />
+His place in history?<br />
+One time my grandfather, who was nearly blind,<br />
+Went out to sow some grass seed.<br />
+They had two sacks in the barn,<br />
+One with grass seed, one with fertilizer,<br />
+And he got the sack with fertilizer,<br />
+And scattered it over the ground,<br />
+Thinking he was sowing grass.<br />
+And as he was finishing up, a grandchild,<br />
+Dorothy, eight years old,<br />
+Followed him, dropping flower seeds.<br />
+Well, after a time<br />
+That was the greatest patch of weeds<br />
+You ever saw! And the old man sat,<br />
+Half blind, on the porch, and said:<br />
+"Good land, that grass is growing!"<br />
+And there was nothing but weeds except<br />
+A few nasturtiums here and there<br />
+That Dorothy had sown....<br />
+Well, I forgot.<br />
+There was a sunflower in one corner<br />
+That looked like a man with a golden beard<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+And a mass of tangled, curly hair&mdash;<br />
+And a pumpkin growing near it....<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+Say, Ed! lend me eighty dollars<br />
+To pay my life insurance.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE VISION</span><br/></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Of that dear vale where you and I have lain<br />
+Scanning the mysteries of life and death<br />
+I dreamed, though how impassable the space<br />
+Of time between the present and the past!<br />
+This was the vision that possessed my mind;<br />
+I thought the weird and gusty days of March<br />
+Had eased themselves in melody and peace.<br />
+Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,<br />
+Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh<br />
+Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs<br />
+Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;<br />
+And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;<br />
+The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;<br />
+The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;<br />
+Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries<br />
+Of awakened life had blossomed into May,<br />
+Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair<br />
+Blew music from the stops of watery stems,<br />
+And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,<br />
+Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.<br />
+Now as I lay in vision by the stream<br />
+That flows amidst our well beloved vale,<br />
+I looked throughout the vista stretched between<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;<br />
+The other wooded, thick and quite obscure<br />
+With overgrowth, rank in the luxury<br />
+Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse<br />
+Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope<br />
+That met the grassy level of the vale;&mdash;<br />
+But still within the shadow of those woods,<br />
+Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,<br />
+There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths<br />
+Between them, up and on into the wood.<br />
+Here, as the sun had left his midday peak<br />
+The incommunicable blue of heaven blent<br />
+With his fierce splendor, filling all the air<br />
+With softened glory, while the pasturage<br />
+Trembled with color of the poppy blooms<br />
+Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.<br />
+Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream<br />
+Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.<br />
+Then as I looked upon the widest space<br />
+Of open meadow where the sunlight fell<br />
+In veils of tempered radiance, I saw<br />
+The form of one who had escaped the care<br />
+And equal dullness of our common day.<br />
+For like a bright mist rising from the earth<br />
+He made appearance, growing more distinct<br />
+Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre<br />
+Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.<br />
+Yea, I did see the glory of his hair<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting<br />
+The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale<br />
+His figure stood distinct and his own shade<br />
+Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach<br />
+Augur of good, as if in hidden ways<br />
+Of loveliness the gods do still appear<br />
+The counselors of men, and even where<br />
+Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,<br />
+I cried, "Apollo"&mdash;and his form dissolved,<br />
+As if the nymphs of echo, who took up<br />
+The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,<br />
+By that same flight had startled the great god<br />
+To vanishment. And thereupon I woke<br />
+And disarrayed the figment of my thought.<br />
+For of the very air, magic with hues,<br />
+Blent with the distant objects, I had formed<br />
+The splendid apparition, and so knew<br />
+It was, alas! a dream within a dream!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">"SO WE GREW TOGETHER"</span><br/></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Reading over your letters I find you wrote me</span><br />
+"My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope<br />
+Said "master"&mdash;all as I had been your very son,<br />
+And not the orphan whom you adopted.<br />
+Well, you were father to me! And I can recall<br />
+The things you did for me or gave me:<br />
+One time we rode in a box car to Springfield<br />
+To see the greatest show on earth;<br />
+And one time you gave me redtop boots,<br />
+And one time a watch, and one time a gun.<br />
+Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice<br />
+Like a rooster trying to crow in August<br />
+Hatched in April, we'll say.<br />
+And you went about wrapped up in silence<br />
+With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors<br />
+Of what they were doing to you, and how<br />
+They wronged you&mdash;and we were poor&mdash;so poor!<br />
+And I could not understand why you failed,<br />
+And why if you did good things for the people<br />
+The people did not sustain you.<br />
+And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan,<br />
+So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser,<br />
+Or so little to be forgiven?...<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">They crowded you hard in those days.</span><br />
+But you fought like a wounded lion<br />
+For yourself I know, but for us, for me.<br />
+At last you fell ill, and for months you tottered<br />
+Around the streets as thin as death,<br />
+Trying to earn our bread, your great eyes glowing<br />
+And the silence around you like a shawl!<br />
+But something in you kept you up.<br />
+You grew well again and rosy with cheeks<br />
+Like an Indian peach almost, and eyes<br />
+Full of moonlight and sunlight, and a voice<br />
+That sang, and a humor that warded<br />
+The arrows off. But still between us<br />
+There was reticence; you kept me away<br />
+With a glittering hardness; perhaps you thought<br />
+I kept you away&mdash;for I was moving<br />
+In spheres you knew not, living through<br />
+Beliefs you believed in no more, and ideals<br />
+That were just mirrors of unrealities.<br />
+As a boy can be I was critical of you.<br />
+And reasons for your failures began to arise<br />
+In my mind&mdash;I saw specific facts here and there<br />
+With no philosophy at hand to weld them<br />
+And synthesize them into one truth&mdash;<br />
+And a rush of the strength of youth<br />
+Deluded me into thinking the world<br />
+Was something so easily understood and managed<br />
+While I knew it not at all in truth.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+And an adolescent egotism<br />
+Made me feel you did not know me<br />
+Or comprehend the all that I was.<br />
+All this you divined....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">So it went. And when I left you and passed</span><br />
+To the world, the city&mdash;still I see you<br />
+With eyes averted, and feel your hand<br />
+Limp with sorrow&mdash;you could not speak.<br />
+You thought of what I might be, and where<br />
+Life would take me, and how it would end&mdash;<br />
+There was longer silence. A year or two<br />
+Brought me closer to you. I saw the play now<br />
+And the game somewhat and understood your fights<br />
+And enmities, and hardnesses and silences,<br />
+And wild humor that had kept you whole&mdash;<br />
+For your soul had made it as an antitoxin<br />
+To the world's infections. And you swung to me<br />
+Closer than before&mdash;and a chumship began<br />
+Between us....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">What vital power was yours!</span><br />
+You never tired, or needed sleep, or had a pain,<br />
+Or refused a delight. I loved the things now<br />
+You had always loved, a winning horse,<br />
+A roulette wheel, a contest of skill<br />
+In games or sports ... long talks on the corner<br />
+With men who have lived and tell you<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>Things with a rich flavor of old wisdom or humor;<br />
+A woman, a glass of whisky at a table<br />
+Where the fatigue of life falls, and our reserves<br />
+That wait for happiness come up in smiles,<br />
+Laughter, gentle confidences. Here you were<br />
+A man with youth, and I a youth was a man,<br />
+Exulting in your braveries and delight in life.<br />
+How you knocked that scamp over at Harry Varnell's<br />
+When he tried to take your chips! And how I,<br />
+Who had thought the devil in cards as a boy,<br />
+Loved to play with you now and watch you play;<br />
+And watch the subtle mathematics of your mind<br />
+Prophecy, divine the plays. Who was it<br />
+In your ancestry that you harked back to<br />
+And reproduced with such various gifts<br />
+Of flesh and spirit, Anglo-Saxon, Celt?&mdash;<br />
+You with such rapid wit and powerful skill<br />
+For catching illogic and whipping Error's<br />
+Fangéd head from the body?...<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">I was really ahead of you</span><br />
+At this stage, with more self-consciousness<br />
+Of what man is, and what life is at last,<br />
+And how the spirit works, and by what laws,<br />
+With what inevitable force. But still I was<br />
+Behind you in that strength which in our youth,<br />
+If ever we have it, squeezes all the nectar<br />
+From the grapes. It seemed you'd never lose<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+This power and sense of joy, but yet at times<br />
+I saw another phase of you....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">There was the day</span><br />
+We rode together north of the old town,<br />
+Past the old farm houses that I knew&mdash;<br />
+Past maple groves, and fields of corn in the shock,<br />
+And fields of wheat with the fall green.<br />
+It was October, but the clouds were summer's,<br />
+Lazily floating in a sky of June;<br />
+And a few crows flying here and there,<br />
+And a quail's call, and around us a great silence<br />
+That held at its core old memories<br />
+Of pioneers, and dead days, forgotten things!<br />
+I'll never forget how you looked that day. Your hair<br />
+Was turning silver now, but still your eyes<br />
+Burned as of old, and the rich olive glow<br />
+In your cheeks shone, with not a line or wrinkle!&mdash;<br />
+You seemed to me perfection&mdash;a youth, a man!<br />
+And now you talked of the world with the old wit,<br />
+And now of the soul&mdash;how such a man went down<br />
+Through folly or wrong done by him, and how<br />
+Man's death cannot end all,<br />
+There must be life hereafter!...<br />
+<br />
+As you were that day, as you looked and spoke,<br />
+As the earth was, I hear as the soul of it all<br />
+Godard's <i>Dawn</i>, Dvorák's <i>Humoresque</i>,<br />
+The Morris Dances, Mendelssohn's <i>Barcarole</i>,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+And old Scotch songs, <i>When the Kye Come Hame</i>,<br />
+And <i>The Moon Had Climbed the Highest Hill</i>,<br />
+The Musseta Waltz and Rudolph's Narrative;<br />
+Your great brow seemed Beethoven's<br />
+And the lust of life in your face Cellini's,<br />
+And your riotous fancy like Dumas.<br />
+I was nearer you now than ever before,<br />
+And finding each other thus I see to-day<br />
+How the human soul seeks the human soul<br />
+And finds the one it seeks at last.<br />
+For you know you can open a window<br />
+That looks upon embowered darkness,<br />
+When the flowers sleep and the trees are still<br />
+At Midnight, and no light burns in the room;<br />
+And you can hide your butterfly<br />
+Somewhere in the room, but soon you will see<br />
+A host of butterfly mates<br />
+Fluttering through the window to join<br />
+Your butterfly hid in the room.<br />
+It is somehow thus with souls....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">This day then I understood it all:</span><br />
+Your vital democracy and love of men<br />
+And tolerance of life; and how the excess of these<br />
+Had wrought your sorrows in the days<br />
+When we were so poor, and the small of mind<br />
+Spoke of your sins and your connivance<br />
+With sinful men. You had lived it down,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+Had triumphed over them, and you had grown.<br />
+Prosperous in the world and had passed<br />
+Into an easy mastery of life and beyond the thought<br />
+Of further conquests for things.<br />
+As the Brahmins say, no more you worshiped matter,<br />
+Or scarcely ghosts, or even the gods<br />
+With singleness of heart.<br />
+This day you worshiped Eternal Peace<br />
+Or Eternal Flame, with scarce a laugh or jest<br />
+To hide your worship; and I understood,<br />
+Seeing so many facets to you, why it was<br />
+Blind Condon always smiled to hear your voice,<br />
+And why it was in a greenroom years ago<br />
+Booth turned to you, marking your face<br />
+From all the rest, and said, "There is a man<br />
+Who might play Hamlet&mdash;better still Othello";<br />
+And why it was the women loved you; and the priest<br />
+Could feed his body and soul together drinking<br />
+A glass of beer and visiting with you....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">Then something happened:</span><br />
+Your face grew smaller, your brow more narrow,<br />
+Dull fires burned in your eyes,<br />
+Your body shriveled, you walked with a cynical shuffle,<br />
+Your hands mixed the keys of life,<br />
+You had become a discord.<br />
+A monstrous hatred consumed you&mdash;<br />
+You had suffered the greatest wrong of all,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+I knew and granted the wrong.<br />
+You had mounted up to sixty years, now breathing hard,<br />
+And just at the time that honor belonged to you<br />
+You were dishonored at the hands of a friend.<br />
+I wept for you, and still I wondered<br />
+If all I had grown to see in you and find in you<br />
+And love in you was just a fond illusion&mdash;<br />
+If after all I had not seen you aright as a boy:<br />
+Barbaric, hard, suspicious, cruel, redeemed<br />
+Alone by bubbling animal spirits&mdash;<br />
+Even these gone now, all of you smoke<br />
+Laden with stinging gas and lethal vapor....<br />
+Then you came forth again like the sun after storm&mdash;<br />
+The deadly uric acid driven out at last<br />
+Which had poisoned you and dwarfed your soul&mdash;<br />
+So much for soul!<br />
+<br />
+The last time I saw you<br />
+Your face was full of golden light,<br />
+Something between flame and the richness of flesh.<br />
+You were yourself again, wholly yourself.<br />
+And oh, to find you again and resume<br />
+Our understanding we had worked so long to reach&mdash;<br />
+You calm and luminant and rich in thought!<br />
+This time it seemed we said but "yes" or "no"&mdash;<br />
+That was enough; we smoked together<br />
+And drank a glass of wine and watched<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+The leaves fall sitting on the porch....<br />
+Then life whirled me away like a leaf,<br />
+And I went about the crowded ways of New York.<br />
+<br />
+And one night Alberta and I took dinner<br />
+At a place near Fourteenth Street where the music<br />
+Was like the sun on a breeze-swept lake<br />
+When every wave is a patine of fire,<br />
+And I thought of you not at all<br />
+Looking at Alberta and watching her white teeth<br />
+Bite off bits of Italian bread,<br />
+And watching her smile and the wide pupils<br />
+Of her eyes, electrified by wine<br />
+And music and the touch of our hands<br />
+Now and then across the table.<br />
+We went to her house at last.<br />
+And through a languorous evening.<br />
+Where no light was but a single candle,<br />
+We circled about and about a pending theme<br />
+Till at last we solved it suddenly in rapture<br />
+Almost by chance; and when I left<br />
+She followed me to the hall and leaned above<br />
+The railing about the stair for the farewell kiss&mdash;<br />
+And I went into the open air ecstatically,<br />
+With the stars in the spaces of sky between<br />
+The towering buildings, and the rush<br />
+Of wheels and clang of bells,<br />
+Still with the fragrance of her lips and cheeks<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+And glinting hair about me, delicate<br />
+And keen in spite of the open air.<br />
+And just as I entered the brilliant car<br />
+Something said to me you are dead&mdash;<br />
+I had not thought of you, was not thinking of you.<br />
+But I knew it was true, as it was,<br />
+For the telegram waited me at my room....<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">I didn't come back.</span><br />
+I could not bear to see the breathless breath<br />
+Over your brow&mdash;nor look at your face&mdash;<br />
+However you fared or where<br />
+To what victories soever&mdash;<br />
+Vanquished or seemingly vanquished!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">RAIN IN MY HEART</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>There is a quiet in my heart<br />
+Like one who rests from days of pain.<br />
+Outside, the sparrows on the roof<br />
+Are chirping in the dripping rain.<br />
+<br />
+Rain in my heart; rain on the roof;<br />
+And memory sleeps beneath the gray<br />
+And windless sky and brings no dreams<br />
+Of any well remembered day.<br />
+<br />
+I would not have the heavens fair,<br />
+Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild,<br />
+But days like this, until my heart<br />
+To loss of you is reconciled.<br />
+<br />
+I would not see you. Every hope<br />
+To know you as you were has ranged.<br />
+I, who am altered, would not find<br />
+The face I loved so greatly changed.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE LOOP</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>From State street bridge a snow-white glimpse of sea<br />
+Beyond the river walled in by red buildings,<br />
+O'ertopped by masts that take the sunset's gildings,<br />
+Roped to the wharf till spring shall set them free.<br />
+Great floes make known how swift the river's current.<br />
+Out of the north sky blows a cutting wind.<br />
+Smoke from the stacks and engines in a torrent<br />
+Whirls downward, by the eddying breezes thinned.<br />
+Enskyed are sign boards advertising soap,<br />
+Tobacco, coal, transcontinental trains.<br />
+A tug is whistling, straining at a rope,<br />
+Fixed to a dredge with derricks, scoops and cranes.<br />
+Down in the loop the blue-gray air enshrouds,<br />
+As with a cyclops' cape, the man-made hills<br />
+And towers of granite where the city crowds.<br />
+Above the din a copper's whistle shrills.<br />
+There is a smell of coffee and of spices.<br />
+We near the market place of trade's devices.<br />
+Blue smoke from out a roasting room is pouring.<br />
+A rooster crows, geese cackle, men are bawling.<br />
+Whips crack, trucks creak, it is the place of storing,<br />
+And drawing out and loading up and hauling<br />
+Fruit, vegetables and fowls and steaks and hams,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+Oysters and lobsters, fish and crabs and clams.<br />
+And near at hand are restaurants and bars,<br />
+Hotels with rooms at fifty cents a day,<br />
+Beer tunnels, pool rooms, places where cigars<br />
+And cigarettes their window signs display;<br />
+Mixed in with letterings of printed tags,<br />
+Twine, boxes, cartels, sacks and leather bags,<br />
+Wigs, telescopes, eyeglasses, ladies' tresses,<br />
+Or those who manicure or fashion dresses,<br />
+Or sell us putters, tennis balls or brassies,<br />
+Make shoes, pull teeth, or fit the eye with glasses.<br />
+<br />
+And now the rows of windows showing laces,<br />
+Silks, draperies and furs and costly vases,<br />
+Watches and mirrors, silver cups and mugs,<br />
+Emeralds, diamonds, Indian, Persian rugs,<br />
+Hats, velvets, silver buckles, ostrich-plumes,<br />
+Drugs, violet water, powder and perfumes.<br />
+Here is a monstrous winking eye&mdash;beneath<br />
+A showcase by an entrance full of teeth.<br />
+Here rubber coats, umbrellas, mackintoshes,<br />
+Hoods, rubber boots and arctics and galoshes.<br />
+Here is half a block of overcoats,<br />
+In this bleak time of snow and slender throats.<br />
+Then windows of fine linen, snakewood canes,<br />
+Scarfs, opera hats, in use where fashion reigns.<br />
+As when the hive swarms, so the crowded street<br />
+Roars to the shuffling of innumerable feet.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+Skyscrapers soar above them; they go by<br />
+As bees crawl, little scales upon the skin<br />
+Of a great dragon winding out and in.<br />
+Above them hangs a tangled tree of signs,<br />
+Suspended or uplifted like dædalian<br />
+Hieroglyphics when the saturnalian<br />
+Night commences, and their racing lines<br />
+Run fire of blue and yellow in a puzzle,<br />
+Bewildering to the eyes of those who guzzle,<br />
+And gourmandize and stroll and seek the bubble<br />
+Of happiness to put away their trouble.<br />
+<br />
+Around the loop the elevated crawls,<br />
+And giant shadows sink against the walls<br />
+Where ten to twenty stories strive to hold<br />
+The pale refraction of the sunset's gold.<br />
+Slop underfoot, we pass beneath the loop.<br />
+The crowd is uglier, poorer; there are smells<br />
+As from the depths of unsuspected hells,<br />
+And from a groggery where beer and soup<br />
+Are sold for five cents to the thieves and bums.<br />
+Here now are huge cartoons in red and blue<br />
+Of obese women and of skeleton men,<br />
+Egyptian dancers, twined with monstrous snakes,<br />
+Before the door a turbaned lithe Hindoo,<br />
+A bagpipe shrilling, underneath a den<br />
+Of opium, whence a man with hand that shakes,<br />
+Rolling a cigarette, so palely comes.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+The clang of car bells and the beat of drums.<br />
+Draft horses clamping with their steel-shod hoofs.<br />
+The buildings have grown small and black and worn;<br />
+The sky is more beholden; o'er the roofs<br />
+A flock of pigeons soars; with dresses torn<br />
+And yellow faces, labor women pass<br />
+Some Chinese gabbling; and there, buying fruit,<br />
+Stands a fair girl who is a late recruit<br />
+To those poor women slain each year by lust.<br />
+'Tis evening now and trade will soon begin.<br />
+The family entrance beckons for a glass<br />
+Of hopeful mockery, the piano's din<br />
+Into the street with sounds of rasping wires<br />
+Filters, and near a pawner's window shows<br />
+Pistols, accordions; and, luring buyers,<br />
+A Jew stands mumbling to the passer-by<br />
+Of jewelry and watches and old clothes.<br />
+A limousine gleams quickly&mdash;with a cry<br />
+A legless man fastened upon a board<br />
+With casters 'neath it by a sudden shove<br />
+Darts out of danger. And upon the corner<br />
+A lassie tells a man that God is love,<br />
+Holding a tambourine with its copper hoard<br />
+To be augmented by the drunken scorner.<br />
+A woman with no eyeballs in her sockets<br />
+Plays "Rock of Ages" on a wheezy organ.<br />
+A newsboy with cold hands thrust in his pockets<br />
+Cries, "All about the will of Pierpont Morgan!"<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+The roofline of the street now sinks and dwindles.<br />
+The windows are begrimed with dust and beer.<br />
+A child half clothed, with legs as thin as spindles,<br />
+Carries a basket with some bits of coal.<br />
+Between lace curtains eyes of yellow leer,<br />
+The cheeks splotched with white places like the skin<br />
+Inside an eggshell&mdash;destitute of soul.<br />
+One sees a brass lamp oozing kerosene<br />
+Upon a stand whereon her elbows lean;<br />
+Lighted, it soon will welcome negroes in.<br />
+<br />
+The railroad tracks are near. We almost choke<br />
+From filth whirled from the street and stinging vapors.<br />
+Great engines vomit gas and heavy smoke<br />
+Upon a north wind driving tattered papers,<br />
+Dry dung and dust and refuse down the street.<br />
+A circumambient roar as of a wheel<br />
+Whirring far off&mdash;a monster's heart whose beat<br />
+Is full of murmurs, comes as we retreat<br />
+Towards Twenty-second. And a man with jaw<br />
+Set like a tiger's, with a dirty beard,<br />
+Skulks toward the loop, with heavy wrists red-raw<br />
+Glowing above his pockets where his hands<br />
+Pushed tensely round his hips the coat tails draw,<br />
+And show what seems a slender piece of metal<br />
+In his hip pocket. On these barren strands<br />
+He waits for midnight for old scores to settle<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+Against his ancient foe society,<br />
+Who keeps the soup house and who builds the jails.<br />
+Switchmen and firemen with their dinner pails<br />
+Go by him homeward, and he wonders if<br />
+These fellows know a hundred thousand workers<br />
+Walk up and down the city's highways, stiff<br />
+From cold and hunger, doomed to poverty,<br />
+As wretched as the thieves and crooks and shirkers.<br />
+He scurries to the lake front, loiters past<br />
+The windows of wax lights with scarlet shades,<br />
+Where smiling diners back of ambuscades<br />
+Of silk and velvet hear not winter's blast<br />
+Blowing across the lake. He has a thought<br />
+Of Michigan, where once at picking berries<br />
+He spent a summer&mdash;then his eye is caught<br />
+At Randolph street by written light which tarries,<br />
+Then like a film runs into sentences.<br />
+He sees it all as from a black abyss.<br />
+Taxis with skid chains rattle, limousines<br />
+Draw up to awnings; for a space he catches<br />
+A scent of musk or violets, sees the patches<br />
+On powdered cheeks of furred and jeweled queens.<br />
+The color round his cruel mouth grows whiter,<br />
+He thrusts his coarse hands in his pockets tighter:<br />
+He is a thief, he knows he is a thief,<br />
+He is a thief found out, and, as he knows,<br />
+The whole loop is a kingdom held in fief<br />
+By men who work with laws instead of blows<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+From sling shots, so he curses under breath<br />
+The money and the invisible hand that owns<br />
+From year to year, in spite of change and death,<br />
+The wires for the lights and telephones,<br />
+The railways on the streets, and overhead<br />
+The railways, and beneath the winding tunnel<br />
+Which crooks stole from the city for a runnel<br />
+To drain her nickels; and the pipes of lead<br />
+Which carry gas, wrapped round us like a snake,<br />
+And round the courts, whose grip no court can break.<br />
+He curses bitterly all those who rise,<br />
+And rule by just the spirit which he plies<br />
+Coarsely against the world's great store of wealth;<br />
+Bankers and usurers and cliques whose stealth<br />
+Works witchcraft through the market and the press,<br />
+And hires editors, or owns the stock<br />
+Controlling papers, playing with finesse<br />
+The city's thinking, that they may unlock<br />
+Treasures and powers like burglars in the dark.<br />
+And thinking thus and cursing, through a flurry<br />
+Of sudden snow he hastens on to Clark.<br />
+In a cheap room there is an eye to mark<br />
+His coming and be glad. His footsteps hurry.<br />
+She will have money, earned this afternoon<br />
+Through men who took her from a near saloon<br />
+Wherein she sits at table to dragoon<br />
+Roughnecks or simpletons upon a lark.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+Within a little hall a fierce-eyed youth<br />
+Rants of the burdens on the people's backs&mdash;<br />
+He would cure all things with the single tax.<br />
+A clergyman demands more gospel truth,<br />
+Speaking to Christians at a weekly dinner.<br />
+A parlor Marxian, for a beginner<br />
+Would take the railways. And amid applause<br />
+Where lawyers dine, a judge says all will be<br />
+Well if we hand down to posterity<br />
+Respect for courts and judges and the laws.<br />
+An anarchist would fight. Upon the whole,<br />
+Another thinks, to cultivate one's soul<br />
+Is most important&mdash;let the passing show<br />
+Go where it wills, and where it wills to go.<br />
+<br />
+Outside the stars look down. Stars are content<br />
+To be so quiet and indifferent.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES</span></p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td>When under the icy eaves<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The swallow heralds the sun,</span><br />
+And the dove for its lost mate grieves<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the young lambs play and run;</span><br />
+When the sea is a plane of glass,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the blustering winds are still,</span><br />
+And the strength of the thin snows pass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In mists o'er the tawny hill&mdash;</span><br />
+The spirit of life awakes<br />
+In the fresh flags by the lakes.<br />
+<br />
+When the sick man seeks the air,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the graves of the dead grow green,</span><br />
+Where the children play unaware<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of the faces no longer seen;</span><br />
+When all we have felt or can feel,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all we are or have been,</span><br />
+And all the heart can hide or reveal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Knocks gently, and enters in:&mdash;</span><br />
+The spirit of life awakes,<br />
+In the fresh flags by the lakes.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN THE CAR</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td>We paused to say good-by,<br />
+As we thought for a little while,<br />
+Alone in the car, in the corner<br />
+Around the turn of the aisle.<br />
+<br />
+A quiver came in your voice,<br />
+Your eyes were sorrowful too;<br />
+'Twas over&mdash;I strode to the doorway,<br />
+Then turned to wave an adieu.<br />
+<br />
+But you had not come from the corner,<br />
+And though I had gone so far,<br />
+I retraced, and faced you coming<br />
+Into the aisle of the car.<br />
+<br />
+You stopped as one who was caught<br />
+In an evil mood by surprise.&mdash;<br />
+I want to forget, I am trying<br />
+To forget the look in your eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Your face was blank and cold,<br />
+Like Lot's wife turned to salt.<br />
+I suddenly trapped and discovered<br />
+Your soul in a hidden fault.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+Your eyes were tearless and wide,<br />
+And your wide eyes looked on me<br />
+Like a Mænad musing murder,<br />
+Or the mask of Melpomene.<br />
+<br />
+And there in a flash of lightning<br />
+I learned what I never could prove:<br />
+That your heart contained no sorrow,<br />
+And your heart contained no love.<br />
+<br />
+And my heart is light and heavy,<br />
+And this is the reason why:<br />
+I am glad we parted forever,<br />
+And sad for the last good-by.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SIMON SURNAMED PETER</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Time that has lifted you over them all&mdash;<br />
+O'er John and o'er Paul;<br />
+Writ you in capitals, made you the chief<br />
+Word on the leaf&mdash;<br />
+How did you, Peter, when ne'er on His breast<br />
+You leaned and were blest&mdash;<br />
+And none except Judas and you broke the faith<br />
+To the day of His death,&mdash;<br />
+You, Peter, the fisherman, worthy of blame,<br />
+Arise to this fame?<br />
+<br />
+'Twas you in the garden who fell into sleep<br />
+And the watch failed to keep,<br />
+When Jesus was praying and pressed with the weight<br />
+Of the oncoming fate.<br />
+'Twas you in the court of the palace who warmed<br />
+Your hands as you stormed<br />
+At the damsel, denying Him thrice, when she cried:<br />
+"He walked at his side!"<br />
+You, Peter, a wave, a star among clouds, a reed in the wind,<br />
+A guide of the blind,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Both smiter and flyer, but human alway, I protest,<br />
+Beyond all the rest.<br />
+<br />
+When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared<br />
+Did you wait till he neared?<br />
+You leaped in the water, not dreading the worst<br />
+In your joy to be first<br />
+To greet Him and tell Him of all that had passed<br />
+Since you saw Him the last.<br />
+You had slept while He watched, but fierce were you, fierce and awake<br />
+When they sought Him to take,<br />
+And cursing, no doubt, as you smote off, as one of the least,<br />
+The ear of the priest.<br />
+Then Andrew and all of them fled, but you followed Him, hoping for strength<br />
+To save him at length<br />
+Till you lied to the damsel, oh penitent Peter, and crept,<br />
+Into hiding and wept.<br />
+<br />
+Oh well! But he asked all the twelve, "Who am I?"<br />
+And who made reply?<br />
+As you leaped in the sea, so you spoke as you smote with the sword;<br />
+"Thou art Christ, even Lord!"<br />
+John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+"Nay, lovest thou me?"<br />
+Thrice over, as thrice you denied Him, and chose you to lead<br />
+His sheep and to feed;<br />
+And gave you, He said, the keys of the den and the fold<br />
+To have and to hold.<br />
+You were a poor jailer, oh Peter, the dreamer, who saw<br />
+The death of the law<br />
+In the dream of the vessel that held all the four-footed beasts,<br />
+Unclean for the priests;<br />
+And heard in the vision a trumpet that all men are worth<br />
+The peace of the earth<br />
+And rapture of heaven hereafter,&mdash;oh Peter, what power<br />
+Was yours in that hour:<br />
+You warder and jailer and sealer of fates and decrees,<br />
+To use the big keys<br />
+With which to reveal and fling wide all the soul and the scheme<br />
+Of the Galilee dream,<br />
+When you flashed in a trice, as later you smote with the sword:<br />
+"Thou art Christ, even Lord!"<br />
+<br />
+We men, Simon Peter, we men also give you the crown<br />
+O'er Paul and o'er John.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+We write you in capitals, make you the chief<br />
+Word on the leaf.<br />
+We know you as one of our flesh, and 'tis well<br />
+You are warder of hell,<br />
+And heaven's gatekeeper forever to bind and to loose&mdash;<br />
+Keep the keys if you choose.<br />
+Not rock of you, fire of you make you sublime<br />
+In the annals of time.<br />
+You were called by Him, Peter, a rock, but we give you the name<br />
+Of Peter the Flame.<br />
+For you struck a spark, as the spark from the shock<br />
+Of steel upon rock.<br />
+The rock has his use but the flame gives the light<br />
+In the way in the night:&mdash;<br />
+Oh Peter, the dreamer, impetuous, human, divine,<br />
+Gnarled branch of the vine!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ALL LIFE IN A LIFE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>His father had a large family<br />
+Of girls and boys and he was born and bred<br />
+In a barn or kind of cattle shed.<br />
+But he was a hardy youngster and grew to be<br />
+A boy with eyes that sparkled like a rod<br />
+Of white hot iron in the blacksmith shop.<br />
+His face was ruddy like a rising moon,<br />
+And his hair was black as sheep's wool that is black.<br />
+And he had rugged arms and legs and a strong back.<br />
+And he had a voice half flute and half bassoon.<br />
+And from his toes up to his head's top<br />
+He was a man, simple but intricate.<br />
+And most men differ who try to delineate<br />
+His life and fate.<br />
+<br />
+He never seemed ashamed<br />
+Of poverty or of his origin. He was a wayward child,<br />
+Nevertheless though wise and mild,<br />
+And thoughtful but when angered then he flamed<br />
+As fire does in a forge.<br />
+When he was ten years old he ran away<br />
+To be alone and watch the sea, and the stars<br />
+At midnight from a mountain gorge.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span><br />
+When he returned his parents scolded him<br />
+And threatened him with bolts and bars.<br />
+Then they grew soft for his return and gay<br />
+And with their love would have enfolded him.<br />
+But even at ten years old he had a way<br />
+Of gazing at you with a look austere<br />
+Which gave his kinfolk fear.<br />
+He had no childlike love for father or mother,<br />
+Sister or brother,<br />
+They were the same to him as any other.<br />
+He was a little cold, a little queer.<br />
+<br />
+His father was a laborer and now<br />
+They made the boy work for his daily bread.<br />
+They say he read<br />
+A book or two during these years of work.<br />
+But if there was a secret prone to lurk<br />
+Between the pages under the light of his brow<br />
+It came forth. And if he had a woman<br />
+In love or out of love, or a companion or a chum,<br />
+History is dumb.<br />
+So far as we know he dreamed and worked with hands<br />
+And learned to know his genius' commands<br />
+Or what is called one's dæmon.<br />
+<br />
+And this became at last the city's call.<br />
+He had now reached the age of thirty years,<br />
+And found a Dream of Life and a solution<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+For slavery of soul and even all<br />
+Miseries that flow from things material.<br />
+To free the world was his soul's resolution.<br />
+But his family had great fears<br />
+For him, knowing the evil<br />
+Which might befall him, seeing that the light<br />
+Of his own dream had blinded his mind's eyes.<br />
+They could not tell but what he had a devil.<br />
+But still in their tears despite,<br />
+And warnings he departed with replies<br />
+That when a man's genius calls him<br />
+He must obey no matter what befalls him.<br />
+<br />
+What he had in his mind was growth<br />
+Of soul by watching,<br />
+And the creation of eyes<br />
+Over your mind's eyes to supervise<br />
+A clear activity and to ward off sloth.<br />
+What he had in his mind was scotching<br />
+And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove<br />
+From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire<br />
+Of Falsehood and Unbrotherly Desire.&mdash;<br />
+What he had in his mind was simply Love.<br />
+And it was strange he preached the sword and force<br />
+To establish Love, but it was not strange,<br />
+Since he did this, his life took on a change.<br />
+And what he taught seems muddled at its source<br />
+With moralizing and with moral strife.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+For morals are merely the Truth diluted<br />
+And sweetened up and suited<br />
+To the business and bread of Life.<br />
+<br />
+And now this City was just what you'd find<br />
+A city anywhere,<br />
+A turmoil and a Vanity Fair,<br />
+A sort of heaven and a sort of Tophet.<br />
+There were so many leaders of his kind<br />
+The city didn't care<br />
+For one additional prophet.<br />
+He said some extravagant things<br />
+And planted a few stings<br />
+Under the rich man's hide.<br />
+And one of the sensational newspapers<br />
+Gave him a line or two for cutting capers<br />
+In front of the Palace of Justice and the Church.<br />
+But all of the first grade people took the other side<br />
+Of the street when they saw him coming<br />
+With a rag tag crowd singing and humming,<br />
+And curious boys and men up in a perch<br />
+Of a tree or window taking the spectacle in,<br />
+And the Corybantic din<br />
+Of a Salvation Army as it were.<br />
+And whatever he dreamed when he lived in a little town<br />
+The intelligent people ignored him, and this is the stir<br />
+And the only stir he made in the city.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+But there was a certain sinister<br />
+Fellow who came to him hearing of his renown<br />
+And said "You can be Mayor of this city,<br />
+We need a man like you for Mayor."<br />
+And others said "You'd make a lawyer or a politician,<br />
+Look how the people follow you;<br />
+Why don't you hire out as a special writer,<br />
+You could become a business man, a rhetorician,<br />
+You could become a player,<br />
+You can grow rich. There's nothing for a fighter,<br />
+Fighting as you are, but to end in ruin."<br />
+But he turned from them on his way pursuing<br />
+The dream he had in view.<br />
+<br />
+He had a rich man or two<br />
+Who took up with him against the powerful frown<br />
+Which looked him down.<br />
+For you'll always find a rich man or two<br />
+To take up with anything.<br />
+There are those who can't get into society or bring<br />
+Their riches to a social recognition;<br />
+Or ill-formed souls who lack the real patrician<br />
+Spirit for life.<br />
+But as for him he didn't care, he passed<br />
+Where the richness of living was rife.<br />
+And like wise Goethe talking to the last<br />
+With cabmen rather than with lords<br />
+He sat about the markets and the fountains,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+He walked about the country and the mountains,<br />
+Took trips upon the lakes and waded fords<br />
+Barefooted, laughing as a young animal<br />
+Disports itself amid the festival<br />
+Of warm winds, sunshine, summer's carnival&mdash;<br />
+With laborers, carpenters, seamen<br />
+And some loose women.<br />
+And certain notable sinners<br />
+Gave him dinners.<br />
+And he went to weddings and to places where youth slakes<br />
+Its thirst for happiness, and they served him cakes<br />
+And wine wherever he went.<br />
+And he ate and drank and spent<br />
+His time in feasting and in telling stories,<br />
+And singing poems of lilies and of trees,<br />
+With crowds of people crowded around his knees<br />
+That searched with lightning secrets hidden<br />
+Of life and of life's glories,<br />
+Of death and of the soul's way after death.<br />
+<br />
+Time makes amends usually for scandal's breath,<br />
+Which touched him to his earthly ruination.<br />
+But this city had a Civic Federation,<br />
+And a certain social order which intrigues<br />
+Through churches, courts, with an endless ramification<br />
+Of money and morals to save itself.<br />
+And this city had a Bar Association,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+Also its Public Efficiency Leagues<br />
+For laying honest men upon the shelf<br />
+While making private pelf<br />
+Secure and free to increase.<br />
+And this city had illustrious Pharisees<br />
+And this city had a legion<br />
+Of men who make a business of religion,<br />
+With eyes one inch apart,<br />
+Dark and narrow of heart,<br />
+Who give themselves and give the city no peace,<br />
+And who are everywhere the best police<br />
+For Life as business.<br />
+And when they saw this youth<br />
+Was telling the truth,<br />
+And that his followers were multiplying,<br />
+And were going about rejoicing and defying<br />
+The social order and were stirring up<br />
+The dregs of discontent in the cup<br />
+With the hand of their own happiness,<br />
+They saw dynamic mysteries<br />
+In the poems of lilies and trees,<br />
+Therefore they held him for a felony.<br />
+<br />
+If you will take a kernel of wheat<br />
+And first make free<br />
+The outer flake and then pare off the meat<br />
+Of edible starch you'll find at the kernel's core<br />
+The life germ. And this young man's words were dim<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+With blasphemy, sedition at the rim,<br />
+Which fired the heads of dreamers like new wine.<br />
+But this was just the outward force of him.<br />
+For this young man's philosophy was more<br />
+Than such external ferment, being divine<br />
+With secrets so profound no plummet line<br />
+Can altogether sound it. It means growth<br />
+Of soul by watching,<br />
+And the creation of eyes<br />
+Over your mind's eyes to supervise<br />
+A clear activity and to ward off sloth.<br />
+What he had in mind was scotching<br />
+And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove<br />
+From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire<br />
+Of falsehood and unbrotherly Desire.<br />
+What he had in mind was simply Love.<br />
+<br />
+But he was prosecuted<br />
+As a rebel and as a rebel executed<br />
+Right in a public place where all could see.<br />
+And his mother watched him hang for the felony.<br />
+He hated to die being but thirty-three,<br />
+And fearing that his poems might be lost.<br />
+And certain members of the Bar Association,<br />
+And of the Civic Federation,<br />
+And of the League of Public Efficiency,<br />
+And a legion<br />
+Of men devoted to religion,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+With policemen, soldiers, roughs,<br />
+Loose women, thieves and toughs,<br />
+Came out to see him die,<br />
+And hooted at him giving up the ghost<br />
+In great despair and with a fearful cry!<br />
+<br />
+And after him there was a man named Paul<br />
+Who almost spoiled it all.<br />
+<br />
+And protozoan things like hypocrites,<br />
+And parasitic things who make a food<br />
+Of the mysteries of God for earthly power<br />
+Must wonder how before this young man's hour<br />
+They lived without his blood,<br />
+Shed on that day, and which<br />
+In red cells is so rich.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHAT YOU WILL</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>April rain, delicious weeping,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Washes white bones from the grave,</span><br />
+Long enough have they been sleeping.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">They are cleansed, and now they crave</span><br />
+Once more on the earth to gather<br />
+Pleasure from the springtime weather.<br />
+<br />
+The pine trees and the long dark grass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Feed on what is placed below.</span><br />
+Think you not that there doth pass<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In them something we did know?</span><br />
+This spell&mdash;well, friends, I greet ye once again<br />
+With joy&mdash;but with a most unuttered pain.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CITY</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>The Sun hung like a red balloon<br />
+As if he would not rise;<br />
+For listless Helios drowsed and yawned.<br />
+He cared not whether the morning dawned,<br />
+The brother of Eos and the Moon<br />
+Stretched him and rubbed his eyes.<br />
+<br />
+He would have dreamed the dream again<br />
+That found him under sea:<br />
+He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side,<br />
+He saw Hæphestos with his bride;<br />
+He traced from Enna's flowery plain<br />
+The child Persephone.<br />
+<br />
+There was a time when heaven's vault<br />
+Cracked like a temple's roof.<br />
+A new hierarchy burst its shell,<br />
+And as the sapphire ceiling fell,<br />
+From stern Jehovah's mad assault,<br />
+Vast spaces stretched aloof:<br />
+<br />
+Great blue black depths of frozen air<br />
+Engulfed the soul of Zeus.<br />
+And then Jehovah reigned instead.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+For Judah was living and Greece was dead.<br />
+And Hope was born to nurse Despair,<br />
+And the Devil was let loose.<br />
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+Far off in the waste empyrean<br />
+The world was a golden mote.<br />
+And the Sun hung like a red balloon,<br />
+Or a bomb afire o'er a barracoon.<br />
+And the sea was drab, and the sea was green<br />
+Like a many colored coat.<br />
+<br />
+The sea was pink like cyclamen,<br />
+And red as a blushing rose.<br />
+It shook anon like the sensitive plant,<br />
+Under the golden light aslant.<br />
+The little waves patted the shore again<br />
+Where the restless river flows.<br />
+<br />
+And thus it has been for ages gone&mdash;<br />
+For a hundred thousand years;<br />
+Ere Buddha lived or Jesus came,<br />
+Or ever the city had place or name,<br />
+The sea thrilled through at the kiss of dawn<br />
+Like a soul of smiles and tears.<br />
+<br />
+When the city's seat was a waste of sand,<br />
+And the hydra lived alone,<br />
+The sound of the sea was here to be heard,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+And the moon rose up like a great white bird,<br />
+Sailing aloft from the yellow strand<br />
+To her silent midnight throne.<br />
+<br />
+Now Helios eyes the universe,<br />
+And he knows the world is small.<br />
+Of old he walked through pagan Tyre,<br />
+Babylon, Sodom destroyed by fire,<br />
+And sought to unriddle the primal curse<br />
+That holds the race in thrall.<br />
+<br />
+So he stepped from the Sun in robes of flame<br />
+As the city woke from sleep.<br />
+He walked the markets, walked the squares,<br />
+He walked the places of sweets and snares,<br />
+Where men buy honor and barter shame,<br />
+And the weak are killed as sheep.<br />
+<br />
+He saw the city is one great mart<br />
+Where life is bought and sold.<br />
+Men rise to get them meat and bread<br />
+To barter for drugs or coffin the dead.<br />
+And dawn is but a plucked-up heart<br />
+For the dreary game of gold.<br />
+<br />
+"Ho! ho!" said Helios, "father Zeus<br />
+Would never botch it so.<br />
+If he had stolen Joseph's bride,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+And let his son be crucified<br />
+The son's blood had been put to use<br />
+To ease the people's woe."<br />
+<br />
+"He of the pest and the burning bush,<br />
+Of locusts, lice, and frogs,<br />
+Who made me stand, veiling my light,<br />
+While Joshua slaughtered the Amorite,<br />
+Who blacked the skin of the sons of Cush,<br />
+And builded the synagogues."<br />
+<br />
+"And Jehovah the great is omnipotent,<br />
+While Zeus was bound by Fate.<br />
+But Athens fell when Peter took Rome,<br />
+And Chicago is made His hecatomb.<br />
+And since from the hour His son was sent<br />
+The hypocrite holds the state."<br />
+<br />
+Helios traversed the city streets<br />
+And this is what he saw:<br />
+Some sold their honor, some their skill,<br />
+The soldier hired himself to kill,<br />
+The judges bartered the judgment seats<br />
+And trafficked in the law.<br />
+<br />
+The starving artist sold his youth,<br />
+The writer sold his pen;<br />
+The lawyer sharpened up his wits<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+Like a burglar filing auger bits,<br />
+And Jesus' vicar sold the truth<br />
+To the famished sons of men.<br />
+<br />
+In every heart flamed cruelty<br />
+Like a little emerald snake.<br />
+And each one knew if he should stand<br />
+In another's way the dagger-hand<br />
+Would make the stronger the feofee<br />
+Of the coveted wapentake.<br />
+<br />
+There's not a thing men will not do<br />
+For honor, gold, or power.<br />
+We smile and call the city fair,<br />
+We call life lovely and debonair,<br />
+But Proserpina never grew<br />
+So deadly a passion flower.<br />
+<br />
+Go live for an hour in a tropic land<br />
+Hid near a sinking pool:<br />
+The lion and tiger come to drink,<br />
+The boa crawls to the water's brink,<br />
+The elephant bull kneels down in the sand<br />
+And drinks till his throat is cool.<br />
+<br />
+Jehovah will keep you awhile unseen<br />
+As you lie behind the rocks.<br />
+But go, if you dare, to slake your thirst,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Though Jesus died for our life accursed<br />
+Your bones by the tiger will be licked clean<br />
+As he licks the bones of an ox.<br />
+<br />
+And the sky may be blue as fleur de lis,<br />
+And the earth be tulip red;<br />
+And God in heaven, and life all good<br />
+While you lie hid in the underwood:<br />
+And the city may leave you sorrow free<br />
+If you ask it not for bread.<br />
+<br />
+One day Achilles lost a horse<br />
+While the pest at Troy was rife,<br />
+And a million maggots fought and ate<br />
+Like soldiers storming a city's gate,<br />
+And Thersites said, as he looked at the corse,<br />
+"Achilles, that is life."
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+Day fades and from a million cells<br />
+The office people pour.<br />
+Like bees that crawl on the honeycomb<br />
+The workers scurry to what is home,<br />
+And trains and traffic and clanging bells<br />
+Make the cañon highways roar.<br />
+<br />
+Helios walked the city's ways<br />
+Till the lights began to shine.<br />
+Then the janitor women start to scrub<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+And the Pharisees up and enter the club,<br />
+And the harlot wakes, and the music plays<br />
+And the glasses glow with wine.<br />
+<br />
+Now we're good fellows one and all,<br />
+And the buffet storms with talk.<br />
+"The market's closed and trade's at end<br />
+We had our battle, now I'm your friend."<br />
+And thanks to the spirit of alcohol<br />
+Men go for a ride or walk.<br />
+<br />
+Oh but traffic is not all done<br />
+Nor everything yet sold.<br />
+There's woman to win, and plots to weave,<br />
+There's a heart to hurt, or one to deceive,<br />
+And bargains to bind ere rise of Sun<br />
+To garner the morrow's gold.<br />
+<br />
+The market at night is as full of fraud<br />
+As the market kept by day.<br />
+The courtesan buys a soul with a look,<br />
+A dinner tempers the truth in a book,<br />
+And love is sold till love is a bawd,<br />
+And falsehood froths in the play.<br />
+<br />
+And men and women sell their smiles<br />
+For friendship's lifeless dregs.<br />
+For fear of the morrow we bend and bow<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+To moneybags with the slanting brow.<br />
+For the heart that knows life's little wiles<br />
+Seldom or never begs.<br />
+<br />
+"Poor men," sighed Helios, "how they long<br />
+For the ultimate fire of love.<br />
+They yearn, through life, like the peacock moth,<br />
+And die worn out in search of the troth.<br />
+For love in the soul is the siren song<br />
+That wrecks the peace thereof."
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+Helios turned from the world and fled<br />
+As the convent bell tolled six.<br />
+For he caught a glimpse of an agéd crone<br />
+Who knelt beside a coffin alone;<br />
+She had sold her cloak to shrive the dead<br />
+And buy a crucifix!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE IDIOT</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Two children in a garden<br />
+Shouting for joy<br />
+Were playing dolls and houses,<br />
+A girl and boy.<br />
+I smiled at a neighbor window,<br />
+And watched them play<br />
+Under a budding oak tree<br />
+On a wintry day.<br />
+<br />
+And then a board half broken<br />
+In the high fence<br />
+Fell over and there entered,<br />
+I know not whence,<br />
+A jailbird face of yellow<br />
+With a vacant sulk,<br />
+His body was a sickly<br />
+Thing of bulk.<br />
+<br />
+His open mouth was slavering,<br />
+And a green light<br />
+Turned disc-like in his eyeballs,<br />
+Like a dog's at night.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+His teeth were like a giant's,<br />
+And far apart;<br />
+I saw him reel on the children<br />
+With a stopping heart.<br />
+He trampled their dolls and ruined<br />
+The house they made;<br />
+He struck to earth the children<br />
+With a dirty spade.<br />
+As a tiger growls with an antelope<br />
+After the hunt,<br />
+Over the little faces<br />
+I heard him grunt.<br />
+<br />
+I stood at the window frozen,<br />
+And short of breath,<br />
+And then I saw the idiot<br />
+Was Master Death!<br />
+<br />
+A bird in the lilac bushes<br />
+Began to sing.<br />
+The garden colored before me<br />
+To the kiss of spring.<br />
+And the yellow face in a moment<br />
+Was a mystic white;<br />
+The matted hair was softened<br />
+To starry light.<br />
+The ragged coat flowed downward<br />
+Into a robe;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+He carried a sword and a balance<br />
+And stood on a globe.<br />
+I watched him from the window<br />
+Under a spell;<br />
+The idiot was the angel<br />
+Azrael!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">HELEN OF TROY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">On an ancient vase representing in bas-relief the flight
+of Helen.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>This is the vase of Love<br />
+Whose feet would ever rove<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">O'er land and sea;</span><br />
+Whose hopes forever seek<br />
+Bright eyes, the vermeiled cheek,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And ways made free.</span><br />
+<br />
+Do we not understand<br />
+Why thou didst leave thy land,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy spouse, thy hearth?</span><br />
+Helen of Troy, Greek art<br />
+Hath made our heart thy heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy mirth our mirth.</span><br />
+<br />
+For Paris did appear,&mdash;<br />
+Curled hair and rosy ear<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And tapering hands.</span><br />
+He spoke&mdash;the blood ran fast,<br />
+He touched, and killed the past,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And clove its bands.</span><br />
+<br/>
+And this, I deem, is why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span><br />
+The restless ages sigh,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Helen, for thee.</span><br />
+Whate'er we do or dream,<br />
+Whate'er we say or seem,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We would be free.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would forsake old love,<br />
+And all the pain thereof,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all the care;</span><br />
+We would find out new seas,<br />
+And lands more strange than these,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And flowers more fair.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would behold fresh skies<br />
+Where summer never dies<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And amaranths spring;</span><br />
+Lands where the halcyon hours<br />
+Nest over scented bowers<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On folded wing.</span><br />
+<br />
+We would be crowned with bays,<br />
+And spend the long bright days<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On sea or shore;</span><br />
+Or sit by haunted woods,<br />
+And watch the deep sea's moods,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And hear its roar.</span><br />
+<br/>
+Beneath that ancient sky<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span><br />
+Who is not fain to fly<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As men have fled?</span><br />
+Ah! we would know relief<br />
+From marts of wine and beef,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And oil and bread.</span><br />
+<br />
+Helen of Troy, Greek art<br />
+Hath made our heart thy heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy love our love.</span><br />
+For poesy, like thee,<br />
+Must fly and wander free<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As the wild dove.</span><br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">O GLORIOUS FRANCE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>You have become a forge of snow white fire,<br />
+A crucible of molten steel, O France!<br />
+Your sons are stars who cluster to a dawn<br />
+And fade in light for you, O glorious France!<br />
+They pass through meteor changes with a song<br />
+Which to all islands and all continents<br />
+Says life is neither comfort, wealth, nor fame,<br />
+Nor quiet hearthstones, friendship, wife nor child<br />
+Nor love, nor youth's delight, nor manhood's power,<br />
+Nor many days spent in a chosen work,<br />
+Nor honored merit, nor the patterned theme<br />
+Of daily labor, nor the crowns nor wreaths<br />
+Or seventy years.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">These are not all of life,</span><br />
+O France, whose sons amid the rolling thunder<br />
+Of cannon stand in trenches where the dead<br />
+Clog the ensanguinéd ice. But life to these<br />
+Prophetic and enraptured souls is vision,<br />
+And the keen ecstasy of fated strife,<br />
+And divination of the loss as gain,<br />
+And reading mysteries with brightened eyes<br />
+In fiery shock and dazzling pain before<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+The orient splendor of the face of Death,<br />
+As a great light beside a shadowy sea;<br />
+And in a high will's strenuous exercise,<br />
+Where the warmed spirit finds its fullest strength<br />
+And is no more afraid. And in the stroke<br />
+Of azure lightning when the hidden essence<br />
+And shifting meaning of man's spiritual worth<br />
+And mystical significance in time<br />
+Are instantly distilled to one clear drop<br />
+Which mirrors earth and heaven.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13em;">This is life</span><br />
+Flaming to heaven in a minute's span<br />
+When the breath of battle blows the smoldering spark.<br />
+And across these seas<br />
+We who cry Peace and treasure life and cling<br />
+To cities, happiness, or daily toil<br />
+For daily bread, or trail the long routine<br />
+Of seventy years, taste not the terrible wine<br />
+Whereof you drink, who drain and toss the cup<br />
+Empty and ringing by the finished feast;<br />
+Or have it shaken from your hand by sight<br />
+Of God against the olive woods.<br />
+<br />
+As Joan of Arc amid the apple trees<br />
+With sacred joy first heard the voices, then<br />
+Obeying plunged at Orleans in a field<br />
+Of spears and lived her dream and died in fire,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+Thou, France, hast heard the voices and hast lived<br />
+The dream and known the meaning of the dream,<br />
+And read its riddle: How the soul of man<br />
+May to one greatest purpose make itself<br />
+A lens of clearness, how it loves the cup<br />
+Of deepest truth, and how its bitterest gall<br />
+Turns sweet to soul's surrender.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">And you say:</span><br />
+Take days for repetition, stretch your hands<br />
+For mocked renewal of familiar things:<br />
+The beaten path, the chair beside the window,<br />
+The crowded street, the task, the accustomed sleep,<br />
+And waking to the task, or many springs<br />
+Of lifted cloud, blue water, flowering fields&mdash;<br />
+The prison house grows close no less, the feast<br />
+A place of memory sick for senses dulled<br />
+Down to the dusty end where pitiful Time<br />
+Grown weary cries Enough!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">FOR A DANCE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>There is in the dance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The joy of children on a May day lawn.</span><br />
+The fragments of old dreams and dead romance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Come to us from the dancers who are gone.</span><br />
+<br />
+What strains of ancient blood<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Move quicker to the music's passionate beat?</span><br />
+I see the gulls fly over a shadowy flood<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And Munster fields of barley and of wheat.</span><br />
+<br />
+And I see sunny France,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the vine's tendrils quivering to the light,</span><br />
+And faces, faces, yearning for the dance<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With wistful eyes that look on our delight.</span><br />
+<br />
+They live through us again<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And we through them, who wish for lips and eyes</span><br />
+Wherewith to feel, not fancy, the old pain<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Passed with reluctance through the centuries</span><br />
+<br />
+To us, who in the maze<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of dancing and hushed music woven afresh</span><br />
+Amid the shifting mirrors of hours and days<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Know not our spirit, neither know our flesh;</span><br />
+<br/>
+Nor what ourselves have been,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Through the long way that brought us to the dance:</span><br />
+I see a little green by Camolin<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And odorous orchards blooming in Provence.</span><br />
+<br />
+Two listen to the roar<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of waves moon-smitten, where no steps intrude.</span><br />
+Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?</span><br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WHEN LIFE IS REAL</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>We rode, we rode against the wind.<br />
+The countless lights along the town<br />
+Made the town blacker for their fire,<br />
+And you were always looking down.<br />
+<br />
+To 'scape the blustering breath of March,<br />
+Or was it for your mind's disguise?<br />
+Still I could shut my eyes and see<br />
+The turquoise color of your eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Surely your ermine furs were warm,<br />
+And warm your flowing cloak of red;<br />
+Was it the wild wind kept you thus<br />
+Pensive and with averted head?<br />
+<br />
+I scarcely spoke, my words were swept<br />
+Like winged things in the wind's despite.<br />
+We rode, and with what shadow speed<br />
+Across the darkness of the night!<br />
+<br />
+Without a word, without a look.<br />
+What was the charm and what the spell<br />
+That made one hour of life become<br />
+A memory ever memorable?<br/>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span><span class="spacer">*</span></span></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+All craft, all labor, all desire,<br/>
+All toil of age, all hope of youth<br />
+Are shadows from the fount of fire<br />
+And mummers of the truth.<br />
+<br />
+How bloodless books, how pulseless art,<br />
+Vain kingly and imperial zeal,<br />
+Vain all memorials of the heart!<br />
+When Life itself is real!<br />
+<br />
+We traced the golden clouds of spring,<br />
+We roved the beach, we walked the land.<br />
+What was the world? A Phantom thing<br />
+That vanished in your hand.<br />
+<br />
+You were as quiet as the sky.<br />
+Your eyes were liquid as the sea.<br />
+And in that hour that passed us by<br />
+We lived eternally.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE QUESTION</span></p>
+<p class="center">I</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+
+
+<tr><td>The sea moans and the stars are bright,<br />
+The leaves lisp 'neath a rolling moon.<br />
+I shut my eyes against the night<br />
+And make believe the time is June&mdash;<br />
+The June that left us over-soon.<br />
+<br />
+This is the path and this the place<br />
+We sat and watched the moving sea,<br />
+And I the moonlight on your face.<br />
+We were not happy&mdash;woe is me,<br />
+Happiness is but memory!<br />
+<br />
+It seemeth, now that you are gone,<br />
+My heart a measured pain doth keep:&mdash;<br />
+Are you now, as I am, alone?<br />
+Do you make merry, do you weep?<br />
+In whose arms are you now asleep?<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE ANSWER</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center">II</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>I made my bed beneath the pines<br />
+Where the sea washed the sandy bars;<br />
+I heard the music of the winds,<br />
+And blest the aureate face of Mars.<br />
+All night a lilac splendor throve<br />
+Above the heaven's shadowy verge;<br />
+And in my heart the voice of love<br />
+Kept music with the dreaming surge.<br />
+<br />
+A little maid was at my side&mdash;<br />
+She slept&mdash;I scarcely slept at all;<br />
+Until toward the morning-tide<br />
+A dream possessed me with its thrall.<br />
+She sweetly breathed; around my breast<br />
+I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss,<br />
+Then came the vision of unrest&mdash;<br />
+I saw your face and felt your kiss.<br />
+<br />
+I woke and knew with what dismay<br />
+She read my secret and surprise;<br />
+She only said, "Again 'tis day!<br />
+How red your cheeks, how bright your eyes!"<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE SIGN</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>There's not a soul on the square,<br />
+And the snow blows up like a sail,<br />
+Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man<br />
+Falling, before the gale.<br />
+<br />
+And when the wind eddies it rifts<br />
+The snow that lies in drifts;<br />
+And it skims along the walk and sifts<br />
+In stairways, doorways all about<br />
+The steps of the church in an angry rout.<br />
+And one would think that a hungry hound<br />
+Was out in the cold for the sound.<br />
+<br />
+But I do not seem to mind<br />
+The snow that makes one blind,<br />
+Nor the crying voice of the wind&mdash;<br />
+I hate to hear the creak of the sign<br />
+Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:<br />
+With its rhythmic monotone of awe.<br />
+And neither a moan nor yet a whine,<br />
+Nor a cry of pain&mdash;one can't define<br />
+The sound of a creaking sign.<br />
+<br/>
+Especially if the sky be bleak,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span><br />
+And no one stirs however you seek,<br />
+And every time you hear it creak<br />
+You wonder why they leave it stay<br />
+When a man is buried and hidden away<br />
+Many a day!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">WILLIAM MARION REEDY</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>He sits before you silent as Buddha,<br />
+And then you say<br />
+This man is Rabelais.<br />
+And while you wonder what his stock is,<br />
+English or Irish, you behold his eyes<br />
+As big and brown as those desirable crockies<br />
+With which as boys we used to play.<br />
+And then you see the spherical light that lies<br />
+Just under the iris coloring,<br />
+Before which everything,<br />
+Becomes as plain as day.<br />
+<br />
+If you have noticed the rolling jowls<br />
+And the face that speaks its chief<br />
+Delight in beer and roast beef<br />
+Before you have seen his eyes, you see<br />
+A man of fleshly jollity,<br />
+Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls<br />
+To make a show of scowls.<br />
+And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls<br />
+In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett<br />
+That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+Or retraces to Thales of Crete,<br />
+And touches upon Descartes coming back<br />
+Through the intellectual Zodiac<br />
+That's something of a feat.<br />
+And you see that the eyes are really the man,<br />
+For the thought of him proliferates<br />
+This way over to Hindostan,<br />
+And that way descanting on Yeats.<br />
+With a word on Plato's symposium,<br />
+And a little glimpse of Theocritus,<br />
+Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,<br />
+Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant<br />
+By a certain line obscure to us.<br />
+And then he'll take up Horace's odes<br />
+Or the Roman civilization;<br />
+Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,<br />
+Or the Greek deterioration.<br />
+Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,<br />
+Which Benjamin Moore and others think<br />
+Is the origin of life. Then Shelley<br />
+Comes in a for a look of understanding.<br />
+Or he'll tell you about the orientation<br />
+Of the ancient dream of Zion.<br />
+Or what's the matter with Bryan.<br />
+And while the porter is bringing a drink<br />
+Something into his fancy skips<br />
+And he talks about the Apocalypse,<br />
+Or a painter or writer now unknown<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+In France or Germany who will soon<br />
+Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.<br />
+<br />
+It's not so hard a thing to be wise<br />
+In the lore of books.<br />
+It's a different thing to be all eyes,<br />
+Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks<br />
+Over the land and out to sea:<br />
+And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!<br />
+Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,<br />
+Young as the light of the sun is young,<br />
+And taking the even with the odd<br />
+As a matter of course, and the path he's trod<br />
+As a path that was good enough.<br />
+With a sort of transcendental sense<br />
+Whose hatred is less than indifference,<br />
+And a gift of wisdom in love.<br />
+And who can say as he classifies<br />
+Men and ages with his eyes<br />
+With cool detachment: this is dung,<br />
+And that poor fellow is just a fool.<br />
+And say what you will death is a rod.<br />
+But I see a light that shines and shines<br />
+And I rather think it's God.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">A STUDY</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>If your thoughts were as clear as your eyes,<br />
+And the whole of your heart were true,<br />
+You were fitter by far for winning&mdash;<br />
+But then that would not be you.<br />
+<br />
+If your pulse beat time to love<br />
+As fast as you think and plan,<br />
+You could kindle a lasting passion<br />
+In the breast of the strongest man.<br />
+<br />
+If you felt as much as you thought,<br />
+And dreamed what you seem to dream,<br />
+A world of elysian beauty<br />
+Your ruined heart would redeem.<br />
+<br />
+If you thought in the light of the sun,<br />
+Or the blood in your veins flowed free,<br />
+If you gave your kisses but gladly,<br />
+We two could better agree.<br />
+<br />
+If you were strong where I counted,<br />
+And weak where yourself were at stake,<br />
+You would have my strength for your giving,<br />
+You would gain and not lose for my sake.<br />
+<br/>
+If your heart overruled your head,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span><br />
+Or your head were lord of your heart,<br />
+Or the two were lovingly balanced,<br />
+I think we never should part.<br />
+<br />
+If you came to me spite of yourself,<br />
+And staid not away through design,<br />
+These days of loving and living<br />
+Were sweet as Olympian wine.<br />
+<br />
+If you could weep with another,<br />
+And tears for yourself controlled,<br />
+You could waken and hold to a pity<br />
+You waken, but do not hold.<br />
+<br />
+If your lips were as fain to speak<br />
+As your face is fashioned to hide&mdash;<br />
+You would know that to lay up treasure<br />
+A woman's heart must confide.<br />
+<br />
+If your bosom were something richer,<br />
+Or your hands more fragile and thin,<br />
+You would call what the world calls evil,<br />
+Or sin and be glad of the sin.<br />
+<br />
+If your soul were aflame with love,<br />
+Or your head were devoted to truth,<br />
+You never would toss on your pillow<br />
+Bewildered 'twixt rapture and ruth.<br />
+<br/>
+If you were the you of my dreams,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span><br />
+And the you of my dreams were mine,<br />
+These days, half sweet and half bitter,<br />
+Would taste like Olympian wine.<br />
+<br />
+Oh, subtle and mystic Egyptians!<br />
+Who chiseled the Sphinx in the East,<br />
+With head and the breasts of a woman,<br />
+And body and claws of a beast.<br />
+<br />
+And gave her a marvellous riddle<br />
+That the eyeless should read as he ran:<br />
+What crawls and runs and is baffled<br />
+By woman, the sphinx&mdash;but a man?<br />
+<br />
+Many look in her face and are conquered,<br />
+Where one all her heart has explored;<br />
+A thousand have made her their sovereign,<br />
+But one is her sovereign and lord.<br />
+<br />
+For him she leaps from her standard<br />
+And fawns at his feet in the sand,<br />
+Who sees that himself is her riddle,<br />
+And she but the work of his hand.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>The pathos in your face is like a peace,<br />
+It is like resignation or a grace<br />
+Which smiles at the surcease<br />
+Of hope. But there is in your face<br />
+The shadow of pain, and there is a trace<br />
+Of memory of pain.<br />
+<br />
+I look at you again and again,<br />
+And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives<br />
+My search for your despair.<br />
+I look at your pale hands&mdash;I look at your hair;<br />
+And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare<br />
+Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves<br />
+A flutter of color running under leaves&mdash;<br />
+Such anguished dreams in your eyes!<br />
+And I listen to you speak<br />
+Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle,<br />
+Or a star's twinkle.<br />
+Sometimes as we talk you rise<br />
+And leave the room, and then I rub a streak<br />
+Of a tear from my cheek.<br />
+<br />
+You tell me such magical things<br />
+Of pictures, books, romance<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+And of your life in France<br />
+In the varied music of exquisite words,<br />
+And in a voice that sings.<br />
+<br />
+All things are memory now with you,<br />
+For poverty girds<br />
+Your hopes, and only your dreams remain.<br />
+And sometimes here and there<br />
+I see as you turn your head a whitened hair,<br />
+Even when you are smiling most.<br />
+And a light comes in your eyes like a passing ghost,<br />
+And a color runs through your cheeks as fresh<br />
+As burns in a girl's flesh.<br />
+Then I can shut my eyes and feel the pain<br />
+That has become a part of you, though I feign<br />
+Laughter myself. One sees another's bruise<br />
+And shakes his thought out of it shuddering.<br />
+So I turn and clamp my will lest I bring<br />
+Your sorrow into my flesh, who cannot choose<br />
+But hear your words and laughter,<br />
+And watch your hands and eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Then as I think you over after<br />
+I have gone from you, and your face<br />
+Comes to me with its grace<br />
+Of memory of unfound love:<br />
+You seem to me the image of all women<br />
+Who dream and keep under smiles the grief thereof,<br />
+Or sew, or sit by windows, or read books<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+To hide their Secret's looks.<br />
+And after a time go out of life and leave<br />
+No uttered words but in their silence grieve<br />
+For Life and for the things no tongue can tell:<br />
+Why Life hurts so, and why Love haunts and hurts<br />
+Poor men and women in this demi-hell.<br />
+<br />
+Perhaps your pathos means that it is well<br />
+Death in his time the aspiring torch inverts,<br />
+And all tired flesh and haunted eyes and hands<br />
+Moving in painéd whiteness are put under<br />
+The soothing earth to brighten April's wonder.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN THE CAGE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>The sounds of mid-night trickle into the roar<br />
+Of morning over the water growing blue.<br />
+At ten o'clock the August sunbeams pour<br />
+A blinding flood on Michigan Avenue.<br />
+<br />
+But yet the half-drawn shades of bottle green<br />
+Leave the recesses of the room<br />
+With misty auras drawn around their gloom<br />
+Where things lie undistinguished, scarcely seen.<br />
+<br />
+You, standing between the window and the bed<br />
+Are edged with rainbow colors. And I lie<br />
+Drowsy with quizzical half-open eye<br />
+Musing upon the contour of your head,<br />
+Watching you comb your hair,<br />
+Clothed in a corset waist and skirt of silk,<br />
+Tied with white braid above your slender hips<br />
+Which reaches to your knees and makes your bare<br />
+And delicate legs by contrast white as milk.<br />
+And as you toss your head to comb its tresses<br />
+They flash upon me like long strips of sand<br />
+Between a moonlit sea, pale as your hand,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+And a red sun that on a high dune stresses<br />
+Its sanguine heat.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">And then at times your lips,</span><br />
+Protruding half unconscious half in scorn<br />
+Engage my eyes while looking through the morn<br />
+At the clear oval of your brow brought full<br />
+Over the sovereign largeness of your eyes;<br />
+Or at your breasts that shake not as you pull<br />
+The comb through stubborn tangles, only rise<br />
+Scarcely perceptible with breath or signs,<br />
+Firm unmaternal like a young Bacchante's,<br />
+Or at your nose profoundly dipped like Dante's<br />
+Over your chin that softly melts away.<br />
+<br />
+Now you seem fully under my heart's sway.<br />
+I have slipped through the magic of your mesh<br />
+Freed once again and strengthened by your flesh,<br />
+You seem a weak thing for a strong man's play.<br />
+Yet I know now that we shall scarce have parted<br />
+When I shall think of you half heavy hearted.<br />
+I know our partings. You will faintly smile<br />
+And look at me with eyes that have no guile,<br />
+Or have too much, and pass into the sphere<br />
+Where you keep independent life meanwhile.<br />
+How do you live without me, is the fear?<br />
+You do not lean upon me, ask my love, or wonder<br />
+Of other loves I may have hidden under<br />
+These casual renewals of our love.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+And if I loved you I should lie in flame,<br />
+Ari, go about re-murmuring your name,<br />
+And these are things a man should be above.<br />
+<br />
+And as I lie here on the imminent brink<br />
+Of soul's surrender into your soul's power,<br />
+And in the white light of the morning hour<br />
+I see what life would be if we should link<br />
+Our lives together in a marriage pact:<br />
+For we would walk along a boundless tract<br />
+Of perfect hell; but your disloyalty<br />
+Would be of spirit, for I have not won<br />
+Mastered and bound your spirit unto me.<br />
+And if you had a lover in the way<br />
+I have you it would not by half betray<br />
+My love as does your vague and chainless thought,<br />
+Which wanders, soars or vanishes, returns,<br />
+Changes, astonishes, or chills or burns,<br />
+Is unresisting, plastic, freely wrought<br />
+Under my hands yet to no unison<br />
+Of my life and of yours. Upon this brink<br />
+I watch you now and think<br />
+Of all that has been preached or sung or spoken<br />
+Of woman's tragedy in woman's fall;<br />
+And all the pictures of a woman broken<br />
+By man's superior strength.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And there you stand</span><br />
+Your heart and life as firmly in command<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+Of your resolve as mine is, knowing all<br />
+Of man, the master, and his power to harm,<br />
+His rulership of spheres material,<br />
+Bread, customs, rules of fair repute&mdash;<br />
+What are they all against your slender arm?<br />
+Which long since plucked the fruit<br />
+Of good and evil, and of life at last<br />
+And now of Life. For dancing you have cast<br />
+Veil after veil of ideals or pretense<br />
+With which men clothe the being feminine<br />
+To satisfy their lordship or their sense<br />
+Of ownership and hide the things of sin&mdash;<br />
+You have thrown them aside veil after veil;<br />
+And there you stand unarmored, weirdly frail,<br />
+Yet strong as nature, making comical<br />
+The poems and the tales of woman's fall....<br />
+You nod your head, you smile, I feel the air<br />
+Made by the closing door. I lie and stare<br />
+At the closed door. One, two, your tuftèd steps<br />
+Die on the velvet of the outer hall.<br />
+You have escaped. And I would not pursue.<br />
+Though we are but caged creatures, I and you&mdash;<br />
+A male and female tiger in a zoo.<br />
+For I shall wait you. Life himself will track<br />
+Your wanderings and bring you back,<br />
+And shut you up again with me and cage<br />
+Our love and hatred and our silent rage.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>To a lustful thirst she came at first<br />
+And gave him her maiden's pride;<br />
+And the first man scattered the flower of her love,<br />
+Then turned to his chosen bride.<br />
+<br />
+She waned with grief as a fading star,<br />
+And waxed as a shining flame;<br />
+And the second man had her woman's love,<br />
+But the second was playing the game.<br />
+<br />
+With passion she stirred the man who was third;<br />
+Woe's me! what delicate skill<br />
+She plied to the heart that knew her art<br />
+And fled from her wanton will.<br />
+<br />
+Now calm and demure, oh fair, oh pure,<br />
+Oh subtle, patient and wise,<br />
+She trod the weary round of life,<br />
+With a sorrow deep in her eyes.<br />
+<br />
+Now a hero who knew how false, how true<br />
+Was the speech that fell from her lips,<br />
+With a Norseman's strength took sail with her,<br />
+And landed and burnt his ships.<br />
+<br/>
+He gave her pity, he gave her mirth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span><br />
+And the hurt in her heart he nursed;<br />
+But under the silence of her brows<br />
+Was a dream of the man who was first.<br />
+<br />
+And all the deceit and lust of men<br />
+Had sharpened her own deceit;<br />
+And down to the gates of hell she led<br />
+Her friend with her flying feet.<br />
+<br />
+For a bitten bud will never bloom,<br />
+And a woman lost is lost!<br />
+And the first and the third may go unscathed,<br />
+But some man pays the cost.<br />
+<br />
+And the books of life are full of the rune,<br />
+And this is the truth of the song:<br />
+No man can save a woman's soul,<br />
+Nor right a woman's wrong.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">LOVE IS A MADNESS</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Love is a madness, love is a fevered dream,<br />
+A white soul lost in a field of scarlet flowers&mdash;<br />
+Love is a search for the lost, the ever vanishing gleam<br />
+Of wings, desires and sorrows and haunted hours.<br />
+<br />
+Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?<br />
+Love is a doubt, an ache, love is a writhing fear.<br />
+Love is a potion drunk when the ship puts out from land,<br />
+Rudderless, sails at full, and with none to steer.<br />
+<br />
+The end is a shattered lamp, a drunken seraph asleep,<br />
+The upturned face of the drowned on a barren beach.<br />
+The glare of noon is o'er us, we are ashamed to weep&mdash;<br />
+The beginning and end of love are devoid of speech.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ON A BUST</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Your speeches seemed to answer for the nonce&mdash;<br />
+They do not justify your head in bronze!<br />
+Your essays! talent's failures were to you<br />
+Your philosophic gamut, but things true,<br />
+Or beautiful, oh never! What's the pons<br />
+For you to cross to fame?&mdash;Your head in bronze?<br />
+<br />
+What has the artist caught? The sensual chin<br />
+That melts away in weakness from the skin,<br />
+Sagging from your indifference of mind;<br />
+The sullen mouth that sneers at human kind<br />
+For lack of genius to create or rule;<br />
+The superficial scorn that says "you fool!"<br />
+The deep-set eyes that have the mud-cat look<br />
+Which might belong to Tolstoi or a crook.<br />
+The nose half-thickly fleshed and half in point,<br />
+And lightly turned awry as out of joint;<br />
+The eyebrows pointing upward satyr-wise,<br />
+Scarce like Mephisto, for you scarcely rise<br />
+To cosmic irony in what you dream&mdash;<br />
+More like a tomcat sniffing yellow cream.<br />
+The brow! 'Tis worth the bronze it's molded in<br />
+Save for the flat-top head and narrow thin<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+Backhead which shows your spirit has not soared.<br />
+You are a Packard engine in a Ford,<br />
+Which wrecks itself and turtles with its load,<br />
+Too light and powerful to keep the road.<br />
+The master strength for twisting words is caught<br />
+In the swift turning wheels of iron thought.<br />
+With butcher knives your hands can vivisect<br />
+Our butterflies, but you can not erect<br />
+Temples of beauty, wisdom. You can crawl<br />
+Hungry and subtle over Eden's wall,<br />
+And shame half grown up truth, or make a lie<br />
+Full grown as good. You cannot glorify<br />
+Our dreams, or aspirations, or deep thirst.<br />
+To you the world's a fig tree which is curst.<br />
+You have preached every faith but to betray;<br />
+The artist shows us you have had your day.<br />
+<br />
+A giant as we hoped, in truth a dwarf;<br />
+A barrel of slop that shines on Lethe's wharf,<br />
+Which seemed at first a vessel with sweet wine<br />
+For thirsty lips. So down the swift decline<br />
+You went through sloven spirit, craven heart<br />
+And cynic indolence. And here the art<br />
+Of molding clay has caught you for the nonce<br />
+And made your shame our shame&mdash;your head in bronze!<br />
+Some day this bust will lie amid old metals<br />
+Old copper boilers, wires, faucets, kettles.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+Some day it will be melted up and molded<br />
+In door knobs, inkwells, paper knives, or folded<br />
+In leaves and wreaths around the capitals<br />
+Of marble columns, or for arsenals<br />
+Fashioned in something, or in course of time<br />
+Successively made each of these, from grime<br />
+Rescued successively, or made a bell<br />
+For fire or worship, who on earth can tell?<br />
+One thing is sure, you will not long be dust<br />
+When this bronze will be broken as a bust<br />
+And given to the junkman to re-sell.<br />
+You know this and the thought of it is hell!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">ARABEL</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Twists of smoke rise from the limpness of jewelled fingers,<br />
+The softness of Persian rugs hushes the room.<br />
+Under a dragon lamp with a shade the color of coral<br />
+Sit the readers of poems one by one.<br />
+And all the room is in shadow except for the blur<br />
+Of mahogany surface, and tapers against the wall.<br />
+<br />
+And a youth reads a poem of love: forever and ever<br />
+Is his soul the soul of the loved one; a woman sings<br />
+Of the nine months which go to the birth of a soul.<br />
+And after a time under the lamp a man<br />
+Begins to read a letter having no poem to read.<br />
+And the words of the letter flash and die like a fuse<br />
+Dampened by rain&mdash;it's a dying mind that writes<br />
+What Byron did for the Greeks against the Turks.<br />
+And a sickness enters our hearts. The jewelled hands<br />
+Clutch at the arms of the chairs&mdash;about the room<br />
+One hears the parting of lips, and a nervous shifting<br />
+Of feet and arms.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">And I look up and over</span><br />
+The reader's shoulder and see the name of the writer.<br />
+What is it I see? The name of a man I knew!<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>You are an ironical trickster, Time, to bring<br />
+After so many years and into a place like this<br />
+This face before me: hair slicked down and parted<br />
+In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness,<br />
+Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids<br />
+Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.<br />
+Such was your look in a photograph I saw<br />
+In a silver frame on a woman's dresser&mdash;and such<br />
+Your look in life, you thing of flesh alone!<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And then</span><br />
+As a soul looks down on the body it leaves&mdash;<br />
+A body by fever slain&mdash;I look on myself<br />
+As I was a decade ago, while the letter is read:<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">I enter a box</span><br />
+Of a theater with Jim, my friend of fifty,<br />
+I being twenty-two. Two women are in the box<br />
+One of an age for Jim and one of an age for me.<br />
+And mine is dressed in a dainty gown of dimity,<br />
+And she fans herself with a fan of silver spangles<br />
+Till a subtle odor of delicate powder or of herself<br />
+Enters my blood and I stare at her snowy neck,<br />
+And the glossy brownness of her hair until<br />
+She feels my stare, and turns half-view and I see<br />
+How like a Greek's is her nose, with just a little<br />
+Aquiline touch; and I catch the flash of an eye,<br />
+And the glint of a smile on the richness of her lips.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>The company now discourses upon the letter<br />
+But my dream goes on:<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 9em;">I re-live a rapture</span><br />
+Which may be madness, and no man understands<br />
+Until he feels it no more. The youth that was I<br />
+From the theater under the city's lights follows the girl<br />
+Desperate lest in the city's curious chances<br />
+He never sees her again. And boldly he speaks.<br />
+And she and the older woman, her sister<br />
+Smile and speak in turn, and Jim who stands<br />
+While I break the ice comes up&mdash;and so<br />
+Arm in arm we go to the restaurant,<br />
+I in heaven walking with Arabel,<br />
+And Jim with her older sister.<br />
+We drive them home under a summer moon,<br />
+And while I explain to Arabel my boldness,<br />
+And crave her pardon for it, Jim, the devil,<br />
+Laughs apart with her sister while I wonder<br />
+What Jim, the devil, is laughing at. No matter<br />
+To-morrow I walk in the park with Arabel.<br />
+<br />
+Just now the reader of the letter<br />
+Tells of the writer's swift descent<br />
+From wealth to want.<br />
+<br />
+We are in the park next afternoon by the water.<br />
+I look at her white throat full as it were of song.<br />
+And her rounded virginal bosom, beautiful!<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+And I study her eyes, I search to the depths her eyes<br />
+In the light of the sun. They are full of little rays<br />
+Like the edge of a fleur de lys, and she smiles<br />
+At first when I fling my soul at her feet.<br />
+<br />
+But when I repeat I love her, love her only,<br />
+A cloud of wonder passes over her face,<br />
+She veils her eyes. The color comes to her cheeks.<br />
+And when she picks some clover blossoms and tears them<br />
+Her hand is trembling. And when I tell her again<br />
+I love her, love her only, she blots her eyes<br />
+With a handkerchief to hide a tear that starts.<br />
+<br />
+And she says to me: "You do not know me at all,<br />
+How can you love me? You never saw me before<br />
+Last night." "Well, tell me about yourself."<br />
+And after a time she tells me the story:<br />
+About her father who ran away from her mother;<br />
+And how she hated her father, and how she grieved<br />
+When her mother died; and how a good grandmother<br />
+Helped her and helps her now. And how her sister<br />
+Divorced her husband. And then she paused a moment:<br />
+"I am not strong, you'd have to guard me gently,<br />
+And that takes money, dear, as well as love.<br />
+Two years ago I was very ill, and since then<br />
+I am not strong."<br />
+<br/>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">"Well I can work," I said.</span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span><br />
+"And what would you think of a little cottage<br />
+Not too far out with a yard and hosts of roses,<br />
+And a vine on the porch, and a little garden,<br />
+And a dining room where the sun comes in,<br />
+When a morning breeze blows over your brow,<br />
+And you sit across the table and serve me<br />
+And neither of us can speak for happiness<br />
+Without our voices breaking, or lips trembling."<br />
+<br />
+She is looking down with little frowns on her brow.<br />
+"But if ever I had to work, I could not do it,<br />
+I am not really well."<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">"But I can work," I said.</span><br />
+I rise and lift her up, holding her hand.<br />
+She slips her arm through mine and presses it.<br />
+"What a good man you are," she said. "Just like a brother&mdash;<br />
+I almost love you, I believe I love you."<br />
+<br />
+The reader of the letter, being a doctor,<br />
+Is talking learnedly of the writer's case<br />
+Which has the classical marks of paresis.<br />
+<br />
+Next day I look up Jim and rhapsodize<br />
+About a cottage with roses and a garden,<br />
+And a dining room where the sun comes in,<br />
+And Arabel across the table. Jim is smoking<br />
+And flicking the ashes, but never says a word<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+Till I have finished. Then in a quiet voice:<br />
+"Arabel's sister says that Arabel's straight,<br />
+But she isn't, my boy&mdash;she's just like Arabel's sister.<br />
+She knew you had the madness for Arabel.<br />
+That's why we laughed and stood apart as we talked.<br />
+And I'll tell you now I didn't go home that night,<br />
+I shook you at the corner and went back,<br />
+And staid that night. Now be a man, my boy,<br />
+Go have your fling with Arabel, but drop<br />
+The cottage and the roses."<br />
+<br />
+They are still discussing the madman's letter.<br />
+<br />
+And memory permeates me like a subtle drug:<br />
+The memory of my love for Arabel,<br />
+The torture, the doubt, the fear, the restless longing,<br />
+The sleepless nights, the pity for all her sorrows,<br />
+The speculation about her and her sister,<br />
+And what her illness was;<br />
+And whether the man I saw one time was leaving<br />
+Her door or the next door to it, and if her door<br />
+Whether he saw my Arabel or her sister....<br />
+<br />
+The reader of the letter is telling how the writer<br />
+Left his wife chasing the lure of women.<br />
+<br />
+And it all comes back to me as clear as a vision:<br />
+The night I sat with Arabel strong but conquered.<br />
+Whatever I did, I loved her, whatever she was.<br />
+Madness or love the terrible struggle must end.<br />
+She took my hand and said, "You must see my room."<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+We stood in the doorway together and on her dresser<br />
+Was a silver frame with the photograph of a man&mdash;<br />
+I had seen him in life: hair slicked down and parted<br />
+In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness<br />
+Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids<br />
+Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.<br />
+"There is his picture," she said, "ask me whatever you will.<br />
+Take me as mistress or wife, it is yours to decide.<br />
+But take me as mistress and grow like the picture before you,<br />
+Take me as wife and be the good man you can be.<br />
+Choose me as mistress&mdash;how can I do less for dearest?<br />
+Or make me your wife&mdash;fate makes me your mistress or wife."<br />
+"I can leave you," I said. "You can leave me," she echoed,<br />
+"But how about hate in your heart."<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">"You are right," I replied.</span><br />
+The company is now discussing the subject of love&mdash;<br />
+They seem to know little about it.<br />
+<br />
+But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:<br />
+"Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness,<br />
+What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">"Well, it's life," Arabel.</span><br />
+"There's the story of Hamlet, for instance," I added.<br />
+Then fell into silence.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,<br />
+When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.<br />
+So we came out and he went home to wife<br />
+And children, and I started for the club<br />
+Which I call home; and then just like a flash<br />
+You came into my mind. I bought a slug<br />
+And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard<br />
+The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me<br />
+To hear your voice at last&mdash;it was so drowsy,<br />
+Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes<br />
+Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing<br />
+In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....<br />
+<br />
+Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice<br />
+Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine&mdash;<br />
+It showed your understanding, that you know<br />
+How it is with a man, and how it is with me<br />
+Who work by day and sometimes drift by night<br />
+About this hellish city. Though you know<br />
+That I am fifty-one, can you imagine<br />
+My feeling with no children growing up?<br />
+My feeling as of one who sees a play<br />
+And afterwards sits somewhere at a table<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+And talks with friends about the different parts<br />
+Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?<br />
+My feeling with this money which I've made<br />
+And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working<br />
+The money dulls the fancy which could use it<br />
+In splendid dreams or in the art of life.<br />
+Well, here was I ringing your bell at last<br />
+At half-past one, and there you stood before me<br />
+With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands<br />
+So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,<br />
+But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you<br />
+With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you<br />
+Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,<br />
+For that kiss which you gave me at the door....<br />
+<br />
+Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,<br />
+My heart acts queer of late....<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">I want to say</span><br />
+Lest I forget it, if you ever hear<br />
+From Arabel or Francis what I said<br />
+To Francis when he told me he intended<br />
+To marry Arabel, why just remember<br />
+Our talk this morning and forget I said it&mdash;<br />
+I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,<br />
+That night we met, I being fifty-one<br />
+And old at what men call the game, looked on<br />
+With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you<br />
+Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;<br />
+Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+And I found you as I'd found others before you,<br />
+But with this difference so it seemed to me:<br />
+What had been false with them was real with you,<br />
+What had been shame with them with you was life,<br />
+What had been craft with them with you was nature,<br />
+What had been sin with them to you was good,<br />
+What had been vice with them to you the honest<br />
+And uncorrupted innocence of a human<br />
+Heart so human looking on our souls.<br />
+What had been coarse to them to you was clean<br />
+As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow<br />
+And move and sing along creation's way.<br />
+You came to me like friendship, what you gave<br />
+Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self<br />
+And least of motive. And it is through you<br />
+That I have risen out of the pit where sneers<br />
+And laughter, looks and words obscene,<br />
+Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,<br />
+As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses<br />
+Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds<br />
+Upon their infinite sailings and the lake<br />
+Washes beneath us, and we lie and think<br />
+How this has been forever and will be<br />
+When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,<br />
+Yet how life is eternal&mdash;just as one<br />
+Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy<br />
+Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme<br />
+The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+The gospel hymns and ritual) that I<br />
+Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.<br />
+For what is our communion, yours and mine,<br />
+If it be not a way of laying hold<br />
+On that mysterious essence which makes one<br />
+Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....<br />
+Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!<br />
+Pour me a little coffee, if you please.<br />
+<br />
+I'll take from my herbarium certain species<br />
+To make my points: Now here there is the woman<br />
+Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.<br />
+She fixes her design upon a man,<br />
+Who's married and the riotous game begins.<br />
+They go along a year or two perhaps.<br />
+Then psychic chemistry performs its part:<br />
+They are in love, or he's in love with her.<br />
+What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:<br />
+That which she gave without love at the first<br />
+She now withdraws in spite of love unless<br />
+He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties<br />
+And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men<br />
+Kill women with a knife or strangle them?<br />
+Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,<br />
+You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.<br />
+She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;<br />
+She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+And when you dance with her she has a way<br />
+Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,<br />
+Which almost lisps as she caresses you<br />
+With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says<br />
+Things with a double meaning, and she smiles<br />
+To carry out her meaning. Well, you think<br />
+The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing<br />
+She lands you up at the appointed place<br />
+With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,<br />
+That have a nervous way of opening<br />
+And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,<br />
+From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;<br />
+Which meeting is a way of saying to you:<br />
+The girl is yours if you will marry her,<br />
+And let her have your money.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Julia, be still;</span><br />
+I can't go on while you are laughing so.<br />
+I know that men are easy, but to see<br />
+Women as women see them is a gift<br />
+That comes to men who reach my age in life....<br />
+<br />
+Well, here's another, here's the type of woman<br />
+Whose power of motherhood conceals the art<br />
+By which she thrives, through which she reaches also<br />
+An apotheosis in society.<br />
+Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.<br />
+And her strength is the race's, and she draws<br />
+The urgings of posterity and leans<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.<br />
+To her a man must sacrifice his life.<br />
+But women, Julia, of whatever type,<br />
+Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,<br />
+And man's life to develop, even to live.<br />
+And like the praying mantis who's devoured<br />
+In the embrace, man is devoured by women<br />
+In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame<br />
+In man's life where he warms him but to suck<br />
+The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,<br />
+Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates&mdash;<br />
+Love is not free which should be wholly free<br />
+For Life's sake.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">On Michigan Avenue</span><br />
+At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see<br />
+In rain or shine a certain tailor walk<br />
+In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.<br />
+That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.<br />
+He has no woman, cannot find a woman,<br />
+Because all women, seeing him, divine<br />
+What surges through him, and within their hearts<br />
+Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun<br />
+Of seeing how denial keeps him walking<br />
+All up and down the boulevard. He's found<br />
+No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.<br />
+I use him for my point. If we could make<br />
+Some fine erotometer one could sit<br />
+And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+Record the waves of longing in the city,<br />
+And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows<br />
+Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,<br />
+Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Julia.</span><br />
+So much for all these things, and now for you<br />
+To whom they lead.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">You'll find among the marshes</span><br />
+The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,<br />
+Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find<br />
+The water lily with white petals and<br />
+A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches<br />
+The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,<br />
+Impales them on its tiny spines, in time<br />
+Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out<br />
+Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall<br />
+Into the water, treasured there like tears<br />
+Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed<br />
+Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.<br />
+The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily<br />
+Well typify the nature of most women<br />
+Who must have blood or soul of man to live&mdash;<br />
+Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale<br />
+Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.<br />
+He read somewhere that primroses will change<br />
+Under your eyes sometimes to something else,<br />
+Become another flower and not a primrose,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+Another species even. So he watched<br />
+And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed<br />
+Has somewhere in its vital self the power<br />
+Of this mutation. What is the origin<br />
+Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,<br />
+Who has mutated: You are not a mother;<br />
+Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;<br />
+Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;<br />
+Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon<br />
+Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down<br />
+To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who<br />
+Rejoices in the secret of man's strength<br />
+And in subduing it.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">You are a flower</span><br />
+Designed to comfort such poor men as I,<br />
+And show the world how love can be a thing<br />
+That asks no more than what it freely gives,<br />
+And gives all&mdash;all some women call the prize<br />
+For life or honor, riches, power or place.<br />
+You are a blossom in the primrose bed<br />
+So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.<br />
+You have mutated, Julia, that is it,<br />
+This flower of you is what I call <i>The Lover</i>!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death&mdash;<br />
+But never a face like Harold's who passed in a throe of pain.<br />
+There were maidens and youths in the bud, and men in the lust of life;<br />
+And women whom child-birth racked till the crying soul slipped through;<br />
+Patriarchs withered with age and nuns ascetical white;<br />
+And one who wasted her virgin wealth in a riot of joy.<br />
+Brothers and sisters at last in a quiet and purple pall,<br />
+Fellow voyagers bound to a port on an ash-blue sea,<br />
+Locked in an utterless grief, in a mystery fearful to dream.<br />
+All of these I have seen&mdash;but the face of Harold the bold<br />
+Looked with a penitent pallor and stared with a sad surprise.<br />
+<br />
+For now at last he was still who never knew rest in life.<br />
+And the ardent heat of his blood was cold as the sweat of a stone.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+Life came in an evil hour and stabbed with a poisoned word<br />
+The heart of a girl who faintly smiled through her tears.<br />
+And her little life was tossed as the eddies that whirl in the hollows<br />
+From the great world-currents that wreck the battle ships at sea.<br />
+And the face of dead Lillian seemed like a rain-ruined flower.<br />
+<br />
+Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day<br />
+When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?<br />
+<br />
+But the face of William the Great was fashioned by life and thought;<br />
+And death made it massive as bronze, and deepened the lines thereof:<br />
+Some for the will and some for patience, and some for hope&mdash;<br />
+Hope for the weal of the world wherein he mightily strove&mdash;<br />
+Yet what did it all bespeak&mdash;what but submission and awe,<br />
+And a trace of pain as one with a sword in his side?<br />
+<br/>
+I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span><br />
+But the sorrow thereof is dumb like the cloth that lies on the brow.<br />
+So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances,<br />
+Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CRY</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears.<br />
+It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears.<br />
+It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres.<br />
+<br />
+It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise,<br />
+That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries,<br />
+Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise.<br />
+<br />
+It may be myself as I was in another life,<br />
+Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife,<br />
+Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife.<br />
+<br />
+The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul<br />
+Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control,<br />
+When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal.<br />
+<br />
+Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod<br />
+Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;<br />
+Perhaps this cry in my heart is nothing but God!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE HELPING HAND</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Mother, my head is bloody, my breast is red with scars.<br />
+Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?<br />
+<br />
+Mother, my soul is crucified, my thirst is past belief.<br />
+How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?<br />
+<br />
+Mother, I feel the terror and the loveliness of life.<br />
+Tell me of the children, son, and tell me of the wife.<br />
+<br />
+Mother, your face is but a face among a million more.<br />
+You're standing on the deck, my son, and looking at the shore.<br />
+<br />
+I lean against the wall, mother, and struggle hard for breath.<br />
+You must have heard the step, my son, of the patrolman Death.<br />
+<br />
+Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?<br />
+Well, kiss the crucifix, my son, and pass beneath the rod.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE DOOR</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>This is the room that thou wast ushered in.<br />
+Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?<br />
+Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?<br />
+There is no door but death.<br />
+<br />
+Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?<br />
+Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight<br />
+Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore,<br />
+There is no less one door.<br />
+<br />
+Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom,<br />
+The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?<br />
+Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth&mdash;<br />
+There is no door but death.<br />
+<br />
+There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof<br />
+Above the rents within the stairless roof.<br />
+Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor&mdash;<br />
+Who knocks? Unbolt the door!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SUPPLICATION</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>For He knoweth our frame, He remembereth that we are dust.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Psalm
+ciii. 14.</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Oh Lord, when all our bones are thrust<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beyond the gaze of all but Thine;</span><br />
+And these blaspheming tongues are dust<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which babbled of Thy name divine,</span><br />
+How helpless then to carp or rail<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Against the canons of Thy word;</span><br />
+Wilt Thou, when thus our spirits fail,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord?</span><br />
+<br />
+Here from this ebon speck that floats<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As but a mote within Thine eye,</span><br />
+Vain sneers and curses from our throats<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rise to the vault of Thy fair sky:</span><br />
+Yet when this world of ours is still<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of this all-wondering, tortured horde,</span><br />
+And none is left for Thee to kill&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou knowest that our flesh is grass;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ah! let our withered souls remain</span><br />
+Like stricken reeds of some morass,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bleached, in Thy will, by ceaseless rain.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+Have we not had enough of fire,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enough of torment and the sword?&mdash;</span><br />
+If these accrue from Thy desire&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Dost Thou not see about our feet<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The tangles of our erring thought?</span><br />
+Thou knowest that we run to greet<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">High hopes that vanish into naught.</span><br />
+We bleed, we fall, we rise again;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">How can we be of Thee abhorred?</span><br />
+We are Thy breed, we little men&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilt Thou deny when we deny?</span><br />
+A thousand years are but a day,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A little day within Thine eye:</span><br />
+We thirst for love, we yearn for life;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?</span><br />
+We, beaten, fall upon the knife&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou givest us youth that turns to age;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And strength that leaves us while we seek.</span><br />
+Thou pourest the fire of sacred rage<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In costly vessels all too weak.</span><br />
+Great works we planned in hopes that Thou<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fit wisdom therefor wouldst accord;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+Thou wrotest failure on our brow&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Could we but know, as Thou dost know&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hold the whole scheme at once in mind!</span><br />
+Yet, dost Thou watch our anxious woe<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who piece with palsied hands and blind</span><br />
+The fragments of our little plan,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To thrive and earn Thy blest reward,</span><br />
+And make and keep the world of man&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br />
+<br />
+Thou settest the sun within his place<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To light the world, the world is Thine,</span><br />
+Put in our hands and through Thy grace<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To be subdued and made divine.</span><br />
+Whether we serve Thee ill or well,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thou knowest our frame, nor canst afford</span><br />
+To leave Thy own for long in hell&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have mercy, Lord!</span><br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE CONVERSATION</span></p>
+<p class="center"><i>The Human Voice</i></p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+
+<tr><td>You knew then, starting let us say with ether,<br />
+You would become electrons, out of whirling<br />
+Would rise to atoms; then as an atom resting<br />
+Till through Yourself in other atoms moving<br />
+And by the fine affinity of power<br />
+Atom with atom massed, You would go on<br />
+Over the crest of visible forms transformed,<br />
+Would be a molecule, a little system<br />
+Wherein the atoms move like suns and planets<br />
+With satellites, electrons. So as worlds build<br />
+From star-dust, as electron to electron,<br />
+The same attraction drawing, molecules<br />
+Would wed and pass over the crest again<br />
+Of visible forms, lying content as crystals,<br />
+Or colloids&mdash;ready now to use the gleam<br />
+Of life. As 'twere I see You with a match,<br />
+As one in darkness lights a candle, and one<br />
+Sees not his friend's form in the shadowed room<br />
+Until the candle's lighted? Even his form<br />
+Is darkened by the new-made light, he stands<br />
+So near it! Well, I add to all I've asked<br />
+Whether You knew the cell born to the glint<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Of that same lighted candle would not rest<br />
+Even as electrons rest not&mdash;but would surge<br />
+Over the crest of visible forms, become<br />
+Beneath our feet things hidden from the eye<br />
+However aided,&mdash;as above our heads<br />
+Beyond the Milky Way great systems whirl<br />
+Beyond the telescope,&mdash;become bacilli,<br />
+Am&oelig;ba, starfish, swimming things, on land<br />
+The serpent, and then birds, and beasts of prey<br />
+The tiger (You in the tiger) on and on<br />
+Surging above the crest of visible forms until<br />
+The ape came&mdash;oh what ages they are to us&mdash;<br />
+But still creation flies on wings of light&mdash;<br />
+Then to the man who roamed the frozen fields<br />
+Neither man nor ape,&mdash;we found his jaw, You know,<br />
+At Heidelberg, in a sand-pit. On and on<br />
+Till Babylon was builded, and arose<br />
+Jerusalem and Memphis, Athens, Rome,<br />
+Venice and Florence, Paris, London, Berlin,<br />
+New York, Chicago&mdash;did You know, I ask,<br />
+All this would come of You in ether moving?<br />
+<br />
+<p class="center"><i>A Voice</i></p><br />
+I knew.<br />
+<br />
+<p class="center"><i>The Human Voice</i></p><br />
+You knew that man was born to be destroyed,<br />
+That as an atom perfect, whole, at ease,<br />
+Drawn to some other atom, is broken, changed<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+And rises o'er the crest of visible things<br />
+To something else&mdash;that man must pass as well<br />
+Through equal transformation. And You knew<br />
+The unutterable things of man's life: From the first<br />
+You saw his wracked Deucalion-soul that looks<br />
+Backward on life that rises, where he rose<br />
+Out of the stones. You saw him looking forward<br />
+Over the purple mists that hide the gulf.<br />
+Ere the green cell rose, even in the green cell<br />
+You saw the sequences of thought&mdash;You saw<br />
+That one would say, "All's matter" and another,<br />
+"All's mind," and man's mind which reflects the image,<br />
+Could not envision it. That even worship<br />
+Of what you are would be confused by cries<br />
+From India or Palestine. That love<br />
+Which sees itself beginning in the seeds,<br />
+Which fly and seek each other, maims<br />
+The soul at the last in loss of child or friend<br />
+Father or mother. And You knew that sex,<br />
+Ranging from plants through beasts and up to us<br />
+Had ties of filth&mdash;And out of them would rise<br />
+Diverse philosophies to tear the world.<br />
+You knew, when the green cell arose, that even<br />
+The You which formed it moving on would bring<br />
+Races and breeds, madmen, tyrants, slaves,<br />
+The idiot child, the murderer, the insane&mdash;<br />
+All springing from the action of one law.<br />
+You knew the enmity that lies between<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+The lives of micro-beings and our own. You knew<br />
+How man would rise to vision of himself:<br />
+Immortal only in the race's life.<br />
+And past the atom and the first glint of life,<br />
+Saw him with soul enraptured, yet o'ershadowed<br />
+Amid self-consciousness!<br />
+<br />
+<p class="center"><i>A Voice</i></p><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">I knew.</span><br />
+But this your fault: You see me as apart,<br />
+Over, removed, at enmity with You.<br />
+You are in Me, and of Me, even at one<br />
+With Me. But there's your soul&mdash;your soul may be<br />
+The germinal cell of vaster evolution.<br />
+Why try to tell you? If I gave a cell<br />
+Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:<br />
+"After me what, a stalk, a flower, life<br />
+That swims or crawls?" And if I gave to you<br />
+Wisdom to say: "You shall become a reed<br />
+By the water's edge"&mdash;how could the cell foresee<br />
+What the reed is, bending beneath the wind<br />
+When the lake ripples and the skies are blue<br />
+As larkspur? Therefore I, who moved in darkness<br />
+Becoming light in suns and light in souls<br />
+And mind with thought&mdash;for what is thought but light<br />
+Sprung from the clash of ether?&mdash;I am with you.<br />
+And if beyond this stable state that stands<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+For your life here (as cells are whole and balanced<br />
+Till the inner urge bring union, then a breaking<br />
+And building up to higher life), there is<br />
+No memory of this world nor of your thought,<br />
+Nor sense of life on this world lived and borne;<br />
+Or whether you remember, know yourself<br />
+As one who lived here, suffered here, aspired&mdash;<br />
+What does it matter?&mdash;you cannot be lost,<br />
+As I am lost not. Therefore be at peace.<br />
+And from the laws whose orbits cross and run<br />
+To seeming tangles, find the law through which<br />
+Your soul shall be perfected till it draw,&mdash;<br />
+As the green cell the sunlight draws and turns<br />
+Its chemical effulgence into life&mdash;<br />
+My inner splendor. All the rest is mine<br />
+In infinite time. For if I should unroll<br />
+The parchment of the future, it were vain&mdash;<br />
+You could not read it.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">TERMINUS</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Terminus shows the ways and says,<br />
+"All things must have an end."<br />
+Oh, bitter thought we hid away<br />
+When first you were my friend.<br />
+<br />
+We hid it in the darkest place<br />
+Our hearts had place to hide,<br />
+And took the sweet as from a spring<br />
+Whose waters would abide.<br />
+<br />
+For neither life nor the wide world<br />
+Has greater store than this:&mdash;<br />
+The thought that runs through hands and eyes<br />
+And fills the silences.<br />
+<br />
+There is a void the agéd world<br />
+Throws over the spent heart;<br />
+When Life has given all she has,<br />
+And Terminus says depart.<br />
+<br />
+When we must sit with folded hands,<br />
+And see with inward eye<br />
+A void rise like an arctic breath<br />
+To hollow the morrow's sky.<br />
+<br/>
+To-morrow is, and trembling leaves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span><br />
+And 'wildered winds from Thrace<br />
+Look for you where your face has bloomed,<br />
+And where may bloom your face.<br />
+<br />
+Beyond the city, over the hill,<br />
+Under the anguished moon,<br />
+The winds and my dreams seek after you<br />
+By meadow, water and dune.<br />
+<br />
+All things must have an end, we know;<br />
+But oh, the dreaded end;<br />
+Whether in life, whether in death,<br />
+To lose the cherished friend.<br />
+<br />
+To lose in life the cherished friend,<br />
+While the myrtle tree is green;<br />
+To live and have the cherished friend<br />
+With only the world between.<br />
+<br />
+With only the wide, wide world between,<br />
+Where memory has mortmain.<br />
+Life pours more wine in the heart of man<br />
+Than the heart of man can contain.<br />
+<br />
+Oh, heart of man and heart of woman,<br />
+Thirsting for blood of the vine,<br />
+Life waits till the heart has lived too much<br />
+And then pours in new wine!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">MADELINE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>I almost heard your little heart<br />
+Begin to beat, and since that hour<br />
+Your life has grown apace and blossomed,<br />
+Fed by the same miraculous power,<br />
+<br />
+That moved the rivulet of your life,<br />
+And made your heart begin to beat.<br />
+Now all day your steps are a-patter.<br />
+Oh, what swift and musical feet!<br />
+<br />
+You sleep. I wait to see you wake,<br />
+With wonder-eyes and hands that reach.<br />
+I laugh to hear your thoughts that gather<br />
+Too fast on your budding lips for speech.<br />
+<br />
+Your sunny hair is cut as if<br />
+'Twere trimmed around a yellow crock.<br />
+How gay the ribbon, and oh, how cunning<br />
+The flaring skirt of the little frock!<br />
+<br />
+You build and play and search and pry,<br />
+And hunt for dolls and forgotten toys.<br />
+Why do you never tire of playing,<br />
+Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?<br />
+<br/>
+You will not sleep? You are tired of the house?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span><br />
+You are just as naughty as you can be.<br />
+Madeline, Madeline, come to the garden,<br />
+And play with Marcia under the tree!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">MARCIA</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Madeline's hair is straight and yours<br />
+Is just as curly as tendril vines;<br />
+And she is fair, but a deeper color<br />
+Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.<br />
+<br />
+A serious wisdom burns and glows<br />
+Steadily in your dark-eyed look.<br />
+Already a wit and a little stoic&mdash;<br />
+Perhaps you are going to write a book,<br />
+<br />
+Or paint a picture, or sing or act<br />
+The part of Katherine or Juliet.<br />
+I believe you were born with the gift of knowing<br />
+When to remember and when to forget.<br />
+<br />
+And when to stifle and kill a grief,<br />
+And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.<br />
+The heart that has most strength for feeling<br />
+Must have the strength to conquer the pain.<br />
+<br />
+You understand? It seems that you do&mdash;<br />
+Though you cannot utter a word to me.<br />
+Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline<br />
+Building a doll-house under the tree!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE ALTAR</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>My heart is an altar whereon<br />
+Many sacrificial fires have been kindled<br />
+In praise of spring and Aphrodite.<br />
+<br />
+My heart is an altar of chalcedony,<br />
+Crowned with a tablet of bronze,<br />
+Blacked with smoke, scarred with fire,<br />
+And scented with the aromatic bitterness<br />
+Of dead incense.<br />
+<br />
+Albeit let us murmur a little Doric prayer<br />
+Over the ashes which lie scattered around the altar;<br />
+For the April rain has wept over them,<br />
+And from them the crocus smelts its Roman gold.<br />
+<br />
+What though there are remnants here<br />
+Of faded coronals,<br />
+And bits of silver string<br />
+Torn from forgotten harps?<br />
+Perfect amid the ashes sleeps a cup of amethyst.<br />
+Let us take it and pour the sea from it,<br />
+And while the savor of dead lips is washed away,<br />
+Let us lift our hands to this sky of hyacinth.<br />
+Let us light the altar newly, for lo! it is spring.<br />
+<br/>
+Bring from the re-kindled woodland<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span><br />
+Flames of columbine, jewel-weed and trumpet-creeper,<br />
+There where the woodman burns the fallen tree,<br />
+And scented smoke arises<br />
+On azure wings between the branches,<br />
+Budding with adolescent life.<br />
+With these let us light the altar,<br />
+That a scarlet flame may lean<br />
+Against the silver sea.<br />
+<br />
+For thou art fire also,<br />
+And air, and water, and the resurgent earth,<br />
+For thou art woman, thou art love.<br />
+Thou art April of the Arcadian moon,<br />
+Thou art the swift sun racing through snowy clouds,<br />
+Thou art the creative silence of flowering valleys.<br />
+Thy face is the apple tree in bloom;<br />
+Thine eyes the glimpses of green water<br />
+When the tree's blossoms shake<br />
+As soft winds fan them.<br />
+Thy hair is flame blown against the sea's mist&mdash;<br />
+Thou art spring.<br />
+<br />
+The fire on the altar burns brightly,<br />
+And the sea sparkles in the sun.<br />
+Let us murmur a Doric prayer<br />
+For the gift of love,<br />
+For the gift of life,<br />
+Oh Life! Oh Love! We lift our hands to thee!<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">SOUL'S DESIRE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Her soul is like a wolf that stands<br />
+Where sunlight falls between the trees<br />
+Of a sparse forest's leafless edge,<br />
+When Spring's first magic moveth these.<br />
+<br />
+Her soul is like a little brook,<br />
+Thin edged with ice against the leaves,<br />
+Where the wolf drinks and is alone,<br />
+And where the woodbine interweaves.<br />
+<br />
+A bank late covered by the snow,<br />
+But lighted by the frozen North;<br />
+Her soul is like a little plot<br />
+That one white blossom bringeth forth.<br />
+<br />
+Her soul is slim, like silver slips,<br />
+And straight, like flags beside a stream.<br />
+Her soul is like a shape that moves<br />
+And changes in a wonder dream.<br />
+<br />
+Who would pursue her clasps a cloud,<br />
+And taketh sorrow for his zeal.<br />
+Memory shall sing him many songs<br />
+While bound upon the torture wheel.<br />
+<br/>
+Her soul is like a wolf that glides<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span><br />
+By moonlight o'er a phantom ridge;<br />
+Her face is like a light that runs<br />
+Beneath the shadow of a bridge.<br />
+<br />
+Her voice is like a woodland cry<br />
+Heard in a summer's desolate hour.<br />
+Her eyes are dim; her lips are faint,<br />
+And tinctured like the cuckoo flower.<br />
+<br />
+Her little breasts are like the buds<br />
+Of tulips in a place forlorn.<br />
+Her soul is like a mandrake bloom<br />
+Standing against the crimson moon.<br />
+<br />
+Her dream is like the fenny snake's,<br />
+That warms him in the noonday's fire.<br />
+She hath no thought, nor any hope,<br />
+Save of herself and her desire.<br />
+<br />
+She is not life; she is not death;<br />
+She is not fear, or joy or grief.<br />
+Her soul is like a quiet sea<br />
+Beneath a ruin-haunted reef.<br />
+<br />
+She is the shape the sailor sees,<br />
+That slips the rock without a sound.<br />
+She is the soul that comes and goes<br />
+And leaves no mark, yet makes a wound.<br />
+<br/>
+She is the soul that hunts and flies;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span><br />
+She is a world-wide mist of care.<br />
+She is the restlessness of life,<br />
+Its rapture and despair.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>It was a hermit on Whitsunday<br />
+That came to the Table Round.<br />
+"King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight<br />
+May the Holy Grail be found?"<br />
+<br />
+"By never a Knight that liveth now;<br />
+By none that feasteth here."<br />
+King Arthur marvelled when he said,<br />
+"He shall be got this year."<br />
+<br />
+Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot<br />
+And there did mount his steed,<br />
+And hastened to a pleasant town<br />
+That stood in knightly need.<br />
+<br />
+Where many people him acclaimed,<br />
+He passed the Corbin pounte,<br />
+And there he saw a fairer tower<br />
+Than ever was his wont.<br />
+<br />
+And in that tower for many years<br />
+A dolorous lady lay,<br />
+Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched,<br />
+And also Queen le Fay.<br />
+<br/>
+And Launcelot loosed her from those pains,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span><br />
+And there a dragon slew.<br />
+Then came King Pelles out and said,<br />
+"Your name, brave Knight and true?"<br />
+<br />
+"My name is Pelles, wit ye well,<br />
+And King of the far country;<br />
+And I, Sir Knight, am cousin nigh<br />
+To Joseph of Armathie."<br />
+<br />
+"I am Sir Launcelot du Lake."<br />
+And then they clung them fast;<br />
+And yede into the castle hall<br />
+To take the king's repast.<br />
+<br />
+Anon there cometh in a dove<br />
+By the window's open fold,<br />
+And in her mouth was a rich censer,<br />
+That shone like Ophir gold.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was such savor<br />
+As bloweth over sea<br />
+From a land of many colored flowers<br />
+And trees of spicery.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was meat and drink,<br />
+And a damsel passing fair,<br />
+Betwixt her hands of tulip-white,<br />
+A golden cup did bear.<br />
+<br/>
+"O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span><br />
+"What may this marvel mean?"<br />
+"That is," said Pelles, "richest thing<br />
+That any man hath seen."<br />
+<br />
+"O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this sight avail?"<br />
+"Now wit ye well," said King Pelles,<br />
+"That was the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br />
+Then by this sign King Pelles knew<br />
+Elaine his fair daughter<br />
+Should lie with Launcelot that night,<br />
+And Launcelot with her.<br />
+<br />
+And that this twain should get a child<br />
+Before the night should fail,<br />
+Who would be named Sir Galahad,<br />
+And find the Holy Grail.<br />
+<br />
+Then cometh one hight Dame Brisen<br />
+With Pelles to confer,<br />
+"Now, wit ye well, Sir Launcelot<br />
+Loveth but Guinevere."<br />
+<br />
+"But if ye keep him well in hand,<br />
+The while I work my charms,<br />
+The maid Elaine, ere spring of morn,<br />
+Shall lie within his arms."<br />
+<br/>
+Dame Brisen was the subtlest witch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span><br />
+That was that time in life;<br />
+She was as if Beelzebub<br />
+Had taken her to wife.<br />
+<br />
+Then did she cause one known of face<br />
+To Launcelot to bring,<br />
+As if it came from Guinevere,<br />
+Her wonted signet ring.<br />
+<br />
+"By Holy Rood, thou comest true,<br />
+For well I know thy face.<br />
+Where is my lady?" asked the Knight,<br />
+"There in the Castle Case?"<br />
+<br />
+"'Tis five leagues scarcely from this hall,"<br />
+Up spoke that man of guile.<br />
+"I go this hour," said Launcelot,<br />
+"Though it were fifty mile."<br />
+<br />
+Then sped Dame Brisen to the king<br />
+And whispered, "An we thrive,<br />
+Elaine must reach the Castle Case<br />
+Ere Launcelot arrive."<br />
+<br />
+Elaine stole forth with twenty knights<br />
+And a goodly company.<br />
+Sir Launcelot rode fast behind,<br />
+Queen Guinevere to see.<br />
+<br/>
+Anon he reached the castle door.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><br />
+Oh! fond and well deceived.<br />
+And there it seemed the queen's own train<br />
+Sir Launcelot received.<br />
+<br />
+"Where is the queen?" quoth Launcelot,<br />
+"For I am sore bestead,"<br />
+"Have not such haste," said Dame Brisen,<br />
+"The queen is now in bed."<br />
+<br />
+"Then lead me thither," saith he,<br />
+"And cease this jape of thine."<br />
+"Now sit thee down," said Dame Brisen,<br />
+"And have a cup of wine."<br />
+<br />
+"For wit ye not that many eyes<br />
+Upon you here have stared;<br />
+Now have a cup of wine until<br />
+All things may be prepared."<br />
+<br />
+Elaine lay in a fair chamber,<br />
+'Twixt linen sweet and clene.<br />
+Dame Brisen all the windows stopped,<br />
+That no day might be seen.<br />
+<br />
+Dame Brisen fetched a cup of wine<br />
+And Launcelot drank thereof.<br />
+"No more of flagons," saith he,<br />
+"For I am mad for love."<br />
+<br/>
+Dame Brisen took Sir Launcelot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span><br />
+Where lay the maid Elaine.<br />
+Sir Launcelot entered the bed chamber<br />
+The queen's love for to gain.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot kissed the maid Elaine,<br />
+And her cheeks and brows did burn;<br />
+And then they lay in other's arms<br />
+Until the morn's underne.<br />
+<br />
+Anon Sir Launcelot arose<br />
+And toward the window groped,<br />
+And then he saw the maid Elaine<br />
+When he the window oped.<br />
+<br />
+"Ah, traitoress," saith Launcelot,<br />
+And then he gat his sword,<br />
+"That I should live so long and now<br />
+Become a knight abhorred."<br />
+<br />
+"False traitoress," saith Launcelot,<br />
+And then he shook the steel.<br />
+Elaine skipped naked from the bed<br />
+And 'fore the knight did kneel.<br />
+<br />
+"I am King Pelles own daughter<br />
+And thou art Launcelot,<br />
+The greatest knight of all the world.<br />
+This hour we have begot."<br />
+<br/>
+"Oh, traitoress Brisen," cried the knight,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span><br />
+"Oh, charmed cup of wine;<br />
+That I this treasonous thing should do<br />
+For treasures such as thine."<br />
+<br />
+"Have mercy," saith maid Elaine,<br />
+"Thy child is in my womb."<br />
+Thereat the morning's silvern light<br />
+Flooded the bridal room.<br />
+<br />
+That light it was a benison;<br />
+It seemed a holy boon,<br />
+As when behind a wrack of cloud<br />
+Shineth the summer moon.<br />
+<br />
+And in the eyes of maid Elaine<br />
+Looked forth so sweet a faith,<br />
+Sir Launcelot took his glittering sword,<br />
+And thrust it in the sheath.<br />
+<br />
+"So God me help, I spare thy life,<br />
+But I am wretch and thrall,<br />
+If any let my sword to make<br />
+Dame Brisen's head to fall."<br />
+<br />
+"So have thy will of her," she said,<br />
+"But do to me but good;<br />
+For thou hast had my fairest flower,<br />
+Which is my maidenhood."<br />
+<br/>
+"And we have done the will of God,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span><br />
+And the will of God is best."<br />
+Sir Launcelot lifted the maid Elaine<br />
+And hid her on his breast.<br />
+<br />
+Anon there cometh in a dove,<br />
+By the window's open fold,<br />
+And in her mouth was a rich censer<br />
+That shone like beaten gold.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was such savor,<br />
+As bloweth over sea,<br />
+From a land of many colored flowers,<br />
+And trees of spicery.<br />
+<br />
+And therewithal was meat and drink,<br />
+And a damsel passing fair,<br />
+Betwixt her hands of silver white<br />
+A golden cup did bear.<br />
+<br />
+"O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this marvel mean?"<br />
+"That is," she said, "the richest thing<br />
+That any man hath seen."<br />
+<br />
+"O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,<br />
+"What may this sight avail?"<br />
+"Now wit ye well," said maid Elaine,<br />
+"This is the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br/>
+And then a nimbus light hung o'er<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span><br />
+Her brow so fair and meek;<br />
+And turned to orient pearls the tears<br />
+That glistered down her cheek.<br />
+<br />
+And a sound of music passing sweet<br />
+Went in and out again.<br />
+Sir Launcelot made the sign of the cross,<br />
+And knelt to maid Elaine.<br />
+<br />
+"Name him whatever name thou wilt,<br />
+But be his sword and mail<br />
+Thrice tempered 'gainst a wayward world,<br />
+That lost the Holy Grail."<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot sadly took his leave<br />
+And rode against the morn.<br />
+And when the time was fully come<br />
+Sir Galahad was born.<br />
+<br />
+Also he was from Jesu Christ,<br />
+Our Lord, the eighth degree;<br />
+Likewise the greatest knight this world<br />
+May ever hope to see.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE DEATH OF SIR LAUNCELOT</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>Sir Launcelot had fled to France<br />
+For the peace of Guinevere,<br />
+And many a noble knight was slain,<br />
+And Arthur lay on his bier.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot took ship from France<br />
+And sailed across the sea.<br />
+He rode seven days through fair England<br />
+Till he came to Almesbury.<br />
+<br />
+Then spake Sir Bors to Launcelot:<br />
+The old time is at end;<br />
+You have no more in England's realm<br />
+In east nor west a friend.<br />
+<br />
+You have no friend in all England<br />
+Sith Mordred's war hath been,<br />
+And Queen Guinevere became a nun<br />
+To heal her soul of sin.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot answered never a word<br />
+But rode to the west countree<br />
+Until through the forest he saw a light<br />
+That shone from a nunnery.<br />
+<br/>
+Sir Launcelot entered the cloister,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span><br />
+And the queen fell down in a swoon.<br />
+Oh blessed Jesu, saith the queen,<br />
+For thy mother's love, a boon.<br />
+<br />
+Go hence, Sir Launcelot, saith the queen,<br />
+And let me win God's grace.<br />
+My heavy heart serves me no more<br />
+To look upon thy face.<br />
+<br />
+Through you was wrought King Arthur's death,<br />
+Through you great war and wrake.<br />
+Leave me alone, let me bleed,<br />
+Pass by for Jesu's sake.<br />
+<br />
+Then fare you well, saith Launcelot,<br />
+Sweet Madam, fare you well.<br />
+And sythen you have left the world<br />
+No more in the world I dwell.<br />
+<br />
+Then up rose sad Sir Launcelot<br />
+And rode by wold and mere<br />
+Until he came to a hermitage<br />
+Where bode Sir Bedivere.<br />
+<br />
+And there he put a habit on<br />
+And there did pray and fast.<br />
+And when Sir Bedivere told him all<br />
+His heart for sorrow brast.<br />
+<br/>
+How that Sir Mordred, traitorous knight
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span><br/>
+Betrayed his King and sire;<br />
+And how King Arthur wounded, died<br />
+Broken in heart's desire.<br />
+<br />
+And so Sir Launcelot penance made,<br />
+And worked at servile toil;<br />
+And prayed the Bishop of Canterbury<br />
+His sins for to assoil.<br />
+<br />
+His shield went clattering on the wall<br />
+To a dolorous wail of wind;<br />
+His casque was rust, his mantle dust<br />
+With spider webs entwined.<br />
+<br />
+His listless horses left alone<br />
+Went cropping where they would,<br />
+To see the noblest knight of the world<br />
+Upon his sorrow brood.<br />
+<br />
+Anon a Vision came in his sleep,<br />
+And thrice the Vision saith:<br />
+Go thou to Almesbury for thy sin,<br />
+Where lieth the queen in death.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot cometh to Almesbury<br />
+And knelt by the dead queen's bier;<br />
+Oh none may know, moaned Launcelot,<br />
+What sorrow lieth here.<br />
+<br/>
+What love, what honor, what defeat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span><br />
+What hope of the Holy Grail.<br />
+The moon looked through the latticed glass<br />
+On the queen's face cold and pale.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot kissed the ceréd cloth,<br />
+And none could stay his woe,<br />
+Her hair lay back from the oval brow,<br />
+And her nose was clear as snow.<br />
+<br />
+They wrapped her body in cloth of Raines,<br />
+They put her in webs of lead.<br />
+They coffined her in white marble,<br />
+And sang a mass for the dead.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot and seven knights<br />
+Bore torches around the bier.<br />
+They scattered myrrh and frankincense<br />
+On the corpse of Guinevere.<br />
+<br />
+They put her in earth by King Arthur<br />
+To the chant of a doleful tune.<br />
+They heaped the earth on Guinevere<br />
+And Launcelot fell in a swoon.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Launcelot went to the hermitage<br />
+Some Grace of God to find;<br />
+But never he ate, and never he drank<br />
+And there he sickened and dwined.<br />
+<br/>
+Sir Launcelot lay in a painful bed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span><br />
+And spake with a dreary steven;<br />
+Sir Bishop, I pray you shrive my soul<br />
+And make it clean for heaven.<br />
+<br />
+The Bishop houseled Sir Launcelot,<br />
+The Bishop kept watch and ward.<br />
+Bury me, saith Sir Launcelot,<br />
+In the earth of Joyous Guard.<br />
+<br />
+Three candles burned the whole night through<br />
+Till the red dawn looked in the room.<br />
+And the white, white soul of Launcelot<br />
+Strove with a black, black doom.<br />
+<br />
+I see the old witch Dame Brisen,<br />
+And Elaine so straight and tall&mdash;<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The shadows dance on the wall.<br />
+<br />
+I see long hands of dead women,<br />
+They clutch for my soul eftsoon;<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+'Tis the drifting light of the moon.<br />
+<br />
+I see three angels, saith he,<br />
+Before a silver urn.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The candles do but burn.<br />
+<br/>
+I see a cloth of red samite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span><br />
+O'er the holy vessels spread.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The great dawn groweth red.<br />
+<br />
+I see all the torches of the world<br />
+Shine in the room so clear.<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The white dawn draweth near.<br />
+<br />
+Sweet lady, I behold the face<br />
+Of thy dear son, our Lord,<br />
+Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,<br />
+The sun shines on your sword.<br />
+<br />
+Sir Galahad outstretcheth hands<br />
+And taketh me ere I fail&mdash;<br />
+Sir Launcelot's body lay in death<br />
+As his soul found the Holy Grail.<br />
+<br />
+They laid his body in the quire<br />
+Upon a purple pall.<br />
+He was the meekest, gentlest knight<br />
+That ever ate in hall.<br />
+<br />
+He was the kingliest, goodliest knight<br />
+That ever England roved,<br />
+The truest lover of sinful man<br />
+That ever woman loved.<br />
+<br/>
+I pray you all, fair gentlemen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span><br />
+Pray for his soul and mine.<br />
+He lived to lose the heart he loved<br />
+And drink but bitter wine.<br />
+<br />
+He wrought a woe he knew not of,<br />
+He failed his fondest quest,<br />
+Now sing a psalter, read a prayer<br />
+May all souls find their rest.<br />
+<p class="right">Amen.</p></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">IN MICHIGAN</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>You wrote:<br />
+"Come over to Saugatuck<br />
+And be with me on the warm sand,<br />
+And under cool beeches and aromatic cedars."<br />
+And just then no one could do a thing in the city<br />
+For the lure of far places, and something that tugged<br />
+At one's heart because of a June sky,<br />
+And stretches of blue water,<br />
+And a warm wind blowing from the south.<br />
+What could I do but take a boat<br />
+And go to meet you?<br />
+<br />
+And when to-day is not enough,<br />
+But you must live to-morrow also;<br />
+And when the present stands in the way<br />
+Of something to come,<br />
+And there is but one you would see,<br />
+All the interval of waiting is a wall.<br />
+And so it was I walked the landward deck<br />
+With flapping coat and hat pulled down;<br />
+And I sat on the leeward deck and looked<br />
+At the streaming smoke of the funnels,<br />
+And the far waste of rhythmical water,<br />
+And at the gulls flying by our side.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+There was music on board and dancing,<br />
+But I could not take part.<br />
+For above all there was the bluest sky,<br />
+And around us the urge of magical distances.<br />
+And just because you were in the violins,<br />
+And in everything, and were wholly the world<br />
+Of sense and sight,<br />
+It was too much. One could not live it<br />
+And make it all his own&mdash;<br />
+It was too much.<br />
+And I wondered where the rest could be going,<br />
+Or what they thought of water and sky<br />
+Without knowing you.<br />
+<br />
+But at four o'clock there was a rim,<br />
+A circled edge of rainbow color<br />
+Which suspired, widened and narrowed under your gaze:<br />
+It was the phantasy of straining eyes,<br />
+Or land&mdash;and it was land.<br />
+It was distant trees.<br />
+And then it was dunes, bluffs of yellow sand.<br />
+We began to wonder how far it was&mdash;<br />
+Five miles, or ten miles&mdash;<br />
+Surely only five miles!&mdash;<br />
+But at last whatever it was we swung to the end.<br />
+We rounded the lighthouse pier,<br />
+Almost before we knew.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+We slowed our speed in a dizzy river of black,<br />
+We drifted softly to dock.<br />
+<br />
+I took the ferry,<br />
+I crossed the river,<br />
+I ran almost through the little batch<br />
+Of fishermen's shacks.<br />
+I climbed the winding road of the hill,<br />
+And dove in a shadowy quiet<br />
+Of paths of moss and dancing leaves,<br />
+And straight stretched limbs of giant pines<br />
+On patches of sky.<br />
+I ran to the top of the bluff<br />
+Where the lodge-house stood.<br />
+And there the sunlit lake burst on me<br />
+And wine-like air.<br />
+And below me was the beach<br />
+Where the serried lines of hurrying water<br />
+Came up like rank on rank of men<br />
+And fell with a shout on the rocks!<br />
+I plunged, I stumbled, I ran<br />
+Down the hill,<br />
+For I thought I saw you,<br />
+And it was you, you were there!<br />
+And I shall never forget your cry,<br />
+Nor how you raised your arms and cried,<br />
+And laughed when you saw me.<br />
+And there we were with the lake<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+And the sun with his ruddy search-light blaze<br />
+Stretching back to lost Chicago.<br />
+The sun, the lake, the beach, and ourselves<br />
+Were all that was left of Time,<br />
+All else was lost.<br />
+<br />
+You were making a camp.<br />
+You had bent from the bank a cedar bough<br />
+And tied it down.<br />
+And over it flung a quilt of many colors,<br />
+And under it spread on the voluptuous silt<br />
+Gray blankets and canvas pillows.<br />
+I saw it all in a glance.<br />
+And there in dread of eyes we stood<br />
+Scanning the bluff and the beach,<br />
+Lest in the briefest touch of lips<br />
+We might be seen.<br />
+<br />
+For there were eyes, or we thought<br />
+There were eyes, on the porch of the lodge,<br />
+And eyes along the forest's rim on the hill,<br />
+And eyes on the shore.<br />
+But a minute past there was no sun,<br />
+Only a star that shone like a match which lights<br />
+To a blue intenseness amid the glow of a hearth.<br />
+And we sat on the sand as dusk came down<br />
+In a communion of silence and low words.<br />
+Till you said at last: "We'll sup at the lodge,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+Then say good night to me and leave<br />
+As if to stay overnight in the village.<br />
+But instead make a long detour through the wood<br />
+And come to the shore through that ravine,<br />
+Be here at the tent at midnight."<br />
+<br />
+And so I did.<br />
+I stole through echoless ways,<br />
+Where no twigs broke and where I heard<br />
+My heart beat like a watch under a pillow.<br />
+And the whippoorwills were singing.<br />
+And the sound of the surf below me<br />
+Was the sound of silver-poplar leaves<br />
+In a wind that makes no pause....<br />
+I hurried down the steep ravine,<br />
+And a bat flew up at my feet from the brush<br />
+And crossed the moon.<br />
+To my left was the lighthouse,<br />
+And black and deep purples far away,<br />
+And all was still.<br />
+Till I stood breathless by the tent<br />
+And heard your whispered welcome,<br />
+And felt your kiss.<br />
+<br />
+Lovers lay at mid-night<br />
+On roofs of Memphis and Athens<br />
+And looked at tropical stars<br />
+As large as golden beetles.<br />
+Nothing is new, save this,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+And this is always new.<br />
+And there in your tent<br />
+With the balm of the mid-night breeze<br />
+Sweeping over us,<br />
+We looked at one great star<br />
+Through a flap of your many-colored tent,<br />
+And the eternal quality of rapture<br />
+And mystery and vision flowed through us.<br />
+<br />
+Next day we went to Grand Haven,<br />
+For my desire was your desire,<br />
+Whatever wish one had the other had.<br />
+And up the Grand River we rowed,<br />
+With rushes and lily pads about us,<br />
+And the sand hills back of us,<br />
+Till we came to a quiet land,<br />
+A lotus place of farms and meadows.<br />
+And we tied our boat to Schmitty's dock,<br />
+Where we had a dinner of fish.<br />
+And where, after resting, to follow your will<br />
+We drifted back to Spring Lake&mdash;<br />
+And under a larger moon,<br />
+Now almost full,<br />
+Walked three miles to The Beeches,<br />
+By a winding country road,<br />
+Where we had supper.<br />
+And afterwards a long sleep,<br />
+Waking to the song of robins.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+And that day I said:<br />
+There are wild places, blue water, pine forests,<br />
+There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads<br />
+Around Elk Lake&mdash;shall we go?<br />
+And we went, for your desire was mine.<br />
+And there we climbed hills,<br />
+And ate apples along the shaded ways,<br />
+And rolled great boulders down the steeps<br />
+To watch them splash in the water.<br />
+And we stood and wondered what was beyond<br />
+The farther shore two miles away.<br />
+And we came to a place on the shore<br />
+Where four great pine trees stood,<br />
+And underneath them wild flowers to the edge<br />
+Of sand so soft for naked feet.<br />
+And here, for not a soul was near,<br />
+We stripped and swam far out, laughing, rejoicing,<br />
+Rolling and diving in those great depths<br />
+Of bracing water under a glittering sun.<br />
+<br />
+There were farm houses enough<br />
+For food and shelter.<br />
+But something urged us on.<br />
+One knows the end and dreads the end<br />
+Yet seeks the end.<br />
+And you asked, "Is there a town near?<br />
+Let's see a town."<br />
+So we walked to Traverse City<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Through cut-over land and blasted<br />
+Trunks and stumps of pine,<br />
+And by the side of desolate hills.<br />
+But when we got to Traverse City<br />
+You were not content, nor was I.<br />
+Something urged us on.<br />
+Then you thought of Northport<br />
+And of its Norse and German fishermen,<br />
+And its quaint piers where they smoke fish.<br />
+So we drove for thirty miles<br />
+In a speeding automobile<br />
+Over hills, around sudden curves, into warm coverts,<br />
+Or hollows, sometimes at the edge of the Bay,<br />
+Again on the hill,<br />
+From where we could see Old Mission<br />
+Amid blues and blacks, across a score of miles of the Bay,<br />
+Waving like watered silk under the moon!<br />
+And by meadows of clover newly cut,<br />
+And by peach orchards and vineyards.<br />
+But when we came to the little town<br />
+Already asleep, though it was but eight o'clock,<br />
+And only a few drowsy lamps<br />
+With misty eyelids shone from a store or two,<br />
+I said, "Do you see those twinkling lights?<br />
+That's Northport Point, that's the Cedar Cabin&mdash;<br />
+Let's go to the Cedar Cabin."<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+And so we crossed the Bay<br />
+Amid great waves in a plunging launch,<br />
+And a roaring breeze and a great moon,<br />
+For now the moon was full.<br />
+<br />
+So here was the Cedar Cabin<br />
+On a strip of land as wide as a house and lawn,<br />
+And on one side Lake Michigan,<br />
+And on one side the Bay.<br />
+There were distances of color all around,<br />
+And stars and darknesses of land and trees,<br />
+And at the point the lighthouse.<br />
+And over us the moon,<br />
+And over the balcony of our room<br />
+All of these, where we lay till I slept,<br />
+Listening to the water of the lake,<br />
+And the water of the Bay.<br />
+And we saw the moon sink like a red bomb,<br />
+And we saw the stars change<br />
+As the sky wheeled....<br />
+Now this was the end of the earth,<br />
+For this strip of land<br />
+Ran out to a point no larger than one of the stumps<br />
+We saw on the desolate hills.<br />
+And moreover it seemed to dive under,<br />
+Or waste away in a sudden depth of water.<br />
+And around it was a swirl,<br />
+To the north the bounding waves of the Lake,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+And to the south the Bay which seemed the Lake.<br />
+But could we speak of it, even though<br />
+I saw your eyes when you thought of it?<br />
+A sigh of wind blew through the rustic temple<br />
+When we saw this symbol together,<br />
+And neither spoke.<br />
+But that night, somewhere in the beginning of drowsiness,<br />
+You said: "There is no further place to go,<br />
+We must retrace."<br />
+And I awoke in a torrent of light in the room,<br />
+Hearing voices and steps on the walk:<br />
+I looked for you,<br />
+But you had arisen.<br />
+Then I dressed and searched for you,<br />
+But you were gone.<br />
+Then I stood for long minutes<br />
+Looking at a sail far out at sea<br />
+And departed too.<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE STAR</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>I am a certain god<br />
+Who slipped down from a remote height<br />
+To a place of pools and stars.<br />
+And I sat invisible<br />
+Amid a clump of trees<br />
+To watch the madmen.<br />
+<br />
+There were cries and groans about me,<br />
+And shouts of laughter and curses.<br />
+Figures passed by with self-absorbed contempt,<br />
+Wrinkling in bitter smiles about their lips.<br />
+Others hurried on with set eyes<br />
+Pursuing something.<br />
+Then I said this is the place for mad Frederick&mdash;<br />
+Mad Frederick will be here.<br />
+<br />
+But everywhere I could see<br />
+Figures sitting or standing<br />
+By little pools.<br />
+Some seemed grown into the soil<br />
+And were helpless.<br />
+And of these some were asleep.<br />
+Others laughed the laughter<br />
+That comes from dying men<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+Trying to face Death.<br />
+And others said "I should be content,"<br />
+And others said "I will fly."<br />
+Whereupon sepulchral voices muttered,<br />
+As of creatures sitting or hanging head down<br />
+From limbs of the trees,<br />
+"We will not let you."<br />
+And others looked in their pools<br />
+And clasped hands and said "Gone, all gone."<br />
+By other pools there were dead bodies:<br />
+Some of youth, some of age.<br />
+They had given up the fight,<br />
+They had drunk poisoned water,<br />
+They had searched<br />
+Until they fell&mdash;<br />
+All had gone mad!<br />
+<br />
+Then I, a certain god,<br />
+Curious to know<br />
+What it is in pools and stars<br />
+That drives men and women<br />
+Over the earth in this quest<br />
+Waited for mad Frederick.<br />
+And then I heard his step.<br />
+<br />
+I knew that long ago<br />
+He sat by one of these pools<br />
+Enraptured of a star's image.<br />
+And that hands, for his own good,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+As they said,<br />
+Dumped clay into the pool<br />
+And blotted his star.<br />
+And I knew that after that<br />
+He had said, "They will never spy again<br />
+Upon my ecstasy.<br />
+They will never see me watching one star.<br />
+I will fly by rivers,<br />
+And by little brooks,<br />
+And by the edge of lakes,<br />
+And by little bends of water,<br />
+Where no wind blows,<br />
+And glance at stars as I pass.<br />
+They will never spy again<br />
+Upon my ecstasy."<br />
+<br />
+And I knew that mad Frederick<br />
+In this flight<br />
+Through years of restless and madness<br />
+Was caught by the image of a star<br />
+In a mere beyond a meadow<br />
+Down from a hill, under a forest,<br />
+And had said,<br />
+"No one sees;<br />
+Here I can find life,<br />
+Through vision of eternal things."<br />
+But they had followed him.<br />
+They stood on the brow of the hill,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+And when they saw him gazing in the water<br />
+They rolled a great stone down the hill,<br />
+And shattered the star's image.<br />
+Then mad Frederick fled with laughter.<br />
+It echoed through the wood.<br />
+And he said, "I will look for moons,<br />
+I will punish them who disturb me,<br />
+By worshiping moons."<br />
+But when he sought moons<br />
+They left him alone,<br />
+And he did not want the moons.<br />
+And he was alone, and sick from the moons,<br />
+And covered as with a white blankness,<br />
+Which was the worst madness of all.<br />
+<br />
+And I, a certain god,<br />
+Waiting for mad Frederick<br />
+To enter this place of pools and stars,<br />
+Saw him at last.<br />
+With a sigh he looked about upon his fellows<br />
+Sitting or standing by their pools.<br />
+And some of the pools were covered with scum,<br />
+And some were glazed as of filth,<br />
+And some were grown with weeds,<br />
+And some were congealed as of the north wind,<br />
+And a few were yet pure,<br />
+And held the star's image.<br />
+And by these some sat and were glad,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+Others had lost the vision.<br />
+The star was there, but its meaning vanished.<br />
+And mad Frederick, going here and there,<br />
+With no purpose,<br />
+Only curious and interested<br />
+As I was, a certain god,<br />
+Came by a certain pool<br />
+And saw a star.<br />
+<br />
+He shivered,<br />
+He clasped his hands,<br />
+He sank to his knees,<br />
+He touched his lips to the water.<br />
+<br />
+Then voices from the limbs of the trees muttered:<br />
+"There he is again."<br />
+"He must be driven away."<br />
+"The pool is not his."<br />
+"He does not belong here."<br />
+So as when bats fly in a cave<br />
+They swooped from their hidings in the trees<br />
+And dashed themselves in the pool.<br />
+Then I saw what these flying things were&mdash;<br />
+But no matter.<br />
+They were illusions, evil and envious<br />
+And dull,<br />
+But with power to destroy.<br />
+And mad Frederick turned away from the pool<br />
+And covered his eyes with his arms.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+Then a certain god,<br />
+Of less power than mine,<br />
+Came and sat beside me and said:<br />
+"Why do you allow this to be?<br />
+They are all seeking,<br />
+Why do you not let them find their heart's delight?<br />
+Why do you allow this to be?"<br />
+But I did not answer.<br />
+The lesser god did not know<br />
+That I have no power,<br />
+That only the God has the power.<br />
+And that this must be<br />
+In spite of all lesser gods.<br />
+<br />
+And I saw mad Frederick<br />
+Arise and ascend to the top of a high hill,<br />
+And I saw him find the star<br />
+Whose image he had seen in the pool.<br />
+Then he knelt and prayed:<br />
+"Give me to understand, O Star,<br />
+Your inner self, your eternal spirit,<br />
+That I may have you and not images of you,<br />
+So that I may know what has driven me through the world,<br />
+And may cure my soul.<br />
+For I know you are Eternal Love,<br />
+And I can never escape you.<br />
+And if I cannot escape you,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+Then I must serve you.<br />
+And if I must serve you,<br />
+It must be to good and not ill&mdash;<br />
+You have brought me from the forest of pools<br />
+And the images of stars,<br />
+Here to the hill's top.<br />
+Where now do I go?<br />
+And what shall I do?"<br /></td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p class="center">THE END</p>
+
+<p class="center">Printed in the United States of America.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span><br/></p>
+<p class="center">The following pages contain advertisements of
+books by the same author or on kindred subjects</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span><br/></p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big"><i>EDGAR LEE MASTERS' REMARKABLE BOOK</i></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Spoon River Anthology</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Masters' book is considered by many to be the most striking and
+important contribution to American letters in recent years</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="blockquot">"An American 'Comedie Humaine' brings more characters into its
+pages than any American novel.... Takes its place among the masterpieces
+which are not of a time or a locality."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"A work splendid in observation, marvelous in the artistry of exclusion,
+yet of democratic inclusiveness, piercingly analytic of character, of plastic
+facility of handling, sympathetic underneath irony, humorous, pathetic, tragic,
+comic, particular yet universal&mdash;a Comedie Humaine&mdash;a creation of
+a whole community of personalities."&mdash;<i>William Marion Reedy.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"We find a strange impressiveness, akin to greatness, in the 'Spoon
+River Anthology' of Edgar Lee Masters.... It is a book which, whether
+one likes it or not, one must respect."&mdash;<i>The New Republic.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Mr. Masters speaks with a new and authentic voice. It is an illuminating
+piece of work, and an unforgettable one."&mdash;<i>Chicago Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The natural child of Wait Whitman ... the only poet with true Americanism
+in his bones."&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, $1.25; leather, $1.50</i><br /></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Good Friday and Other Poems</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> JOHN MASEFIELD</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "The Everlasting Mercy" and "The Widow in the Bye
+Street," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>The title piece in this volume is a dramatic poem
+of sixty pages, the action of which takes place in the
+time of Christ. The characters introduced include
+Pontius Pilate, Joseph of Ramah and Herod. The
+play, for it is really such, is written in rhyme and is
+one of Mr. Masefield's most interesting and important
+contributions to literature. In addition to this there
+are in the book many sonnets and short poems.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Reveals an interesting development in poetic thought and expression
+... a new Masefield ... who has never written with more dignity, nor
+with more artistry. Those who go in quest of Beauty will find her here....
+Here is beauty of impression, beauty of expression, beauty of thought,
+and beauty of phrase."&mdash;<i>The New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">The Man Against the Sky</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "The Porcupine," "Captain Craig and Other Poems," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.00</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>It has been some years since Mr. Robinson has
+given us a new collection of poems. Those who
+remember "Captain Craig and Other Poems," a volume
+which brought to its author the heartiest of congratulations,
+placing him at once in the rank of those
+American writers whose contributions to literature
+are of permanent value, will welcome this new work
+and will find that their anticipation of it and hopes
+for it are to be pleasantly realized. It is a book
+which well carries out that early promise and which
+helps to maintain Mr. Robinson's position in letters
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Battle and Other Poems</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> WILFRID WILSON GIBSON</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Daily Bread," "Fires," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>Here with that intensely human note exhibited
+in his poems of the working classes, Mr. Gibson
+sings of the life of the soldier. There are many
+moods in the book, for the author has well caught
+the flow of spirits from gaiety to despair which
+makes up the soldier's days. The chief characteristic
+of the little pen pictures is their vividness, the
+way in which they bring before the reader the
+thoughts and feelings of those whose lives may be
+offered up for their country any moment. In addition
+to these poems of battle there are others in the
+collection on varying themes.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">Six French Poets</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> AMY LOWELL</p>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed," "A Dome of Many-Coloured
+Glass," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 8vo, $2.50</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A brilliant series of biographical and critical essays dealing
+with &Eacute;mile Verhaeren, Albert Samain, Remy de Gourmont,
+Henri de Régnier, Francis Jammes, and Paul Fort, by one of the
+foremost living American poets.</p>
+
+<p>The translations make up an important part of the book, and
+together with the French originals constitute a representative
+anthology of the poetry of the period.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Barrett Wendell, of Harvard University, says:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Seems to me as unusual&mdash;in the happiest sense of the word,
+... I find the book a model, in total effect, of what a work
+with such purpose ought to be."</p>
+
+<p>William Lyon Phelps, Professor of English Literature, Yale University, says:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"This is, I think, the most valuable work on contemporary
+French literature that I have seen for a long time. It is written
+by one who has a thorough knowledge of the subject and who is
+herself an American poet of distinction. She has the knowledge,
+the sympathy, the penetration, and the insight&mdash;all necessary
+to make a notable book of criticism. It is a work that
+should be widely read in America."<br/></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">OTHER BOOKS BY AMY LOWELL</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="huge">Sword Blades and Poppy Seed</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boards, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The
+Book of the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in
+our poetry, worthy of companionship to the great romantic
+lyrics of Coleridge."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i><br/></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><span class="huge">A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boards, 12mo, $1.25</i><br /></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal flavor,
+a loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality.... The
+child poems are particularly graceful."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br/>
+Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</p>
+<hr style="width: 75%;" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="big">Transcriber's Notes:</p>
+
+<p>Punctuation has been corrected without note.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the
+original.</p>
+
+<p>It is not always possible to determine if a new stanza begins at the top
+of a printed page, but every effort has been made by the transcriber to
+retain stanza breaks where appropriate.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
+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: Songs and Satires
+
+Author: Edgar Lee Masters
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2011 [EBook #36149]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS AND SATIRES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO . DALLAS
+ ATLANTA . SAN FRANCISCO
+
+ MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
+ LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA
+ MELBOURNE
+
+ THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
+ TORONTO
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+ _By_
+ EDGAR LEE MASTERS
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"
+
+
+ New York
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1916,
+ BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
+
+ Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1916.
+ Reprinted March, June, 1916.
+
+ Norwood Press
+ J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+ Norwood, Mass., U.S.A
+
+
+
+
+For permission to print in book form certain of these poems I wish to
+acknowledge an indebtedness to _Poetry_, _The Smart Set_, _The Little
+Review_, _The Cosmopolitan Magazine_, and William Marion Reedy, Editor
+of _Reedy's Mirror_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ SILENCE 1
+
+ ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE 4
+
+ THE COCKED HAT 10
+
+ THE VISION 18
+
+ SO WE GREW TOGETHER 21
+
+ RAIN IN MY HEART 31
+
+ THE LOOP 32
+
+ WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES 40
+
+ IN THE CAR 41
+
+ SIMON SURNAMED PETER 43
+
+ ALL LIFE IN A LIFE 47
+
+ WHAT YOU WILL 56
+
+ THE CITY 57
+
+ THE IDIOT 65
+
+ HELEN OF TROY 68
+
+ O GLORIOUS FRANCE 71
+
+ FOR A DANCE 74
+
+ WHEN LIFE IS REAL 76
+
+ THE QUESTION 78
+
+ THE ANSWER 79
+
+ THE SIGN 80
+
+ WILLIAM MARION REEDY 82
+
+ A STUDY 85
+
+ PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN 88
+
+ IN THE CAGE 91
+
+ SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE 95
+
+ LOVE IS A MADNESS 97
+
+ ON A BUST 98
+
+ ARABEL 101
+
+ JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER 108
+
+ THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES 116
+
+ THE CRY 119
+
+ THE HELPING HAND 120
+
+ THE DOOR 121
+
+ SUPPLICATION 122
+
+ THE CONVERSATION 125
+
+ TERMINUS 130
+
+ MADELINE 132
+
+ MARCIA 134
+
+ THE ALTAR 135
+
+ SOUL'S DESIRE 137
+
+ BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE 140
+
+ THE DEATH OF LAUNCELOT 149
+
+ IN MICHIGAN 156
+
+ THE STAR 166
+
+
+
+
+SONGS AND SATIRES
+
+
+
+
+SILENCE
+
+
+ I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,
+ And the silence of the city when it pauses,
+ And the silence of a man and a maid,
+ And the silence for which music alone finds the word,
+ And the silence of the woods before the winds of spring begin,
+ And the silence of the sick
+ When their eyes roam about the room.
+ And I ask: For the depths
+ Of what use is language?
+ A beast of the field moans a few times
+ When death takes its young:
+ And we are voiceless in the presence of realities--
+ We cannot speak.
+
+ A curious boy asks an old soldier
+ Sitting in front of the grocery store,
+ "How did you lose your leg?"
+ And the old soldier is struck with silence,
+ Or his mind flies away,
+ Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg.
+ It comes back jocosely
+ And he says, "A bear bit it off."
+ And the boy wonders, while the old soldier
+ Dumbly, feebly lives over
+ The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,
+ The shrieks of the slain,
+ And himself lying on the ground,
+ And the hospital surgeons, the knives,
+ And the long days in bed.
+ But if he could describe it all
+ He would be an artist.
+ But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds
+ Which he could not describe.
+
+ There is the silence of a great hatred,
+ And the silence of a great love,
+ And the silence of a deep peace of mind,
+ And the silence of an embittered friendship.
+ There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,
+ Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,
+ Comes with visions not to be uttered
+ Into a realm of higher life.
+ And the silence of the gods who understand each other without speech.
+ There is the silence of defeat.
+ There is the silence of those unjustly punished;
+ And the silence of the dying whose hand
+ Suddenly grips yours.
+ There is the silence between father and son,
+ When the father cannot explain his life,
+ Even though he be misunderstood for it.
+
+ There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.
+ There is the silence of those who have failed;
+ And the vast silence that covers
+ Broken nations and vanquished leaders.
+ There is the silence of Lincoln,
+ Thinking of the poverty of his youth.
+ And the silence of Napoleon
+ After Waterloo.
+ And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc
+ Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus"--
+ Revealing in two words all sorrow, all hope.
+ And there is the silence of age,
+ Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it
+ In words intelligible to those who have not lived
+ The great range of life.
+
+ And there is the silence of the dead.
+ If we who are in life cannot speak
+ Of profound experiences,
+ Why do you marvel that the dead
+ Do not tell you of death?
+ Their silence shall be interpreted
+ As we approach them.
+
+
+
+
+ST. FRANCIS AND LADY CLARE
+
+
+ Antonio loved the Lady Clare.
+ He caught her to him on the stair
+ And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,
+ And drew her lips in his, and drew
+ Her soul out like a torch's flare.
+ Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;
+ Her senses in a vortex swound.
+ She tore him loose and turned around,
+ And reached her chamber in a bound
+ Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.
+
+ She closed the door and turned the lock,
+ Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.
+ She reeled as drunken from the shock.
+ Before her eyes the devils skipped,
+ She thought she heard the devils mock.
+ For had her soul not been as pure
+ As sifted snow, could she endure
+ Antonio's passion and be sure
+ Against his passion's strength and lure?
+ Lean fears along her wonder slipped.
+
+ Outside she heard a drunkard call,
+ She heard a beggar against the wall
+ Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall
+ Struck through the riot like a sword,
+ And gashed the midnight's festival.
+ She watched the city through the pane,
+ The old Silenus half insane,
+ The idiot crowd that drags its chain--
+ And then she heard the bells again,
+ And heard the voices with the word:
+
+ Ecco il santo! Up the street
+ There was the sound of running feet
+ From closing door and window seat,
+ And all the crowd turned on its way
+ The Saint of Poverty to greet.
+ He passed. And then a circling thrill,
+ As water troubled which was still,
+ Went through her body like a chill,
+ Who of Antonio thought until
+ She heard the Saint begin to pray.
+
+ And then she turned into the room
+ Her soul was cloven through with doom,
+ Treading the softness and the gloom
+ Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,
+ And China's magical perfume.
+ She sickened from the vases hued
+ In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd
+ Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,
+ And tapestries that showed a brood
+ Of leopards by a pool!
+
+ Candles of wax she lit before
+ A pier glass standing from the floor;
+ Up to the ceiling, off she tore
+ With eager hands her jewels, then
+ The silken vesture which she wore.
+ Her little breasts so round to see
+ Were budded like the peony.
+ Her arms were white as ivory,
+ And all her sunny hair lay free
+ As marigold or celandine.
+
+ Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase
+ Of crackled turquoise, in her face
+ Was memory of the mad embrace
+ Antonio gave her on the stair,
+ And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.
+ Like pigeon blood her lips were red.
+ She clasped her bands above her head.
+ Under her arms the waxlight shed
+ Delicate halos where was spread
+ The downy growth of hair.
+
+ Such sudden sin the virgin knew
+ She quenched the tapers as she blew
+ Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw
+ Herself in tears upon her knees,
+ And round her couch the curtain drew.
+ She called upon St. Francis' name,
+ Feeling Antonio's passion maim
+ Her body with his passion's flame
+ To save her, save her from the shame
+ Of fancies such as these!
+
+ "Go by mad life and old pursuits,
+ The wine cup and the golden fruits,
+ The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,
+ I would praise God forevermore
+ With harps of gold and silver lutes."
+ She stripped the velvet from her couch
+ Her broken spirit to avouch.
+ She saw the devils slink and slouch,
+ And passion like a leopard crouch
+ Half mirrored on the polished floor.
+
+ Next day she found the saint and said:
+ I would be God's bride, I would wed
+ Poverty and I would eat the bread
+ That you for anchorites prepare,
+ For my soul's sake I am in dread.
+ Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,
+ Put off this gown of green snake cloth,
+ Put on one somber as a moth,
+ Then come to me and make your troth
+ And I will clip your golden hair.
+
+ She went and came. But still there lay,
+ A gem she did not put away,
+ A locket twixt her breasts, all gay
+ In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,
+ And inlay work of fruit and spray.
+ St. Francis felt it as he slipped
+ His hand across her breast and whipped
+ Her golden tresses ere he clipped--
+ He closed his eyes then as he gripped
+ The shears, plunged the shears through.
+
+ The waterfall of living gold.
+ The locks fell to the floor and rolled,
+ And curled like serpents which unfold.
+ And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.
+ Of worldly glory manifold.
+ She thrilled to feel him take and hide
+ The locket from her breast, a tide
+ Of passion caught them side by side.
+ He was the bridegroom, she the bride--
+ Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.
+
+ Thus was the Lady Clare debased
+ To sack cloth and around her waist
+ A rope the jeweled belt replaced.
+ Her feet made free of silken hose
+ Naked in wooden sandals cased
+ Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then
+ They housed her in St. Damian
+ And here she prayed for poor women
+ And here St. Francis sought her when
+ His faith sank under earthly woes.
+
+ Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme
+ And took to wine and got the lime
+ Of hatred on his soul, in time
+ Grew healed though left a little lame,
+ And laughed about it in his prime;
+ When he could see with crystal eyes
+ That love is a winged thing which flies;
+ Some break the wings, some let them rise
+ From earth like God's dove to the skies
+ Diffused in heavenly flame.
+
+
+
+
+THE COCKED HAT
+
+Would that someone would knock Mr. Bryan into a cocked hat.--WOODROW
+WILSON.
+
+
+ It ain't really a hat at all, Ed:
+ You know that, don't you?
+ When you bowl over six out of the nine pins,
+ And the three that are standing
+ Are the triangular three in front,
+ You've knocked the nine into a cocked hat.
+ If it was really a hat, he would be knocked in, too.
+ Which he hardly is. For a man with money,
+ And a man who can draw a crowd to listen
+ To what he says, ain't all-in yet....
+ Oh yes, defeated
+ And killed off a dozen times, but still
+ He's one of the three nine pins that's standing ...
+ Eh? Why, the other is Teddy, the other
+ Wilson, we'll say. We'll see, perhaps.
+ But six are down to make the cocked hat--
+ That's me and thousands of others like me,
+ And the first-rate men who were cuffed about
+ After the Civil War,
+ And most of the more than six million men
+ Who followed this fellow into the ditch,
+ While he walked down the ditch and stepped to the level--
+ Following an ideal!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember how slim he was,
+ And trim he was,
+ With black hair and pale brow,
+ And the hawk-like nose and flashing eyes,
+ Not turning slowly like an owl
+ But with a sudden eagle motion?...
+
+ One time, in '96, he came here
+ And we had just a dollar and sixty cents
+ In the treasury of the organization.
+ So I stuck his lithograph on a pole
+ And started out for the station.
+ By the time we got back here to Clark street
+ Four thousand men were marching in line,
+ And a band that was playing for an opening
+ Of a restaurant on Franklin street
+ Had left the job and was following his carriage.
+ Why, it took all the money Mark Hanna could raise
+ To beat me, with nothing but a pole
+ And a lithograph.
+ And it wasn't because he was one of the prophets
+ Come back to earth again.
+ It shows how human hearts are hungry
+ How wonderfully true they are--
+ And how they will rise and follow a man
+ Who seems to see the truth!
+ Well, these fellows who marched are the cocked hat,
+ And I am the cocked hat and the six millions,
+ And more are the cocked hat,
+ Who got themselves despised or suspected
+ Of ignorance or something for being with him.
+ But still, he's one of the pins that's standing.
+ He got the money that he went after,
+ And he has a place in history, perhaps--
+ Because we took the blow and fell down
+ When the ripping ball went wild on the alley.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For we were radicals,
+ And he wasn't a radical.
+ Eh? Why, a radical stands for freedom,
+ And for truth--which he never finds
+ But always looks for.
+ A radical is not a moralist.
+ A radical doesn't say:
+ "This is true and you must believe it;
+ This is good and you must accept it,
+ And if you don't believe it and accept it
+ We'll get a law and make you,
+ And if you don't obey the law, we'll kill you--"
+ Oh no! A radical stands for freedom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont
+ In '97 on Jackson's day?
+ Bryan and Altgeld walked together
+ Out to the banquet room.
+ That's the time he said the bolters must
+ Bring fruits meet for repentance--ha! ha! Oh, Gawd!--
+ They never did it and they didn't have to,
+ For they had made friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,
+ Even as he did, a little later, in his own way.
+ Well, Darrow was there that night.
+ I thought it was terribly raw in him,
+ But he said to Bryan, there, in a group:
+ "You'd better go back to Lincoln and study
+ Science, history, philosophy,
+ And read Flaubert's Madam something-or-other,
+ And quit this village religious stuff.
+ You're head of the party before you are ready
+ And a leader should lead with thought."
+ And Bryan turned to the others and said:
+ "Darrow's the only man in the world
+ Who looks down on me for believing in God."
+ "Your kind of a God," snapped Darrow.
+ Honest, Ed, I didn't see this religious business
+ In Bryan in '96 or 1900.
+ Oh well, I knew he went to Church,
+ And talked as statesmen do of God--
+ But McKinley did it, and I used to laugh:
+ "We've got a man to match McKinley,
+ And it's good for us, in a squeeze like this,
+ We didn't nominate some fellow
+ Ethical culture or Unitarian."
+ You see, the newspapers and preachers then
+ Were raising such a hullabaloo
+ About irreligion and dishonesty,
+ And calling old Altgeld an anarchist,
+ And comparing us to Robespierre
+ And the guillotine boys in France.
+ And a little of this religion came in handy.
+ The same as if you saw a Mason button on me,
+ You'd know, you see--but Gee!
+ He was 24-carat religious,
+ A cover-to-cover man....
+ He was a trained collie,
+ And he looked like a lion,
+ There in the convention of '96--What do you know about that?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But right here, I tell you he ain't a hypocrite,
+ This ain't a pose. But I'll tell you:
+ In '96 when they knocked him out,
+ I know what he said to himself as well
+ As if I heard him say it ...
+ I'll tell you in a minute.
+ But suppose you were giving a lecture on the constitution,
+ And you got mixed on your dates,
+ And the audience rotten-egged you,
+ And some one in the confusion
+ Stole the door receipts,
+ And there you were, disgraced and broke!
+ But suppose you could just change your clothes,
+ And lecture to the same audience
+ On the religious nature of Washington,
+ And be applauded and make money--
+ You'd do it, wouldn't you?
+ Well, this is what Bill said to himself:
+ "I'm naturally regular and religious.
+ I'm a moral man and I can prove it
+ By any one in Marion County,
+ Or Jacksonville or Lincoln, Nebraska.
+ I'm a radical, but a radical
+ Alone can be religious.
+ I belong to the church, if not to the bank,
+ Of the people who defeated me.
+ And I'll prove to religious people
+ That I'm a man to be trusted--
+ And just what a radical is.
+ And I'll make some money while winning the votes
+ Of the churches over the country."...
+
+ That's it--it ain't hypocrisy,
+ It's using what you are for ends,
+ When you find yourself in trouble.
+ And this accounts for "The Prince of Peace"--
+ Except no one but him could write it--
+ And "The Value of an Ideal"--
+ (Which is money in bank and several farms) ...
+
+ His place in history?
+ One time my grandfather, who was nearly blind,
+ Went out to sow some grass seed.
+ They had two sacks in the barn,
+ One with grass seed, one with fertilizer,
+ And he got the sack with fertilizer,
+ And scattered it over the ground,
+ Thinking he was sowing grass.
+ And as he was finishing up, a grandchild,
+ Dorothy, eight years old,
+ Followed him, dropping flower seeds.
+ Well, after a time
+ That was the greatest patch of weeds
+ You ever saw! And the old man sat,
+ Half blind, on the porch, and said:
+ "Good land, that grass is growing!"
+ And there was nothing but weeds except
+ A few nasturtiums here and there
+ That Dorothy had sown....
+ Well, I forgot.
+ There was a sunflower in one corner
+ That looked like a man with a golden beard
+ And a mass of tangled, curly hair--
+ And a pumpkin growing near it....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Say, Ed! lend me eighty dollars
+ To pay my life insurance.
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION
+
+
+ Of that dear vale where you and I have lain
+ Scanning the mysteries of life and death
+ I dreamed, though how impassable the space
+ Of time between the present and the past!
+ This was the vision that possessed my mind;
+ I thought the weird and gusty days of March
+ Had eased themselves in melody and peace.
+ Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,
+ Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh
+ Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs
+ Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;
+ And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;
+ The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;
+ The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;
+ Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries
+ Of awakened life had blossomed into May,
+ Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair
+ Blew music from the stops of watery stems,
+ And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,
+ Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.
+ Now as I lay in vision by the stream
+ That flows amidst our well beloved vale,
+ I looked throughout the vista stretched between
+ Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;
+ The other wooded, thick and quite obscure
+ With overgrowth, rank in the luxury
+ Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse
+ Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope
+ That met the grassy level of the vale;--
+ But still within the shadow of those woods,
+ Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,
+ There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths
+ Between them, up and on into the wood.
+ Here, as the sun had left his midday peak
+ The incommunicable blue of heaven blent
+ With his fierce splendor, filling all the air
+ With softened glory, while the pasturage
+ Trembled with color of the poppy blooms
+ Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.
+ Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream
+ Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.
+ Then as I looked upon the widest space
+ Of open meadow where the sunlight fell
+ In veils of tempered radiance, I saw
+ The form of one who had escaped the care
+ And equal dullness of our common day.
+ For like a bright mist rising from the earth
+ He made appearance, growing more distinct
+ Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre
+ Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.
+ Yea, I did see the glory of his hair
+ Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting
+ The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale
+ His figure stood distinct and his own shade
+ Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach
+ Augur of good, as if in hidden ways
+ Of loveliness the gods do still appear
+ The counselors of men, and even where
+ Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,
+ I cried, "Apollo"--and his form dissolved,
+ As if the nymphs of echo, who took up
+ The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,
+ By that same flight had startled the great god
+ To vanishment. And thereupon I woke
+ And disarrayed the figment of my thought.
+ For of the very air, magic with hues,
+ Blent with the distant objects, I had formed
+ The splendid apparition, and so knew
+ It was, alas! a dream within a dream!
+
+
+
+
+"SO WE GREW TOGETHER"
+
+
+ Reading over your letters I find you wrote me
+ "My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope
+ Said "master"--all as I had been your very son,
+ And not the orphan whom you adopted.
+ Well, you were father to me! And I can recall
+ The things you did for me or gave me:
+ One time we rode in a box car to Springfield
+ To see the greatest show on earth;
+ And one time you gave me redtop boots,
+ And one time a watch, and one time a gun.
+ Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice
+ Like a rooster trying to crow in August
+ Hatched in April, we'll say.
+ And you went about wrapped up in silence
+ With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors
+ Of what they were doing to you, and how
+ They wronged you--and we were poor--so poor!
+ And I could not understand why you failed,
+ And why if you did good things for the people
+ The people did not sustain you.
+ And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan,
+ So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser,
+ Or so little to be forgiven?...
+
+ They crowded you hard in those days.
+ But you fought like a wounded lion
+ For yourself I know, but for us, for me.
+ At last you fell ill, and for months you tottered
+ Around the streets as thin as death,
+ Trying to earn our bread, your great eyes glowing
+ And the silence around you like a shawl!
+ But something in you kept you up.
+ You grew well again and rosy with cheeks
+ Like an Indian peach almost, and eyes
+ Full of moonlight and sunlight, and a voice
+ That sang, and a humor that warded
+ The arrows off. But still between us
+ There was reticence; you kept me away
+ With a glittering hardness; perhaps you thought
+ I kept you away--for I was moving
+ In spheres you knew not, living through
+ Beliefs you believed in no more, and ideals
+ That were just mirrors of unrealities.
+ As a boy can be I was critical of you.
+ And reasons for your failures began to arise
+ In my mind--I saw specific facts here and there
+ With no philosophy at hand to weld them
+ And synthesize them into one truth--
+ And a rush of the strength of youth
+ Deluded me into thinking the world
+ Was something so easily understood and managed
+ While I knew it not at all in truth.
+ And an adolescent egotism
+ Made me feel you did not know me
+ Or comprehend the all that I was.
+ All this you divined....
+
+ So it went. And when I left you and passed
+ To the world, the city--still I see you
+ With eyes averted, and feel your hand
+ Limp with sorrow--you could not speak.
+ You thought of what I might be, and where
+ Life would take me, and how it would end--
+ There was longer silence. A year or two
+ Brought me closer to you. I saw the play now
+ And the game somewhat and understood your fights
+ And enmities, and hardnesses and silences,
+ And wild humor that had kept you whole--
+ For your soul had made it as an antitoxin
+ To the world's infections. And you swung to me
+ Closer than before--and a chumship began
+ Between us....
+
+ What vital power was yours!
+ You never tired, or needed sleep, or had a pain,
+ Or refused a delight. I loved the things now
+ You had always loved, a winning horse,
+ A roulette wheel, a contest of skill
+ In games or sports ... long talks on the corner
+ With men who have lived and tell you
+ Things with a rich flavor of old wisdom or humor;
+ A woman, a glass of whisky at a table
+ Where the fatigue of life falls, and our reserves
+ That wait for happiness come up in smiles,
+ Laughter, gentle confidences. Here you were
+ A man with youth, and I a youth was a man,
+ Exulting in your braveries and delight in life.
+ How you knocked that scamp over at Harry Varnell's
+ When he tried to take your chips! And how I,
+ Who had thought the devil in cards as a boy,
+ Loved to play with you now and watch you play;
+ And watch the subtle mathematics of your mind
+ Prophecy, divine the plays. Who was it
+ In your ancestry that you harked back to
+ And reproduced with such various gifts
+ Of flesh and spirit, Anglo-Saxon, Celt?--
+ You with such rapid wit and powerful skill
+ For catching illogic and whipping Error's
+ Fanged head from the body?...
+
+ I was really ahead of you
+ At this stage, with more self-consciousness
+ Of what man is, and what life is at last,
+ And how the spirit works, and by what laws,
+ With what inevitable force. But still I was
+ Behind you in that strength which in our youth,
+ If ever we have it, squeezes all the nectar
+ From the grapes. It seemed you'd never lose
+ This power and sense of joy, but yet at times
+ I saw another phase of you....
+
+ There was the day
+ We rode together north of the old town,
+ Past the old farm houses that I knew--
+ Past maple groves, and fields of corn in the shock,
+ And fields of wheat with the fall green.
+ It was October, but the clouds were summer's,
+ Lazily floating in a sky of June;
+ And a few crows flying here and there,
+ And a quail's call, and around us a great silence
+ That held at its core old memories
+ Of pioneers, and dead days, forgotten things!
+ I'll never forget how you looked that day. Your hair
+ Was turning silver now, but still your eyes
+ Burned as of old, and the rich olive glow
+ In your cheeks shone, with not a line or wrinkle!--
+ You seemed to me perfection--a youth, a man!
+ And now you talked of the world with the old wit,
+ And now of the soul--how such a man went down
+ Through folly or wrong done by him, and how
+ Man's death cannot end all,
+ There must be life hereafter!...
+
+ As you were that day, as you looked and spoke,
+ As the earth was, I hear as the soul of it all
+ Godard's _Dawn_, Dvorak's _Humoresque_,
+ The Morris Dances, Mendelssohn's _Barcarole_,
+ And old Scotch songs, _When the Kye Come Hame_,
+ And _The Moon Had Climbed the Highest Hill_,
+ The Musseta Waltz and Rudolph's Narrative;
+ Your great brow seemed Beethoven's
+ And the lust of life in your face Cellini's,
+ And your riotous fancy like Dumas.
+ I was nearer you now than ever before,
+ And finding each other thus I see to-day
+ How the human soul seeks the human soul
+ And finds the one it seeks at last.
+ For you know you can open a window
+ That looks upon embowered darkness,
+ When the flowers sleep and the trees are still
+ At Midnight, and no light burns in the room;
+ And you can hide your butterfly
+ Somewhere in the room, but soon you will see
+ A host of butterfly mates
+ Fluttering through the window to join
+ Your butterfly hid in the room.
+ It is somehow thus with souls....
+
+ This day then I understood it all:
+ Your vital democracy and love of men
+ And tolerance of life; and how the excess of these
+ Had wrought your sorrows in the days
+ When we were so poor, and the small of mind
+ Spoke of your sins and your connivance
+ With sinful men. You had lived it down,
+ Had triumphed over them, and you had grown.
+ Prosperous in the world and had passed
+ Into an easy mastery of life and beyond the thought
+ Of further conquests for things.
+ As the Brahmins say, no more you worshiped matter,
+ Or scarcely ghosts, or even the gods
+ With singleness of heart.
+ This day you worshiped Eternal Peace
+ Or Eternal Flame, with scarce a laugh or jest
+ To hide your worship; and I understood,
+ Seeing so many facets to you, why it was
+ Blind Condon always smiled to hear your voice,
+ And why it was in a greenroom years ago
+ Booth turned to you, marking your face
+ From all the rest, and said, "There is a man
+ Who might play Hamlet--better still Othello";
+ And why it was the women loved you; and the priest
+ Could feed his body and soul together drinking
+ A glass of beer and visiting with you....
+
+ Then something happened:
+ Your face grew smaller, your brow more narrow,
+ Dull fires burned in your eyes,
+ Your body shriveled, you walked with a cynical shuffle,
+ Your hands mixed the keys of life,
+ You had become a discord.
+ A monstrous hatred consumed you--
+ You had suffered the greatest wrong of all,
+ I knew and granted the wrong.
+ You had mounted up to sixty years, now breathing hard,
+ And just at the time that honor belonged to you
+ You were dishonored at the hands of a friend.
+ I wept for you, and still I wondered
+ If all I had grown to see in you and find in you
+ And love in you was just a fond illusion--
+ If after all I had not seen you aright as a boy:
+ Barbaric, hard, suspicious, cruel, redeemed
+ Alone by bubbling animal spirits--
+ Even these gone now, all of you smoke
+ Laden with stinging gas and lethal vapor....
+ Then you came forth again like the sun after storm--
+ The deadly uric acid driven out at last
+ Which had poisoned you and dwarfed your soul--
+ So much for soul!
+
+ The last time I saw you
+ Your face was full of golden light,
+ Something between flame and the richness of flesh.
+ You were yourself again, wholly yourself.
+ And oh, to find you again and resume
+ Our understanding we had worked so long to reach--
+ You calm and luminant and rich in thought!
+ This time it seemed we said but "yes" or "no"--
+ That was enough; we smoked together
+ And drank a glass of wine and watched
+ The leaves fall sitting on the porch....
+ Then life whirled me away like a leaf,
+ And I went about the crowded ways of New York.
+
+ And one night Alberta and I took dinner
+ At a place near Fourteenth Street where the music
+ Was like the sun on a breeze-swept lake
+ When every wave is a patine of fire,
+ And I thought of you not at all
+ Looking at Alberta and watching her white teeth
+ Bite off bits of Italian bread,
+ And watching her smile and the wide pupils
+ Of her eyes, electrified by wine
+ And music and the touch of our hands
+ Now and then across the table.
+ We went to her house at last.
+ And through a languorous evening.
+ Where no light was but a single candle,
+ We circled about and about a pending theme
+ Till at last we solved it suddenly in rapture
+ Almost by chance; and when I left
+ She followed me to the hall and leaned above
+ The railing about the stair for the farewell kiss--
+ And I went into the open air ecstatically,
+ With the stars in the spaces of sky between
+ The towering buildings, and the rush
+ Of wheels and clang of bells,
+ Still with the fragrance of her lips and cheeks
+ And glinting hair about me, delicate
+ And keen in spite of the open air.
+ And just as I entered the brilliant car
+ Something said to me you are dead--
+ I had not thought of you, was not thinking of you.
+ But I knew it was true, as it was,
+ For the telegram waited me at my room....
+ I didn't come back.
+ I could not bear to see the breathless breath
+ Over your brow--nor look at your face--
+ However you fared or where
+ To what victories soever--
+ Vanquished or seemingly vanquished!
+
+
+
+
+RAIN IN MY HEART
+
+
+ There is a quiet in my heart
+ Like one who rests from days of pain.
+ Outside, the sparrows on the roof
+ Are chirping in the dripping rain.
+
+ Rain in my heart; rain on the roof;
+ And memory sleeps beneath the gray
+ And windless sky and brings no dreams
+ Of any well remembered day.
+
+ I would not have the heavens fair,
+ Nor golden clouds, nor breezes mild,
+ But days like this, until my heart
+ To loss of you is reconciled.
+
+ I would not see you. Every hope
+ To know you as you were has ranged.
+ I, who am altered, would not find
+ The face I loved so greatly changed.
+
+
+
+
+THE LOOP
+
+
+ From State street bridge a snow-white glimpse of sea
+ Beyond the river walled in by red buildings,
+ O'ertopped by masts that take the sunset's gildings,
+ Roped to the wharf till spring shall set them free.
+ Great floes make known how swift the river's current.
+ Out of the north sky blows a cutting wind.
+ Smoke from the stacks and engines in a torrent
+ Whirls downward, by the eddying breezes thinned.
+ Enskyed are sign boards advertising soap,
+ Tobacco, coal, transcontinental trains.
+ A tug is whistling, straining at a rope,
+ Fixed to a dredge with derricks, scoops and cranes.
+ Down in the loop the blue-gray air enshrouds,
+ As with a cyclops' cape, the man-made hills
+ And towers of granite where the city crowds.
+ Above the din a copper's whistle shrills.
+ There is a smell of coffee and of spices.
+ We near the market place of trade's devices.
+ Blue smoke from out a roasting room is pouring.
+ A rooster crows, geese cackle, men are bawling.
+ Whips crack, trucks creak, it is the place of storing,
+ And drawing out and loading up and hauling
+ Fruit, vegetables and fowls and steaks and hams,
+ Oysters and lobsters, fish and crabs and clams.
+ And near at hand are restaurants and bars,
+ Hotels with rooms at fifty cents a day,
+ Beer tunnels, pool rooms, places where cigars
+ And cigarettes their window signs display;
+ Mixed in with letterings of printed tags,
+ Twine, boxes, cartels, sacks and leather bags,
+ Wigs, telescopes, eyeglasses, ladies' tresses,
+ Or those who manicure or fashion dresses,
+ Or sell us putters, tennis balls or brassies,
+ Make shoes, pull teeth, or fit the eye with glasses.
+
+ And now the rows of windows showing laces,
+ Silks, draperies and furs and costly vases,
+ Watches and mirrors, silver cups and mugs,
+ Emeralds, diamonds, Indian, Persian rugs,
+ Hats, velvets, silver buckles, ostrich-plumes,
+ Drugs, violet water, powder and perfumes.
+ Here is a monstrous winking eye--beneath
+ A showcase by an entrance full of teeth.
+ Here rubber coats, umbrellas, mackintoshes,
+ Hoods, rubber boots and arctics and galoshes.
+ Here is half a block of overcoats,
+ In this bleak time of snow and slender throats.
+ Then windows of fine linen, snakewood canes,
+ Scarfs, opera hats, in use where fashion reigns.
+ As when the hive swarms, so the crowded street
+ Roars to the shuffling of innumerable feet.
+ Skyscrapers soar above them; they go by
+ As bees crawl, little scales upon the skin
+ Of a great dragon winding out and in.
+ Above them hangs a tangled tree of signs,
+ Suspended or uplifted like daedalian
+ Hieroglyphics when the saturnalian
+ Night commences, and their racing lines
+ Run fire of blue and yellow in a puzzle,
+ Bewildering to the eyes of those who guzzle,
+ And gourmandize and stroll and seek the bubble
+ Of happiness to put away their trouble.
+
+ Around the loop the elevated crawls,
+ And giant shadows sink against the walls
+ Where ten to twenty stories strive to hold
+ The pale refraction of the sunset's gold.
+ Slop underfoot, we pass beneath the loop.
+ The crowd is uglier, poorer; there are smells
+ As from the depths of unsuspected hells,
+ And from a groggery where beer and soup
+ Are sold for five cents to the thieves and bums.
+ Here now are huge cartoons in red and blue
+ Of obese women and of skeleton men,
+ Egyptian dancers, twined with monstrous snakes,
+ Before the door a turbaned lithe Hindoo,
+ A bagpipe shrilling, underneath a den
+ Of opium, whence a man with hand that shakes,
+ Rolling a cigarette, so palely comes.
+ The clang of car bells and the beat of drums.
+ Draft horses clamping with their steel-shod hoofs.
+ The buildings have grown small and black and worn;
+ The sky is more beholden; o'er the roofs
+ A flock of pigeons soars; with dresses torn
+ And yellow faces, labor women pass
+ Some Chinese gabbling; and there, buying fruit,
+ Stands a fair girl who is a late recruit
+ To those poor women slain each year by lust.
+ 'Tis evening now and trade will soon begin.
+ The family entrance beckons for a glass
+ Of hopeful mockery, the piano's din
+ Into the street with sounds of rasping wires
+ Filters, and near a pawner's window shows
+ Pistols, accordions; and, luring buyers,
+ A Jew stands mumbling to the passer-by
+ Of jewelry and watches and old clothes.
+ A limousine gleams quickly--with a cry
+ A legless man fastened upon a board
+ With casters 'neath it by a sudden shove
+ Darts out of danger. And upon the corner
+ A lassie tells a man that God is love,
+ Holding a tambourine with its copper hoard
+ To be augmented by the drunken scorner.
+ A woman with no eyeballs in her sockets
+ Plays "Rock of Ages" on a wheezy organ.
+ A newsboy with cold hands thrust in his pockets
+ Cries, "All about the will of Pierpont Morgan!"
+ The roofline of the street now sinks and dwindles.
+ The windows are begrimed with dust and beer.
+ A child half clothed, with legs as thin as spindles,
+ Carries a basket with some bits of coal.
+ Between lace curtains eyes of yellow leer,
+ The cheeks splotched with white places like the skin
+ Inside an eggshell--destitute of soul.
+ One sees a brass lamp oozing kerosene
+ Upon a stand whereon her elbows lean;
+ Lighted, it soon will welcome negroes in.
+
+ The railroad tracks are near. We almost choke
+ From filth whirled from the street and stinging vapors.
+ Great engines vomit gas and heavy smoke
+ Upon a north wind driving tattered papers,
+ Dry dung and dust and refuse down the street.
+ A circumambient roar as of a wheel
+ Whirring far off--a monster's heart whose beat
+ Is full of murmurs, comes as we retreat
+ Towards Twenty-second. And a man with jaw
+ Set like a tiger's, with a dirty beard,
+ Skulks toward the loop, with heavy wrists red-raw
+ Glowing above his pockets where his hands
+ Pushed tensely round his hips the coat tails draw,
+ And show what seems a slender piece of metal
+ In his hip pocket. On these barren strands
+ He waits for midnight for old scores to settle
+ Against his ancient foe society,
+ Who keeps the soup house and who builds the jails.
+ Switchmen and firemen with their dinner pails
+ Go by him homeward, and he wonders if
+ These fellows know a hundred thousand workers
+ Walk up and down the city's highways, stiff
+ From cold and hunger, doomed to poverty,
+ As wretched as the thieves and crooks and shirkers.
+ He scurries to the lake front, loiters past
+ The windows of wax lights with scarlet shades,
+ Where smiling diners back of ambuscades
+ Of silk and velvet hear not winter's blast
+ Blowing across the lake. He has a thought
+ Of Michigan, where once at picking berries
+ He spent a summer--then his eye is caught
+ At Randolph street by written light which tarries,
+ Then like a film runs into sentences.
+ He sees it all as from a black abyss.
+ Taxis with skid chains rattle, limousines
+ Draw up to awnings; for a space he catches
+ A scent of musk or violets, sees the patches
+ On powdered cheeks of furred and jeweled queens.
+ The color round his cruel mouth grows whiter,
+ He thrusts his coarse hands in his pockets tighter:
+ He is a thief, he knows he is a thief,
+ He is a thief found out, and, as he knows,
+ The whole loop is a kingdom held in fief
+ By men who work with laws instead of blows
+ From sling shots, so he curses under breath
+ The money and the invisible hand that owns
+ From year to year, in spite of change and death,
+ The wires for the lights and telephones,
+ The railways on the streets, and overhead
+ The railways, and beneath the winding tunnel
+ Which crooks stole from the city for a runnel
+ To drain her nickels; and the pipes of lead
+ Which carry gas, wrapped round us like a snake,
+ And round the courts, whose grip no court can break.
+ He curses bitterly all those who rise,
+ And rule by just the spirit which he plies
+ Coarsely against the world's great store of wealth;
+ Bankers and usurers and cliques whose stealth
+ Works witchcraft through the market and the press,
+ And hires editors, or owns the stock
+ Controlling papers, playing with finesse
+ The city's thinking, that they may unlock
+ Treasures and powers like burglars in the dark.
+ And thinking thus and cursing, through a flurry
+ Of sudden snow he hastens on to Clark.
+ In a cheap room there is an eye to mark
+ His coming and be glad. His footsteps hurry.
+ She will have money, earned this afternoon
+ Through men who took her from a near saloon
+ Wherein she sits at table to dragoon
+ Roughnecks or simpletons upon a lark.
+ Within a little hall a fierce-eyed youth
+ Rants of the burdens on the people's backs--
+ He would cure all things with the single tax.
+ A clergyman demands more gospel truth,
+ Speaking to Christians at a weekly dinner.
+ A parlor Marxian, for a beginner
+ Would take the railways. And amid applause
+ Where lawyers dine, a judge says all will be
+ Well if we hand down to posterity
+ Respect for courts and judges and the laws.
+ An anarchist would fight. Upon the whole,
+ Another thinks, to cultivate one's soul
+ Is most important--let the passing show
+ Go where it wills, and where it wills to go.
+
+ Outside the stars look down. Stars are content
+ To be so quiet and indifferent.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN UNDER THE ICY EAVES
+
+
+ When under the icy eaves
+ The swallow heralds the sun,
+ And the dove for its lost mate grieves
+ And the young lambs play and run;
+ When the sea is a plane of glass,
+ And the blustering winds are still,
+ And the strength of the thin snows pass
+ In mists o'er the tawny hill--
+ The spirit of life awakes
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+ When the sick man seeks the air,
+ And the graves of the dead grow green,
+ Where the children play unaware
+ Of the faces no longer seen;
+ When all we have felt or can feel,
+ And all we are or have been,
+ And all the heart can hide or reveal,
+ Knocks gently, and enters in:--
+ The spirit of life awakes,
+ In the fresh flags by the lakes.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAR
+
+
+ We paused to say good-by,
+ As we thought for a little while,
+ Alone in the car, in the corner
+ Around the turn of the aisle.
+
+ A quiver came in your voice,
+ Your eyes were sorrowful too;
+ 'Twas over--I strode to the doorway,
+ Then turned to wave an adieu.
+
+ But you had not come from the corner,
+ And though I had gone so far,
+ I retraced, and faced you coming
+ Into the aisle of the car.
+
+ You stopped as one who was caught
+ In an evil mood by surprise.--
+ I want to forget, I am trying
+ To forget the look in your eyes.
+
+ Your face was blank and cold,
+ Like Lot's wife turned to salt.
+ I suddenly trapped and discovered
+ Your soul in a hidden fault.
+
+ Your eyes were tearless and wide,
+ And your wide eyes looked on me
+ Like a Maenad musing murder,
+ Or the mask of Melpomene.
+
+ And there in a flash of lightning
+ I learned what I never could prove:
+ That your heart contained no sorrow,
+ And your heart contained no love.
+
+ And my heart is light and heavy,
+ And this is the reason why:
+ I am glad we parted forever,
+ And sad for the last good-by.
+
+
+
+
+SIMON SURNAMED PETER
+
+
+ Time that has lifted you over them all--
+ O'er John and o'er Paul;
+ Writ you in capitals, made you the chief
+ Word on the leaf--
+ How did you, Peter, when ne'er on His breast
+ You leaned and were blest--
+ And none except Judas and you broke the faith
+ To the day of His death,--
+ You, Peter, the fisherman, worthy of blame,
+ Arise to this fame?
+
+ 'Twas you in the garden who fell into sleep
+ And the watch failed to keep,
+ When Jesus was praying and pressed with the weight
+ Of the oncoming fate.
+ 'Twas you in the court of the palace who warmed
+ Your hands as you stormed
+ At the damsel, denying Him thrice, when she cried:
+ "He walked at his side!"
+ You, Peter, a wave, a star among clouds, a reed in the wind,
+ A guide of the blind,
+ Both smiter and flyer, but human alway, I protest,
+ Beyond all the rest.
+
+ When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared
+ Did you wait till he neared?
+ You leaped in the water, not dreading the worst
+ In your joy to be first
+ To greet Him and tell Him of all that had passed
+ Since you saw Him the last.
+ You had slept while He watched, but fierce were you, fierce and awake
+ When they sought Him to take,
+ And cursing, no doubt, as you smote off, as one of the least,
+ The ear of the priest.
+ Then Andrew and all of them fled, but you followed Him,
+ hoping for strength
+ To save him at length
+ Till you lied to the damsel, oh penitent Peter, and crept,
+ Into hiding and wept.
+
+ Oh well! But he asked all the twelve, "Who am I?"
+ And who made reply?
+ As you leaped in the sea, so you spoke as you smote with the sword;
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+ John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,
+ "Nay, lovest thou me?"
+ Thrice over, as thrice you denied Him, and chose you to lead
+ His sheep and to feed;
+ And gave you, He said, the keys of the den and the fold
+ To have and to hold.
+ You were a poor jailer, oh Peter, the dreamer, who saw
+ The death of the law
+ In the dream of the vessel that held all the four-footed beasts,
+ Unclean for the priests;
+ And heard in the vision a trumpet that all men are worth
+ The peace of the earth
+ And rapture of heaven hereafter,--oh Peter, what power
+ Was yours in that hour:
+ You warder and jailer and sealer of fates and decrees,
+ To use the big keys
+ With which to reveal and fling wide all the soul and the scheme
+ Of the Galilee dream,
+ When you flashed in a trice, as later you smote with the sword:
+ "Thou art Christ, even Lord!"
+
+ We men, Simon Peter, we men also give you the crown
+ O'er Paul and o'er John.
+ We write you in capitals, make you the chief
+ Word on the leaf.
+ We know you as one of our flesh, and 'tis well
+ You are warder of hell,
+ And heaven's gatekeeper forever to bind and to loose--
+ Keep the keys if you choose.
+ Not rock of you, fire of you make you sublime
+ In the annals of time.
+ You were called by Him, Peter, a rock, but we give you the name
+ Of Peter the Flame.
+ For you struck a spark, as the spark from the shock
+ Of steel upon rock.
+ The rock has his use but the flame gives the light
+ In the way in the night:--
+ Oh Peter, the dreamer, impetuous, human, divine,
+ Gnarled branch of the vine!
+
+
+
+
+ALL LIFE IN A LIFE
+
+
+ His father had a large family
+ Of girls and boys and he was born and bred
+ In a barn or kind of cattle shed.
+ But he was a hardy youngster and grew to be
+ A boy with eyes that sparkled like a rod
+ Of white hot iron in the blacksmith shop.
+ His face was ruddy like a rising moon,
+ And his hair was black as sheep's wool that is black.
+ And he had rugged arms and legs and a strong back.
+ And he had a voice half flute and half bassoon.
+ And from his toes up to his head's top
+ He was a man, simple but intricate.
+ And most men differ who try to delineate
+ His life and fate.
+
+ He never seemed ashamed
+ Of poverty or of his origin. He was a wayward child,
+ Nevertheless though wise and mild,
+ And thoughtful but when angered then he flamed
+ As fire does in a forge.
+ When he was ten years old he ran away
+ To be alone and watch the sea, and the stars
+ At midnight from a mountain gorge.
+
+ When he returned his parents scolded him
+ And threatened him with bolts and bars.
+ Then they grew soft for his return and gay
+ And with their love would have enfolded him.
+ But even at ten years old he had a way
+ Of gazing at you with a look austere
+ Which gave his kinfolk fear.
+ He had no childlike love for father or mother,
+ Sister or brother,
+ They were the same to him as any other.
+ He was a little cold, a little queer.
+
+ His father was a laborer and now
+ They made the boy work for his daily bread.
+ They say he read
+ A book or two during these years of work.
+ But if there was a secret prone to lurk
+ Between the pages under the light of his brow
+ It came forth. And if he had a woman
+ In love or out of love, or a companion or a chum,
+ History is dumb.
+ So far as we know he dreamed and worked with hands
+ And learned to know his genius' commands
+ Or what is called one's daemon.
+
+ And this became at last the city's call.
+ He had now reached the age of thirty years,
+ And found a Dream of Life and a solution
+ For slavery of soul and even all
+ Miseries that flow from things material.
+ To free the world was his soul's resolution.
+ But his family had great fears
+ For him, knowing the evil
+ Which might befall him, seeing that the light
+ Of his own dream had blinded his mind's eyes.
+ They could not tell but what he had a devil.
+ But still in their tears despite,
+ And warnings he departed with replies
+ That when a man's genius calls him
+ He must obey no matter what befalls him.
+
+ What he had in his mind was growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in his mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of Falsehood and Unbrotherly Desire.--
+ What he had in his mind was simply Love.
+ And it was strange he preached the sword and force
+ To establish Love, but it was not strange,
+ Since he did this, his life took on a change.
+ And what he taught seems muddled at its source
+ With moralizing and with moral strife.
+ For morals are merely the Truth diluted
+ And sweetened up and suited
+ To the business and bread of Life.
+
+ And now this City was just what you'd find
+ A city anywhere,
+ A turmoil and a Vanity Fair,
+ A sort of heaven and a sort of Tophet.
+ There were so many leaders of his kind
+ The city didn't care
+ For one additional prophet.
+ He said some extravagant things
+ And planted a few stings
+ Under the rich man's hide.
+ And one of the sensational newspapers
+ Gave him a line or two for cutting capers
+ In front of the Palace of Justice and the Church.
+ But all of the first grade people took the other side
+ Of the street when they saw him coming
+ With a rag tag crowd singing and humming,
+ And curious boys and men up in a perch
+ Of a tree or window taking the spectacle in,
+ And the Corybantic din
+ Of a Salvation Army as it were.
+ And whatever he dreamed when he lived in a little town
+ The intelligent people ignored him, and this is the stir
+ And the only stir he made in the city.
+
+ But there was a certain sinister
+ Fellow who came to him hearing of his renown
+ And said "You can be Mayor of this city,
+ We need a man like you for Mayor."
+ And others said "You'd make a lawyer or a politician,
+ Look how the people follow you;
+ Why don't you hire out as a special writer,
+ You could become a business man, a rhetorician,
+ You could become a player,
+ You can grow rich. There's nothing for a fighter,
+ Fighting as you are, but to end in ruin."
+ But he turned from them on his way pursuing
+ The dream he had in view.
+
+ He had a rich man or two
+ Who took up with him against the powerful frown
+ Which looked him down.
+ For you'll always find a rich man or two
+ To take up with anything.
+ There are those who can't get into society or bring
+ Their riches to a social recognition;
+ Or ill-formed souls who lack the real patrician
+ Spirit for life.
+ But as for him he didn't care, he passed
+ Where the richness of living was rife.
+ And like wise Goethe talking to the last
+ With cabmen rather than with lords
+ He sat about the markets and the fountains,
+ He walked about the country and the mountains,
+ Took trips upon the lakes and waded fords
+ Barefooted, laughing as a young animal
+ Disports itself amid the festival
+ Of warm winds, sunshine, summer's carnival--
+ With laborers, carpenters, seamen
+ And some loose women.
+ And certain notable sinners
+ Gave him dinners.
+ And he went to weddings and to places where youth slakes
+ Its thirst for happiness, and they served him cakes
+ And wine wherever he went.
+ And he ate and drank and spent
+ His time in feasting and in telling stories,
+ And singing poems of lilies and of trees,
+ With crowds of people crowded around his knees
+ That searched with lightning secrets hidden
+ Of life and of life's glories,
+ Of death and of the soul's way after death.
+
+ Time makes amends usually for scandal's breath,
+ Which touched him to his earthly ruination.
+ But this city had a Civic Federation,
+ And a certain social order which intrigues
+ Through churches, courts, with an endless ramification
+ Of money and morals to save itself.
+ And this city had a Bar Association,
+ Also its Public Efficiency Leagues
+ For laying honest men upon the shelf
+ While making private pelf
+ Secure and free to increase.
+ And this city had illustrious Pharisees
+ And this city had a legion
+ Of men who make a business of religion,
+ With eyes one inch apart,
+ Dark and narrow of heart,
+ Who give themselves and give the city no peace,
+ And who are everywhere the best police
+ For Life as business.
+ And when they saw this youth
+ Was telling the truth,
+ And that his followers were multiplying,
+ And were going about rejoicing and defying
+ The social order and were stirring up
+ The dregs of discontent in the cup
+ With the hand of their own happiness,
+ They saw dynamic mysteries
+ In the poems of lilies and trees,
+ Therefore they held him for a felony.
+
+ If you will take a kernel of wheat
+ And first make free
+ The outer flake and then pare off the meat
+ Of edible starch you'll find at the kernel's core
+ The life germ. And this young man's words were dim
+ With blasphemy, sedition at the rim,
+ Which fired the heads of dreamers like new wine.
+ But this was just the outward force of him.
+ For this young man's philosophy was more
+ Than such external ferment, being divine
+ With secrets so profound no plummet line
+ Can altogether sound it. It means growth
+ Of soul by watching,
+ And the creation of eyes
+ Over your mind's eyes to supervise
+ A clear activity and to ward off sloth.
+ What he had in mind was scotching
+ And killing the snake of Hatred and stripping the glove
+ From the hand of Hypocrisy and quenching the fire
+ Of falsehood and unbrotherly Desire.
+ What he had in mind was simply Love.
+
+ But he was prosecuted
+ As a rebel and as a rebel executed
+ Right in a public place where all could see.
+ And his mother watched him hang for the felony.
+ He hated to die being but thirty-three,
+ And fearing that his poems might be lost.
+ And certain members of the Bar Association,
+ And of the Civic Federation,
+ And of the League of Public Efficiency,
+ And a legion
+ Of men devoted to religion,
+ With policemen, soldiers, roughs,
+ Loose women, thieves and toughs,
+ Came out to see him die,
+ And hooted at him giving up the ghost
+ In great despair and with a fearful cry!
+
+ And after him there was a man named Paul
+ Who almost spoiled it all.
+
+ And protozoan things like hypocrites,
+ And parasitic things who make a food
+ Of the mysteries of God for earthly power
+ Must wonder how before this young man's hour
+ They lived without his blood,
+ Shed on that day, and which
+ In red cells is so rich.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT YOU WILL
+
+
+ April rain, delicious weeping,
+ Washes white bones from the grave,
+ Long enough have they been sleeping.
+ They are cleansed, and now they crave
+ Once more on the earth to gather
+ Pleasure from the springtime weather.
+
+ The pine trees and the long dark grass
+ Feed on what is placed below.
+ Think you not that there doth pass
+ In them something we did know?
+ This spell--well, friends, I greet ye once again
+ With joy--but with a most unuttered pain.
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY
+
+
+ The Sun hung like a red balloon
+ As if he would not rise;
+ For listless Helios drowsed and yawned.
+ He cared not whether the morning dawned,
+ The brother of Eos and the Moon
+ Stretched him and rubbed his eyes.
+
+ He would have dreamed the dream again
+ That found him under sea:
+ He saw Zeus sit by Hera's side,
+ He saw Haephestos with his bride;
+ He traced from Enna's flowery plain
+ The child Persephone.
+
+ There was a time when heaven's vault
+ Cracked like a temple's roof.
+ A new hierarchy burst its shell,
+ And as the sapphire ceiling fell,
+ From stern Jehovah's mad assault,
+ Vast spaces stretched aloof:
+
+ Great blue black depths of frozen air
+ Engulfed the soul of Zeus.
+ And then Jehovah reigned instead.
+ For Judah was living and Greece was dead.
+ And Hope was born to nurse Despair,
+ And the Devil was let loose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Far off in the waste empyrean
+ The world was a golden mote.
+ And the Sun hung like a red balloon,
+ Or a bomb afire o'er a barracoon.
+ And the sea was drab, and the sea was green
+ Like a many colored coat.
+
+ The sea was pink like cyclamen,
+ And red as a blushing rose.
+ It shook anon like the sensitive plant,
+ Under the golden light aslant.
+ The little waves patted the shore again
+ Where the restless river flows.
+
+ And thus it has been for ages gone--
+ For a hundred thousand years;
+ Ere Buddha lived or Jesus came,
+ Or ever the city had place or name,
+ The sea thrilled through at the kiss of dawn
+ Like a soul of smiles and tears.
+
+ When the city's seat was a waste of sand,
+ And the hydra lived alone,
+ The sound of the sea was here to be heard,
+ And the moon rose up like a great white bird,
+ Sailing aloft from the yellow strand
+ To her silent midnight throne.
+
+ Now Helios eyes the universe,
+ And he knows the world is small.
+ Of old he walked through pagan Tyre,
+ Babylon, Sodom destroyed by fire,
+ And sought to unriddle the primal curse
+ That holds the race in thrall.
+
+ So he stepped from the Sun in robes of flame
+ As the city woke from sleep.
+ He walked the markets, walked the squares,
+ He walked the places of sweets and snares,
+ Where men buy honor and barter shame,
+ And the weak are killed as sheep.
+
+ He saw the city is one great mart
+ Where life is bought and sold.
+ Men rise to get them meat and bread
+ To barter for drugs or coffin the dead.
+ And dawn is but a plucked-up heart
+ For the dreary game of gold.
+
+ "Ho! ho!" said Helios, "father Zeus
+ Would never botch it so.
+ If he had stolen Joseph's bride,
+ And let his son be crucified
+ The son's blood had been put to use
+ To ease the people's woe."
+
+ "He of the pest and the burning bush,
+ Of locusts, lice, and frogs,
+ Who made me stand, veiling my light,
+ While Joshua slaughtered the Amorite,
+ Who blacked the skin of the sons of Cush,
+ And builded the synagogues."
+
+ "And Jehovah the great is omnipotent,
+ While Zeus was bound by Fate.
+ But Athens fell when Peter took Rome,
+ And Chicago is made His hecatomb.
+ And since from the hour His son was sent
+ The hypocrite holds the state."
+
+ Helios traversed the city streets
+ And this is what he saw:
+ Some sold their honor, some their skill,
+ The soldier hired himself to kill,
+ The judges bartered the judgment seats
+ And trafficked in the law.
+
+ The starving artist sold his youth,
+ The writer sold his pen;
+ The lawyer sharpened up his wits
+ Like a burglar filing auger bits,
+ And Jesus' vicar sold the truth
+ To the famished sons of men.
+
+ In every heart flamed cruelty
+ Like a little emerald snake.
+ And each one knew if he should stand
+ In another's way the dagger-hand
+ Would make the stronger the feofee
+ Of the coveted wapentake.
+
+ There's not a thing men will not do
+ For honor, gold, or power.
+ We smile and call the city fair,
+ We call life lovely and debonair,
+ But Proserpina never grew
+ So deadly a passion flower.
+
+ Go live for an hour in a tropic land
+ Hid near a sinking pool:
+ The lion and tiger come to drink,
+ The boa crawls to the water's brink,
+ The elephant bull kneels down in the sand
+ And drinks till his throat is cool.
+
+ Jehovah will keep you awhile unseen
+ As you lie behind the rocks.
+ But go, if you dare, to slake your thirst,
+ Though Jesus died for our life accursed
+ Your bones by the tiger will be licked clean
+ As he licks the bones of an ox.
+
+ And the sky may be blue as fleur de lis,
+ And the earth be tulip red;
+ And God in heaven, and life all good
+ While you lie hid in the underwood:
+ And the city may leave you sorrow free
+ If you ask it not for bread.
+
+ One day Achilles lost a horse
+ While the pest at Troy was rife,
+ And a million maggots fought and ate
+ Like soldiers storming a city's gate,
+ And Thersites said, as he looked at the corse,
+ "Achilles, that is life."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Day fades and from a million cells
+ The office people pour.
+ Like bees that crawl on the honeycomb
+ The workers scurry to what is home,
+ And trains and traffic and clanging bells
+ Make the canon highways roar.
+
+ Helios walked the city's ways
+ Till the lights began to shine.
+ Then the janitor women start to scrub
+ And the Pharisees up and enter the club,
+ And the harlot wakes, and the music plays
+ And the glasses glow with wine.
+
+ Now we're good fellows one and all,
+ And the buffet storms with talk.
+ "The market's closed and trade's at end
+ We had our battle, now I'm your friend."
+ And thanks to the spirit of alcohol
+ Men go for a ride or walk.
+
+ Oh but traffic is not all done
+ Nor everything yet sold.
+ There's woman to win, and plots to weave,
+ There's a heart to hurt, or one to deceive,
+ And bargains to bind ere rise of Sun
+ To garner the morrow's gold.
+
+ The market at night is as full of fraud
+ As the market kept by day.
+ The courtesan buys a soul with a look,
+ A dinner tempers the truth in a book,
+ And love is sold till love is a bawd,
+ And falsehood froths in the play.
+
+ And men and women sell their smiles
+ For friendship's lifeless dregs.
+ For fear of the morrow we bend and bow
+ To moneybags with the slanting brow.
+ For the heart that knows life's little wiles
+ Seldom or never begs.
+
+ "Poor men," sighed Helios, "how they long
+ For the ultimate fire of love.
+ They yearn, through life, like the peacock moth,
+ And die worn out in search of the troth.
+ For love in the soul is the siren song
+ That wrecks the peace thereof."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Helios turned from the world and fled
+ As the convent bell tolled six.
+ For he caught a glimpse of an aged crone
+ Who knelt beside a coffin alone;
+ She had sold her cloak to shrive the dead
+ And buy a crucifix!
+
+
+
+
+THE IDIOT
+
+
+ Two children in a garden
+ Shouting for joy
+ Were playing dolls and houses,
+ A girl and boy.
+ I smiled at a neighbor window,
+ And watched them play
+ Under a budding oak tree
+ On a wintry day.
+
+ And then a board half broken
+ In the high fence
+ Fell over and there entered,
+ I know not whence,
+ A jailbird face of yellow
+ With a vacant sulk,
+ His body was a sickly
+ Thing of bulk.
+
+ His open mouth was slavering,
+ And a green light
+ Turned disc-like in his eyeballs,
+ Like a dog's at night.
+ His teeth were like a giant's,
+ And far apart;
+ I saw him reel on the children
+ With a stopping heart.
+ He trampled their dolls and ruined
+ The house they made;
+ He struck to earth the children
+ With a dirty spade.
+ As a tiger growls with an antelope
+ After the hunt,
+ Over the little faces
+ I heard him grunt.
+
+ I stood at the window frozen,
+ And short of breath,
+ And then I saw the idiot
+ Was Master Death!
+
+ A bird in the lilac bushes
+ Began to sing.
+ The garden colored before me
+ To the kiss of spring.
+ And the yellow face in a moment
+ Was a mystic white;
+ The matted hair was softened
+ To starry light.
+ The ragged coat flowed downward
+ Into a robe;
+ He carried a sword and a balance
+ And stood on a globe.
+ I watched him from the window
+ Under a spell;
+ The idiot was the angel
+ Azrael!
+
+
+
+
+HELEN OF TROY
+
+On an ancient vase representing in bas-relief the flight of
+Helen.
+
+
+ This is the vase of Love
+ Whose feet would ever rove
+ O'er land and sea;
+ Whose hopes forever seek
+ Bright eyes, the vermeiled cheek,
+ And ways made free.
+
+ Do we not understand
+ Why thou didst leave thy land,
+ Thy spouse, thy hearth?
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy mirth our mirth.
+
+ For Paris did appear,--
+ Curled hair and rosy ear
+ And tapering hands.
+ He spoke--the blood ran fast,
+ He touched, and killed the past,
+ And clove its bands.
+
+ And this, I deem, is why
+ The restless ages sigh,
+ Helen, for thee.
+ Whate'er we do or dream,
+ Whate'er we say or seem,
+ We would be free.
+
+ We would forsake old love,
+ And all the pain thereof,
+ And all the care;
+ We would find out new seas,
+ And lands more strange than these,
+ And flowers more fair.
+
+ We would behold fresh skies
+ Where summer never dies
+ And amaranths spring;
+ Lands where the halcyon hours
+ Nest over scented bowers
+ On folded wing.
+
+ We would be crowned with bays,
+ And spend the long bright days
+ On sea or shore;
+ Or sit by haunted woods,
+ And watch the deep sea's moods,
+ And hear its roar.
+
+ Beneath that ancient sky
+ Who is not fain to fly
+ As men have fled?
+ Ah! we would know relief
+ From marts of wine and beef,
+ And oil and bread.
+
+ Helen of Troy, Greek art
+ Hath made our heart thy heart,
+ Thy love our love.
+ For poesy, like thee,
+ Must fly and wander free
+ As the wild dove.
+
+
+
+
+O GLORIOUS FRANCE
+
+
+ You have become a forge of snow white fire,
+ A crucible of molten steel, O France!
+ Your sons are stars who cluster to a dawn
+ And fade in light for you, O glorious France!
+ They pass through meteor changes with a song
+ Which to all islands and all continents
+ Says life is neither comfort, wealth, nor fame,
+ Nor quiet hearthstones, friendship, wife nor child
+ Nor love, nor youth's delight, nor manhood's power,
+ Nor many days spent in a chosen work,
+ Nor honored merit, nor the patterned theme
+ Of daily labor, nor the crowns nor wreaths
+ Or seventy years.
+
+ These are not all of life,
+ O France, whose sons amid the rolling thunder
+ Of cannon stand in trenches where the dead
+ Clog the ensanguined ice. But life to these
+ Prophetic and enraptured souls is vision,
+ And the keen ecstasy of fated strife,
+ And divination of the loss as gain,
+ And reading mysteries with brightened eyes
+ In fiery shock and dazzling pain before
+ The orient splendor of the face of Death,
+ As a great light beside a shadowy sea;
+ And in a high will's strenuous exercise,
+ Where the warmed spirit finds its fullest strength
+ And is no more afraid. And in the stroke
+ Of azure lightning when the hidden essence
+ And shifting meaning of man's spiritual worth
+ And mystical significance in time
+ Are instantly distilled to one clear drop
+ Which mirrors earth and heaven.
+
+ This is life
+ Flaming to heaven in a minute's span
+ When the breath of battle blows the smoldering spark.
+ And across these seas
+ We who cry Peace and treasure life and cling
+ To cities, happiness, or daily toil
+ For daily bread, or trail the long routine
+ Of seventy years, taste not the terrible wine
+ Whereof you drink, who drain and toss the cup
+ Empty and ringing by the finished feast;
+ Or have it shaken from your hand by sight
+ Of God against the olive woods.
+
+ As Joan of Arc amid the apple trees
+ With sacred joy first heard the voices, then
+ Obeying plunged at Orleans in a field
+ Of spears and lived her dream and died in fire,
+ Thou, France, hast heard the voices and hast lived
+ The dream and known the meaning of the dream,
+ And read its riddle: How the soul of man
+ May to one greatest purpose make itself
+ A lens of clearness, how it loves the cup
+ Of deepest truth, and how its bitterest gall
+ Turns sweet to soul's surrender.
+
+ And you say:
+ Take days for repetition, stretch your hands
+ For mocked renewal of familiar things:
+ The beaten path, the chair beside the window,
+ The crowded street, the task, the accustomed sleep,
+ And waking to the task, or many springs
+ Of lifted cloud, blue water, flowering fields--
+ The prison house grows close no less, the feast
+ A place of memory sick for senses dulled
+ Down to the dusty end where pitiful Time
+ Grown weary cries Enough!
+
+
+
+
+FOR A DANCE
+
+
+ There is in the dance
+ The joy of children on a May day lawn.
+ The fragments of old dreams and dead romance
+ Come to us from the dancers who are gone.
+
+ What strains of ancient blood
+ Move quicker to the music's passionate beat?
+ I see the gulls fly over a shadowy flood
+ And Munster fields of barley and of wheat.
+
+ And I see sunny France,
+ And the vine's tendrils quivering to the light,
+ And faces, faces, yearning for the dance
+ With wistful eyes that look on our delight.
+
+ They live through us again
+ And we through them, who wish for lips and eyes
+ Wherewith to feel, not fancy, the old pain
+ Passed with reluctance through the centuries
+
+ To us, who in the maze
+ Of dancing and hushed music woven afresh
+ Amid the shifting mirrors of hours and days
+ Know not our spirit, neither know our flesh;
+
+ Nor what ourselves have been,
+ Through the long way that brought us to the dance:
+ I see a little green by Camolin
+ And odorous orchards blooming in Provence.
+
+ Two listen to the roar
+ Of waves moon-smitten, where no steps intrude.
+ Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?
+ Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LIFE IS REAL
+
+
+ We rode, we rode against the wind.
+ The countless lights along the town
+ Made the town blacker for their fire,
+ And you were always looking down.
+
+ To 'scape the blustering breath of March,
+ Or was it for your mind's disguise?
+ Still I could shut my eyes and see
+ The turquoise color of your eyes.
+
+ Surely your ermine furs were warm,
+ And warm your flowing cloak of red;
+ Was it the wild wind kept you thus
+ Pensive and with averted head?
+
+ I scarcely spoke, my words were swept
+ Like winged things in the wind's despite.
+ We rode, and with what shadow speed
+ Across the darkness of the night!
+
+ Without a word, without a look.
+ What was the charm and what the spell
+ That made one hour of life become
+ A memory ever memorable?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All craft, all labor, all desire,
+ All toil of age, all hope of youth
+ Are shadows from the fount of fire
+ And mummers of the truth.
+
+ How bloodless books, how pulseless art,
+ Vain kingly and imperial zeal,
+ Vain all memorials of the heart!
+ When Life itself is real!
+
+ We traced the golden clouds of spring,
+ We roved the beach, we walked the land.
+ What was the world? A Phantom thing
+ That vanished in your hand.
+
+ You were as quiet as the sky.
+ Your eyes were liquid as the sea.
+ And in that hour that passed us by
+ We lived eternally.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUESTION
+
+
+ I
+
+ The sea moans and the stars are bright,
+ The leaves lisp 'neath a rolling moon.
+ I shut my eyes against the night
+ And make believe the time is June--
+ The June that left us over-soon.
+
+ This is the path and this the place
+ We sat and watched the moving sea,
+ And I the moonlight on your face.
+ We were not happy--woe is me,
+ Happiness is but memory!
+
+ It seemeth, now that you are gone,
+ My heart a measured pain doth keep:--
+ Are you now, as I am, alone?
+ Do you make merry, do you weep?
+ In whose arms are you now asleep?
+
+
+
+
+THE ANSWER
+
+
+ II
+
+ I made my bed beneath the pines
+ Where the sea washed the sandy bars;
+ I heard the music of the winds,
+ And blest the aureate face of Mars.
+ All night a lilac splendor throve
+ Above the heaven's shadowy verge;
+ And in my heart the voice of love
+ Kept music with the dreaming surge.
+
+ A little maid was at my side--
+ She slept--I scarcely slept at all;
+ Until toward the morning-tide
+ A dream possessed me with its thrall.
+ She sweetly breathed; around my breast
+ I felt her warmth like drowsy bliss,
+ Then came the vision of unrest--
+ I saw your face and felt your kiss.
+
+ I woke and knew with what dismay
+ She read my secret and surprise;
+ She only said, "Again 'tis day!
+ How red your cheeks, how bright your eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+THE SIGN
+
+
+ There's not a soul on the square,
+ And the snow blows up like a sail,
+ Or dizzily drifts like a drunken man
+ Falling, before the gale.
+
+ And when the wind eddies it rifts
+ The snow that lies in drifts;
+ And it skims along the walk and sifts
+ In stairways, doorways all about
+ The steps of the church in an angry rout.
+ And one would think that a hungry hound
+ Was out in the cold for the sound.
+
+ But I do not seem to mind
+ The snow that makes one blind,
+ Nor the crying voice of the wind--
+ I hate to hear the creak of the sign
+ Of Harmon Whitney, attorney at law:
+ With its rhythmic monotone of awe.
+ And neither a moan nor yet a whine,
+ Nor a cry of pain--one can't define
+ The sound of a creaking sign.
+
+ Especially if the sky be bleak,
+ And no one stirs however you seek,
+ And every time you hear it creak
+ You wonder why they leave it stay
+ When a man is buried and hidden away
+ Many a day!
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM MARION REEDY
+
+
+ He sits before you silent as Buddha,
+ And then you say
+ This man is Rabelais.
+ And while you wonder what his stock is,
+ English or Irish, you behold his eyes
+ As big and brown as those desirable crockies
+ With which as boys we used to play.
+ And then you see the spherical light that lies
+ Just under the iris coloring,
+ Before which everything,
+ Becomes as plain as day.
+
+ If you have noticed the rolling jowls
+ And the face that speaks its chief
+ Delight in beer and roast beef
+ Before you have seen his eyes, you see
+ A man of fleshly jollity,
+ Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls
+ To make a show of scowls.
+ And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls
+ In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett
+ That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette
+ Or retraces to Thales of Crete,
+ And touches upon Descartes coming back
+ Through the intellectual Zodiac
+ That's something of a feat.
+ And you see that the eyes are really the man,
+ For the thought of him proliferates
+ This way over to Hindostan,
+ And that way descanting on Yeats.
+ With a word on Plato's symposium,
+ And a little glimpse of Theocritus,
+ Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,
+ Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant
+ By a certain line obscure to us.
+ And then he'll take up Horace's odes
+ Or the Roman civilization;
+ Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,
+ Or the Greek deterioration.
+ Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,
+ Which Benjamin Moore and others think
+ Is the origin of life. Then Shelley
+ Comes in a for a look of understanding.
+ Or he'll tell you about the orientation
+ Of the ancient dream of Zion.
+ Or what's the matter with Bryan.
+ And while the porter is bringing a drink
+ Something into his fancy skips
+ And he talks about the Apocalypse,
+ Or a painter or writer now unknown
+ In France or Germany who will soon
+ Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.
+
+ It's not so hard a thing to be wise
+ In the lore of books.
+ It's a different thing to be all eyes,
+ Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks
+ Over the land and out to sea:
+ And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!
+ Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,
+ Young as the light of the sun is young,
+ And taking the even with the odd
+ As a matter of course, and the path he's trod
+ As a path that was good enough.
+ With a sort of transcendental sense
+ Whose hatred is less than indifference,
+ And a gift of wisdom in love.
+ And who can say as he classifies
+ Men and ages with his eyes
+ With cool detachment: this is dung,
+ And that poor fellow is just a fool.
+ And say what you will death is a rod.
+ But I see a light that shines and shines
+ And I rather think it's God.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY
+
+
+ If your thoughts were as clear as your eyes,
+ And the whole of your heart were true,
+ You were fitter by far for winning--
+ But then that would not be you.
+
+ If your pulse beat time to love
+ As fast as you think and plan,
+ You could kindle a lasting passion
+ In the breast of the strongest man.
+
+ If you felt as much as you thought,
+ And dreamed what you seem to dream,
+ A world of elysian beauty
+ Your ruined heart would redeem.
+
+ If you thought in the light of the sun,
+ Or the blood in your veins flowed free,
+ If you gave your kisses but gladly,
+ We two could better agree.
+
+ If you were strong where I counted,
+ And weak where yourself were at stake,
+ You would have my strength for your giving,
+ You would gain and not lose for my sake.
+
+ If your heart overruled your head,
+ Or your head were lord of your heart,
+ Or the two were lovingly balanced,
+ I think we never should part.
+
+ If you came to me spite of yourself,
+ And staid not away through design,
+ These days of loving and living
+ Were sweet as Olympian wine.
+
+ If you could weep with another,
+ And tears for yourself controlled,
+ You could waken and hold to a pity
+ You waken, but do not hold.
+
+ If your lips were as fain to speak
+ As your face is fashioned to hide--
+ You would know that to lay up treasure
+ A woman's heart must confide.
+
+ If your bosom were something richer,
+ Or your hands more fragile and thin,
+ You would call what the world calls evil,
+ Or sin and be glad of the sin.
+
+ If your soul were aflame with love,
+ Or your head were devoted to truth,
+ You never would toss on your pillow
+ Bewildered 'twixt rapture and ruth.
+
+ If you were the you of my dreams,
+ And the you of my dreams were mine,
+ These days, half sweet and half bitter,
+ Would taste like Olympian wine.
+
+ Oh, subtle and mystic Egyptians!
+ Who chiseled the Sphinx in the East,
+ With head and the breasts of a woman,
+ And body and claws of a beast.
+
+ And gave her a marvellous riddle
+ That the eyeless should read as he ran:
+ What crawls and runs and is baffled
+ By woman, the sphinx--but a man?
+
+ Many look in her face and are conquered,
+ Where one all her heart has explored;
+ A thousand have made her their sovereign,
+ But one is her sovereign and lord.
+
+ For him she leaps from her standard
+ And fawns at his feet in the sand,
+ Who sees that himself is her riddle,
+ And she but the work of his hand.
+
+
+
+
+PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN
+
+
+ The pathos in your face is like a peace,
+ It is like resignation or a grace
+ Which smiles at the surcease
+ Of hope. But there is in your face
+ The shadow of pain, and there is a trace
+ Of memory of pain.
+
+ I look at you again and again,
+ And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives
+ My search for your despair.
+ I look at your pale hands--I look at your hair;
+ And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare
+ Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves
+ A flutter of color running under leaves--
+ Such anguished dreams in your eyes!
+ And I listen to you speak
+ Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle,
+ Or a star's twinkle.
+ Sometimes as we talk you rise
+ And leave the room, and then I rub a streak
+ Of a tear from my cheek.
+
+ You tell me such magical things
+ Of pictures, books, romance
+ And of your life in France
+ In the varied music of exquisite words,
+ And in a voice that sings.
+
+ All things are memory now with you,
+ For poverty girds
+ Your hopes, and only your dreams remain.
+ And sometimes here and there
+ I see as you turn your head a whitened hair,
+ Even when you are smiling most.
+ And a light comes in your eyes like a passing ghost,
+ And a color runs through your cheeks as fresh
+ As burns in a girl's flesh.
+ Then I can shut my eyes and feel the pain
+ That has become a part of you, though I feign
+ Laughter myself. One sees another's bruise
+ And shakes his thought out of it shuddering.
+ So I turn and clamp my will lest I bring
+ Your sorrow into my flesh, who cannot choose
+ But hear your words and laughter,
+ And watch your hands and eyes.
+
+ Then as I think you over after
+ I have gone from you, and your face
+ Comes to me with its grace
+ Of memory of unfound love:
+ You seem to me the image of all women
+ Who dream and keep under smiles the grief thereof,
+ Or sew, or sit by windows, or read books
+ To hide their Secret's looks.
+ And after a time go out of life and leave
+ No uttered words but in their silence grieve
+ For Life and for the things no tongue can tell:
+ Why Life hurts so, and why Love haunts and hurts
+ Poor men and women in this demi-hell.
+
+ Perhaps your pathos means that it is well
+ Death in his time the aspiring torch inverts,
+ And all tired flesh and haunted eyes and hands
+ Moving in pained whiteness are put under
+ The soothing earth to brighten April's wonder.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE CAGE
+
+
+ The sounds of mid-night trickle into the roar
+ Of morning over the water growing blue.
+ At ten o'clock the August sunbeams pour
+ A blinding flood on Michigan Avenue.
+
+ But yet the half-drawn shades of bottle green
+ Leave the recesses of the room
+ With misty auras drawn around their gloom
+ Where things lie undistinguished, scarcely seen.
+
+ You, standing between the window and the bed
+ Are edged with rainbow colors. And I lie
+ Drowsy with quizzical half-open eye
+ Musing upon the contour of your head,
+ Watching you comb your hair,
+ Clothed in a corset waist and skirt of silk,
+ Tied with white braid above your slender hips
+ Which reaches to your knees and makes your bare
+ And delicate legs by contrast white as milk.
+ And as you toss your head to comb its tresses
+ They flash upon me like long strips of sand
+ Between a moonlit sea, pale as your hand,
+ And a red sun that on a high dune stresses
+ Its sanguine heat.
+
+ And then at times your lips,
+ Protruding half unconscious half in scorn
+ Engage my eyes while looking through the morn
+ At the clear oval of your brow brought full
+ Over the sovereign largeness of your eyes;
+ Or at your breasts that shake not as you pull
+ The comb through stubborn tangles, only rise
+ Scarcely perceptible with breath or signs,
+ Firm unmaternal like a young Bacchante's,
+ Or at your nose profoundly dipped like Dante's
+ Over your chin that softly melts away.
+
+ Now you seem fully under my heart's sway.
+ I have slipped through the magic of your mesh
+ Freed once again and strengthened by your flesh,
+ You seem a weak thing for a strong man's play.
+ Yet I know now that we shall scarce have parted
+ When I shall think of you half heavy hearted.
+ I know our partings. You will faintly smile
+ And look at me with eyes that have no guile,
+ Or have too much, and pass into the sphere
+ Where you keep independent life meanwhile.
+ How do you live without me, is the fear?
+ You do not lean upon me, ask my love, or wonder
+ Of other loves I may have hidden under
+ These casual renewals of our love.
+ And if I loved you I should lie in flame,
+ Ari, go about re-murmuring your name,
+ And these are things a man should be above.
+
+ And as I lie here on the imminent brink
+ Of soul's surrender into your soul's power,
+ And in the white light of the morning hour
+ I see what life would be if we should link
+ Our lives together in a marriage pact:
+ For we would walk along a boundless tract
+ Of perfect hell; but your disloyalty
+ Would be of spirit, for I have not won
+ Mastered and bound your spirit unto me.
+ And if you had a lover in the way
+ I have you it would not by half betray
+ My love as does your vague and chainless thought,
+ Which wanders, soars or vanishes, returns,
+ Changes, astonishes, or chills or burns,
+ Is unresisting, plastic, freely wrought
+ Under my hands yet to no unison
+ Of my life and of yours. Upon this brink
+ I watch you now and think
+ Of all that has been preached or sung or spoken
+ Of woman's tragedy in woman's fall;
+ And all the pictures of a woman broken
+ By man's superior strength.
+
+ And there you stand
+ Your heart and life as firmly in command
+ Of your resolve as mine is, knowing all
+ Of man, the master, and his power to harm,
+ His rulership of spheres material,
+ Bread, customs, rules of fair repute--
+ What are they all against your slender arm?
+ Which long since plucked the fruit
+ Of good and evil, and of life at last
+ And now of Life. For dancing you have cast
+ Veil after veil of ideals or pretense
+ With which men clothe the being feminine
+ To satisfy their lordship or their sense
+ Of ownership and hide the things of sin--
+ You have thrown them aside veil after veil;
+ And there you stand unarmored, weirdly frail,
+ Yet strong as nature, making comical
+ The poems and the tales of woman's fall....
+ You nod your head, you smile, I feel the air
+ Made by the closing door. I lie and stare
+ At the closed door. One, two, your tufted steps
+ Die on the velvet of the outer hall.
+ You have escaped. And I would not pursue.
+ Though we are but caged creatures, I and you--
+ A male and female tiger in a zoo.
+ For I shall wait you. Life himself will track
+ Your wanderings and bring you back,
+ And shut you up again with me and cage
+ Our love and hatred and our silent rage.
+
+
+
+
+SAVING A WOMAN: ONE PHASE
+
+
+ To a lustful thirst she came at first
+ And gave him her maiden's pride;
+ And the first man scattered the flower of her love,
+ Then turned to his chosen bride.
+
+ She waned with grief as a fading star,
+ And waxed as a shining flame;
+ And the second man had her woman's love,
+ But the second was playing the game.
+
+ With passion she stirred the man who was third;
+ Woe's me! what delicate skill
+ She plied to the heart that knew her art
+ And fled from her wanton will.
+
+ Now calm and demure, oh fair, oh pure,
+ Oh subtle, patient and wise,
+ She trod the weary round of life,
+ With a sorrow deep in her eyes.
+
+ Now a hero who knew how false, how true
+ Was the speech that fell from her lips,
+ With a Norseman's strength took sail with her,
+ And landed and burnt his ships.
+
+ He gave her pity, he gave her mirth,
+ And the hurt in her heart he nursed;
+ But under the silence of her brows
+ Was a dream of the man who was first.
+
+ And all the deceit and lust of men
+ Had sharpened her own deceit;
+ And down to the gates of hell she led
+ Her friend with her flying feet.
+
+ For a bitten bud will never bloom,
+ And a woman lost is lost!
+ And the first and the third may go unscathed,
+ But some man pays the cost.
+
+ And the books of life are full of the rune,
+ And this is the truth of the song:
+ No man can save a woman's soul,
+ Nor right a woman's wrong.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IS A MADNESS
+
+
+ Love is a madness, love is a fevered dream,
+ A white soul lost in a field of scarlet flowers--
+ Love is a search for the lost, the ever vanishing gleam
+ Of wings, desires and sorrows and haunted hours.
+
+ Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?
+ Love is a doubt, an ache, love is a writhing fear.
+ Love is a potion drunk when the ship puts out from land,
+ Rudderless, sails at full, and with none to steer.
+
+ The end is a shattered lamp, a drunken seraph asleep,
+ The upturned face of the drowned on a barren beach.
+ The glare of noon is o'er us, we are ashamed to weep--
+ The beginning and end of love are devoid of speech.
+
+
+
+
+ON A BUST
+
+
+ Your speeches seemed to answer for the nonce--
+ They do not justify your head in bronze!
+ Your essays! talent's failures were to you
+ Your philosophic gamut, but things true,
+ Or beautiful, oh never! What's the pons
+ For you to cross to fame?--Your head in bronze?
+
+ What has the artist caught? The sensual chin
+ That melts away in weakness from the skin,
+ Sagging from your indifference of mind;
+ The sullen mouth that sneers at human kind
+ For lack of genius to create or rule;
+ The superficial scorn that says "you fool!"
+ The deep-set eyes that have the mud-cat look
+ Which might belong to Tolstoi or a crook.
+ The nose half-thickly fleshed and half in point,
+ And lightly turned awry as out of joint;
+ The eyebrows pointing upward satyr-wise,
+ Scarce like Mephisto, for you scarcely rise
+ To cosmic irony in what you dream--
+ More like a tomcat sniffing yellow cream.
+ The brow! 'Tis worth the bronze it's molded in
+ Save for the flat-top head and narrow thin
+ Backhead which shows your spirit has not soared.
+ You are a Packard engine in a Ford,
+ Which wrecks itself and turtles with its load,
+ Too light and powerful to keep the road.
+ The master strength for twisting words is caught
+ In the swift turning wheels of iron thought.
+ With butcher knives your hands can vivisect
+ Our butterflies, but you can not erect
+ Temples of beauty, wisdom. You can crawl
+ Hungry and subtle over Eden's wall,
+ And shame half grown up truth, or make a lie
+ Full grown as good. You cannot glorify
+ Our dreams, or aspirations, or deep thirst.
+ To you the world's a fig tree which is curst.
+ You have preached every faith but to betray;
+ The artist shows us you have had your day.
+
+ A giant as we hoped, in truth a dwarf;
+ A barrel of slop that shines on Lethe's wharf,
+ Which seemed at first a vessel with sweet wine
+ For thirsty lips. So down the swift decline
+ You went through sloven spirit, craven heart
+ And cynic indolence. And here the art
+ Of molding clay has caught you for the nonce
+ And made your shame our shame--your head in bronze!
+ Some day this bust will lie amid old metals
+ Old copper boilers, wires, faucets, kettles.
+ Some day it will be melted up and molded
+ In door knobs, inkwells, paper knives, or folded
+ In leaves and wreaths around the capitals
+ Of marble columns, or for arsenals
+ Fashioned in something, or in course of time
+ Successively made each of these, from grime
+ Rescued successively, or made a bell
+ For fire or worship, who on earth can tell?
+ One thing is sure, you will not long be dust
+ When this bronze will be broken as a bust
+ And given to the junkman to re-sell.
+ You know this and the thought of it is hell!
+
+
+
+
+ARABEL
+
+
+ Twists of smoke rise from the limpness of jewelled fingers,
+ The softness of Persian rugs hushes the room.
+ Under a dragon lamp with a shade the color of coral
+ Sit the readers of poems one by one.
+ And all the room is in shadow except for the blur
+ Of mahogany surface, and tapers against the wall.
+
+ And a youth reads a poem of love: forever and ever
+ Is his soul the soul of the loved one; a woman sings
+ Of the nine months which go to the birth of a soul.
+ And after a time under the lamp a man
+ Begins to read a letter having no poem to read.
+ And the words of the letter flash and die like a fuse
+ Dampened by rain--it's a dying mind that writes
+ What Byron did for the Greeks against the Turks.
+ And a sickness enters our hearts. The jewelled hands
+ Clutch at the arms of the chairs--about the room
+ One hears the parting of lips, and a nervous shifting
+ Of feet and arms.
+
+ And I look up and over
+ The reader's shoulder and see the name of the writer.
+ What is it I see? The name of a man I knew!
+ You are an ironical trickster, Time, to bring
+ After so many years and into a place like this
+ This face before me: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness,
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ Such was your look in a photograph I saw
+ In a silver frame on a woman's dresser--and such
+ Your look in life, you thing of flesh alone!
+
+ And then
+ As a soul looks down on the body it leaves--
+ A body by fever slain--I look on myself
+ As I was a decade ago, while the letter is read:
+
+ I enter a box
+ Of a theater with Jim, my friend of fifty,
+ I being twenty-two. Two women are in the box
+ One of an age for Jim and one of an age for me.
+ And mine is dressed in a dainty gown of dimity,
+ And she fans herself with a fan of silver spangles
+ Till a subtle odor of delicate powder or of herself
+ Enters my blood and I stare at her snowy neck,
+ And the glossy brownness of her hair until
+ She feels my stare, and turns half-view and I see
+ How like a Greek's is her nose, with just a little
+ Aquiline touch; and I catch the flash of an eye,
+ And the glint of a smile on the richness of her lips.
+ The company now discourses upon the letter
+ But my dream goes on:
+
+ I re-live a rapture
+ Which may be madness, and no man understands
+ Until he feels it no more. The youth that was I
+ From the theater under the city's lights follows the girl
+ Desperate lest in the city's curious chances
+ He never sees her again. And boldly he speaks.
+ And she and the older woman, her sister
+ Smile and speak in turn, and Jim who stands
+ While I break the ice comes up--and so
+ Arm in arm we go to the restaurant,
+ I in heaven walking with Arabel,
+ And Jim with her older sister.
+ We drive them home under a summer moon,
+ And while I explain to Arabel my boldness,
+ And crave her pardon for it, Jim, the devil,
+ Laughs apart with her sister while I wonder
+ What Jim, the devil, is laughing at. No matter
+ To-morrow I walk in the park with Arabel.
+
+ Just now the reader of the letter
+ Tells of the writer's swift descent
+ From wealth to want.
+
+ We are in the park next afternoon by the water.
+ I look at her white throat full as it were of song.
+ And her rounded virginal bosom, beautiful!
+ And I study her eyes, I search to the depths her eyes
+ In the light of the sun. They are full of little rays
+ Like the edge of a fleur de lys, and she smiles
+ At first when I fling my soul at her feet.
+
+ But when I repeat I love her, love her only,
+ A cloud of wonder passes over her face,
+ She veils her eyes. The color comes to her cheeks.
+ And when she picks some clover blossoms and tears them
+ Her hand is trembling. And when I tell her again
+ I love her, love her only, she blots her eyes
+ With a handkerchief to hide a tear that starts.
+
+ And she says to me: "You do not know me at all,
+ How can you love me? You never saw me before
+ Last night." "Well, tell me about yourself."
+ And after a time she tells me the story:
+ About her father who ran away from her mother;
+ And how she hated her father, and how she grieved
+ When her mother died; and how a good grandmother
+ Helped her and helps her now. And how her sister
+ Divorced her husband. And then she paused a moment:
+ "I am not strong, you'd have to guard me gently,
+ And that takes money, dear, as well as love.
+ Two years ago I was very ill, and since then
+ I am not strong."
+
+ "Well I can work," I said.
+ "And what would you think of a little cottage
+ Not too far out with a yard and hosts of roses,
+ And a vine on the porch, and a little garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ When a morning breeze blows over your brow,
+ And you sit across the table and serve me
+ And neither of us can speak for happiness
+ Without our voices breaking, or lips trembling."
+
+ She is looking down with little frowns on her brow.
+ "But if ever I had to work, I could not do it,
+ I am not really well."
+
+ "But I can work," I said.
+ I rise and lift her up, holding her hand.
+ She slips her arm through mine and presses it.
+ "What a good man you are," she said. "Just like a brother--
+ I almost love you, I believe I love you."
+
+ The reader of the letter, being a doctor,
+ Is talking learnedly of the writer's case
+ Which has the classical marks of paresis.
+
+ Next day I look up Jim and rhapsodize
+ About a cottage with roses and a garden,
+ And a dining room where the sun comes in,
+ And Arabel across the table. Jim is smoking
+ And flicking the ashes, but never says a word
+ Till I have finished. Then in a quiet voice:
+ "Arabel's sister says that Arabel's straight,
+ But she isn't, my boy--she's just like Arabel's sister.
+ She knew you had the madness for Arabel.
+ That's why we laughed and stood apart as we talked.
+ And I'll tell you now I didn't go home that night,
+ I shook you at the corner and went back,
+ And staid that night. Now be a man, my boy,
+ Go have your fling with Arabel, but drop
+ The cottage and the roses."
+
+ They are still discussing the madman's letter.
+
+ And memory permeates me like a subtle drug:
+ The memory of my love for Arabel,
+ The torture, the doubt, the fear, the restless longing,
+ The sleepless nights, the pity for all her sorrows,
+ The speculation about her and her sister,
+ And what her illness was;
+ And whether the man I saw one time was leaving
+ Her door or the next door to it, and if her door
+ Whether he saw my Arabel or her sister....
+
+ The reader of the letter is telling how the writer
+ Left his wife chasing the lure of women.
+
+ And it all comes back to me as clear as a vision:
+ The night I sat with Arabel strong but conquered.
+ Whatever I did, I loved her, whatever she was.
+ Madness or love the terrible struggle must end.
+ She took my hand and said, "You must see my room."
+ We stood in the doorway together and on her dresser
+ Was a silver frame with the photograph of a man--
+ I had seen him in life: hair slicked down and parted
+ In the middle and cheeks stuck out with fatness
+ Plump from camembert and clicquot, eyelids
+ Thin as skins of onions, cut like dough 'round the eyes.
+ "There is his picture," she said, "ask me whatever you will.
+ Take me as mistress or wife, it is yours to decide.
+ But take me as mistress and grow like the picture before you,
+ Take me as wife and be the good man you can be.
+ Choose me as mistress--how can I do less for dearest?
+ Or make me your wife--fate makes me your mistress or wife."
+ "I can leave you," I said. "You can leave me," she echoed,
+ "But how about hate in your heart."
+
+ "You are right," I replied.
+
+ The company is now discussing the subject of love--
+ They seem to know little about it.
+
+ But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:
+ "Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness,
+ What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"
+
+ "Well, it's life," Arabel.
+ "There's the story of Hamlet, for instance," I added.
+ Then fell into silence.
+
+
+
+
+JIM AND ARABEL'S SISTER
+
+
+ Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,
+ When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.
+ So we came out and he went home to wife
+ And children, and I started for the club
+ Which I call home; and then just like a flash
+ You came into my mind. I bought a slug
+ And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard
+ The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me
+ To hear your voice at last--it was so drowsy,
+ Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes
+ Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing
+ In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....
+
+ Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice
+ Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine--
+ It showed your understanding, that you know
+ How it is with a man, and how it is with me
+ Who work by day and sometimes drift by night
+ About this hellish city. Though you know
+ That I am fifty-one, can you imagine
+ My feeling with no children growing up?
+ My feeling as of one who sees a play
+ And afterwards sits somewhere at a table
+ And talks with friends about the different parts
+ Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?
+ My feeling with this money which I've made
+ And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working
+ The money dulls the fancy which could use it
+ In splendid dreams or in the art of life.
+ Well, here was I ringing your bell at last
+ At half-past one, and there you stood before me
+ With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands
+ So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,
+ But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you
+ With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you
+ Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,
+ For that kiss which you gave me at the door....
+
+ Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,
+ My heart acts queer of late....
+
+ I want to say
+ Lest I forget it, if you ever hear
+ From Arabel or Francis what I said
+ To Francis when he told me he intended
+ To marry Arabel, why just remember
+ Our talk this morning and forget I said it--
+ I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,
+ That night we met, I being fifty-one
+ And old at what men call the game, looked on
+ With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you
+ Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;
+ And I found you as I'd found others before you,
+ But with this difference so it seemed to me:
+ What had been false with them was real with you,
+ What had been shame with them with you was life,
+ What had been craft with them with you was nature,
+ What had been sin with them to you was good,
+ What had been vice with them to you the honest
+ And uncorrupted innocence of a human
+ Heart so human looking on our souls.
+ What had been coarse to them to you was clean
+ As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow
+ And move and sing along creation's way.
+ You came to me like friendship, what you gave
+ Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self
+ And least of motive. And it is through you
+ That I have risen out of the pit where sneers
+ And laughter, looks and words obscene,
+ Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,
+ As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses
+ Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds
+ Upon their infinite sailings and the lake
+ Washes beneath us, and we lie and think
+ How this has been forever and will be
+ When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,
+ Yet how life is eternal--just as one
+ Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy
+ Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme
+ The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme
+ The gospel hymns and ritual) that I
+ Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.
+ For what is our communion, yours and mine,
+ If it be not a way of laying hold
+ On that mysterious essence which makes one
+ Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....
+ Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!
+ Pour me a little coffee, if you please.
+
+ I'll take from my herbarium certain species
+ To make my points: Now here there is the woman
+ Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.
+ She fixes her design upon a man,
+ Who's married and the riotous game begins.
+ They go along a year or two perhaps.
+ Then psychic chemistry performs its part:
+ They are in love, or he's in love with her.
+ What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:
+ That which she gave without love at the first
+ She now withdraws in spite of love unless
+ He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties
+ And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men
+ Kill women with a knife or strangle them?
+ Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,
+ You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.
+ She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;
+ She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.
+ And when you dance with her she has a way
+ Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,
+ Which almost lisps as she caresses you
+ With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says
+ Things with a double meaning, and she smiles
+ To carry out her meaning. Well, you think
+ The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing
+ She lands you up at the appointed place
+ With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,
+ That have a nervous way of opening
+ And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,
+ From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;
+ Which meeting is a way of saying to you:
+ The girl is yours if you will marry her,
+ And let her have your money.
+
+ Julia, be still;
+ I can't go on while you are laughing so.
+ I know that men are easy, but to see
+ Women as women see them is a gift
+ That comes to men who reach my age in life....
+
+ Well, here's another, here's the type of woman
+ Whose power of motherhood conceals the art
+ By which she thrives, through which she reaches also
+ An apotheosis in society.
+ Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.
+ And her strength is the race's, and she draws
+ The urgings of posterity and leans
+ Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.
+ To her a man must sacrifice his life.
+ But women, Julia, of whatever type,
+ Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,
+ And man's life to develop, even to live.
+ And like the praying mantis who's devoured
+ In the embrace, man is devoured by women
+ In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame
+ In man's life where he warms him but to suck
+ The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,
+ Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates--
+ Love is not free which should be wholly free
+ For Life's sake.
+
+ On Michigan Avenue
+ At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see
+ In rain or shine a certain tailor walk
+ In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.
+ That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.
+ He has no woman, cannot find a woman,
+ Because all women, seeing him, divine
+ What surges through him, and within their hearts
+ Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun
+ Of seeing how denial keeps him walking
+ All up and down the boulevard. He's found
+ No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.
+ I use him for my point. If we could make
+ Some fine erotometer one could sit
+ And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands
+ Record the waves of longing in the city,
+ And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows
+ Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,
+ Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.
+
+ Julia.
+ So much for all these things, and now for you
+ To whom they lead.
+
+ You'll find among the marshes
+ The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,
+ Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find
+ The water lily with white petals and
+ A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches
+ The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,
+ Impales them on its tiny spines, in time
+ Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out
+ Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall
+ Into the water, treasured there like tears
+ Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed
+ Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.
+ The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily
+ Well typify the nature of most women
+ Who must have blood or soul of man to live--
+ Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale
+ Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.
+ He read somewhere that primroses will change
+ Under your eyes sometimes to something else,
+ Become another flower and not a primrose,
+ Another species even. So he watched
+ And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed
+ Has somewhere in its vital self the power
+ Of this mutation. What is the origin
+ Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,
+ Who has mutated: You are not a mother;
+ Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;
+ Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;
+ Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon
+ Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down
+ To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who
+ Rejoices in the secret of man's strength
+ And in subduing it.
+
+ You are a flower
+ Designed to comfort such poor men as I,
+ And show the world how love can be a thing
+ That asks no more than what it freely gives,
+ And gives all--all some women call the prize
+ For life or honor, riches, power or place.
+ You are a blossom in the primrose bed
+ So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.
+ You have mutated, Julia, that is it,
+ This flower of you is what I call _The Lover_!
+
+
+
+
+THE SORROW OF DEAD FACES
+
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death--
+ But never a face like Harold's who passed in a throe of pain.
+ There were maidens and youths in the bud, and men in the lust of life;
+ And women whom child-birth racked till the crying soul slipped through;
+ Patriarchs withered with age and nuns ascetical white;
+ And one who wasted her virgin wealth in a riot of joy.
+ Brothers and sisters at last in a quiet and purple pall,
+ Fellow voyagers bound to a port on an ash-blue sea,
+ Locked in an utterless grief, in a mystery fearful to dream.
+ All of these I have seen--but the face of Harold the bold
+ Looked with a penitent pallor and stared with a sad surprise.
+
+ For now at last he was still who never knew rest in life.
+ And the ardent heat of his blood was cold as the sweat of a stone.
+ Life came in an evil hour and stabbed with a poisoned word
+ The heart of a girl who faintly smiled through her tears.
+ And her little life was tossed as the eddies that whirl in the hollows
+ From the great world-currents that wreck the battle ships at sea.
+ And the face of dead Lillian seemed like a rain-ruined flower.
+
+ Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day
+ When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?
+
+ But the face of William the Great was fashioned by life and thought;
+ And death made it massive as bronze, and deepened the lines thereof:
+ Some for the will and some for patience, and some for hope--
+ Hope for the weal of the world wherein he mightily strove--
+ Yet what did it all bespeak--what but submission and awe,
+ And a trace of pain as one with a sword in his side?
+
+ I have seen many faces changed by the Sculptor Death
+ But the sorrow thereof is dumb like the cloth that lies on the brow.
+ So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances,
+ Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?
+
+
+
+
+THE CRY
+
+
+ There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears.
+ It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears.
+ It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres.
+
+ It may be a daemon of pent and high emprise,
+ That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries,
+ Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise.
+
+ It may be myself as I was in another life,
+ Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife,
+ Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife.
+
+ The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul
+ Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control,
+ When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal.
+
+ Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod
+ Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;
+ Perhaps this cry in my heart is nothing but God!
+
+
+
+
+THE HELPING HAND
+
+
+ Mother, my head is bloody, my breast is red with scars.
+ Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?
+
+ Mother, my soul is crucified, my thirst is past belief.
+ How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?
+
+ Mother, I feel the terror and the loveliness of life.
+ Tell me of the children, son, and tell me of the wife.
+
+ Mother, your face is but a face among a million more.
+ You're standing on the deck, my son, and looking at the shore.
+
+ I lean against the wall, mother, and struggle hard for breath.
+ You must have heard the step, my son, of the patrolman Death.
+
+ Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?
+ Well, kiss the crucifix, my son, and pass beneath the rod.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOOR
+
+
+ This is the room that thou wast ushered in.
+ Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?
+ Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?
+ Stand thou! but if thy terrored heart takes flight
+ Facing maimed Hope and wide-eyed Nevermore,
+ There is no less one door.
+
+ Dost thou bewail love's end and friendship's doom,
+ The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?
+ Explore the walls, if thy soul ventureth--
+ There is no door but death.
+
+ There is no window. Heaven hangs aloof
+ Above the rents within the stairless roof.
+ Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor--
+ Who knocks? Unbolt the door!
+
+
+
+
+SUPPLICATION
+
+_For He knoweth our frame, He remembereth that we are dust._--PSALM
+CIII. 14.
+
+
+ Oh Lord, when all our bones are thrust
+ Beyond the gaze of all but Thine;
+ And these blaspheming tongues are dust
+ Which babbled of Thy name divine,
+ How helpless then to carp or rail
+ Against the canons of Thy word;
+ Wilt Thou, when thus our spirits fail,
+ Have mercy, Lord?
+
+ Here from this ebon speck that floats
+ As but a mote within Thine eye,
+ Vain sneers and curses from our throats
+ Rise to the vault of Thy fair sky:
+ Yet when this world of ours is still
+ Of this all-wondering, tortured horde,
+ And none is left for Thee to kill--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou knowest that our flesh is grass;
+ Ah! let our withered souls remain
+ Like stricken reeds of some morass,
+ Bleached, in Thy will, by ceaseless rain.
+ Have we not had enough of fire,
+ Enough of torment and the sword?--
+ If these accrue from Thy desire--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Dost Thou not see about our feet
+ The tangles of our erring thought?
+ Thou knowest that we run to greet
+ High hopes that vanish into naught.
+ We bleed, we fall, we rise again;
+ How can we be of Thee abhorred?
+ We are Thy breed, we little men--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay,
+ Wilt Thou deny when we deny?
+ A thousand years are but a day,
+ A little day within Thine eye:
+ We thirst for love, we yearn for life;
+ We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?
+ We, beaten, fall upon the knife--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou givest us youth that turns to age;
+ And strength that leaves us while we seek.
+ Thou pourest the fire of sacred rage
+ In costly vessels all too weak.
+ Great works we planned in hopes that Thou
+ Fit wisdom therefor wouldst accord;
+ Thou wrotest failure on our brow--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Could we but know, as Thou dost know--
+ Hold the whole scheme at once in mind!
+ Yet, dost Thou watch our anxious woe
+ Who piece with palsied hands and blind
+ The fragments of our little plan,
+ To thrive and earn Thy blest reward,
+ And make and keep the world of man--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+ Thou settest the sun within his place
+ To light the world, the world is Thine,
+ Put in our hands and through Thy grace
+ To be subdued and made divine.
+ Whether we serve Thee ill or well,
+ Thou knowest our frame, nor canst afford
+ To leave Thy own for long in hell--
+ Have mercy, Lord!
+
+
+
+
+THE CONVERSATION
+
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew then, starting let us say with ether,
+ You would become electrons, out of whirling
+ Would rise to atoms; then as an atom resting
+ Till through Yourself in other atoms moving
+ And by the fine affinity of power
+ Atom with atom massed, You would go on
+ Over the crest of visible forms transformed,
+ Would be a molecule, a little system
+ Wherein the atoms move like suns and planets
+ With satellites, electrons. So as worlds build
+ From star-dust, as electron to electron,
+ The same attraction drawing, molecules
+ Would wed and pass over the crest again
+ Of visible forms, lying content as crystals,
+ Or colloids--ready now to use the gleam
+ Of life. As 'twere I see You with a match,
+ As one in darkness lights a candle, and one
+ Sees not his friend's form in the shadowed room
+ Until the candle's lighted? Even his form
+ Is darkened by the new-made light, he stands
+ So near it! Well, I add to all I've asked
+ Whether You knew the cell born to the glint
+ Of that same lighted candle would not rest
+ Even as electrons rest not--but would surge
+ Over the crest of visible forms, become
+ Beneath our feet things hidden from the eye
+ However aided,--as above our heads
+ Beyond the Milky Way great systems whirl
+ Beyond the telescope,--become bacilli,
+ Amoeba, starfish, swimming things, on land
+ The serpent, and then birds, and beasts of prey
+ The tiger (You in the tiger) on and on
+ Surging above the crest of visible forms until
+ The ape came--oh what ages they are to us--
+ But still creation flies on wings of light--
+ Then to the man who roamed the frozen fields
+ Neither man nor ape,--we found his jaw, You know,
+ At Heidelberg, in a sand-pit. On and on
+ Till Babylon was builded, and arose
+ Jerusalem and Memphis, Athens, Rome,
+ Venice and Florence, Paris, London, Berlin,
+ New York, Chicago--did You know, I ask,
+ All this would come of You in ether moving?
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+
+_The Human Voice_
+
+ You knew that man was born to be destroyed,
+ That as an atom perfect, whole, at ease,
+ Drawn to some other atom, is broken, changed
+ And rises o'er the crest of visible things
+ To something else--that man must pass as well
+ Through equal transformation. And You knew
+ The unutterable things of man's life: From the first
+ You saw his wracked Deucalion-soul that looks
+ Backward on life that rises, where he rose
+ Out of the stones. You saw him looking forward
+ Over the purple mists that hide the gulf.
+ Ere the green cell rose, even in the green cell
+ You saw the sequences of thought--You saw
+ That one would say, "All's matter" and another,
+ "All's mind," and man's mind which reflects the image,
+ Could not envision it. That even worship
+ Of what you are would be confused by cries
+ From India or Palestine. That love
+ Which sees itself beginning in the seeds,
+ Which fly and seek each other, maims
+ The soul at the last in loss of child or friend
+ Father or mother. And You knew that sex,
+ Ranging from plants through beasts and up to us
+ Had ties of filth--And out of them would rise
+ Diverse philosophies to tear the world.
+ You knew, when the green cell arose, that even
+ The You which formed it moving on would bring
+ Races and breeds, madmen, tyrants, slaves,
+ The idiot child, the murderer, the insane--
+ All springing from the action of one law.
+ You knew the enmity that lies between
+ The lives of micro-beings and our own. You knew
+ How man would rise to vision of himself:
+ Immortal only in the race's life.
+ And past the atom and the first glint of life,
+ Saw him with soul enraptured, yet o'ershadowed
+ Amid self-consciousness!
+
+_A Voice_
+
+ I knew.
+ But this your fault: You see me as apart,
+ Over, removed, at enmity with You.
+ You are in Me, and of Me, even at one
+ With Me. But there's your soul--your soul may be
+ The germinal cell of vaster evolution.
+ Why try to tell you? If I gave a cell
+ Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:
+ "After me what, a stalk, a flower, life
+ That swims or crawls?" And if I gave to you
+ Wisdom to say: "You shall become a reed
+ By the water's edge"--how could the cell foresee
+ What the reed is, bending beneath the wind
+ When the lake ripples and the skies are blue
+ As larkspur? Therefore I, who moved in darkness
+ Becoming light in suns and light in souls
+ And mind with thought--for what is thought but light
+ Sprung from the clash of ether?--I am with you.
+ And if beyond this stable state that stands
+ For your life here (as cells are whole and balanced
+ Till the inner urge bring union, then a breaking
+ And building up to higher life), there is
+ No memory of this world nor of your thought,
+ Nor sense of life on this world lived and borne;
+ Or whether you remember, know yourself
+ As one who lived here, suffered here, aspired--
+ What does it matter?--you cannot be lost,
+ As I am lost not. Therefore be at peace.
+ And from the laws whose orbits cross and run
+ To seeming tangles, find the law through which
+ Your soul shall be perfected till it draw,--
+ As the green cell the sunlight draws and turns
+ Its chemical effulgence into life--
+ My inner splendor. All the rest is mine
+ In infinite time. For if I should unroll
+ The parchment of the future, it were vain--
+ You could not read it.
+
+
+
+
+TERMINUS
+
+
+ Terminus shows the ways and says,
+ "All things must have an end."
+ Oh, bitter thought we hid away
+ When first you were my friend.
+
+ We hid it in the darkest place
+ Our hearts had place to hide,
+ And took the sweet as from a spring
+ Whose waters would abide.
+
+ For neither life nor the wide world
+ Has greater store than this:--
+ The thought that runs through hands and eyes
+ And fills the silences.
+
+ There is a void the aged world
+ Throws over the spent heart;
+ When Life has given all she has,
+ And Terminus says depart.
+
+ When we must sit with folded hands,
+ And see with inward eye
+ A void rise like an arctic breath
+ To hollow the morrow's sky.
+
+ To-morrow is, and trembling leaves,
+ And 'wildered winds from Thrace
+ Look for you where your face has bloomed,
+ And where may bloom your face.
+
+ Beyond the city, over the hill,
+ Under the anguished moon,
+ The winds and my dreams seek after you
+ By meadow, water and dune.
+
+ All things must have an end, we know;
+ But oh, the dreaded end;
+ Whether in life, whether in death,
+ To lose the cherished friend.
+
+ To lose in life the cherished friend,
+ While the myrtle tree is green;
+ To live and have the cherished friend
+ With only the world between.
+
+ With only the wide, wide world between,
+ Where memory has mortmain.
+ Life pours more wine in the heart of man
+ Than the heart of man can contain.
+
+ Oh, heart of man and heart of woman,
+ Thirsting for blood of the vine,
+ Life waits till the heart has lived too much
+ And then pours in new wine!
+
+
+
+
+MADELINE
+
+
+ I almost heard your little heart
+ Begin to beat, and since that hour
+ Your life has grown apace and blossomed,
+ Fed by the same miraculous power,
+
+ That moved the rivulet of your life,
+ And made your heart begin to beat.
+ Now all day your steps are a-patter.
+ Oh, what swift and musical feet!
+
+ You sleep. I wait to see you wake,
+ With wonder-eyes and hands that reach.
+ I laugh to hear your thoughts that gather
+ Too fast on your budding lips for speech.
+
+ Your sunny hair is cut as if
+ 'Twere trimmed around a yellow crock.
+ How gay the ribbon, and oh, how cunning
+ The flaring skirt of the little frock!
+
+ You build and play and search and pry,
+ And hunt for dolls and forgotten toys.
+ Why do you never tire of playing,
+ Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?
+
+ You will not sleep? You are tired of the house?
+ You are just as naughty as you can be.
+ Madeline, Madeline, come to the garden,
+ And play with Marcia under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+MARCIA
+
+
+ Madeline's hair is straight and yours
+ Is just as curly as tendril vines;
+ And she is fair, but a deeper color
+ Your cheeks of olive incarnadines.
+
+ A serious wisdom burns and glows
+ Steadily in your dark-eyed look.
+ Already a wit and a little stoic--
+ Perhaps you are going to write a book,
+
+ Or paint a picture, or sing or act
+ The part of Katherine or Juliet.
+ I believe you were born with the gift of knowing
+ When to remember and when to forget.
+
+ And when to stifle and kill a grief,
+ And clutch your heart when it beats in vain.
+ The heart that has most strength for feeling
+ Must have the strength to conquer the pain.
+
+ You understand? It seems that you do--
+ Though you cannot utter a word to me.
+ Marcia, Marcia, look at Madeline
+ Building a doll-house under the tree!
+
+
+
+
+THE ALTAR
+
+
+ My heart is an altar whereon
+ Many sacrificial fires have been kindled
+ In praise of spring and Aphrodite.
+
+ My heart is an altar of chalcedony,
+ Crowned with a tablet of bronze,
+ Blacked with smoke, scarred with fire,
+ And scented with the aromatic bitterness
+ Of dead incense.
+
+ Albeit let us murmur a little Doric prayer
+ Over the ashes which lie scattered around the altar;
+ For the April rain has wept over them,
+ And from them the crocus smelts its Roman gold.
+
+ What though there are remnants here
+ Of faded coronals,
+ And bits of silver string
+ Torn from forgotten harps?
+ Perfect amid the ashes sleeps a cup of amethyst.
+ Let us take it and pour the sea from it,
+ And while the savor of dead lips is washed away,
+ Let us lift our hands to this sky of hyacinth.
+ Let us light the altar newly, for lo! it is spring.
+
+ Bring from the re-kindled woodland
+ Flames of columbine, jewel-weed and trumpet-creeper,
+ There where the woodman burns the fallen tree,
+ And scented smoke arises
+ On azure wings between the branches,
+ Budding with adolescent life.
+ With these let us light the altar,
+ That a scarlet flame may lean
+ Against the silver sea.
+
+ For thou art fire also,
+ And air, and water, and the resurgent earth,
+ For thou art woman, thou art love.
+ Thou art April of the Arcadian moon,
+ Thou art the swift sun racing through snowy clouds,
+ Thou art the creative silence of flowering valleys.
+ Thy face is the apple tree in bloom;
+ Thine eyes the glimpses of green water
+ When the tree's blossoms shake
+ As soft winds fan them.
+ Thy hair is flame blown against the sea's mist--
+ Thou art spring.
+
+ The fire on the altar burns brightly,
+ And the sea sparkles in the sun.
+ Let us murmur a Doric prayer
+ For the gift of love,
+ For the gift of life,
+ Oh Life! Oh Love! We lift our hands to thee!
+
+
+
+
+SOUL'S DESIRE
+
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that stands
+ Where sunlight falls between the trees
+ Of a sparse forest's leafless edge,
+ When Spring's first magic moveth these.
+
+ Her soul is like a little brook,
+ Thin edged with ice against the leaves,
+ Where the wolf drinks and is alone,
+ And where the woodbine interweaves.
+
+ A bank late covered by the snow,
+ But lighted by the frozen North;
+ Her soul is like a little plot
+ That one white blossom bringeth forth.
+
+ Her soul is slim, like silver slips,
+ And straight, like flags beside a stream.
+ Her soul is like a shape that moves
+ And changes in a wonder dream.
+
+ Who would pursue her clasps a cloud,
+ And taketh sorrow for his zeal.
+ Memory shall sing him many songs
+ While bound upon the torture wheel.
+
+ Her soul is like a wolf that glides
+ By moonlight o'er a phantom ridge;
+ Her face is like a light that runs
+ Beneath the shadow of a bridge.
+
+ Her voice is like a woodland cry
+ Heard in a summer's desolate hour.
+ Her eyes are dim; her lips are faint,
+ And tinctured like the cuckoo flower.
+
+ Her little breasts are like the buds
+ Of tulips in a place forlorn.
+ Her soul is like a mandrake bloom
+ Standing against the crimson moon.
+
+ Her dream is like the fenny snake's,
+ That warms him in the noonday's fire.
+ She hath no thought, nor any hope,
+ Save of herself and her desire.
+
+ She is not life; she is not death;
+ She is not fear, or joy or grief.
+ Her soul is like a quiet sea
+ Beneath a ruin-haunted reef.
+
+ She is the shape the sailor sees,
+ That slips the rock without a sound.
+ She is the soul that comes and goes
+ And leaves no mark, yet makes a wound.
+
+ She is the soul that hunts and flies;
+ She is a world-wide mist of care.
+ She is the restlessness of life,
+ Its rapture and despair.
+
+
+
+
+BALLAD OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE
+
+
+ It was a hermit on Whitsunday
+ That came to the Table Round.
+ "King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight
+ May the Holy Grail be found?"
+
+ "By never a Knight that liveth now;
+ By none that feasteth here."
+ King Arthur marvelled when he said,
+ "He shall be got this year."
+
+ Then uprose brave Sir Launcelot
+ And there did mount his steed,
+ And hastened to a pleasant town
+ That stood in knightly need.
+
+ Where many people him acclaimed,
+ He passed the Corbin pounte,
+ And there he saw a fairer tower
+ Than ever was his wont.
+
+ And in that tower for many years
+ A dolorous lady lay,
+ Whom Queen Northgalis had bewitched,
+ And also Queen le Fay.
+
+ And Launcelot loosed her from those pains,
+ And there a dragon slew.
+ Then came King Pelles out and said,
+ "Your name, brave Knight and true?"
+
+ "My name is Pelles, wit ye well,
+ And King of the far country;
+ And I, Sir Knight, am cousin nigh
+ To Joseph of Armathie."
+
+ "I am Sir Launcelot du Lake."
+ And then they clung them fast;
+ And yede into the castle hall
+ To take the king's repast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer,
+ That shone like Ophir gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor
+ As bloweth over sea
+ From a land of many colored flowers
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of tulip-white,
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," said Pelles, "richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O, Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said King Pelles,
+ "That was the Holy Grail."
+
+ Then by this sign King Pelles knew
+ Elaine his fair daughter
+ Should lie with Launcelot that night,
+ And Launcelot with her.
+
+ And that this twain should get a child
+ Before the night should fail,
+ Who would be named Sir Galahad,
+ And find the Holy Grail.
+
+ Then cometh one hight Dame Brisen
+ With Pelles to confer,
+ "Now, wit ye well, Sir Launcelot
+ Loveth but Guinevere."
+
+ "But if ye keep him well in hand,
+ The while I work my charms,
+ The maid Elaine, ere spring of morn,
+ Shall lie within his arms."
+
+ Dame Brisen was the subtlest witch
+ That was that time in life;
+ She was as if Beelzebub
+ Had taken her to wife.
+
+ Then did she cause one known of face
+ To Launcelot to bring,
+ As if it came from Guinevere,
+ Her wonted signet ring.
+
+ "By Holy Rood, thou comest true,
+ For well I know thy face.
+ Where is my lady?" asked the Knight,
+ "There in the Castle Case?"
+
+ "'Tis five leagues scarcely from this hall,"
+ Up spoke that man of guile.
+ "I go this hour," said Launcelot,
+ "Though it were fifty mile."
+
+ Then sped Dame Brisen to the king
+ And whispered, "An we thrive,
+ Elaine must reach the Castle Case
+ Ere Launcelot arrive."
+
+ Elaine stole forth with twenty knights
+ And a goodly company.
+ Sir Launcelot rode fast behind,
+ Queen Guinevere to see.
+
+ Anon he reached the castle door.
+ Oh! fond and well deceived.
+ And there it seemed the queen's own train
+ Sir Launcelot received.
+
+ "Where is the queen?" quoth Launcelot,
+ "For I am sore bestead,"
+ "Have not such haste," said Dame Brisen,
+ "The queen is now in bed."
+
+ "Then lead me thither," saith he,
+ "And cease this jape of thine."
+ "Now sit thee down," said Dame Brisen,
+ "And have a cup of wine."
+
+ "For wit ye not that many eyes
+ Upon you here have stared;
+ Now have a cup of wine until
+ All things may be prepared."
+
+ Elaine lay in a fair chamber,
+ 'Twixt linen sweet and clene.
+ Dame Brisen all the windows stopped,
+ That no day might be seen.
+
+ Dame Brisen fetched a cup of wine
+ And Launcelot drank thereof.
+ "No more of flagons," saith he,
+ "For I am mad for love."
+
+ Dame Brisen took Sir Launcelot
+ Where lay the maid Elaine.
+ Sir Launcelot entered the bed chamber
+ The queen's love for to gain.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the maid Elaine,
+ And her cheeks and brows did burn;
+ And then they lay in other's arms
+ Until the morn's underne.
+
+ Anon Sir Launcelot arose
+ And toward the window groped,
+ And then he saw the maid Elaine
+ When he the window oped.
+
+ "Ah, traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he gat his sword,
+ "That I should live so long and now
+ Become a knight abhorred."
+
+ "False traitoress," saith Launcelot,
+ And then he shook the steel.
+ Elaine skipped naked from the bed
+ And 'fore the knight did kneel.
+
+ "I am King Pelles own daughter
+ And thou art Launcelot,
+ The greatest knight of all the world.
+ This hour we have begot."
+
+ "Oh, traitoress Brisen," cried the knight,
+ "Oh, charmed cup of wine;
+ That I this treasonous thing should do
+ For treasures such as thine."
+
+ "Have mercy," saith maid Elaine,
+ "Thy child is in my womb."
+ Thereat the morning's silvern light
+ Flooded the bridal room.
+
+ That light it was a benison;
+ It seemed a holy boon,
+ As when behind a wrack of cloud
+ Shineth the summer moon.
+
+ And in the eyes of maid Elaine
+ Looked forth so sweet a faith,
+ Sir Launcelot took his glittering sword,
+ And thrust it in the sheath.
+
+ "So God me help, I spare thy life,
+ But I am wretch and thrall,
+ If any let my sword to make
+ Dame Brisen's head to fall."
+
+ "So have thy will of her," she said,
+ "But do to me but good;
+ For thou hast had my fairest flower,
+ Which is my maidenhood."
+
+ "And we have done the will of God,
+ And the will of God is best."
+ Sir Launcelot lifted the maid Elaine
+ And hid her on his breast.
+
+ Anon there cometh in a dove,
+ By the window's open fold,
+ And in her mouth was a rich censer
+ That shone like beaten gold.
+
+ And therewithal was such savor,
+ As bloweth over sea,
+ From a land of many colored flowers,
+ And trees of spicery.
+
+ And therewithal was meat and drink,
+ And a damsel passing fair,
+ Betwixt her hands of silver white
+ A golden cup did bear.
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this marvel mean?"
+ "That is," she said, "the richest thing
+ That any man hath seen."
+
+ "O Jesu," said Sir Launcelot,
+ "What may this sight avail?"
+ "Now wit ye well," said maid Elaine,
+ "This is the Holy Grail."
+
+ And then a nimbus light hung o'er
+ Her brow so fair and meek;
+ And turned to orient pearls the tears
+ That glistered down her cheek.
+
+ And a sound of music passing sweet
+ Went in and out again.
+ Sir Launcelot made the sign of the cross,
+ And knelt to maid Elaine.
+
+ "Name him whatever name thou wilt,
+ But be his sword and mail
+ Thrice tempered 'gainst a wayward world,
+ That lost the Holy Grail."
+
+ Sir Launcelot sadly took his leave
+ And rode against the morn.
+ And when the time was fully come
+ Sir Galahad was born.
+
+ Also he was from Jesu Christ,
+ Our Lord, the eighth degree;
+ Likewise the greatest knight this world
+ May ever hope to see.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF SIR LAUNCELOT
+
+
+ Sir Launcelot had fled to France
+ For the peace of Guinevere,
+ And many a noble knight was slain,
+ And Arthur lay on his bier.
+
+ Sir Launcelot took ship from France
+ And sailed across the sea.
+ He rode seven days through fair England
+ Till he came to Almesbury.
+
+ Then spake Sir Bors to Launcelot:
+ The old time is at end;
+ You have no more in England's realm
+ In east nor west a friend.
+
+ You have no friend in all England
+ Sith Mordred's war hath been,
+ And Queen Guinevere became a nun
+ To heal her soul of sin.
+
+ Sir Launcelot answered never a word
+ But rode to the west countree
+ Until through the forest he saw a light
+ That shone from a nunnery.
+
+ Sir Launcelot entered the cloister,
+ And the queen fell down in a swoon.
+ Oh blessed Jesu, saith the queen,
+ For thy mother's love, a boon.
+
+ Go hence, Sir Launcelot, saith the queen,
+ And let me win God's grace.
+ My heavy heart serves me no more
+ To look upon thy face.
+
+ Through you was wrought King Arthur's death,
+ Through you great war and wrake.
+ Leave me alone, let me bleed,
+ Pass by for Jesu's sake.
+
+ Then fare you well, saith Launcelot,
+ Sweet Madam, fare you well.
+ And sythen you have left the world
+ No more in the world I dwell.
+
+ Then up rose sad Sir Launcelot
+ And rode by wold and mere
+ Until he came to a hermitage
+ Where bode Sir Bedivere.
+
+ And there he put a habit on
+ And there did pray and fast.
+ And when Sir Bedivere told him all
+ His heart for sorrow brast.
+
+ How that Sir Mordred, traitorous knight
+ Betrayed his King and sire;
+ And how King Arthur wounded, died
+ Broken in heart's desire.
+
+ And so Sir Launcelot penance made,
+ And worked at servile toil;
+ And prayed the Bishop of Canterbury
+ His sins for to assoil.
+
+ His shield went clattering on the wall
+ To a dolorous wail of wind;
+ His casque was rust, his mantle dust
+ With spider webs entwined.
+
+ His listless horses left alone
+ Went cropping where they would,
+ To see the noblest knight of the world
+ Upon his sorrow brood.
+
+ Anon a Vision came in his sleep,
+ And thrice the Vision saith:
+ Go thou to Almesbury for thy sin,
+ Where lieth the queen in death.
+
+ Sir Launcelot cometh to Almesbury
+ And knelt by the dead queen's bier;
+ Oh none may know, moaned Launcelot,
+ What sorrow lieth here.
+
+ What love, what honor, what defeat
+ What hope of the Holy Grail.
+ The moon looked through the latticed glass
+ On the queen's face cold and pale.
+
+ Sir Launcelot kissed the cered cloth,
+ And none could stay his woe,
+ Her hair lay back from the oval brow,
+ And her nose was clear as snow.
+
+ They wrapped her body in cloth of Raines,
+ They put her in webs of lead.
+ They coffined her in white marble,
+ And sang a mass for the dead.
+
+ Sir Launcelot and seven knights
+ Bore torches around the bier.
+ They scattered myrrh and frankincense
+ On the corpse of Guinevere.
+
+ They put her in earth by King Arthur
+ To the chant of a doleful tune.
+ They heaped the earth on Guinevere
+ And Launcelot fell in a swoon.
+
+ Sir Launcelot went to the hermitage
+ Some Grace of God to find;
+ But never he ate, and never he drank
+ And there he sickened and dwined.
+
+ Sir Launcelot lay in a painful bed,
+ And spake with a dreary steven;
+ Sir Bishop, I pray you shrive my soul
+ And make it clean for heaven.
+
+ The Bishop houseled Sir Launcelot,
+ The Bishop kept watch and ward.
+ Bury me, saith Sir Launcelot,
+ In the earth of Joyous Guard.
+
+ Three candles burned the whole night through
+ Till the red dawn looked in the room.
+ And the white, white soul of Launcelot
+ Strove with a black, black doom.
+
+ I see the old witch Dame Brisen,
+ And Elaine so straight and tall--
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The shadows dance on the wall.
+
+ I see long hands of dead women,
+ They clutch for my soul eftsoon;
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ 'Tis the drifting light of the moon.
+
+ I see three angels, saith he,
+ Before a silver urn.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The candles do but burn.
+
+ I see a cloth of red samite
+ O'er the holy vessels spread.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The great dawn groweth red.
+
+ I see all the torches of the world
+ Shine in the room so clear.
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The white dawn draweth near.
+
+ Sweet lady, I behold the face
+ Of thy dear son, our Lord,
+ Nay, saith the Bishop of Canterbury,
+ The sun shines on your sword.
+
+ Sir Galahad outstretcheth hands
+ And taketh me ere I fail--
+ Sir Launcelot's body lay in death
+ As his soul found the Holy Grail.
+
+ They laid his body in the quire
+ Upon a purple pall.
+ He was the meekest, gentlest knight
+ That ever ate in hall.
+
+ He was the kingliest, goodliest knight
+ That ever England roved,
+ The truest lover of sinful man
+ That ever woman loved.
+
+ I pray you all, fair gentlemen,
+ Pray for his soul and mine.
+ He lived to lose the heart he loved
+ And drink but bitter wine.
+
+ He wrought a woe he knew not of,
+ He failed his fondest quest,
+ Now sing a psalter, read a prayer
+ May all souls find their rest.
+ Amen.
+
+
+
+
+IN MICHIGAN
+
+
+ You wrote:
+ "Come over to Saugatuck
+ And be with me on the warm sand,
+ And under cool beeches and aromatic cedars."
+ And just then no one could do a thing in the city
+ For the lure of far places, and something that tugged
+ At one's heart because of a June sky,
+ And stretches of blue water,
+ And a warm wind blowing from the south.
+ What could I do but take a boat
+ And go to meet you?
+
+ And when to-day is not enough,
+ But you must live to-morrow also;
+ And when the present stands in the way
+ Of something to come,
+ And there is but one you would see,
+ All the interval of waiting is a wall.
+ And so it was I walked the landward deck
+ With flapping coat and hat pulled down;
+ And I sat on the leeward deck and looked
+ At the streaming smoke of the funnels,
+ And the far waste of rhythmical water,
+ And at the gulls flying by our side.
+
+ There was music on board and dancing,
+ But I could not take part.
+ For above all there was the bluest sky,
+ And around us the urge of magical distances.
+ And just because you were in the violins,
+ And in everything, and were wholly the world
+ Of sense and sight,
+ It was too much. One could not live it
+ And make it all his own--
+ It was too much.
+ And I wondered where the rest could be going,
+ Or what they thought of water and sky
+ Without knowing you.
+
+ But at four o'clock there was a rim,
+ A circled edge of rainbow color
+ Which suspired, widened and narrowed under your gaze:
+ It was the phantasy of straining eyes,
+ Or land--and it was land.
+ It was distant trees.
+ And then it was dunes, bluffs of yellow sand.
+ We began to wonder how far it was--
+ Five miles, or ten miles--
+ Surely only five miles!--
+ But at last whatever it was we swung to the end.
+ We rounded the lighthouse pier,
+ Almost before we knew.
+ We slowed our speed in a dizzy river of black,
+ We drifted softly to dock.
+
+ I took the ferry,
+ I crossed the river,
+ I ran almost through the little batch
+ Of fishermen's shacks.
+ I climbed the winding road of the hill,
+ And dove in a shadowy quiet
+ Of paths of moss and dancing leaves,
+ And straight stretched limbs of giant pines
+ On patches of sky.
+ I ran to the top of the bluff
+ Where the lodge-house stood.
+ And there the sunlit lake burst on me
+ And wine-like air.
+ And below me was the beach
+ Where the serried lines of hurrying water
+ Came up like rank on rank of men
+ And fell with a shout on the rocks!
+ I plunged, I stumbled, I ran
+ Down the hill,
+ For I thought I saw you,
+ And it was you, you were there!
+ And I shall never forget your cry,
+ Nor how you raised your arms and cried,
+ And laughed when you saw me.
+ And there we were with the lake
+ And the sun with his ruddy search-light blaze
+ Stretching back to lost Chicago.
+ The sun, the lake, the beach, and ourselves
+ Were all that was left of Time,
+ All else was lost.
+
+ You were making a camp.
+ You had bent from the bank a cedar bough
+ And tied it down.
+ And over it flung a quilt of many colors,
+ And under it spread on the voluptuous silt
+ Gray blankets and canvas pillows.
+ I saw it all in a glance.
+ And there in dread of eyes we stood
+ Scanning the bluff and the beach,
+ Lest in the briefest touch of lips
+ We might be seen.
+
+ For there were eyes, or we thought
+ There were eyes, on the porch of the lodge,
+ And eyes along the forest's rim on the hill,
+ And eyes on the shore.
+ But a minute past there was no sun,
+ Only a star that shone like a match which lights
+ To a blue intenseness amid the glow of a hearth.
+ And we sat on the sand as dusk came down
+ In a communion of silence and low words.
+ Till you said at last: "We'll sup at the lodge,
+ Then say good night to me and leave
+ As if to stay overnight in the village.
+ But instead make a long detour through the wood
+ And come to the shore through that ravine,
+ Be here at the tent at midnight."
+
+ And so I did.
+ I stole through echoless ways,
+ Where no twigs broke and where I heard
+ My heart beat like a watch under a pillow.
+ And the whippoorwills were singing.
+ And the sound of the surf below me
+ Was the sound of silver-poplar leaves
+ In a wind that makes no pause....
+ I hurried down the steep ravine,
+ And a bat flew up at my feet from the brush
+ And crossed the moon.
+ To my left was the lighthouse,
+ And black and deep purples far away,
+ And all was still.
+ Till I stood breathless by the tent
+ And heard your whispered welcome,
+ And felt your kiss.
+
+ Lovers lay at mid-night
+ On roofs of Memphis and Athens
+ And looked at tropical stars
+ As large as golden beetles.
+ Nothing is new, save this,
+ And this is always new.
+ And there in your tent
+ With the balm of the mid-night breeze
+ Sweeping over us,
+ We looked at one great star
+ Through a flap of your many-colored tent,
+ And the eternal quality of rapture
+ And mystery and vision flowed through us.
+
+ Next day we went to Grand Haven,
+ For my desire was your desire,
+ Whatever wish one had the other had.
+ And up the Grand River we rowed,
+ With rushes and lily pads about us,
+ And the sand hills back of us,
+ Till we came to a quiet land,
+ A lotus place of farms and meadows.
+ And we tied our boat to Schmitty's dock,
+ Where we had a dinner of fish.
+ And where, after resting, to follow your will
+ We drifted back to Spring Lake--
+ And under a larger moon,
+ Now almost full,
+ Walked three miles to The Beeches,
+ By a winding country road,
+ Where we had supper.
+ And afterwards a long sleep,
+ Waking to the song of robins.
+
+ And that day I said:
+ There are wild places, blue water, pine forests,
+ There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads
+ Around Elk Lake--shall we go?
+ And we went, for your desire was mine.
+ And there we climbed hills,
+ And ate apples along the shaded ways,
+ And rolled great boulders down the steeps
+ To watch them splash in the water.
+ And we stood and wondered what was beyond
+ The farther shore two miles away.
+ And we came to a place on the shore
+ Where four great pine trees stood,
+ And underneath them wild flowers to the edge
+ Of sand so soft for naked feet.
+ And here, for not a soul was near,
+ We stripped and swam far out, laughing, rejoicing,
+ Rolling and diving in those great depths
+ Of bracing water under a glittering sun.
+
+ There were farm houses enough
+ For food and shelter.
+ But something urged us on.
+ One knows the end and dreads the end
+ Yet seeks the end.
+ And you asked, "Is there a town near?
+ Let's see a town."
+ So we walked to Traverse City
+ Through cut-over land and blasted
+ Trunks and stumps of pine,
+ And by the side of desolate hills.
+ But when we got to Traverse City
+ You were not content, nor was I.
+ Something urged us on.
+ Then you thought of Northport
+ And of its Norse and German fishermen,
+ And its quaint piers where they smoke fish.
+ So we drove for thirty miles
+ In a speeding automobile
+ Over hills, around sudden curves, into warm coverts,
+ Or hollows, sometimes at the edge of the Bay,
+ Again on the hill,
+ From where we could see Old Mission
+ Amid blues and blacks, across a score of miles of the Bay,
+ Waving like watered silk under the moon!
+ And by meadows of clover newly cut,
+ And by peach orchards and vineyards.
+ But when we came to the little town
+ Already asleep, though it was but eight o'clock,
+ And only a few drowsy lamps
+ With misty eyelids shone from a store or two,
+ I said, "Do you see those twinkling lights?
+ That's Northport Point, that's the Cedar Cabin--
+ Let's go to the Cedar Cabin."
+ And so we crossed the Bay
+ Amid great waves in a plunging launch,
+ And a roaring breeze and a great moon,
+ For now the moon was full.
+
+ So here was the Cedar Cabin
+ On a strip of land as wide as a house and lawn,
+ And on one side Lake Michigan,
+ And on one side the Bay.
+ There were distances of color all around,
+ And stars and darknesses of land and trees,
+ And at the point the lighthouse.
+ And over us the moon,
+ And over the balcony of our room
+ All of these, where we lay till I slept,
+ Listening to the water of the lake,
+ And the water of the Bay.
+ And we saw the moon sink like a red bomb,
+ And we saw the stars change
+ As the sky wheeled....
+ Now this was the end of the earth,
+ For this strip of land
+ Ran out to a point no larger than one of the stumps
+ We saw on the desolate hills.
+ And moreover it seemed to dive under,
+ Or waste away in a sudden depth of water.
+ And around it was a swirl,
+ To the north the bounding waves of the Lake,
+ And to the south the Bay which seemed the Lake.
+ But could we speak of it, even though
+ I saw your eyes when you thought of it?
+ A sigh of wind blew through the rustic temple
+ When we saw this symbol together,
+ And neither spoke.
+ But that night, somewhere in the beginning of drowsiness,
+ You said: "There is no further place to go,
+ We must retrace."
+ And I awoke in a torrent of light in the room,
+ Hearing voices and steps on the walk:
+ I looked for you,
+ But you had arisen.
+ Then I dressed and searched for you,
+ But you were gone.
+ Then I stood for long minutes
+ Looking at a sail far out at sea
+ And departed too.
+
+
+
+
+THE STAR
+
+
+ I am a certain god
+ Who slipped down from a remote height
+ To a place of pools and stars.
+ And I sat invisible
+ Amid a clump of trees
+ To watch the madmen.
+
+ There were cries and groans about me,
+ And shouts of laughter and curses.
+ Figures passed by with self-absorbed contempt,
+ Wrinkling in bitter smiles about their lips.
+ Others hurried on with set eyes
+ Pursuing something.
+ Then I said this is the place for mad Frederick--
+ Mad Frederick will be here.
+
+ But everywhere I could see
+ Figures sitting or standing
+ By little pools.
+ Some seemed grown into the soil
+ And were helpless.
+ And of these some were asleep.
+ Others laughed the laughter
+ That comes from dying men
+ Trying to face Death.
+ And others said "I should be content,"
+ And others said "I will fly."
+ Whereupon sepulchral voices muttered,
+ As of creatures sitting or hanging head down
+ From limbs of the trees,
+ "We will not let you."
+ And others looked in their pools
+ And clasped hands and said "Gone, all gone."
+ By other pools there were dead bodies:
+ Some of youth, some of age.
+ They had given up the fight,
+ They had drunk poisoned water,
+ They had searched
+ Until they fell--
+ All had gone mad!
+
+ Then I, a certain god,
+ Curious to know
+ What it is in pools and stars
+ That drives men and women
+ Over the earth in this quest
+ Waited for mad Frederick.
+ And then I heard his step.
+
+ I knew that long ago
+ He sat by one of these pools
+ Enraptured of a star's image.
+ And that hands, for his own good,
+ As they said,
+ Dumped clay into the pool
+ And blotted his star.
+ And I knew that after that
+ He had said, "They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy.
+ They will never see me watching one star.
+ I will fly by rivers,
+ And by little brooks,
+ And by the edge of lakes,
+ And by little bends of water,
+ Where no wind blows,
+ And glance at stars as I pass.
+ They will never spy again
+ Upon my ecstasy."
+
+ And I knew that mad Frederick
+ In this flight
+ Through years of restless and madness
+ Was caught by the image of a star
+ In a mere beyond a meadow
+ Down from a hill, under a forest,
+ And had said,
+ "No one sees;
+ Here I can find life,
+ Through vision of eternal things."
+ But they had followed him.
+ They stood on the brow of the hill,
+ And when they saw him gazing in the water
+ They rolled a great stone down the hill,
+ And shattered the star's image.
+ Then mad Frederick fled with laughter.
+ It echoed through the wood.
+ And he said, "I will look for moons,
+ I will punish them who disturb me,
+ By worshiping moons."
+ But when he sought moons
+ They left him alone,
+ And he did not want the moons.
+ And he was alone, and sick from the moons,
+ And covered as with a white blankness,
+ Which was the worst madness of all.
+
+ And I, a certain god,
+ Waiting for mad Frederick
+ To enter this place of pools and stars,
+ Saw him at last.
+ With a sigh he looked about upon his fellows
+ Sitting or standing by their pools.
+ And some of the pools were covered with scum,
+ And some were glazed as of filth,
+ And some were grown with weeds,
+ And some were congealed as of the north wind,
+ And a few were yet pure,
+ And held the star's image.
+ And by these some sat and were glad,
+ Others had lost the vision.
+ The star was there, but its meaning vanished.
+ And mad Frederick, going here and there,
+ With no purpose,
+ Only curious and interested
+ As I was, a certain god,
+ Came by a certain pool
+ And saw a star.
+
+ He shivered,
+ He clasped his hands,
+ He sank to his knees,
+ He touched his lips to the water.
+
+ Then voices from the limbs of the trees muttered:
+ "There he is again."
+ "He must be driven away."
+ "The pool is not his."
+ "He does not belong here."
+ So as when bats fly in a cave
+ They swooped from their hidings in the trees
+ And dashed themselves in the pool.
+ Then I saw what these flying things were--
+ But no matter.
+ They were illusions, evil and envious
+ And dull,
+ But with power to destroy.
+ And mad Frederick turned away from the pool
+ And covered his eyes with his arms.
+ Then a certain god,
+ Of less power than mine,
+ Came and sat beside me and said:
+ "Why do you allow this to be?
+ They are all seeking,
+ Why do you not let them find their heart's delight?
+ Why do you allow this to be?"
+ But I did not answer.
+ The lesser god did not know
+ That I have no power,
+ That only the God has the power.
+ And that this must be
+ In spite of all lesser gods.
+
+ And I saw mad Frederick
+ Arise and ascend to the top of a high hill,
+ And I saw him find the star
+ Whose image he had seen in the pool.
+ Then he knelt and prayed:
+ "Give me to understand, O Star,
+ Your inner self, your eternal spirit,
+ That I may have you and not images of you,
+ So that I may know what has driven me through the world,
+ And may cure my soul.
+ For I know you are Eternal Love,
+ And I can never escape you.
+ And if I cannot escape you,
+ Then I must serve you.
+ And if I must serve you,
+ It must be to good and not ill--
+ You have brought me from the forest of pools
+ And the images of stars,
+ Here to the hill's top.
+ Where now do I go?
+ And what shall I do?"
+
+
+THE END
+
+Printed in the United States of America.
+
+
+
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of books by the same author
+or on kindred subjects
+
+
+
+
+ _EDGAR LEE MASTERS' REMARKABLE BOOK_
+
+ Spoon River Anthology
+
+ _Mr. Masters' book is considered by many to be the most striking and
+ important contribution to American letters in recent years_:--
+
+ "An American 'Comedie Humaine' brings more characters into its pages
+ than any American novel.... Takes its place among the masterpieces
+ which are not of a time or a locality."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ "A work splendid in observation, marvelous in the artistry of
+ exclusion, yet of democratic inclusiveness, piercingly analytic of
+ character, of plastic facility of handling, sympathetic underneath
+ irony, humorous, pathetic, tragic, comic, particular yet
+ universal--a Comedie Humaine--a creation of a whole community of
+ personalities."--_William Marion Reedy._
+
+ "We find a strange impressiveness, akin to greatness, in the 'Spoon
+ River Anthology' of Edgar Lee Masters.... It is a book which,
+ whether one likes it or not, one must respect."--_The New Republic._
+
+ "Mr. Masters speaks with a new and authentic voice. It is an
+ illuminating piece of work, and an unforgettable one."--_Chicago
+ Evening Post._
+
+ "The natural child of Wait Whitman ... the only poet with true
+ Americanism in his bones."--_New York Times._
+
+ _Cloth, $1.25; leather, $1.50_
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Good Friday and Other Poems
+
+ BY JOHN MASEFIELD
+
+ Author of "The Everlasting Mercy" and "The Widow in the Bye Street,"
+ etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ The title piece in this volume is a dramatic poem of sixty pages, the
+ action of which takes place in the time of Christ. The characters
+ introduced include Pontius Pilate, Joseph of Ramah and Herod. The
+ play, for it is really such, is written in rhyme and is one of Mr.
+ Masefield's most interesting and important contributions to
+ literature. In addition to this there are in the book many sonnets and
+ short poems.
+
+ "Reveals an interesting development in poetic thought and expression
+ ... a new Masefield ... who has never written with more dignity, nor
+ with more artistry. Those who go in quest of Beauty will find her
+ here.... Here is beauty of impression, beauty of expression, beauty
+ of thought, and beauty of phrase."--_The New York Times._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Man Against the Sky
+
+ BY EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON
+
+ Author of "The Porcupine," "Captain Craig and Other Poems," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo, $1.00_
+
+ It has been some years since Mr. Robinson has given us a new
+ collection of poems. Those who remember "Captain Craig and Other
+ Poems," a volume which brought to its author the heartiest of
+ congratulations, placing him at once in the rank of those American
+ writers whose contributions to literature are of permanent value, will
+ welcome this new work and will find that their anticipation of it and
+ hopes for it are to be pleasantly realized. It is a book which well
+ carries out that early promise and which helps to maintain Mr.
+ Robinson's position in letters to-day.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Battle and Other Poems
+
+ BY WILFRID WILSON GIBSON
+
+ Author of "Daily Bread," "Fires," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 12mo_
+
+ Here with that intensely human note exhibited in his poems of the
+ working classes, Mr. Gibson sings of the life of the soldier. There
+ are many moods in the book, for the author has well caught the flow of
+ spirits from gaiety to despair which makes up the soldier's days. The
+ chief characteristic of the little pen pictures is their vividness,
+ the way in which they bring before the reader the thoughts and
+ feelings of those whose lives may be offered up for their country any
+ moment. In addition to these poems of battle there are others in the
+ collection on varying themes.
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Six French Poets
+
+ BY AMY LOWELL
+
+ Author of "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed," "A Dome of Many-Coloured
+ Glass," etc.
+
+ _Cloth, 8vo, $2.50_
+
+ A brilliant series of biographical and critical essays dealing with
+ Emile Verhaeren, Albert Samain, Remy de Gourmont, Henri de Regnier,
+ Francis Jammes, and Paul Fort, by one of the foremost living American
+ poets.
+
+ The translations make up an important part of the book, and together
+ with the French originals constitute a representative anthology of the
+ poetry of the period.
+
+ Professor Barrett Wendell, of Harvard University, says:
+
+ "Seems to me as unusual--in the happiest sense of the word, ... I
+ find the book a model, in total effect, of what a work with such
+ purpose ought to be."
+
+ William Lyon Phelps, Professor of English Literature, Yale University,
+ says:
+
+ "This is, I think, the most valuable work on contemporary French
+ literature that I have seen for a long time. It is written by one
+ who has a thorough knowledge of the subject and who is herself an
+ American poet of distinction. She has the knowledge, the sympathy,
+ the penetration, and the insight--all necessary to make a notable
+ book of criticism. It is a work that should be widely read in
+ America."
+
+
+ OTHER BOOKS BY AMY LOWELL
+
+
+ Sword Blades and Poppy Seed
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The Book of
+ the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in our poetry,
+ worthy of companionship to the great romantic lyrics of
+ Coleridge."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+
+ A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass
+
+ _Boards, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+ "Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal flavor, a
+ loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality.... The child
+ poems are particularly graceful."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
+
+Punctuation has been corrected without note.
+
+Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the
+original.
+
+It is not always possible to determine if a new stanza begins at the top
+of a printed page, but every effort has been made by the transcriber to
+retain stanza breaks where appropriate.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs and Satires, by Edgar Lee Masters
+
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