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+Project Gutenberg Etext of Chinese Nightingale, by Vachel Lindsay
+#3 in our series by Vachel Lindsay
+
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+The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems
+
+by Vachel Lindsay
+
+July, 1996 [Etext #592]
+
+
+**The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Chinese Nightingale**
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+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems,
+by Vachel Lindsay. [Nicholas Vachel Lindsay, Illinois Poet. 1879-1931.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Note on text: Italicized words or phrases capitalized.
+Italicized stanzas are indented 5 spaces. Some errors have been corrected.
+Lines longer than 78 characters are broken according to metre,
+and the continuation is indented two spaces.]
+
+
+
+
+
+The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems
+
+By Vachel Lindsay
+Author of "The Congo", "General William Booth Enters Into Heaven",
+"Adventures While Preaching the Gospel of Beauty", etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+This Book is Dedicated to Sara Teasdale, Poet
+
+
+
+
+
+ Harriet Monroe awarded the Levinson Prize to "The Chinese Nightingale",
+ as the best contribution to "Poetry: A Magazine of Verse",
+ for the year 1915.
+
+
+
+
+
+Table of Contents
+
+
+
+ First Section
+
+The Chinese Nightingale
+
+
+ Second Section
+America Watching the War, August, 1914, to April, 1917
+
+Where Is the Real Non-resistant?
+Here's to the Mice!
+When Bryan Speaks
+To Jane Addams at the Hague
+ I. Speak Now for Peace
+ II. Tolstoi Is Plowing Yet
+The Tale of the Tiger Tree
+The Merciful Hand
+
+
+ Third Section
+America at War with Germany, Beginning April, 1917
+
+Our Mother Pocahontas
+Concerning Emperors
+Niagara
+Mark Twain and Joan of Arc
+The Bankrupt Peace Maker
+"This, My Song, is made for Kerensky"
+
+
+ Fourth Section
+Tragedies, Comedies, and Dreams
+
+Our Guardian Angels and Their Children
+Epitaphs for Two Players
+ I. Edwin Booth
+ II. John Bunny, Motion Picture Comedian
+Mae Marsh, Motion Picture Actress
+Two Old Crows
+The Drunkard's Funeral
+The Raft
+The Ghosts of the Buffaloes
+The Broncho that Would Not Be Broken
+The Prairie Battlements
+The Flower of Mending
+Alone in the Wind, on the Prairie
+To Lady Jane
+How I Walked Alone in the Jungles of Heaven
+
+
+ Fifth Section
+The Poem Games
+
+An Account of the Poem Games
+The King of Yellow Butterflies
+The Potatoes' Dance
+The Booker Washington Trilogy
+ I. Simon Legree
+ II. John Brown
+ III. King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba
+How Samson Bore Away the Gates of Gaza
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ First Section
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Chinese Nightingale
+
+A Song in Chinese Tapestries
+
+
+
+"How, how," he said. "Friend Chang," I said,
+"San Francisco sleeps as the dead --
+Ended license, lust and play:
+Why do you iron the night away?
+Your big clock speaks with a deadly sound,
+With a tick and a wail till dawn comes round.
+While the monster shadows glower and creep,
+What can be better for man than sleep?"
+
+"I will tell you a secret," Chang replied;
+"My breast with vision is satisfied,
+And I see green trees and fluttering wings,
+And my deathless bird from Shanghai sings."
+Then he lit five fire-crackers in a pan.
+"Pop, pop," said the fire-crackers, "cra-cra-crack."
+He lit a joss stick long and black.
+Then the proud gray joss in the corner stirred;
+On his wrist appeared a gray small bird,
+And this was the song of the gray small bird:
+"Where is the princess, loved forever,
+Who made Chang first of the kings of men?"
+
+And the joss in the corner stirred again;
+And the carved dog, curled in his arms, awoke,
+Barked forth a smoke-cloud that whirled and broke.
+It piled in a maze round the ironing-place,
+And there on the snowy table wide
+Stood a Chinese lady of high degree,
+With a scornful, witching, tea-rose face. . . .
+Yet she put away all form and pride,
+And laid her glimmering veil aside
+With a childlike smile for Chang and for me.
+
+The walls fell back, night was aflower,
+The table gleamed in a moonlit bower,
+While Chang, with a countenance carved of stone,
+Ironed and ironed, all alone.
+And thus she sang to the busy man Chang:
+"Have you forgotten. . . .
+Deep in the ages, long, long ago,
+I was your sweetheart, there on the sand --
+Storm-worn beach of the Chinese land?
+We sold our grain in the peacock town
+Built on the edge of the sea-sands brown --
+Built on the edge of the sea-sands brown. . . .
+
+"When all the world was drinking blood
+From the skulls of men and bulls
+And all the world had swords and clubs of stone,
+We drank our tea in China beneath the sacred spice-trees,
+And heard the curled waves of the harbor moan.
+And this gray bird, in Love's first spring,
+With a bright-bronze breast and a bronze-brown wing,
+Captured the world with his carolling.
+Do you remember, ages after,
+At last the world we were born to own?
+You were the heir of the yellow throne --
+The world was the field of the Chinese man
+And we were the pride of the Sons of Han?
+We copied deep books and we carved in jade,
+And wove blue silks in the mulberry shade. . . ."
+
+"I remember, I remember
+That Spring came on forever,
+That Spring came on forever,"
+Said the Chinese nightingale.
+
+My heart was filled with marvel and dream,
+Though I saw the western street-lamps gleam,
+Though dawn was bringing the western day,
+Though Chang was a laundryman ironing away. . . .
+Mingled there with the streets and alleys,
+The railroad-yard and the clock-tower bright,
+Demon clouds crossed ancient valleys;
+Across wide lotus-ponds of light
+I marked a giant firefly's flight.
+
+And the lady, rosy-red,
+Flourished her fan, her shimmering fan,
+Stretched her hand toward Chang, and said:
+"Do you remember,
+Ages after,
+Our palace of heart-red stone?
+Do you remember
+The little doll-faced children
+With their lanterns full of moon-fire,
+That came from all the empire
+Honoring the throne? --
+The loveliest fete and carnival
+Our world had ever known?
+The sages sat about us
+With their heads bowed in their beards,
+With proper meditation on the sight.
+Confucius was not born;
+We lived in those great days
+Confucius later said were lived aright. . . .
+And this gray bird, on that day of spring,
+With a bright bronze breast, and a bronze-brown wing,
+Captured the world with his carolling.
+Late at night his tune was spent.
+Peasants,
+Sages,
+Children,
+Homeward went,
+And then the bronze bird sang for you and me.
+We walked alone. Our hearts were high and free.
+I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name,
+I had a silvery name -- do you remember
+The name you cried beside the tumbling sea?"
+
+Chang turned not to the lady slim --
+He bent to his work, ironing away;
+But she was arch, and knowing and glowing,
+And the bird on his shoulder spoke for him.
+
+"Darling . . . darling . . . darling . . . darling . . ."
+Said the Chinese nightingale.
+
+The great gray joss on a rustic shelf,
+Rakish and shrewd, with his collar awry,
+Sang impolitely, as though by himself,
+Drowning with his bellowing the nightingale's cry:
+"Back through a hundred, hundred years
+Hear the waves as they climb the piers,
+Hear the howl of the silver seas,
+Hear the thunder.
+Hear the gongs of holy China
+How the waves and tunes combine
+In a rhythmic clashing wonder,
+Incantation old and fine:
+ `Dragons, dragons, Chinese dragons,
+ Red fire-crackers, and green fire-crackers,
+ And dragons, dragons, Chinese dragons.'"
+
+Then the lady, rosy-red,
+Turned to her lover Chang and said:
+"Dare you forget that turquoise dawn
+When we stood in our mist-hung velvet lawn,
+And worked a spell this great joss taught
+Till a God of the Dragons was charmed and caught?
+From the flag high over our palace home
+He flew to our feet in rainbow-foam --
+A king of beauty and tempest and thunder
+Panting to tear our sorrows asunder.
+A dragon of fair adventure and wonder.
+We mounted the back of that royal slave
+With thoughts of desire that were noble and grave.
+We swam down the shore to the dragon-mountains,
+We whirled to the peaks and the fiery fountains.
+To our secret ivory house we were bourne.
+We looked down the wonderful wing-filled regions
+Where the dragons darted in glimmering legions.
+Right by my breast the nightingale sang;
+The old rhymes rang in the sunlit mist
+That we this hour regain --
+Song-fire for the brain.
+When my hands and my hair and my feet you kissed,
+When you cried for your heart's new pain,
+What was my name in the dragon-mist,
+In the rings of rainbowed rain?"
+
+"Sorrow and love, glory and love,"
+Said the Chinese nightingale.
+"Sorrow and love, glory and love,"
+Said the Chinese nightingale.
+
+And now the joss broke in with his song:
+"Dying ember, bird of Chang,
+Soul of Chang, do you remember? --
+Ere you returned to the shining harbor
+There were pirates by ten thousand
+Descended on the town
+In vessels mountain-high and red and brown,
+Moon-ships that climbed the storms and cut the skies.
+On their prows were painted terrible bright eyes.
+But I was then a wizard and a scholar and a priest;
+I stood upon the sand;
+With lifted hand I looked upon them
+And sunk their vessels with my wizard eyes,
+And the stately lacquer-gate made safe again.
+Deep, deep below the bay, the sea-weed and the spray,
+Embalmed in amber every pirate lies,
+Embalmed in amber every pirate lies."
+
+Then this did the noble lady say:
+"Bird, do you dream of our home-coming day
+When you flew like a courier on before
+From the dragon-peak to our palace-door,
+And we drove the steed in your singing path --
+The ramping dragon of laughter and wrath:
+And found our city all aglow,
+And knighted this joss that decked it so?
+There were golden fishes in the purple river
+And silver fishes and rainbow fishes.
+There were golden junks in the laughing river,
+And silver junks and rainbow junks:
+There were golden lilies by the bay and river,
+And silver lilies and tiger-lilies,
+And tinkling wind-bells in the gardens of the town
+By the black-lacquer gate
+Where walked in state
+The kind king Chang
+And his sweet-heart mate. . . .
+With his flag-born dragon
+And his crown of pearl . . . and . . . jade,
+And his nightingale reigning in the mulberry shade,
+And sailors and soldiers on the sea-sands brown,
+And priests who bowed them down to your song --
+By the city called Han, the peacock town,
+By the city called Han, the nightingale town,
+The nightingale town."
+
+Then sang the bird, so strangely gay,
+Fluttering, fluttering, ghostly and gray,
+A vague, unravelling, final tune,
+Like a long unwinding silk cocoon;
+Sang as though for the soul of him
+Who ironed away in that bower dim: --
+ "I have forgotten
+ Your dragons great,
+ Merry and mad and friendly and bold.
+ Dim is your proud lost palace-gate.
+ I vaguely know
+ There were heroes of old,
+ Troubles more than the heart could hold,
+ There were wolves in the woods
+ Yet lambs in the fold,
+ Nests in the top of the almond tree. . . .
+ The evergreen tree . . . and the mulberry tree . . .
+ Life and hurry and joy forgotten,
+ Years on years I but half-remember . . .
+ Man is a torch, then ashes soon,
+ May and June, then dead December,
+ Dead December, then again June.
+ Who shall end my dream's confusion?
+ Life is a loom, weaving illusion . . .
+ I remember, I remember
+ There were ghostly veils and laces . . .
+ In the shadowy bowery places . . .
+ With lovers' ardent faces
+ Bending to one another,
+ Speaking each his part.
+ They infinitely echo
+ In the red cave of my heart.
+ `Sweetheart, sweetheart, sweetheart.'
+ They said to one another.
+ They spoke, I think, of perils past.
+ They spoke, I think, of peace at last.
+ One thing I remember:
+ Spring came on forever,
+ Spring came on forever,"
+ Said the Chinese nightingale.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Second Section
+America Watching the War, August, 1914, to April, 1917
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Where Is the Real Non-resistant?
+
+(Matthew 5:38-48)
+
+
+
+Who can surrender to Christ, dividing his best with the stranger,
+Giving to each what he asks, braving the uttermost danger
+All for the enemy, MAN? Who can surrender till death
+His words and his works, his house and his lands,
+His eyes and his heart and his breath?
+
+Who can surrender to Christ? Many have yearned toward it daily.
+Yet they surrender to passion, wildly or grimly or gaily;
+Yet they surrender to pride, counting her precious and queenly;
+Yet they surrender to knowledge, preening their feathers serenely.
+
+Who can surrender to Christ? Where is the man so transcendent,
+So heated with love of his kind, so filled with the spirit resplendent
+That all of the hours of his day his song is thrilling and tender,
+And all of his thoughts to our white cause of peace
+ Surrender, surrender, surrender?
+
+
+
+
+Here's to the Mice!
+
+(Written with the hope that the socialists might yet
+dethrone Kaiser and Czar.)
+
+
+
+Here's to the mice that scare the lions,
+Creeping into their cages.
+Here's to the fairy mice that bite
+The elephants fat and wise:
+Hidden in the hay-pile while the elephant thunder rages.
+Here's to the scurrying, timid mice
+Through whom the proud cause dies.
+
+Here's to the seeming accident
+When all is planned and working,
+All the flywheels turning,
+Not a vassal shirking.
+Here's to the hidden tunneling thing
+That brings the mountain's groans.
+Here's to the midnight scamps that gnaw,
+Gnawing away the thrones.
+
+
+
+
+When Bryan Speaks
+
+
+
+When Bryan speaks, the town's a hive.
+From miles around, the autos drive.
+The sparrow chirps. The rooster crows.
+The place is kicking and alive.
+
+When Bryan speaks, the bunting glows.
+The raw procession onward flows.
+The small dogs bark. The children laugh
+A wind of springtime fancy blows.
+
+When Bryan speaks, the wigwam shakes.
+The corporation magnate quakes.
+The pre-convention plot is smashed.
+The valiant pleb full-armed awakes.
+
+When Bryan speaks, the sky is ours,
+The wheat, the forests, and the flowers.
+And who is here to say us nay?
+Fled are the ancient tyrant powers.
+
+When Bryan speaks, then I rejoice.
+His is the strange composite voice
+Of many million singing souls
+Who make world-brotherhood their choice.
+
+ Written in Washington, D.C.
+ February, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+To Jane Addams at the Hague
+
+Two Poems, written on the Sinking of the Lusitania.
+Appearing in the Chicago `Herald', May 11, 1915.
+
+
+
+ I. Speak Now for Peace
+
+
+Lady of Light, and our best woman, and queen,
+Stand now for peace, (though anger breaks your heart),
+Though naught but smoke and flame and drowning is seen.
+
+Lady of Light, speak, though you speak alone,
+Though your voice may seem as a dove's in this howling flood,
+It is heard to-night by every senate and throne.
+
+Though the widening battle of millions and millions of men
+Threatens to-night to sweep the whole of the earth,
+Back of the smoke is the promise of kindness again.
+
+
+
+ II. Tolstoi Is Plowing Yet
+
+
+Tolstoi is plowing yet. When the smoke-clouds break,
+High in the sky shines a field as wide as the world.
+There he toils for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake.
+
+Ah, he is taller than clouds of the little earth.
+Only the congress of planets is over him,
+And the arching path where new sweet stars have birth.
+
+Wearing his peasant dress, his head bent low,
+Tolstoi, that angel of Peace, is plowing yet;
+Forward, across the field, his horses go.
+
+
+
+
+The Tale of the Tiger Tree
+
+A Fantasy, dedicated to the little poet Alice Oliver Henderson, ten years old.
+
+The Fantasy shows how tiger-hearts are the cause of war in all ages.
+It shows how the mammoth forces may be either friends or enemies
+of the struggle for peace. It shows how the dream of peace
+is unconquerable and eternal.
+
+
+
+ I
+
+Peace-of-the-Heart, my own for long,
+Whose shining hair the May-winds fan,
+Making it tangled as they can,
+A mystery still, star-shining yet,
+Through ancient ages known to me
+And now once more reborn with me: --
+
+This is the tale of the Tiger Tree
+A hundred times the height of a man,
+Lord of the race since the world began.
+
+This is my city Springfield,
+My home on the breast of the plain.
+The state house towers to heaven,
+By an arsenal gray as the rain . . .
+And suddenly all is mist,
+And I walk in a world apart,
+In the forest-age when I first knelt down
+At your feet, O Peace-of-the-Heart.
+
+This is the wonder of twilight:
+Three times as high as the dome
+Tiger-striped trees encircle the town,
+Golden geysers of foam.
+While giant white parrots sail past in their pride.
+The roofs now are clouds and storms that they ride.
+And there with the huntsmen of mound-builder days
+Through jungle and meadow I stride.
+And the Tiger Tree leaf is falling around
+As it fell when the world began:
+Like a monstrous tiger-skin, stretched on the ground,
+Or the cloak of a medicine man.
+A deep-crumpled gossamer web,
+Fringed with the fangs of a snake.
+The wind swirls it down from the leperous boughs.
+It shimmers on clay-hill and lake,
+With the gleam of great bubbles of blood,
+Or coiled like a rainbow shell. . . .
+I feast on the stem of the Leaf as I march.
+I am burning with Heaven and Hell.
+
+
+ II
+
+The gray king died in his hour.
+Then we crowned you, the prophetess wise:
+Peace-of-the-Heart we deeply adored
+For the witchcraft hid in your eyes.
+Gift from the sky, overmastering all,
+You sent forth your magical parrots to call
+The plot-hatching prince of the tigers,
+To your throne by the red-clay wall.
+
+Thus came that genius insane:
+Spitting and slinking,
+Sneering and vain,
+He sprawled to your grassy throne, drunk on The Leaf,
+The drug that was cunning and splendor and grief.
+He had fled from the mammoth by day,
+He had blasted the mammoth by night,
+War was his drunkenness,
+War was his dreaming,
+War was his love and his play.
+And he hissed at your heavenly glory
+While his councillors snarled in delight,
+Asking in irony: "What shall we learn
+From this whisperer, fragile and white?"
+
+And had you not been an enchantress
+They would not have loitered to mock
+Nor spared your white parrots who walked by their paws
+With bantering venturesome talk.
+
+You made a white fire of The Leaf.
+You sang while the tiger-chiefs hissed.
+You chanted of "Peace to the wonderful world."
+And they saw you in dazzling mist.
+And their steps were no longer insane,
+Kindness came down like the rain,
+They dreamed that like fleet young ponies they feasted
+On succulent grasses and grain.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+Then came the black-mammoth chief:
+Long-haired and shaggy and great,
+Proud and sagacious he marshalled his court:
+(You had sent him your parrots of state.)
+His trunk in rebellion upcurled,
+A curse at the tiger he hurled.
+Huge elephants trumpeted there by his side,
+And mastodon-chiefs of the world.
+But higher magic began.
+For the turbulent vassals of man.
+You harnessed their fever, you conquered their ire,
+Their hearts turned to flowers through holy desire,
+For their darling and star you were crowned,
+And their raging demons were bound.
+You rode on the back of the yellow-streaked king,
+His loose neck was wreathed with a mistletoe ring.
+Primordial elephants loomed by your side,
+And our clay-painted children danced by your path,
+Chanting the death of the kingdoms of wrath.
+You wrought until night with us all.
+The fierce brutes fawned at your call,
+Then slipped to their lairs, song-chained.
+And thus you sang sweetly, and reigned:
+"Immortal is the inner peace, free to beasts and men.
+Beginning in the darkness, the mystery will conquer,
+And now it comforts every heart that seeks for love again.
+And now the mammoth bows the knee,
+We hew down every Tiger Tree,
+We send each tiger bound in love and glory to his den,
+Bound in love . . . and wisdom . . . and glory, . . . to his den."
+
+
+ III
+
+"Beware of the trumpeting swine,"
+Came the howl from the northward that night.
+Twice-rebel tigers warning was still
+If we held not beside them it boded us ill.
+From the parrots translating the cry,
+And the apes in the trees came the whine:
+"Beware of the trumpeting swine.
+Beware of the faith of a mammoth."
+
+"Beware of the faith of a tiger,"
+Came the roar from the southward that night.
+Trumpeting mammoths warning us still
+If we held not beside them it boded us ill.
+The frail apes wailed to us all,
+The parrots reechoed the call:
+"Beware of the faith of a tiger."
+From the heights of the forest the watchers could see
+The tiger-cats crunching the Leaf of the Tree
+Lashing themselves, and scattering foam,
+Killing our huntsmen, hurrying home.
+The chiefs of the mammoths our mastery spurned,
+And eastward restlessly fumed and burned.
+The peacocks squalled out the news of their drilling
+And told how they trampled, maneuvered, and turned.
+Ten thousand man-hating tigers
+Whirling down from the north, like a flood!
+Ten thousand mammoths oncoming
+From the south as avengers of blood!
+Our child-queen was mourning, her magic was dead,
+The roots of the Tiger Tree reeking with red.
+
+
+ IV
+
+This is the tale of the Tiger Tree
+A hundred times the height of a man,
+Lord of the race since the world began.
+
+We marched to the mammoths,
+We pledged them our steel,
+And scorning you, sang: --
+"We are men,
+We are men."
+We mounted their necks,
+And they stamped a wide reel.
+We sang:
+"We are fighting the hell-cats again,
+We are mound-builder men,
+We are elephant men."
+We left you there, lonely,
+Beauty your power,
+Wisdom your watchman,
+To hold the clay tower.
+While the black-mammoths boomed --
+"You are elephant men,
+Men,
+Men,
+Elephant men."
+The dawn-winds prophesied battles untold.
+While the Tiger Trees roared of the glories of old,
+Of the masterful spirits and hard.
+
+The drunken cats came in their joy
+In the sunrise, a glittering wave.
+"We are tigers, are tigers," they yowled.
+"Down,
+Down,
+Go the swine to the grave."
+But we tramp
+Tramp
+Trampled them there,
+Then charged with our sabres and spears.
+The swish of the sabre,
+The swish of the sabre,
+Was a marvellous tune in our ears.
+We yelled "We are men,
+We are men."
+As we bled to death in the sun. . . .
+Then staunched our horrible wounds
+With the cry that the battle was won. . . .
+And at last,
+When the black-mammoth legion
+Split the night with their song: --
+"Right is braver than wrong,
+Right is stronger than wrong,"
+The buzzards came taunting:
+"Down from the north
+Tiger-nations are sweeping along."
+
+ . . . . .
+
+Then we ate of the ravening Leaf
+As our savage fathers of old.
+No longer our wounds made us weak,
+No longer our pulses were cold.
+Though half of my troops were afoot,
+(For the great who had borne them were slain)
+We dreamed we were tigers, and leaped
+And foamed with that vision insane.
+We cried "We are soldiers of doom,
+Doom,
+Sabres of glory and doom."
+We wreathed the king of the mammoths
+In the tiger-leaves' terrible bloom.
+We flattered the king of the mammoths,
+Loud-rattling sabres and spears.
+The swish of the sabre,
+The swish of the sabre,
+Was a marvellous tune in his ears.
+
+
+ V
+
+This was the end of the battle.
+The tigers poured by in a tide
+Over us all with their caterwaul call,
+"We are the tigers,"
+They cried.
+"We are the sabres,"
+They cried.
+But we laughed while our blades swept wide,
+While the dawn-rays stabbed through the gloom.
+"We are suns on fire" was our yell --
+"Suns on fire." . . .
+But man-child and mastodon fell,
+Mammoth and elephant fell.
+The fangs of the devil-cats closed on the world,
+Plunged it to blackness and doom.
+The desolate red-clay wall
+Echoed the parrots' call: --
+"Immortal is the inner peace, free to beasts and men.
+Beginning in the darkness, the mystery will conquer,
+And now it comforts every heart that seeks for love again.
+And now the mammoth bows the knee,
+We hew down every Tiger Tree,
+We send each tiger bound in love and glory to his den,
+Bound in love . . . and wisdom . . . and glory, . . . to his den."
+
+A peacock screamed of his beauty
+On that broken wall by the trees,
+Chiding his little mate,
+Spreading his fans in the breeze . . .
+And you, with eyes of a bride,
+Knelt on the wall at my side,
+The deathless song in your mouth . . .
+A million new tigers swept south . . .
+As we laughed at the peacock, and died.
+
+This is my vision in Springfield:
+Three times as high as the dome,
+Tiger-striped trees encircle the town,
+Golden geysers of foam; --
+Though giant white parrots sail past, giving voice,
+Though I walk with Peace-of-the-Heart and rejoice.
+
+
+
+
+The Merciful Hand
+
+Written to Miss Alice L. F. Fitzgerald, Edith Cavell memorial nurse,
+going to the front.
+
+
+
+Your fine white hand is Heaven's gift
+To cure the wide world, stricken sore,
+Bleeding at the breast and head,
+Tearing at its wounds once more.
+
+Your white hand is a prophecy,
+A living hope that Christ shall come
+And make the nations merciful,
+Hating the bayonet and drum.
+
+Each desperate burning brain you soothe,
+Or ghastly broken frame you bind,
+Brings one day nearer our bright goal,
+The love-alliance of mankind.
+
+ Wellesley.
+ February, 1916.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Third Section
+America at War with Germany, Beginning April, 1917
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Our Mother Pocahontas
+
+(Note: -- Pocahontas is buried at Gravesend, England.)
+
+"Pocahontas' body, lovely as a poplar, sweet as a red haw in November
+or a pawpaw in May -- did she wonder? does she remember --
+in the dust -- in the cool tombs?"
+ Carl Sandburg.
+
+
+
+ I
+
+Powhatan was conqueror,
+Powhatan was emperor.
+He was akin to wolf and bee,
+Brother of the hickory tree.
+Son of the red lightning stroke
+And the lightning-shivered oak.
+His panther-grace bloomed in the maid
+Who laughed among the winds and played
+In excellence of savage pride,
+Wooing the forest, open-eyed,
+In the springtime,
+In Virginia,
+Our Mother, Pocahontas.
+
+Her skin was rosy copper-red.
+And high she held her beauteous head.
+Her step was like a rustling leaf:
+Her heart a nest, untouched of grief.
+She dreamed of sons like Powhatan,
+And through her blood the lightning ran.
+Love-cries with the birds she sung,
+Birdlike
+In the grape-vine swung.
+The Forest, arching low and wide
+Gloried in its Indian bride.
+Rolfe, that dim adventurer
+Had not come a courtier.
+John Rolfe is not our ancestor.
+We rise from out the soul of her
+Held in native wonderland,
+While the sun's rays kissed her hand,
+In the springtime,
+In Virginia,
+Our Mother, Pocahontas.
+
+
+ II
+
+She heard the forest talking,
+Across the sea came walking,
+And traced the paths of Daniel Boone,
+Then westward chased the painted moon.
+She passed with wild young feet
+On to Kansas wheat,
+On to the miners' west,
+The echoing canyons' guest,
+Then the Pacific sand,
+Waking,
+Thrilling,
+The midnight land. . . .
+
+On Adams street and Jefferson --
+Flames coming up from the ground!
+On Jackson street and Washington --
+Flames coming up from the ground!
+And why, until the dawning sun
+Are flames coming up from the ground?
+Because, through drowsy Springfield sped
+This red-skin queen, with feathered head,
+With winds and stars, that pay her court
+And leaping beasts, that make her sport;
+Because, gray Europe's rags august
+She tramples in the dust;
+Because we are her fields of corn;
+Because our fires are all reborn
+From her bosom's deathless embers,
+Flaming
+As she remembers
+The springtime
+And Virginia,
+Our Mother, Pocahontas.
+
+
+ III
+
+We here renounce our Saxon blood.
+Tomorrow's hopes, an April flood
+Come roaring in. The newest race
+Is born of her resilient grace.
+We here renounce our Teuton pride:
+Our Norse and Slavic boasts have died:
+Italian dreams are swept away,
+And Celtic feuds are lost today. . . .
+
+She sings of lilacs, maples, wheat,
+Her own soil sings beneath her feet,
+Of springtime
+And Virginia,
+Our Mother, Pocahontas.
+
+
+
+
+Concerning Emperors
+
+
+
+ I. God Send the Regicide
+
+Would that the lying rulers of the world
+Were brought to block for tyrannies abhorred.
+Would that the sword of Cromwell and the Lord,
+The sword of Joshua and Gideon,
+Hewed hip and thigh the hosts of Midian.
+God send that ironside ere tomorrow's sun;
+Let Gabriel and Michael with him ride.
+God send the Regicide.
+
+
+ II. A Colloquial Reply: To Any Newsboy
+
+If you lay for Iago at the stage door with a brick
+You have missed the moral of the play.
+He will have a midnight supper with Othello and his wife.
+They will chirp together and be gay.
+But the things Iago stands for must go down into the dust:
+Lying and suspicion and conspiracy and lust.
+And I cannot hate the Kaiser (I hope you understand.)
+Yet I chase the thing he stands for with a brickbat in my hand.
+
+
+
+
+Niagara
+
+
+
+ I
+
+Within the town of Buffalo
+Are prosy men with leaden eyes.
+Like ants they worry to and fro,
+(Important men, in Buffalo.)
+But only twenty miles away
+A deathless glory is at play:
+Niagara, Niagara.
+
+The women buy their lace and cry: --
+"O such a delicate design,"
+And over ostrich feathers sigh,
+By counters there, in Buffalo.
+The children haunt the trinket shops,
+They buy false-faces, bells, and tops,
+Forgetting great Niagara.
+
+Within the town of Buffalo
+Are stores with garnets, sapphires, pearls,
+Rubies, emeralds aglow, --
+Opal chains in Buffalo,
+Cherished symbols of success.
+They value not your rainbow dress: --
+Niagara, Niagara.
+
+The shaggy meaning of her name
+This Buffalo, this recreant town,
+Sharps and lawyers prune and tame:
+Few pioneers in Buffalo;
+Except young lovers flushed and fleet
+And winds hallooing down the street:
+"Niagara, Niagara."
+
+The journalists are sick of ink:
+Boy prodigals are lost in wine,
+By night where white and red lights blink,
+The eyes of Death, in Buffalo.
+And only twenty miles away
+Are starlit rocks and healing spray: --
+Niagara, Niagara.
+
+Above the town a tiny bird,
+A shining speck at sleepy dawn,
+Forgets the ant-hill so absurd,
+This self-important Buffalo.
+Descending twenty miles away
+He bathes his wings at break of day --
+Niagara, Niagara.
+
+
+ II
+
+ What marching men of Buffalo
+ Flood the streets in rash crusade?
+ Fools-to-free-the-world, they go,
+ Primeval hearts from Buffalo.
+ Red cataracts of France today
+ Awake, three thousand miles away
+ An echo of Niagara,
+ The cataract Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+Mark Twain and Joan of Arc
+
+
+
+When Yankee soldiers reach the barricade
+Then Joan of Arc gives each the accolade.
+
+For she is there in armor clad, today,
+All the young poets of the wide world say.
+
+Which of our freemen did she greet the first,
+Seeing him come against the fires accurst?
+
+Mark Twain, our Chief, with neither smile nor jest,
+Leading to war our youngest and our best.
+
+The Yankee to King Arthur's court returns.
+The sacred flag of Joan above him burns.
+
+For she has called his soul from out the tomb.
+And where she stands, there he will stand till doom.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+But I, I can but mourn, and mourn again
+At bloodshed caused by angels, saints, and men.
+
+
+
+
+The Bankrupt Peace Maker
+
+
+
+I opened the ink-well and smoke filled the room.
+The smoke formed the giant frog-cat of my doom.
+His web feet left dreadful slime tracks on the floor.
+He had hammer and nails that he laid by the door.
+He sprawled on the table, claw-hands in my hair.
+He looked through my heart to the mud that was there.
+Like a black-mailer hating his victim he spoke:
+"When I see all your squirming I laugh till I choke
+Singing of peace. Railing at battle.
+Soothing a handful with saccharine prattle.
+All the millions of earth have voted for fight.
+You are voting for talk, with hands lily white."
+He leaped to the floor, then grew seven feet high,
+Beautiful, terrible, scorn in his eye:
+The Devil Eternal, Apollo grown old,
+With beard of bright silver and garments of gold.
+"What will you do to end war for good?
+Will you stand by the book-case, be nailed to the wood?"
+I stretched out my arms. He drove the nails deep,
+Silently, coolly. The house was asleep,
+I hung for three years, forbidden to die.
+I seemed but a shadow the servants passed by.
+At the end of the time with hot irons he returned.
+"The Quitter Sublime" on my bosom he burned.
+As he seared me he hissed: "You are wearing away.
+The good angels tell me you leave them today.
+You want to come down from the nails in the door.
+The victor must hang there three hundred years more.
+If any prig-saint would outvote all mankind
+He must use an immortally resolute mind.
+Think what the saints of Benares endure,
+Through infinite birthpangs their courage is sure.
+Self-tortured, self-ruled, they build their powers high,
+Until they are gods, overmaster the sky."
+Then he pulled out the nails. He shouted "Come in."
+To heal me there stepped in a lady of sin.
+Her hand was in mine. We walked in the sun.
+She said: "Now forget them, the Saxon and Hun.
+You are dreary and aged and silly and weak.
+Let us smell the sweet groves. Let the summertime speak."
+We walked to the river. We swam there in state.
+I was a serpent. She was my mate.
+I forgot in the marsh, as I tumbled about,
+That trial in my room, where I did not hold out.
+Since I was a serpent, my mate seemed to me
+As a mermaiden seems to a fisher at sea,
+Or a whisky soaked girl to a whisky soaked king.
+I woke. She had turned to a ravening thing
+On the table -- a buzzard with leperous head.
+She tore up my rhymes and my drawings. She said:
+"I am your own cheap bankrupt soul.
+Will you die for the nations, making them whole?
+We joy in the swamp and here we are gay.
+WILL YOU BRING YOUR FINE PEACE TO THE NATIONS TODAY?"
+
+
+
+
+"This, My Song, Is Made for Kerensky"
+
+(Being a Chant of the American Soap-Box and the Russian Revolution.)
+
+
+
+O market square, O slattern place,
+Is glory in your slack disgrace?
+Plump quack doctors sell their pills,
+Gentle grafters sell brass watches,
+Silly anarchists yell their ills.
+Shall we be as weird as these?
+In the breezes nod and wheeze?
+
+ Heaven's mass is sung,
+ Tomorrow's mass is sung
+ In a spirit tongue
+ By wind and dust and birds,
+ The high mass of liberty,
+ While wave the banners red:
+ Sung round the soap-box,
+ A mass for soldiers dead.
+
+When you leave your faction in the once-loved hall,
+Like a true American tongue-lash them all,
+Stand then on the corner under starry skies
+And get you a gang of the worn and the wise.
+The soldiers of the Lord may be squeaky when they rally,
+The soldiers of the Lord are a queer little army,
+But the soldiers of the Lord, before the year is through,
+Will gather the whole nation, recruit all creation,
+To smite the hosts abhorred, and all the heavens renew --
+Enforcing with the bayonet the thing the ages teach --
+Free speech!
+Free speech!
+
+Down with the Prussians, and all their works.
+Down with the Turks.
+Down with every army that fights against the soap-box,
+The Pericles, Socrates, Diogenes soap-box,
+The old Elijah, Jeremiah, John-the-Baptist soap-box,
+The Rousseau, Mirabeau, Danton soap-box,
+The Karl Marx, Henry George, Woodrow Wilson soap-box.
+We will make the wide earth safe for the soap-box,
+The everlasting foe of beastliness and tyranny,
+Platform of liberty: -- Magna Charta liberty,
+Andrew Jackson liberty, bleeding Kansas liberty,
+New-born Russian liberty: --
+Battleship of thought,
+The round world over,
+Loved by the red-hearted,
+Loved by the broken-hearted,
+Fair young Amazon or proud tough rover,
+Loved by the lion,
+Loved by the lion,
+Loved by the lion,
+Feared by the fox.
+
+The Russian Revolution is the world revolution.
+Death at the bedstead of every Kaiser knocks.
+The Hohenzollern army shall be felled like the ox.
+The fatal hour is striking in all the doomsday clocks.
+The while, by freedom's alchemy
+Beauty is born.
+Ring every sleigh-bell, ring every church bell,
+Blow the clear trumpet, and listen for the answer: --
+The blast from the sky of the Gabriel horn.
+
+Hail the Russian picture around the little box: --
+Exiles,
+Troops in files,
+Generals in uniform,
+Mujiks in their smocks,
+And holy maiden soldiers who have cut away their locks.
+All the peoples and the nations in processions mad and great,
+Are rolling through the Russian Soul as through a city gate: --
+As though it were a street of stars that paves the shadowy deep.
+And mighty Tolstoi leads the van along the stairway steep.
+
+But now the people shout:
+"Hail to Kerensky,
+He hurled the tyrants out."
+And this my song is made for Kerensky,
+Prophet of the world-wide intolerable hope,
+There on the soap-box, seasoned, dauntless,
+There amid the Russian celestial kaleidoscope,
+Flags of liberty, rags and battlesmoke.
+
+Moscow and Chicago!
+Come let us praise battling Kerensky,
+Bravo! Bravo!
+Comrade Kerensky the thunderstorm and rainbow!
+Comrade Kerensky, Bravo, Bravo!
+
+ August, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Fourth Section
+Tragedies, Comedies, and Dreams
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Our Guardian Angels and Their Children
+
+
+
+Where a river roars in rapids
+And doves in maples fret,
+Where peace has decked the pastures
+Our guardian angels met.
+
+Long they had sought each other
+In God's mysterious name,
+Had climbed the solemn chaos tides
+Alone, with hope aflame:
+
+Amid the demon deeps had wound
+By many a fearful way.
+As they beheld each other
+Their shout made glad the day.
+
+No need of purse delayed them,
+No hand of friend or kin --
+Nor menace of the bell and book,
+Nor fear of mortal sin.
+
+You did not speak, my girl,
+At this, our parting hour.
+Long we held each other
+And watched their deeds of power.
+
+They made a curious Eden.
+We saw that it was good.
+We thought with them in unison.
+We proudly understood
+
+Their amaranth eternal,
+Their roses strange and fair,
+The asphodels they scattered
+Upon the living air.
+
+They built a house of clouds
+With skilled immortal hands.
+They entered through the silver doors.
+Their wings were wedded brands.
+
+I labored up the valley
+To granite mountains free.
+You hurried down the river
+To Zidon by the sea.
+
+But at their place of meeting
+They keep a home and shrine.
+Your angel twists a purple flax,
+Then weaves a mantle fine.
+
+My angel, her defender
+Upstanding, spreads the light
+On painted clouds of fancy
+And mists that touch the height.
+
+Their sturdy babes speak kindly
+And fly and run with joy,
+Shepherding the helpless lambs --
+A Grecian girl and boy.
+
+These children visit Heaven
+Each year and make of worth
+All we planned and wrought in youth
+And all our tears on earth.
+
+From books our God has written
+They sing of high desire.
+They turn the leaves in gentleness.
+Their wings are folded fire.
+
+
+
+
+Epitaphs for Two Players
+
+
+
+ I. Edwin Booth
+
+An old actor at the Player's Club told me that Edwin Booth
+first impersonated Hamlet when a barnstormer in California.
+There were few theatres, but the hotels were provided
+with crude assembly rooms for strolling players.
+
+
+The youth played in the blear hotel.
+The rafters gleamed with glories strange.
+And winds of mourning Elsinore
+Howling at chance and fate and change;
+Voices of old Europe's dead
+Disturbed the new-built cattle-shed,
+The street, the high and solemn range.
+
+The while the coyote barked afar
+All shadowy was the battlement.
+The ranch-boys huddled and grew pale,
+Youths who had come on riot bent.
+Forgot were pranks well-planned to sting.
+Behold there rose a ghostly king,
+And veils of smoking Hell were rent.
+
+When Edwin Booth played Hamlet, then
+The camp-drab's tears could not but flow.
+Then Romance lived and breathed and burned.
+She felt the frail queen-mother's woe,
+Thrilled for Ophelia, fond and blind,
+And Hamlet, cruel, yet so kind,
+And moaned, his proud words hurt her so.
+
+A haunted place, though new and harsh!
+The Indian and the Chinaman
+And Mexican were fain to learn
+What had subdued the Saxon clan.
+Why did they mumble, brood, and stare
+When the court-players curtsied fair
+And the Gonzago scene began?
+
+And ah, the duel scene at last!
+They cheered their prince with stamping feet.
+A death-fight in a palace! Yea,
+With velvet hangings incomplete,
+A pasteboard throne, a pasteboard crown,
+And yet a monarch tumbled down,
+A brave lad fought in splendor meet.
+
+Was it a palace or a barn?
+Immortal as the gods he flamed.
+There in his last great hour of rage
+His foil avenged a mother shamed.
+In duty stern, in purpose deep
+He drove that king to his black sleep
+And died, all godlike and untamed.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+I was not born in that far day.
+I hear the tale from heads grown white.
+And then I walk that earlier street,
+The mining camp at candle-light.
+I meet him wrapped in musings fine
+Upon some whispering silvery line
+He yet resolves to speak aright.
+
+
+
+ II. John Bunny, Motion Picture Comedian
+
+In which he is remembered in similitude, by reference to Yorick,
+the king's jester, who died when Hamlet and Ophelia were children.
+
+
+Yorick is dead. Boy Hamlet walks forlorn
+Beneath the battlements of Elsinore.
+Where are those oddities and capers now
+That used to "set the table on a roar"?
+
+And do his bauble-bells beyond the clouds
+Ring out, and shake with mirth the planets bright?
+No doubt he brings the blessed dead good cheer,
+But silence broods on Elsinore tonight.
+
+That little elf, Ophelia, eight years old,
+Upon her battered doll's staunch bosom weeps.
+("O best of men, that wove glad fairy-tales.")
+With tear-burned face, at last the darling sleeps.
+
+Hamlet himself could not give cheer or help,
+Though firm and brave, with his boy-face controlled.
+For every game they started out to play
+Yorick invented, in the days of old.
+
+The times are out of joint! O cursed spite!
+The noble jester Yorick comes no more.
+And Hamlet hides his tears in boyish pride
+By some lone turret-stair of Elsinore.
+
+
+
+
+Mae Marsh, Motion Picture Actress
+
+In "Man's Genesis", "The Wild Girl of the Sierras", "The Wharf Rat",
+"A Girl of the Paris Streets", etc.
+
+
+
+ I
+
+The arts are old, old as the stones
+From which man carved the sphinx austere.
+Deep are the days the old arts bring:
+Ten thousand years of yesteryear.
+
+
+ II
+
+She is madonna in an art
+As wild and young as her sweet eyes:
+A frail dew flower from this hot lamp
+That is today's divine surprise.
+
+Despite raw lights and gloating mobs
+She is not seared: a picture still:
+Rare silk the fine director's hand
+May weave for magic if he will.
+
+When ancient films have crumbled like
+Papyrus rolls of Egypt's day,
+Let the dust speak: "Her pride was high,
+All but the artist hid away:
+
+"Kin to the myriad artist clan
+Since time began, whose work is dear."
+The deep new ages come with her,
+Tomorrow's years of yesteryear.
+
+
+
+
+Two Old Crows
+
+
+
+Two old crows sat on a fence rail,
+Two old crows sat on a fence rail,
+Thinking of effect and cause,
+Of weeds and flowers,
+And nature's laws.
+One of them muttered, one of them stuttered,
+One of them stuttered, one of them muttered.
+Each of them thought far more than he uttered.
+One crow asked the other crow a riddle.
+One crow asked the other crow a riddle:
+The muttering crow
+Asked the stuttering crow,
+"Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?
+Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?"
+"Bee-cause," said the other crow,
+"Bee-cause,
+B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B-cause."
+
+Just then a bee flew close to their rail: --
+"Buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz zzzzzzzzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz ZZZZZZZZ."
+And those two black crows
+Turned pale,
+And away those crows did sail.
+Why?
+B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B-cause.
+B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B-cause.
+"Buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz zzzzzzzzzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz ZZZZZZZ."
+
+
+
+
+The Drunkard's Funeral
+
+
+
+"Yes," said the sister with the little pinched face,
+The busy little sister with the funny little tract: --
+"This is the climax, the grand fifth act.
+There rides the proud, at the finish of his race.
+There goes the hearse, the mourners cry,
+The respectable hearse goes slowly by.
+The wife of the dead has money in her purse,
+The children are in health, so it might have been worse.
+That fellow in the coffin led a life most foul.
+A fierce defender of the red bar-tender,
+At the church he would rail,
+At the preacher he would howl.
+He planted every deviltry to see it grow.
+He wasted half his income on the lewd and the low.
+He would trade engender for the red bar-tender,
+He would homage render to the red bar-tender,
+And in ultimate surrender to the red bar-tender,
+He died of the tremens, as crazy as a loon,
+And his friends were glad, when the end came soon.
+There goes the hearse, the mourners cry,
+The respectable hearse goes slowly by.
+And now, good friends, since you see how it ends,
+Let each nation-mender flay the red bar-tender, --
+Abhor
+The transgression
+Of the red bar-tender, --
+Ruin
+The profession
+Of the red bar-tender:
+Force him into business where his work does good.
+Let him learn how to plough, let him learn to chop wood,
+Let him learn how to plough, let him learn to chop wood.
+
+"The moral,
+The conclusion,
+The verdict now you know: --
+`The saloon must go,
+The saloon must go,
+The saloon,
+The saloon,
+The saloon,
+Must go.'"
+
+"You are right, little sister," I said to myself,
+"You are right, good sister," I said.
+"Though you wear a mussy bonnet
+On your little gray head,
+You are right, little sister," I said.
+
+
+
+
+The Raft
+
+
+
+The whole world on a raft! A King is here,
+The record of his grandeur but a smear.
+Is it his deacon-beard, or old bald pate
+That makes the band upon his whims to wait?
+Loot and mud-honey have his soul defiled.
+Quack, pig, and priest, he drives camp-meetings wild
+Until they shower their pennies like spring rain
+That he may preach upon the Spanish main.
+What landlord, lawyer, voodoo-man has yet
+A better native right to make men sweat?
+
+The whole world on a raft! A Duke is here
+At sight of whose lank jaw the muses leer.
+Journeyman-printer, lamb with ferret eyes,
+In life's skullduggery he takes the prize --
+Yet stands at twilight wrapped in Hamlet dreams.
+Into his eyes the Mississippi gleams.
+The sandbar sings in moonlit veils of foam.
+A candle shines from one lone cabin home.
+The waves reflect it like a drunken star.
+A banjo and a hymn are heard afar.
+No solace on the lazy shore excels
+The Duke's blue castle with its steamer-bells.
+The floor is running water, and the roof
+The stars' brocade with cloudy warp and woof.
+
+And on past sorghum fields the current swings.
+To Christian Jim the Mississippi sings.
+This prankish wave-swept barque has won its place,
+A ship of jesting for the human race.
+But do you laugh when Jim bows down forlorn
+His babe, his deaf Elizabeth to mourn?
+And do you laugh, when Jim, from Huck apart
+Gropes through the rain and night with breaking heart?
+
+But now that imp is here and we can smile,
+Jim's child and guardian this long-drawn while.
+With knife and heavy gun, a hunter keen,
+He stops for squirrel-meat in islands green.
+The eternal gamin, sleeping half the day,
+Then stripped and sleek, a river-fish at play.
+And then well-dressed, ashore, he sees life spilt.
+The river-bank is one bright crazy-quilt
+Of patch-work dream, of wrath more red than lust,
+Where long-haired feudist Hotspurs bite the dust . . .
+This Huckleberry Finn is but the race,
+America, still lovely in disgrace,
+New childhood of the world, that blunders on
+And wonders at the darkness and the dawn,
+The poor damned human race, still unimpressed
+With its damnation, all its gamin breast
+Chorteling at dukes and kings with nigger Jim,
+Then plotting for their fall, with jestings grim.
+
+Behold a Republic
+Where a river speaks to men
+And cries to those that love its ways,
+Answering again
+When in the heart's extravagance
+The rascals bend to say
+"O singing Mississippi
+Shine, sing for us today."
+
+But who is this in sweeping Oxford gown
+Who steers the raft, or ambles up and down,
+Or throws his gown aside, and there in white
+Stands gleaming like a pillar of the night?
+The lion of high courts, with hoary mane,
+Fierce jester that this boyish court will gain --
+Mark Twain!
+The bad world's idol:
+Old Mark Twain!
+
+He takes his turn as watchman with the rest,
+With secret transports to the stars addressed,
+With nightlong broodings upon cosmic law,
+With daylong laughter at this world so raw.
+
+All praise to Emerson and Whitman, yet
+The best they have to say, their sons forget.
+But who can dodge this genius of the stream,
+The Mississippi Valley's laughing dream?
+He is the artery that finds the sea
+In this the land of slaves, and boys still free.
+He is the river, and they one and all
+Sail on his breast, and to each other call.
+
+Come let us disgrace ourselves,
+Knock the stuffed gods from their shelves,
+And cinders at the schoolhouse fling.
+Come let us disgrace ourselves,
+And live on a raft with gray Mark Twain
+And Huck and Jim
+And the Duke and the King.
+
+
+
+
+The Ghosts of the Buffaloes
+
+
+
+Last night at black midnight I woke with a cry,
+The windows were shaking, there was thunder on high,
+The floor was a-tremble, the door was a-jar,
+White fires, crimson fires, shone from afar.
+I rushed to the door yard. The city was gone.
+My home was a hut without orchard or lawn.
+It was mud-smear and logs near a whispering stream,
+Nothing else built by man could I see in my dream . . .
+Then . . .
+Ghost-kings came headlong, row upon row,
+Gods of the Indians, torches aglow.
+
+They mounted the bear and the elk and the deer,
+And eagles gigantic, aged and sere,
+They rode long-horn cattle, they cried "A-la-la."
+They lifted the knife, the bow, and the spear,
+They lifted ghost-torches from dead fires below,
+The midnight made grand with the cry "A-la-la."
+The midnight made grand with a red-god charge,
+A red-god show,
+A red-god show,
+"A-la-la, a-la-la, a-la-la, a-la-la."
+
+With bodies like bronze, and terrible eyes
+Came the rank and the file, with catamount cries,
+Gibbering, yipping, with hollow-skull clacks,
+Riding white bronchos with skeleton backs,
+Scalp-hunters, beaded and spangled and bad,
+Naked and lustful and foaming and mad,
+Flashing primeval demoniac scorn,
+Blood-thirst and pomp amid darkness reborn,
+Power and glory that sleep in the grass
+While the winds and the snows and the great rains pass.
+They crossed the gray river, thousands abreast,
+They rode in infinite lines to the west,
+Tide upon tide of strange fury and foam,
+Spirits and wraiths, the blue was their home,
+The sky was their goal where the star-flags are furled,
+And on past those far golden splendors they whirled.
+They burned to dim meteors, lost in the deep.
+And I turned in dazed wonder, thinking of sleep.
+
+And the wind crept by
+Alone, unkempt, unsatisfied,
+The wind cried and cried --
+Muttered of massacres long past,
+Buffaloes in shambles vast . . .
+An owl said: "Hark, what is a-wing?"
+I heard a cricket carolling,
+I heard a cricket carolling,
+I heard a cricket carolling.
+
+Then . . .
+Snuffing the lightning that crashed from on high
+Rose royal old buffaloes, row upon row.
+The lords of the prairie came galloping by.
+And I cried in my heart "A-la-la, a-la-la,
+A red-god show,
+A red-god show,
+A-la-la, a-la-la, a-la-la, a-la-la."
+
+Buffaloes, buffaloes, thousands abreast,
+A scourge and amazement, they swept to the west.
+With black bobbing noses, with red rolling tongues,
+Coughing forth steam from their leather-wrapped lungs,
+Cows with their calves, bulls big and vain,
+Goring the laggards, shaking the mane,
+Stamping flint feet, flashing moon eyes,
+Pompous and owlish, shaggy and wise.
+Like sea-cliffs and caves resounded their ranks
+With shoulders like waves, and undulant flanks.
+Tide upon tide of strange fury and foam,
+Spirits and wraiths, the blue was their home,
+The sky was their goal where the star-flags are furled,
+And on past those far golden splendors they whirled.
+They burned to dim meteors, lost in the deep,
+And I turned in dazed wonder, thinking of sleep.
+
+I heard a cricket's cymbals play,
+A scarecrow lightly flapped his rags,
+And a pan that hung by his shoulder rang,
+Rattled and thumped in a listless way,
+And now the wind in the chimney sang,
+The wind in the chimney,
+The wind in the chimney,
+The wind in the chimney,
+Seemed to say: --
+"Dream, boy, dream,
+If you anywise can.
+To dream is the work
+Of beast or man.
+Life is the west-going dream-storm's breath,
+Life is a dream, the sigh of the skies,
+The breath of the stars, that nod on their pillows
+With their golden hair mussed over their eyes."
+The locust played on his musical wing,
+Sang to his mate of love's delight.
+I heard the whippoorwill's soft fret.
+I heard a cricket carolling,
+I heard a cricket carolling,
+I heard a cricket say: "Good-night, good-night,
+Good-night, good-night, . . . good-night."
+
+
+
+
+The Broncho that Would Not Be Broken
+
+
+
+A little colt -- broncho, loaned to the farm
+To be broken in time without fury or harm,
+Yet black crows flew past you, shouting alarm,
+Calling "Beware," with lugubrious singing . . .
+The butterflies there in the bush were romancing,
+The smell of the grass caught your soul in a trance,
+So why be a-fearing the spurs and the traces,
+O broncho that would not be broken of dancing?
+
+You were born with the pride of the lords great and olden
+Who danced, through the ages, in corridors golden.
+In all the wide farm-place the person most human.
+You spoke out so plainly with squealing and capering,
+With whinnying, snorting, contorting and prancing,
+As you dodged your pursuers, looking askance,
+With Greek-footed figures, and Parthenon paces,
+O broncho that would not be broken of dancing.
+
+The grasshoppers cheered. "Keep whirling," they said.
+The insolent sparrows called from the shed
+"If men will not laugh, make them wish they were dead."
+But arch were your thoughts, all malice displacing,
+Though the horse-killers came, with snake-whips advancing.
+You bantered and cantered away your last chance.
+And they scourged you, with Hell in their speech and their faces,
+O broncho that would not be broken of dancing.
+
+"Nobody cares for you," rattled the crows,
+As you dragged the whole reaper, next day, down the rows.
+The three mules held back, yet you danced on your toes.
+You pulled like a racer, and kept the mules chasing.
+You tangled the harness with bright eyes side-glancing,
+While the drunk driver bled you -- a pole for a lance --
+And the giant mules bit at you -- keeping their places.
+O broncho that would not be broken of dancing.
+
+In that last afternoon your boyish heart broke.
+The hot wind came down like a sledge-hammer stroke.
+The blood-sucking flies to a rare feast awoke.
+And they searched out your wounds, your death-warrant tracing.
+And the merciful men, their religion enhancing,
+Stopped the red reaper, to give you a chance.
+Then you died on the prairie, and scorned all disgraces,
+O broncho that would not be broken of dancing.
+
+ Souvenir of Great Bend, Kansas.
+
+
+
+
+The Prairie Battlements
+
+(To Edgar Lee Masters, with great respect.)
+
+
+
+Here upon the prairie
+Is our ancestral hall.
+Agate is the dome,
+Cornelian the wall.
+Ghouls are in the cellar,
+But fays upon the stairs.
+And here lived old King Silver Dreams,
+Always at his prayers.
+
+Here lived grey Queen Silver Dreams,
+Always singing psalms,
+And haughty Grandma Silver Dreams,
+Throned with folded palms.
+Here played cousin Alice.
+Her soul was best of all.
+And every fairy loved her,
+In our ancestral hall.
+
+Alice has a prairie grave.
+The King and Queen lie low,
+And aged Grandma Silver Dreams,
+Four tombstones in a row.
+But still in snow and sunshine
+Stands our ancestral hall.
+Agate is the dome,
+Cornelian the wall.
+And legends walk about,
+And proverbs, with proud airs.
+Ghouls are in the cellar,
+But fays upon the stairs.
+
+
+
+
+The Flower of Mending
+
+(To Eudora, after I had had certain dire adventures.)
+
+
+
+When Dragon-fly would fix his wings,
+When Snail would patch his house,
+When moths have marred the overcoat
+Of tender Mister Mouse,
+
+The pretty creatures go with haste
+To the sunlit blue-grass hills
+Where the Flower of Mending yields the wax
+And webs to help their ills.
+
+The hour the coats are waxed and webbed
+They fall into a dream,
+And when they wake the ragged robes
+Are joined without a seam.
+
+My heart is but a dragon-fly,
+My heart is but a mouse,
+My heart is but a haughty snail
+In a little stony house.
+
+Your hand was honey-comb to heal,
+Your voice a web to bind.
+You were a Mending Flower to me
+To cure my heart and mind.
+
+
+
+
+Alone in the Wind, on the Prairie
+
+
+
+I know a seraph who has golden eyes,
+And hair of gold, and body like the snow.
+Here in the wind I dream her unbound hair
+Is blowing round me, that desire's sweet glow
+Has touched her pale keen face, and willful mien.
+And though she steps as one in manner born
+To tread the forests of fair Paradise,
+Dark memory's wood she chooses to adorn.
+Here with bowed head, bashful with half-desire
+She glides into my yesterday's deep dream,
+All glowing by the misty ferny cliff
+Beside the far forbidden thundering stream.
+Within my dream I shake with the old flood.
+I fear its going, ere the spring days go.
+Yet pray the glory may have deathless years,
+And kiss her hair, and sweet throat like the snow.
+
+
+
+
+To Lady Jane
+
+
+
+Romance was always young.
+You come today
+Just eight years old
+With marvellous dark hair.
+Younger than Dante found you
+When you turned
+His heart into the way
+That found the heavenly stair.
+
+Perhaps we must be strangers.
+I confess
+My soul this hour is Dante's,
+And your care
+Should be for dolls
+Whose painted hands caress
+Your marvellous dark hair.
+
+Romance, with moonflower face
+And morning eyes,
+And lips whose thread of scarlet prophesies
+The canticles of a coming king unknown,
+Remember, when you join him
+On his throne,
+Even me, your far off troubadour,
+And wear
+For me some trifling rose
+Beneath your veil,
+Dying a royal death,
+Happy and pale,
+Choked by the passion,
+The wonder and the snare,
+The glory and despair
+That still will haunt and own
+Your marvellous dark hair.
+
+
+
+
+How I Walked Alone in the Jungles of Heaven
+
+
+
+Oh, once I walked in Heaven, all alone
+Upon the sacred cliffs above the sky.
+God and the angels, and the gleaming saints
+Had journeyed out into the stars to die.
+
+They had gone forth to win far citizens,
+Bought at great price, bring happiness for all:
+By such a harvest make a holier town
+And put new life within old Zion's wall.
+
+Each chose a far-off planet for his home,
+Speaking of love and mercy, truth and right,
+Envied and cursed, thorn-crowned and scourged in time,
+Each tasted death on his appointed night.
+
+Then resurrection day from sphere to sphere
+Sped on, with all the POWERS arisen again,
+While with them came in clouds recruited hosts
+Of sun-born strangers and of earth-born men.
+
+And on that day gray prophet saints went down
+And poured atoning blood upon the deep,
+Till every warrior of old Hell flew free
+And all the torture fires were laid asleep.
+
+And Hell's lost company I saw return
+Clear-eyed, with plumes of white, the demons bold
+Climbed with the angels now on Jacob's stair,
+And built a better Zion than the old.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+And yet I walked alone on azure cliffs
+A lifetime long, and loved each untrimmed vine:
+The rotted harps, the swords of rusted gold,
+The jungles of all Heaven then were mine.
+
+Oh mesas and throne-mountains that I found!
+Oh strange and shaking thoughts that touched me there,
+Ere I beheld the bright returning wings
+That came to spoil my secret, silent lair!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Fifth Section
+The Poem Games
+
+
+
+
+
+
+An Account of the Poem Games
+
+
+
+In the summer of 1916 in the parlor of Mrs. William Vaughn Moody;
+and in the following winter in the Chicago Little Theatre,
+under the auspices of Poetry, A Magazine of Verse; and in Mandel Hall,
+the University of Chicago, under the auspices of the Senior Class, --
+these Poem Games were presented. Miss Eleanor Dougherty
+was the dancer throughout. The entire undertaking developed
+through the generous cooperation and advice of Mrs. William Vaughn Moody.
+The writer is exceedingly grateful to Mrs. Moody and all concerned
+for making place for the idea. Now comes the test of its vitality.
+Can it go on in the absence of its initiators?
+
+Mr. Lewellyn Jones, of the Chicago Evening Post, announced the affair
+as a "rhythmic picnic". Mr. Maurice Browne of the Chicago Little Theatre
+said Miss Dougherty was at the beginning of the old Greek Tragic Dance.
+Somewhere between lies the accomplishment.
+
+In the Congo volume, as is indicated in the margins,
+the meaning of a few of the verses is aided by chanting.
+In the Poem Games the English word is still first in importance,
+the dancer comes second, the chanter third. The marginal directions
+of King Solomon indicate the spirit in which all the pantomime was developed.
+Miss Dougherty designed her own costumes, and worked out
+her own stage business for King Solomon, The Potatoes' Dance,
+The King of Yellow Butterflies and Aladdin and the Jinn (The Congo, page 140).
+In the last, "`I am your slave,' said the Jinn" was repeated four times
+at the end of each stanza.
+
+The Poem Game idea was first indorsed in the Wellesley kindergarten,
+by the children. They improvised pantomime and dance for the Potatoes' Dance,
+while the writer chanted it, and while Professor Hamilton C. Macdougall
+of the Wellesley musical department followed on the piano
+the outline of the jingle. Later Professor Macdougall very kindly wrote down
+his piano rendition. A study of this transcript helps to confirm the idea
+that when the cadences of a bit of verse are a little exaggerated,
+they are tunes, yet of a truth they are tunes which can be
+but vaguely recorded by notation or expressed by an instrument.
+The author of this book is now against instrumental music
+in this type of work. It blurs the English.
+
+Professor Macdougall has in various conversations helped the author
+toward a Poem Game theory. He agrees that neither the dancing
+nor the chanting nor any other thing should be allowed to run away
+with the original intention of the words. The chanting should not be carried
+to the point where it seeks to rival conventional musical composition.
+The dancer should be subordinated to the natural rhythms of English speech,
+and not attempt to incorporate bodily all the precedents
+of professional dancing.
+
+Speaking generally, poetic ideas can be conveyed word by word,
+faster than musical feeling. The repetitions in the Poem Games
+are to keep the singing, the dancing and the ideas at one pace.
+The repetitions may be varied according to the necessities
+of the individual dancer. Dancing is slower than poetry and faster than music
+in developing the same thoughts. In folk dances and vaudeville,
+the verse, music, and dancing are on so simple a basis the time elements
+can be easily combined. Likewise the rhythms and the other elements.
+
+Miss Dougherty is particularly illustrative in her pantomime,
+but there were many verses she looked over and rejected
+because they could not be rendered without blurring the original intent.
+Possibly every poem in the world has its dancer somewhere waiting,
+who can dance but that one poem. Certainly those poems would be
+most successful in games, where the tone color is so close to the meaning
+that any exaggeration of that color by dancing and chanting
+only makes the story clearer. The writer would like to see some one try
+Dryden's Alexander's Feast, or Swinburne's Atalanta in Calydon.
+Certainly in those poems the decorative rhythm and the meaning
+are absolutely one.
+
+With no dancing evolutions, the author of this book
+has chanted John Brown and King Solomon for the last two years
+for many audiences. It took but a minute to teach the people the responses.
+As a rule they had no advance notice they were going to sing.
+The versifier sang the parts of the King and Queen in turn,
+and found each audience perfectly willing to be the oxen, the sweethearts,
+the swans, the sons, the shepherds, etc.
+
+A year ago the writer had the honor of chanting for
+the Florence Fleming Noyes school of dancers. In one short evening
+they made the first section of the Congo into an incantation,
+the King Solomon into an extraordinarily graceful series of tableaus,
+and the Potatoes' Dance into a veritable whirlwind.
+Later came the more elaborately prepared Chicago experiment.
+
+In the King of Yellow Butterflies and the Potatoes' Dance
+Miss Dougherty occupied the entire eye of the audience and interpreted,
+while the versifier chanted the poems as a semi-invisible orchestra,
+by the side of the curtain. For Aladdin and for King Solomon
+Miss Dougherty and the writer divided the stage between them,
+but the author was little more than the orchestra. The main intention
+was carried out, which was to combine the work of the dancer
+with the words of the production and the responses of the audience.
+
+The present rhymer has no ambitions as a stage manager.
+The Poem Game idea, in its rhythmic picnic stage, is recommended to amateurs,
+its further development to be on their own initiative.
+Informal parties might divide into groups of dancers and groups of chanters.
+The whole might be worked out in the spirit in which
+children play King William was King James' Son, London Bridge,
+or As We Go Round the Mulberry Bush. And the author of this book
+would certainly welcome the tragic dance, if Miss Dougherty
+will gather a company about her and go forward, using any acceptable poems,
+new or old. Swinburne's Atalanta in Calydon is perhaps
+the most literal and rhythmic example of the idea we have in English,
+though it may not be available when tried out.
+
+The main revolution necessary for dancing improvisers,
+who would go a longer way with the Poem Game idea,
+is to shake off the Isadora Duncan and the Russian precedents for a while,
+and abolish the orchestra and piano, replacing all these
+with the natural meaning and cadences of English speech.
+The work would come closer to acting, than dancing is now conceived.
+
+
+
+
+The King of Yellow Butterflies
+
+(A Poem Game.)
+
+
+
+The King of Yellow Butterflies,
+The King of Yellow Butterflies,
+The King of Yellow Butterflies,
+Now orders forth his men.
+He says "The time is almost here
+When violets bloom again."
+Adown the road the fickle rout
+Goes flashing proud and bold,
+Adown the road the fickle rout
+Goes flashing proud and bold,
+Adown the road the fickle rout
+Goes flashing proud and bold,
+They shiver by the shallow pools,
+They shiver by the shallow pools,
+They shiver by the shallow pools,
+And whimper of the cold.
+They drink and drink. A frail pretense!
+They love to pose and preen.
+Each pool is but a looking glass,
+Where their sweet wings are seen.
+Each pool is but a looking glass,
+Where their sweet wings are seen.
+Each pool is but a looking glass,
+Where their sweet wings are seen.
+Gentlemen adventurers! Gypsies every whit!
+They live on what they steal. Their wings
+By briars are frayed a bit.
+Their loves are light. They have no house.
+And if it rains today,
+They'll climb into your cattle-shed,
+They'll climb into your cattle-shed,
+They'll climb into your cattle-shed,
+And hide them in the hay,
+And hide them in the hay,
+And hide them in the hay,
+And hide them in the hay.
+
+
+
+
+The Potatoes' Dance
+
+(A Poem Game.)
+
+
+
+ I
+
+"Down cellar," said the cricket,
+"Down cellar," said the cricket,
+"Down cellar," said the cricket,
+"I saw a ball last night,
+In honor of a lady,
+In honor of a lady,
+In honor of a lady,
+Whose wings were pearly-white.
+The breath of bitter weather,
+The breath of bitter weather,
+The breath of bitter weather,
+Had smashed the cellar pane.
+We entertained a drift of leaves,
+We entertained a drift of leaves,
+We entertained a drift of leaves,
+And then of snow and rain.
+But we were dressed for winter,
+But we were dressed for winter,
+But we were dressed for winter,
+And loved to hear it blow
+In honor of the lady,
+In honor of the lady,
+In honor of the lady,
+Who makes potatoes grow,
+Our guest the Irish lady,
+The tiny Irish lady,
+The airy Irish lady,
+Who makes potatoes grow.
+
+
+ II
+
+"Potatoes were the waiters,
+Potatoes were the waiters,
+Potatoes were the waiters,
+Potatoes were the band,
+Potatoes were the dancers
+Kicking up the sand,
+Kicking up the sand,
+Kicking up the sand,
+Potatoes were the dancers
+Kicking up the sand.
+Their legs were old burnt matches,
+Their legs were old burnt matches,
+Their legs were old burnt matches,
+Their arms were just the same.
+They jigged and whirled and scrambled,
+Jigged and whirled and scrambled,
+Jigged and whirled and scrambled,
+In honor of the dame,
+The noble Irish lady
+Who makes potatoes dance,
+The witty Irish lady,
+The saucy Irish lady,
+The laughing Irish lady
+Who makes potatoes prance.
+
+
+ III
+
+"There was just one sweet potato.
+He was golden brown and slim.
+The lady loved his dancing,
+The lady loved his dancing,
+The lady loved his dancing,
+She danced all night with him,
+She danced all night with him.
+Alas, he wasn't Irish.
+So when she flew away,
+They threw him in the coal-bin,
+And there he is today,
+Where they cannot hear his sighs
+And his weeping for the lady,
+The glorious Irish lady,
+The beauteous Irish lady,
+Who
+Gives
+Potatoes
+Eyes."
+
+
+
+
+The Booker Washington Trilogy
+
+A Memorial to Booker T. Washington
+
+
+
+ I. Simon Legree
+
+A Negro Sermon. (To be read in your own variety of negro dialect.)
+
+
+Legree's big house was white and green.
+His cotton-fields were the best to be seen.
+He had strong horses and opulent cattle,
+And bloodhounds bold, with chains that would rattle.
+His garret was full of curious things:
+Books of magic, bags of gold,
+And rabbits' feet on long twine strings.
+BUT HE WENT DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+
+Legree he sported a brass-buttoned coat,
+A snake-skin necktie, a blood-red shirt.
+Legree he had a beard like a goat,
+And a thick hairy neck, and eyes like dirt.
+His puffed-out cheeks were fish-belly white,
+He had great long teeth, and an appetite.
+He ate raw meat, 'most every meal,
+And rolled his eyes till the cat would squeal.
+His fist was an enormous size
+To mash poor niggers that told him lies:
+He was surely a witch-man in disguise.
+BUT HE WENT DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+
+He wore hip-boots, and would wade all day
+To capture his slaves that had fled away.
+BUT HE WENT DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+
+He beat poor Uncle Tom to death
+Who prayed for Legree with his last breath.
+Then Uncle Tom to Eva flew,
+To the high sanctoriums bright and new;
+And Simon Legree stared up beneath,
+And cracked his heels, and ground his teeth:
+AND WENT DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+
+He crossed the yard in the storm and gloom;
+He went into his grand front room.
+He said, "I killed him, and I don't care."
+He kicked a hound, he gave a swear;
+He tightened his belt, he took a lamp,
+Went down cellar to the webs and damp.
+There in the middle of the mouldy floor
+He heaved up a slab, he found a door --
+AND WENT DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+
+His lamp blew out, but his eyes burned bright.
+Simon Legree stepped down all night --
+DOWN, DOWN TO THE DEVIL.
+Simon Legree he reached the place,
+He saw one half of the human race,
+He saw the Devil on a wide green throne,
+Gnawing the meat from a big ham-bone,
+And he said to Mister Devil:
+
+ "I see that you have much to eat --
+ A red ham-bone is surely sweet.
+ I see that you have lion's feet;
+ I see your frame is fat and fine,
+ I see you drink your poison wine --
+ Blood and burning turpentine."
+
+And the Devil said to Simon Legree:
+ "I like your style, so wicked and free.
+ Come sit and share my throne with me,
+ And let us bark and revel."
+And there they sit and gnash their teeth,
+And each one wears a hop-vine wreath.
+They are matching pennies and shooting craps,
+They are playing poker and taking naps.
+And old Legree is fat and fine:
+He eats the fire, he drinks the wine --
+Blood and burning turpentine --
+ DOWN, DOWN WITH THE DEVIL;
+ DOWN, DOWN WITH THE DEVIL;
+ DOWN, DOWN WITH THE DEVIL.
+
+
+
+ II. John Brown
+
+(To be sung by a leader and chorus, the leader singing the body of the poem,
+while the chorus interrupts with the question.)
+
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+I saw the ark of Noah --
+It was made of pitch and pine.
+I saw old Father Noah
+Asleep beneath his vine.
+I saw Shem, Ham and Japhet
+Standing in a line.
+I saw the tower of Babel
+In the gorgeous sunrise shine --
+By a weeping willow tree
+Beside the Dead Sea.
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+I saw abominations
+And Gadarene swine.
+I saw the sinful Canaanites
+Upon the shewbread dine,
+And spoil the temple vessels
+And drink the temple wine.
+I saw Lot's wife, a pillar of salt
+Standing in the brine --
+By a weeping willow tree
+Beside the Dead Sea.
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+Cedars on Mount Lebanon,
+Gold in Ophir's mine,
+And a wicked generation
+Seeking for a sign
+And Baal's howling worshippers
+Their god with leaves entwine.
+And . . .
+I saw the war-horse ramping
+And shake his forelock fine --
+By a weeping willow tree
+Beside the Dead Sea.
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+Old John Brown.
+Old John Brown.
+I saw his gracious wife
+Dressed in a homespun gown.
+I saw his seven sons
+Before his feet bow down.
+And he marched with his seven sons,
+His wagons and goods and guns,
+To his campfire by the sea,
+By the waves of Galilee.
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+I saw the harp and psalt'ry
+Played for Old John Brown.
+I heard the ram's horn blow,
+Blow for Old John Brown.
+I saw the Bulls of Bashan --
+They cheered for Old John Brown.
+I saw the big Behemoth --
+He cheered for Old John Brown.
+I saw the big Leviathan --
+He cheered for Old John Brown.
+I saw the Angel Gabriel
+Great power to him assign.
+I saw him fight the Canaanites
+And set God's Israel free.
+I saw him when the war was done
+In his rustic chair recline --
+By his campfire by the sea,
+By the waves of Galilee.
+
+I've been to Palestine.
+ WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
+Old John Brown.
+Old John Brown.
+And there he sits
+To judge the world.
+His hunting-dogs
+At his feet are curled.
+His eyes half-closed,
+But John Brown sees
+The ends of the earth,
+The Day of Doom.
+And his shot-gun lies
+Across his knees --
+Old John Brown,
+Old John Brown.
+
+
+
+ III. King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba
+
+(A Poem Game.)
+
+"And when the Queen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon, . . .
+she came to prove him with hard questions."
+
+
+<The men's leader rises as he sees the Queen unveiling
+ and approaching a position that gives her half of the stage.>
+
+ Men's Leader: The Queen of Sheba came to see King Solomon.
+<He bows three times.>
+ I was King Solomon,
+ I was King Solomon,
+ I was King Solomon.
+
+<She bows three times.>
+ Women's Leader: I was the Queen,
+ I was the Queen,
+ I was the Queen.
+
+ Both Leaders: We will be king and queen,
+<They stand together stretching their hands over the land.>
+ Reigning on mountains green,
+ Happy and free
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<They stagger forward as though carrying a yoke together.>
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he had four hundred oxen.
+
+ Congregation: We were the oxen.
+
+<Here King and Queen pause at the footlights.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall feel goads no more.
+<They walk backward, throwing off the yoke and rejoicing.>
+ Walk dreadful roads no more,
+ Free from your loads
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<The men's leader goes forward, the women's leader dances round him.>
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he had four hundred sweethearts.
+
+<Here he pauses at the footlights.>
+ Congregation: We were the sweethearts.
+
+<He walks backward. Both clap their hands to the measure.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall dance round again,
+ You shall dance round again,
+ Cymbals shall sound again,
+ Cymbals shall sound again,
+<The Queen appears to gather wildflowers.>
+ Wildflowers be found
+ For ten thousand years,
+ Wildflowers be found
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<He continues to command the congregation, the woman to dance.
+ He goes forward to the footlights.>
+ Both Leaders: And every sweetheart had four hundred swans.
+
+ Congregation: We were the swans.
+
+<The King walks backward.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall spread wings again,
+ You shall spread wings again,
+<Here a special dance, by the Queen: swans flying in circles.>
+ Fly in soft rings again,
+ Fly in soft rings again,
+ Swim by cool springs
+ For ten thousand years,
+ Swim by cool springs,
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<The refrain "King Solomon" may be intoned by the men's leader
+ whenever it is needed to enable the women's leader to get to
+ her starting point. All the refrains may be likewise used.>
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon,
+ King Solomon.
+
+ Women's Leader: The Queen of Sheba asked him like a lady,
+<They bow to each other -- then give a pantomime
+ indicating a great rose garden.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "What makes the roses bloom
+ Over the mossy tomb,
+ Driving away the gloom
+ Ten thousand years?"
+
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon made answer to the lady,
+<They bow and confer. The Queen reserved, but taking cognizance.
+The King wooing with ornate gestures of respect, and courtly animation.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "They bloom forever thinking of your beauty,
+ Your step so queenly and your eyes so lovely.
+ These keep the roses fair,
+ Young and without a care,
+ Making so sweet the air,
+ Ten thousand years."
+
+<The two, with a manner almost a cake walk, go forward.>
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he had four hundred sons.
+
+<On this line, King and Queen pause before the footlights.>
+ Congregation: We were the sons.
+
+<Pantomime of crowning the audience.>
+ Both Leaders: Crowned by the throngs again,
+<On this line they walk backward, playing great imaginary harps.>
+ You shall make songs again,
+ Singing along
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<They go forward in a pony gallop, then stand pawing.>
+ Both Leaders: He gave each son four hundred prancing ponies.
+
+ Congregation: We were the ponies.
+
+<They nod their heads, starting to walk backward.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall eat hay again,
+<A pony dance by both, in circles.>
+ In forests play again,
+ Rampage and neigh
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon he asked the Queen of Sheba,
+<They bow to each other, standing so that
+ each one commands half of the stage.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "What makes the oak-tree grow
+ Hardy in sun and snow,
+ Never by wind brought low
+ Ten thousand years?"
+
+ Women's Leader: The Queen of Sheba answered like a lady,
+<They bow to each other, again, with pantomime indicating a forest.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "It blooms forever thinking of your wisdom,
+ Your brave heart and the way you rule your kingdom.
+ These keep the oak secure,
+ Weaving its leafy lure,
+ Dreaming by fountains pure
+ Ten thousand years."
+
+<They go to the footlights with a sailor's lurch and hitch.>
+ Both Leaders: The Queen of Sheba had four hundred sailors.
+
+<The King and Queen pause.>
+ Congregation: We were the sailors.
+
+ Both Leaders: You shall bring spice and ore
+<They walk backward with slow long-armed gestures
+ indicating the entire horizon line.>
+ Over the ocean's floor,
+ Shipmates once more,
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+ Women's Leader: The Queen of Sheba asked him like a lady,
+<They bow to each other, the Queen indicating the depths of the sea.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "Why is the sea so deep,
+ What secret does it keep
+ While tides a-roaring leap
+ Ten thousand years?"
+
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon made answer to the lady,
+<They bow to each other, then confer; the Queen reserved,
+ but taking cognizance, the King wooing with ornate gestures
+ of respect and courtly admiration.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "My love for you is like the stormy ocean --
+ Too deep to understand,
+ Bending to your command,
+ Bringing your ships to land
+ Ten thousand years."
+ King Solomon,
+ King Solomon.
+
+<They go to the footlights with the greatest possible strut.>
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he had four hundred chieftains.
+
+ Congregation: We were the chieftains.
+
+<The leaders stand with arms proudly folded.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall be proud again,
+<They walk backward haughtily, laughing on the last lines.>
+ Dazzle the crowd again,
+ Laughing aloud
+ For ten thousand years.
+
+<From here on the whole production to be
+ much more solemn, elevated, religious.>
+
+<The leaders go forward to the footlights carrying imaginary torches.>
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he had four hundred shepherds.
+
+<The man and woman pause at the footlights.>
+ Congregation: We were the shepherds.
+
+<They wander over the stage as though looking for lost lambs,
+ with torches held high.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall have torches bright,
+ Watching the folds by night,
+ Guarding the lambs aright,
+ Ten thousand years.
+
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon he asked the Queen of Sheba,
+<The King kneels, and indicates the entire sky with one long slow gesture.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "Why are the stars so high,
+ There in the velvet sky,
+ Rolling in rivers by,
+ Ten thousand years?"
+
+ Women's Leader: The Queen of Sheba answered like a lady,
+<The Queen kneels opposite the King,
+ and gives the same gesture as she answers.>
+ Bowing most politely:
+ "They're singing of your kingdom to the angels,
+ They guide your chariot with their lamps and candles,
+ Therefore they burn so far --
+ So you can drive your car
+ Up where the prophets are,
+ Ten thousand years."
+
+ Men's Leader: King Solomon,
+ King Solomon.
+
+ Both Leaders: King Solomon he kept the Sabbath holy.
+<The two stand, commanding the audience.>
+ And spoke with tongues in prophet words so mighty
+<The man and woman stamp and whirl with great noise and solemnity.>
+ We stamped and whirled and wept and shouted: --
+
+ Congregation Rises and Joins the Song:
+ . . . . "Glory."
+ We were his people.
+
+<On these two lines, man and woman stamp and whirl again,
+ gravely, magnificently.>
+ Both Leaders: You shall be wild and gay,
+ Green trees shall deck your way,
+<On these two lines they kneel, commanding the audience.>
+ Sunday be every day,
+ Ten thousand years.
+
+<Now they rise and bow to each other and the audience,
+ maintaining a certain intention of benediction.>
+ King Solomon,
+ King Solomon.
+
+
+
+
+How Samson Bore Away the Gates of Gaza
+
+(A Negro Sermon.)
+
+
+
+Once, in a night as black as ink,
+She drove him out when he would not drink.
+Round the house there were men in wait
+Asleep in rows by the Gaza gate.
+But the Holy Spirit was in this man.
+Like a gentle wind he crept and ran.
+("It is midnight," said the big town clock.)
+
+He lifted the gates up, post and lock.
+The hole in the wall was high and wide
+When he bore away old Gaza's pride
+Into the deep of the night: --
+The bold Jack Johnson Israelite, --
+Samson --
+The Judge,
+The Nazarite.
+
+The air was black, like the smoke of a dragon.
+Samson's heart was as big as a wagon.
+He sang like a shining golden fountain.
+He sweated up to the top of the mountain.
+He threw down the gates with a noise like judgment.
+And the quails all ran with the big arousement.
+
+But he wept -- "I must not love tough queens,
+And spend on them my hard earned means.
+I told that girl I would drink no more.
+Therefore she drove me from her door.
+Oh sorrow!
+Sorrow!
+I cannot hide.
+Oh Lord look down from your chariot side.
+You made me Judge, and I am not wise.
+I am weak as a sheep for all my size."
+
+ Let Samson
+ Be coming
+ Into your mind.
+
+The moon shone out, the stars were gay.
+He saw the foxes run and play.
+He rent his garments, he rolled around
+In deep repentance on the ground.
+
+Then he felt a honey in his soul.
+Grace abounding made him whole.
+Then he saw the Lord in a chariot blue.
+The gorgeous stallions whinnied and flew.
+The iron wheels hummed an old hymn-tune
+And crunched in thunder over the moon.
+And Samson shouted to the sky:
+"My Lord, my Lord is riding high."
+
+Like a steed, he pawed the gates with his hoof.
+He rattled the gates like rocks on the roof,
+And danced in the night
+On the mountain-top,
+Danced in the deep of the night:
+The Judge, the holy Nazarite,
+Whom ropes and chains could never bind.
+
+ Let Samson
+ Be coming
+ Into your mind.
+
+Whirling his arms, like a top he sped.
+His long black hair flew round his head
+Like an outstretched net of silky cord,
+Like a wheel of the chariot of the Lord.
+
+ Let Samson
+ Be coming
+ Into your mind.
+
+Samson saw the sun anew.
+He left the gates in the grass and dew.
+He went to a county-seat a-nigh.
+Found a harlot proud and high:
+Philistine that no man could tame --
+Delilah was her lady-name.
+Oh sorrow,
+Sorrow,
+She was too wise.
+She cut off his hair,
+She put out his eyes.
+
+ Let Samson
+ Be coming
+ Into your mind.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ----------------------------------------------
+ | The following pages contain advertisements |
+ | of other books by the same author |
+ | which appeared in the 1918 copy. |
+ ----------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+
+
+By the Same Author
+
+
+
+A Handy Guide for Beggars
+ New Edition. Cloth, 12mo, $1.25
+
+"The Handy Guide for Beggars" is an introduction to all Vachel Lindsay's work.
+It gives his first adventures afoot. He walked through Florida, Georgia,
+North Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky, in the spring of 1906.
+He walked through New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and on to Hiram, Ohio,
+in the spring of 1908. He carried on these trips his poems:
+"The Tree of Laughing Bells", "The Heroes of Time", etc.
+He recited them in exchange for food and lodging. He left copies
+for those who appeared interested. The book is a record of these journeys,
+and of many pleasing discoveries about American Democracy.
+
+This book serves to introduce the next, "Adventures While Preaching
+the Gospel of Beauty". In the spring and summer of 1912,
+Mr. Lindsay walked from Springfield, Illinois, west to Colorado,
+and into New Mexico. He was much more experienced in the road.
+He carried "Rhymes to Be Traded for Bread", "The Village Improvement Parade",
+etc. As is indicated in the title, he wrestled with a theory
+of American aesthetics. "Christmas, 1915", the third book in the series,
+appeared, applying the "Gospel of Beauty to the Photoplay".
+The ideas of Art and Democracy that develop in the first two books
+are used as the basic principles in "The Art of the Moving Picture".
+Those who desire a close view of the Lindsay idea will do well
+to read the three works in the order named. Further particulars
+in the pages following.
+
+
+
+The Congo and Other Poems
+ With a preface by Harriet Monroe, Editor of the `Poetry Magazine'.
+ Cloth, 12mo, $1.25; leather, $1.60
+
+In the readings which Vachel Lindsay has given for colleges, universities,
+etc., throughout the country, he has won the approbation of the critics
+and of his audiences in general for the new verse-form which he is employing,
+as well as the manner of his chanting and singing,
+which is peculiarly his own. He carries in memory all the poems in his books,
+and recites the program made out for him; the wonderful effect of sound
+produced by his lines, their relation to the idea which the author seeks
+to convey, and their marvelous lyrical quality are quite beyond the ordinary,
+and suggest new possibilities and new meanings in poetry.
+It is his main object to give his already established friends
+a deeper sense of the musical intention of his pieces.
+
+The book contains the much discussed "War Poem", "Abraham Lincoln Walks
+at Midnight"; it contains among its familiar pieces: "The Santa Fe Trail",
+"The Firemen's Ball", "The Dirge for a Righteous Kitten",
+"The Griffin's Egg", "The Spice Tree", "Blanche Sweet", "Mary Pickford",
+"The Soul of the City", etc.
+
+Mr. Lindsay received the Levinson Prize for the best poem contributed
+to `Poetry', a magazine of verse, (Chicago) for 1915.
+
+"We do not know a young man of any more promise than Mr. Vachel Lindsay
+for the task which he seems to have set himself." -- `The Dial'.
+
+
+
+General William Booth Enters Into Heaven and Other Poems
+ Price, $1.25; leather, $1.60
+
+This book contains among other verses: "On Reading Omar Khayyam
+during an Anti-Saloon Campaign in Illinois"; "The Wizard Wind";
+"The Eagle Forgotten", a Memorial to John P. Altgeld;
+"The Knight in Disguise", a Memorial to O. Henry; "The Rose and the Lotus";
+"Michaelangelo"; "Titian"; "What the Hyena Said"; "What Grandpa Mouse Said";
+"A Net to Snare the Moonlight"; "Springfield Magical"; "The Proud Farmer";
+"The Illinois Village"; "The Building of Springfield".
+
+ --------
+
+Comments on the Title Poem:
+
+"This poem, at once so glorious, so touching and poignant
+in its conception and expression . . . is perhaps the most remarkable poem
+of a decade -- one that defies imitation." -- `Review of Reviews'.
+
+"A sweeping and penetrating vision that works with a naive charm. . . .
+No American poet of to-day is more a people's poet." -- `Boston Transcript'.
+
+"One could hardly overpraise `General Booth'." -- `New York Times'.
+
+"Something new in verse, spontaneous, passionate, unmindful of conventions
+in form and theme." -- `The Living Age'.
+
+
+
+Adventures While Preaching the Gospel of Beauty
+ Price, $1.00
+
+This is a series of happening afoot while reciting at back-doors in the west,
+and includes some experiences while harvesting in Kansas.
+It includes several proclamations which apply the Gospel of Beauty
+to agricultural conditions. There are, among other rhymed interludes:
+"The Shield of Faith", "The Flute of the Lonely", "The Rose of Midnight",
+"Kansas", "The Kallyope Yell".
+
+ Something to Read
+
+Vachel Lindsay took a walk from his home in Springfield, Ill.,
+over the prairies to New Mexico. He was in Kansas in wheat-harvest time
+and he worked as a farmhand, and he tells all about that.
+He tells about his walks and the people he met in a little book,
+"Adventures While Preaching the Gospel of Beauty".
+For the conditions of his tramps were that he should keep away
+from cities, money, baggage, and pay his way by reciting his own poems.
+And he did it. People liked his pieces, and tramp farmhands
+with rough necks and rougher hands left off singing smutty limericks
+and took to "Atalanta in Calydon" apparently because they preferred it.
+Of motor cars, which gave him a lift, he says: "I still maintain
+that the auto is a carnal institution, to be shunned by the truly spiritual,
+but there are times when I, for one, get tired of being spiritual."
+His story of the "Five Little Children Eating Mush" (that was one night
+in Colorado, and he recited to them while they ate supper) has more beauty
+and tenderness and jolly tears than all the expensive sob stuff
+theatrical managers ever dreamed of. Mr. Lindsay doesn't need to write verse
+to be a poet. His prose is poetry -- poetry straight from the soil,
+of America that is, and of a nobler America that is to be.
+You cannot afford -- both for your entertainment and for the REAL IDEA
+that this young man has (of which we have said nothing) -- to miss this book.
+-- Editorial from `Collier's Weekly'.
+
+
+
+The Art of the Moving Picture
+ Price, $1.25
+
+An effort to apply the Gospel of Beauty to a new art.
+The first section has an outline which is proposed as a basis
+for photoplay criticism in America; chapters on: "The Photoplay of Action",
+"The Intimate Photoplay", "The Picture of Fairy Splendor",
+"The Picture of Crowd Splendor", "The Picture of Patriotic Splendor",
+"The Picture of Religious Splendor", "Sculpture in Motion",
+"Painting in Motion", "Furniture", "Trappings and Inventions in Motion",
+"Architecture in Motion", "Thirty Differences between the Photoplays
+and the Stage", "Hieroglyphics". The second section is avowedly
+more discursive, being more personal speculations and afterthoughts,
+not brought forward so dogmatically; chapters on: "The Orchestra Conversation
+and the Censorship", "The Substitute for the Saloon",
+"California and America", "Progress and Endowment",
+"Architects as Crusaders", "On Coming Forth by Day",
+"The Prophet Wizard", "The Acceptable Year of the Lord".
+
+ For Late Reviews of Mr. Lindsay and his contemporaries read:
+
+`The New Republic': Articles by Randolph S. Bourne, December 5, 1914,
+on the "Adventures While Preaching"; and Francis Hackett, December 25, 1915,
+on "The Art of the Moving Picture".
+
+`The Dial': Unsigned article by Lucien Carey, October 16, 1914,
+on "The Congo", etc.
+
+`The Yale Review': Article by H. M. Luquiens, July, 1916,
+on "The Art of the Moving Picture".
+
+ General Articles on the Poetry Situation
+
+`The Century Magazine': "America's Golden Age in Poetry", March, 1916.
+
+`Harper's Monthly Magazine': "The Easy Chair", William Dean Howells,
+September, 1915.
+
+`The Craftsman': "Has America a National Poetry?" Amy Lowell, July, 1916.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[End of original text.]
+
+
+
+Biographical Note:
+
+Nicholas Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931):
+ (Vachel is pronounced Vay-chul, that is, it rhymes with `Rachel').
+
+"The Eagle that is Forgotten" and "The Congo" are two of his best-known poems,
+and appear in his first two volumes of verse, "General William Booth
+Enters into Heaven" (1913) and "The Congo" (1914).
+
+As a sidenote, he became close friends with the poet Sara Teasdale
+and his third volume of verse, "The Chinese Nightingale" (1917),
+is dedicated to her. In turn, she wrote a memorial verse for him
+after he committed suicide in 1931.
+
+----
+
+From an anthology of verse by Jessie B. Rittenhouse (1913, 1917):
+
+"Lindsay, Vachel. Born November 10, 1879. Educated at Hiram College, Ohio.
+He took up the study of art and studied at the Art Institute, Chicago,
+1900-03 and at the New York School of Art, 1904-05. For a time
+after his technical study, he lectured upon art in its practical relation
+to the community, and returning to his home in Springfield, Illinois,
+issued what one might term his manifesto in the shape of
+"The Village Magazine", divided about equally between prose articles,
+pertaining to beautifying his native city, and poems,
+illustrated by his own drawings. Soon after this, Mr. Lindsay,
+taking as scrip for the journey, "Rhymes to be Traded for Bread",
+made a pilgrimage on foot through several Western States
+going as far afield as New Mexico. The story of this journey is given
+in his volume, "Adventures while Preaching the Gospel of Beauty".
+Mr. Lindsay first attracted attention in poetry by "General William Booth
+Enters into Heaven", a poem which became the title of his first volume,
+in 1913. His second volume was "The Congo", published in 1914.
+He is attempting to restore to poetry its early appeal as a spoken art,
+and his later work differs greatly from the selections contained
+in this anthology."
+
+
+
+
+In four instances, the original copy used accented spellings of words
+which are now common in English without those accents. They are:
+
+ ~
+canons ==> canyons
+
+ "
+cooperation ==> cooperation
+
+ ^
+fete ==> fete
+
+ "
+reechoed ==> reechoed
+
+
+
+
+End of this etext of The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems
+
+
+
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