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Title: Toward the Gulf

Author: Edgar Lee Masters


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TOWARD THE GULF

By Edgar Lee Masters




CONTENTS

 TOWARD THE GULF
 THE LAKE BOATS
 CITIES OF THE PLAIN
 EXCLUDED MIDDLE
 SAMUEL BUTLER, ET AL
 JOHNNY APPLESEED
 THE LOOM
 DIALOGUE AT PERKO'S
 SIR GALAHAD
 ST. DESERET
 HEAVEN IS BUT THE HOUR
 VICTOR RAFOLSKI ON ART
 THE LANDSCAPE
 TO-MORROW IS MY BIRTHDAY
 SWEET CLOVER
 SOMETHING BEYOND THE HILL
 FRONT THE AGES WITH A SMILE
 POOR PIERROT
 MIRAGE OF THE DESERT
 DAHLIAS
 THE GRAND RIVER MARSHES
 DELILAH
 THE WORLD-SAVER
 RECESSIONAL
 THE AWAKENING
 IN THE GARDEN AT THE DAWN HOUR
 FRANCE
 BERTRAND AND GOURGAUD TALK OVER OLD TIMES
 DRAW THE SWORD, O REPUBLIC
 DEAR OLD DICK
 THE ROOM OF MIRRORS
 THE LETTER
 CANTICLE OF THE RACE
 BLACK EAGLE RETURNS TO ST. JOE
 MY LIGHT WITH YOURS
 THE BLIND
 "I PAY MY DEBT FOR LAFAYETTE AND ROCHAMBEAU"
 CHRISTMAS AT INDIAN POINT
 WIDOW LA RUE
 DR. SCUDDER'S CLINICAL LECTURE
 FRIAR YVES
 THE EIGHTH CRUSADE
 THE BISHOP'S DREAM OF THE HOLY SEPULCHRE
 NEANDERTHAL
 THE END OF THE SEARCH
 BOTANICAL GARDENS




TO WILLIAM MARION REEDY


It would have been fitting had I dedicated Spoon River Anthology to
you. Considerations of an intimate nature, not to mention a literary
encouragement which was before yours, crowded you from the page.  Yet
you know that it was you who pressed upon my attention in June, 1909,
the Greek Anthology. It was from contemplation of its epitaphs that my
hand unconsciously strayed to the sketches of "Hod Putt," "Serepta The
Scold" ("Serepta Mason" in the book), "Amanda Barker" ("Amanda" in the
book), "Ollie McGee" and "The Unknown," the first written and the
first printed sketches of The Spoon River Anthology.  The
_Mirror_ of May 29th, 1914, is their record.

I take one of the epigrams of Meleager with its sad revealment and
touch of irony and turn it from its prose form to a verse form, making
verses according to the breath pauses:

"The holy night and thou, O Lamp, we took as witness of our vows; and
before thee we swore, he that would love me always and I that I would
never leave him. We swore, and thou wert witness of our double
promise. But now he says that our vows were written on the running
waters. And thou, O Lamp, thou seest him in the arms of another."

In verse this epigram is as follows:

 The holy night and thou,
 O Lamp,
 We took as witness of our vows;
 And before thee we swore,
 He that would love me always
 And I that I would never leave him.
 We swore,
 And thou wert witness of our double promise.
 But now he says that our vows were written on the running waters.
 And thou, O Lamp,
 Thou seest him in the arms of another.

It will be observed that iambic feet prevail in this translation. They
merely become noticeable and imperative when arranged in verses. But
so it is, even in the briefest and starkest rendering of these
epigrams from the Greek the humanism and dignity of the original
transfer themselves, making something, if less than verse, yet more
than prose; as Byron said of Sheridan's speeches, neither poetry nor
oratory, but better than either. It was no difficult matter to pass
from Chase Henry:

 "In life I was the town drunkard.
  When I died the priest denied me burial
  In holy ground, etc."

to the use of standard measures, or rhythmical arrangements of iambics
or what not, and so to make a book, which for the first third required
a practiced voice or eye to yield the semblance of verse; and for the
last two-thirds, or nearly so, accommodated itself to the less
sensitive conception of the average reader.  The prosody was allowed
to take care of itself under the emotional requirements and
inspiration of the moment. But there is nothing new in English
literature for some hundreds of years in combinations of dactyls,
anapests or trochees, and without rhyme.  Nor did I discover to the
world that an iambic pentameter can be lopped to a tetrameter without
the verse ceasing to be an iambic; though it be no longer the blank
verse which has so ennobled English poetry.  A great deal of unrhymed
poetry is yet to be written in the various standard rhythms and in
carefully fashioned metres.

But obviously a formal resuscitation of the Greek epigrams, ironical
and tender, satirical and sympathetic, as casual experiments in
unrelated themes would scarcely make the same appeal that an epic
rendition of modern life would do, and as it turned out actually
achieved.

The response of the American press to Spoon River Anthology during the
summer of 1914 while it was appearing in the _Mirror_ is my
warrant for saying this.  It was quoted and parodied during that time
in the country and in the metropolitan newspapers. _Current
Opinion_ in its issue of September, 1914, reproduced from the
_Mirror_ some of the poems. Though at this time the schematic
effect of the Anthology could not be measured, Edward J. Wheeler, that
devoted patron of the art and discriminating critic of its
manifestations, was attracted, I venture to say, by the substance of
"Griffy, The Cooper," for that is one of the poems from the Anthology
which he set forth in his column "The Voice of Living Poets" in the
issue referred to.  _Poetry, A Magazine of Verse_, followed in
its issue of October, 1914, with a reprinting from the _Mirror_.
In a word, the Anthology went the rounds over the country before it
was issued in book form. And a reception was thus prepared for the
complete work not often falling to the lot of a literary production.
I must not omit an expression of my gratitude for the very high praise
which John Cowper Powys bestowed on the Anthology just before it
appeared in book form and the publicity which was given his lecture by
the _New York Times_. Nathan Haskell Dole printed an article in
the Boston _Transcript_ of June 30, 1915, in which he contrasted
the work with the Greek Anthology, pointing in particular to certain
epitaphs by Carphylides, Kallaischros and Pollianos.  The critical
testimony of Miss Harriet Monroe in her editorial comments and in her
preface to "The New Poetry" has greatly strengthened the judgment of
to-day against a reversal at the hands of a later criticism.

This response to the Anthology while it was appearing in the
_Mirror_ and afterwards when put in the book was to nothing so
much as to the substance. It was accepted as a picture of our life in
America. It was interpreted as a transcript of the state of mind of
men and women here and elsewhere. You called it a Comedy Humaine in
your announcement of my identity as the author in the _Mirror_ of
November 20, 1914. If the epitaphic form gave added novelty I must
confess that the idea was suggested to me by the Greek Anthology.  But
it was rather because of the Greek Anthology than from it that I
evolved the less harmonious epitaphs with which Spoon River Anthology
was commenced.  As to metrical epitaphs it is needless to say that I
drew upon the legitimate materials of authentic English versification.
Up to the Spring of 1914, I had never allowed a Spring to pass without
reading Homer; and I feel that this familiarity had its influence both
as to form and spirit; but I shall not take the space now to pursue
this line of confessional.

What is the substance of which I have spoken if it be not the life
around us as we view it through eyes whose vision lies in heredity,
mode of life, understanding of ourselves and of our place and time?
You have lived much. As a critic and a student of the country no one
understands America better than you do. As a denizen of the west, but
as a surveyor of the east and west you have brought to the country's
interpretation a knowledge of its political and literary life as well
as a proficiency in the history of other lands and other times. You
have seen and watched the unfolding of forces that sprang up after the
Civil War. Those forces mounted in the eighties and exploded in free
silver in 1896. They began to hit through the directed marksmanship of
Theodore Roosevelt during his second term. You knew at first hand all
that went with these forces of human hope, futile or valiant endeavor,
articulate or inarticulate expression of the new birth.  You saw and
lived, but in greater degree, what I have seen and lived. And with
this back-ground you inspired and instructed me in my analysis.
Standing by you confirmed or corrected my sculpturing of the clay
taken out of the soil from which we both came.  You did this with an
eye familiar with the secrets of the last twenty years, familiar also
with the relation of those years to the time which preceded and bore
them.

So it is, that not only because I could not dedicate Spoon River to
you, but for the larger reasons indicated, am I impelled to do you
whatever honor there may be in taking your name for this book. By this
outline confession, sometime perhaps to be filled in, do I make known
what your relation is to these interpretations of mine resulting from
a spirit, life, thought, environment which have similarly come to us
and have similarly affected us.

I call this book "Toward the Gulf," a title importing a continuation
of the attempts of Spoon River and The Great Valley to mirror the age
and the country in which we live. It does not matter which one of
these books carries your name and makes these acknowledgments; so far,
anyway, as the opportunity is concerned for expressing my appreciation
of your friendship and the great esteem and affectionate interest in
which I hold you.

EDGAR LEE MASTERS.



The following poems were first printed in the publications indicated:

Toward the Gulf, The Lake Boats, The Loom, Tomorrow is my
Birthday, Dear Old Dick, The Letter, My Light with Yours, Widow
LaRue, Neanderthal, in Reedy's Mirror.

Draw the Sword, Oh Republic, in the Independent.

Canticle of the Race, in Poetry, a Magazine of Verse.

Friar Yves, in the Cosmopolitan Magazine.

"I pay my debt for Lafayette and Rochambeau," in Fashions of
the Hour.





TOWARD THE GULF

    _Dedicated to Theodore Roosevelt_


    From the Cordilleran Highlands,
    From the Height of Land
    Far north.
    From the Lake of the Woods,
    From Rainy Lake,
    From Itasca's springs.
    From the snow and the ice
    Of the mountains,
    Breathed on by the sun,
    And given life,
    Awakened by kisses of fire,
    Moving, gliding as brightest hyaline
    Down the cliffs,
    Down the hills,
    Over the stones.
    Trickling as rills;
    Swiftly running as mountain brooks;
    Swirling through runnels of rock;
    Curving in spheréd silence
    Around the long worn walls of granite gorges;
    Storming through chasms;
    And flowing for miles in quiet over the Titan basin
    To the muddled waters of the mighty river,
    Himself obeying the call of the gulf,
    And the unfathomed urge of the sea!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Waters of mountain peaks,
    Spirits of liberty
    Leaving your pure retreats
    For work in the world.
    Soiling your crystal springs
    With the waste that is whirled to your breast as you run,
    Until you are foul as the crawling leviathan
    That devours you,
    And uses you to carry waste and earth
    For the making of land at the gulf,
    For the conquest of land for the feet of men.

           *       *       *       *       *

    De Soto, Marquette and La Salle
    Planting your cross in vain,
    Gaining neither gold nor ivory,
    Nor tribute
    For France or Spain.
    Making land alone
    For liberty!
    You could proclaim in the name of the cross
    The dominion of kings over a world that was new.
    But the river has altered its course:
    There are fertile fields
    For a thousand miles where the river flowed that you knew.
    And there are liberty and democracy
    For thousands of miles
    Where in the name of kings, and for the cross
    You tramped the tangles for treasure.

           *       *       *       *       *

    The Falls of St. Anthony tumble the waters
    In laughter and tumult and roaring of voices,
    Swirling, dancing, leaping, foaming,
    Spirits of caverns, of canyons and gorges:
    Waters tinctured by star-lights, sweetened by breezes
    Blown over snows, out of the rosy northlands,
    Through forests of pine and hemlock,
    Whisperings of the Pacific grown symphonic.
    Voices of freedom, restless, unconquered,
    Mad with divinity, fearless and free:--
    Hunters and choppers, warriors, revelers,
    Laughers, dancers, fiddlers, freemen,
    Climbing the crests of the Alleghenies,
    Singing, chopping, hunting, fighting
    Erupting into Kentucky and Tennessee,
    Into Ohio, Indiana, Illinois,
    Sweeping away the waste of the Indians,
    As the river carries mud for the making of land.
    And taking the land of Illinois from kings
    And handing its allegiance to the Republic.
    What riflemen with Daniel Boone for leader,
    And conquerors with Clark for captain
    Plunge down like melted snows
    The rocks and chasms of forbidden mountains,
    And make more land for freemen!
    Clear-eyed, hard-muscled, dauntless hunters,
    Choppers of forests and tillers of fields
    Meet at last in a field of snow-white clover
    To make wise laws for states,
    And to teach their sons of the new West
    That suffrage is the right of freemen.
    Until the lion of Tennessee,
    Who crushes king-craft near the gulf.
    Where La Salle proclaimed the crown,
    And the cross,
    Is made the ruler of the republic
    By freeman suffragans,
    And winners of the West!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Father of Waters! Ever recurring symbol of wider freedom,
    Even to the ocean girdled earth,
    The out-worn rule of Florida rots your domain.
    But the lion of Tennessee asks: Would you take from Spain
    The land she has lost but in name?
    It shall be done in a month if you loose my sword.
    It was done as he said.
    And the sick and drunken power of Spain that clung,
    And sucked at the life of Chile, Peru, Argentina,
    Loosened under the blows of San Martin and Bolivar,
    Breathing the lightning thrown by Napoleon the Great
    On the thrones of Europe.
    Father of Waters! 'twas you who made us say:
    No kings this side of the earth forever!
    One-half of the earth shall be free
    By our word and the might that is back of our word!

           *       *       *       *       *

    The falls of St. Anthony tumble the waters
    In laughter and tumult and roaring of voices!
    And the river moves in its winding channel toward the gulf,
    Over the breast of De Soto,
    By the swamp grave of La Salle!
    The old days sleep, the lion of Tennessee sleeps
    With Daniel Boone and the hunters,
    The rifle men, the revelers,
    The laughers and dancers and choppers
    Who climbed the crests of the Alleghenies,
    And poured themselves into Tennessee, Ohio,
    Kentucky, Illinois, the bountiful West.
    But the river never sleeps, the river flows forever,
    Making land forever, reclaiming the wastes of the sea.
    And the race never sleeps, the race moves on forever.
    And wars must come, as the waters must sweep away
    Drift-wood, dead wood, choking the strength of the river--
    For Liberty never sleeps!

           *       *       *       *       *

    The lion of Tennessee sleeps!
    And over the graves of the hunters and choppers
    The tramp of troops is heard!
    There is war again,
    O, Father of Waters!
    There is war, O, symbol of freedom!
    They have chained your giant strength for the cause
    Of trade in men.
    But a man of the West, a denizen of your shore,
    Wholly American,
    Compact, clear-eyed, nerved like a hunter,
    Who knew no faster beat of the heart,
    Except in charity, forgiveness, peace;
    Generous, plain, democratic,
    Scarcely appraising himself at full,
    A spiritual rifleman and chopper,
    Of the breed of Daniel Boone--
    This man, your child, O, Father of Waters,
    Waked from the winter sleep of a useless day
    By the rising sun of a Freedom bright and strong,
    Slipped like the loosened snows of your mountain streams
    Into a channel of fate as sure as your own--
    A fate which said: till the thing be done
    Turn not back nor stop.
    Ulysses of the great Atlantis,
    Wholly American,
    Patient, silent, tireless, watchful, undismayed
    Grant at Fort Donelson, Grant at Vicksburg,
    Leading the sons of choppers and riflemen,
    Pushing on as the hunters and farmers
    Poured from the mountains into the West,
    Freed you, Father of Waters,
    To flow to the Gulf and be one
    With the earth-engirdled tides of time.
    And gave us states made ready for the hands
    Wholly American:
    Hunters, choppers, tillers, fighters
    For epochs vast and new
    In Truth, in Liberty,
    Posters from land to land and sea to sea
    Till all the earth be free!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Ulysses of the great Atlantis,
    Dream not of disaster,
    Sleep the sleep of the brave
    In your couch afar from the Father of Waters!
    A new Ulysses arises,
    Who turns not back, nor stops
    Till the thing is done.
    He cuts with one stroke of the sword
    The stubborn neck that keeps the Gulf
    And the Caribbean
    From the luring Pacific.
    Roosevelt the hunter, the pioneer,
    Wholly American,
    Winner of greater wests
    Till all the earth be free!

           *       *       *       *       *

    And forever as long as the river flows toward the Gulf
    Ulysses reincarnate shall come
    To guard our places of sleep,
    Till East and West shall be one in the west of heaven and earth!

           *       *       *       *       *

    In an old print
    I see a thicket of masts on the river.
    But in the prints to be
    There will be lake boats,
    With port holes, funnels, rows of decks,
    Huddled like swans by the docks,
    Under the shadows of cliffs of brick.
    And who will know from the prints to be,
    When the Albatross and the Golden Eagle,
    The flying craft which shall carry the vision
    Of impatient lovers wounded by Spring
    To the shaded rivers of Michigan,
    That it was the Missouri, the Iowa,
    And the City of Benton Harbor
    Which lay huddled like swans by the docks?

    You are not Lake Leman,
    Walled in by Mt. Blanc.
    One sees the whole world round you,
    And beyond you, Lake Michigan.
    And when the melodious winds of March
    Wrinkle you and drive on the shore
    The serpent rifts of sand and snow,
    And sway the giant limbs of oaks,
    Longing to bud,
    The boats put forth for the ports that began to stir,
    With the creak of reels unwinding the nets,
    And the ring of the caulking wedge.
    But in the June days--
    The Alabama ploughs through liquid tons
    Of sapphire waves.
    She sinks from hills to valleys of water,
    And rises again,
    Like a swimming gull!
    I wish a hundred years to come, and forever
    All lovers could know the rapture
    Of the lake boats sailing the first Spring days
    To coverts of hepatica,
    With the whole world sphering round you,
    And the whole of the sky beyond you.

    I knew the captain of the City of Grand Rapids.
    He had sailed the seas as a boy.
    And he stood on deck against the railing
    Puffing a cigar,
    Showing in his eyes the cinema flash of the sun on the waves.
    It was June and life was easy. ...
    One could lie on deck and sleep,
    Or sit in the sun and dream.
    People were walking the decks and talking,
    Children were singing.
    And down on the purser's deck
    A man was dancing by himself,
    Whirling around like a dervish.
    And this captain said to me:
    "No life is better than this.
    I could live forever,
    And do nothing but run this boat
    From the dock at Chicago to the dock at Holland
    And back again."

    One time I went to Grand Haven
    On the Alabama with Charley Shippey.
    It was dawn, but white dawn only,
    Under the reign of Leucothea,
    As we volplaned, so it seemed, from the lake
    Past the lighthouse into the river.
    And afterward laughing and talking
    Hurried to Van Dreezer's restaurant
    For breakfast.
    (Charley knew him and talked of things
    Unknown to me as he cooked the breakfast.)
    Then we fished the mile's length of the pier
    In a gale full of warmth and moisture
    Which blew the gulls about like confetti,
    And flapped like a flag the linen duster
    Of a fisherman who paced the pier--
    (Charley called him Rip Van Winkle).
    The only thing that could be better
    Than this day on the pier
    Would be its counterpart in heaven,
    As Swedenborg would say--
    Charley is fishing somewhere now, I think.

    There is a grove of oaks on a bluff by the river
    At Berrien Springs.
    There is a cottage that eyes the lake
    Between pines and silver birches
    At South Haven.
    There is the inviolable wonder of wooded shore
    Curving for miles at Saugatuck.
    And at Holland a beach like Scheveningen's.
    And at Charlevoix the sudden quaintness
    Of an old-world place by the sea.
    There are the hills around Elk Lake
    Where the blue of the sky is so still and clear
    It seems it was rubbed above them
    By the swipe of a giant thumb.
    And beyond these the little Traverse Bay
    Where the roar of the breeze goes round
    Like a roulette ball in the groove of the wheel,
    Circling the bay,
    And beyond these Mackinac and the Cheneaux Islands--
    And beyond these a great mystery!--

    Neither ice floes, nor winter's palsy
    Stays the tide in the river.




LAKE BOATS


    And under the shadows of cliffs of brick
    The lake boats
    Huddled like swans
    Turn and sigh like sleepers----
    They are longing for the Spring!




CITIES OF THE PLAIN


    Where are the cabalists, the insidious committees,
    The panders who betray the idiot cities
    For miles and miles toward the prairie sprawled,
    Ignorant, soul-less, rich,
    Smothered in fumes of pitch?

           *       *       *       *       *

    Rooms of mahogany in tall sky scrapers
    See the unfolding and the folding up
    Of ring-clipped papers,
    And letters which keep drugged the public cup.
    The walls hear whispers and the semi-tones
    Of voices in the corner, over telephones
    Muffled by Persian padding, gemmed with brass spittoons.
    Butts of cigars are on the glass topped table,
    And through the smoke, gracing the furtive Babel,
    The bishop's picture blesses the picaroons,
    Who start or stop the life of millions moving
    Unconscious of obedience, the plastic
    Yielders to satanic and dynastic
    Hands of reproaching and approving.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Here come knights armed,
    But with their arms concealed,
    And rubber heeled.
    Here priests and wavering want are charmed.
    And shadows fall here like the shark's
    In messages received or sent.
    Signals are flying from the battlement.
    And every president
    Of rail, gas, coal and oil, the parks,
    The receipt of custom knows, without a look,
    Their meaning as the code is in no book.
    The treasonous cracksmen of the city's wealth
    Watch for the flags of stealth!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Acres of coal lie fenced along the tracks.
    Tracks ribbon the streets, and beneath the streets
    Wires for voices, fire, thwart the plebiscites,
    And choke the counsels and symposiacs
    Of dreamers who have pity for the backs
    That bear and bleed.
    All things are theirs: tracks, wires, streets and coal,
    The church's creed,
    The city's soul,
    The city's sea girt loveliness,
    The merciless and meretricious press.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Far up in a watch-tower, where the news is printed,
    Gray faces and bright eyes, weary and cynical
    Discuss fresh wonders of the old cabal.
    But nothing of its work in type is hinted:
    Taxes are high! The mentors of the town
    Must keep their taxes down
    On buildings, presses, stocks
    In gas, oil, coal and docks.
    The mahogany rooms conceal a spider man
    Who holds the taxing bodies through the church,
    And knights with arms concealed. The mentors search
    The spider man, the master publican,
    And for his friendship silence keep,
    Letting him herd the populace like sheep
    For self and for the insatiable desires
    Of coal and tracks and wires,
    Pick judges, legislators,
    And tax-gatherers.
    Or name his favorites, whom they name:
    The slick and sinistral,
    Servitors of the cabal,
    For praise which seems the equivalent of fame:
    Giving to the delicate handed crackers
    Of priceless safes, the spiritual slackers,
    The flash and thunder of front pages!
    And the gulled millions stare and fling their wages
    Where they are bidden, helpless and emasculate.
    And the unilluminate,
    Whose brows are brass,
    Who weep on every Sabbath day
    For Jesus riding on an ass,
    Scarce know the ass is they,
    Now ridden by his effigy,
    The publican with Jesus' painted mask,
    Along a way where fumes of odorless gas
    First spur then fell them from the task.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Through the parade runs swift the psychic cackle
    Like thorns beneath a boiling pot that crackle.
    And the angels say to Yahveh looking down
    From the alabaster railing, on the town,
    O, cackle, cackle, cackle, crack and crack
    We wish we had our little Sodom back!




EXCLUDED MIDDLE


    Out of the mercury shimmer of glass
    Over these daguerreotypes
    The balloon-like spread of a skirt of silk emerges
    With its little figure of flowers.
    And the enameled glair of parted hair
    Lies over the oval brow,
    From under which eyes of fiery blackness
    Look through you.
    And the only repose of spirit shown
    Is in the hands
    Lying loosely one in the other,
    Lightly clasped somewhat below the breast. ...
    And in the companion folder of this case
    Of gutta percha
    Is the shape of a man.
    His brow is oval too, but broader.
    His nose is long, but thick at the tip.
    His eyes are blue
    Wherein faith burns her signal lights,
    And flashes her convictions.
    His mouth is tense, almost a slit.
    And his face is a massive Calvinism
    Resting on a stock tie.

    They were married, you see.
    The clasp on this gutta percha case
    Locks them together.
    They were locked together in life.
    And a hasp of brass
    Keeps their shadows face to face in the case
    Which has been handed down--
    (The pictures of noble ancestors,
    Showing what strains of gentle blood
    Flow in the third generation)--
    From Massachusetts to Illinois. ...

    Long ago it was over for them,
    Massachusetts has done its part,
    She raised the seed
    And a wind blew it over to Illinois
    Where it has mixed, multiplied, mutated
    Until one soul comes forth:
    But a soul all striped and streaked,
    And a soul self-crossed and self-opposed,
    As it were a tree which on one branch
    Bears northern spies,
    And on another thorn apples. ...

    Come Weissmann, Von Baer and Schleiden,
    And you Buffon and De Vries,
    Come with your secrets of sea shore asters
    Night-shade, henbanes, gloxinias,
    Veronicas, snap-dragons, Danebrog,
    And show us how they cross and change,
    And become hybrids.
    And show us what heredity is,
    And how it works.
    For the secret of these human beings
    Locked in this gutta percha case
    Is the secret of Mephistos and red Campions.

    Let us lay out the facts as far as we can.
    Her eyes were black,
    His eyes were blue.
    She saw through shadows, walls and doors,
    She knew life and hungered for more.
    But he lived in the mists, and climbed to high places
    To feel clouds about his face, and get the lights
    Of supernal sun-sets.
    She was reason, and he was faith.
    She had an illumination, but of the intellect.
    And he had an illumination but of the soul.
    And she saw God as merciless law,
    And he knew God as divine love.
    And she was a man, and he in part was a woman.
    He stood in a pulpit and preached the Christ,
    And the remission of sins by blood,
    And the literal fall of man through Adam,
    And the mystical and actual salvation of man
    Through the coming of Christ.

    And she sat in a pew shading her great eyes
    To hide her scorn for it all.
    She was crucified,
    And raged to the last like the impenitent thief
    Against the fate which wasted and trampled down
    Her wisdom, sagacity, versatile skill,
    Which would have piled up gold or honors
    For a mate who knew that life is growth,
    And health, and the satisfaction of wants,
    And place and reputation and mansion houses,
    And mahogany and silver,
    And beautiful living.
    She hated him, and hence she pitied him.
    She was like the gardener with great pruners
    Deciding to clip, sometimes not clipping
    Just for the dread.
    She had married him--but why?
    Some inscrutable air
    Wafted his pollen to her across a wide garden--
    Some power had crossed them.
    And here is the secret I think:
    (As we would say here is electricity)
    It is the vibration inhering in sex
    That produces devils or angels,
    And it is the sex reaction in men and women
    That brings forth devils or angels,
    And starts in them the germs of powers or passions,
    Becoming loves, ferocities, gifts and weaknesses,
    Till the stock dies out.
    So now for their hybrid children:--
    She gave birth to four daughters and one son.

    But first what have we for the composition of these daughters?
    Reason opposed and becoming keener therefor.
    Faith mocked and drawing its mantel closer.
    Love thwarted and becoming acid.
    Hatred mounting too high and thinning into pity.
    Hunger for life unappeased and becoming a stream under-ground
    Where only blind things swim.
    God year by year removing himself to remoter thrones
    Of inexorable law.
    God coming closer even while disease
    And total blindness came between him and God
    And defeated the mercy of God.
    And a love and a trust growing deeper in him
    As she in great thirst, hanging on the cross,
    Mocked his crucifixion,
    And talked philosophy between the spasms of pain,
    Till at last she is all satirist,
    And he is all saint.

    And all the children were raised
    After the strictest fashion in New England,
    And made to join the church,
    And attend its services.
    And these were the children:

    Janet was a religious fanatic and a virago,
    She debated religion with her husband for ten years,
    Then he refused to talk, and for twenty years
    Scarcely spoke to her.
    She died a convert to Catholicism.
    They had two children:
    The boy became a forgerer
    Of notorious skill.
    The daughter married, but was barren.

    Miranda married a rich man
    And spent his money so fast that he failed.
    She lashed him with a scorpion tongue
    And made him believe at last
    With her incessant reasonings
    That he was a fool, and so had failed.
    In middle life he started over again,
    But became tangled in a law-suit.
    Because of these things he killed himself.

    Louise was a nymphomaniac.
    She was married twice.
    Both husbands fled from her insatiable embraces.
    At thirty-two she became a woman on a telephone list,
    Subject to be called,
    And for two years ran through a daily orgy of sex,
    When blindness came on her, as it came on her father before her,
    And she became a Christian Scientist,
    And led an exemplary life.

    Deborah was a Puritan of Puritans,
    Her list of unmentionable things
    Tabooed all the secrets of creation,
    Leaving politics, religion, and human faults,
    And the mistakes most people make,
    And the natural depravity of man,
    And his freedom to redeem himself if he chooses,
    As the only subjects of conversation.
    As a twister of words and meanings,
    And a skilled welder of fallacies,
    And a swift emerger from ineluctable traps of logic,
    And a wit with an adder's tongue,
    And a laugher,
    And an unafraid facer of enemies,
    Oppositions, hatreds,
    She never knew her equal.
    She was at once very cruel, and very tender,
    Very selfish and very generous
    Very little and very magnanimous.
    Scrupulous as to the truth, and utterly disregardless of the truth.

    Of the keenest intuitions, yet gullible,
    Easily used at times, of erratic judgment,
    Analytic but pursuing with incredible swiftness
    The falsest trails to her own undoing--
    All in all the strangest mixture of colors and scent
    Derived from father and mother,
    But mixed by whom, and how, and why?

    Now for the son named Herman, rebel soul.
    His brow was like a loaf of bread, his eyes
    Turned from his father's blue to gray, his nose
    Was like his mother's, skin was dark like hers.
    His shapely body, hands and feet belonged
    To some patrician face, not to Marat's.
    And his was like Marat's, fanatical,
    Materialistic, fierce, as it might guide
    A reptile's crawl, but yet he crawled to peaks
    Loving the hues of mists, but not the mists
    His father loved. And being a rebel soul
    He thought the world all wrong. A nothingness
    Moving as malice marred the life of man.
    'Twas man's great work to fight this Giant Fraud,
    And all who praise and serve Him. 'Tis for man
    To free the world from error, suffer, die
    For liberty of thought. You see his mother
    Is in possession of one part of him,
    Or all of him for some time.

                                  So he lives
    Nursing the dream (like father he's a dreamer)
    That genius fires him. All the while a gift
    For analytics stored behind that brow,
    That bulges like a loaf of bread, is all
    Of which he well may boast above the man
    He hates as but a slave of faith and fear.
    He feeds luxurious doubt with Omar Khyam,
    But for long years neglects the jug of wine.
    And as for "thou" he does not wake for years,
    Is a pure maiden when he weds, the grains
    Run counter in him, end in knots at times.
    He takes from father certain tastes and traits,
    From mother certain others, one can see
    His mother's sex re-actions to his father,
    Not passed to him to make him celibate,
    But holding back in sleeping passions which
    Burst over bounds at last in lust, not love.
    Not love since that great engine in the brow
    Tears off the irised wings of love and bares
    The poor worm's body where the wings had been:
    What is it but desire? Such stuff in rhyme
    In music over what is but desire,
    And ends when that is satisfied!

                                        He's a crank.
    And follows all the psychic thrills which run
    To cackles o'er the world. It's Looking Backward,
    Or Robert Elsmere, Spencer's Social Statics,
    It's socialism, Anarchism, Peace,
    It's non-resistance with a swelling heart,
    As who should say how truer to the faith
    Of Jesus am I, without hope or faith,
    Than churchmen. He's a prohibitionist,
    The poor's protagonist, the knight at arms
    Of fallen women, yelling at the rich
    Whose wicked greed makes all the prostitutes--
    No prostitutes without the wicked rich!
    But as he ages, as the bitter days
    Approach with perorations: O ye vipers,
    The engine in him changes all the world,
    Reverses all the wheels of thought behind.
    For Nietzsche comes, and makes him superman.
    He dumps the truth of Jesus over--there
    It lies with his youth's textual skepticism,
    And laughter at the supernatural.

    Now what's the motivating principle
    Of such a mind? In youth he sought for rules
    Wherewith to trail and capture truths. He found it
    In James McCosh's Logic, it was this:
    Lex Exclusi Tertii aut Medii,
    Law of Excluded Middle speaking plain:
    A thing is true, or not true, never a third
    Hypothesis, so God is or is not.
    That's very good to start with, how to end
    And how to know which of the two is false--
    He hunted out the false, as mother did--
    Requires a tool. He found it in this book,
    Reductio ad absurdum; let us see
    Excluded middle use reductio.
    God is or God is not, but then what God?
    Excluded Middle never sought a God
    To suffer demolition at his hands
    Except the God of Illinois, the God
    Grown but a little with his followers
    Since Moses lived and Peter fished. So now
    God is or God is not. Let us assume
    God is and use reductio ad absurdum,
    Taking away the rotten props, the posts
    That do not fit or hold, and let Him fall.
    For if he falls, the other postulate
    That God is not is demonstrated. See
    A universe of truth pass on the way
    Cleared by Excluded Middle through the stuff
    Of thought and visible things, a way that lets
    A greater God escape, uncaught by all
    The nippers of reductio ad absurdum.
    But to resume his argument was this:
    God is or God is not, but if God is
    Why pestilence and war, earthquake and famine?
    He either wills them, or cannot prevent them,
    But if he wills them God is evil, if
    He can't prevent them, he is limited.

    But God, you say, is good, omnipotent,
    And here I prove Him evil, or too weak
    To stay the evil. Having shown your God
    Lacking in what makes God, the proposition
    Which I oppose to this, that God is not
    Stands proven. For as evil is most clear
    In sickness, pain and death, it cannot be
    There is a Power with strength to overcome them,
    Yet suffers them to be.

                           And so this man
    Went through the years of life, and stripped the fields
    Of beauty and of thought with mandibles
    Insatiable as the locust's, which devours
    A season's care and labor in an hour.
    He stripped these fields and ate them, but they made
    No meat or fat for him. And so he lived
    On his own thought, as starving men may live
    On stored up fat. And so in time he starved.
    The thought in him no longer fed his life,
    And he had withered up the outer world
    Of man and nature, stripped it to the bone,
    Nothing but skull and cross-bones greeted him
    Wherever he turned--the world became a bottle
    Filled with a bitter essence he could drink
    From long accustomed doses--labeled poison
    And marked with skull and cross-bones. Could he laugh
    As mother laughed? No more! He tried to find
    The mother's laugh and secret for the laugh
    Which kept her to the end--but did she laugh?
    Or if she laughed, was it so hollow, forced
    As all his laughter now was. He had proved
    Too much for laughter. Nothing but himself
    Remained to keep himself, he lived alone
    Upon his stored up fat, now daily growing
    To dangerous thinness.

                          So with love of woman.
    He had found "thou" the jug of wine as well,
    "Thou" "thou" had come and gone too many times.
    For what is sex but touch of flesh, the hand
    Is flesh and hands may touch, if so, the loins--
    Reductio ad absurdum, O you fools,
    Who see a wrong in touch of loins, no wrong
    In clasp of hands. And so again, again
    With his own tools of thought he bruised his hands
    Until they grew too callous to perceive
    When they were touched.

                              So by analysis
    He turned on everything he once believed.
    Let's make an end!

                         Men thought Excluded Middle
    Was born for great things. Why that bulging brow
    And analytic keen if not for greatness?

    In those old days they thought so when he fought
    For lofty things, a youthful radical
    Come here to change the world! But now at last
    He lectures in back halls to youths who are
    What he was in his youth, to acid souls
    Who must have bitterness, can take enough
    To kill a healthy soul, as fiends for dope
    Must have enough to kill a body clean.
    And so upon a night Excluded Middle
    Is lecturing to prove that life is evil,
    Not worth the living--when his auditors
    Behold him pale and sway and take his seat,
    And later quit the hall, the lecture left
    Half finished.

    This had happened in a twinkling:
    He had made life a punching bag, with fists,
    Excluded Middle and Reductio,
    Had whacked it back and forth. But just as often
    As he had struck it with an argument
    That it is not worth living, snap, the bag
    Would fly back for another punch. For life
    Just like a punching bag will stand your whacks
    Of hatred and denial, let you punch
    Almost at will. But sometime, like the bag,
    The strap gives way, the bag flies up and falls
    And lies upon the floor, you've knocked it out.
    And this is what Excluded Middle does
    This night, the strap breaks with his blows. He proves
    His strength, his case and for the first he sees
    Life is not worth the living. Life gives up,
    Resists no more, flys back no more to him,
    But hits the ceiling, snap the strap gives way!
    The bag falls to the floor, and lies there still--
    Who now shall pick it up, re-fasten it?
    And so his color fades, it well may be
    The crisis of a long neurosis, well
    What caused it? But his eyes are wondrous clear
    Perceiving life knocked out. His heart is sick,
    He takes his seat, admiring friends swarm round him,
    Conduct him to a carriage, he goes home
    And sitting by the fire (O what is fire?
    The miracle of fire dawns on his thought,
    Fire has been near him all these years unseen,
    How wonderful is fire!) which warms and soothes
    Neuritic pains, he takes the rubber case
    Which locks the images of father, mother.
    And as he stares upon the oval brow,
    The eyes of blue which flash the light of faith,
    Preserved like dendrites in this silver shimmer,
    Some spectral speculations fill his brain,
    Float like a storm above the sorry wreck
    Of all his logic tools, machines; for now
    Since pains in back and shoulder like to father's
    Fall to him at the age that father had them,
    Father has entered him, has settled down
    To live with him with those neuritic pangs.
    Thus are his speculations. Over all
    How comes it that a sudden feel of life,
    Its wonder, terror, beauty is like father's?
    As if the soul of father entered in him
    And made the field of consciousness his own,
    Emotions, powers of thought his instruments.
    That is a horrible atavism, when
    You find yourself reverting to a soul
    You have not loved, despite yourself becoming
    That other soul, and with an out-worn self
    Crying for burial on your hands, a life
    Not yours till now that waits your new found powers--
    Live now or die indeed!




SAMUEL BUTLER ET AL.


    Let me consider your emergence
    From the milieu of our youth:
    We have played all the afternoon, grown hungry.
    No meal has been prepared, where have you been?
    Toward sun's decline we see you down the path,
    And run to meet you, and perhaps you smile,
    Or take us in your arms. Perhaps again
    You look at us, say nothing, are absorbed,
    Or chide us for our dirty frocks or faces.
    Of running wild without our meals
    You do not speak.

    Then in the house, seized with a sudden joy,
    After removing gloves and hat, you run,
    As with a winged descending flight, and cry,
    Half song, half exclamation,
    Seize one of us,
    Crush one of us with mad embraces, bite
    Ears of us in a rapture of affection.
    "You shall have supper," then you say.
    The stove lids rattle, wood's poked in the fire,
    The kettle steams, pots boil, by seven o'clock
    We sit down to a meal of hodge-podge stuff.
    I understand now how your youth and spirits
    Fought back the drabness of the village,
    And wonder not you spent the afternoons
    With such bright company as Eugenia Turner--
    And I forgive you hunger, loneliness.

    But when we asked you where you'd been,
    Complained of loneliness and hunger, spoke of children
    Who lived in order, sat down thrice a day
    To cream and porridge, bread and meat.
    We think to corner you--alas for us!
    Your anger flashes swords! Reasons pour out
    Like anvil sparks to justify your way:
    "Your father's always gone--you selfish children,
    You'd have me in the house from morn till night."
    You put us in the wrong--our cause is routed.
    We turn to bed unsatisfied in mind,
    You've overwhelmed us, not convinced us.
    Our sense of wrong defeat breeds resolution
    To whip you out when minds grow strong.

    Up in the moon-lit room without a light,
    (The lamps have not been filled,)
    We crawl in unmade beds.
    We leave you pouring over paper backs.
    We peek above your shoulder.
    It is "The Lady in White" you read.
    Next morning you are dead for sleep,
    You've sat up more than half the night.
    We have been playing hours when you arise,
    It's nine o'clock when breakfast's served at last,
    When school days come I'm always late to school.

    Shy, hungry children scuffle at your door,
    Eye through the crack, maybe, at nine o'clock,
    Find father has returned during the night.
    You are all happiness, his idlest word
    Provokes your laughter.
    He shows us rolls of precious money earned;
    He's given you a silk dress, money too
    For suits and shoes for us--all is forgiven.
    You run about the house,
    As with a winged descending flight and cry
    Half song, half exclamation.

    We're sick so much. But then no human soul
    Could be more sweet when one of us is sick.
    We run to colds, have measles, mumps, our throats
    Are weak, the doctor says. If rooms were warmer,
    And clothes were warmer, food more regular,
    And sleep more regular, it might be different.
    Then there's the well. You fear the water.
    He laughs at you, we children drink the water,
    Though it tastes bitter, shows white particles:
    It may be shreds of rats drowned in the well.
    The village has no drainage, blights and mildews
    Get in our throats. I spend a certain spring
    Bent over, yellow, coughing blood at times,
    Sick to somnambulistic sense of things.
    You blame him for the well, that's just one thing.
    You seem to differ about everything--
    You seem to hate each other--when you quarrel
    We cry, take sides, sometimes are whipped
    For taking sides.

    Our broken school days lose us clues,
    Some lesson has been missed, the final meaning
    And wholeness of the grammar are disturbed--
    That shall not be made up in all our life.
    The children, save a few, are not our friends,
    Some taunt us with your quarrels.
    We learn great secrets scrawled in signs or words
    Of foulness on the fences. So it is
    An American village, in a great Republic,
    Where men are free, where therefore goodness, wisdom
    Must have their way!

    We reach the budding age.
    Sweet aches are in our breasts:
    Is it spring, or God, or music, is it you?
    I am all tenderness for you at times,
    Then hate myself for feeling so, my flesh
    Crawls by an instinct from you. You repel me
    Sometimes with an insidious smile, a look.
    What are these phantasies I have? They breed
    Strange hatred for you, even while I feel
    My soul's home is with you, must be with you
    To find my soul's rest. ...

    I must go back a little. At ten years
    I play with Paula.
    I plait her crowns of flowers, carry her books,
    Defend her, watch her, choose her in the games.
    You overhear us under the oak tree
    Calling her doll our child. You catch my coat
    And draw me in the house.
    When I resist you whip me cruelly.
    To think of whipping me at such time,
    And mix the shame of smarting legs and back
    With love of Paula!
    So I lose Paula.

    I am a man at last.
    I now can master what you are and see
    What you have been. You cannot rout me now,
    Or put me in the wrong. Out of old wounds,
    Remembrance of your baffling days,
    I take great strength and show you
    Where you have been untruthful, where a hater,
    Where narrow, bitter, growing in on self,
    Where you neglected us,
    Where you heaped fast destruction on our father--
    For now I know that you devoured his soul,
    And that no soul that you could not devour
    Could have its peace with you.
    You've dwindled to a quiet word like this:
    "You are unfilial." Which means at last
    That I have conquered you, at least it means
    That you could not devour me.

    Yet am I blind to you? Let me confess
    You are the world's whole cycle in yourself:
    You can be summer rich and luminous;
    You can be autumn, mellow, mystical;
    You can be winter with a cheerful hearth;
    You can be March, bitter, bright and hard,
    Pouring sharp sleet, and showering cutting hail;
    You can be April of the flying cloud,
    And intermittent sun and musical air.
    I am not you while being you,
    While finding in myself so much of you.
    It tears my other self, which is not you.
    My tragedy is this: I do not love you.
    Your tragedy is this: my other self
    Which triumphs over you, you hate at heart.
    Your solace is you have no faith in me.

    All quiet now, no March days with you now,
    Only the soft coals slumbering in your face,
    I saw you totter over a ravine!
    Your eyes averted, watching steps,
    A light of resignation on your brow.
    Your thin-spun hair all gray, blown by the wind
    Which swayed the blossomed cherry trees,
    Bent last year's reeds,
    Shook early dandelions, and tossed a bird
    That left a branch with song--
    I saw you totter over a ravine!

    What were you at the start?
    What soul dissatisfaction, sense of wrong,
    Of being thwarted, stung you?
    What was your shrinking of the flesh;
    What fear of being soiled, misunderstood,
    What wrath for loneliness which constant hope
    Saw turned to fine companionship;
    What in your marriage, what in seeing me,
    The fruit of marriage, recreated traits
    Of face or spirit which you loathed;
    What in your father and your mother,
    And in the chromosomes from which you grew,
    By what mitosis could result at last
    In you, in issues of such moment,
    In our dissevered beings,
    In what the world will take from me
    In children, in events?
    All quiet now, no March days with you now,
    Only the soft coals slumbering in your face,
    I saw you totter over a ravine,
    And back of you the Furies!




JOHNNY APPLESEED

    When the air of October is sweet and cold as the wine of apples
    Hanging ungathered in frosted orchards along the Grand River,
    I take the road that winds by the resting fields and wander
    From Eastmanville to Nunica down to the Villa Crossing.

    I look for old men to talk with, men as old as the orchards,
    Men to tell me of ancient days, of those who built and planted,
    Lichen gray, branch broken, bent and sighing,
    Hobbling for warmth in the sun and for places to sit and smoke.

    For there is a legend here, a tale of the croaking old ones
    That Johnny Appleseed came here, planted some orchards around here,
    When nothing was here but the pine trees, oaks and the beeches,
    And nothing was here but the marshes, lake and the river.

    Peter Van Zylen is ninety and this he tells me:
    My father talked with Johnny Appleseed there on the hill-side,
    There by the road on the way to Fruitport, saw him
    Clearing pines and oaks for a place for an apple orchard.

    Peter Van Zylen says: He got that name from the people
    For carrying apple-seed with him and planting orchards
    All the way from Ohio, through Indiana across here,
    Planting orchards, they say, as far as Illinois.

    Johnny Appleseed said, so my father told me:
    I go to a place forgotten, the orchards will thrive and be here
    For children to come, who will gather and eat hereafter.
    And few will know who planted, and none will understand.

    I laugh, said Johnny Appleseed: Some fellow buys this timber
    Five years, perhaps from to-day, begins to clear for barley.
    And here in the midst of the timber is hidden an apple orchard.
    How did it come here? Lord! Who was it here before me?

    Yes, I was here before him, to make these places of worship,
    Labor and laughter and gain in the late October.
    Why did I do it, eh? Some folks say I am crazy.
    Where do my labors end? Far west, God only knows!

    Said Johnny Appleseed there on the hill-side: Listen!
    Beware the deceit of nurseries, sellers of seeds of the apple.
    Think! You labor for years in trees not worth the raising.
    You planted what you knew not, bitter or sour for sweet.

    No luck more bitter than poor seed, but one as bitter:
    The planting of perfect seed in soil that feeds and fails,
    Nourishes for a little, and then goes spent forever.
    Look to your seed, he said, and remember the soil.

    And after that is the fight: the foe curled up at the root,
    The scale that crumples and deadens, the moth in the blossoms
    Becoming a life that coils at the core of a thing of beauty:
    You bite your apple, a worm is crushed on your tongue!

    And it's every bit the truth, said Peter Van Zylen.
    So many things love an apple as well as ourselves.
    A man must fight for the thing he loves, to possess it:
    Apples, freedom, heaven, said Peter Van Zylen.




THE LOOM


    My brother, the god, and I grow sick
    Of heaven's heights.
    We plunge to the valley to hear the tick
    Of days and nights.
    We walk and loiter around the Loom
    To see, if we may,
    The Hand that smashes the beam in the gloon
    To the shuttle's play;
    Who grows the wool, who cards and spins,
    Who clips and ties;
    For the storied weave of the Gobelins,
    Who draughts and dyes.

    But whether you stand or walk around
    You shall but hear
    A murmuring life, as it were the sound
    Of bees or a sphere.
    No Hand is seen, but still you may feel
    A pulse in the thread,
    And thought in every lever and wheel
    Where the shuttle sped,
    Dripping the colors, as crushed and urged--
    Is it cochineal?--
    Shot from the shuttle, woven and merged
    A tale to reveal.
    Woven and wound in a bolt and dried
    As it were a plan.
    Closer I looked at the thread and cried
    The thread is man!

    Then my brother curious, strong and bold,
    Tugged hard at the bolt
    Of the woven life; for a length unrolled
    The cryptic cloth.
    He gasped for labor, blind for the moult
    Of the up-winged moth.
    While I saw a growth and a mad crusade
    That the Loom had made;
    Land and water and living things,
    Till I grew afraid
    For mouths and claws and devil wings,
    And fangs and stings,
    And tiger faces with eyes of hell
    In caves and holes.
    And eyes in terror and terrible
    For awakened souls.

    I stood above my brother, the god
    Unwinding the roll.
    And a tale came forth of the woven slain
    Sequent and whole,
    Of flint and bronze, trowel and hod,
    The wheel and the plane,
    The carven stone and the graven clod
    Painted and baked.
    And cromlechs, proving the human heart
    Has always ached;
    Till it puffed with blood and gave to art
    The dream of the dome;
    Till it broke and the blood shot up like fire
    In tower and spire.

    And here was the Persian, Jew and Goth
    In the weave of the cloth;
    Greek and Roman, Ghibelline, Guelph,
    Angel and elf.
    They were dyed in blood, tangled in dreams
    Like a comet's streams.
    And here were surfaces red and rough
    In the finished stuff,
    Where the knotted thread was proud and rebelled
    As the shuttle proved
    The fated warp and woof that held
    When the shuttle moved;
    And pressed the dye which ran to loss
    In a deep maroon
    Around an altar, oracle, cross
    Or a crescent moon.
    Around a face, a thought, a star
    In a riot of war!

    Then I said to my brother, the god, let be,
    Though the thread be crushed,
    And the living things in the tapestry
    Be woven and hushed;
    The Loom has a tale, you can see, to tell,
    And a tale has told.
    I love this Gobelin epical
    Of scarlet and gold.
    If the heart of a god may look in pride
    At the wondrous weave
    It is something better to Hands which guide--
    I see and believe.




DIALOGUE AT PERKO'S


    Look here, Jack:
    You don't act natural. You have lost your laugh.
    You haven't told me any stories. You
    Just lie there half asleep. What's on your mind?

    JACK

    What time is it? Where is my watch?

    FLORENCE

                                           Your watch
    Under your pillow! You don't think I'd take it.
    Why, Jack, what talk for you.

    JACK

                            Well, never mind,
    Let's pack no ice.

    FLORENCE

                  What's that?

    JACK

                  No quarreling--
    What is the time?

    FLORENCE

                  Look over towards my dresser--
    My clock says half-past eleven.

    JACK

                                     Listen to that--
    That hurdy-gurdy's playing Holy Night,
    And on this street.

    FLORENCE

                  And why not on this street?

    JACK

    You may be right. It may as well be played
    Where you live as in front of where I work,
    Some twenty stories up. I think you're right.

    FLORENCE

    Say, Jack, what is the matter? Come! be gay.
    Tell me some stories. Buy another bottle.
    Just think you make a lot of money, Jack.
    You're young and prominent. They all know you.
    I hear your name all over town. I see
    Your picture in the papers. What's the matter?

    JACK

    I've lost my job for one thing.

    FLORENCE

                  You don't mean it!

    JACK

    They used me and then fired me, same as you.
    If you don't make the money, out you go.

    FLORENCE

    Yes, out I go. But, there are other places.

    JACK

    On further down the street.

    FLORENCE

                  Not yet a while.

    JACK

    Not yet for me, but still the question is
    Whether to fight it out for up or down,
    Or run from everything, be free.

    FLORENCE

    You can't do that.

    JACK

                  Why not?

    FLORENCE

                                  No more than I.
    Oh well perhaps, if a nice man came by
    To marry me then I could get away.
    It happens all the time. Last week in fact
    Christ Perko married Rachel who lived here.
    He's rich as cream.

    JACK

                                What corresponds to marriage
    To take me from slavery?

    FLORENCE

    Money is everything.

    JACK

                                  Yes, everything and nothing.
    Christ Perko's rich, Christ Perko runs this house,
    The madam merely acts as figure-head;
    Keeps check upon the girls and on the wine.
    She's just the editor, and yet I'd rather
    Be editor than owner. I was editor.
    My Perko was the owner of a pulp mill,
    Incorporate through some multi-millionaires,
    And all our lesser writers were the girls,
    Like you and Rachel.

    FLORENCE

                                     But you know before
    He married Rachel, he was lover to
    The madam here.

    JACK

                               The stories tally, for
    The pulp mill took my first assistant editor
    To wife by making him the editor.
    And I was fired just as the madam here
    Lost out with Perko.

    FLORENCE

                                  This is growing funny...
    Ahem! I'll ask you something--
    As if I were a youth and you a girl--
    How were you ruined first?

    JACK

                                             The same as you:
    You ran away from school. It was romance.
    You thought you loved this flashy travelling man.
    And I--I loved adventure, loved the truth.
    I wanted to destroy the force called "They."
    There is no "They"--we're all together here,
    And everyone must live, Christ Perko too,
    The pulp-mill, the policeman, magistrate,
    The alderman, the precinct captain too,
    And you the girls, myself the editor,
    And all the lesser writers. Here we are
    Thrown in one integrated lot. You see
    There is no "They," except the terms, the thought
    Which ramifies and vivifies the whole. ...
    So I came to the city, went to work
    Reporting for a paper. Having said
    There is no "They"--I've freed myself to say
    What bitter things I choose. For how they drive you,
    And terrify you, mock you, ridicule you,
    And call you cub and greenhorn, send you round
    To courts and dirty places, make you risk
    Your body and your life, and make you watch
    The rules about your writing; what's tabooed,
    What names are to be cursed or to be praised,
    What interests, policies to be subserved,
    And what to undermine. So I went through,
    Until I had a desk, wrote editorials--
    Now said I to myself, I'm free at last.
    But no, my manager, your madam, mark you,
    Kept eye on me, for he was under watch
    Of some Christ Perko. So my manager
    Blue penciled me when I touched certain subjects.
    But, as he was a just man, loved me too.
    He gave me things to write where he could let
    My conscience have full scope, as you might live
    In this house where you saw the man you loved,
    And no one else, though living in this hell.
    For I lived in a hell, who saw around me
    Such lying, hatred, malice, prostitution.
    And when this offer came to be an editor
    Of a great magazine, I seemed to feel
    My courage and my virtue given reward.
    Now, I should pass on poems, and on stories,
    Creations of free souls. It was not so.
    The poems and the stories one could see
    Were written to be sold, to please a taste,
    Placate a prejudice, keep still alive
    An era dying, ready for the tomb,
    Already smelling. And that was not all.
    Just as the madam here must make report
    To Perko, so the magazine had to run
    To suit the pulp mill. As the madam here,
    Assistant to Christ Perko, must keep friends
    With alderman, policemen, magistrates,
    So I was just a wheel in a machine
    To keep it running with such larger wheels,
    And by them run, of policies, and politics
    Of State and Nation. Here was I locked in
    And given dope to keep me still lest I
    Cry out and wake the copper-who's the copper
    For such as I was? If he heard me cry
    How could he raid the magazine? If he raided
    Where was the court to take me and the rest--
    That's it, where is the court?

    FLORENCE

                                  It seems to me
    You're bad as I am.

    JACK

                                  I am worse than you:
    I poison minds with thoughts they take as good.
    I drug an era, make it foul or dull--
    You only sicken bodies here and there.
    But you know how it is. You have remorse,
    You fight it down, hush it with sophistry.
    You think about the world, about your fellows:
    You see that everyone is selling self,
    Little or much somehow. You feed your body,
    Try to be hearty, take things as they come.
    You take athletics, try to keep your strength,
    As you hear music, laugh, drink wine, and smoke,
    Are bathed and coifed to keep your beauty fresh.
    And through it all the soul's and body's needs,
    The pleasures, interests, passions of our life,
    The cry that comes from somewhere: "Live, O Soul,
    The time is passing," move and claim your strength.
    Till you forget yourself, forget the boy
    And man you were, forget the dreams you had,
    The creed you wished to live by--yes, what's worse,
    See dreams you had, grown tawdry, see your creed
    Cracked through and crumbled like a falling house.
    And then you say: What is the difference?
    As you might ask what virtue is and why
    Should woman keep it.

                                     I have reached this place
    Save for one truth I hold to, shall still hold to:
    As long as I have breath: The man who sees not,
    Or cares not for the Truth that keeps the world
    From vast disintegration is a brute,
    And marked for a brute's death--that is his hell.
    'Twas loyalty to this truth that made me lose
    My place as editor. For when they came
    And tried to make me pass an article
    To poison millions with, I said, "I won't,
    I won't by God. I'll quit before I do."
    And then they said, "You quit," and so I quit.

    FLORENCE

    And so you took to drink and came to me!
    And that's the same as if I came to you
    And used you as an editor. I am nothing
    But just a poor reporter in this house--
    But now I quit.

    JACK

                         Where are you going, Florence?

    FLORENCE

    I'm going to a village or a farm
    Where I'll get up at six instead of twelve,
    Where I'll wear calico instead of silk,
    And where there'll be no furnace in the house.
    And where the carpet which has kept me here
    And keeps you here as editor is not.
    I'm going to economize my life
    By freeing it of systems which grow rich
    By using me, and for the privilege
    Bestow these gaudy clothes and perfumed bed.
    I hate you now, because I hate my life.

    JACK

    Wait! Wait a minute.

    FLORENCE

                          Dinah, call a cab!




SIR GALAHAD


    I met Hosea Job on Randolph Street
    Who said to me: "I'm going for the train,
    I want you with me."

                         And it happened then
    My mind was hard, as muscles of the back
    Grow hard resisting cold or shock or strain
    And need the osteopath to be made supple,
    To give the nerves and streams of life a chance.
    Hosea Job was just the osteopath
    To loose, relax my mood. And so I said
    "All right"--and went.

                          Hosea was a man
    Whom nothing touched of danger, or of harm.
    His life was just a rare-bit dream, where some one
    Seems like to fall before a truck or train--
    Instead he walks across them. Or you see
    Shadows of falling things, great buildings topple,
    Pianos skid like bulls from hellish corners
    And chase the oblivious fool who stands and smiles.
    The buildings slant and sway like monstrous searchlights,
    But never touch him. And the mad piano
    Comes up to him, puts down its angry head,
    Runs out a friendly tongue and licks his hand,
    And lows a symphony.

                          By which I mean
    Hosea had some money, and would sign
    A bond or note for any man who asked him.
    He'd rent a house and leave it, rent another,
    Then rent a farm, move out from town and in.
    He'd have the leases of superfluous places
    Cancelled some how, was never sued for rent.
    One time he had a fancy he would see
    South Africa, took ship with a load of mules,
    First telegraphing home from New Orleans
    He'd be back in the Spring. Likewise he went
    To Klondike with the rush. I think he owned
    More kinds of mining stock than there were mines.
    He had more quaint, peculiar men for friends
    Than one could think were living. He believed
    In every doctrine in its time, that promised
    Salvation for the world. He took no thought
    For life or for to-morrow, or for health,
    Slept with his windows closed, ate what he wished.
    And if he cut his finger, let it go.
    I offered him peroxide once, he laughed.
    And when I asked him if his soul was saved
    He only said: "I see things. I lie back
    And take it easy. Nothing can go wrong
    In any serious sense."

                            So many thought
    Hosea was a nut, and others thought,
    That I was just a nut for liking him.
    And what would any man of business say
    If he knew that I didn't ask a question,
    But simply went with him to take the train
    That day he asked me.

                            And the train had gone
    Five miles or so when I said: "Where you going?"
    Hosea answered, and it made me start--
    Hosea answered simply, "We are going
    To see Sir Galahad."

                            It made me start
    To hear Hosea say this, for I thought
    He was now really off. But, I looked at him
    And saw his eyes were sane.

                            "Sir Galahad?
    Who is Sir Galahad?"

                            Hosea answered:
    "I'm going up to see Sir Galahad,
    And sound him out about re-entering
    The game and run for governor again."

    So then I knew he was the man our fathers
    Worked with and knew and called Sir Galahad,
    Now in retirement fifteen years or so.
    Well, I was twenty-five when he was famous.
    Sir Galahad was forty then, and now
    Must be some fifty-five while I am forty.
    So flashed across my thought the matter of time
    And ages. So I thought of all he did:
    Of how he went from faith to faith in politics
    And ran for every office up to governor,
    And ran for governor four times or so,
    And never was elected to an office.
    He drew more bills to remedy injustice,
    Improve the courts, relieve the poor, reform
    Administration, than the legislature
    Could read, much less digest or understand.
    The people beat him and the leaders flogged him.
    They shut the door against his face until
    He had no place to go except a farm
    Among the stony hills, and there he went.
    And thither we were going to see the knight,
    And call him from his solitude to the fight
    Against injustice, greed.

                              So we got off
    The train at Alden, just a little village
    Of fifty houses lying beneath the sprawl
    Of hills and hills. And here there was a stillness
    Made lonelier by an anvil ringing, by
    A plow-man's voice at intervals.

                               Here Hosea
    Engaged a horse and buggy, and we drove
    And wound about a crooked road between
    Great hills that stood together like the backs
    Of elephants in a herd, where boulders lay
    As thick as hail in places. Ruined pines
    Stood like burnt matches. There was one which stuck
    Against a single cloud so white it seemed
    A bursted bale of cotton.

                               We reached the summit
    And drove along past orchards, past a field
    Level and green, kept like a garden, rich
    Against the coming harvest. Here we met
    A scarecrow man, driving a scarecrow horse
    Hitched to a wobbly wagon. And we stopped,
    The scarecrow stopped. The scarecrow and Hosea
    Talked much of people and of farming--I
    Sat listening, and I gathered from the talk,
    And what Hosea told me as we drove,
    That once this field so level and so green
    The scarecrow owned. He had cleaned out the stumps,
    And tried to farm it, failed, and lost the field,
    But raged to lose it, thought he might succeed
    In further time. Now having lost the field
    So many years ago, could be a scarecrow,
    And drive a scarecrow horse, yet laugh again
    And have no care, the sorrow healed.

                                          It seemed
    The clearing of the stumps was scarce a starter
    Toward a field of profit. For in truth,
    The soil possessed a secret which the scarecrow
    Never went deep enough to learn about.
    His problem was all stumps. Not solving that,
    He sold it to a farmer who out-slaved
    The busiest bee, but only half succeeded.
    He tried to raise potatoes, made a failure.
    He planted it in beans, had half a crop.
    He sowed wheat once and reaped a stack of straw.
    The secret of the soil eluded him.
    And here Hosea laughed: "This fellow's failure
    Was just the thing that gave another man
    The secret of the soil. For he had studied
    The properties of soils and fertilizers.
    And when he heard the field had failed to raise
    Potatoes, beans and wheat, he simply said:
    There are other things to raise: the question is
    Whether the soil is suited to the things
    He tried to raise, or whether it needs building
    To raise the things he tried to raise, or whether
    It must be builded up for anything.
    At least he said the field is clear of stumps.
    Pass on your field, he said. If I lose out
    I'll pass it on. The field is his, he said
    Who can make something grow.

                                And so this field
    Of waving wheat along which we were driving
    Was just the very field the scarecrow man
    Had failed to master, as that other man
    Had failed to master after him.

                                        Hosea
    Kept talking of this field as we drove on.
    That field, he said, is economical
    Of men compared with many fields. You see
    It only used two men. To grub the stumps
    Took all the scarecrow's strength. That other man
    Ran off to Oklahoma from this field.
    I have known fields that ate a dozen men
    In country such as this. The field remains
    And laughs and waits for some one who divines
    The secret of the field. Some farmers live
    To prove what can't be done, and narrow down
    The guess of what is possible. It's right
    A certain crop should prosper and another
    Should fail, and when a farmer tries to raise
    A crop before it's time, he wastes himself
    And wastes the field to try.

                                We now were climbing
    To higher hills and rockier fields. Hosea
    Had fallen into silence. I was thinking
    About Sir Galahad, was wondering
    Which man he was, the scarecrow, or the farmer
    Who didn't know the seed to sow, or whether
    He might still prove the farmer raising wheat,
    Now we were come to give him back the field
    With all the stumps grubbed out, the secret lying
    Revealed and ready for the appointed hands.

    We passed an orchard growing on a knoll
    And saw a barn perked on a rocky hill,
    And near the barn a house. Hosea said:
    "This is Sir Galahad's." We tied the horse.
    And we were in the silence of the country
    At mid-day on a day in June. No bird
    Was singing, fowl was cackling, cow was lowing,
    No dog was barking. All was summer stillness.
    We crossed a back-yard past a windlass well,
    Dodged under clothes lines through a place of chips,
    Walked in a path along the house. I said:
    "Sir Galahad is ploughing, or perhaps
    Is mending fences, cutting weeds." It seemed
    Too bad to come so far and not to find him.
    "We'll find him," said Hosea. "Let us sit
    Under that tree and wait for him."

                                       And then
    We turned the corner of the house and there
    Under a tree an old man sat, his head
    Bowed down upon his breast, locked fast in sleep.
    And by his feet a dog half blind and fat
    Lay dozing, too inert to rise and bark.

    Hosea gripped my arm. "Be still" he said.
    "Let's ask him where Sir Galahad is," said I.
    And then Hosea whispered, "God forgive me,
    I had forgotten, you too have forgotten.
    The man is old, he's very old. The years
    Go by unnoticed. Come! Sir Galahad
    Should sleep and not be waked."

                                We tip-toed off
    And hurried back to Alden for the train.




ST. DESERET

    You wonder at my bright round eyes, my lips
    Pressed tightly like a venomous rosette.
    Thus do me honor by so much, fond wretch,
    And praise my Persian beauty, dulcet voice.
    But oh you know me, read me, passion blinds
    Your vision not at all, and you have passion
    For me and what I am. How can you be so?
    Hold me so bear-like, take my lips with yours,
    Bury your face in these my russet tresses,
    And yet not lose your vision? So I love you,
    And fear you too. How idle to deny it
    To you who know I fear you.

                                 Here am I
    Who answer you what e'er you choose to ask.
    You stride about my rooms and open books,
    And say when did he give you this? You pick
    His photograph from mantels, dressers, drawl
    Out of ironic strength, and smile the while:
    "You did not love this man." You probe my soul
    About his courtship, how I ran away,
    How he pursued with gifts from city to city,
    Threw bouquets to me from the pit, or stood

    Like Cleopatra's Giant negro guard,
    Watchful and waiting at the green-room door.
    So, devil, that you are, with needle pricks,
    One little question at a time, you've inked
    The story in my flesh. And now at last
    You smile and say I killed him. Well, it's true.
    But what a death he had! Envy him that.
    Your frigid soul can never win the death
    I gave him.

                     Listen since you know already
    All but the subtlest matters. How you laugh!
    You know these too? Well, only I can tell them.

    First 'twas a piteous thing to see a man
    So love a woman, see a living thing
    So love another. Why he could not touch
    My hand but that his heart went up ten beats.
    His eyes would grow as bright as flames, his breath
    Come short when speaking. When he felt my breast
    Crush soft around him he would reel and walk
    Away from me, while I stood like a snake
    Poised for the strike, as quiet and possessed
    As a dead breeze. And you can have me wholly,
    And pet and pat me like a favored child,
    And let me go my way, while you turn back
    To what you left for me.

                                       Not so with him:
    I was all through his blood, had made his flesh
    My flesh, his nerves, brain, soul all mine at last,
    Dreams, thoughts, emotions, hungers all my own.
    So that he lived two lives, his own and mine,
    With one poor body, which he gave to me.
    Save that he could not give what I pushed back
    Into his hands to use for me and live
    My pities, hatreds, loves and passions with.
    I loved all this and thrived upon it, still
    I did not love him. Then why marry him?
    Why don't you see? It meant so much to him.
    And 'twas a little thing for me to do.
    His loneliness, his hunger, his great passion
    That showed in his poor eyes, his broken breath,
    His chivalry, his gifts, his poignant letters,
    His failing health, why even woman's cruelty
    Cannot deny such passion. Woman's cruelty
    Takes other means for finding its expression.
    And mine found its expression--you have guessed
    And so I tell you all.

                                 We were married then.
    He made a sacrament of our nuptials,
    Knelt with closed eyes beside the bed, my lips
    Pressed to his brow and throat. Unveiled my breast
    And looked, then closed his eyes. He did not take me
    As man takes his possession, nature's way,
    In triumph of life, in lightning, no, he came
    A suppliant, a worshipper, and whispered:
    "What angel child may lie upon the breast
    Of this it's angel mother."

                                        Well, you see
    The tears came in my eyes, for pity of him,
    Who made so much of what I had to give,
    And could give easily whether 'twas my rapture
    To give or to withhold. And in that moment
    Contempt of which I had been scarcely conscious
    Lying diffused like dew around my heart
    Drained down itself into my heart's dark cup
    To one bright drop of vital power, where
    He could not see it, scarcely knew that something
    Gradually drugged the potion that he drank
    In life with me.

                          So we were wed a year,
    And he was with me hourly, till at last
    I could not breathe for him, while he could breathe
    No where but where I was. Then the bazaar
    Was coming on where I was to dance, and he
    Had long postponed a trip to England where
    Great interests waited for him, and with kisses
    I pushed him to his duty, and he went
    Shame stricken for a duty long postponed,
    Unable to retort against my words
    When I said "You must go;" for well he knew
    He should have gone before. And as for going
    I pleaded the bazaar and hate of travel,
    And got him off, and freed myself to breathe.

    His life had been too fast, his years too many
    To stand the strain that came. There was the worry
    About the business, and the labor over it.
    There was the war, and all the fear and turmoil
    In London for the war. But most of all
    There was the separation. And his letters!
    You've read them, wretch. Such letters never were
    Of aching loneliness and pining love
    And hope that lives across three thousand miles,
    And waits the day to travel them, and fear
    Of something which may bar the way forever:
    A storm, a wreck, a submarine and no day
    Without a letter or a cablegram.
    And look at the endearments--oh you fiend
    To pick their words to pieces like a botanist
    Who cuts a flower up for his microscope.
    And oh myself who let you see these letters.
    Why did I do it? Rather why is it
    You master me, even as I mastered him?

    At last he finished, got his passage back.
    He had been gone three months. And all these letters
    Showed how he starved for me, and scarce could wait
    To take me in his arms again, would choke
    With fast and heavy feeding.

                                               Well, you see
    The contempt I spoke of which lay long diffused
    Like dew around my heart, and which at once
    Drained down itself into my heart's dark cup
    Grew brighter, bitterer, for this obvious hunger,
    This thirst which could not wait, the piteous trembling.
    And all the while it seemed he thought his love
    Grew sacreder as it grew uncontrolled,
    And marked by trembling, choking, tears and sighs.
    This is not love which should be, has no use
    In this or any world. And as for me
    I could not stand it longer. And I thought
    Of what was best to do: if 'twas not best
    To kill him as the queen bee kills the mate
    In rapture's own excess.

                                         Then he arrived.
    I went to meet him in the car, pretended
    The feed pipe broke while I was on the way.
    I was not at the station when he came.
    I got back to the house and found him gone.
    He had run through the rooms calling my name,
    So Mary told me. Then he went around
    From place to place, wherever in the village
    He thought to find me.

                                        Soon I heard his steps,
    The key in the door, his winded breath, his call,
    His running, stumbling up the stairs, while I
    Stood silent as a shadow in our room,
    My round bright eyes grown brighter for the light
    His life was feeding them. And then he stood
    Breathless and trembling in the door-way, stood
    Transfixed with ecstacy, then rushed and caught me
    And broke into loud tears.

                                          It had to end.
    One or the other of us had to die.
    I could not die but by a violence,
    And he could die by love alone, and love
    I gave him to his death.

                                       Why tell you details
    And ways with which I maddened him, and whipped
    The energies of love? You have extracted
    The secret in the main, that 'twas from love
    He came to death. His life had been too fast,
    His years too many for the daily rapture
    I gave him after three months' separation.
    And so he died one morning, made me free
    Of nothing but his presence in the flesh.
    His love is on me yet, and its effect.
    And now you're here to slave me differently--
    No soul is ever free.




HEAVEN IS BUT THE HOUR


    Eyes wide for wisdom, calm for joy or pain,
    Bright hair alloyed with silver, scarcely gold.
    And gracious lips flower pressed like buds to hold
    The guarded heart against excess of rain.
    Hands spirit tipped through which a genius plays
    With paints and clays,
    And strings in many keys--
    Clothed in an aura of thought as soundless as a flood
    Of sun-shine where there is no breeze.
    So is it light in spite of rhythm of blood,
    Or turn of head, or hands that move, unite--
    Wind cannot dim or agitate the light.
    From Plato's idea stepping, wholly wrought
    From Plato's dream, made manifest in hair,
    Eyes, lips and hands and voice,
    As if the stored up thought
    From the earth sphere
    Had given down the being of your choice
    Conjured by the dream long sought.

           *       *       *       *       *

    For you have moved in madness, rapture, wrath
    In and out of the path
    Drawn by the dream of a face.
    You have been watched, as star-men watch a star
    That leaves its way, returns and leaves its way,
    Until the exploring watchers find, can trace
    A hidden star beyond their sight, whose sway
    Draws the erratic star so long observed--
    So have you wandered, swerved.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Always pursued and lost,
    Sometimes half found, half-faced,
    Such years we waste
    With the almost:
    The lips flower pressed like buds to hold
    Guarded the heart of the flower,
    But over them eyes not hued as the Dream foretold.
    Or to find the lips too rich and the dower
    Of eyes all gaiety
    Where wisdom scarce can be.
    Or to find the eyes, but to find offence
    In fingers where the sense
    Falters with colors, strings,
    Not touching with closed eyes, out of an immanence
    Of flame and wings.
    Or to find the light, but to find it set behind
    An eye which is not your dream, nor the shadow thereof,
    As it were your lamp in a stranger's window.
    And so almost to find
    In the great weariness of love.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Now this is the tragedy:
    If the Idea did not move
    Somewhere in the realm of Love,
    Clothing itself in flesh at last for you to see,
    You could scarcely follow the gleam.
    And the tragedy is when Life has made you over,
    And denied you, and dulled your dream,
    And you no longer count the cost,
    Nor the past lament,
    You are sitting oblivious of your discontent
    Beside the Almost--
    And then the face appears
    Evoked from the Idea by your dead desire,
    And blinds and burns you like fire.
    And you sit there without tears,
    Though thinking it has come to kill you, or mock your youth
    With its half of the truth.

           *       *       *       *       *

    A beach as yellow as gold
    Daisied with tents for a lovely mile.
    And a sea that edges and walls the sand with blue,
    Matching the heaven without a seam,
    Save for the threads of foam that hold
    With stitches the canopy rare as the tile
    Of old Damascus. And O the wind
    Which roars to the roaring water brightened
    By the beating wings of the sun!
    And here I walk, not seeking the Dream,
    As men walk absent of heart or mind
    Who have no wish for a sorrow lightened
    Since all things now seem lost or won.
    And here it is that your face appears!
    Like a star brushed out from leaves by a breeze
    When day's in the sky, though evening nears.
    You are here by a tent with your little brood,
    And I approach in a quiet mood
    And see you, know that the Destinies
    Have surrendered you at last.
    Voice, lips and hands and the light of the eyes.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And I who have asked so much discover
    That you find in me the man and lover
    You have divined and visualized,
    In quiet day dreams. And what is strange
    Your boy of eight is subtly guised
    In fleeting looks that half resemble
    Something in me. Two souls may range
    Mid this earth's billion souls for life,
    And hide their hunger or dissemble.
    For there are two at least created,
    Endowed with alien powers that draw,
    And kindred powers that by some law
    Bind souls as like as sister, brother.
    There are two at least who are for each other.
    If we are such, it is not fated
    You are for him, howe'er belated
    The time's for us.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And yet is not the time gone by?
    Your garden has been planted, dear.
    And mine with weeds is over-grown.
    Oh yes! 'tis only late July!
    We can replant, ere frosts appear,
    Gather the blossoms we have sown.
    And I have preached that hearts should seize
    The hour that brings realities. ...

    Yes, I admit it all, we crush
    Under our feet the world's contempt.
    But when I raise the cup, it's blush
    Reveals the snake's eyes, there's a hush
    While a hand writes upon the wall:
    Life cannot be re-made, exempt
    From life that has been, something's gone
    Out of the soil, in life updrawn
    To growths that vine, and tangle, crawl,
    Withered in part, or gone to seed.
    'Tis not the same, though you have freed
    The soil from what was grown. ...

           *       *       *       *       *

    Heaven is but the hour
    Of the planting of the flower.
    But heaven is the blossom to be,
    Of the one Reality.
    And heaven cannot undo the once sown ground.
    But heaven is love in the pursuing,
    And in the memory of having found. ...

    The rocks in the river make light and sound
    And show that the waters search and move.
    And what is time but an infinite whole
    Revealed by the breaks in thought, desire?
    To put it away is to know one's soul.
    Love is music unheard and fire
    Too rare for eyes; between hurt beats
    The heart detects it, sees how pure
    Its essence is, through heart defeats.--
    You are the silence making sure
    The sound with which it has to cope,
    My sorrow and as well my hope.




VICTOR RAFOLSKI ON ART


    You dull Goliaths clothed in coats of blue,
    Strained and half bursted by the swell of flesh,
    Topped by Gorilla heads. You Marmoset,
    Trained scoundrel, taught to question and ensnare,
    I hate you, hate your laws and hate your courts.
    Hands off, give me a chair, now let me be.
    I'll tell you more than you can think to ask me.
    I love this woman, but what is love to you?
    What is it to your laws or courts? I love her.
    She loves me, if you'd know. I entered her room--
    She stood before me naked, shrank a little,
    Cried out a little, calmed her sudden cry
    When she saw amiable passion in my eyes--
    She loves me, if you'd know. I saw in her eyes
    More in those moments than whole hours of talk
    From witness stands exculpate could make clear
    My innocence.

                          But if I did a crime
    My excuse is hunger, hunger for more life.
    Oh what a world, where beauty, rapture, love
    Are walled in and locked up like coal or food
    And only may be had by purchasers
    From whose fat fingers slip the unheeded gold.
    Oh what a world where beauty lies in waste,
    While power and freedom skulk with famished lips
    Too tightly pressed for curses.

                                         So do men,
    Save for the thousandth man, deny themselves
    And live in meagreness to make sure a life
    Of meagreness by hearth stones long since stale;
    And live in ways, companionships as fixed
    As the geared figures of the Strassburg clock.
    You wonder at war? Why war lets loose desires,
    Emotions long repressed. Would you stop war?
    Then let men live. The moral equivalent
    Of war is freedom. Art does not suffice--
    Religion is not life, but life is living.
    And painted cherries to the hungry thrush
    Is art to life. The artist lived his work.
    You cannot live his life who love his work.
    You are the thrush that pecks at painted cherries
    Who hope to live through art. Beer-soaked Goliaths,
    The story's coming of her nakedness
    Be patient for a time.

                                    All this I learned
    While painting pictures no one ever bought,
    Till hunger drove me to this servile work
    As butler in her father's house, with time
    On certain days to walk the galleries
    And look at pictures, marbles. For I saw
    I was not living while I painted pictures.
    I was not living working for a crust,
    I was not living walking galleries:
    All this was but vicarious life which felt
    Through gazing at the thing the artist made,
    In memory of the life he lived himself:
    As we preserve the fragrance of a flower
    By drawing off its essence in a bottle,
    Where color, fluttering leaves, are thrown away
    To get the inner passion of the flower
    Extracted to a bottle that a queen
    May act the flower's part.

                                     Say what you will,
    Make laws to strangle life, shout from your pulpits,
    Your desks of editors, your woolsack benches
    Where judges sit, that this dull hypocrite,
    You call the State, has fashioned life aright--
    The secret is abroad, from eye to eye
    The secret passes from poor eyes that wink
    In boredom, in fatigue, in furious strength
    Roped down or barred, that what the human heart
    Dreams of and hopes for till the aspiring flame
    Flaps in the guttered candle and goes out,
    Is love for body and for spirit, love
    To satisfy their hunger. Yet what is it,
    This earth, this life, what is it but a meadow
    Where spirits are left free a little while
    Within a little space, so long as strength,
    Flesh, blood increases to the day of use
    As roasts or stews wherewith this witless beast,
    Society may feed himself and keep
    His olden shape and power?

                                       Fools go crop
    The herbs they turn you to, and starve yourself
    For what you want, and count it righteousness,
    No less you covet love. Poor shadows sighing,
    Across the curtain racing! Mangled souls
    Pecking so feebly at the painted cherries,
    Inhaling from a bottle what was lived
    These summers gone! You know, and scarce deny
    That what we men desire are horses, dogs,
    Loves, women, insurrections, travel, change,
    Thrill in the wreck and rapture for the change,
    And re-adjusted order.

                                      As I turned
    From painting and from art, yet found myself
    Full of all lusts while bound to menial work
    Where my eyes daily rested on this woman
    A thought came to me like a little spark
    One sees far down the darkness of a cave,
    Which grows into a flame, a blinding light
    As one approaches it, so did this thought
    Both burn and blind me: For I loved this woman,
    I wanted her, why should I lose this woman?
    What was there to oppose possession? Will?
    Her will, you say? I am not sure, but then
    Which will is better, mine or hers? Which will
    Deserves achievement? Which has rights above
    The other? I desire her, her desire
    Is not toward me, which of these two desires
    Shall triumph? Why not mine for me and hers
    For her, at least the stronger must prevail,
    And wreck itself or bend all else before it.
    That millionaire who wooed her, tried in vain
    To overwhelm her will with gold, and I
    With passion, boldness would have overwhelmed it,
    And what's the difference?

                                      But as I said
    I walked the galleries. When I stood in the yard
    Bare armed, bare throated at my work, she came
    And gazed upon me from her window. I
    Could feel the exhausting influence of her eyes.
    Then in a concentration which was blindness
    To all else, so bewilderment of mind,
    I'd go to see Watteau's Antiope
    Where he sketched Zeus in hunger, drawing back
    The veil that hid her sleeping nakedness.
    There was Correggio's too, on whom a satyr
    Smiled for his amorous wonder. A Semele,
    Done by an unknown hand, a thing of lightning
    Moved through by Zeus who seized her as the flames
    Consumed her ravished beauty.

                                       So I looked,
    And trembled, then returned perhaps to find
    Her eyes upon me conscious, calm, elate,
    And radiate with lashes of surprise,
    Delight as when a star is still but shines.
    And on this night somehow our natures worked
    To climaxes. For first she dressed for dinner
    To show more back and bosom than before.
    And as I served her, her down-looking eyes
    Were more than glances. Then she dropped her napkin.
    Before I could begin to bend she leaned
    And let me see--oh yes, she let me see
    The white foam of her little breasts caressing
    The scarlet flame of silk, a swooning shore
    Of bright carnations. It was from such foam
    That Venus rose. And as I stooped and gave
    The napkin to her she pushed out a foot,
    And then I coughed for breath grown short, and she
    Concealed a smile--and you, you jailers laugh
    Coarse-mouthed, and mock my hunger.

                                           I go on,
    Observe how courage, boldness mark my steps!
    At nine o'clock she climbs to her boudoir.
    I finding errands in the hallway hear
    The desultory taking up of books,
    And through her open door, see her at last
    Cast off her dinner gown and to the bath
    Step like a ray of moonlight. Then she snaps
    The light on where the onyx tub and walls
    Dazzle the air. I enter then her room
    And stand against the closed door, do not pry
    Upon her in the bath. Give her the chance
    To fly me, fight me standing face to face.
    I hear her flounder in the water, hear
    Hands slap and slip with water breast and arms;
    Hear little sighs and shudders and the roughness
    Of crash towels on her back, when in a minute
    She stands with back toward me in the doorway,
    A sea-shell glory, pink and white to hair
    Sun-lit, a lily crowned with powdered gold.
    She turned toward her dresser then and shook
    White dust of talcum on her arms, and looked
    So lovingly upon her tense straight breasts,
    Touching them under with soft tapering hands
    To blue eyes deepening like a brazier flame
    Turned by a sudden gust. Who gives her these,
    The thought ran through me, for her joy alone
    And not for mine?

                       So I stood there like Zeus
    Coming in thunder to Semele, like
    The diety of Watteau. Correggio
    Had never painted me a satyr there
    Drinking her beauty in, so worshipful,
    My will subdued in worship of her beauty
    To obey her will.

                      And then she turned and saw me,
    And faced me in her nakedness, nor tried
    To hide it from me, faced me immovable
    A Mona Lisa smile upon her lips.
    And let me plead my cause, make known my love,
    Speak out my torture, wearing still the smile.
    Let me approach her till I almost touched
    The whiteness of her bosom. Then it seemed
    That smile of hers not wilting me she clapped
    Hands over eyes and said: "I am afraid--
    Oh no, it cannot be--what would they say?"
    Then rushing in the bathroom, quick she slammed
    The door and shrieked: "You scoundrel, go--you beast."
    My dream went up like paper charred and whirled
    Above a hearth. Thrilling I stood alone
    Amid her room and saw my life, our life
    Embodied in this woman lately there
    Lying and cowardly. And as I turned
    To leave the room, her father and the gardener
    Pounced on me, threw me down a flight of stairs
    And turned me over, stunned, to you the law
    Here with these others who have stolen coal
    To keep them warm, as I have stolen beauty
    To keep from freezing in this arid country
    Of winter winds on which the dust of custom
    Rides like a fog.

                      Now do your worst to me!




THE LANDSCAPE


    You and your landscape! There it lies
    Stripped, resuming its disguise,
    Clothed in dreams, made bare again,
    Symbol infinite of pain,
    Rapture, magic, mystery
    Of vanished days and days to be.
    There's its sea of tidal grass
    Over which the south winds pass,
    And the sun-set's Tuscan gold
    Which the distant windows hold
    For an instant like a sphere
    Bursting ere it disappear.
    There's the dark green woods which throve
    In the spell of Leese's Grove.
    And the winding of the road;
    And the hill o'er which the sky
    Stretched its pallied vacancy
    Ere the dawn or evening glowed.
    And the wonder of the town
    Somewhere from the hill-top down
    Nestling under hills and woods
    And the meadow's solitudes.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And your paper knight of old
    Secrets of the landscape told.
    And the hedge-rows where the pond
    Took the blue of heavens beyond
    The hastening clouds of gusty March.
    There you saw their wrinkled arch
    Where the East wind cracks his whips
    Round the little pond and clips
    Main-sails from your toppled ships. ...

    Landscape that in youth you knew
    Past and present, earth and you!
    All the legends and the tales
    Of the uplands, of the vales;
    Sounds of cattle and the cries
    Of ploughmen and of travelers
    Were its soul's interpreters.
    And here the lame were always lame.
    Always gray the gray of head.
    And the dead were always dead
    Ere the landscape had become
    Your cradle, as it was their tomb.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And when the thunder storms would waken
    Of the dream your soul was not forsaken:
    In the room where the dormer windows look--
    There were your knight and the tattered book.
    With colors of the forest green
    Gabled roofs and the demesne
    Of faery kingdoms and faery time
    Storied in pre-natal rhyme. ...
    Past the orchards, in the plain
    The cattle fed on in the rain.
    And the storm-beaten horseman sped
    Rain blinded and with bended head.
    And John the ploughman comes and goes
    In labor wet, with steaming clothes.
    This is your landscape, but you see
    Not terror and not destiny
    Behind its loved, maternal face,
    Its power to change, or fade, replace
    Its wonder with a deeper dream,
    Unfolding to a vaster theme.
    From time eternal was this earth?
    No less this landscape with your birth
    Arose, nor leaves you, nor decay
    Finds till the twilight of your day.
    It bore you, moulds you to its plan.
    It ends with you as it began,
    But bears the seed of future years
    Of higher raptures, dumber tears.

           *       *       *       *       *

    For soon you lose the landscape through
    Absence, sorrow, eyes grown true
    To the naked limbs which show
    Buds that never more may blow.
    Now you know the lame were straight
    Ere you knew them, and the fate
    Of the old is yet to die.
    Now you know the dead who lie
    In the graves you saw where first
    The landscape on your vision burst,
    Were not always dead, and now
    Shadows rest upon the brow
    Of the souls as young as you.
    Some are gone, though years are few
    Since you roamed with them the hills.
    So the landscape changes, wills
    All the changes, did it try
    Its promises to justify?...

           *       *       *       *       *

    For you return and find it bare:
    There is no heaven of golden air.
    Your eyes around the horizon rove,
    A clump of trees is Leese's Grove.
    And what's the hedgerow, what's the pond?
    A wallow where the vagabond
    Beast will not drink, and where the arch
    Of heaven in the days of March
    Refrains to look. A blinding rain
    Beats the once gilded window pane.
    John, the poor wretch, is gone, but bread
    Tempts other feet that path to tread
    Between the barn and house, and brave
    The March rain and the winds that rave. ...
    O, landscape I am one who stands
    Returned with pale and broken hands
    Glad for the day that I have known,
    And finds the deserted doorway strown
    With shoulder blade and spinal bone.
    And you who nourished me and bred
    I find the spirit from you fled.
    You gave me dreams,'twas at your breast
    My soul's beginning rose and pressed
    My steps afar at last and shaped
    A world elusive, which escaped
    Whatever love or thought could find
    Beyond the tireless wings of mind.
    Yet grown by you, and feeding on
    Your strength as mother, you are gone
    When I return from living, trace
    My steps to see how I began,
    And deeply search your mother face
    To know your inner self, the place
    For which you bore me, sent me forth
    To wander, south or east or north. ...
    Now the familiar landscape lies
    With breathless breast and hollow eyes.
    It knows me not, as I know not
    Its secret, spirit, all forgot
    Its kindred look is, as I stand
    A stranger in an unknown land.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Are we not earth-born, formed of dust
    Which seeks again its love and trust
    In an old landscape, after change
    In hearts grown weary, wrecked and strange?
    What though we struggled to emerge
    Dividual, footed for the urge
    Of further self-discoveries, though
    In the mid-years we cease to know,
    Through disenchanted eyes, the spell
    That clothed it like a miracle--
    Yet at the last our steps return
    Its deeper mysteries to learn.
    It has been always us, it must
    Clasp to itself our kindred dust.
    We cannot free ourselves from it.
    Near or afar we must submit
    To what is in us, what was grown
    Out of the landscape's soil, the known
    And unknown powers of soil and soul.
    As bodies yield to the control
    Of the earth's center, and so bend
    In age, so hearts toward the end
    Bend down with lips so long athirst
    To waters which were known at first--
    The little spring at Leese's Grove
    Was your first love, is your last love!

           *       *        *       *       *

    When those we knew in youth have crept
    Under the landscape, which has kept
    Nothing we saw with youthful eyes;
    Ere God is formed in the empty skies,
    I wonder not our steps are pressed
    Toward the mystery of their rest.
    That is the hope at bud which kneels
    Where ancestors the tomb conceals.
    Age no less than youth would lean
    Upon some love. For what is seen
    No more of father, mother, friend,
    For hands of flesh lost, eyes grown blind
    In death, a something which assures,
    Comforts, allays our fears, endures.
    Just as the landscape and our home
    In childhood made of heaven's dome,
    And all the farthest ways of earth
    A place as sheltered as the hearth.

            *       *       *       *       *

    Is it not written at the last day
    Heaven and earth shall roll away?
    Yes, as my landscape passed through death,
    Lay like a corpse, and with new breath
    Became instinct with fire and light--
    So shall it roll up in my sight,
    Pass from the realm of finite sense,
    Become a thing of spirit, whence
    I shall pass too, its child in faith
    Of dreams it gave me, which nor death
    Nor change can wreck, but still reveal
    In change a Something vast, more real
    Than sunsets, meadows, green-wood trees,
    Or even faery presences.
    A Something which the earth and air
    Transmutes but keeps them what they were;
    Clear films of beauty grown more thin
    As we approach and enter in.
    Until we reach the scene that made
    Our landscape just a thing of shade.




TO-MORROW IS MY BIRTHDAY


    Well, then, another drink! Ben Jonson knows,
    So do you, Michael Drayton, that to-morrow
    I reach my fifty-second year. But hark ye,
    To-morrow lacks two days of being a month--
    Here is a secret--since I made my will.
    Heigh ho! that's done too! I wonder why I did it?
    That I should make a will! Yet it may be
    That then and jump at this most crescent hour
    Heaven inspired the deed.

                                           As a mad younker
    I knew an aged man in Warwickshire
    Who used to say, "Ah, mercy me," for sadness
    Of change, or passing time, or secret thoughts.
    If it was spring he sighed it, if 'twas fall,
    With drifting leaves, he looked upon the rain
    And with doleful suspiration kept
    This habit of his grief. And on a time
    As he stood looking at the flying clouds,
    I loitering near, expectant, heard him say it,
    Inquired, "Why do you say 'Ah, mercy me,'
    Now that it's April?" So he hobbled off
    And left me empty there.

                                         Now here am I!
    Oh, it is strange to find myself this age,
    And rustling like a peascod, though unshelled,
    And, like this aged man of Warwickshire,
    Slaved by a mood which must have breath--"Tra-la!
    That's what I say instead of "Ah, mercy me."
    For look you, Ben, I catch myself with "Tra-la"
    The moment I break sleep to see the day.
    At work, alone, vexed, laughing, mad or glad
    I say, "Tra-la" unknowing. Oft at table
    I say, "Tra-la." And 'tother day, poor Anne
    Looked long at me and said, "You say, 'Tra-la'
    Sometimes when you're asleep; why do you so?"
    Then I bethought me of that aged man
    Who used to say, "Ah, mercy me," but answered:
    "Perhaps I am so happy when awake
    The song crops out in slumber--who can say?"
    And Anne arose, began to keel the pot,
    But was she answered, Ben? Who know a woman?

    To-morrow is my birthday. If I die,
    Slip out of this with Bacchus for a guide,
    What soul would interdict the poppied way?
    Heroes may look the Monster down, a child
    Can wilt a lion, who is cowed to see
    Such bland unreckoning of his strength--but I,
    Having so greatly lived, would sink away
    Unknowing my departure. I have died
    A thousand times, and with a valiant soul
    Have drunk the cup, but why? In such a death
    To-morrow shines and there's a place to lean.
    But in this death that has no bottom to it,
    No bank beyond, no place to step, the soul
    Grows sick, and like a falling dream we shrink
    From that inane which gulfs us, without place
    For us to stand and see it.

                                     Yet, dear Ben,
    This thing must be; that's what we live to know
    Out of long dreaming, saying that we know it.
    As yeasty heroes in their braggart teens
    Spout learnedly of war, who never saw
    A cannon aimed. You drink too much to-day,
    Or get a scratch while turning Lucy's stile,
    And like a beast you sicken. Like a beast
    They cart you off. What matter if your thought
    Outsoared the Phoenix? Like a beast you rot.
    Methinks that something wants our flesh, as we
    Hunger for flesh of beasts. But still to-morrow,
    To-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
    Creeps in this petty pace--O, Michael Drayton,
    Some end must be. But 'twixt the fear of ceasing
    And weariness of going on we lie
    Upon these thorns!

                         These several springs I find
    No new birth in the Spring. And yet in London
    I used to cry, "O, would I were in Stratford;
    It's April and the larks are singing now.
    The flags are green along the Avon river;
    O, would I were a rambler in the fields.
    This poor machine is racing to its wreck.
    This grist of thought is endless, this old sorrow
    Sprouts, winds and crawls in London's darkness. Come
    Back to your landscape! Peradventure waits
    Some woman there who will make new the earth,
    And crown the spring with fire."

                                     So back I come.
    And the springs march before me, say, "Behold
    Here are we, and what would you, can you use us?
    What good is air if lungs are out, or springs
    When the mind's flown so far away no spring,
    Nor loveliness of earth can call it back?
    I tell you what it is: in early youth
    The life is in the loins; by thirty years
    It travels through the stomach to the lungs,
    And then we strut and crow. By forty years
    The fruit is swelling while the leaves are fresh.
    By fifty years you're ripe, begin to rot.
    At fifty-two, or fifty-five or sixty
    The life is in the seed--what's spring to you?
    Puff! Puff! You are so winged and light you fly.
    For every passing zephyr, are blown off,
    And drifting, God knows where, cry out "tra-la,"
    "Ah, mercy me," as it may happen you.
    Puff! Puff! away you go!

                                         Another drink?
    Why, you may drown the earth with ale and I
    Will drain it like a sea. The more I drink
    The better I see that this is April time. ...

    Ben! There is one Voice which says to everything:
    "Dream what you will, I'll make you bear your seed.
    And, having borne, the sickle comes among ye
    And takes your stalk." The rich and sappy greens
    Of spring or June show life within the loins,
    And all the world is fair, for now the plant
    Can drink the level cup of flame where heaven
    Is poured full by the sun. But when the blossom
    Flutters its colors, then it takes the cup
    And waves the stalk aside. And having drunk
    The stalk to penury, then slumber comes
    With dreams of spring stored in the imprisoned germ,
    An old life and a new life all in one,
    A thing of memory and of prophecy,
    Of reminiscence, longing, hope and fear.
    What has been ours is taken, what was ours
    Becomes entailed on our seed in the spring,
    Fees in possession and enjoyment too. ...

    The thing is sex, Ben. It is that which lives
    And dies in us, makes April and unmakes,
    And leaves a man like me at fifty-two,
    Finished but living, on the pinnacle
    Betwixt a death and birth, the earth consumed
    And heaven rolled up to eyes whose troubled glances
    Would shape again to something better--what?
    Give me a woman, Ben, and I will pick
    Out of this April, by this larger art
    Of fifty-two, such songs as we have heard,
    Both you and I, when weltering in the clouds
    Of that eternity which comes in sleep,
    Or in the viewless spinning of the soul
    When most intense. The woman is somewhere,
    And that's what tortures, when I think this field
    So often gleaned could blossom once again
    If I could find her.

                               Well, as to my plays:
    I have not written out what I would write.
    They have a thousand buds of finer flowering.
    And over "Hamlet" hangs a teasing spirit
    As fine to that as sense is fine to flesh.
    Good friends, my soul beats up its prisoned wings
    Against the ceiling of a vaster whorl
    And would break through and enter. But, fair friends,
    What strength in place of sex shall steady me?
    What is the motive of this higher mount?
    What process in the making of myself--
    The very fire, as it were, of my growth--
    Shall furnish forth these writings by the way,
    As incident, expression of the nature
    Relumed for adding branches, twigs and leaves?...

    Suppose I'd make a tragedy of this,
    Focus my fancied "Dante" to this theme,
    And leave my halfwrit "Sappho," which at best
    Is just another delving in the mine
    That gave me "Cleopatra" and the Sonnets?
    If you have genius, write my tragedy,
    And call it "Shakespeare, Gentleman of Stratford,"
    Who lost his soul amid a thousand souls,
    And had to live without it, yet live with it
    As wretched as the souls whose lives he lived.
    Here is a play for you: Poor William Shakespeare,
    This moment growing drunk, the famous author
    Of certain sugared sonnets and some plays,
    With this machine too much to him, which started
    Some years ago, now cries him nay and runs
    Even when the house shakes and complains, "I fall,
    You shake me down, my timbers break apart.
    Why, if an engine must go on like this
    The building should be stronger."

                                      Or to mix,
    And by the mixing, unmix metaphors,
    No mortal man has blood enough for brains
    And stomach too, when the brain is never done
    With thinking and creating.

                                     For you see,
    I pluck a flower, cut off a dragon's head--
    Choose twixt these figures--lo, a dozen buds,
    A dozen heads out-crop. For every fancy,
    Play, sonnet, what you will, I write me out
    With thinking "Now I'm done," a hundred others
    Crowd up for voices, and, like twins unborn
    Kick and turn o'er for entrance to the world.
    And I, poor fecund creature, who would rest,
    As 'twere from an importunate husband, fly
    To money-lending, farming, mulberry trees,
    Enclosing Welcombe fields, or idling hours
    In common talk with people like the Combes.
    All this to get a heartiness, a hold
    On earth again, lest Heaven Hercules,
    Finding me strayed to mid-air, kicking heels
    Above the mountain tops, seize on my scruff
    And bear me off or strangle.

                                 Good, my friends,
    The "Tempest" is as nothing to the voice
    That calls me to performance--what I know not.
    I've planned an epic of the Asian wash
    Which slopped the star of Athens and put out,
    Which should all history analyze, and present
    A thousand notables in the guise of life,
    And show the ancient world and worlds to come
    To the last blade of thought and tiniest seed
    Of growth to be. With visions such as these
    My spirit turns in restless ecstacy,
    And this enslaved brain is master sponge,
    And sucks the blood of body, hands and feet.
    While my poor spirit, like a butterfly
    Gummed in its shell, beats its bedraggled wings,
    And cannot rise.

                        I'm cold, both hands and feet.
    These three days past I have been cold, this hour
    I am warm in three days. God bless the ale.
    God did do well to give us anodynes. ...
    So now you know why I am much alone,
    And cannot fellow with Augustine Phillips,
    John Heminge, Richard Burbage, Henry Condell,
    And do not have them here, dear ancient friends,
    Who grieve, no doubt, and wonder for changed love.
    Love is not love which alters when it finds
    A change of heart, but mine has changed not, only
    I cannot be my old self. I blaspheme:
    I hunger for broiled fish, but fly the touch
    Of hands of flesh.

                       I am most passionate,
    And long am used perplexities of love
    To bemoan and to bewail. And do you wonder,
    Seeing what I am, what my fate has been?
    Well, hark you; Anne is sixty now, and I,
    A crater which erupts, look where she stands
    In lava wrinkles, eight years older than I am,
    As years go, but I am a youth afire
    While she is lean and slippered. It's a Fury
    Which takes me sometimes, makes my hands clutch out
    For virgins in their teens. O sullen fancy!
    I want them not, I want the love which springs
    Like flame which blots the sun, where fuel of body
    Is piled in reckless generosity. ...
    You are most learned, Ben, Greek and Latin know,
    And think me nature's child, scarce understand
    How much of physic, law, and ancient annals
    I have stored up by means of studious zeal.
    But pass this by, and for the braggart breath
    Ensuing now say, "Will was in his cups,
    Potvaliant, boozed, corned, squiffy, obfuscated,
    Crapulous, inter pocula, or so forth.
    Good sir, or so, or friend, or gentleman,
    According to the phrase or the addition
    Of man and country, on my honor, Shakespeare
    At Stratford, on the twenty-second of April,
    Year sixteen-sixteen of our Lord was merry--
    Videlicet, was drunk." Well, where was I?--
    Oh yes, at braggart breath, and now to say it:
    I believe and say it as I would lightly speak
    Of the most common thing to sense, outside
    Myself to touch or analyze, this mind
    Which has been used by Something, as I use
    A quill for writing, never in this world
    In the most high and palmy days of Greece,
    Or in this roaring age, has known its peer.
    No soul as mine has lived, felt, suffered, dreamed,
    Broke open spirit secrets, followed trails
    Of passions curious, countless lives explored
    As I have done. And what are Greek and Latin,
    The lore of Aristotle, Plato to this?
    Since I know them by what I am, the essence
    From which their utterance came, myself a flower
    Of every graft and being in myself
    The recapitulation and the complex
    Of all the great. Were not brains before books?
    And even geometries in some brain
    Before old Gutenberg? O fie, Ben Jonson,
    If I am nature's child am I not all?
    Howe'er it be, ascribe this to the ale,
    And say that reason in me was a fume.
    But if you honor me, as you have said,
    As much as any, this side idolatry,
    Think, Ben, of this: That I, whate'er I be
    In your regard, have come to fifty-two,
    Defeated in my love, who knew too well
    That poets through the love of women turn
    To satyrs or to gods, even as women
    By the first touch of passion bloom or rot
    As angels or as bawds.

                               Bethink you also
    How I have felt, seen, known the mystic process
    Working in man's soul from the woman soul
    As part thereof in essence, spirit and flesh,
    Even as a malady may be, while this thing
    Is health and growth, and growing draws all life,
    All goodness, wisdom for its nutriment.
    Till it become a vision paradisic,
    And a ladder of fire for climbing, from its topmost
    Rung a place for stepping into heaven. ...

    This I have know, but had not. Nor have I
    Stood coolly off and seen the woman, used
    Her blood upon my palette. No, but heaven
    Commanded my strength's use to abort and slay
    What grew within me, while I saw the blood
    Of love untimely ripped, as 'twere a child
    Killed i' the womb, a harpy or an angel
    With my own blood stained.

                               As a virgin shamed
    By the swelling life unlicensed needles it,
    But empties not her womb of some last shred
    Of flesh which fouls the alleys of her body,
    And fills her wholesome nerves with poisoned sleep,
    And weakness to the last of life, so I
    For some shame not unlike, some need of life
    To rid me of this life I had conceived
    Did up and choke it too, and thence begot
    A fever and a fixed debility
    For killing that begot.

                                 Now you see that I
    Have not grown from a central dream, but grown
    Despite a wound, and over the wound and used
    My flesh to heal my flesh. My love's a fever
    Which longed for that which nursed the malady,
    And fed on that which still preserved the ill,
    The uncertain, sickly appetite to please.
    My reason, the physician to my love,
    Angry that his prescriptions are not kept
    Has left me. And as reason is past care
    I am past cure, with ever more unrest
    Made frantic-mad, my thoughts as madmen's are,
    And my discourse at random from the truth,
    Not knowing what she is, who swore her fair
    And thought her bright, who is as black as hell
    And dark as night.

                        But list, good gentlemen,
    This love I speak of is not as a cloak
    Which one may put away to wear a coat,
    And doff that for a jacket, like the loves
    We men are wont to have as loves or wives.
    She is the very one, the soul of souls,
    And when you put her on you put on light,
    Or wear the robe of Nessus, poisonous fire,
    Which if you tear away you tear your life,
    And if you wear you fall to ashes. So
    'Tis not her bed-vow broke, I have broke mine,
    That ruins me; 'tis honest faith quite lost,
    And broken hope that we could find each other,
    And that mean more to me and less to her.
    'Tis that she could take all of me and leave me
    Without a sense of loss, without a tear,
    And make me fool and perjured for the oath
    That swore her fair and true. I feel myself
    As like a virgin who her body gives
    For love of one whose love she dreams is hers,
    But wakes to find herself a toy of blood,
    And dupe of prodigal breath, abandoned quite
    For other conquests. For I gave myself,
    And shrink for thought thereof, and for the loss
    Of myself never to myself restored.
    The urtication of this shame made plays
    And sonnets, as you'll find behind all deeds
    That mount to greatness, anger, hate, disgust,
    But, better, love.

                       To hell with punks and wenches,
    Drabs, mopsies, doxies, minxes, trulls and queans,
    Rips, harridans and strumpets, pieces, jades.
    And likewise to the eternal bonfire lechers,
    All rakehells, satyrs, goats and placket fumblers,
    Gibs, breakers-in-at-catch-doors, thunder tubes.
    I think I have a fever--hell and furies!
    Or else this ale grows hotter i' the mouth.
    Ben, if I die before you, let me waste
    Richly and freely in the good brown earth,
    Untrumpeted and by no bust marked out.
    What good, Ben Jonson, if the world could see
    What face was mine, who wrote these plays and sonnets?
    Life, you have hurt me. Since Death has a veil
    I take the veil and hide, and like great Cæsar
    Who drew his toga round him, I depart.

    Good friends, let's to the fields--I have a fever.
    After a little walk, and by your pardon,
    I think I'll sleep. There is no sweeter thing,
    Nor fate more blessed than to sleep. Here, world,
    I pass you like an orange to a child:
    I can no more with you. Do what you will.
    What should my care be when I have no power
    To save, guide, mould you? Naughty world you need me
    As little as I need you: go your way!
    Tyrants shall rise and slaughter fill the earth,
    But I shall sleep. In wars and wars and wars
    The ever-replenished youth of earth shall shriek
    And clap their gushing wounds--but I shall sleep,
    Nor earthy thunder wake me when the cannon
    Shall shake the throne of Tartarus. Orators
    Shall fulmine over London or America
    Of rights eternal, parchments, sacred charters
    And cut each others' throats when reason fails--
    But I shall sleep. This globe may last and breed
    The race of men till Time cries out "How long?"
    But I shall sleep ten thousand thousand years.
    I am a dream, Ben, out of a blessed sleep--
    Let's walk and hear the lark.




SWEET CLOVER


    Only a few plants up--and not a blossom
    My clover didn't catch. What is the matter?
    Old John comes by. I show him my result.
    Look, John! My clover patch is just a failure,
    I wanted you to sow it. Now you see
    What comes of letting Hunter do your work.
    The ground was not plowed right, or disced perhaps,
    Or harrowed fine enough, or too little seed
    Was sown.

               But John, who knows a clover field,
    Pulls up a plant and cleans the roots of soil
    And studies them.

                      He says, Look at the roots!
    Hunter neglected to inoculate
    The seed, for clover seed must always have
    Clover bacteria to make it grow,
    And blossom. In a thrifty field of clover
    The roots are studded thick with tubercles,
    Like little warts, made by bacteria.
    And somehow these bacteria lay hold
    Upon the nitrogen that fills the soil,
    And make the plants grow, make them blossom too.
    When Hunter sowed this field he was not well:
    He should have hauled some top-soil to this field
    From some old clover field, or made a culture
    Of these bacteria and soaked the seed
    In it before he sowed it.

                              As I said,
    Hunter was sick when he was working here.
    And then he ran away to Indiana
    And left his wife and children. Now he's back.
    His cough was just as bad in Indiana
    As it is here. A cough is pretty hard
    To run away from. Wife and children too
    Are pretty hard to leave, since thought of them
    Stays with a fellow and cannot be left.
    Yes, Hunter's back, but he can't work for you.
    He's straightening out his little farm and making
    Provision for his family. Hunter's changed.
    He is a better man. It almost seems
    That Hunter's blossomed. ...

                                 I am sorry for him.
    The doctor says he has tuberculosis.




SOMETHING BEYOND THE HILL


    To a western breeze
    A row of golden tulips is nodding.
    They flutter their golden wings
    In a sudden ecstasy and say:
    Something comes to us from beyond,
    Out of the sky, beyond the hill
    We give it to you.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And I walk through rows of jonquils
    To a beloved door,
    Which you open.
    And you stand with the priceless gold of your tulip head
    Nodding to me, and saying:
    Something comes to me
    Out of the mystery of Eternal Beauty--
    I give it to you.

           *       *       *       *       *

    There is the morning wonder of hyacinth in your eyes,
    And the freshness of June iris in your hands,
    And the rapture of gardenias in your bosom.
    But your voice is the voice of the robin
    Singing at dawn amid new leaves.
    It is like sun-light on blue water
    Where the south-wind is on the water
    And the buds of the flags are green.
    It is like the wild bird of the sedges
    With fluttering wings on a wind-blown reed
    Showering lyrics over the sun-light
    Between rhythmical pauses
    When his heart has stopped,
    Making light and water
    Into song.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Let me hear your voice,
    And the voice of Eternal Beauty
    Through the music of your voice.
    Let me gather the iris of your hands.
    Against my face.
    And close my eyes with your eyes.
    Let me listen with you
    For the Voice.




FRONT THE AGES WITH A SMILE


    How did the sculptor, Voltaire, keep you quiet and posed
    In an arm chair, just think, at your busiest age we are told,
    Being better than seventy? How did he manage to stay you
    From hopping through Europe for long enough time for his work,
    Which shows you in marble, the look and the smile and the nose,
    The filleted brow very bald, the thin little hands,
    The posture pontifical, face imperturbable, smile so serene.
    How did the sculptor detain you, you ever so restless,
    You ever so driven by princes and priests? So I stand here
    Enwrapped of this face of you, frail little frame of you,
    And think of your work--how nothing could balk you
    Or quench you or damp you. How you twisted and turned,
    Emerged from the fingers of malice, emerged with a laugh,
    Kept Europe in laughter, in turmoil, in fear
    For your eighty-four years!

                                And they say of you still
    You were light and a mocker! You should have been solemn,
    And argued with monkeys and swine, speaking truthfully always.
    Nay, truthful with whom, to what end? With a breed such as lived
    In your day and your place? It was never their due!
    Truth for the truthful and true, and a lie for the liar if need be--
    A board out of plumb for a place out of plumb, for the hypocrite flashes
    Of lightning or rods red hot for thrusting in tortuous places.
    Well, this was your way, you lived out the genius God gave you.
    And they hated you for it, hunted you all over Europe--
    Why should they not hate you? Why should you not follow your light?
    But wherever they drove you, you climbed to a place more satiric.
    Did France bar her door? Geneva remained--good enough!
    Les Delices close to some several cantons, you know.
    Would they lay hands upon you? I fancy you laughing,
    You stand at your door and step into Vaud by one path;
    You stand at your door and step by another to France--
    Such safe jurisdictions, in truth, as the Illinois rowdies
    Step from county to county ahead of the frustrate policeman.
    And here you have printers to print what you write and a house
    For the acting of plays, La Pucelle, Orphelin.
    O busy Voltaire, never resting. ...

    So England conservative, England of Southey and Burke,
    The fox-hunting squires, the England of Church and of State,
    The England half mule and half ox, writes you down, O Voltaire:
    The quack grass of popery flourished in France, you essayed
    To plow up the tangle, and harrow the roots from the soil.
    It took a good ploughman to plow it, a ploughman of laughter,
    A ploughman who laughed when the plow struck the roots, and your breast
    Was thrown on the handles.

                                   And yet to this day, O Voltaire,
    They charge you with levity, scoffing, when all that you did
    Was to plough up the quack grass, and turn up the roots to the sun,
    And let the sun kill them. For laughter is sun-light,
    And nothing of worth or of truth needs to fear it.
                                                          But listen
    The strength of a nation is mind, I will grant you, and still
    But give it a tongue read and spoken more greatly than others,
    That nation can judge true or false and the judgment abides.
    The judgment in English condemns you, where is there a judgment
    To save you from this? Is it German, or Russian, or French?

    Did you give up three years of your life
    To wipe out the sentence that burned the wracked body of Calas?
    Did you help the oppressed Montbailli and Lally, O well,
    Six lines in an article written in English are plenty
    To weigh what you did, put it by with a generous gesture,
    Give the minds of the student your measure, impress them
    Forever that all of this sacrifice, service was noble,
    But done with mixed motives, the fruits of your meddlesome nature,
    Your hatred of churches and priests. Six lines are the record
    Of all of these years of hard plowing in quack-grass, while batting
    At poisonous flies and stepping on poisonous snakes ...

    How well did you know that life to a genius, a god,
    Is naught but a farce! How well did you look with those eyes
    As black as a beetle's through all the ridiculous show:
    Ridiculous war, and ridiculous strife, and ridiculous pomp.
    Ridiculous dignity, riches, rituals, reasons and creeds.
    Ridiculous guesses at what the great Silence is saying.
    Ridiculous systems wound over the earth like a snake
    Devouring the children of Fear! Ridiculous customs,
    Ridiculous judgments and laws, philosophies, worships.
    You saw through and laughed at--you saw above all
    That a soul must make end with a groan, or a curse, or a laugh.

    So you smiled till the lines of your mouth
    A crescent became with dimples for horns, so expressing
    To centuries after who see you in marble: Behold me,
    I lived, I loved, I laughed, I toiled without ceasing
    Through eighty-four years for realities--O let them pass,
    Let life go by. Would you rise over death like a god?
    Front the ages with a smile!




POOR PIERROT


    Here far away from the city, here by the yellow dunes
    I will lie and soothe my heart where the sea croons.
    For what can I do with strife, or what can I do with hate?
    Or the city, or life, or fame, or love or fate?

    Or the struggle since time began of the rich and poor?
    Or the law that drives the weak from the temple's door?
    Bury me under the sand so that my sorrow shall lie
    Hidden under the dunes from the world's eye.

    I have learned the secret of silence, silence long and deep:
    The dead knew all that I know, that is why they sleep.
    They could do nothing with fate, or love, or fame, or strife--
    When life fills full the soul then life kills life.

    I would glide under the earth as a shadow over a dune,
    Into the soul of silence, under the sun and moon.
    And forever as long as the world stands or the stars flee
    Be one with the sands of the shore and one with the sea.




MIRAGE OF THE DESERT


    Well, there's the brazier set by the temple door:
    Blue flames run over the coals and flicker through.
    There are cool spaces of sky between white clouds--
    But what are flames and spaces but eyes of blue?

           *       *       *       *       *

    And there's the harp on which great fingers play
    Of gods who touch the wires, dreaming infinite things;
    And there's a soul that wanders out when called
    By a voice afar from the answering strings.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And there's the wish of the deep fulfillment of tears,
    Till the vision, the mad music are wept away.
    One cannot have them and live, but if one die
    It might be better than living--who can say?

           *       *       *       *       *

    Why do we thirst for urns beyond urns who know
    How sweet they are, yet bitter, not enough?
    Eternity will quench your thirst, O soul--
    But never the Desert's spectre, cup of love!

           *       *       *       *       *




DAHLIAS


    The mad wind is the warden,
    And the smiling dahlias nod
    To the dahlias across the garden,
    And the wastes of the golden rod.

    They never pray for pardon,
    Nor ask his way nor forego,
    Nor close their hearts nor harden
    Nor stay his hand, nor bestow

    Their hearts filched out of their bosoms,
    Nor plan for dahlias to be.
    For the wind blows over the garden
    And sets the dahlias free.

    They drift to the song of the warden,
    Heedless they give him heed.
    And he walks and blows through the garden
    Blossom and leaf and seed.




THE GRAND RIVER MARSHES


    Silvers and purples breathing in a sky
    Of fiery mid-days, like a watching tiger,
    Of the restrained but passionate July
    Upon the marshes of the river lie,
    Like the filmed pinions of the dragon fly.

           *       *       *       *       *

    A whole horizon's waste of rushes bend
    Under the flapping of the breeze's wing,
    Departing and revisiting
    The haunts of the river twisting without end.

           *       *       *       *       *

    The torsions of the river make long miles
    Of the waters of the river which remain
    Coiled by the village, tortuous aisles
    Of water between the rushes, which restrain
    The bewildered currents in returning files,
    Twisting between the greens like a blue racer,
    Too hurt to leap with body or uplift
    Its head while gliding, neither slow nor swift

           *       *       *       *       *

    Against the shaggy yellows of the dunes
    The iron bridge's reticules
    Are seen by fishermen from the Damascened lagoons.
    But from the bridge, watching the little steamer
    Paddling against the current up to Eastmanville,
    The river loosened from the abandoned spools
    Of earth and heaven wanders without will,
    Between the rushes, like a silken streamer.
    And two old men who turn the bridge
    For passing boats sit in the sun all day,
    Toothless and sleepy, ancient river dogs,
    And smoke and talk of a glory passed away.
    And of the ruthless sacrilege
    Which mowed away the pines,
    And cast them in the current here as logs,
    To be devoured by the mills to the last sliver,
    Making for a little hour heroes and heroines,
    Dancing and laughter at Grand Haven,
    When the great saws sent screeches up and whines,
    And cries for more and more
    Slaughter of forests up and down the river
    And along the lake's shore.

           *       *       *       *       *

    But all is quiet on the river now
    As when the snow lay windless in the wood,
    And the last Indian stood
    And looked to find the broken bough
    That told the path under the snow.
    All is as silent as the spiral lights
    Of purple and of gold that from the marshes rise,
    Like the wings of swarming dragon flies,
    Far up toward Eastmanville, where the enclosing skies
    Quiver with heat; as silent as the flights
    Of the crow like smoke from shops against the glare
    Of dunes and purple air,
    There where Grand Haven against the sand hill lies.

           *       *       *       *       *

    The forests and the mills are gone!
    All is as silent as the voice I heard
    On a summer dawn
    When we two fished among the river reeds.
    As silent as the pain
    In a heart that feeds
    A sorrow, but does not complain.
    As silent as above the bridge in this July,
    Noiseless, far up in this mirror-lighted sky
    Wheels aimlessly a hydroplane:
    A man-bestridden dragon fly!




DELILAH


    Because thou wast most delicate,
    A woman fair for men to see,
    The earth did compass thy estate,
    Thou didst hold life and death in fee,
    And every soul did bend the knee.

    [Sidenote: (Wherein the corrupt spirit of privilege is symbolized by
    Delilah and the People by Samson.)]

    Much pleasure also made thee grieve
    For that the goblet had been drained.
    The well spiced viand thou didst leave
    To frown on want whose throat was strained,
    And violence whose hands were stained.

    The purple of thy royal cloak,
    Made the sea paler for its hue.
    Much people bent beneath the yoke
    To fetch thee jewels white and blue,
    And rings to pass thy gold hair through.

    Therefore, Delilah wast thou called,
    Because the choice wines nourished thee
    In Sorek, by the mountains walled
    Against the north wind's misery,
    Where flourished every pleasant tree.

    [Sidenote: (Delilah hath a taste for ease and luxury and wantoneth
    with divers lovers.)]

    Thy lovers also were as great
    In numbers as the sea sands were;
    Thou didst requite their love with hate;
    And give them up to massacre,
    Who brought thee gifts of gold and myrrh.

    [Sidenote: (Delilah conceiveth the design of ensnaring Samson.)]

    At Gaza and at Ashkelon,
    The obscene Dagon worshipping,
    Thy face was fair to look upon.
    Yet thy tongue, sweet to talk or sing,
    Was deadlier than the adder's sting.

    Wherefore, thou saidst: "I will procure
    The strong man Samson for my spouse,
    His death will make my ease secure.
    The god has heard this people's vows
    To recompense their injured house."

    Thereafter, when the giant lay
    Supinely rolled against thy feet,
    Him thou didst craftily betray,
    With amorous vexings, low and sweet,
    To tell thee that which was not meet.

    [Sidenote: (Delilah attempteth to discover the source of Samson's
    strength. Samson very neatly deceiveth her.)]

    And Samson spake to thee again;
    "With seven green withes I may be bound,
    So shall I be as other men."
    Whereat the lords the green withes found--
    The same about his limbs were bound.

    Then did the fish-god in thee cry:
    "The Philistines be upon thee now."
    But Samson broke the withes awry,
    As when a keen fire toucheth tow;
    So thou didst not the secret know.

    But thou, being full of guile, didst plead:
    "My lord, thou hast but mocked my love
    With lies who gave thy saying heed;
    Hast thou not vexed my heart enough,
    To ease me all the pain thereof?"

    Now, in the chamber with fresh hopes,
    The liers in wait did list, and then
    He said: "Go to, and get new ropes,
    Wherewith thou shalt bind me again,
    So shall I be as other men."

    [Sidenote: (Samson retaineth his intellect and the lustihood of his
    body and again misleadeth the subtle craft of Delilah.)]

    Then didst thou do as he had said,
    Whereat the fish-god in thee cried,
    "The Philistines be upon thy head,"
    He shook his shoulders deep and wide,
    And cast the ropes like thread aside.

    Yet thou still fast to thy conceit,
    Didst chide him softly then and say:
    "Beforetime thou hast shown deceit,
    And mocked my quest with idle play,
    Thou canst not now my wish gainsay."

    Then with the secret in his thought,
    He said: "If thou wilt weave my hair,
    The web withal, the deed is wrought;
    Thou shalt have all my strength in snare,
    And I as other men shall fare."

    Seven locks of him thou tookest and wove
    The web withal and fastened it,
    And then the pin thy treason drove,
    With laughter making all things fit,
    As did beseem thy cunning wit.

    [Sidenote: (Delilah still pursueth her designs and Samson beginning to
    be somewhat wearied hinteth very close to his secret.)]

    Then the god Dagon speaking by
    Thy delicate mouth made horrid din;
    "Lo the Philistine lords are nigh"--
    He woke ere thou couldst scarce begin,
    And took away the web and pin.

    Yet, saying not it doth suffice,
    Thou in the chamber's secrecy,
    Didst with thy artful words entice
    Samson to give his heart to thee,
    And tell thee where his strength might be.

    Pleading, "How canst thou still aver,
    I love thee, being yet unkind?
    How is it thou dost minister
    Unto my heart with treacherous mind,
    Thou art but cruelly inclined."

    From early morn to falling dusk,
    At night upon the curtained bed,
    Fragrant with spikenard and with musk,
    For weariness he laid his head,
    Whilst thou the insidious net didst spread.

    [Sidenote: (Samson being weakened by lust and overcome by Delilah's
    importunities and guile telleth her wherein his great strength
    consisteth.)]

    Nor wouldst not give him any rest,
    But vexed with various words his soul,
    Till death far more than life was blest,
    Shot through and through with heavy dole,
    He gave his strength to thy control.

    Saying, "I am a Nazarite,
    To God alway, nor hath there yet
    Razor or shears done despite
    To these my locks of coarsen jet,
    Therefore my strength hath known no let."

    "But, and if these be shaven close,
    Whereas I once was strong as ten,
    I may not meet my meanest foes
    Among the hated Philistine,
    I shall be weak like other men."

    He turned to sleep, the spell was done,
    Thou saidst "Come up this once, I trow
    The secret of his strength is known;
    Hereafter sweat shall bead his brow,
    Bring up the silver thou didst vow."

    [Sidenote: (Samson having trusted Delilah turneth to sleep whereat her
    minions with force falleth upon him and depriveth him of his
    strength.)]

    They came, and sleeping on thy knees,
    The giant of his locks was shorn.
    And Dagon, being now at ease,
    Cried like the harbinger of morn,
    To see the giant's strength forlorn.

    For he wist not the Lord was gone:--
    "I will go as I went erewhile,"
    He said, "and shake my mighty brawn."
    Without the captains, file on file,
    Did execute Delilah's guile.

    [Sidenote: (Sansculottism, as it seemeth, is overthrown.)]

    At Gaza where the mockers pass,
    Midst curses and unholy sound,
    They fettered him with chains of brass,
    Put out his eyes, and being bound
    Within the prison house he ground.

    The heathen looking on did sing;
    "Behold our god into our hand,
    Hath brought him for our banqueting,
    Who slew us and destroyed our land,
    Against whom none of us could stand."

    [Sidenote: (Samson being no longer formidable and being deprived of
    his eyes is reduced to slavery and made the sport of the heathen.)]

    Now, therefore, when the festival
    Waxed merrily, with one accord,
    The lords and captains loud did call,
    To bring him out whom they abhorred,
    To make them sport who sat at board.

    [Sidenote: (After a time Samson prayeth for vengeance even though
    himself should perish thereby.)]

    And Samson made them sport and stood
    Betwixt the pillars of the house,
    Above with scornful hardihood,
    Both men and women made carouse,
    And ridiculed his eyeless brows.

    Then Samson prayed "Remember me
    O Lord, this once, if not again.
    O God, behold my misery,
    Now weaker than all other men,
    Who once was mightier than ten."

    "Grant vengeance for these sightless eyes,
    And for this unrequited toil,
    For fraud, injustice, perjuries,
    For lords whose greed devours the soil,
    And kings and rulers who despoil."

    [Sidenote: (Wherein by a very nice conceit revolution is symbolized.)]

    "For all that maketh light of Thee,
    And sets at naught Thy holy word,
    For tongues that babble blasphemy,
    And impious hands that hold the sword--
    Grant vengeance, though I perish, Lord."

    He grasped the pillars, having prayed,
    And bowed himself--the building fell,
    And on three thousand souls was laid,
    Gone soon to death with mighty yell.
    And Samson died, for it was well.

    The lords and captains greatly err,
    Thinking that Samson is no more,
    Blind, but with ever-growing hair,
    He grinds from Tyre to Singapore,
    While yet Delilah plays the whore.

    So it hath been, and yet will be,
    The captains, drunken at the feast
    To garnish their felicity,
    Will taunt him as a captive beast,
    Until their insolence hath ceased.

    [Sidenote: (Wherein it is shown that while the people like Samson have
    been blinded, and have not recovered their sight still that their hair
    continueth to grow.)]

    Of ribaldry that smelleth sweet,
    To Dagon and to Ashtoreth;
    Of bloody stripes from head to feet,
    He will endure unto the death,
    Being blind, he also nothing saith.

    Then 'gainst the Doric capitals,
    Resting in prayer to God for power,
    He will shake down your marble walls,
    Abiding heaven's appointed hour,
    And those that fly shall hide and cower.

    But this Delilah shall survive,
    To do the sin already done,
    Her treacherous wiles and arts shall thrive,
    At Gaza and at Ashkelon,
    A woman fair to look upon.




THE WORLD-SAVER


    If the grim Fates, to stave ennui,
    Play whips for fun, or snares for game,
    The liar full of ease goes free,
    And Socrates must bear the shame.

    With the blunt sage he stands despised,
    The Pharisees salute him not;
    Laughter awaits the truth he prized,
    And Judas profits by his plot.

    A million angels kneel and pray,
    And sue for grace that he may win--
    Eternal Jove prepares the day,
    And sternly sets the fateful gin.

    Satan, who hates the light, is fain,
    To back his virtuous enterprise;
    The omnipotent powers alone refrain,
    Only the Lord of hosts denies.

    Whatever of woven argument,
    Lacks warp to hold the woof in place,
    Smothers his honest discontent,
    But leaves to view his woeful face.

    Fling forth the flag, devour the land,
    Grasp destiny and use the law;
    But dodge the epigram's keen brand,
    And fall not by the ass's jaw.

    The idiot snicker strikes more down,
    Than fell at Troy or Waterloo;
    Still, still he meets it with a frown,
    And argues loudly for "the True."

    Injustice lengthens out her chain,
    Greed, yet ahungered, calls for more;
    But while the eons wax and wane,
    He storms the barricaded door.

    Wisdom and peace and fair intent,
    Are tedious as a tale twice told;
    One thing increases being spent--
    Perennial youth belongs to gold.

    At Weehawken the soul set free,
    Rules the high realm of Bunker Hill,
    Drink life from that philosophy,
    And flourish by the age's will.

    If he shall toil to clear the field,
    Fate's children seize the prosperous year;
    Boldly he fashions some new shield,
    And naked feels the victor's spear.

    He rolls the world up into day,
    He finds the grain, and gets the hull.
    He sees his own mind in the sway,
    And Progress tiptoes on his skull.

    Angels and fiends behold the wrong,
    And execrate his losing fight;
    While Jove amidst the choral song
    Smiles, and the heavens glow with light!

    --_Trueblood_

           *       *       *       *       *

    Trueblood is bewitched to write a drama--
    Only one drama, then to die. Enough
    To win the heights but once! He writes me letters,
    These later days marked "Opened by the Censor,"
    About his drama, asks me what I think
    About this point of view, and that approach,
    And whether to etch in his hero's soul
    By etching in his hero's enemies,
    Or luminate his hero by enshadowing
    His hero's enemies. How shall I tell him
    Which is the actual and the larger theme,
    His hero or his hero's enemies?
    And through it all I see that Trueblood's mind
    Runs to the under-dog, the fallen Titan
    The god misunderstood, the lover of man
    Destroyed by heaven for his love of man.
    In July, 1914, while in London
    He took me to his house to dine and showed me
    The verses as above. And while I read
    He left the room, returned, I heard him move
    The ash trays on the table where we sat
    And set some object on the table.

                                       Then
    As I looked up from reading I discovered
    A skull and bony hand upon the table.
    And Trueblood said: "Look at the loft brow!
    And what a hand was this! A right hand too.
    Those fingers in the flesh did miracles.
    And when I have my hero's skull before me,
    His hand that moulded peoples, I should write
    The drama that possesses all my thought.
    You'd think the spirit of the man would come
    And show me how to find the key that fits
    The story of his life, reveal its secret.
    I know the secrets, but I want the secret.
    You'd think his spirit out of gratitude
    Would start me off. It's something, I insist,
    To find a haven with a dramatist
    After your bones have crossed the sea, and after
    Passing from hand to hand they reach seclusion,
    And reverent housing.

                            Dying in New York
    He lay for ten years in a lonely grave
    Somewhere along the Hudson, I believe.
    No grave yard in the city would receive him.
    Neither a banker nor a friend of banks,
    Nor falling in a duel to awake
    Indignant sorrow, space in Trinity
    Was not so much as offered. He was poor,
    And never had a tomb like Washington.
    Of course he wasn't Washington--but still,
    Study that skull a little! In ten years
    A mad admirer living here in England
    Went to America and dug him up,
    And brought his bones to Liverpool. Just then
    Our country was in turmoil over France--
    (The details are so rich I lose my head,
    And can't construct my acts.)--hell's flaming here,
    And we are fighting back the roaring fire
    That France had lighted. England would abort
    The era she embraced. Here is a point
    That vexes me in laying out the scenes,
    And persons of the play. For parliament
    Went into fury that these bones were here
    On British soil. The city raged. They took
    The poor town-crier, gave him nine months' prison
    For crying on the streets the bones' arrival.
    I'd like to put that crier in my play.
    The scene of his arrest would thrill, in case
    I put it on a background understood,
    And showing why the fellow was arrested,
    And what a high offence to heaven it was.
    Then here's another thing: The monument
    This zealous friend had planned was never raised.
    The city wouldn't have it--you can guess
    The brain that filled this skull and moved this hand
    Had given England trouble. Yes, believe me!
    He roused rebellion and he scattered pamphlets.
    He had the English gift of writing pamphlets.
    He stirred up peoples with his English gift
    Against the mother country. How to show this
    In action, not in talk, is difficult.

    Well, then here is our friend who has these bones
    And cannot honor them in burial.
    And so he keeps them, then becomes a bankrupt.
    And look! the bones pass to our friend's receiver.
    Are they an asset? Our Lord Chancellor
    Does not regard them so. I'd like to work
    Some humor in my drama at this point,
    And satirize his lordship just a little.
    Though you can scarcely call a skull an asset
    If it be of a man who helped to cost you
    The loss of half the world. So the receiver
    Cast out the bones and for a time a laborer
    Took care of them. He sold them to a man
    Who dealt in furniture. The empty coffin
    About this time turned up in Guilford--then
    It's 1854, the man is dead
    Near forty years, when just the skull and hand
    Are owned by Rev. Ainslie, who evades
    All questions touching on that ownership,
    And where the ribs, spine, arms and thigh bones are--
    The rest in short.

                            And as for me--no matter
    Who sold them, gave them to me, loaned them to me.
    Behold the good right hand, behold the skull
    Of _Thomas Paine_, theo-philanthropist,
    Of Quaker parents, born in England! Look,
    That is the hand that wrote the Crisis, wrote
    The Age of Reason, Common Sense, and rallied
    Americans against the mother country,
    With just that English gift of pamphleteering.
    You see I'd have to bring George Washington,
    And James Monroe and Thomas Jefferson
    Upon the stage, and put into their mouths
    The eulogies they spoke on Thomas Paine,
    To get before the audience that they thought
    He did as much as any man to win
    Your independence; that your Declaration
    Was founded on his writings, even inspired
    A clause against your negro slavery--how--
    Look at this hand!--he was the first to write
    _United States of America_--there's the hand
    That was the first to write those words. Good Lord
    This drama would out-last a Chinese drama
    If I put all the story in. But tell me
    What to omit, and what to stress?

                                       And still
    I'd have the greatest drama in the world
    If I could prove he was dishonored, hunted,
    Neglected, libeled, buried like a beast,
    His bones dug up, thrown in and out of Chancery.
    And show these horrors overtook Tom Paine
    Because he was too great, and by this showing
    Instruct the world to honor its torch bearers
    For time to come. No? Well, that can't be done--
    I know that; but it puzzles me to think
    That Hamilton--we'll say, is so revered,
    So lauded, toasted, all his papers studied
    On tariffs and on banks, evoking ahs!
    Great genius! and so forth--and there's the Crisis
    And Common Sense which only little Shelleys
    Haunting the dusty book shops read at all.
    It wasn't that he liked his rum and drank
    Too much at times, or chased a pretty skirt--
    For Hamilton did that. Paine never mixed
    In money matters to another's wrong
    For his sake or a system's. Yes, I know
    The world cares more for chastity and temperance
    Than for a faultless life in money matters.
    No use to dramatize that vital contrast,
    The world to-day is what it always was.
    But you don't call this Hamilton an artist
    And Paine a mere logician and a wrangler?
    Your artist soul gets limed in this mad world
    As much as any. There is Leonardo--
    The point's not here.

                          I think it's more like this:
    Some men are Titans and some men are gods,
    And some are gods who fall while climbing back
    Up to Olympus whence they came. And some
    While fighting for the race fall into holes
    Where to return and rescue them is death.
    Why look you here! You'd think America
    Had gone to war to cheat the guillotine
    Of Thomas Paine, in fiery gratitude.
    He's there in France's national assembly,
    And votes to save King Louis with this phrase:
    Don't kill the man but kill the kingly office.
    They think him faithless to the revolution
    For words like these--and clap! the prison door
    Shuts on our Thomas. So he writes a letter
    To president--of what! to Washington
    President of the United States of America,
    A title which Paine coined in seventy-seven
    Now lettered on a monstrous seal of state!
    And Washington is silent, never answers,
    And leaves our Thomas shivering in a cell,
    Who hears the guillotine go slash and click!
    Perhaps this is the nucleus of my drama.
    Or else to show that Washington was wise
    Respecting England's hatred of our Thomas,
    And wise to lift no finger to save Thomas,
    Incurring England's wrath, who hated Thomas
    For pamphlets like the "Crisis" "Common Sense."
    That may be just the story for my drama.
    Old Homer satirized the human race
    For warring for the rescue of a Cyprian.
    But there's not stuff for satire in a war
    Ensuing on the insult for the rescue
    Of nothing but a fellow who wrote pamphlets,
    And won a continent for the rescuer.
    That's tragedy, the more so if the fellow
    Likes rum and writes that Jesus was a man.
    This crushing of poor Thomas in the hate
    Of England and her power, America's
    Great fear and lowered strength might make a drama
    As showing how the more you do in life
    The greater shall you suffer. This is true,
    If what you battered down gets hold of you.
    This drama almost drives me mad at times.
    I have his story at my fingers' ends.
    But it won't take a shape. It flies my hands.
    I think I'll have to give it up. What's that?
    Well, if an audience of to-day would turn
    From seeing Thomas Paine upon the stage
    What is the use to write it, if they'd turn
    No matter how you wrote it? I believe
    They wouldn't like it in America,
    Nor England either, maybe--you are right!
    A drama with no audience is a failure.
    But here's this skull. What shall I do with it?
    If I should have it cased in solid silver
    There is no shrine to take it--no Cologne
    For skulls like this.

                          Well, I must die sometime,
    And who will get it then? Look at this skull!
    This bony hand! Then look at me, my friend:
    A man who has a theme the world despises!




RECESSIONAL


    IN TIME OF WAR

    MEDICAL UNIT--

    Even as I see, and share with you in seeing,
    The altar flame of your love's sacrifice;
    And even as I bear before the hour the vision,
    Your little hands in hospital and prison
    Laid upon broken bodies, dying eyes,
    So do I suffer for splendor of your being
    Which leads you from me, and in separation
    Lays on my breast the pain of memory.
    Over your hands I bend
    In silent adoration,
    Dumb for a fear of sorrow without end,
    Asking for consolation
    Out of the sacrament of our separation,
    And for some faithful word acceptable and true,
    That I may know and keep the mystery:
    That in this separation I go forth with you
    And you to the world's end remain with me.

           *       *       *       *       *

    How may I justify the hope that rises
    That I am giving you to a world of pain,
    And am a part of your love's sacrifices?
    Is it so little if I see you not again?
    You will croon soldier lads to sleep,
    Even to the last sleep of all.
    But in this absence, as your love will keep
    Your breast for me for comfort, if I fall,
    So I, though far away, shall kneel by you
    If the last hour approaches, to bedew
    Your lips that from their infant wondering
    Lisped of a heaven lost.
    I shall kiss down your eyes, and count the cost
    As mine, who gave you, by the tragic giving.
    Go forth with spirit to death, and to the living
    Bearing a solace in death.
    God has breathed on you His transfiguring breath,--
    You are transfigured
    Before me, and I bow my head,
    And leave you in the light that lights your way,
    And shadows me. Even now the hour is sped,
    And the hour we must obey--
    Look you, I will go pray!

           *       *       *       *       *




THE AWAKENING


    When you lie sleeping; golden hair
    Tossed on your pillow, sea shell pink
    Ears that nestle, I forbear
    A moment while I look and think
    How you are mine, and if I dare
    To bend and kiss you lying there.

           *       *       *       *       *

    A Raphael in the flesh! Resist
    I cannot, though to break your sleep
    Is thoughtless of me--you are kissed
    And roused from slumber dreamless, deep--
    You rub away the slumber's mist,
    You scold and almost weep.

           *       *       *       *       *

    It is too bad to wake you so,
    Just for a kiss. But when awake
    You sing and dance, nor seem to know
    You slept a sleep too deep to break
    From which I roused you long ago
    For nothing but my passion's sake--
    What though your heart should ache!

           *       *       *       *       *




IN THE GARDEN AT THE DAWN HOUR


    I arise in the silence of the dawn hour.
    And softly steal out to the garden
    Under the Favrile goblet of the dawning.
    And a wind moves out of the south-land,
    Like a film of silver,
    And thrills with a far borne message
    The flowers of the garden.
    Poppies untie their scarlet hoods and wave them
    To the south wind as he passes.
    But the zinnias and calendulas,
    In a mood of calm reserve, nod faintly
    As the south wind whispers the secret
    Of the dawn hour!

    I stand in the silence of the dawn hour
    In the garden,
    As the star of morning fades.
    Flying from scythes of air
    The hare-bells, purples and golden glow
    On the sand-hill back of the orchard
    Race before the feet of the wind.
    But clusters of oak-leaves over the yellow sand rim
    Begin to flutter and glisten.
    And in a moment, in a twinkled passion,
    The blazing rapiers of the sun are flashed,
    As he fences the lilac lights of the sky,
    And drives them up where the ice of the melting moon
    Is drowned in the waste of morning!

           *       *       *       *       *

    In the silence of the garden,
    At the dawn hour
    I turn and see you--
    You who knew and followed,
    You who knew the dawn hour,
    And its sky like a Favrile goblet.
    You who knew the south-wind
    Bearing the secret of the morning
    To waking gardens, fields and forests.
    You in a gown of green, O footed Iris,
    With eyes of dryad gray,
    And the blown glory of unawakened tresses--
    A phantom sprung out of the garden's enchantment,
    In the silence of the dawn hour!

           *       *       *       *       *

    And here I behold you
    Amid a trance of color, silent music,
    The embodied spirit of the morning:
    Wind from the south-land, flashing beams of the sun
    Caught in the twinkling oak leaves:
    Poppies who wave their untied hoods to the south wind;
    And the imperious bows of zinnias and calendulas;
    The star of morning drowned, and lights of lilac
    Turned white for the woe of the moon;
    And the silence of the dawn hour!

           *       *       *       *       *

    And there to take you in my arms and feel you
    In the glory of the dawn hour,
    Along the sinuous rhythm of flesh and flesh!
    To know your spirit by that oneness
    Of living and of love, in the twinkled passion
    Of life re-lit and visioned.
    In dryad eyes beholding
    The dancing, leaping, touching hands and racing
    Rapturous moment of the arisen sun;
    And the first drop of day out of this cup of Favrile.
    There to behold you,
    Our spirits lost together
    In the silence of the dawn hour!

           *       *       *       *       *




FRANCE


    France fallen! France arisen! France of the brave!
    France of lost hopes! France of Promethean zeal!
    Napoleon's France, that bruised the despot's heel
    Of Europe, while the feudal world did rave.
    Thou France that didst burst through the rock-bound grave
    Which Germany and England joined to seal,
    And undismayed didst seek the human weal,
    Through which thou couldst thyself and others save--
    The wreath of amaranth and eternal praise!
    When every hand was 'gainst thee, so was ours.
    Freedom remembers, and I can forget:--
    Great are we by the faith our past betrays,
    And noble now the great Republic flowers
    Incarnate with the soul of Lafayette.




BERTRAND AND GOURGAUD TALK OVER OLD TIMES


    Gourgaud, these tears are tears--but look, this laugh,
    How hearty and serene--you see a laugh
    Which settles to a smile of lips and eyes
    Makes tears just drops of water on the leaves
    When rain falls from a sun-lit sky, my friend,
    Drink to me, clasp my hand, embrace me, call me
    Beloved Bertrand. Ha! I sigh for joy.
    Look at our Paris, happy, whole, renewed,
    Refreshed by youth, new dressed in human leaves,
    Shaking its fresh blown blossoms to the world.
    And here we sit grown old, of memories
    Top-full--your hand--my breast is all afire
    With happiness that warms, makes young again.

    You see it is not what we saw to-day
    That makes me spirit, rids me of the flesh:--
    But all that I remember, we remember
    Of what the world was, what it is to-day,
    Beholding how it grows. Gourgaud, I see
    Not in the rise of this man or of that,
    Nor in a battle's issue, in the blow
    That lifts or fells a nation--no, my friend,
    God is not there, but in the living stream
    Which sweeps in spite of eddies, undertows,
    Cross-currents, what you will, to that result
    Where stillness shows the star that fits the star
    Of truth in spirits treasured, imaged, kept
    Through sorrow, blood and death,--God moves in that
    And there I find Him.

                          But these tears--for whom
    Or what are tears? The Old Guard--oh, my friend
    That melancholy remnant! And the horse,
    White, to be sure, but not Marengo, wearing
    The saddle and the bridle which he used.
    My tears take quality for these pitiful things,
    But other quality for the purple robe
    Over the coffin lettered in pure gold
    "Napoleon"--ah, the emperor at last
    Come back to Paris! And his spirit looks
    Over the land he loved, with what result?
    Does just the army that acclaimed him rise
    Which rose to hail him back from Elba?--no
    All France acclaims him! Princes of the church,
    And notables uncover! At the door
    A herald cries "The Emperor!" Those assembled
    Rise and do reverence to him. Look at Soult,
    He hands the king the sword of Austerlitz,
    The king turns to me, hands the sword to me,
    I place it on the coffin--dear Gourgaud,
    Embrace me, clasp my hand! I weep and laugh
    For thinking that the Emperor is home;
    For thinking I have laid upon his bed
    The sword that makes inviolable his bed,
    Since History stepped to where I stood and stands
    To say forever: Here he rests, be still,
    Bow down, pass by in reverence--the Ages
    Like giant caryatides that look
    With sleepless eyes upon the world and hold
    With never tiring hands the Vault of Time,
    Command your reverence.

                             What have we seen?
    Why this, that every man, himself achieving
    Exhausts the life that drives him to the work
    Of self-expression, of the vision in him,
    His reason for existence, as he sees it.
    He may or may not mould the epic stuff
    As he would wish, as lookers on have hope
    His hands shall mould it, and by failing take--
    For slip of hand, tough clay or blinking eye,
    A cinder for that moment in the eye--
    A world of blame; for hooting or dispraise
    Have all his work misvalued for the time,
    And pump his heart up harder to subdue
    Envy, or fear or greed, in any case
    He grows and leaves and blossoms, so consumes
    His soul's endowment in the vision of life.
    And thus of him. Why, there at Fontainebleau
    He is a man full spent, he idles, sleeps,
    Hears with dull ears: Down with the Corsican,
    Up with the Bourbon lilies! Royalists,
    Conspirators, and clericals may shout
    Their hatred of him, but he sits for hours
    Kicking the gravel with his little heel,
    Which lately trampled sceptres in the mud.
    Well, what was he at Waterloo?--you know:
    That piercing spirit which at mid-day power
    Knew all the maps of Europe--could unfold
    A map and say here is the place, the way,
    The road, the valley, hill, destroy them here.
    Why, all his memory of maps was blurred
    The night before he failed at Waterloo.
    The Emperor was sick, my friend, we know it.
    He could not ride a horse at Waterloo.
    His soul was spent, that's all. But who was rested?
    The dirty Bourbons skulking back to Paris,
    Now that our giant democrat was sick.
    Oh, yes, the dirty Bourbons skulked to Paris
    Helped by the Duke and Blücher, damn their souls.

    What is a man to do whose work is done
    And does not feel so well, has cancer, say?
    You know he could have reached America
    After his fall at Waterloo. Good God!
    If only he had done it! For they say
    New Orleans is a city good to live in.
    And he had ceded to America
    Louisiana, which in time would curb
    The English lion. But he didn't go there.
    His mind was weakened else he had foreseen
    The lion he had tangled, wounded, scourged
    Would claw him if it got him, play with him
    Before it killed him. Who was England then?--

    An old, mad, blind, despised and dying king
    Who lost a continent for the lust that slew
    The Emperor--the world will say at last
    It was no other. Who was England then?
    A regent bad as husband, father, son,
    Monarch and friend. But who was England then?
    Great Castlereagh who cut his throat, but who
    Had cut his country's long before. The duke--
    Since Waterloo, and since the Emperor slept--
    The English stoned the duke, he bars his windows
    With iron 'gainst the mobs who break to fury,
    To see the Duke waylay democracy.
    The world's great conqueror's conqueror!--Eh bien!
    Grips England after Waterloo, but when
    The people see the duke for what he is:
    A blocker of reform, a Tory sentry,
    A spotless knight of ancient privilege,
    They up and stone him, by the very deed
    Stone him for wronging the democracy
    The Emperor erected with the sword.
    The world's great conqueror's conqueror--Oh, I sicken!
    Odes are like head-stones, standing while the graves
    Are guarded and kept up, but falling down
    To ruin and erasure when the graves
    Are left to sink. Hey! there you English poets,
    Picking from daily libels, slanders, junk
    Of metal for your tablets 'gainst the Emperor,
    Melt up true metal at your peril, poets,
    Sweet moralists, monopolists of God.
    But who was England? Byron driven out,
    And courts of chancery vile but sacrosanct,
    Despoiling Shelley of his children; Southey,
    The turn-coat panegyrist of King George,
    An old, mad, blind, despised, dead king at last;
    A realm of rotten boroughs massed to stop
    The progress of democracy and chanting
    To God Almighty hymns for Waterloo,
    Which did not stop democracy, as they hoped.
    For England of to-day is freer--why?
    The revolution and the Emperor!
    They quench the revolution, send Napoleon
    To St. Helena--but the ashes soar
    Grown finer, grown invisible at last.
    And all the time a wind is blowing ashes,
    And sifting them upon the spotless linen
    Of kings and dukes in England till at last
    They find themselves mistaken for the people.
    Drink to me, clasp my hand, embrace me--_tiens_!
    The Emperor is home again in France,
    And Europe for democracy is thrilling.
    Now don't you see the Emperor was sick,
    The shadows falling slant across his mind
    To write to such an England: "My career
    Is ended and I come to sit me down
    Before the fireside of the British people,
    And claim protection from your Royal Highness"--
    This to the regent--"as a generous foe
    Most constant and most powerful"--I weep.
    They tricked him Gourgaud. Once upon the ship,
    He thinks he's bound for England, and why not?
    They dine him, treat him like an Emperor.
    And then they tack and sail to St. Helena,
    Give him a cow shed for a residence.
    Depute that thing Sir Hudson Lowe to watch him,
    Spy on his torture, intercept his letters,
    Step on his broken wings, and mock the film
    Descending on those eyes of failing fire. ...

    One day the packet brought to him a book
    Inscribed by Hobhouse, "To the Emperor."
    Lowe kept the book but when the Emperor learned
    Lowe kept the book, because 'twas so inscribed,
    The Emperor said--I stood near by--"Who gave you
    The right to slur my title? In a few years
    Yourself, Lord Castlereagh, the duke himself
    Will be beneath oblivion's dust, remembered
    For your indignities to me, that's all.
    England expended millions on her libels
    To poison Europe's mind and make my purpose
    Obscure or bloody--how have they availed?
    You have me here upon this scarp of rock,
    But truth will pierce the clouds, 'tis like the sun
    And like the sun it cannot be destroyed.
    Your Wellingtons and Metternichs may dam
    The liberal stream, but only to make stronger
    The torrent when it breaks. "Is it not true?
    That's why I weep and laugh to-day, my friend
    And trust God as I have not trusted yet.
    And then the Emperor said: "What have I claimed?
    A portion of the royal blood of Europe?
    A crown for blood's sake? No, my royal blood
    Is dated from the field of Montenotte,
    And from my mother there in Corsica,
    And from the revolution. I'm a man
    Who made himself because the people made me.
    You understand as little as she did
    When I had brought her back from Austria,
    And riding through the streets of Paris pointed
    Up to the window of the little room
    Where I had lodged when I came from Brienne,
    A poor boy with my way to make--as poor
    As Andrew Jackson in America,
    No more a despot than he is a despot.
    Your England understands. I was a menace
    Not as a despot, but as head and front,
    Eyes, brain and leader of democracy,
    Which like the messenger of God was marking
    The doors of kings for slaughter. England lies.
    Your England understands I had to hold
    By rule compact a people drunk with rapture,
    And torn by counter forces, had to fight
    The royalists of Europe who beheld
    Their peoples feverish from the great infection,
    Who hoped to stamp the plague in France and stop
    Its spread to them. Your England understands.
    Save Castlereagh and Wellington and Southey.
    But look you, sir, my roads, canals and harbors,
    My schools, finance, my code, the manufactures
    Arts, sciences I builded, democratic
    Triumphs which I won will live for ages--
    These are my witnesses, will testify
    Forever what I was and meant to do.
    The ideas which I brought to power will stifle
    All royalty, all feudalism--look
    They live in England, they illuminate
    America, they will be faith, religion
    For every people--these I kindled, carried
    Their flaming torch through Europe as the chief
    Torch bearer, soldier, representative."

    You were not there, Gourgaud--but wait a minute,
    I choke with tears and laughter. Listen now:
    Sir Hudson Lowe looked at the Emperor
    Contemptuous but not the less bewitched.
    And when the Emperor finished, out he drawled
    "You make me smile." Why that is memorable:
    It should be carved upon Sir Hudson's stone.
    He was a prophet, founder of the sect
    Of smilers and of laughers through the world,
    Smilers and laughers that the Emperor
    Told every whit the truth. Look you at Europe,
    What were it in this day except for France,
    Napoleon's France, the revolution's France?
    What will it be as time goes on but peoples
    Made free through France?

                              I take the good and ill,
    Think over how he lounged, lay late in bed,
    Spent long hours in the bath, counted the hours,
    Pale, broken, wracked with pain, insulted, watched,
    His child torn from him, Josephine and wife
    Silent or separate, waiting long for death,
    Looking with filmed eyes upon his wings
    Broken, upon the rocks stretched out to gain
    A little sun, and crying to the sea
    With broken voice--I weep when I remember
    Such things which you and I from day to day
    Beheld, nor could not mitigate. But then
    There is that night of thunder, and the dawning
    And all that day of storm and toward the evening
    He says: "Deploy the eagles!" "Onward!" Well,
    I leave the room and say to Steward there:
    "The Emperor is dead." That very moment
    A crash of thunder deafened us. You see
    A great age boomed in thunder its renewal--
    Drink to me, clasp my hand, embrace me, friend.




DRAW THE SWORD, O REPUBLIC!


    By the blue sky of a clear vision,
    And by the white light of a great illumination,
    And by the blood-red of brotherhood,
    Draw the sword, O Republic!
    Draw the sword!

    For the light which is England,
    And the resurrection which is Russia,
    And the sorrow which is France,
    And for peoples everywhere
    Crying in bondage,
    And in poverty!

    You have been a leaven in the earth, O Republic!
    And a watch-fire on the hill-top scattering sparks;
    And an eagle clanging his wings on a cloud-wrapped promontory:
    Now the leaven must be stirred,
    And the brands themselves carried and touched
    To the jungles and the black-forests.
    Now the eaglets are grown, they are calling,
    They are crying to each other from the peaks--
    They are flapping their passionate wings in the sunlight,
    Eager for battle!

    As a strong man nurses his youth
    To the day of trial;
    But as a strong man nurses it no more
    On the day of trial,
    But exults and cries: For Victory, O Strength!
    And for the glory of my City, O treasured youth!
    You shall neither save your youth,
    Nor hoard your strength
    Beyond this hour, O Republic!

    For you have sworn
    By the passion of the Gaul,
    And the strength of the Teuton,
    And the will of the Saxon,
    And the hunger of the Poor,
    That the white man shall lie down by the black man,
    And by the yellow man,
    And all men shall be one spirit, as they are one flesh,
    Through Wisdom, Liberty and Democracy.
    And forasmuch as the earth cannot hold
    Aught beside them,
    You have dedicated the earth, O Republic,
    To Wisdom, Liberty and Democracy!

    By the Power that drives the soul to Freedom,
    And by the Power that makes us love our fellows,
    And by the Power that comforts us in death,
    Dying for great races to come--
    Draw the sword, O Republic!
    Draw the Sword!




DEAR OLD DICK

    (Dedicated to Vachel Lindsay and in Memory of Richard E. Burke)


    Said dear old Dick
    To the colored waiter:
    "Here, George! be quick
    Roast beef and a potato.
    I'm due at the courthouse at half-past one,
    You black old scoundrel, get a move on you!
    I want a pot of coffee and a graham bun.
    This vinegar decanter'll make a groove on you,
    You black-faced mandril, you grinning baboon--"
    "Yas sah! Yas sah,"answered the coon.
    "Now don't you talk back," said dear old Dick,
    "Go and get my dinner or I'll show you a trick
    With a plate, a tumbler or a silver castor,
    Fuliginous monkey, sired by old Nick."
    And the nigger all the time was moving round the table,
    Rattling the silver things faster and faster--
    "Yes sah! Yas sah, soon as I'se able
    I'll bring yo' dinnah as shore as yo's bawn."
    "Quit talking about it; hurry and be gone,
    You low-down nigger," said dear old Dick.

    Then I said to my friend: "Suppose he'd up and stick
    A knife in your side for raggin' him so hard;
    Or how would you relish some spit in your broth?
    Or a little Paris green in your cheese for chard?
    Or something in your coffee to make your stomach froth?
    Or a bit of asafoetida hidden in your pie?
    That's a gentlemanly nigger or he'd black your eye/'

    Then dear old Dick made this long reply:
    "You know, I love a nigger,
    And I love this nigger.
    I met him first on the train from California
    Out of Kansas City; in the morning early
    I walked through the diner, feeling upset
    For a cup of coffee, looking rather surly.
    And there sat this nigger by a table all dressed,
    Waiting for the time to serve the omelet,
    Buttered toast and coffee to the passengers.
    And this is what he said in a fine southern way:
    'Good mawnin,' sah, I hopes yo' had yo' rest,
    I'm glad to see you on dis sunny day.'
    Now think! here's a human who has no other cares
    Except to please the white man, serve him when he's starving,
    And who has as much fun when he sees you carving
    The sirloin as you do, does this black man.
    Just think for a minute, how the negroes excel,
    Can you beat them with a banjo or a broiling pan?
    There's music in their soul as original
    As any breed of people in the whole wide earth;
    They're elemental hope, heartiness, mirth.
    There are only two things real American:
    One is Christian Science, the other is the nigger.
    Think it over for yourself and see if you can figure
    Anything beside that is not imitation
    Of something in Europe in this hybrid nation.
    Return to this globe five hundred years hence--
    You'll see how the fundamental color of the coon
    In art, in music, has altered our tune;
    We are destined to bow to their influence;
    There's a whole cult of music in Dixie alone,
    And that is America put into tone."

    And dear old Dick gathered speed and said:
    "Sometimes through Dvorák a vision arises
    To the words of Merneptah whose hands were red:
    'I shall live, I shall live, I shall grow, I shall grow,
    I shall wake up in peace, I shall thrill with the glow
    Of the life of Temu, the god who prizes
    Favorite souls and the souls of kings.'
    Now these are the words, and here is the dream,
    No wonder you think I am seeing things:
    The desert of Egypt shimmers in the gleam
    Of the noonday sun on my dazzled sight.
    And a giant negro as black as night
    Is walking by a camel in a caravan.
    His great back glistens with the streaming sweat.
    The camel is ridden by a light-faced man,
    A Greek perhaps, or Arabian.
    And this giant negro is rhythmically swaying
    With the rhythm of the camel's neck up and down.
    He seems to be singing, rollicking, playing;
    His ivory teeth are glistening, the Greek is listening
    To the negro keeping time like a tabouret.
    And what cares he for Memphis town,
    Merneptah the bloody, or Books of the Dead,
    Pyramids, philosophies of madness or dread?
    A tune is in his heart, a reality:
    The camel, the desert are things that be,
    He's a negro slave, but his heart is free."

    Just then the colored waiter brought in the dinner.
    "Get a hustle on you, you miserable sinner,"
    Said dear old Dick to the colored waiter.
    "Heah's a nice piece of beef and a great big potato.
    I hopes yo'll enjoy 'em sah, yas I do;
    Heah's black mustahd greens, 'specially for yo',
    And a fine piece of jowl that I swiped and took
    From a dish set by, by the git-away cook.
    I hope yo'll enjoy 'em, sah, yas I do."
    "Well, George," Dick said, "if Gabriel blew
    His horn this minute, you'd up and ascend
    To wait on St. Peter world without end."




THE ROOM OF MIRRORS


    I saw a room where many feet were dancing.
    The ceiling and the wall were mirrors glancing
    Both flames of candles and the heaven's light,
    Though windows there were none for air or flight.
    The room was in a form polygonal
    Reached by a little door and narrow hall.
    One could behold them enter for the dance,
    And waken as it were out of a trance,
    And either singly or with some one whirl:
    The old, the young, full livers, boy and girl.
    And every panel of the room was just
    A mirrored door through which a hand was thrust
    Here, there, around the room, a soul to seize
    Whereat a scream would rise, but no surcease
    Of music or of dancing, save by him
    Drawn through the mirrored panel to the dim
    And unknown space behind the flashing mirrors,
    And by his partner struck through by the terrors
    Of sudden loss.

                    And looking I could see
    That scarcely any dancer here could free
    His eyes from off the mirrors, but would gaze
    Upon himself or others, till a craze
    Shone in his eyes thus to anticipate
    The hand that took each dancer soon or late.
    Some analyzed themselves, some only glanced,
    Some stared and paled and then more madly danced.
    One dancer only never looked at all.
    He seemed soul captured by the carnival.
    There were so many dancers there he loved,
    He was so greatly by the music moved,
    He had no time to study his own face
    There in the mirrors as from place to place
    He quickly danced.

                       Until I saw at last
    This dancer by the whirling dancers cast
    Face full against a mirrored panel where
    Before he could look at himself or stare
    He plunged through to the other side--and quick,
    As water closes when you lift the stick,
    The mirrored panel swung in place and left
    No trace of him, as 'twere a magic trick.
    But all his partners thus so soon bereft
    Went dancing to the music as before.
    But I saw faces in that mirrored door
    Anatomizing their forced smiles and watching
    Their faces over shoulders, even matching
    Their terror with each other's to repress
    A growing fear in seeing it was less
    Than some one else's, or to ease despair
    By looking in a face who did not care,
    While watching for the hand that through some door
    Caught a poor dancer from the dancing floor
    With every time-beat of the orchestra.
    What is this room of mirrors? Who can say?




THE LETTER


    What does one gain by living? What by dying
    Is lost worth having? What the daily things
    Lived through together make them worth the while
    For their sakes or for life's? Where's the denying
    Of souls through separation? There's your smile!
    And your hands' touch! And the long day that brings
    Half uttered nothings of delight! But then
    Now that I see you not, and shall again
    Touch you no more--memory can possess
    Your soul's essential self, and none the less
    You live with me. I therefore write to you
    This letter just as if you were away
    Upon a journey, or a holiday;
    And so I'll put down everything that's new
    In this secluded village, since you left. ...
    Now let me think! Well, then, as I remember,
    After ten days the lilacs burst in bloom.
    We had spring all at once--the long December
    Gave way to sunshine. Then we swept your room,
    And laid your things away. And then one morning
    I saw the mother robin giving warning
    To little bills stuck just above the rim
    Of that nest which you watched while being built,
    Near where she sat, upon a leafless limb,
    With folded wings against an April rain.
    On June the tenth Edward and Julia married,
    I did not go for fear of an old pain.
    I was out on the porch as they drove by,
    Coming from church. I think I never scanned
    A girl's face with such sunny smiles upon it
    Showing beneath the roses on her bonnet--
    I went into the house to have a cry.
    A few days later Kimbrough lost his wife.
    Between housework and hoeing in the garden
    I read Sir Thomas More and Goethe's life.
    My heart was numb and still I had to harden
    All memory or die. And just the same
    As when you sat beside the window, passed
    Larson, the cobbler, hollow-chested, lamed.
    He did not die till late November came.
    Things did not come as Doctor Jones forecast,
    'Twas June when Mary Morgan had her child.
    Her husband was in Monmouth at the time.
    She had no milk, the baby is not well.
    The Baptist Church has got a fine new bell.
    And after harvest Joseph Clifford tiled
    His bottom land. Then Judy Heaton's crime
    Has shocked the village, for the monster killed
    Glendora Wilson's father at his door--
    A daughter's name was why the blood was spilled.
    I could go on, but wherefore tell you more?
    The world of men has gone its olden way
    With war in Europe and the same routine
    Of life among us that you knew when here.
    This gossip is not idle, since I say
    By means of it what I would tell you, dear:
    I have been near you, dear, for I have been
    Not with you through these things, but in despite
    Of living them without you, therefore near
    In spirit and in memory with you.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Do you remember that delightful Inn
    At Chester and the Roman wall, and how
    We walked from Avon clear to Kenilworth?
    And afterward when you and I came down
    To London, I forsook the murky town,
    And left you to quaint ways and crowded places,
    While I went on to Putney just to see
    Old Swinburne and to look into his face's
    Changeable lights and shadows and to seize on
    A finer thing than any verse he wrote?
    (Oh beautiful illusions of our youth!)
    He did not see me gladly. Talked of treason
    To England's greatness. What was Camden like?
    Did old Walt Whitman smoke or did he drink?
    And Longfellow was sweet, but couldn't think.
    His mood was crusty. Lowell made him laugh!
    Meantime Watts-Dunton came and broke in half
    My visit, so I left.

                          The thing was this:
    None of this talk was Swinburne any more
    Than some child of his loins would take his hair,
    Eyes, skin, from him in some pangenesis,--
    His flesh was nothing but a poor affair,
    A channel for the eternal stream--his flesh
    Gave nothing closer, mind you, than his book,
    But rather blurred it; even his eyes' look
    Confused "Madonna Mia" from its fresh
    And liquid meaning. So I knew at last
    His real immortal self is in his verse.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Since you have gone I've thought of this so much.
    I cannot lose you in this universe--
    I first must lose myself. The essential touch
    Of soul possession lies not in the walk
    Of daily life on earth, nor in the talk
    Of daily things, nor in the sight of eyes
    Looking in other eyes, nor daily bread
    Broken together, nor the hour of love
    When flesh surrenders depths of things divine
    Beyond all vision, as they were the dream
    Of other planets, but without these even
    In death and separation, there is heaven:
    By just that unison and its memory
    Which brought our lips together. To be free
    From accidents of being, to be freeing
    The soul from trammels on essential being,
    Is to possess the loved one. I have strayed
    Into the only heaven God has made:
    That's where we know each other as we are,
    In the bright ether of some quiet star,
    Communing as two memories with each other.




CANTICLE OF THE RACE


    SONG OF MEN

    How beautiful are the bodies of men--
    The agonists!
    Their hearts beat deep as a brazen gong
    For their strength's behests.
    Their arms are lithe as a seasoned thong
    In games or tests
    When they run or box or swim the long
    Sea-waves crests
    With their slender legs, and their hips so strong,
    And their rounded chests.

    I know a youth who raises his arms
    Over his head.
    He laughs and stretches and flouts alarms
    Of flood or fire.
    He springs renewed from a lusty bed
    To his youth's desire.
    He drowses, for April flames outspread
    In his soul's attire.

    The strength of men is for husbandry
    Of woman's flesh:
    Worker, soldier, magistrate
    Of city or realm;
    Artist, builder, wrestling Fate
    Lest it overwhelm
    The brood or the race, or the cherished state.
    They sing at the helm
    When the waters roar and the waves are great,
    And the gale is fresh.

    There are two miracles, women and men--
    Yea, four there be:
    A woman's flesh, and the strength of a man,
    And God's decree.
    And a babe from the womb in a little span
    Ere the month be ten.
    Their rapturous arms entwine and cling
    In the depths of night;
    He hunts for her face for his wondering,
    And her eyes are bright.
    A woman's flesh is soil, but the spring
    Is man's delight.


    SONG OF WOMEN

    How beautiful is the flesh of women--
    Their throats, their breasts!
    My wonder is a flame which burns,
    A flame which rests;
    It is a flame which no wind turns,
    And a flame which quests.

    I know a woman who has red lips,
    Like coals which are fanned.
    Her throat is tied narcissus, it dips
    From her white-rose chin.
    Her throat curves like a cloud to the land
    Where her breasts begin.
    I close my eyes when I put my hand
    On her breast's white skin.

    The flesh of women is like the sky
    When bare is the moon:
    Rhythm of backs, hollow of necks,
    And sea-shell loins.
    I know a woman whose splendors vex
    Where the flesh joins--
    A slope of light and a circumflex
    Of clefts and coigns.
    She thrills like the air when silence wrecks
    An ended tune.

    These are the things not made by hands in the earth:
    Water and fire,
    The air of heaven, and springs afresh,
    And love's desire.
    And a thing not made is a woman's flesh,
    Sorrow and mirth!
    She tightens the strings on the lyric lyre,
    And she drips the wine.
    Her breasts bud out as pink and nesh
    As buds on the vine:
    For fire and water and air are flesh,
    And love is the shrine.


    SONG OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT

    How beautiful is the human spirit
    In its vase of clay!
    It takes no thought of the chary dole
    Of the light of day.
    It labors and loves, as it were a soul
    Whom the gods repay
    With length of life, and a golden goal
    At the end of the way.

    There are souls I know who arch a dome,
    And tunnel a hill.
    They chisel in marble and fashion in chrome,
    And measure the sky.
    They find the good and destroy the ill,
    And they bend and ply
    The laws of nature out of a will
    While the fates deny.

    I wonder and worship the human spirit
    When I behold
    Numbers and symbols, and how they reach
    Through steel and gold;
    A harp, a battle-ship, thought and speech,
    And an hour foretold.
    It ponders its nature to turn and teach,
    And itself to mould.

    The human spirit is God, no doubt,
    Is flesh made the word:
    Jesus, Beethoven and Raphael,
    And the souls who heard
    Beyond the rim of the world the swell
    Of an ocean stirred
    By a Power on the waters inscrutable.
    There are souls who gird
    Their loins in faith that the world is well,
    In a faith unblurred.
    How beautiful is the human spirit--
    The flesh made the word!




BLACK EAGLE RETURNS TO ST. JOE


    This way and that way measuring,
    Sighting from tree to tree,
    And from the bend of the river.
    This must be the place where Black Eagle
    Twelve hundred moons ago
    Stood with folded arms,
    While a Pottawatomie father
    Plunged a knife in his heart,
    For the murder of a son.
    Black Eagle stood with folded arms,
    Slim, erect, firm, unafraid,
    Looking into the distance, across the river.
    Then the knife flashed,
    Then the knife crashed through his ribs
    And into his heart.
    And like a wounded eagle's wings
    His arms fell, slowly unfolding,
    And he sank to death without a groan!

    And my name is Black Eagle too.
    And I am of the spirit,
    And perhaps of the blood
    Of that Black Eagle of old.
    I am naked and alone,
    But very happy;
    Being rich in spirit and in memories.
    I am very strong.
    I am very proud,
    Brave, revengeful, passionate.
    No longer deceived, keen of eye,
    Wise in the ways of the tribes:
    A knower of winds, mists, rains, snows, changes.
    A knower of balsams, simples, blossoms, grains.
    A knower of poisonous leaves, deadly fungus, herries.
    A knower of harmless snakes,
    And the livid copperhead.
    Lastly a knower of the spirits,
    For there are many spirits:
    Spirits of hidden lakes,
    And of pine forests.
    Spirits of the dunes,
    And of forested valleys.
    Spirits of rivers, mountains, fields,
    And great distances.
    There are many spirits
    Under the Great Spirit.
    Him I know not.
    Him I only feel
    With closed eyes.
    Or when I look from my bed of moss by the river
    At a sky of stars,
    When the leaves of the oak are asleep.
    I will fill this birch bark full of writing
    And hide it in the cleft of an oak,
    Here where Black Eagle fell.
    Decipher my story who can:

    When I was a boy of fourteen
    Tobacco Jim, who owned many dogs,
    Rose from the door of his tent
    And came to where we were running,
    Young Coyote, Rattler, Little Fox,
    And said to me in their hearing:
    "You are the fastest of all.
    Now run again, and let me see.
    And if you can run
    I will make you my runner,
    I will care for you,
    And you shall have pockets of gold." ...

    And then we ran.
    And the others lagged behind me,
    Like smoke behind the wind.
    But the faces of Young Coyote, Rattler, Little Fox
    Grew dark.
    They nudged each other.
    They looked side-ways,
    Toeing the earth in shame. ...
    Then Tobacco Jim took me and trained me.
    And he went here and there
    To find a match.
    And to get wagers of ponies, nuggets of copper,
    And nuggets of gold.
    And at last the match was made.

    It was under a sky as blue as the cup of a harebell,
    It was by a red and yellow mountain,
    It was by a great river
    That we ran.
    Hundreds of Indians came to the race.
    They babbled, smoked and quarreled.
    And everyone carried a knife,
    And everyone carried a gun.
    And we runners--
    How young we were and unknowing
    What the race meant to them!
    For we saw nothing but the track,
    We saw nothing but our trainers
    And the starters.
    And I saw no one but Tobacco Jim.
    But the Indians and the squaws saw much else,
    They thought of the race in such different ways
    From the way we thought of it.
    For with me it was honor,
    It was triumph,
    It was fame.
    It was the tender looks of Indian maidens
    Wherever I went.
    But now I know that to Tobacco Jim,
    And the old fathers and young bucks
    The race meant jugs of whiskey,
    And new guns.
    It meant a squaw,
    A pony,
    Or some rise in the life of the tribe.

    So the shot of the starter rang at last,
    And we were off.
    I wore a band of yellow around my brow
    With an eagle's feather in it,
    And a red strap for my loins.
    And as I ran the feather fluttered and sang:
    "You are the swiftest runner, Black Eagle,
    They are all behind you."
    And they were all behind me,
    As the cloud's shadow is behind
    The bend of the grass under the wind.
    But as we neared the end of the race
    The onlookers, the gamblers, the old Indians,
    And the young bucks,
    Crowded close to the track--
    I fell and lost.

    Next day Tobacco Jim went about
    Lamenting his losses.
    And when I told him they tripped me
    He cursed them.
    But later he went about asking in whispers
    If I was wise enough to throw the race.
    Then suddenly he disappeared.
    And we heard rumors of his riches,
    Of his dogs and ponies,
    And of the joyous life he was leading.

    Then my father took me to New Mexico,
    And here my life changed.
    I was no longer the runner,
    I had forgotten it all.
    I had become a wise Indian.
    I could do many things.
    I could read the white man's writing
    And write it.

    And Indians flocked to me:
    Billy the Pelican, Hooked Nosed Weasel,
    Hungry Mole, Big Jawed Prophet,
    And many others.
    They flocked to me, for I could help them.
    For the Great Spirit may pick a chief,
    Or a leader.
    But sometimes the chief rises
    By using wise Indians like me
    Who are rich in gifts and powers ...
    But at least it is true:
    All little great Indians
    Who are after ponies,
    Jugs of whiskey and soft blankets
    Gain their ends through the gifts and powers
    Of wise Indians like me.
    They come to you and ask you to do this,
    And to do that.
    And you do it, because it would be small
    Not to do it.
    And until all the cards are laid on the table
    You do not see what they were after,
    And then you see:
    They have won your friend away;
    They have stolen your hill;
    They have taken your place at the feast;
    They are wearing your feathers;
    They have much gold.
    And you are tired, and without laughter.
    And they drift away from you,
    As Tobacco Jim went away from me.
    And you hear of them as rich and great.
    And then you move on to another place,
    And another life.

    Billy the Pelican has built him a board house
    And lives in Guthrie.
    Hook Nosed Weasel is a Justice of the Peace.
    Hungry Mole had his picture in the Denver News;
    He is helping the government
    To reclaim stolen lands.
    (Many have told me it was Hungry Mole
    Who tripped me in the race.)
    Big Jawed Prophet is very rich.
    He has disappeared as an eagle
    With a rabbit.
    And I have come back here
    Where twelve hundred moons ago
    Black Eagle before me
    Had the knife run through his ribs
    And through his heart. ...

    I will hide this writing
    In the cleft of the oak
    By this bend in the river.
    Let him read who can:
    I was a swift runner whom they tripped.




MY LIGHT WITH YOURS


    I

    When the sea has devoured the ships,
    And the spires and the towers
    Have gone back to the hills.
    And all the cities
    Are one with the plains again.
    And the beauty of bronze,
    And the strength of steel
    Are blown over silent continents,
    As the desert sand is blown--
    My dust with yours forever.


    II

    When folly and wisdom are no more,
    And fire is no more,
    Because man is no more;
    When the dead world slowly spinning
    Drifts and falls through the void--
    My light with yours
    In the Light of Lights forever!




THE BLIND

    Amid the din of cars and automobiles,
    At the corner of a towering pile of granite,
    Under the city's soaring brick and stone,
    Where multitudes go hurrying by, you stand
    With eyeless sockets playing on a flute.
    And an old woman holds the cup for you,
    Wherein a curious passer by at times
    Casts a poor coin.

    You are so blind you cannot see us men
    As walking trees!
    I fancy from the tune
    You play upon the flute, you have a vision
    Of leafy trees along a country road-side,
    Where wheat is growing and the meadow-larks
    Rise singing in the sun-shine!
    In your darkness
    You may see such things playing on your flute
    Here in the granite ways of mad Chicago!

    And here's another on a farther corner,
    With head thrown back as if he searched the skies,
    He's selling evening papers, what's to him
    The flaring headlines? Yet he calls the news.
    That is his flute, perhaps, for one can call,
    Or play the flute in blindness.

    Yet I think
    It's neither news nor music with these blind ones--
    Rather the hope of re-created eyes,
    And a light out of death!
    "How can it be," I hear them over and over,
    "There never shall be eyes for me again?"




"I PAY MY DEBT FOR LAFAYETTE AND ROCHAMBEAU"


    --_His Own Words_

    IN MEMORY OF KIFFIN ROCKWELL

         *        *        *        *        *

    Eagle, whose fearless
    Flight in vast spaces
    Clove the inane,
    While we stood tearless,
    White with rapt faces
    In wonder and pain. ...

    Heights could not awe you,
    Depths could not stay you.
    Anguished we saw you,
    Saw Death way-lay you
    Where the storm flings
    Black clouds to thicken
    Round France's defender!
    Archangel stricken
    From ramparts of splendor--
    Shattered your wings! ...

    But Lafayette called you,
    Rochambeau beckoned.
    Duty enthralled you.
    For France you had reckoned
    Her gift and your debt.
    Dull hearts could harden
    Half-gods could palter.
    For you never pardon
    If Liberty's altar
    You chanced to forget. ...

    Stricken archangel!
    Ramparts of splendor
    Keep you, evangel
    Of souls who surrender
    No banner unfurled
    For ties ever living,
    Where Freedom has bound them.
    Praise and thanksgiving
    For love which has crowned them--
    Love frees the world! ...




CHRISTMAS AT INDIAN POINT


    Who is that calling through the night,
    A wail that dies when the wind roars?
    We heard it first on Shipley's Hill,
    It faded out at Comingoer's.

    Along five miles of wintry road
    A horseman galloped with a cry,
    "'Twas two o'clock," said Herman Pointer,
    "When I heard clattering hoofs go by."

    "I flung the winder up to listen;
    I heerd him there on Gordon's Ridge;
    I heerd the loose boards bump and rattle
    When he went over Houghton's Bridge."

    Said Roger Ragsdale: "I was doctorin'
    A heifer in the barn, and then
    My boy says: 'Pap, that's Billy Paris.'
    'There,' says my boy, it is again."

    "Says I: 'That kain't be Billy Paris,
    We seed 'im at the Christmas tree.
    It's two o'clock,' says I, 'and Billy
    I seed go home with Emily.'

    "'He is too old for galavantin'
    Upon a night like this,' says I.
    'Well, pap,' says he, 'I know that frosty,
    Good-natured huskiness in that cry.'

    "'It kain't be Billy,' says I, swabbin'
    The heifer's tongue and mouth with brine,
    'I never thought--it makes me shiver,
    And goose-flesh up and down the spine.'"

    Said Doggie Traylor: "When I heard it
    I 'lowed 'twas Pin Hook's rowdy new 'uns.
    Them Cashner boys was at the schoolhouse
    Drinkin' there at the Christmas doin's."

    Said Pete McCue: "I lit a candle
    And held it up to the winder pane.
    But when I heerd again the holler
    'Twere half-way down the Bowman Lane."

    Said Andy Ensley: "First I knowed
    I thought he'd thump the door away.
    I hopped from bed, and says, 'Who is it?'
    'O, Emily,' I heard him say.

    "And there stood Billy Paris tremblin',
    His face so white, he looked so queer.
    'O Andy'--and his voice went broken.
    'Come in,' says I, 'and have a cheer.'

    "'Sit by the fire,' I kicked the logs up,
    'What brings you here?--I would be told.'
    Says he. 'My hand just ... happened near hers,
    It teched her hand ... and it war cold.

    "'We got back from the Christmas doin's
    And went to bed, and she was sayin',
    (The clock struck ten) if it keeps snowin'
    To-morrow there'll be splendid sleighin'.'

    "'My hand teched hers, the clock struck two,
    And then I thought I heerd her moan.
    It war the wind, I guess, for Emily
    War lyin' dead. ... She's thar alone.'

    "I left him then to call my woman
    To tell her that her mother died.
    When we come back his voice was steady,
    The big tears in his eyes was dried.

    "He just sot there and quiet like
    Talked 'bout the fishin' times they had,
    And said for her to die on Christmas
    Was somethin' 'bout it made him glad.

    "He grew so cam he almost skeered us.
    Says he: 'It's a fine Christmas over there.'
    Says he: 'She was the lovingest woman
    That ever walked this Vale of Care.'

    "Says he: 'She allus laughed and sang,
    I never heerd her once complain.'
    Says he: "It's not so bad a Christmas
    When she can go and have no pain.'

    "Says he: 'The Christmas's good for her.'
    Says he: ... 'Not very good for me.'
    He hid his face then in his muffler
    And sobbed and sobbed, 'O Emily.'"




WIDOW LA RUE


    I

    What will happen, Widow La Rue?
    For last night at three o'clock
    You woke and saw by your window again
    Amid the shadowy locust grove
    The phantom of the old soldier:
    A shadow of blue, like mercury light--
    What will happen, Widow La Rue?

           *       *       *       *       *

    What may not happen
    In this place of summer loneliness?
    For neither the sunlight of July,
    Nor the blue of the lake,
    Nor the green boundaries of cool woodlands,
    Nor the song of larks and thrushes,
    Nor the bravuras of bobolinks,
    Nor scents of hay new mown,
    Nor the ox-blood sumach cones,
    Nor the snow of nodding yarrow,
    Nor clover blossoms on the dizzy crest
    Of the bluff by the lake
    Can take away the loneliness
    Of this July by the lake!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Last night you saw the old soldier
    By your window, Widow La Rue!
    Or was it your husband you saw,
    As he lay by the gate so long ago?
    With the iris of his eyes so black,
    And the white of his eyes so china-blue,
    And specks of blood on his face,
    Like a wall specked by a shake a brush;
    And something like blubber or pinkish wax,
    Hiding the gash in his throat----
    The serum and blood blown up by the breath
    From emptied lungs.


    II

    So Widow La Rue has gone to a friend
    For the afternoon and the night,
    Where the phantom will not come,
    Where the phantom may be forgotten.
    And scarcely has she turned the road,
    Round the water-mill by the creek,
    When the telephone rings and daughter Flora
    Springs up from a drowsy chair
    And the ennui of a book,
    And runs to answer the call.
    And her heart gives a bound,
    And her heart stops still,
    As she hears the voice, and a faintness courses
    Quick as poison through all her frame.
    And something like bees swarming in her breast
    Comes to her throat in a surge of fear,
    Rapture, passion, for what is the voice
    But the voice of her lover?
    And just because she is here alone
    In this desolate summer-house by the lake;
    And just because this man is forbidden
    To cross her way, for a taint in his blood
    Of drink, from a father who died of drink;
    And just because he is in her thought
    By night and day,
    The voice of him heats her through like fire.
    She sways from dizziness,
    The telephone falls from her shaking hand. ...
    He is in the village, is walking out,
    He will be at the door in an hour.


    III

    The sun is half a hand above the lake
    In a sky of lemon-dust down to the purple vastness.
    On the dizzy crest of the bluff the balls of clover
    Bow in the warm wind blowing across a meadow
    Where hay-cocks stand new-piled by the harvesters
    Clear to the forest of pine and beech at the meadow's end.
    A robin on the tip of a poplar's spire
    Sings to the sinking sun and the evening planet.
    Over the olive green of the darkening forest
    A thin moon slits the sky and down the road
    Two lovers walk.

                     It is night when they reappear
    From the forest, walking the hay-field over.
    And the sky is so full of stars it seems
    Like a field of buckwheat. And the lovers look up,
    Then stand entranced under the silence of stars,
    And in the silence of the scented hay-field
    Blurred only by a lisp of the listless water
    A hundred feet below.
    And at last they sit by a cock of hay,
    As warm as the nest of a bird,
    Hand clasped in hand and silent,
    Large-eyed and silent.

           *       *       *       *       *

    O, daughter Flora!
    Delicious weakness is on you now,
    With your lover's face above you.
    You can scarcely lift your hand,
    Or turn your head
    Pillowed upon the fragrant hay.
    You dare not open your moistened eyes
    For fear of this sky of stars,
    For fear of your lover's eyes.
    The trance of nature has taken you
    Rocked on creation's tide.
    And the kinship you feel for this man,
    Confessed this night--so often confessed
    And wondered at--
    Has coiled its final sorcery about you.
    You do not know what it is,
    Nor care what it is,
    Nor care what fate is to come,--
    The night has you.
    You only move white, fainting hands
    Against his strength, then let them fall.
    Your lips are parted over set teeth;
    A dewy moisture with the aroma of a woman's body
    Maddens your lover,
    And in a swift and terrible moment
    The mystery of love is unveiled to you. ...

    Then your lover sits up with a sigh.
    But you lie there so still with closed eyes.
    So content, scarcely breathing under that ocean of stars.
    A night bird calls, and a vagrant zephyr
    Stirs your uncoiled hair on your bare bosom,
    But you do not move.
    And the sun comes up at last
    Finding you asleep in his arms,
    There by the hay cock.
    And he kisses your tears away,
    And redeems his word of last night,
    For down to the village you go
    And take your vows before the Pastor there,
    And then return to the summer house. ...
    All is well.


    IV

    Widow La Rue has returned
    And is rocking on the porch--
    What is about to happen?
    For last night the phantom of the old soldier
    Appeared to her again--
    It followed her to the house of her friend,
    And appeared again.
    But more than ever was it her husband,
    With the iris of his eyes so black,
    And the white of his eyes so china-blue.
    And while she thinks of it,
    And wonders what is about to happen,
    She hears laughter,
    And looking up, beholds her daughter
    And the forbidden lover.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And then the daughter and her husband
    Come to the porch and the daughter says
    "We have just been married in the village, mother;
    Will you forgive us?
    This is your son; you must kiss your son."
    And Widow La Rue from her chair arises
    And calmly takes her child in her arms,
    And clasps his hand.
    And after gazing upon him
    Imperturbably as Clytemnestra looked
    Upon returning Agamemnon,
    With a light in her eyes which neither fathomed,
    She kissed him,
    And in a calm voice blessed them.
    Then sent her daughter, singing,
    On an errand back to the village
    To market for dinner, saying:
    "We'll talk over plans, my dear."


    V

    And the young husband
    Rocks on the porch without a thought
    Of the lightning about to strike.
    And like Clytemnestra, Widow La Rue
    Enters the house.
    And while he is rocking, with all his spirit in a rythmic rapture,
    The Widow La Rue takes a seat in the room
    By a window back of the chair where he rocks,
    And drawing the shade
    She speaks:

    "These two nights past I have seen the phantom of the old soldier
    Who haunts the midnights
    Of this summer loneliness.
    And I knew that a doom was at hand. ...
    You have married my daughter, and this is the doom. ...
    O, God in heaven!"
    Then a horror as of a writhing whiteness
    Winds out of the July glare
    And stops the flow of his blood,
    As he hears from the re-echoing room
    The voice of Widow La Rue
    Moving darkly between banks
    Of delirious fear and woe!

    "Be calm till you hear me through. ...
    Do not move, or enter here,
    I am hiding my face from you. ...
    Hear me through, and then fly.
    I warned her against you, but how could I tell her
    Why you were not for her?
    But tell me now, have you come together?
    No? Thank God for that. ...
    For you must not come together. ...
    Now listen while I whisper to you:
    My daughter was born of a lawless love
    For a man I loved before I married,
    And when, for five years, no child came
    I went to this man
    And begged him to give me a child. ...
    Well then ... the child was born, your wife as it seems. ...
    And when my husband saw her,
    And saw the likeness of this man in her face
    He went out of the house, where they found him later
    By the entrance gate
    With the iris of his eyes so black,
    And the white of his eyes so china-blue,
    And specks of blood on his face,
    Like a wall specked by a shake of a brush.
    And something like blubber or pinkish wax
    Hiding the gash in his throat--
    The serum and blood blown up by the breath
    From emptied lungs. Yes, there by the gate, O God!
    Quit rocking your chair! Don't you understand?
    Quit rocking your chair! Go! Go!
    Leap from the bluff to the rocks on the shore!
    Take down the sickle and end yourself!
    You don't care, you say, for all I've told you?
    Well, then, you see, you're older than Flora. ...
    And her father died when she was a baby. ...
    And you were four when your father died. ...
    And her father died on the very day
    That your father died,
    At the verv same moment. ...
    On the very same bed. ...
    Don't you understand?"


    VI

    He ceases to rock. He reels from the porch,
    He runs and stumbles to reach the road.
    He yells and curses and tears his hair.
    He staggers and falls and rises and runs.
    And Widow La Rue
    With the eyes of Clytemnestra
    Stands at the window and watches him
    Running and tearing his hair.

    VII

    She seems so calm when the daughter returns.
    She only says: "He has gone to the meadow,
    He will soon be back. ..."
    But he never came back.

    And the years went on till the daughter's hair
    Was white as her mother's there in the grave.
    She was known as the bride whom the bridegroom left
    And didn't say good-bye.




DR. SCUDDER'S CLINICAL LECTURE


    I lectured last upon the morbus sacer,
    Or falling sickness, epilepsy, of old
    In Palestine and Greece so much ascribed
    To deities or devils. To resume
    We find it caused by morphological
    Changes of the cortex cells. Sometimes,
    More times, indeed, the anatomical
    Basis, if one be, escapes detection.
    For many functions of the cortex are
    Unknown, as I have said.

                               And now remember
    Mercier's analysis of heredity:
    Besides direct transmission of unstable
    Nervous systems, there remains the law
    Hereditary of sanguinity.
    Then here's another matter: Parents may
    Have normal nervous systems, yet produce
    Children of abnormal nerves and minds,
    Caused by unsuitable sexual germs.
    Let me repeat before I leave the matter
    The factors in a perfect organization:
    First quality in the germ producing matter;
    Then quality in the sperm producing force,
    And lastly relative fitness of the two.
    We are but plants, however high we rise,
    Whatever thoughts we have, or dreams we dream
    We are but plants, and all we are and do
    Depends upon the seed and on the soil.
    What Mendel found in raising peas may lead
    To perfect knowledge of the human mind.
    There is one law for men and peas, the law
    Makes peas of certain matter, and makes men
    And mind of certain matter, all depends
    Not on a varying law, but on a law
    Varied in its course by matter, as
    The arm, which is a lever and which works
    By lever principle cannot make use
    And form cement with trowel to the forms
    It makes of paint or marble.

                                 To resume:
    A child may take the qualities of one parent
    In some respects, and of the other parent
    In some respects. A child may have the traits
    Of father at one period of his life,
    The mother at one period of his life.
    And if the parents' traits are similar
    Their traits may be prepotent in a child,
    Thus giving rise to qualities convergent.
    So if you take a circle and draw off
    A line which would become another circle
    If drawn enough, completed, but is left
    Half drawn or less, that illustrates a mind
    Of cumulative heredity. Take John,
    My gardener, John, within his sphere is perfect,
    John has a mind which is a perfect circle.
    A perfect circle can be small, you know.
    And so John has good sense within his sphere.
    But if some force began to work like yeast
    In brain cells, and his mind shot forth a line
    To make a larger thinking circle, say
    About a great invention, heaven or God,
    Then John would be abnormal, till this line
    Shot round and joined, became a larger circle.
    This is the secret of eccentric genius,
    The man is half a sphere, sticks out in space
    Does not enclose co-ordinated thought.
    He's like a plant mutating, half himself
    Half something new and greater. If we looked
    To John's heredity we'd find this change
    Was manifest in mother or in father
    About the self-same period of life,
    Most likely in his father. Attributes
    Of fathers are inherited by sons,
    Of mothers by the daughters.

                                 Now this morning
    I take up paranoia. Paranoics
    Are often noted for great gifts of mind.
    Mahomet, Swedenborg were paranoics,
    Joan of Arc, and Ossawatomie Brown,
    Cellini, many others. All who think
    Themselves inspired of God, and all who see
    Themselves appointed to a work, the subjects
    Of prophecies are paranoics. All
    Who visions have of God or archangels,
    Hear voices or celestial music, these
    Are paranoics. And whether it be they rise
    Enough above the earth to look along
    A longer arc and see realities,
    Or see strange things through atmospheric strata
    Which build up or distort the things they see
    Remains the question. Let us wait the proof.

    Last week I told you I would have to-day
    The skull and brain of Jacob Groesbell here,
    And lecture on his case. Here is the brain:
    Weight sixteen hundred grammes. Students may look
    After the lecture at the brain and skull.
    There's nothing anatomical at fault
    With this fine brain, so far as I can find.
    You'll note how deep the convolutions are,
    Arrangement quite symmetrical. The skull
    Is well formed too. The jaws are long you'll note,
    The palate roof somewhat asymmetrical.
    But this is scarce significant. Let me tell
    How Jacob Groesbell looked:

                                The man was tall,
    Had shapely hands and feet, but awkward limbs.
    His hair was brown and fine, his forehead high,
    And ran back at an angle, temples full.
    His nose was long and fleshy at the point,
    Was tilted to one side. His eyes were gray,
    The iris flecked. They looked as if a light
    As of a sun-set shone behind them. Ears
    Were very large, projected at right angles.
    His neck was slender, womanish. His skin
    Of finest texture, white and very smooth.
    His voice was quiet, musical. His manner
    Patient and gentle, modest, reasonable.
    His parents, as I learned through inquiry,
    Were Methodists, devout and greatly loved.
    The mother healthy both in mind and body.
    The father was eccentric, perhaps insane.
    They were first cousins.

                             I knew Jacob Groesbell
    Ten years before he died. I knew him first
    When he was sent to mend my porch. A workman
    With saw and hammer never excelled him. Then
    As time went on I saw him when he came
    At my request to do my carpentry.
    I grew to know him, and by slow degrees
    He told me of his readings in the Bible,
    And gave me his interpretations. At last
    Aged forty-six, had ulcers of the stomach,
    Which took him off. He sent for me, and said
    He wished me to attend him, which I did.
    He told me I could have his body and brain
    To lecture on, dissect, since some had said
    He was insane, he told me, and if so
    I should find something wrong with brain or body.
    And if I found a wrong then all his visions
    Of God and archangels were just the fancies
    That come to madmen. So he made provision
    To give his brain and body for this cause,
    And here's his brain and skull, and I am lecturing
    On Jacob Groesbell as a paranoic.

    As I have said before, in making tests
    And observations of the patient, have
    His conversation taken stenographically,
    In order to preserve his speech exactly,
    And catch the flow if he becomes excited.
    So we determine if he makes new words,
    If he be incoherent, or repeats.
    I took my secretary once to make
    A stenographic record. Strange enough
    He would not talk while she was writing down.
    And when I asked him why, he would not tell.
    So I devised a scheme: I took a satchel,
    And put in it a dictaphone, and when
    A cylinder was full I'd stoop and put
    My hand among my bottles in the satchel,
    As if I was compounding medicine,
    Instead I'd put another cylinder on.
    And thus I got his story in his voice,
    Just as he talked, with nothing lost at all,
    Which you shall hear. For with this megaphone
    The students in the farthest gallery
    Can hear what Jacob Groesbell said to me,
    And weigh the thought that stirred within the brain
    Here in this jar beside me. Listen now
    To Jacob Groesbell's voice:

                                "Will you repeat
    From the beginning connectedly the story
    Of your religious life, illumination,
    Vhat you have called your soul's escape?"

                                         "I will,
    Since I shall never tell it again."

                                     "I grew up
    Timid and sensitive, not very strong,
    Not understood of father or of mother.
    They did not love me, and I never felt
    A tenderness for them. I used to quote:
    'Who is my mother and who are my brothers?'
    At school I was not liked. I had a chum
    From time to time, that's all. And I remember
    My mother on a day put with my luncheon
    A bottle of milk, and when the noon hour came
    I missed it, found some boys had taken it,
    And when I asked for it, they made the cry:
    'Bottle of milk, bottle of milk,' and I
    Flushed through with shame, and cried, and to this hour
    It hurts me to remember it. Such days,
    All misery! For all my clothes were patched.
    They hooted at me. So I lived alone.
    At twelve years old I had great fears of death,
    And hell, heard devils in my room. One night
    During a thunderstorm heard clanking chains,
    And hid beneath the pillows. One spring day
    As I was walking on the village street
    Close to the church I heard a voice which said
    'Behold, my son'--and falling on my knees
    I prayed in ecstacy--but as I prayed
    Some passing school boys laughed, threw stones at me.
    A heat ran through me, I arose and fled.
    Well, then I joined the church and was baptized.
    But something left me in the ceremony,
    I lost my ecstacy, seemed slipping back
    Into the trap. I took to wandering
    In solitary places, could not bear
    To see a human face. I slept for nights
    In still ravines, or meadows. But one time
    Returning to my home, I found the room
    Filled up with visitors--my heart stopped short,
    And glancing at the faces of my parents
    I hurried, bolted through, and did not speak,
    Entered a bed-room door and closed it. So
    I tell this just to illustrate my shyness,
    Which cursed my youth and made me miserable,
    Something I fought but could not overcome.
    And pondering on the Scriptures I could see
    How I resembled the saints, our Saviour even,
    How even as my brothers called me mad
    They called our Saviour so.

                               "At fourteen years
    My father taught me carpentry, his trade,
    And made me work with him. I seemed to be
    The butt for jokes and laughter with the men--
    I know not why. For now and then they'd drop
    A word that showed they knew my secrets, knew
    I had heard voices, knew I loathed the lusts
    Of women, drink. Oh these were sorry years,
    God was not with me though I sought Him ever
    And I was persecuted for His sake. My brain
    Seemed like to burst at times, saw sparkling lights,
    Heard music, voices, made strange shapes of leaves,
    Clouds, trunks of trees,--illusions of the devil.
    I was turned twenty years when on an evening
    Calm, beautiful in June, after a day
    Of healthful toil, while sitting on the porch,
    The sun just sinking, at my left I heard
    A voice of hollow clearness: "You are Christ."
    My eyes grew blind with tears for the evil
    Of such a thought, soul stained with such a thought,
    So devil stained, soul damned with blasphemy.
    I ran into my room and seized a pistol
    To end my life. God willed it otherwise.
    I fainted and awoke upon the floor
    After some hours. To heap my suffering full
    A few days after this while in the village
    I went into a store. The friendly clerk--
    I knew him always--said 'What will you have?
    I wait first always on the little boys.'
    I laughed and went my way. But in an hour
    His saying rankled, I began to brood
    On ways of vengeance, till it seemed at last
    His life must pay. O, soul so full of sin,
    So devil tangled, tortured--which not prayer
    Nor watching could deliver. So I thought
    To save my soul from murder I must fly--
    I felt an urging as one does in sleep
    Pursued by giant things to fly, to fly
    From terror, death, from blankness on the scene,
    From emptiness, from beauty gone. The world
    Seemed something seen in fever, where the steps
    Of men are muffled, and a futile scheme
    Impels all steps. So packing up my kit,
    My Bible in my pocket, secretly
    I disappeared. Next day took up my life
    In Barrington, a village thirty miles
    From all I knew, besides a lovely lake,
    Reached by a road that crossed a bridge
    Over a little bay, the bridge's ends
    Clustered with boats for fishermen. And here
    Night after night I fished, or stood and watched
    The star-light on the water.

                                 I grew calmer
    Almost found peace, got work to do, and lived
    Under a widow's roof, who was devout
    And knew my love for God. Now listen, doctor,
    To every word: I was now twenty-five,
    In perfect health, no longer persecuted,
    At peace with all the world, if not my soul
    Had wholly found its peace, for truth to tell
    It had an ache which sometimes I could feel,
    And yet I had this soul awakening.
    I know I have been counted mad, so watch
    Each detail here and judge.

                                At four o'clock
    The thirtieth day of June, my work being done,
    My kit upon my back I walked this road
    Toward the village. 'Twas an afternoon
    Of clouds, no rain, a little breeze, the tinkle
    Of cow bells in the air, a heavenly silence
    Pervading nature. Reaching the hill's foot
    I sat down by a tree to rest, enjoy
    The greenness of the forests, meadows, flats
    Along the bay, the blueness of the lake,
    The ripple of the water at my feet,
    The rythmic babble of the little boats
    Tied to the bridge. And as I sat there musing,
    Myself lost in the self, in time the clouds
    Lifted, blew off, to let the sun go down
    Over the waters gloriously to rest.
    So as I stared upon the sun on the water,
    Some minutes, though I know not for how long,
    Out of the splendor of the shining sun
    Upon the water, Jesus of Nazareth
    Clothed all in white, the nimbus round his brow,
    His face all wisdom, love, rose to my view,
    And then he spake: 'Jacob, my son, arise
    And come with me.'

                       "And in an instant there
    Something fell from me, I became a cloud,
    A soul with wings. A glory burned about me.
    And in that glory I perceived all things:
    I saw the eternal wheels, the deepest secrets
    Of creatures, herbs and grass, and stars and suns
    And I knew God, and knew all things as God:
    The All loving, the Perfect One, the Perfect Wisdom,
    Truth, love and purity. And in that instant
    Atoms and molecules I saw, and faces,
    And how they are arranged order to order,
    With no break in the order, one harmonious
    Whole of universal life all blended
    And interfused with universal love.
    And as it was with Shelley so I cried,
    And clasped my hands in ecstacy and rose
    And started back to climb the hill again,
    Scarce knowing, neither caring what I did,
    Nor where I went, and thinking if this be
    A fancy only of the Saviour then
    He will not follow me, and if it be
    Himself, indeed, he will not let me fall
    After the revelation. As I reached
    The brow of the hill, I felt his presence with me
    And turned, and saw Him. 'Thou hast faith, my son,
    Who knowest me, when they who walked with me
    Toward Emmaus knew me not, to whom I told
    All secrets of the scriptures beginning at Moses,
    Who knew me not till I brake bread and then,
    As after thought could say, Did not our heart
    Within us burn while he talked. O, Jacob Groesbell,
    Thou carpenter, as I was, greatly blessed
    With visions and my Father's love, this walk
    Is your walk toward Emmaus.' So he talked,
    Expounding all the scriptures, telling me
    About the race of men who live and move
    Along a life of meat and drink and sleep
    And comforts of the flesh, while here and there
    A hungering soul is chosen to lift up
    And re-create the race. 'The prophet, poet
    Must seek and must find God to keep the race
    Awake to the divine and to the orders
    Of universal and harmonious life,
    All interfused with Universal love,
    Which love is God, lest blindness, atheism,
    Which sees no order, reason, no intent
    Beat down the race to welter in the mire
    When storms, and floods come. And the sons of God,
    The leaders of the race from age to age
    Are chosen for their separate work, each work
    Fits in the given order. All who suffer
    The martyrdom of thought, whether they think
    Themselves as servants of my Father, or even
    Mock at the images and rituals
    Which prophets of dead creeds did symbolize
    The mystery they sensed, or whether they be
    Spirits of laughter, logic, divination
    Of human life, the human soul, all men
    Who give their essence, blindly or in vision
    In faith that life is worth their utmost love,
    They are my brothers and my Father's sons.'
    So Jesus told me as we took my walk
    Toward my Emmaus. After a time we turned
    And walked through heading rye and purple vetch
    Into an orchard where great rows of pears
    Sloped up a hill. It was now evening:
    Stretches of scarlet clouds were in the west,
    And a half moon was hanging just above
    The pears' white blossoms. O, that evening!
    We came back to the boats at last and loosed
    One of them and rowed out into the bay,
    And fished, while the stars appeared. He only said
    'Whatever they did with me you too shall do.'
    A haziness came on me now. I seem
    To find myself alone there in that boat.
    At mid-night I awoke, the moon was sunk,
    The whippoorwills were singing. I walked home
    Back to the village in a silence, peace,
    A happiness profound.

                          "And the next morning
    I awoke with aching head, spent body, yet
    With spiritual vision so intense I looked
    Through things material as if they were
    But shadows--old things passed away or grew
    A lovelier order. And my heart was full.
    Infinitely I loved, and infinitely was loved.
    My landlady looked at me sharply, asked
    What hour I entered, where I was so late.
    I only answered fishing. For I told
    No person of my vision, went my way
    At carpentry in silence, in great joy.
    For archangels and powers were at my side,
    They led me, bore me up, instructed me
    In mysteries, and voices said to me
    'Write' as the voice in Patmos said to John.
    I wrote and printed and the village read,
    And called me mad. And so I grew to see
    The deepest truths of God, and God Himself,
    The geniture of all things, of the Word
    Becoming flesh in Christ. I knew all ages,
    Times, empires, races, creeds, the human weakness
    Which makes life wearisome, confused and pained,
    And how the search for something (it is God)
    Makes divers worships, fire, the sun, and beasts
    Takes form in Eleusinian mysteries
    Or festivals where sex, the vine, the Earth
    At harvest time have praise or reverence.
    I knew God, talked with God, and knew that God
    Is more than Thought or Love. Our twisted brains
    Are but the wires in the bulb which stays,
    Resists the current and makes human thought.
    As the electric current is not light
    But heat and power as well. Our little brains
    Resist God and make thought and love as well.
    But God is more than these. Oh I heard much
    Of music, heard the whirring as of wheels,
    Or buzzing as of ears when a room is still.
    That is the axis of profoundest life
    Which turns and rests not. And I heard the cry
    And hearing wept, of man's soul, heard the ages,
    The epochs of this earth as it were the feet
    Of multitudes in corridors. And I knew
    The agony of genius and the woe
    Of prophets and the great.

                               "From that next morning
    I searched the scriptures with more fervid zeal
    Than I had ever done. I could not open
    Its pages anywhere but I could find
    Myself set forth or mirrored, pointed to.
    I could not doubt my destiny was bound
    With man's salvation. Jeremiah said
    'Take forth the precious from the vile.' Those words
    To me were spoken, and to no one else.
    And so I searched the scriptures. And I found
    I never had a thought, experience, pang,
    A state in human life our Saviour had not.
    He was a carpenter, and so was I.
    He had his soul's illumination, so had I.
    His brethren called him mad, they called me mad.
    He triumphed over death, so shall I triumph.
    For I could, I can feel my way along
    Death's stages as a man can reach and feel
    Ahead of him along a wall. I know
    This body is a shell, a butterfly's
    Excreta pushed away with rising wings.

    "I searched the scriptures. How should I believe
    Paul's story, not my own? Did he not see
    At mid-day in the way a light from heaven
    Above the brightness of the sun and hear
    The voice of Jesus saying to him 'Saul,'
    Why persecutest thou me?' And did not Festus,
    Before whom Paul stood speaking for himself,
    Call Paul a mad man? Even while he spake
    Such words as none but men inspired can speak,
    As well as words of truth and soberness,
    Such as myself speak now.

                              "And from the scriptures
    I passed to studies of the men who came
    To great illuminations. You will see
    There are two kinds: One's of the intellect,
    The understanding, one is of the soul.
    The x-ray lets the eye behind the flesh
    To see the ribs, or heart beat, choose! So men
    In their illumination see the frame-work
    Of life or see its spirit, so align
    Themselves with Science, Satire, or align
    Themselves with Poetry or Prophecy.
    So being Aristotle, Rabelais,
    Paul, Swedenborg.

                      "And as the years
    Went on, as I had time, was fortunate
    In finding books I read of many men
    Who had illumination, as I had it. Read
    Of Dante's vision, how he found himself
    Saw immortality, lost fear of death.
    Read Swedenborg, who left the intellect
    At fifty-four for God, and entered heaven
    Before he quitted life and saw behind
    The sun of fire, a sun of love and truth.
    Read Whitman who exclaimed to God: 'Thou knowest
    My manhood's visionary meditations
    Which come from Thee, the ardor and the urge.
    Thou lightest my life with rays ineffable
    Beyond all signs, descriptions, languages.'
    Read Blake, Spinoza, Emerson, read Wordsworth
    Who wrote of something 'deeply interfused,
    Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
    And the round ocean and the living air,
    And the blue skies, and in the mind of man--
    A motion and a spirit that impels
    All thinking things, all objects of all thought
    And rolls through all things.'

                         "And at last they called me
    The mad, and learned carpenter. And then--
    I'm growing faint. Your hand, hold ..."

                                     At this point
    He fainted, sank into a stupor. There
    I watched him, to discover if 'twas death.
    But soon I saw him rally, then he spoke.
    There was some other talk, but not of moment.
    I had to change the cylinder--the talk
    Was broken, rambling, and of trifling things,
    Throws no light on the case, being sane enough.
    He died next morning.

                          Students who desire
    To examine the skull and brain may do so now
    At their convenience in the laboratory.




FRIAR YVES


    Said Friar Yves: "God will bless
    Saint Louis' other-worldliness.
    Whatever the fate be, still I fare
    To fight for the Holy Sepulcher.
    If I survive, I shall return
    With precious things from Palestine--
    Gold for my purse, spices and wine,
    Glory to wear among my kin.
    Fame as a warrior I shall win.
    But, otherwise, if I am slain
    In Jesus' cause, my soul shall earn
    Immortal life washed white from sin."

    Said Friar Yves: "Come what will--
    Riches and glory, death and woe--
    At dawn to Palestine I go.
    Whether I live or die, I gain
    To fly the tepid good and ill
    Of daily living in Champagne,
    Where those who reach salvation lose
    The treasures, raptures of the earth,
    Captured, possessed, and made to serve
    The gospel love of Jesus' birth,
    Sacrifice, death; where even those
    Passing from pious works and prayer
    To paradise are not received
    As those who battled, strove, and lived,
    And periled bodies, as I choose
    To peril mine, and thus to use
    Body and soul to build the throne
    Of Louis the Saint, where Joseph's care
    Lay Jesus under a granite stone."

    Then Friar Yves buckled on
    His breastplate, and, at break of dawn,
    With crossboy, halberd took his way,
    Walked without resting, without pause,
    Till the sun hovered at midday
    Over a tree of glistening leaves,
    Where a spring gurgled. "Hunger gnaws
    My stomach," whispered Friar Yves.
    "If I," he sighed, "could only gain,
    Like yonder spring, an inner source
    Of life, and need not dew or rain
    Of human love, or human friends,
    And thus accomplish my soul's ends
    Within myself! No," said the friar;
    "There is one water and one fire;
    There is one Spirit, which is God.
    And what are we but streams and springs
    Through which He takes His wanderings?
    Lord, I am weak, I am afraid;
    Show me the way!" the friar prayed.
    "Where do I flow and to what end?
    Am I of Thee, or do I blend
    Hereafter with Thee?"

                          Yves heard,
    While praying, sounds as when the sod
    Teems with a swarm of insect things.
    He dropped his halberd to look down,
    And then his waking vision blurred,
    As one before a light will frown.
    His inner ear was caught and stirred
    By voices; then the chestnut tree
    Became a step beside a throne.
    Breathless he lay and fearfully,
    While on his brain a vision shone.
    Said a Great Voice of sweetest tone:
    "The time has come when I must take
    The form of man for mankind's sake.
    This drama is played long enough
    By creatures who have naught of me,
    Save what comes up from foam of the sea
    To crawling moss or swimming weeds,
    At last to man. From heaven in flame,
    Pure, whole, and vital, down I fly,
    And take a mortal's form and name,
    And labor for the race's needs."
    Then Friar Yves dreamed the sky
    Flushed like a bride's face rosily,
    And shot to lightning from its bloom.
    The world leaped like a babe in the womb,
    And choral voices from heaven's cope
    Circled the earth like singing stars:
    "O wondrous hope, O sweetest hope,
    O passion realized at last;
    O end of hunger, fear, and wars,
    O victory over the bottomless, vast
    Valley of Death!"

                      A silence fell,
    Broke by the voice of Gabriel:
    "Music may follow this, O Lord!
    Music I hear; I hear discord
    Through ages yet to be, as well.
    There will be wars because of this,
    And wars will come in its despite.
    It's noon on the world now; blackest night
    Will follow soon. And men will miss
    The meaning, Lord! There will be strife
    'Twixt Montanist and Ebionite,
    Gnostic, Mithraist, Manichean,
    'Twixt Christian and the Saracen.
    There will be war to win the place
    Where you bend death to sovereign life.
    Armed kings will battle for the grace
    Of rulership, for power and gold
    In the name of Jesus. Men will hold
    Conclaves of swords to win surcease
    Of doctrines of the Prince of Peace.
    The seed is good, Lord, make the ground
    Good for the seed you scatter round!"

    Said the Great Voice of sweetest tone:
    "The gardener sprays his plants and trees
    To drive out lice and stop disease.
    After the spraying, fruit is grown
    Ruddy and plump. The shortened eyes
    Of men can see this end, although
    Leaves wither or a whole tree dies
    From what the gardener does to grow
    Apples and plums of sweeter flesh.
    The gardener lives outside the tree;
    The gardener knows the tree can see
    What cure is needed, plans afresh
    An end foreseen, and there's the will
    Wherewith the gardener may fulfil
    The orchard's destiny."

                           So He spake.
    And Friar Yves seemed to wake,
    But did not wake, and only sunk
    Into another dreaming state,
    Wherein he saw a woman's form
    Leaning against the chestnut's trunk.
    Her body was virginal, white, and straight,
    And glowed like a dawning, golden, warm,
    Behind a robe of writhing green:
    As when a rock's wall makes a screen
    Whereon the crisscross reflect moves
    Of circling water under the rays
    Of April sunlight through the sprays
    Of budding branches in willow groves--
    A liquid mosaic of green and gold--
    Thus was her robe.

                       But to behold
    Her face was to forget the youth
    Of her white bosom. All her hair
    Was tangled serpents; she did wear
    A single eye in the middle brow.
    Her cheeks were shriveled, and one tooth
    Stuck from shrunken gums. A bough
    O'ershadowed her the while she gripped
    A pail in either hand. One dripped
    Clear water; one, ethereal fire.
    Then to the Graia spoke the friar:
    "Have mercy! Tell me your desire
    And what you are?"

                      Then the Graia said:
    "My body is Nature and my head
    Is Man, and God has given me
    A seeing spirit, strong and free,
    Though by a single eye, as even
    Man has one vision at a time.
    I lift my pails up; mark them well.
    With this fire I will burn up heaven,
    And with this water I will quench
    The flames of hell's remotest trench,
    That men may work in righteousness.
    Not for the fears of an after hell,
    Nor for the rewards which heaven will bless
    The soul with when the mountains nod
    And the sun darkens, but for love
    Of Man and Life, and love of God.
    Now look!"

               She dashed the pail of fire
    Against the vault of heaven. It fell
    As would a canopy of blue
    Burned by a soldier's careless torch.
    She dashed the water into hell,
    And a great steam rose up with the smell
    Of gaseous coals, which seemed to scorch
    All things which on the good earth grew.
    "Now," said the Graia, "loiterer,
    Awake from slumber, rise and speed
    To fight for the Holy Sepulcher--
    Nothing is left but Life, indeed--
    I have burned heaven! I have quenched hell."

    Friar Yves no longer slept;
    Friar Yves awoke and wept.




THE EIGHTH CRUSADE


    June, but we kept the fire place piled with logs,
    And every day it rained. And every morning
    I heard the wind and rain among the leaves.
    Try as I would my spirits grew no better.
    What was it? Was I ill or sick in mind?
    I spent the whole day working with my hands,
    For there was brush to clear and corn to plant
    Between the gusts of rain; and there at night
    I sat about the room and hugged the fire.
    And the rain dripped and the wind blew, we shivered
    For cold and it was June. I ached all through
    For my hard labor, why did muscles grow not
    To hardness and cure body, if 'twere body,
    Or soul if it were soul?

                             But there at night
    As I sat aching, worn, before the hour
    Of sleep, and restless in this interval
    Of nothingness, the silence out-of-doors,
    Timed by the dripping rain, and by the slap
    Of cards upon a table by a boarder
    Who passed the time in playing solitaire,
    Sometimes my ancient host would fill his pipe,
    And scrape away the dust of long past years
    To show me what had happened in his life.
    And as he smoked and talked his aged wife
    Would parallel his theme, as a brooks' branches
    Formed by a slender island, flow together.
    Or yet again she'd intercalate a touch,
    An episode or version. And sometimes
    He'd make her hush; or sometimes he'd suspend
    While she went on to what she wished to finish,
    When he'd resume. They talked together thus.
    He found the story and began to tell it,
    And she hung on his story, told it too.

    This night the rain came down in buckets full,
    And Claude who brought the logs in showed his breath
    Between the opening of the outer door
    And the swift on-rush of the room's warm air.
    And my host who had hoed the whole day long,
    Hearty at eighty years, sat with his pipe
    Reading the organ of the Adventists,
    His wife beside him knitting.

                                  On the table
    Are several magazines with their monthly grist
    Of stories and of pictures. O such stories!
    Who writes these stories? How does it happen people
    Are born into the world to read these stories?
    But anyway the lamp is very bad,
    And every bone in me aches--and why always
    Must one be either reading, knitting, talking?
    Why not sit quietly and think?

                                    At last
    Between the clicking needles and the slap
    Of cards upon the table and the swish
    Of rain upon the window my host speaks:
    "It says here when the Germans are defeated,
    And that means when the Turks are beaten too,
    The Christian world will take back Palestine,
    And drive the Turks out. God be praised, I hope so."
    "Amen" breaks in the wife. "May we both live
    To see the day. Perhaps you'll get your trunk back
    From Jaffa if the Allies win."

                                    To me
    The wife turns and goes on, "He has a trunk,
    At least his trunk went on to Jaffa, and
    It never came back. The bishop's trunk came back,
    But his trunk never came."

                               And then the husband:
    "What are you saying, mother, you go on
    As if our friend here knew the story too.
    And then you talk as if our hope of the war
    Was centered on recovering that trunk."

                                        "Oh, not at all
    But if the Allies win, and the trunk is there
    In Jaffa you might get it back. You know
    You'll never get it back while infidels
    Rule Palestine."

                     The husband says to me:
    "It looks as if she thought that trunk of mine,
    Which went to Jaffa fifty years ago,
    Is in existence yet, when chances are
    They kept it for awhile, and sold it off,
    Or threw it away."

                       "They never threw it away.
    Why I made him a dozen shirts or more,
    And knitted him a lot of lovely socks,
    And made him neck-ties, and that trunk contained
    Everything that a man might need in absence
    A year from home. And yet they threw it away!"

    "They might have done so."

                            "But they never did,
    Perhaps they threw your cabinet tools away?"
    "They were too valuable."

                              "Too valuable,
    Fine socks and shirts are worthless are they, yes."

    "Not worthless, but fine tools are valuable."
    He turns to me: "I lost a box of tools
    Sent on to Jaffa, too. The scheme was this:
    To work at cabinet making while observing
    Conditions there in Palestine, and get ready
    To drive the Turks from Palestine."

                                  What's this?
    I rub my eyes and wake up to this story.
    I'm here in Illinois, in a farmer's house
    Who boards stray fishermen, and takes me in.
    And in a moment Turks and Palestine,
    And that old dream of Louis the Saint arise
    And show me how the world is small, and a man
    Native to Illinois may travel forth
    And mix his life with ancient things afar.
    To-day be raising corn here and next month
    Walking the streets of Jaffa, in Mycenæ,
    Digging for Grecian relics.

                                So I asked
    "Were you in Palestine?" And the wife spoke quick:
    "He didn't get there, that's the joke of it."
    And the husband said: "It wasn't such a joke.
    You see it was this way, myself and the bishop,
    He lived in Springfield, I in Pleasant Plains,
    Had planned to meet in Switzerland."

                       "Montreaux"
    The wife broke in.

                      "Montreaux" the husband added.
    "You said you two had planned it," she went on.
    Now looking over specks and speaking louder:
    "The bishop came to him, he planned it out.
    My husband didn't plan the trip at all.
    He knows the bishop planned it."

                                    Then the husband:
    "Oh for that matter he spoke of it first,
    And I acceded and we worked it out.
    He was to go ahead of me, I was
    To come in later, soon as I could raise
    What funds my congregation could afford
    To spare for this adventure."

                                "Guess," she said,
    "How much it was."

                     I shook my head and she
    Said in a lowered and a tragic voice:
    "Four hundred dollars, and you can believe
    It strapped his church to raise so great a sum.
    And if they hadn't thought that Christ would come
    Scarcely before the plan could be put through
    Of winning back the Holy Land, that sum
    Had never been made up and put in gold
    For him to carry in a chamois belt."

    And then the husband said: "Mother, be still,
    I'll tell our friend the story if you'll let me."
    "I'm done," she said. "I wanted to say that.
    Go on," she said.

                      And so he started over:
    "The bishop came to me and said he thought
    The Advent would be June of seventy-six.
    This was the winter of eighteen seventy-one.
    He said he had a dream; and in this dream
    An angel stood beside him, told him so,
    And told him to get me and go to Jaffa,
    And live there, learn the people and the country,
    We were to live disguised the better to learn
    The people and the country. I was to work
    At my trade as a cabinet maker, he
    At carpentry, which was his trade, and so
    No one would know us, or suspect our plan.
    And thus we could live undisturbed and work,
    And get all things in readiness, that in time
    The Lord would send us power, and do all things.
    We were the messengers to go ahead
    And make the ways straight, so I told her of it."

    "You told me, yes, but my trust was as great
    As yours was in the bishop, little the good
    To tell me of it."

                       "Well, I told you of it.
    And she said, 'If the Lord commands you so
    You must obey.' And so she knit the socks
    And made that trunk of things, as she has said,
    And in six weeks I sailed from Philadelphia."

    "'Twas nearer two months," said the wife.

                                          "Perhaps,
    Somewhere between six weeks and that. The bishop
    Left Springfield in a month from our first talk.
    I knew, for I went over when he left.
    And I remember how his poor wife cried,
    And how the children cried. He had a family
    Of some eight children."

                             "Only seven then,
    The son named David died the year before."

    "Mother, you're right, 'twas seven children then.
    The oldest was not more than twelve, I think,
    And all the children cried, and at the train
    His congregation almost to a man
    Was there to see him off."

                              "Well, one was missing.
    You know, you know," the wife said pregnantly.

    "I'll come to that in time, if you'll be still.
    Well, so the bishop left, and in six weeks,
    Or somewhere there, I started for Montreaux
    To meet the bishop. Shipped ahead my trunk
    To Jaffa as the bishop did. But now
    I must tell you my dream. The night before
    I reached Montreaux I had a wondrous dream:
    I saw the bishop on the station platform
    His face with brandy blossoms splotched and wearing
    His gold head cane. And sure enough next day
    As I stepped from the train I saw the bishop
    His face with brandy blossoms splotched and wearing
    His gold head cane. And I thought something wrong,
    And still I didn't act upon the thought."

    "I should say not," the wife broke in again.

    "Oh, well what could I do, if I had thought
    More clearly than I did that things were wrong.
    You can't uproot the confidence of years
    Because of dreams. And as to brandy blossoms
    I knew his face was red, but didn't know,
    Or think just then, that brandy made it red.
    And so I went up to the house he lived in--
    A mansion beautiful, and we sat down.
    And he sat there bolt upright in a rocker,
    Hands spread upon his knees, his black eyes bigger
    Than I had ever seen them, eyeing me
    Silently for a moment, when he said:
    'What money did you bring?' And so I told him.
    And he said quickly 'let me have it.' So
    I took my belt off, counted out the gold
    And gave it to him. And he took it, thrust it
    With this hand in this pocket, that in that,
    And sat there and said nothing more, just looked!
    And then before a word was spoke again
    I heard a step upon the stair, the stair
    Came down into this room where we were sitting.
    And I looked up, and there--I rubbed my eyes--
    I looked again, rose from my chair to see,
    And saw descending the most lovely woman,
    Who was"--

                "A lovely woman," sneered the wife
    "Well, she was just affinity to the bishop,
    That's what she was."

                          "Affinity is right--
    You see she was the leader in the choir,
    And she had run away with him, or rather
    Had gone abroad upon another boat
    And met him in Montreaux. Now from this time
    For forty hours or so all is a blank.
    I just remember trying to speak and choking,
    And flying from the room, the bishop clutching
    At my coat sleeve to hold me. After that
    I can't recall a thing until I saw
    A little cottage way up in the Alps.
    I was knocking at the door, was faint and sick,
    The door was opened and they took me in,
    And warmed me with a glass of wine, and tucked me
    In a good bed where I slept half a week.
    It seems in my bewilderment I wandered,
    Ran, stumbled, climbed for forty hours or so
    By rocky chasms, up the piney slopes."

    "He might have lost his life," the wife exclaimed.

    "These were the kindest people in the world,
    A French family. They gave me splendid food,
    And when I left two francs to reach the place
    Where lived the English Consul, who arranged
    After some days for money for my passage
    Back to America, and in six weeks
    I preached a sermon here in Pleasant Plains."

    "Beware of false prophets was the text!" she said.

    And I who heard this story through spoke up:
    "The thing about this that I fail to get
    Concerns this woman, the affinity.
    If, as seems evident, she and the bishop
    Had planned this run-a-way and used the faith,
    And you, the congregation to get money
    To do it with, or used you in particular
    To get the money for themselves to live on
    After they had arrived there in Montreaux,
    If all this be" I said, "why did this woman
    Descend just at the moment when he asked you
    For the money that you had. You might have seen her
    Before you gave the money, if you had
    You might have held it back."

                                  "I would indeed,
    You can be sure I should have held it back."

    And then the old wife gasped and dropped her knitting.

    "Now, James, you let me answer that, I know.
    She was done with the bishop, that's the reason.
    Be still and let me answer. Here's the story:
    We found out later that the bishop's trunk
    And kit of tools had been returned from Jaffa
    There to Montreaux, were there that very day,
    Which means the bishop never meant to go
    To Palestine at all, but meant to meet
    This woman in Montreaux and live with her.
    Well, that takes money. So he used my husband
    To get that money. Now you wonder I see
    Why she would chance the spoiling of the scheme,
    Descend into the room before my husband
    Had given up this money, and this money,
    You see, was treated as a common fund
    Belonging to the church and to be used
    To get back Palestine, and so the bishop
    As head of the church, superior to my husband,
    Could say 'give me the money'--that was natural,
    My husband could not be surprised at that,
    Or question it. Well, why did she descend
    And almost lose the money? Oh, the cat!
    I know what she did, as well as I had seen
    Her do it. Yes, she listened at the landing.
    And when she heard my husband tell the sum
    Which he had brought, it wasn't enough to please her,
    And Satan entered in her heart, and she
    Waited until she heard the bishop's pockets
    Clink with the double eagles, then descended
    To expose the bishop and disgrace him there
    And everywhere in all the world. Now listen:
    She got that money or the most of it
    In spite of what she did. For in six weeks
    After my husband had returned, she walked,
    The brazen thing, the public streets of Springfield
    As jaunty as you please, and pretty soon
    The bishop died and all the papers printed
    The story of his shame."

                             She had scarce finished
    When the man at solitaire threw down the deck
    And make a whacking noise and rose and came
    Around in front of us and stood and looked
    The old man and old woman over, me
    He studied too. Then in an organ voice:
    "Is there a single verse in the New Testament
    That hasn't sprouted one church anyway,
    Letting alone the verses that have sprouted
    Two, three or four or five? I know of one:
    Where is it that it says that "Jesus wept"?
    Let's found a church on that verse, "Jesus wept."
    With that he went out in the rain and slammed
    The door behind him.

                           The old clergyman
    Had fallen asleep. His wife looked up and said,
    "That man is crazy, ain't he? I'm afraid."




THE BISHOP'S DREAM OF THE HOLY SEPULCHRE


    A lassie sells the War Cry on the corner
    And the big drum booms, and the raucous brass horns
    Mingle with the cymbals and the silver triangle.
    I stand a moment listening, then my friend
    Who studies all religions, finds a wonder
    In orphic spectacles like this, lays hold
    Upon my arm and draws me to a door
    Through which we look and see a room of seats,
    A platform at the end, a table on it,
    And signs upon the wall, "Jesus is Waiting,"
    And "God is Love."

                       We enter, take a seat.
    The band comes in and fills the room to bursting
    With horns and drums. They cease and feet are heard,
    The crowd has followed, half the seats are full.
    After a prayer, a song, the captain mounts
    The platform by the table and begins:
    "Praise God so many girls are here to-night,
    And Sister Trickey, by the grace of God
    Saved from the wrath to come, will speak to you."
    So Sister Trickey steps upon the platform,
    A woman nearing forty, one would say.
    Blue-eyed, fair skinned, and yellow haired, a figure
    Once trim enough, no doubt, grown stout at last.
    She was a pretty woman in her time,
    'Twas plain to see. A shrewd intelligence
    From living in the world shines in her face.
    We settle down to hear from Sister Trickey
    And in a moment she begins:

                                "Young girls:
    I thank the Lord for Jesus, for he saved me,
    I thank the Lord for Jesus every hour.
    No woman ever stained with redder sins.
    Had greater grace than mine. Praise God for Jesus!
    Praise God for blood that washes sins away!
    I was a woman fallen till Lord Jesus
    Forgave me, helped me up and made me clean.
    My name is Lilah Trickey. Let me tell you
    How music was my tempter. Oh, you girls,
    If there be one before me who can sing
    Beware the devil and beware your voice
    That it be used for Jesus, not for Satan."

    "I had a voice, was leader of the choir,
    But Satan entered in my voice to tempt
    The bishop of the church, and in my heart
    To tempt and use the bishop; in the bishop
    Old Satan slipped to lure me from the path.
    He fell from grace for listening. And I
    Whose voice had turned him over to the devil
    Fell as he fell. He dragged me down with him.
    No use to make it long, one word's enough:
    Old Satan is the first word and the last,
    And all between is nothing. It's enough
    To say the bishop and myself eloped
    Went to Montreaux. He left a wife and children.
    And I poor silly thing with promises
    Of culture of my voice in Paris, lost
    Good name and all. And he lost all as well.
    Good name, his soul I fear, because he took
    The church's money saying he would use it
    To win the Holy Sepulchre, in fact
    Intending all the while to use the money
    For travel and for keeping up a house
    With me as soul-mate. For he never meant
    To let me go to Paris for my voice,
    He never got enough to pay for that.
    On that point he betrayed me, now I see
    'Twas God who used him to deceive me there,
    And leave me to return to Springfield broken,
    An out-cast, fallen woman, shamed and scorned."

    "We took a house in Montreaux, plain enough
    As we looked at it passing, but within
    'Twas sweet and fair as Satan could desire:
    Engravings on the wall and marble mantels,
    Gilt clocks upon the mantels, lovely rugs,
    Chests full of linen, silver, pewter, china,
    Soft beds with canopies of figured satin,
    The scent of apple blossoms through the rooms.
    A little garden, vines against the wall.
    There were the lake and mountains. Oh, but Satan
    Baited the hook with beauty. But the bishop
    Seemed self-absorbed, depressed and never smiled.
    And every time his face came close to mine
    I smelled the brandy on him. Conscience whipped
    Its venomed tail against his peace of mind.
    And so he took the brandy to benumb
    The sting of conscience and to dull the pain.
    He told me he had business in Montreaux
    Which would require some weeks, would there be met
    By people who had money for him. I
    Was twenty-three and green, besides I walked
    In dreamland thinking of the promised schooling
    In Paris--oh 'twas music, as I said.". ...

    "At last one day he said a friend was coming,
    And he went to the station. Very soon
    I heard their steps, the bishop and his friend.
    They entered. I was curious and sat
    Upon the stair-way's landing just to hear.
    And this is what I heard. The bishop asked:
    'You've brought some money, how much have you brought?'

    The man replied 'four hundred dollars.' Then
    The bishop said: 'I'll take it.' In a moment
    I heard the clinking gold and heard the bishop
    Putting it in his pocket.'

                               "God forgive me,
    I never was so angry in my life.
    The bishop had been talking in big figures,
    We would have thousands for my voice and Paris,
    And here was just a paltry sum. Scarce knowing
    Just what I did, perhaps I wished to see
    The American who brought the money--well,
    No matter what it was, I walked in view
    Upon the landing, stood there for a moment
    And saw our visitor, a clergyman
    From all appearances. He stared, grew red,
    Large eyed and apoplectic, then he rose,
    Walked side-ways, backward, stumbled toward the door,
    Rattled with shaking hand the knob and jerked
    The door ajar, with open mouth backed out
    Upon the street and ran. I heard him run
    A square at least."

                        "The bishop looked at me,
    His face all brandy blossoms, left the room,
    Came back at once with brandy on his breath.
    And all that day was tippling, went to bed
    So drunk I had to take his clothing off
    And help him in."

                      "Young girls, beware of music,
    Save only hymns and sacred oratorios.
    Beware the theatre and dancing hall.
    Take lesson from my fate.

                              "The morning came.
    The bishop called me, he was very ill
    And pale with fear. He had a dream that night.
    Satan had used him and abandoned him.
    And Death, whom only Jesus can put down,
    Was standing by the bed. He called to me,
    And said to me:

                    "'That money's in that drawer.
    Use it to reach America, but use it
    To send my body back. Death's in the corner
    Behind that cabinet--there--see him look!
    I had a dream--go get a pen and paper,
    And write down what I tell you. God forgive me--
    Oh what a blasphemer am I. O, woman,
    To lie here dying and to know that God
    Has left me--hell awaits me--horrible!
    Last night I dreamed this man who brought the money,
    This man and I were walking from Damascus,
    And in a trice came down to Olivet.
    Just then great troops of men sprang up around us
    And hailed us as expecting our approach.
    And there I saw the faces--hundreds maybe,
    Of congregations who had trusted me
    In all the long past years--Oh, sinful woman,
    Why did you cross my path,' he moaned at times,
    'And wreck my ministry.'

                             "'And so these crowds
    Armed as it seemed, exulted, called me general,
    And shouted forward. So we ran like mad
    And came before a building with a dome--
    You know--I've seen a picture of it somewhere.
    And so the crowds yelled: let the bishop enter
    And see the sepulchre, while we keep guard.
    They pushed me in. But when I was inside
    There was no dome, above us was the sky,
    And what seemed walls was nothing but a fence.
    Before us was a stable with a stall
    Where two cows munched the hay. There was a farmer
    Who with a pitchfork bedded down the stall.
    "Where is the holy sepulchre?" I asked--
    "My army's at the door." He kept at work
    And never raised his eyes and only said:
    "Don't know; I haven't time for things like that.
    You're 'bout the hundredth man who's asked me that.
    We don't know where it is, nor do we care.
    We live here and we knew him, so we feel
    Less interest than you. But have you thought
    If you should find it it would only be
    A tomb like other tombs? Why look at this:
    Here is the very manger where he lay--
    What is it? Just a manger filled with straw.
    These cows are not the very cows you know--
    But cows are cows in every age and place.
    I think that board there has been nailed on since.
    Outside of that the place is just the same.
    Now what's the good of seeing it? His mother
    Lay in that corner there, what if she did?
    That lantern on the wall's the very one
    They came to see the child with from the inn--
    What of it? Take your army and go on,
    And leave me with my barn and with my cows."

    "'So all the glory vanished! Devil magic
    Stripped all the glory off. No angels singing,
    No star of Bethlehem, no magi kneeling,
    No Mary crowned, no Jesus King, no mystic
    Blood for sins' remission--just a barn,
    A stall, two cows, a lantern--all the glory--
    Swept from the gospel. That's my punishment:
    My poor weak brain filled full of all this dream,
    Which seems as real as life--to lie here dying
    Too weak to shake the dream! To see Death there
    Behind that cabinet--there--see him look--
    By God forsaken--all theology,
    All mystery, all wonder, all delight
    Of spiritual vision swept away as clean
    As winds sweep up the clouds, and thus to see
    While dying, just a manger, and two cows,
    A lantern on the wall.

                           "'And thus to see,
    For blasphemy that duped an honest heart,
    And took the pitiful dollars of the flock
    To win you with--oh, woman, woman, woman,
    A barn, a stall, a lantern limned so clear
    In such a daylight of clear seeing senses
    That all the splendor, the miraculous
    Wonder of the virgin, nimbused child,
    The star that followed till it rested over
    The manger (such a manger) all are wrecked,
    All blotted from belief, all snatched away
    From hands pushed off by God, no longer holding
    The robes of God.'

                       "And so the bishop raved
    While I stood terrified, since I could feel
    Death in the room, and almost see the monster
    Behind the cabinet.

                         "Then the bishop said:
    "'My dream went on. I crossed the stable yard
    And passed into a place of tombs. And look!
    Before I knew I stepped into a hole,
    A sunken grave with just a slab at head,
    And "Jesus" carven on it, nothing else,
    No date, no birth, no parentage.'"

                                       "'I lie
    Tormented by the pictures of this dream.
    Woman, take to your death bed with clear mind
    Of gospel faith, clean conscience, sins forgiven.
    The thoughts that we must suffer with and die with
    Are worth the care of all the days of life.
    All life should be directed to this end,
    Lest when the mind lies fallen, vultures swoop,
    And with their wings blot out the sun of faith,
    And with their croakings drown the voice of God.'

    "He ceased, became delirious. So he died,
    And I still unrepentant buried him
    There in Montreaux, and with what gold remained
    Went on to Paris.

                      "See how I was marked
    For God's salvation.

                         "There I went to see
    The celebrated teacher Jean Strakosch,
    Who looked at me with insolent, calm eyes,
    And face impassive, let me sing a scale,
    Then shook his head. A diva, as I thought,
    Came in just then. They talked in French, and I,
    Prickling from head to foot with shame, ignored,
    Left standing like a fool, passed from the room.
    So music turned on me, but God received me,
    And I came back to Springfield. But the Lord
    Made life too hard for me without the fold.
    I was so shunned and scorned, I had no place
    Save with the fallen, with the mockers, drinkers.
    Thus being in conviction, after struggles,
    And many prayers I found salvation, found
    My work in life: which is to talk to girls
    And stand upon this platform and relate
    My story for their good."

                              She ceased. Amens
    Went up about the room. The big drum boomed,
    And the raucous brass horns mingled with the cymbals,
    The silver triangle and the singing voices.

    My friend and I arose and left the room.




NEANDERTHAL


    "Then what is life?" I cried. And with that cry
    I woke from deeper slumber--was it sleep?--
    And saw a hooded figure standing by
    The bed whereon I lay.

                           "Why do you keep,
    O spirit beautiful and swift, this guard
    About my slumber? Shelley, from the deep
    Why do you come with veiled face, mighty bard,
    As that unearthly shape was veiled to you
    At Casa Magni?"

                    Then the room was starred
    With light as I was speaking, and I knew
    The god, my brother, from whose face the veil
    Melted as mist.

                    "What mission fair and true,
    While I am sleeping, brings you? For I pale
    Amid this solemn stillness, for your face
    Unutterably majestic."

                           As when the dale
    At midnight echoes for a little space,
    The night-bird's cry, the god responded "Come,"
    And nothing more. I left my bed apace,
    And followed him with wings above the gloom
    Of clouds like chariots driven on to war,
    Between whose wheels the swift moon raced and swum.

    A mile beneath us lay the earth, afar
    Were mountains which as swift as thought drew near
    As we passed over pines, where many a star
    And heaven's light made every frond as clear
    As through a glass or in the lightning's flash. ...
    Yet I seemed flying from an olden fear,
    A bulk of black that sought to sting or gnash
    My breast or side--which was myself, it seemed,
    The flesh or thinking part of me grown rash
    And violent, a brain soul unredeemed,
    Which sometime earlier in the grip of Death
    Forgot its terror when my soul which streamed
    Like ribbons of silk fire, with quiet breath
    Said to the body, as it were a thing
    Separate and indifferent: "How uneath
    That fellow turns, while I am safe yet cling
    Close to him, both another and the same."
    Now was this mood reversed: That self must wing
    Its fastest flight to fly him, lest he maim
    With fleshly hands my better, stronger part,
    As dragon wings my flap and quench a flame. ...
    But as we passed o'er empires and athwart
    A bellowing strait, beholding bergs and floes
    And running tides which made the sinking heart
    Rise up again for breath, I felt how close
    The god, my brother, was, who would sustain
    My wings whatever dangers might oppose,
    And knowing him beside me, like a strain
    Of music were his thoughts, though nothing yet
    Was spoken by him.

                       When as out of rain
    Suddenly lights may break, the earth was set
    Beneath us, and we stood and paused to see
    The Düssel river from a parapet
    Of earth and rock. Then bending curiously,
    As reaching, in a moment with his hand
    He scraped the turf and stones, pried up a key
    Of harder granite, and at his command,
    When he had made an opening, I slid
    And sank, down, down through the Devonian land
    Until with him I reached a cavern hid
    From every eye but ours, and where no light
    But from our faces was, a pyramid
    Of hills that walled this crypt of soundless night.
    Then in a mood, it seemed more fanciful,
    He bent again and raked, and to my sight
    Upheaved and held the remnant of a skull--
    Gorilla's or a man's, I could not guess.
    Yet brutal though it was, it was a hull
    Too fine and large to house the nakedness
    Of a beast's mind.

                       But as I looked the god
    Began these words: "Before the iron stress
    Of the north pole's dominion fell, he trod
    The wastes of Europe, ere the Nile was made
    A granary for the east, or ere the clod
    In Babylon or India baked was laid
    For hovels, this man lived. Ten thousand years
    Before the earliest pyramid cast its shade
    Upon the desolate sands this thing of fears,
    Lusts, hungers, lived and hunted, woke and slept,
    Mated, produced its kind, with hairy ears,
    And tiger eyes sensed all that you accept
    In terms of thought or vision as the proof
    Of immanent Power or Love. But this skull kept
    The intangible meaning out. This heavy roof
    Of brutish bone above the eyes was dead
    Even to lower ethers, no behoof
    Of seasons, stars or skies took, though they bred
    Suspicions, fears, or nervous glances, thought,
    Which silent as a lizard's shadow fled
    Before it graved itself, passed over, wrought
    No vision, only pain, which he deemed pangs
    Of hunger or of thirst."

                             As you have sought
    The meaning of life's riddle, since it hangs
    In waking or in slumber just above
    The highest reach of prophecy, and fangs
    With poison of despair all moods but love,
    Behold its secret lettered on this brow
    Placed by your own!

                        This is the word thereof:
    _Change and progression from the glazed slough,
    Where life creeps and is blind, ascending up
    The jungled slopes for prey till spirits bow
    On Calvaries with crosses, take the cup
    Of martyrdom for truth's sake._

                                    It may be
    Men of to-day make monstrous war, sleep, sup,
    Traffic, build shrines, as earliest history
    Records the earliest day, and that the race
    Is what it was in virtue, charity,
    And nothing better. But within this face
    No light shone from that realm where Hindostan,
    Delving in numbers, watching stars took grace
    And inspiration to explore the plan
    Of heaven and earth. And of the scheme the test
    Is not five thousand years, which leave the van
    Just where it was, but this change manifest
    In fifty thousand years between the mind
    Neanderthal's and Shelley's.

                                 Man progressed
    Along these years, found eyes where he was blind,
    Put instinct under thought, crawled from the cave,
    And faced the sun, till somewhere heaven's wind
    Mixed with the light of Lights descending, gave
    To mind a touch of divinity, making whole
    An undeveloped growth.

                           As ships that brave
    Great storms at sea on masts a flaming coal
    From heaven catch, bear on, so man was wreathed
    Somewhere with lightning and became a soul.
    Into his nostrils purer fire was breathed
    Than breath of life itself, and by a leap,
    As lightning leaps from crag to crag, what seethed
    In man from the beginning broke the sleep
    That lay on consciousness of self, with eyes
    Awakened saw himself, out of the deep
    And wonder of the self caught the surmise
    Of Power beyond this world, and felt it through
    The flow of living.

                        And so man shall rise
    From this illumination, from this clue
    To perfect knowledge that this Power exists,
    And what man is to this Power, even as you
    Have left Neanderthal lost in the mists
    And ignorance of centuries untold.
    What would you say if learned geologists
    Out of the rocks and caverns should unfold
    The skulls of greater races, records, books
    To shame us for our day, could we behold
    Therein our retrogression? Wonder looks
    In vain for these, discovers everywhere
    Proof of the root which darkly bends and crooks
    Far down and far away; a stalk more fair
    Upspringing finds its proof, buds on the stalk
    The eye may see, at last the flowering flare
    Of man to-day!

                   I see the things which balk,
    Retard, divert, draw into sluices small,
    But who beholds the stream turned back to mock,
    Not just itself, but make equivocal
    A Universal Reason, Vision? No.
    You find no proof of this, but prodigal
    Proof of ascending Life!

                             So life shall flow
    Here on this globe until the final fruit
    And harvest. As it were until the glow
    Of the great blossom has the attribute
    In essence, color of eternal things,
    And shows no rim between its hues which suit
    The infinite sky's. Then if the dead earth swings
    A gleaned and stricken field amid the void
    What matters it to you, a soul with wings,
    Whether it be replanted or destroyed?
    Has it not served you?"

                             Now his voice was still,
    Which in such discourse had been thus employed.
    And in that lonely cavern dark and chill
    I heard again, "Then what is life?" And woke
    To find the moonlight on the window sill
    That which had seemed his presence. And a cloak,
    Whose hood was perked upon the moonbeams, made
    The skull of the Neanderthal. The smoke
    Blown from the fireplace formed the cavern's shade.
    And roaring winds blew down as they had tuned
    The voice which left me calm and unafraid.




THE END OF THE SEARCH


    _There's the dragon banner, says Old King Cole,
    And the tiger banner, he cries.
    Pantagruel breaks into a laugh
    As the monarch dries his eyes.--The Search_

    _"The tiger banyer, that is what you call much
    Bad men in China, Amelica. The dragon banyer.
    That is storm, leprosy, no rice, what you call
    Nature. See! Nature!"--King Joy_

           *       *       *       *       *

    Said Old King Cole I know the banner
    Of dragon and tiger too,
    But I would know the vagrant fellows
    Who came to my castle with you.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And I would know why they rise in the morning
    And never take bread or scrip;
    And why they hasten over the mountain
    In a sorrowed fellowship.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Then said Pantagruel: Heard you not?
    One said he goes to Spain.
    One said he goes to Elsinore,
    And one to the Trojan plain.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Faith, if it be, said Old King Cole,
    There is a word that's more:
    Who is it goes to Spain and Troy?
    And who to Elsinore?

           *       *       *       *       *

    One may be Quixote, said Pantagruel,
    Out for the final joust.
    One may be Hamlet, said Pantagruel
    And one I think is Faust.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Whoever they be, said Pantagruel,
    Why stand at the window and drool?
    Let's out and catch the runaways
    While the morning hour is cool.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel runs to the castle court,
    And King Cole follows soon.
    The cobblestones of the court yard ring
    To the beat of their flying shoon.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel clutches the holy bottle,
    And King Cole clutches his crown.
    They throw the bolt of the castle gate
    And race them through the town.

           *       *       *       *       *

    They cross the river and follow the road,
    They run by the willow trees,
    And the tiger banner and dragon banner
    Wait for the morning breeze.

           *       *       *       *       *

    They clamber the wall and part the brambles,
    And tear through thicket and thorn.
    And a wild dove in an olive tree
    Does mourn and mourn and mourn.

           *       *       *       *       *

    A green snake starts in the tangled grass,
    And springs his length at their feet.
    And a condor circles the purple sky
    Looking for carrion meat.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And mad black flies are over their heads,
    And a wolf looks out of his hole.
    Great drops of sweat break out and run
    From the brow of Old King Cole.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Said Old King Cole: A drink, my friend,
    From the holy bottle, I pray.
    My breath is short, my feet run blood,
    My throat is baked as clay.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Anon they reach a mountain top,
    And a mile below in the plain
    Are the glitter of guns and a million men
    Led by an idiot brain.

           *       *       *       *       *

    They come to a field of slush and flaw
    Red with a blood red dye.
    And a million faces fungus pale
    Stare horribly at the sky.

           *       *       *       *       *

    They come to a cross where a rotting thing
    Is slipping down from the nails.
    And a raven perched on the eyeless skull
    Opens his beak and rails:

           *       *       *       *       *

    "If thou be the Son of man come down,
    Save us and thyself save."
    Pantagruel flings a rock at the raven:
    "How now blaspheming knave!"

           *       *       *       *       *

    "Come down and of my bottle drink,
    And cease this scurvy rune."
    But the raven flapped its wings and laughed
    Loud as the water loon.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Said Old King Cole: A drink, my friend,
    I faint, a drink in haste.
    But when he drinks he pales and mutters:
    "The wine has lost its taste."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "You have gone mad," said Pantagruel,
    "In faith 'tis the same old wine."
    Pantagruel drinks at the holy bottle
    But the flavor is like sea brine.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And there on a rock is a cypress tree,
    And a form with a muffled face.
    "I know you, Death," said Pantagruel,
    "But I ask of you no grace."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "Empty my bottle, sour my wine,
    Bend me, you shall not break."
    "Oh well," said Death, "one woe at a time
    Before I come and take."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "You have lost everything in life but the bottle,
    Youth and woman and friend.
    Pass on and laugh for a little space yet
    The laugh that has an end."

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel passes and looks around him
    Brave and merry of soul.
    But there on the ground lies a dead body,
    The body of Old King Cole.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And a Voice said: Take the body up
    And carry the body for me
    Until you come to a silent water,
    By the sands of a silent sea.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel takes the body up
    And the dead fat bends him down.
    He climbs the mountains, runs the valleys
    With body, bottle and crown.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And the wastes are strewn with skulls,
    And the desert is hot and cursed.
    And a phantom shape of the holy bottle
    Mocks his burning thirst.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel wanders seven days,
    And seven nights wanders he.
    And on the seventh night he rests him
    By the sands of the silent sea.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And sees a new made fire on the shore,
    And on the fire is a dish.
    And by the fire two travelers sleep,
    And two are broiling fish.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Don Quixote and Hamlet are sleeping,
    And Faust is stirring the fire.
    But the fourth is a stranger with a face
    Starred with a great desire.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel hungers, Pantagruel thirsts,
    Pantagruel falls to his knees.
    He flings down the body of Old King Cole
    As a man throws off disease.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And rolls his burden away and cries:
    "Take and watch, if you will.
    But as for me I go to France
    My bottle to refill."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "And as for me I go to France
    To fill this bottle up."
    He felt at his side for the holy bottle,
    And found it turned a cup.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And the stranger said: Behold our friend
    Has brought my cup to me.
    That is the cup whereof I drank
    In the garden Gethsemane.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel hands the cup to Jesus
    Who dips it in sea brine.
    This is the water, says Jesus of Nazareth,
    Whereof I make your wine.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And Faust takes the cup from Jesus of Nazareth,
    And his lips wear a purple stain.
    And Faust hands the cup to Pantagruel
    With the dregs for him to drain.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Pantagruel drinks and falls into slumber,
    And Jesus strokes his hair.
    And Faust sings a song of Euphorion
    To hide his heart's despair.

           *       *       *       *       *

    And Faust takes the hand of Jesus of Nazareth,
    And they walk by the purple deep.
    Says Jesus of Nazareth: "Some are watchers,
    And some grow tired and sleep."




BOTANICAL GARDENS


    He follows me no more, I said, nor stands
    Beside me. And I wake these later days
    In an April mood, a wonder light and free.
    The vision is gone, but gone the constant pain
    Of constant thought. I see dawn from my hill,
    And watch the lights which fingers from the waters
    Twine from the sun or moon. Or look across
    The waste of bays and marshes to the woods,
    Under the prism colors of the air,
    Held in a vacuum silence, where the clouds,
    Like cyclop hoods are tossed against the sky
    In terrible glory.

                       And earth charmed I lie
    Before the staring sphinx whose musing face
    Is this Egyptian heaven, and whose eyes
    Are separate clouds of gold, whose pedestal
    Is earth, whose silken sheathed claws
    No longer toy with me, even while I stroke them:
    Since I have ceased to tease her.

                                      Then behold
    A breeze is blown out of a world becalmed,
    And as I see the multitudinous leaves
    Fluttered against the water and the light,
    And see this light unveil itself, reveal
    An inner light, a Presence, Secret splendor,
    I clap hands over eyes, for the earth reels;
    And I have fears of dieties shown or spun
    From nothingness. But when I look again
    The earth has stayed itself, I see the lake,
    The leaves, the light of the sun, the cyclop hoods
    Of thunder heads, yet feel upon my arm
    A hand I know, and hear a voice I know--
    He has returned and brought with him the thought
    And the old pain.

                      The voice says: "Leave the sphinx.
    The garden waits your study fully grown."
    And I arise and follow down a slope
    To a lawn by the lake and an ancient seat of stone,
    And near it a fountain's shattered rim enclosing
    An Eros of light mood, whose sculptured smile
    Consciously dimples for the unveiled pistil of love,
    As he strokes with baby hand the slender arching
    Neck of a swan. And here is a peristyle
    Whose carven columns are pink as the long updrawn
    Stalks of tulips bedded in April snow.
    And sunk amid tiger lillies is the face
    Of an Asian Aphrodite close to the seat
    With feet of a Babylonian lion amid
    This ruined garden of yellow daisies, poppies
    And ruddy asphodel from Crete, it seems,
    Though here is our western moon as white and thin
    As an abalone shell hung under the boughs
    Of an oak, that is mocked by the vastness of sky between
    His boughs and the moon in this sky of afternoon. ...
    We walk to the water's edge and here he shows me
    Green scum, or stalks, or sedges, grasses, shrubs,
    That yield to trees beyond the levels, where
    The beech and oak have triumph; for along
    This gradual growth from algae, reeds and grasses,
    That builds the soil against the water's hands,
    All things are fierce for place and garner life
    From weaker things.

                        And then he shows me root stocks,
    And Alpine willow, growths that sneak and crawl
    Beneath the soil. Or as we leave the lake
    And walk the forest I behold lianas,
    Smilax or woodbine climbing round the trunks
    Of giant trees that live and out of earth,
    And out of air make strength and food and ask
    No other help. And in this place I see
    Spiral bryony, python of the vines
    That coils and crushes; and that banyan tree
    Whose spreading branches drop new roots to earth,
    And lives afar from where the parent trunk
    Has sunk its roots, so that the healthful sun
    Is darkened: as a people might be darkened
    By ignorance or want or tyranny,
    Or dogma of a jungle hidden faith.
    Why is it, think I, though I dare not speak,
    That this should be to forests or to men;
    That water fails, and light decreases, heat
    Of God's air lessens, and the soil goes spent,
    Till plants change leaves and stalks and seeds as well,
    Or migrate from the olden places, go
    In search of life, or if they cannot move
    Die in the ruthless marches.

                                 That is life, he said.
    For even these, the giants scatter life
    Into the maws of death. That towering tree
    That for these hundred years has leafed itself,
    And through its leaves out of the magic air
    Drawn nutriment for annual girths, took root
    Out of an acorn which good chance preserved,
    While all its brother acorns cast to earth,
    To make trees, by a parent tree now gone,
    Were crushed, devoured, or strangled as they sprouted
    Amid thick jealous growth wherein they fell.
    All acorns but this one were lost.

                                       Then he reads
    My questioning thought and shows me yuccas, cactus
    Whose thick leaves in the rainless places thrive.
    And shows me leaves that must have rain, and roots
    That must have water where the river flows.
    And how the spirit of life, though turned or driven
    This way or that beyond a course begun,
    Cannot be stayed or quenched, but moves, conforms
    To soil and sun, makes roots, or thickens leaves,
    Or thins or re-adjusts them on the stem
    To fashion forth itself, produce its kind.
    Nor dies not, rests not, nor surrenders not,
    Is only changed or buried, re-appears
    As other forms of life.

                            We had walked through
    A forest of sequoias, beeches, pines,
    And ancient oaks where I could see the trace
    Of willows, alders, ruined or devoured
    By the great Titans.

                         At last
    We reached my hill and sat and overlooked
    The garden at our feet, even to the place
    Of tiger lilies and of asphodel,
    By now beneath the self-same moon, grown denser:
    As where the wounded surface of the shell
    Thickens its shimmering stuff in spiral coigns
    Of the shell, so was the moon above the seat
    Beside the Eros and the Aphrodite
    Sunk amid yellow daisies and deep grass.
    And here we sat and looked. And here my vision
    Was over all we saw, but not a part
    Of what we saw, for all we saw stood forth
    As foreign to myself as something touched
    To learn the thing it is.

                              I might have asked
    Who owns this garden, for the thought arose
    With my surprise, who owns this garden, who
    Planted this garden, why and to what end,
    And why this fight for place, for soil and sun
    Water and air, and why this enmity
    Between the things here planted, and between
    Flying or crawling life and plants, and whence
    The power that falls in one place but arises
    Some other place; and why the unceasing growth
    Of all these forms that only come to seed,
    Then disappear to enrich the insatiate soil
    Where the new seed falls? But silence kept me there
    For wonder of the beauty which I saw,
    Even while the faculty of external vision
    Kept clear the garden separate from me,
    Envisioned, seen as grasses, sedges, alders,
    As forestry, as fields of wheat and corn,
    As the vast theatre of unceasing life,
    Moving to life and blind to all but life;
    As places used, tried out, as if the gardener,
    For his delight or use, or for an end
    Of good or beauty made experiments
    With seed or soils or crossings of the seed.
    Even as peoples, epochs, did the garden
    Lie to my vision, or as races crowding,
    Absorbing, dispossessing, killing races,
    Not only for a place to grow, but under
    A stimulus of doctrine: as Mahomet,
    Or Jesus, like a vital change of air,
    Or artifice of culture, made the garden,
    Which mortals call the world, grow in a way,
    And overgrow the world as neither dreamed.
    Who is the Gardener then? Or is there one
    Beside the life within the plant, within
    The python climbers, wandering sedges, root stalks,
    Thorn bushes, night-shade, deadly saprophytes,
    Goths, Vandals, Tartars, striving for more life,
    And praying to the urge within as God,
    The Gardener who lays out the garden, sprays
    For insects which devour, keeps rich the soil
    For those who pray and know the Gardener
    As One who is without and over-sees? ...

    But while in contemplation of the garden,
    Whether from failing day or from departure
    Of my own vision in the things it saw,
    Bereft of penetrating thought I sank,
    Became a part of what I saw and lost
    The great solution.

                        As we sat in silence,
    And coming night, what seemed the sinking moon,
    Amid the yellow sedges by the lake
    Began to twinkle, as a fire were blown--
    And it was fire, the garden was afire,
    As it were all the world had flamed with war.
    And a wind came out of the bright heaven
    And blew the flames, first through the ruined garden,
    Then through the wood, the fields of wheat, at last
    Nothing was left but waste and wreaths of smoke
    Twisting toward the stars. And there he sat
    Nor uttered aught, save when I sighed he said
    "If it be comforting I promise you
    Another spring shall come."

                                "And after that?"
    "Another spring--that's all I know myself,
    There shall be springs and springs!"








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