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+Project Gutenberg's Irradiations; Sand and Spray, by John Gould Fletcher
+
+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: Irradiations; Sand and Spray
+
+Author: John Gould Fletcher
+
+Release Date: February 13, 2012 [EBook #38857]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRRADIATIONS; SAND AND SPRAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
+(From images generously made available by the Internet
+Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+IRRADIATIONS
+
+SAND AND SPRAY
+
+BY
+
+JOHN GOULD FLETCHER
+
+
+BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+
+HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
+
+The Riverside Press Cambridge
+
+1915
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+AMY LOWELL
+
+BEST OF FRIENDS AND POETS
+
+
+
+
+Thanks are due to the Editors of Poetry (Chicago) and The Egoist
+(London) for permission to reprint here matter that originally appeared
+in the pages of their respective publications.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The art of poetry as practised in the English-speaking countries to-day,
+is in a greatly backward state. Among the reading public there are
+exactly three opinions generally held about it. The first, and by far
+the most popular, view is that all poets are fools and that poetry is
+absurd. The second is that poetry is an agreeable after-dinner
+entertainment, and that a poet is great because he has written quotable
+lines. The last and worst is that which strives to press the poet into
+the service of some philosophical dogma, ism, or fad.
+
+For these views the poets themselves, and no others, are largely
+responsible. With their exaggerated vanity, they have attempted to make
+of their craft a Masonic secret, iterating that a poet composes by ear
+alone; that rhythm is not to be analyzed, that rhyme is sacrosanct; that
+poets, by some special dispensation of Providence, write by inspiration,
+being born with more insight than other men; and so forth. Is it any
+wonder that the public is indifferent, hostile, or befooled when poets
+themselves disdain to explain clearly what they are trying to do, and
+refuse to admit the public into the privacy of their carefully guarded
+workrooms?
+
+It was Theophile Gautier, I think, who offered to teach any one how to
+write poetry in twenty-five lessons. Now this view has in it some
+exaggeration, but, at the same time, much truth. No amount of lessoning
+will turn an idiot into a wise man, or enable a man to say something
+when he is naturally one who has nothing to say. Nevertheless, I believe
+that there would have been fewer mute inglorious Miltons, greater
+respect paid to poetry, and many better poets, if the poets themselves
+had stopped working through sheer instinct and set themselves the task
+of considering some elementary principles in their craft. In this
+belief, and in the hope of enlightening some one as to the aim and
+purpose of my work, I am writing this preface.
+
+To begin with, the basis of English poetry is rhythm, or, as some would
+prefer to call it, cadence. This rhythm is obtained by mingling stressed
+and unstressed syllables. Stress may be produced by accent. It may--and
+often is--produced by what is known as quantity, the breath required to
+pronounce certain syllables being more than is required on certain
+others. However it be produced, it is precisely this insistence upon
+cadence, upon the rhythm of the line when spoken, which sets poetry
+apart from prose, and not--be it said at the outset--a certain way of
+printing, with a capital letter at the beginning of each line, or an
+insistence upon end-rhymes.
+
+Now this rhythm can be made the same in every line of the poem. This was
+the aim of Alexander Pope, for instance. My objection to this method is
+that it is both artificial and unmusical. In the case of the eighteenth
+century men, it gave the effect of a perfectly balanced pattern, like a
+minuet or fugue. In the case of the modern imitator of Kipling or
+Masefield, it gives the effect of monotonous rag-time. In neither case
+does it offer full scope for emotional development.
+
+I maintain that poetry is capable of as many gradations in cadence as
+music is in time. We can have a rapid group of syllables--what is called
+a line--succeeded by a slow heavy one; like the swift, scurrying-up of
+the wave and the sullen dragging of itself away. Or we can gradually
+increase or decrease our _tempo_, creating _accelerando_ and
+_rallentando_ effects. Or we can follow a group of rapid lines with a
+group of slow ones, or a single slow, or _vice versa_. Finally, we can
+have a perfectly even and unaltered movement throughout if we desire to
+be monotonous.
+
+The good poem is that in which all these effects are properly used to
+convey the underlying emotions of its author, and that which welds all
+these emotions into a work of art by the use of dominant _motif_,
+subordinate themes proportionate treatment, repetition, variation,--what
+in music is called development, reversal of roles, and return In short,
+the good poem fixes a free emotion, or a free range of emotions, into an
+inevitable and artistic whole. The real secret of the greatest English
+poets lies not in their views on life,--which were, naturally, only
+those which every sane man is obliged to hold,--but in their profound
+knowledge of their craft, whereby they were enabled to put forth their
+views in perfect form. Each era of man has its unique and self-sufficing
+range of expression and experience, and therefore every poet must seek
+anew for himself, out of the language-medium at his disposal, rhythms
+which are adequate and forms which are expressive of his own unique
+personality.
+
+As regards the length of the lines themselves, that depends altogether
+upon the apparatus which Nature has given us, to enable us to breathe
+and to speak. Each line of a poem, however many or few its stresses,
+represents a single breath, and therefore a single perception. The
+relation between breath and perception is a commonplace of Oriental
+philosophy. As we breathe so do we know the universe, whether by sudden,
+powerful gusts of inspiration, or through the calmer--but rarer--gradual
+ascent into the hidden mysteries of knowledge, and slow falling away
+therefrom into darkness.
+
+So much for the question of metre. The second range of problems with
+which we are immediately concerned, when we examine the poetic craft, is
+that which is generally expressed under the name of rhyme.
+
+Now rhyme is undoubtedly an element of poetry, but it is neither an
+indissoluble element, nor is it, in every case, an inevitable one. In
+the main, the instinct which makes for rhyme is sound. Poetry is an art
+which demands--though not invariably--the utmost richness and fulness of
+musical effect. When rhyme is considered as an additional instrument of
+what may be called the poetic orchestra, it both loses and gains in
+importance. It loses because it becomes of no greater import than
+assonance, consonance, alliteration, and a host of similar devices. It
+gains because it is used intelligently as a device for adding richness
+of effect, instead of blindly as a mere tag at the end of a line.
+
+The system which demands that the end of every line of poetry must rhyme
+with the end of some one preceding or following it, has not even the
+merit of high antiquity or of civilized adherence. In its essence it is
+barbarous; it derives from the stamping of feet, clapping of hands,
+pounding of drums, or like devices of savage peoples to mark the rhythms
+in their dances and songs. And its introduction into European poetry, as
+a rule to be invariably followed, dates precisely from the time of the
+break-up of the Latin civilization, and the approach of what the
+historians know as the Dark Ages. Since it has come into common use
+among European peoples, every poet of eminence has tried to avoid its
+fatiguing monotony, by constructing new stanza-forms. Dante, Petrarch,
+Chaucer, Spenser, all these were innovators or developers of what may be
+known as formal metre. But let us not forget that the greatest of all,
+Shakespeare, used rhyme in his plays, only as additional decoration to
+a lyric, or in a perfectly legitimate fashion as marking the necessary
+pause at the close of a scene. Let us also remember that, as he advanced
+in thought and expression, he gradually abandoned rhyme for the only
+reason that an artist abandons anything; because it was no longer
+adequate.
+
+The process that began with the Pervigilium Veneris, the mediaeval
+hymn-writers, and the Provencal troubadours, and which culminated in the
+orchestral blank verse of Shakespeare, has now passed through all the
+stages of reduction to formula, eclecticism, archaistic reaction,
+vulgarization, gramaphone popularity, and death. Milton--Gibbon among
+poets--reduced it to his too-monotonous organ-roll. Dryden, Pope and his
+followers, endlessly repeated a formula. Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge,
+attempted a return to the Elizabethan and to the even earlier ballad
+forms. In the later nineteenth century we come back to still earlier
+forms. Ballades, rondeaus, even sestinas appear. Gradually we find the
+public attention dropping away from these juggling feats performed with
+stale form, and turning to what may be called the new balladist--the
+street singer who is content to doggerelize and make strident a once
+noble form. We have our Masefields, our Kiplings, and worse. Rag-time
+has at last made its appearance in poetry. Let us be grateful to the man
+who invented it--Nicholas Vachel Lindsay--but let us admit that the
+force of nature can no further go.
+
+It is time to create something new. It is time to strip poetry of
+meaningless tatters of form, and to clothe her in new, suitable
+garments. Portents and precursors there have been in plenty. We already
+have Blake, Matthew Arnold, Whitman, Samuel Butler, and I know not how
+many more. Every one is talking--many poets, poeticules, and poetasters
+are writing--what they call "free verse." Let there be no mistake about
+one thing. Free verse that is flabby, in-organic, shapelessly obvious,
+is as much of a crime against poetry as the cheapest echo of a Masefield
+that any doggerel scribbler ever strummed. Let poets drop their
+formulas--"free" or otherwise--and determine to discipline themselves
+through experiment. There is much to be learned from the precursors I
+have mentioned. There is a great deal to be learned from the French
+poets--Parnassians, Symbolists, Whitmanites, Fantaisistes--who have, in
+the years 1860 to 1900, created a new Renaissance under our noses. But
+above all, what will teach us the most is our language and life. Never
+was life lived more richly, more fully, with more terrible blind
+intensity than it is being lived at this instant. Never was the noble
+language which is ours surpassed either in richness or in concision. We
+have the material with which to work, and the tools to do the work with.
+It is America's opportunity to lay the foundations for a new flowering
+of English verse, and to lay them as broad as they are strong.
+
+_January, 1915._
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ IRRADIATIONS
+
+ EPILOGUE
+
+
+ SAND AND SPRAY (A SEA-SYMPHONY)
+
+ PART I. THE GALE
+
+ PART II. VARIATIONS
+
+ (1) SAILBOATS
+ (2) THE TIDE
+ (3) THE SANDS
+ (4) THE GULLS
+ (5) STEAMERS
+ (6) NIGHT OF STARS
+
+ PART III. VARIATIONS
+
+ (1) THE GROUNDSWELL
+ (2) SNOW AT SEA
+ (3) THE NIGHT WIND
+ (4) THE WRECK
+ (5) TIDE OF STORMS
+
+ PART IV. THE CALM
+
+
+
+
+ IRRADIATIONS
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ The spattering of the rain upon pale terraces
+ Of afternoon is like the passing of a dream
+ Amid the roses shuddering 'gainst the wet green stalks
+ Of the streaming trees--the passing of the wind
+ Upon the pale lower terraces of my dream
+ Is like the crinkling of the wet grey robes
+ Of the hours that come to turn over the urn
+ Of the day and spill its rainy dream.
+ Vague movement over the puddled terraces:
+ Heavy gold pennons--a pomp of solemn gardens
+ Half hidden under the liquid veil of spring:
+ Far trumpets like a vague rout of faded roses
+ Burst 'gainst the wet green silence of distant forests:
+ A clash of cymbals--then the swift swaying footsteps
+ Of the wind that undulates along the languid terraces.
+ Pools of rain--the vacant terraces
+ Wet, chill and glistening
+ Towards the sunset beyond the broken doors of to-day.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Gaunt sails--bronze boats of the evening--
+ Float along the river where aloft
+ Like dim swans the clouds die
+ Softly.
+
+ I am afraid to traverse the long still streets of evening;
+ For I fear to see the ghosts that stare at me
+ From the shadows.
+ I will stay indoors instead and await my wandering dream.
+
+ She is about me, fluid yet, and formless;
+ The wind in her hair whispers like dim violins:
+ And the faint glint of her eyes shifts like a sudden movement
+ Over the surface of a dark pool.
+
+ She comes to me slowly down the lost streets of the evening,
+ And their immutable silence is in her feet.
+ Let no lamps flare--be still, my heart--hands, stay:
+ For I would touch the lips of my new love with my lips.
+
+
+ III
+
+ In the grey skirts of the fog seamews skirl desolately,
+ And flick like bits of paper propelled by a wind
+ About the flabby sails of a departing ship
+ Crawling slowly down the low reaches
+ Of the river.
+ About the keel there is a bubbling and gurgling
+ Of grumpy water;
+ And as the prow noses out a way for itself,
+ It seems to weave a dream of bubbles and flashing foam,
+ A dream of strange islands whereto it is bound:
+ Pear-islands drenched with the dawn.
+ The palms flash under the immense dark sky,
+ Down which the sun dives to embrace the earth:
+ Drums boom and conches bray,
+ And with a crash of crimson cymbals
+ Suddenly appears above the polished backs of slaves
+ A king in a breastplate of gold
+ Gigantic
+ Amid tossed roses and swaying dancers
+ That melt into pale undulations and muffled echoes
+ 'Mid the bubbling of the muddy lumpy water,
+ And the swirling of the seamews above the sullen river.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The iridescent vibrations of midsummer light
+ Dancing, dancing, suddenly flickering and quivering
+ Like little feet or the movement of quick hands clapping,
+ Or the rustle of furbelows or the clash of polished gems.
+ The palpitant mosaic of the midday light
+ Colliding, sliding, leaping and lingering:
+ O, I could lie on my back all day,
+ And mark the mad ballet of the midsummer sky.
+
+
+ V
+
+ Over the roof-tops race the shadows of clouds;
+ Like horses the shadows of clouds charge down the street.
+
+ Whirlpools of purple and gold,
+ Winds from the mountains of cinnabar,
+ Lacquered mandarin moments, palanquins swaying and balancing
+ Amid the vermilion pavilions, against the jade balustrades.
+ Glint of the glittering wings of dragon-flies in the light:
+ Silver filaments, golden flakes settling downwards,
+ Rippling, quivering flutters, repulse and surrender,
+ The sun broidered upon the rain,
+ The rain rustling with the sun.
+
+ Over the roof-tops race the shadows of clouds;
+ Like horses the shadows of clouds charge down the street.
+
+
+ VI
+
+ The balancing of gaudy broad pavilions
+ Of summer against the insolent breeze:
+ The bellying of the sides of striped tents,
+ Swelling taut, shuddering in quick collapse,
+ Silent under the silence of the sky.
+
+ Earth is streaked and spotted
+ With great splashes and dapples of sunlight:
+ The sun throws an immense circle of hot light upon the world,
+ Rolling slowly in ponderous rhythm
+ Darkly, musically forward.
+
+ All is silent under the steep cone of afternoon:
+ The sky is imperturbably profound.
+ The ultimate divine union seems about to be accomplished,
+ All is troubled at the attainment
+ Of the inexhaustible infinite.
+
+ The rolling and the tossing of the sides of immense pavilions
+ Under the whirling wind that screams up the cloudless sky.
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Flickering of incessant rain
+ On flashing pavements:
+ Sudden scurry of umbrellas:
+ Bending, recurved blossoms of the storm.
+
+ The winds came clanging and clattering
+ From long white highroads whipping in ribbons up summits:
+ They strew upon the city gusty wafts of appleblossom,
+ And the rustling of innumerable translucent leaves.
+
+ Uneven tinkling, the lazy rain
+ Dripping from the eaves.
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ The fountain blows its breathless spray
+ From me to you and back to me.
+
+ Whipped, tossed, curdled,
+ Crashing, quivering:
+ I hurl kisses like blows upon your lips.
+ The dance of a bee drunken with sunlight:
+ Irradiant ecstasies, white and gold,
+ Sigh and relapse.
+
+ The fountain tosses pallid spray
+ Far in the sorrowful, silent sky.
+
+
+ IX
+
+ The houses of the city no longer hum and play:
+ They lie like careless drowsy giants, dumb, estranged.
+
+ One presses to his breast his toy, a lighted pane:
+ One stirs uneasily: one is cold in death.
+
+ And the late moon, fearfully peering over an immense shoulder,
+ Sees, in the shadow below, the unpeopled hush of a street.
+
+
+ X
+
+ The trees, like great jade elephants,
+ Chained, stamp and shake 'neath the gadflies of the breeze
+ The trees lunge and plunge, unruly elephants:
+ The clouds are their crimson howdah-canopies,
+ The sunlight glints like the golden robe of a Shah.
+ Would I were tossed on the wrinkled backs of those trees
+
+
+ XI
+
+ The clouds are like a sombre sea:
+ On shining screens of ebony
+ Are carven marvels of my heart.
+
+ 'Gainst crimson placques of cinnabar
+ Shrills, like a diamond, dawn's last star.
+
+ The gardens of my heart are green:
+ The rain drips off the glistening leaves.
+ In the humid gardens of my soul,
+ The crimson peonies explode.
+
+ I am like a drop of rose-flushed rain,
+ Clinging to crimson petals of love.
+
+ In the afternoon, over gold screens,
+ I will brush the blue dust of my dreams.
+
+
+ XII
+
+ The pine, rough-bearded Pan of the woods
+ Whispered in my ear his sleepy-sweet song.
+ Like liquid fire it ran through my veins.
+ Thus he piped: Sad, lonely son of the woods,
+ Lie down in the long still grass and sleep,
+ Ere the dawn has hidden her swelling breasts,
+ Ere the morning has covered her massive flanks,
+ With the flame-coloured mantle of noon.
+ Lie down in the dewless grass nor awake
+ To see whether afternoon has hurried in
+ From the rim of her purple robe dropping dim flowers
+ Golden flowers with pollen-dusty cups,
+ Flowers of silence. Heed not though eve
+ Should sail, a grey swan, in the pool of the sky,
+ Spreading low ripples. Heed these not!
+ Only awake when slim twilight
+ Plunges her body in the last blown spray of the sun!
+ Awake, then, for twilight and dawn are your day:
+ Therefore lie down in the long dim grass and sleep,
+ And I will blow my low pipes over you.
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ As I went through the city by day
+ I saw shadows in sunlight:
+ But in the night I saw everywhere
+ Stars within the darkness.
+
+ (A coldly fluting breeze:
+ Dark Pan under the trees.
+ Low laughter: up the sky
+ A star like a street-lamp left on high.)
+
+ As I went through the city by day
+ I was hustled by jostling people.
+ But in the night, the wind of the darkness
+ Whispered, "Hush!" to my soul.
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ Brown bed of earth, still fresh and warm with love,
+ Now hold me tight:
+ Broad field of sky, where the clouds laughing move,
+ Fill up my pores with light:
+ You trees, now talk to me, chatter and scold or weep,
+ Or drowsing stand:
+ You winds, now play with me, you wild things creep,
+ You boulders, bruise my hand!
+ I now am yours and you are mine: it matters not
+ What Gods herein I see:
+ You grow in me, I am rooted to this spot,
+ We drink and pass the cup, immortally.
+
+
+ XV
+
+ O seeded grass, you army of little men
+ Crawling up the long slope with quivering, quick blades of steel:
+ You who storm millions of graves, tiny green tentacles of Earth,
+ Interlace yourselves tightly over my heart,
+ And do not let me go:
+ For I would lie here forever and watch with one eye
+ The pilgrimaging ants in your dull, savage jungles,
+ The while with the other I see the stiff lines of the slope
+ Break in mid-air, a wave surprisingly arrested,
+ And above them, wavering, dancing, bodiless, colourless, unreal,
+ The long thin lazy fingers of the heat.
+
+
+ XVI
+
+ An ant crawling up a grass-blade,
+ And above it, the sky.
+ I shall remember these when I die:
+ An ant and a butterfly
+ And the sky.
+
+ The grass is full of forget-me-nots and poppies:
+ Through the air darts many a fly.
+ The ant toils up its grass-blade,
+ The careless hours go by.
+
+ The grass-blades bow to the feet of the lazy hours:
+ They walk out of the wood, showering shadows on flowers.
+ Their robes flutter vaguely far off there in the clearing:
+ I see them sometimes from the corner of my eye.
+
+
+ XVII
+
+ The wind that drives the fine dry sand
+ Across the strand:
+ The sad wind spinning arabesques
+ With a wrinkled hand.
+
+ Labyrinths of shifting sand,
+ The dancing dunes!
+
+ I will arise and run with the sand,
+ And gather it greedily in my hand:
+ I will wriggle like a long yellow snake over the beaches.
+ I will lie curled up, sleeping,
+ And the wind shall chase me
+ Far inland.
+
+ My breath is the music of the mad wind;
+ Shrill piping, stamping of drunken feet,
+ The fluttering, tattered broidery flung
+ Over the dunes' steep escarpments.
+
+ The fine dry sand that whistles
+ Down the long low beaches.
+
+
+ XVIII
+
+ Blue, brown, blue: sky, sand, sea:
+ I swell to your immensity.
+ I will run over the endless beach,
+ I will shout to the breaking spray,
+ I will touch the sky with my fingers.
+ My happiness is like this sand:
+ I let it run out of my hand.
+
+
+ XIX
+
+ The clouds pass
+ Over the polished mirror of the sky:
+ The clouds pass, puffs of grey,
+ There is no star.
+
+ The clouds pass slowly:
+ Suddenly a disengaged star flashes.
+ The night is cold and the clouds
+ Roll slowly over the sky.
+
+
+ XX
+
+ I dance:
+ I exist in motion:
+ A wind-shaken flower spilling my drops in the sunlight.
+
+ I feel the muscles bending, relaxing beneath me;
+ I direct the rippling sweep of the lines of my body;
+ Its impact crashes through the thin walls of the atmosphere,
+ I dance.
+
+ About me whirls
+ The sombre hall, the gaudy stage, the harsh glare of the footlights,
+ And in the brains of thousands watching
+ Little flames leap quivering to the music of my effort.
+
+ I have danced:
+ I have expressed my soul
+ In unbroken rhythm,
+ Sorrow, and flame.
+ I am tired: I would be extinguished beneath your beating hands.
+
+
+ XXI
+
+ Not noisily, but solemnly and pale,
+ In a meditative ecstasy you entered life:
+ As performing some strange rite, to which you alone held the clue.
+ Child, life did not give rude strength to you;
+ from the beginning, you would seem to have thrown away,
+ As something cold and cumbersome, that armour men use against death.
+ You would perhaps look on him face to face, and so learn the secret
+ Whether that face wears oftenest a smile or no?
+ Strange, old, and silent being, there is something
+ Infinitely vast in your intense tininess:
+ I think you could point out, with a smile, some curious star
+ Far off in the heavens, which no man has seen before.
+
+
+ XXII
+
+ The morning is clean and blue and the wind blows up the clouds:
+ Now my thoughts gathered from afar
+ Once again in their patched armour, with rusty plumes and blunted swords,
+ Move out to war.
+
+ Smoking our morning pipes we shall ride two and two
+ Through the woods.
+ For our old cause keeps us together,
+ And our hatred is so precious not death or defeat can break it.
+
+ God willing, we shall this day meet that old enemy
+ Who has given us so many a good beating.
+ Thank God we have a cause worth fighting for,
+ And a cause worth losing and a good song to sing.
+
+
+ XXIII
+
+ Torridly the moon rolls upward
+ Against the smooth immensity of midsummer sky,
+ Changeless, inexhaustible:
+ The city beneath is still:
+ Heaven and Earth are clasped together,
+ Momently life grows as careless
+ As the life of the intense stars.
+ Out of the houses climbing,
+ Fuming up windows, flickering from every roof-top,
+ Rigid on sonorous pinnacles,
+ Silently swirl aloft
+ Love's infinite flamelets.
+
+
+ XXIV
+
+ O all you stars up yonder,
+ Do you hear me? Beautiful, winking, sullen eyes,
+ I am tired of seeing you in the same old places,
+ Night after night in the sky.
+ I hoped you would dance--but after twenty-six years,
+ I find you are determined to stay as you are.
+ So I make it known to you, stars clustered or solitary,
+ That I want you to fall into my lap to-night.
+ Come down, little stars, let me play with you:
+ I will string you like beads, and shovel you together,
+ And wear you in my ears, and scatter you over people--
+ And toss you back, like apples, if I choose.
+
+
+ XXV
+
+ As I wandered over the city through the night,
+ I saw many strange things:
+ But I have forgotten all
+ Except one painted face.
+ Gaudy, shameless night-orchid,
+ Heavy, flushed, sticky with narcotic perfume,
+ There was something in you which made me prefer you
+ Above all the feeble forget-me-nots of the world.
+ You were neither burnt out nor pallid,
+ There was plain, coarse, vulgar meaning in every line of you
+ And no make-believe:
+ You were at least alive,
+ When all the rest were but puppets of the night.
+
+
+ XXVI
+
+ Slowly along the lamp-emblazoned street,
+ Amid the last sad drifting crowds of midnight
+ Like lost souls wandering,
+ Comes marching by solemnly
+ As for some gem-bedecked ritual of old,
+ A monotonous procession of black carts
+ Full crowded with blood-red blossom:
+ Scarlet geraniums
+ Unfolding their fiery globes upon the night.
+ These are the memories of day moulded in jagged flame:
+ Lust, joy, blood, and death.
+ With crushed hands, weary eyes, and hoarse clamour,
+ We consecrate and acclaim them tumultuously
+ Ere they pass, contemptuous, beyond the unpierced veil of silence.
+
+
+ XXVII
+
+ I think there was an hour in which God laughed at me,
+ For as I passed along the street,
+ saw that all the women--although their bodies were dexterously concealed--
+ Were thinking with all their might what men were like:
+ And the men, mechanically correct, cigars at lips,
+ Were wanting to rush at the women,
+ But were restrained by respectability or timidity,
+ Or fear of the consequences or vanity or some puerile dream
+ Of a pale ideal lost in the vast grey sky.
+ So I said to myself, it is time to end all this:
+ I will take the first woman that comes along.
+ And then God laughed at me--and I too smiled
+ To see that He was in such good humour and that the sun was shining.
+
+
+ XXVIII
+
+ I remember, there was a day
+ During which I did not write a line of verse:
+ Nor did I speak a word to any woman,
+ Nor did I meet with death.
+
+ Yet all that day I was fully occupied:
+ My eyes saw trees, clouds, streets, houses, people;
+ My lungs breathed air;
+ My mouth swallowed food and drink;
+ My hands seized things, my feet touched earth,
+ Or spurned it at my desire.
+
+ On that day I know I would have been sufficiently happy,
+ If I could have kept my brain from bothering at all
+ About my next trite poem;
+ About the tedious necessities of sex;
+ And about the day on which I would at last meet death.
+
+
+ XXIX
+
+ It is evening, and the earth
+ Wraps her shoulders in an old blue shawl.
+ Afar off there clink the polychrome points of the stars,
+ Indefatigable, after all these years!
+ Here upon earth there is life, and then death,
+ Dawn, and later nightfall,
+ Fire, and the quenching of embers:
+ But why should I not remember that my night is dawn in another part of
+ the world,
+ If the idea fits my fancy?
+ Dawns of marvellous light, wakeful, sleepy, weary, dancing dawns,
+ You are rose petals settling through the blue of my evening:
+ I light my pipe to salute you,
+ And sit puffing smoke in the air and never say a word.
+
+
+ XXX
+
+ I have seemed often feeble and useless to myself,
+ And many times I have wished that the tedium of my life
+ Lay at last dissolved in the cold acid of death:
+ Yet I have not forgotten
+ The sparkling of waters in the sunlight,
+ The sound of a woman's voice,
+ Gliding dancers,
+ Chanting worshippers,
+ A child crying,
+ The wind amid the hills.
+ These I can remember,
+ And I think they are more of me
+ Than the wrinkles on my face and the hungry ache at my heart.
+
+
+ XXXI
+
+ My stiff-spread arms
+ Break into sudden gesture;
+ My feet seize upon the rhythm;
+ My hands drag it upwards:
+ Thus I create the dance.
+
+ I drink of the red bowl of the sunlight:
+ I swim through seas of rain:
+ I dig my toes into earth:
+ I taste the smack of the wind:
+ I am myself:
+ I live.
+
+ The temples of the gods are forgotten or in ruins:
+ Professors are still arguing about the past and the future:
+ I am sick of reading marginal notes on life,
+ I am weary of following false banners:
+ I desire nothing more intensely or completely than this present;
+ There is nothing about me you are more likely to notice than my being:
+ Let me therefore rejoice silently,
+ A golden butterfly glancing against an unflecked wall.
+
+
+ XXXII
+
+ Today you shall have but little song from me,
+ For I belong to the sunlight.
+ This I would not barter for any kingdom.
+
+ I am a wheeling swallow,
+ Blue all over is my delight.
+ I am a drowsy grass-blade
+ In the greenest shadow.
+
+
+ XXXIII
+
+ My desire goes bristling and growling like an angry leopard;
+ My ribs are a hollow grating, my hair is coarse and hard,
+ My flanks are like sharp iron wedges, my eyes glitter as chill glass;
+ Down below there are the meadows where my famished hopes are feeding,
+ I will waylay them to windward, stalking in watchful patience,
+ I will pounce upon them, plunging my muzzle in the hot spurt of their
+ blood.
+
+
+ XXXIV
+
+ The flag let loose for a day of festivity;
+ Free desperate symbol of battle and desire,
+ Leaping, lunging, tossing up the halyards;
+ Below it a tumult of music,
+ Above it the streaming wastes of the sky,
+ Pinnacles of clouds, pyres of dawn,
+ Infinite effort, everlasting day.
+ The immense flag waving
+ Aloft in glory:
+ Over seas and hilltops
+ Transmitting its lightnings.
+
+
+ XXXV
+
+ What weave you, what spin you,
+ What wonder win you,
+ You looms of desire?
+ Sin that is splendour,
+ Love that is shameless,
+ Life that is glory,
+ Life that is all.
+
+
+ XXXVI
+
+ Like cataracts that crash from a crumbling crag
+ Into the dull-blue smouldering gulf of a lake below,
+ Landlocked amid the mountains, so my soul
+ Was a gorge that was filled with the warring echoes of song.
+
+ Of old, they wore
+ Shining armour, and banners of broad gold they bore:
+ Now they drift, like a wild bird's cry,
+ Downwards from chill summits of the sky.
+ Fountains of flashing joy were their source afar;
+ Now they lie still, to mirror every star.
+ In circles of opal, ruby, blue, out-thrown,
+ They drift down to a dull, dark monotone.
+
+ Pluck the loose strings, singer,
+ Thrum the strings;
+ For the wind brings distant, drowsy bells of song.
+ Loose the plucked string, poet,
+ Spurn the strings,
+ For the echoes of memory float through the gulf for long.
+
+ My songs seem now one humming note afar:
+ Light as ether, quivering 'twixt star and star,
+ But yet, so still
+ I know not whence they come, if mine they are.
+ Yet that low note
+ Increases in force as if it said, "I will":
+ Kindled by God's fierce breath, it would the whole world fill.
+ Till steadily outwards thrown,
+ By trumpets blazoned, from the sky downblown,
+ It grows a vast march, massive, monotonous, known
+ Of old gold trumpeteers
+ Through infinite years:
+ Bursting the white, thronged vaults of the cool sky.
+ Till hurtling down there falls one mad black hammer-blow:
+ Then the chained echoes in their maniac woe
+ Are loosed against the silence, to shriek uncannily.
+
+ The strings shiver faintly, poet:
+ Strike the strings,
+ Speed the song:
+ Tremulous upward rush of wheeling, whirling wings.
+
+
+ EPILOGUE
+
+ The barking of little dogs in the night is more remembered than
+ the shining of the stars:
+ Only those who watch for long may see the moon rise:
+ And they are mad ever after and go with blind eyes
+ Nosing hungrily in the gutter for the scraps that men throw to the dogs;
+ Few heed their babblings.
+
+
+
+ SAND AND SPRAY
+
+ A SEA-SYMPHONY
+
+
+
+
+ PART I. THE GALE
+
+
+ _Allegro furioso._
+
+
+ Pale green-white, in a gallop across the sky,
+ The clouds retreating from a perilous affray
+ Carry the moon with them, a heavy sack of gold;
+ Sharp arrows, stars between them shoot and play.
+
+ The wind, as it strikes the sand,
+ Clutches with rigid hands
+ And tears from them
+ Thin ribbons of pallid sleet,
+ Long stinging hissing drift,
+ Which it trails up inland.
+
+ I lean against the bitter wind:
+ My body plunges like a ship.
+ Out there I see grey breakers rise,
+ Their ravelled beards are white,
+ And foam is in their eyes.
+ My heart is blown from me to-night
+ To be transfixed by all the stars.
+
+ Steadily the wind
+ Rages up the shore:
+ In the trees it roars and battles,
+ With rattling drums
+ And heavy spears,
+ Towards the housefronts on it comes.
+
+ The village, a loose mass outflung,
+ Breaks its path.
+ Between the walls
+ It bounces, tosses in its wrath.
+ It is broken, it is lost.
+
+ With green-grey eyes,
+ With whirling arms,
+ With clashing feet,
+ With bellowing lungs,
+ Pale green-white in a gallop across the sky,
+ The wind comes.
+
+ The great gale of the winter flings himself flat upon earth.
+
+ He hurriedly scribbles on the sand
+ His transient tragic destiny.
+
+
+
+
+ PART II. VARIATIONS
+
+
+ (1) SAILBOATS
+
+ _Scherzando._
+
+
+ Light as thin-winged swallows pirouetting and gyrating,
+ The sails dance in the estuary:
+ Now heeling to the gust, now cantering,
+ Bobbing as shuttles back and forth from each other.
+ I They scorn the black steamers that steadily near them
+ I On a course direct, with white spume of smoke from their bows,
+ With snapping crash of breakers they fling themselves forward:
+ Black on the wing-tips, white on the underside.
+ These are the birds of the land breeze,
+ Nesting on green waves in the gold sunlight:
+ These are the sailships
+ Heeling and tossing about in the estuary.
+
+
+
+ (2) THE TIDE
+
+ _Con moto ondeggiante_
+
+
+ The tide makes music
+ At the foot of the beach;
+ The waves sing together
+ Rumble of breakers.
+ Ships there are swaying,
+ Into the distance,
+ Thrum of the cordage,
+ Slap of the sails.
+
+ The tide makes music
+ At the foot of the beach;
+ Low notes of an organ
+ 'Gainst the dull clang of bells.
+ The tide's tense purple
+ On the untrodden sand:
+ Its throat is blue,
+ Its hands are gold.
+
+ The tide makes music:
+ The tide all day
+ Catches light from the clouds
+ That float over the sky.
+
+ Ocean, old serpent,
+ Coils up and uncoils;
+ With sinuous motion,
+ With rustle of scales.
+
+
+ (3) THE SANDS
+
+ _Lento._
+
+
+ Shallow pools of water
+ Are drinking up the sky;
+ Chasms of cool blue-white
+ In the brown of the sands.
+ The clouds are in them,
+ The houses on the shore,
+ The winds rumple the even
+ Glimmer of the reflection.
+
+ _Appassionato._
+
+ I dash across those shallow pools:
+ Starring their gauzy surface:
+ A plopping rush of bubbles:
+ I turn and watch my boot-tracks
+ Oozing upwards slowly in the dark wind-wrinkled sand.
+
+
+ (4) THE GULLS
+
+ _Molto Allegro._
+
+
+ White stars scattering,
+ Pale rain of spray-drops,
+ Delicate flash of smoke wind-drifted low and high,
+ Silver upon dark purple,
+ The gulls quiver
+ In a noiseless flight, far out across the sky.
+
+
+ (5) STEAMERS
+
+ _Maestoso._
+
+
+ Like black plunging dolphins with red bellies,
+ The steamers in herds
+ Swim through the choppy breakers
+ On this day of winds and clouds.
+ Wallowing and plunging,
+ They seek their path,
+ The smoke of their snorting
+ Hangs in the sky.
+
+ Like black plunging dolphins with red bellies,
+ The steamers pass,
+ Flapping their propellers
+ Salt with the spray.
+ Their iron sides glisten,
+ Their stays thrash:
+ Their funnels quiver
+ With the heat from beneath.
+
+ Like black plunging dolphins with red bellies,
+ The steamers together
+ Dive and roll through the tumult
+ Of green hissing water.
+
+ These are the avid of spoil,
+ Gleaners of the seas,
+ They loom on their adventure
+ Up purple and chrome horizons.
+
+
+ (6) NIGHT OF STARS
+
+ _Allegro brillante._
+
+
+ The sky immense, bejewelled with rain of stars,
+ Hangs over us:
+ The stars like a sudden explosion powder the zenith
+ With green and gold;
+ North-east, south-west the Milky Way's pale streamers
+ Flash past in flame;
+ The sky is a swirling cataract
+ Of fire, on high.
+
+ Over us the sky up to the zenith
+ Palpitates with tense glitter:
+ About our keel the foam bubbles and curdles
+ In phosphorescent joy.
+ Flame boils up to meet down-rushing flame
+ In the blue stillness.
+ Aloft a single orange meteor
+ Crashes down the sky.
+
+
+
+
+ PART III. VARIATIONS
+
+
+ (1) THE GROUNDSWELL.
+
+ _Marcia Funebre._
+
+
+ With heavy doleful clamour, hour on hour, and day on day,
+ The muddy groundswell lifts and breaks and falls and slides away.
+
+ The cold and naked wind runs shivering over the sands,
+ Salt are its eyes, open its mouth, its brow wet, blue its hands.
+
+ It finds naught but a starving gull whose wings trail at its side,
+ And the dull battered wreckage, grey jetsam of the tide.
+
+ The lifeless chilly slaty sky with no blue hope is lit,
+ A rusty waddling steamer plants a smudge of smoke on it.
+
+ Stupidly stand the factory chimneys staring over all,
+ The grey grows ever denser, and soon the night will fall:
+
+ The wind runs sobbing over the beach and touches with its hands
+ Straw, chaff, old bottles, broken crates, the litter of the sands.
+
+ Sometimes the bloated carcase of a dog or fish is found,
+ Sometimes the rumpled feathers of a sea-gull shot or drowned.
+
+ Last year it was an unknown man who came up from the sea,
+ There is his grave hard by the dunes under a stunted tree.
+
+ With heavy doleful clamour, hour on hour, and day on day,
+ The muddy groundswell lifts and breaks and falls and slides away.
+
+
+ (2) SNOW AT SEA
+
+ _Andante._
+
+
+ Silently fell
+ The snow on the waters
+ In the grey dusk
+ Of the winter evening:
+ Swirling and falling,
+ Sucked into the oily
+ Blue-black surface
+ Of the sea.
+
+ We pounded on slowly;
+ From our bows sheeted
+ A shuddering mass of heavy foam:
+ Night closed about us,
+ But ere we were darkened,
+ We saw close in
+ A great gaunt schooner
+ Beating to southward.
+
+ Silently fell
+ The snow on the waters,
+ As we pounded north
+ In the winter evening.
+
+
+ (3) THE NIGHT WIND
+
+ _Adagio lamentoso._
+
+
+ Wind of the night, wind of the long cool shadows,
+ Wind from the garden gate stealing up the avenue,
+ Wind caressing my cool pale cheek completely,
+ All my happiness goes out to you.
+
+ Wind flapping aimlessly at my yellow window curtain,
+ Wind suddenly insisting on your way down to the sea,
+ Buoyant wind, sobbing wind, wind shuddering and plaintive,
+ Why come you from beyond through the night's blue mystery?
+
+ Wind of my dream, wind of the delicate beauty,
+ Wind strumming idly at the harp-strings of my heart:
+ Wind of the autumn--O melancholy beauty,
+ Touch me once--one instant--you and I shall never part!
+
+ Wind of the night, wind that has fallen silent,
+ Wind from the dark beyond crying suddenly, eerily,
+ What terrible news have you shrieked out there in the stillness?
+ The night is cool and quiet and the wind has crept to sea.
+
+
+ (4) THE WRECK
+
+ _Grave: triste._
+
+
+ Its huge red prow
+ Uplifted in a tragic attitude,
+ It waits out there; the seas around
+ Bubble and hiss with moaning sound:
+ In sight of port at the gates of the sea,
+ It waits upreared expectantly.
+
+ It has known the joy of battle,
+ It has known the shock of wreck:
+ The spray coated its planking,
+ The sands swallow its deck:
+ Monument of the sea,
+ That knows and that forgets eternally.
+
+ It heaves its scarred brow towards the city:
+ The city pays it little heed:
+ Indifferent, brutal, without pity,
+ Stern cargo-steamers trudge and speed;
+ The sun glares on it and the gulls wheel and flash,
+ The rain beats on its deck, the winds pass silently;
+ It is out there alone with the immense sea:
+ Alone with its forgotten tragedy.
+
+
+ (5) TIDE OF STORMS
+
+ _Allegro con fuoco._
+
+
+ Crooked, crawling tide with long wet fingers
+ Clutching at the gritty beach in the roar and spurt of spray,
+ Tide of gales, drunken tide, lava-burst of breakers,
+ Black ships plunge upon you from sea to sea away.
+
+ Shattering tide, tide of winds, tide of the long still winter,
+ What matter though ships fail, men sink, there vanish glory?
+ War-clouds shall hurl their stinging sleet upon our last adventure,
+ Night-winds shall brokenly whisper our bitter, tragic story.
+
+
+
+
+ PART IV. THE CALM
+
+ _Largo._
+
+
+ In the morning I saw three great ships
+ Almost motionless
+ Becalmed on an infinite horizon.
+
+ The clatter of waves up the beach,
+ The grating rush of wet pebbles,
+ The loud monotonous song of the surf,
+ All these have soothed me
+ And have given
+ My soul to rest.
+
+ At noon I shall see waves flashing,
+ White power of spray.
+
+ The steamers, stately,
+ Kick up white puffs of spray behind them.
+ The boiling wake
+ Merges in the blue-black mirror of the sea.
+
+ One eye of the sun sees all:
+ The world, the wave, my heart.
+ I am content.
+
+ In the afternoon I shall dream a dream
+ Of islands beyond the horizon.
+
+ White clouds drift over the sky,
+ Frigates on a long voyage.
+
+ In the evening a mute blue stillness
+ Clutches at my heart.
+ Stars sparkle upon the tips of my fingers.
+
+ Mystical hush,
+ Fire in the darkness;
+ The breaking of dreams.
+
+ But in the morning I shall see three great
+ Almost motionless
+ Becalmed on an infinite horizon.
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Irradiations; Sand and Spray, by
+John Gould Fletcher
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