<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> SECOND APRIL </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Edna St. Vincent Millay </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h4>
TO<br/> <br/> MY BELOVED FRIEND<br/> CAROLINE B. DOW
</h4>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> SECOND APRIL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> SPRING </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> CITY TREES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE BLUE-FLAG IN THE BOG </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> JOURNEY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> EEL-GRASS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> ELEGY BEFORE DEATH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE BEAN-STALK </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> WEEDS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> PASSER MORTUUS EST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> PASTORAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> ASSAULT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> TRAVEL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> LOW-TIDE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> SONG OF A SECOND APRIL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> ROSEMARY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> THE POET AND HIS BOOK </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> ALMS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> INLAND </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> TO A POET THAT DIED YOUNG </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> WRAITH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> EBB </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> ELAINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> BURIAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> MARIPOSA </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> THE LITTLE HILL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> DOUBT NO MORE THAT OBERON </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> LAMENT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> EXILED </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> THE DEATH OF AUTUMN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> ODE TO SILENCE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> EPITAPH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> PRAYER TO PERSEPHONE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034"> CHORUS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035"> ELEGY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036"> DIRGE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037"> SONNETS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0038"> WILD SWANS </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SECOND APRIL </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SPRING </h2>
<p>To what purpose, April, do you return again?<br/>
Beauty is not enough.<br/>
You can no longer quiet me with the redness<br/>
Of little leaves opening stickily.<br/>
I know what I know.<br/>
The sun is hot on my neck as I observe<br/>
The spikes of the crocus.<br/>
The smell of the earth is good.<br/>
It is apparent that there is no death.<br/>
But what does that signify?<br/>
Not only under ground are the brains of men<br/>
Eaten by maggots,<br/>
Life in itself<br/>
Is nothing,<br/>
An empty cup, a flight of uncarpeted stairs.<br/>
It is not enough that yearly, down this hill,<br/>
April<br/>
Comes like an idiot, babbling and strewing flowers.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CITY TREES </h2>
<p>The trees along this city street,<br/>
Save for the traffic and the trains,<br/>
Would make a sound as thin and sweet<br/>
As trees in country lanes.<br/>
<br/>
And people standing in their shade<br/>
Out of a shower, undoubtedly<br/>
Would hear such music as is made<br/>
Upon a country tree.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, little leaves that are so dumb<br/>
Against the shrieking city air,<br/>
I watch you when the wind has come,—<br/>
I know what sound is there.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE BLUE-FLAG IN THE BOG </h2>
<p>God had called us, and we came;<br/>
Our loved Earth to ashes left;<br/>
Heaven was a neighbor's house,<br/>
Open to us, bereft.<br/>
<br/>
Gay the lights of Heaven showed,<br/>
And 'twas God who walked ahead;<br/>
Yet I wept along the road,<br/>
Wanting my own house instead.<br/>
<br/>
Wept unseen, unheeded cried,<br/>
"All you things my eyes have kissed,<br/>
Fare you well! We meet no more,<br/>
Lovely, lovely tattered mist!<br/>
<br/>
Weary wings that rise and fall<br/>
All day long above the fire!"—<br/>
Red with heat was every wall,<br/>
Rough with heat was every wire—<br/>
<br/>
"Fare you well, you little winds<br/>
That the flying embers chase!<br/>
Fare you well, you shuddering day,<br/>
With your hands before your face!<br/>
<br/>
And, ah, blackened by strange blight,<br/>
Or to a false sun unfurled,<br/>
Now forevermore goodbye,<br/>
All the gardens in the world!<br/>
<br/>
On the windless hills of Heaven,<br/>
That I have no wish to see,<br/>
White, eternal lilies stand,<br/>
By a lake of ebony.<br/>
<br/>
But the Earth forevermore<br/>
Is a place where nothing grows,—<br/>
Dawn will come, and no bud break;<br/>
Evening, and no blossom close.<br/>
<br/>
Spring will come, and wander slow<br/>
Over an indifferent land,<br/>
Stand beside an empty creek,<br/>
Hold a dead seed in her hand."<br/>
<br/>
God had called us, and we came,<br/>
But the blessed road I trod<br/>
Was a bitter road to me,<br/>
And at heart I questioned God.<br/>
<br/>
"Though in Heaven," I said, "be all<br/>
That the heart would most desire,<br/>
Held Earth naught save souls of sinners<br/>
Worth the saving from a fire?<br/>
<br/>
Withered grass,—the wasted growing!<br/>
Aimless ache of laden boughs!"<br/>
Little things God had forgotten<br/>
Called me, from my burning house.<br/>
<br/>
"Though in Heaven," I said, "be all<br/>
That the eye could ask to see,<br/>
All the things I ever knew<br/>
Are this blaze in back of me."<br/>
<br/>
"Though in Heaven," I said, "be all<br/>
That the ear could think to lack,<br/>
All the things I ever knew<br/>
Are this roaring at my back."<br/>
<br/>
It was God who walked ahead,<br/>
Like a shepherd to the fold;<br/>
In his footsteps fared the weak,<br/>
And the weary and the old,<br/>
<br/>
Glad enough of gladness over,<br/>
Ready for the peace to be,—<br/>
But a thing God had forgotten<br/>
Was the growing bones of me.<br/>
<br/>
And I drew a bit apart,<br/>
And I lagged a bit behind,<br/>
And I thought on Peace Eternal,<br/>
Lest He look into my mind:<br/>
<br/>
And I gazed upon the sky,<br/>
And I thought of Heavenly Rest,—<br/>
And I slipped away like water<br/>
Through the fingers of the blest!<br/>
<br/>
All their eyes were fixed on Glory,<br/>
Not a glance brushed over me;<br/>
"Alleluia! Alleluia!"<br/>
Up the road,—and I was free.<br/>
<br/>
And my heart rose like a freshet,<br/>
And it swept me on before,<br/>
Giddy as a whirling stick,<br/>
Till I felt the earth once more.<br/>
<br/>
All the earth was charred and black,<br/>
Fire had swept from pole to pole;<br/>
And the bottom of the sea<br/>
Was as brittle as a bowl;<br/>
<br/>
And the timbered mountain-top<br/>
Was as naked as a skull,—<br/>
Nothing left, nothing left,<br/>
Of the Earth so beautiful!<br/>
<br/>
"Earth," I said, "how can I leave you?"<br/>
"You are all I have," I said;<br/>
"What is left to take my mind up,<br/>
Living always, and you dead?"<br/>
<br/>
"Speak!" I said, "Oh, tell me something!<br/>
Make a sign that I can see!<br/>
For a keepsake! To keep always!<br/>
Quick!—before God misses me!"<br/>
<br/>
And I listened for a voice;—<br/>
But my heart was all I heard;<br/>
Not a screech-owl, not a loon,<br/>
Not a tree-toad said a word.<br/>
<br/>
And I waited for a sign;—<br/>
Coals and cinders, nothing more;<br/>
And a little cloud of smoke<br/>
Floating on a valley floor.<br/>
<br/>
And I peered into the smoke<br/>
Till it rotted, like a fog:—<br/>
There, encompassed round by fire,<br/>
Stood a blue-flag in a bog!<br/>
<br/>
Little flames came wading out,<br/>
Straining, straining towards its stem,<br/>
But it was so blue and tall<br/>
That it scorned to think of them!<br/>
<br/>
Red and thirsty were their tongues,<br/>
As the tongues of wolves must be,<br/>
But it was so blue and tall—<br/>
Oh, I laughed, I cried, to see!<br/>
<br/>
All my heart became a tear,<br/>
All my soul became a tower,<br/>
Never loved I anything<br/>
As I loved that tall blue flower!<br/>
<br/>
It was all the little boats<br/>
That had ever sailed the sea,<br/>
It was all the little books<br/>
That had gone to school with me;<br/>
<br/>
On its roots like iron claws<br/>
Rearing up so blue and tall,—<br/>
It was all the gallant Earth<br/>
With its back against a wall!<br/>
<br/>
In a breath, ere I had breathed,—<br/>
Oh, I laughed, I cried, to see!—<br/>
I was kneeling at its side,<br/>
And it leaned its head on me!<br/>
<br/>
Crumbling stones and sliding sand<br/>
Is the road to Heaven now;<br/>
Icy at my straining knees<br/>
Drags the awful under-tow;<br/>
<br/>
Soon but stepping-stones of dust<br/>
Will the road to Heaven be,—<br/>
Father, Son and Holy Ghost,<br/>
Reach a hand and rescue me!<br/>
<br/>
"There—there, my blue-flag flower;<br/>
Hush—hush—go to sleep;<br/>
That is only God you hear,<br/>
Counting up His folded sheep!<br/>
<br/>
Lullabye—lullabye—<br/>
That is only God that calls,<br/>
Missing me, seeking me,<br/>
Ere the road to nothing falls!<br/>
<br/>
He will set His mighty feet<br/>
Firmly on the sliding sand;<br/>
Like a little frightened bird<br/>
I will creep into His hand;<br/>
<br/>
I will tell Him all my grief,<br/>
I will tell Him all my sin;<br/>
He will give me half His robe<br/>
For a cloak to wrap you in.<br/>
<br/>
Lullabye—lullabye—"<br/>
Rocks the burnt-out planet free!—<br/>
Father, Son and Holy Ghost,<br/>
Reach a hand and rescue me!<br/>
<br/>
Ah, the voice of love at last!<br/>
Lo, at last the face of light!<br/>
And the whole of His white robe<br/>
For a cloak against the night!<br/>
<br/>
And upon my heart asleep<br/>
All the things I ever knew!—<br/>
"Holds Heaven not some cranny, Lord,<br/>
For a flower so tall and blue?"<br/>
<br/>
All's well and all's well!<br/>
Gay the lights of Heaven show!<br/>
In some moist and Heavenly place<br/>
We will set it out to grow.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> JOURNEY </h2>
<p>Ah, could I lay me down in this long grass<br/>
And close my eyes, and let the quiet wind<br/>
Blow over me—I am so tired, so tired<br/>
Of passing pleasant places! All my life,<br/>
Following Care along the dusty road,<br/>
Have I looked back at loveliness and sighed;<br/>
Yet at my hand an unrelenting hand<br/>
Tugged ever, and I passed. All my life long<br/>
Over my shoulder have I looked at peace;<br/>
And now I fain would lie in this long grass<br/>
And close my eyes.<br/>
Yet onward!<br/>
Cat birds call<br/>
Through the long afternoon, and creeks at dusk<br/>
Are guttural. Whip-poor-wills wake and cry,<br/>
Drawing the twilight close about their throats.<br/>
Only my heart makes answer. Eager vines<br/>
Go up the rocks and wait; flushed apple-trees<br/>
Pause in their dance and break the ring for me;<br/>
Dim, shady wood-roads, redolent of fern<br/>
And bayberry, that through sweet bevies thread<br/>
Of round-faced roses, pink and petulant,<br/>
Look back and beckon ere they disappear.<br/>
Only my heart, only my heart responds.<br/>
Yet, ah, my path is sweet on either side<br/>
All through the dragging day,—sharp underfoot<br/>
And hot, and like dead mist the dry dust hangs—<br/>
But far, oh, far as passionate eye can reach,<br/>
And long, ah, long as rapturous eye can cling,<br/>
The world is mine: blue hill, still silver lake,<br/>
Broad field, bright flower, and the long white road<br/>
A gateless garden, and an open path:<br/>
My feet to follow, and my heart to hold.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> EEL-GRASS </h2>
<p>No matter what I say,<br/>
All that I really love<br/>
Is the rain that flattens on the bay,<br/>
And the eel-grass in the cove;<br/>
The jingle-shells that lie and bleach<br/>
At the tide-line, and the trace<br/>
Of higher tides along the beach:<br/>
Nothing in this place.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ELEGY BEFORE DEATH </h2>
<p>There will be rose and rhododendron<br/>
When you are dead and under ground;<br/>
Still will be heard from white syringas<br/>
Heavy with bees, a sunny sound;<br/>
<br/>
Still will the tamaracks be raining<br/>
After the rain has ceased, and still<br/>
Will there be robins in the stubble,<br/>
Brown sheep upon the warm green hill.<br/>
<br/>
Spring will not ail nor autumn falter;<br/>
Nothing will know that you are gone,<br/>
Saving alone some sullen plough-land<br/>
None but yourself sets foot upon;<br/>
<br/>
Saving the may-weed and the pig-weed<br/>
Nothing will know that you are dead,—<br/>
These, and perhaps a useless wagon<br/>
Standing beside some tumbled shed.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, there will pass with your great passing<br/>
Little of beauty not your own,—<br/>
Only the light from common water,<br/>
Only the grace from simple stone!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE BEAN-STALK </h2>
<p>Ho, Giant! This is I!<br/>
I have built me a bean-stalk into your sky!<br/>
La,—but it's lovely, up so high!<br/>
<br/>
This is how I came,—I put<br/>
Here my knee, there my foot,<br/>
Up and up, from shoot to shoot—<br/>
And the blessed bean-stalk thinning<br/>
Like the mischief all the time,<br/>
Till it took me rocking, spinning,<br/>
In a dizzy, sunny circle,<br/>
Making angles with the root,<br/>
Far and out above the cackle<br/>
Of the city I was born in,<br/>
Till the little dirty city<br/>
In the light so sheer and sunny<br/>
Shone as dazzling bright and pretty<br/>
As the money that you find<br/>
In a dream of finding money—<br/>
What a wind! What a morning!—<br/>
<br/>
Till the tiny, shiny city,<br/>
When I shot a glance below,<br/>
Shaken with a giddy laughter,<br/>
Sick and blissfully afraid,<br/>
Was a dew-drop on a blade,<br/>
And a pair of moments after<br/>
Was the whirling guess I made,—<br/>
And the wind was like a whip<br/>
<br/>
Cracking past my icy ears,<br/>
And my hair stood out behind,<br/>
And my eyes were full of tears,<br/>
Wide-open and cold,<br/>
More tears than they could hold,<br/>
The wind was blowing so,<br/>
And my teeth were in a row,<br/>
Dry and grinning,<br/>
And I felt my foot slip,<br/>
And I scratched the wind and whined,<br/>
And I clutched the stalk and jabbered,<br/>
With my eyes shut blind,—<br/>
What a wind! What a wind!<br/>
<br/>
Your broad sky, Giant,<br/>
Is the shelf of a cupboard;<br/>
I make bean-stalks, I'm<br/>
A builder, like yourself,<br/>
But bean-stalks is my trade,<br/>
I couldn't make a shelf,<br/>
Don't know how they're made,<br/>
Now, a bean-stalk is more pliant—<br/>
La, what a climb!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> WEEDS </h2>
<p>White with daisies and red with sorrel<br/>
And empty, empty under the sky!—<br/>
Life is a quest and love a quarrel—<br/>
Here is a place for me to lie.<br/>
<br/>
Daisies spring from damned seeds,<br/>
And this red fire that here I see<br/>
Is a worthless crop of crimson weeds,<br/>
Cursed by farmers thriftily.<br/>
<br/>
But here, unhated for an hour,<br/>
The sorrel runs in ragged flame,<br/>
The daisy stands, a bastard flower,<br/>
Like flowers that bear an honest name.<br/>
<br/>
And here a while, where no wind brings<br/>
The baying of a pack athirst,<br/>
May sleep the sleep of blessed things,<br/>
The blood too bright, the brow accurst.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PASSER MORTUUS EST </h2>
<p>Death devours all lovely things;<br/>
Lesbia with her sparrow<br/>
Shares the darkness,—presently<br/>
Every bed is narrow.<br/>
<br/>
Unremembered as old rain<br/>
Dries the sheer libation,<br/>
And the little petulant hand<br/>
Is an annotation.<br/>
<br/>
After all, my erstwhile dear,<br/>
My no longer cherished,<br/>
Need we say it was not love,<br/>
Now that love is perished?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PASTORAL </h2>
<p>If it were only still!—<br/>
With far away the shrill<br/>
Crying of a cock;<br/>
Or the shaken bell<br/>
From a cow's throat<br/>
Moving through the bushes;<br/>
Or the soft shock<br/>
Of wizened apples falling<br/>
From an old tree<br/>
In a forgotten orchard<br/>
Upon the hilly rock!<br/>
<br/>
Oh, grey hill,<br/>
Where the grazing herd<br/>
Licks the purple blossom,<br/>
Crops the spiky weed!<br/>
Oh, stony pasture,<br/>
Where the tall mullein<br/>
Stands up so sturdy<br/>
On its little seed!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ASSAULT </h2>
<p>I<br/>
<br/>
I had forgotten how the frogs must sound<br/>
After a year of silence, else I think<br/>
I should not so have ventured forth alone<br/>
At dusk upon this unfrequented road.<br/></p>
<p>II<br/>
<br/>
I am waylaid by Beauty. Who will walk<br/>
Between me and the crying of the frogs?<br/>
Oh, savage Beauty, suffer me to pass,<br/>
That am a timid woman, on her way<br/>
From one house to another!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> TRAVEL </h2>
<p>The railroad track is miles away,<br/>
And the day is loud with voices speaking,<br/>
Yet there isn't a train goes by all day<br/>
But I hear its whistle shrieking.<br/>
<br/>
All night there isn't a train goes by,<br/>
Though the night is still for sleep and dreaming<br/>
But I see its cinders red on the sky,<br/>
And hear its engine steaming.<br/>
<br/>
My heart is warm with the friends I make,<br/>
And better friends I'll not be knowing,<br/>
Yet there isn't a train I wouldn't take,<br/>
No matter where it's going.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LOW-TIDE </h2>
<p>These wet rocks where the tide has been,<br/>
Barnacled white and weeded brown<br/>
And slimed beneath to a beautiful green,<br/>
These wet rocks where the tide went down<br/>
Will show again when the tide is high<br/>
Faint and perilous, far from shore,<br/>
No place to dream, but a place to die,—<br/>
The bottom of the sea once more.<br/>
There was a child that wandered through<br/>
A giant's empty house all day,—<br/>
House full of wonderful things and new,<br/>
But no fit place for a child to play.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SONG OF A SECOND APRIL </h2>
<p>April this year, not otherwise<br/>
Than April of a year ago,<br/>
Is full of whispers, full of sighs,<br/>
Of dazzling mud and dingy snow;<br/>
Hepaticas that pleased you so<br/>
Are here again, and butterflies.<br/>
<br/>
There rings a hammering all day,<br/>
And shingles lie about the doors;<br/>
In orchards near and far away<br/>
The grey wood-pecker taps and bores;<br/>
The men are merry at their chores,<br/>
And children earnest at their play.<br/>
<br/>
The larger streams run still and deep,<br/>
Noisy and swift the small brooks run<br/>
Among the mullein stalks the sheep<br/>
Go up the hillside in the sun,<br/>
Pensively,—only you are gone,<br/>
You that alone I cared to keep.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ROSEMARY </h2>
<p>For the sake of some things<br/>
That be now no more<br/>
I will strew rushes<br/>
On my chamber-floor,<br/>
I will plant bergamot<br/>
At my kitchen-door.<br/>
<br/>
For the sake of dim things<br/>
That were once so plain<br/>
I will set a barrel<br/>
Out to catch the rain,<br/>
I will hang an iron pot<br/>
On an iron crane.<br/>
<br/>
Many things be dead and gone<br/>
That were brave and gay;<br/>
For the sake of these things<br/>
I will learn to say,<br/>
"An it please you, gentle sirs,"<br/>
"Alack!" and "Well-a-day!"<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE POET AND HIS BOOK </h2>
<p>Down, you mongrel, Death!<br/>
Back into your kennel!<br/>
I have stolen breath<br/>
In a stalk of fennel!<br/>
You shall scratch and you shall whine<br/>
Many a night, and you shall worry<br/>
Many a bone, before you bury<br/>
One sweet bone of mine!<br/>
<br/>
When shall I be dead?<br/>
When my flesh is withered,<br/>
And above my head<br/>
Yellow pollen gathered<br/>
All the empty afternoon?<br/>
When sweet lovers pause and wonder<br/>
Who am I that lie thereunder,<br/>
Hidden from the moon?<br/>
<br/>
This my personal death?—<br/>
That lungs be failing<br/>
To inhale the breath<br/>
Others are exhaling?<br/>
This my subtle spirit's end?—<br/>
Ah, when the thawed winter splashes<br/>
Over these chance dust and ashes,<br/>
Weep not me, my friend!<br/>
<br/>
Me, by no means dead<br/>
In that hour, but surely<br/>
When this book, unread,<br/>
Rots to earth obscurely,<br/>
And no more to any breast,<br/>
Close against the clamorous swelling<br/>
Of the thing there is no telling,<br/>
Are these pages pressed!<br/>
<br/>
When this book is mould,<br/>
And a book of many<br/>
Waiting to be sold<br/>
For a casual penny,<br/>
In a little open case,<br/>
In a street unclean and cluttered,<br/>
Where a heavy mud is spattered<br/>
From the passing drays,<br/>
<br/>
Stranger, pause and look;<br/>
From the dust of ages<br/>
Lift this little book,<br/>
Turn the tattered pages,<br/>
Read me, do not let me die!<br/>
Search the fading letters, finding<br/>
Steadfast in the broken binding<br/>
All that once was I!<br/>
<br/>
When these veins are weeds,<br/>
When these hollowed sockets<br/>
Watch the rooty seeds<br/>
Bursting down like rockets,<br/>
And surmise the spring again,<br/>
Or, remote in that black cupboard,<br/>
Watch the pink worms writhing upward<br/>
At the smell of rain,<br/>
<br/>
Boys and girls that lie<br/>
Whispering in the hedges,<br/>
Do not let me die,<br/>
Mix me with your pledges;<br/>
Boys and girls that slowly walk<br/>
In the woods, and weep, and quarrel,<br/>
Staring past the pink wild laurel,<br/>
Mix me with your talk,<br/>
<br/>
Do not let me die!<br/>
Farmers at your raking,<br/>
When the sun is high,<br/>
While the hay is making,<br/>
When, along the stubble strewn,<br/>
Withering on their stalks uneaten,<br/>
Strawberries turn dark and sweeten<br/>
In the lapse of noon;<br/>
<br/>
Shepherds on the hills,<br/>
In the pastures, drowsing<br/>
To the tinkling bells<br/>
Of the brown sheep browsing;<br/>
Sailors crying through the storm;<br/>
Scholars at your study; hunters<br/>
Lost amid the whirling winter's<br/>
Whiteness uniform;<br/>
<br/>
Men that long for sleep;<br/>
Men that wake and revel;—<br/>
If an old song leap<br/>
To your senses' level<br/>
At such moments, may it be<br/>
Sometimes, though a moment only,<br/>
Some forgotten, quaint and homely<br/>
Vehicle of me!<br/>
<br/>
Women at your toil,<br/>
Women at your leisure<br/>
Till the kettle boil,<br/>
Snatch of me your pleasure,<br/>
Where the broom-straw marks the leaf;<br/>
Women quiet with your weeping<br/>
Lest you wake a workman sleeping,<br/>
Mix me with your grief!<br/>
<br/>
Boys and girls that steal<br/>
From the shocking laughter<br/>
Of the old, to kneel<br/>
By a dripping rafter<br/>
Under the discolored eaves,<br/>
Out of trunks with hingeless covers<br/>
Lifting tales of saints and lovers,<br/>
Travelers, goblins, thieves,<br/>
<br/>
Suns that shine by night,<br/>
Mountains made from valleys,—<br/>
Bear me to the light,<br/>
Flat upon your bellies<br/>
By the webby window lie,<br/>
Where the little flies are crawling,—<br/>
Read me, margin me with scrawling,<br/>
Do not let me die!<br/>
<br/>
Sexton, ply your trade!<br/>
In a shower of gravel<br/>
Stamp upon your spade!<br/>
Many a rose shall ravel,<br/>
Many a metal wreath shall rust<br/>
In the rain, and I go singing<br/>
Through the lots where you are flinging<br/>
Yellow clay on dust!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ALMS </h2>
<p>My heart is what it was before,<br/>
A house where people come and go;<br/>
But it is winter with your love,<br/>
The sashes are beset with snow.<br/>
<br/>
I light the lamp and lay the cloth,<br/>
I blow the coals to blaze again;<br/>
But it is winter with your love,<br/>
The frost is thick upon the pane.<br/>
<br/>
I know a winter when it comes:<br/>
The leaves are listless on the boughs;<br/>
I watched your love a little while,<br/>
And brought my plants into the house.<br/>
<br/>
I water them and turn them south,<br/>
I snap the dead brown from the stem;<br/>
But it is winter with your love,—<br/>
I only tend and water them.<br/>
<br/>
There was a time I stood and watched<br/>
The small, ill-natured sparrows' fray;<br/>
I loved the beggar that I fed,<br/>
I cared for what he had to say,<br/>
<br/>
I stood and watched him out of sight;<br/>
Today I reach around the door<br/>
And set a bowl upon the step;<br/>
My heart is what it was before,<br/>
<br/>
But it is winter with your love;<br/>
I scatter crumbs upon the sill,<br/>
And close the window,—and the birds<br/>
May take or leave them, as they will.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<h2> INLAND </h2>
<p>People that build their houses inland,<br/>
People that buy a plot of ground<br/>
Shaped like a house, and build a house there,<br/>
Far from the sea-board, far from the sound<br/>
<br/>
Of water sucking the hollow ledges,<br/>
Tons of water striking the shore,—<br/>
What do they long for, as I long for<br/>
One salt smell of the sea once more?<br/>
<br/>
People the waves have not awakened,<br/>
Spanking the boats at the harbor's head,<br/>
What do they long for, as I long for,—<br/>
Starting up in my inland bed,<br/>
<br/>
Beating the narrow walls, and finding<br/>
Neither a window nor a door,<br/>
Screaming to God for death by drowning,—<br/>
One salt taste of the sea once more?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<h2> TO A POET THAT DIED YOUNG </h2>
<p>Minstrel, what have you to do<br/>
With this man that, after you,<br/>
Sharing not your happy fate,<br/>
Sat as England's Laureate?<br/>
Vainly, in these iron days,<br/>
Strives the poet in your praise,<br/>
Minstrel, by whose singing side<br/>
Beauty walked, until you died.<br/>
<br/>
Still, though none should hark again,<br/>
Drones the blue-fly in the pane,<br/>
Thickly crusts the blackest moss,<br/>
Blows the rose its musk across,<br/>
Floats the boat that is forgot<br/>
None the less to Camelot.<br/>
<br/>
Many a bard's untimely death<br/>
Lends unto his verses breath;<br/>
Here's a song was never sung:<br/>
Growing old is dying young.<br/>
Minstrel, what is this to you:<br/>
That a man you never knew,<br/>
When your grave was far and green,<br/>
Sat and gossipped with a queen?<br/>
<br/>
Thalia knows how rare a thing<br/>
Is it, to grow old and sing;<br/>
When a brown and tepid tide<br/>
Closes in on every side.<br/>
Who shall say if Shelley's gold<br/>
Had withstood it to grow old?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<h2> WRAITH </h2>
<p>"Thin Rain, whom are you haunting,<br/>
That you haunt my door?"<br/>
—Surely it is not I she's wanting;<br/>
Someone living here before—<br/>
"Nobody's in the house but me:<br/>
You may come in if you like and see."<br/>
<br/>
Thin as thread, with exquisite fingers,—<br/>
Have you seen her, any of you?—<br/>
Grey shawl, and leaning on the wind,<br/>
And the garden showing through?<br/>
<br/>
Glimmering eyes,—and silent, mostly,<br/>
Sort of a whisper, sort of a purr,<br/>
Asking something, asking it over,<br/>
If you get a sound from her.—<br/>
<br/>
Ever see her, any of you?—<br/>
Strangest thing I've ever known,—<br/>
Every night since I moved in,<br/>
And I came to be alone.<br/>
<br/>
"Thin Rain, hush with your knocking!<br/>
You may not come in!<br/>
This is I that you hear rocking;<br/>
Nobody's with me, nor has been!"<br/>
<br/>
Curious, how she tried the window,—<br/>
Odd, the way she tries the door,—<br/>
Wonder just what sort of people<br/>
Could have had this house before . . .<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<h2> EBB </h2>
<p>I know what my heart is like<br/>
Since your love died:<br/>
It is like a hollow ledge<br/>
Holding a little pool<br/>
Left there by the tide,<br/>
A little tepid pool,<br/>
Drying inward from the edge.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ELAINE </h2>
<p>OH, come again to Astolat!<br/>
I will not ask you to be kind.<br/>
And you may go when you will go,<br/>
And I will stay behind.<br/>
<br/>
I will not say how dear you are,<br/>
Or ask you if you hold me dear,<br/>
Or trouble you with things for you<br/>
The way I did last year.<br/>
<br/>
So still the orchard, Lancelot,<br/>
So very still the lake shall be,<br/>
You could not guess—though you should guess—<br/>
What is become of me.<br/>
<br/>
So wide shall be the garden-walk,<br/>
The garden-seat so very wide,<br/>
You needs must think—if you should think—<br/>
The lily maid had died.<br/>
<br/>
Save that, a little way away,<br/>
I'd watch you for a little while,<br/>
To see you speak, the way you speak,<br/>
And smile,—if you should smile.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BURIAL </h2>
<p>Mine is a body that should die at sea!<br/>
And have for a grave, instead of a grave<br/>
Six feet deep and the length of me,<br/>
All the water that is under the wave!<br/>
<br/>
And terrible fishes to seize my flesh,<br/>
Such as a living man might fear,<br/>
And eat me while I am firm and fresh,—<br/>
Not wait till I've been dead for a year!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<h2> MARIPOSA </h2>
<p>Butterflies are white and blue<br/>
In this field we wander through.<br/>
Suffer me to take your hand.<br/>
Death comes in a day or two.<br/>
<br/>
All the things we ever knew<br/>
Will be ashes in that hour,<br/>
Mark the transient butterfly,<br/>
How he hangs upon the flower.<br/>
<br/>
Suffer me to take your hand.<br/>
Suffer me to cherish you<br/>
Till the dawn is in the sky.<br/>
Whether I be false or true,<br/>
Death comes in a day or two.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE LITTLE HILL </h2>
<p>OH, here the air is sweet and still,<br/>
And soft's the grass to lie on;<br/>
And far away's the little hill<br/>
They took for Christ to die on.<br/>
<br/>
And there's a hill across the brook,<br/>
And down the brook's another;<br/>
But, oh, the little hill they took,—<br/>
I think I am its mother!<br/>
<br/>
The moon that saw Gethsemane,<br/>
I watch it rise and set:<br/>
It has so many things to see,<br/>
They help it to forget.<br/>
<br/>
But little hills that sit at home<br/>
So many hundred years,<br/>
Remember Greece, remember Rome,<br/>
Remember Mary's tears.<br/>
<br/>
And far away in Palestine,<br/>
Sadder than any other,<br/>
Grieves still the hill that I call mine,—<br/>
I think I am its mother!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<h2> DOUBT NO MORE THAT OBERON </h2>
<p>Doubt no more that Oberon—<br/>
Never doubt that Pan<br/>
Lived, and played a reed, and ran<br/>
After nymphs in a dark forest,<br/>
In the merry, credulous days,—<br/>
Lived, and led a fairy band<br/>
Over the indulgent land!<br/>
Ah, for in this dourest, sorest<br/>
Age man's eye has looked upon,<br/>
Death to fauns and death to fays,<br/>
Still the dog-wood dares to raise—<br/>
Healthy tree, with trunk and root—<br/>
Ivory bowls that bear no fruit,<br/>
And the starlings and the jays—<br/>
Birds that cannot even sing—<br/>
Dare to come again in spring!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LAMENT </h2>
<p>Listen, children:<br/>
Your father is dead.<br/>
From his old coats<br/>
I'll make you little jackets;<br/>
I'll make you little trousers<br/>
From his old pants.<br/>
There'll be in his pockets<br/>
Things he used to put there,<br/>
Keys and pennies<br/>
Covered with tobacco;<br/>
Dan shall have the pennies<br/>
To save in his bank;<br/>
Anne shall have the keys<br/>
To make a pretty noise with.<br/>
Life must go on,<br/>
And the dead be forgotten;<br/>
Life must go on,<br/>
Though good men die;<br/>
Anne, eat your breakfast;<br/>
Dan, take your medicine;<br/>
Life must go on;<br/>
I forget just why.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> EXILED </h2>
<p>Searching my heart for its true sorrow,<br/>
This is the thing I find to be:<br/>
That I am weary of words and people,<br/>
Sick of the city, wanting the sea;<br/>
<br/>
Wanting the sticky, salty sweetness<br/>
Of the strong wind and shattered spray;<br/>
Wanting the loud sound and the soft sound<br/>
Of the big surf that breaks all day.<br/>
<br/>
Always before about my dooryard,<br/>
Marking the reach of the winter sea,<br/>
Rooted in sand and dragging drift-wood,<br/>
Straggled the purple wild sweet-pea;<br/>
<br/>
Always I climbed the wave at morning,<br/>
Shook the sand from my shoes at night,<br/>
That now am caught beneath great buildings,<br/>
Stricken with noise, confused with light.<br/>
<br/>
If I could hear the green piles groaning<br/>
Under the windy wooden piers,<br/>
See once again the bobbing barrels,<br/>
And the black sticks that fence the weirs,<br/>
<br/>
If I could see the weedy mussels<br/>
Crusting the wrecked and rotting hulls,<br/>
Hear once again the hungry crying<br/>
Overhead, of the wheeling gulls,<br/>
<br/>
Feel once again the shanty straining<br/>
Under the turning of the tide,<br/>
Fear once again the rising freshet,<br/>
Dread the bell in the fog outside,—<br/>
<br/>
I should be happy,—that was happy<br/>
All day long on the coast of Maine!<br/>
I have a need to hold and handle<br/>
Shells and anchors and ships again!<br/>
<br/>
I should be happy, that am happy<br/>
Never at all since I came here.<br/>
I am too long away from water.<br/>
I have a need of water near.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE DEATH OF AUTUMN </h2>
<p>When reeds are dead and a straw to thatch the marshes,<br/>
And feathered pampas-grass rides into the wind<br/>
Like aged warriors westward, tragic, thinned<br/>
Of half their tribe, and over the flattened rushes,<br/>
Stripped of its secret, open, stark and bleak,<br/>
Blackens afar the half-forgotten creek,—<br/>
Then leans on me the weight of the year, and crushes<br/>
My heart. I know that Beauty must ail and die,<br/>
And will be born again,—but ah, to see<br/>
Beauty stiffened, staring up at the sky!<br/>
Oh, Autumn! Autumn!—What is the Spring to me?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ODE TO SILENCE </h2>
<p>Aye, but she?<br/>
Your other sister and my other soul<br/>
Grave Silence, lovelier<br/>
Than the three loveliest maidens, what of her?<br/>
Clio, not you,<br/>
Not you, Calliope,<br/>
Nor all your wanton line,<br/>
Not Beauty's perfect self shall comfort me<br/>
For Silence once departed,<br/>
For her the cool-tongued, her the tranquil-hearted,<br/>
Whom evermore I follow wistfully,<br/>
Wandering Heaven and Earth and Hell and the four seasons through;<br/>
Thalia, not you,<br/>
Not you, Melpomene,<br/>
Not your incomparable feet, O thin Terpsichore,<br/>
I seek in this great hall,<br/>
But one more pale, more pensive, most beloved of you all.<br/>
I seek her from afar,<br/>
I come from temples where her altars are,<br/>
From groves that bear her name,<br/>
Noisy with stricken victims now and sacrificial flame,<br/>
And cymbals struck on high and strident faces<br/>
Obstreperous in her praise<br/>
They neither love nor know,<br/>
A goddess of gone days,<br/>
Departed long ago,<br/>
Abandoning the invaded shrines and fanes<br/>
Of her old sanctuary,<br/>
A deity obscure and legendary,<br/>
Of whom there now remains,<br/>
For sages to decipher and priests to garble,<br/>
Only and for a little while her letters wedged in marble,<br/>
Which even now, behold, the friendly mumbling rain erases,<br/>
And the inarticulate snow,<br/>
Leaving at last of her least signs and traces<br/>
None whatsoever, nor whither she is vanished from these places.<br/>
"She will love well," I said,<br/>
"If love be of that heart inhabiter,<br/>
The flowers of the dead;<br/>
The red anemone that with no sound<br/>
Moves in the wind, and from another wound<br/>
That sprang, the heavily-sweet blue hyacinth,<br/>
That blossoms underground,<br/>
And sallow poppies, will be dear to her.<br/>
And will not Silence know<br/>
In the black shade of what obsidian steep<br/>
Stiffens the white narcissus numb with sleep?<br/>
(Seed which Demeter's daughter bore from home,<br/>
Uptorn by desperate fingers long ago,<br/>
Reluctant even as she,<br/>
Undone Persephone,<br/>
And even as she set out again to grow<br/>
In twilight, in perdition's lean and inauspicious loam).<br/>
She will love well," I said,<br/>
"The flowers of the dead;<br/>
Where dark Persephone the winter round,<br/>
Uncomforted for home, uncomforted,<br/>
Lacking a sunny southern slope in northern Sicily,<br/>
With sullen pupils focussed on a dream,<br/>
Stares on the stagnant stream<br/>
That moats the unequivocable battlements of Hell,<br/>
There, there will she be found,<br/>
She that is Beauty veiled from men and Music in a swound."<br/>
<br/>
"I long for Silence as they long for breath<br/>
Whose helpless nostrils drink the bitter sea;<br/>
What thing can be<br/>
So stout, what so redoubtable, in Death<br/>
What fury, what considerable rage, if only she,<br/>
Upon whose icy breast,<br/>
Unquestioned, uncaressed,<br/>
One time I lay,<br/>
And whom always I lack,<br/>
Even to this day,<br/>
Being by no means from that frigid bosom weaned away,<br/>
If only she therewith be given me back?"<br/>
I sought her down that dolorous labyrinth,<br/>
Wherein no shaft of sunlight ever fell,<br/>
And in among the bloodless everywhere<br/>
I sought her, but the air,<br/>
Breathed many times and spent,<br/>
Was fretful with a whispering discontent,<br/>
And questioning me, importuning me to tell<br/>
Some slightest tidings of the light of day they know no more,<br/>
Plucking my sleeve, the eager shades were with me where I went.<br/>
I paused at every grievous door,<br/>
And harked a moment, holding up my hand,—and for a space<br/>
A hush was on them, while they watched my face;<br/>
And then they fell a-whispering as before;<br/>
So that I smiled at them and left them, seeing she was not there.<br/>
I sought her, too,<br/>
Among the upper gods, although I knew<br/>
She was not like to be where feasting is,<br/>
Nor near to Heaven's lord,<br/>
Being a thing abhorred<br/>
And shunned of him, although a child of his,<br/>
(Not yours, not yours; to you she owes not breath,<br/>
Mother of Song, being sown of Zeus upon a dream of Death).<br/>
Fearing to pass unvisited some place<br/>
And later learn, too late, how all the while,<br/>
With her still face,<br/>
She had been standing there and seen me pass, without a smile,<br/>
I sought her even to the sagging board whereat<br/>
The stout immortals sat;<br/>
But such a laughter shook the mighty hall<br/>
No one could hear me say:<br/>
Had she been seen upon the Hill that day?<br/>
And no one knew at all<br/>
How long I stood, or when at last I sighed and went away.<br/>
<br/>
There is a garden lying in a lull<br/>
Between the mountains and the mountainous sea,<br/>
I know not where, but which a dream diurnal<br/>
Paints on my lids a moment till the hull<br/>
Be lifted from the kernel<br/>
And Slumber fed to me.<br/>
Your foot-print is not there, Mnemosene,<br/>
Though it would seem a ruined place and after<br/>
Your lichenous heart, being full<br/>
Of broken columns, caryatides<br/>
Thrown to the earth and fallen forward on their jointless knees,<br/>
And urns funereal altered into dust<br/>
Minuter than the ashes of the dead,<br/>
And Psyche's lamp out of the earth up-thrust,<br/>
Dripping itself in marble wax on what was once the bed<br/>
Of Love, and his young body asleep, but now is dust instead.<br/>
<br/>
There twists the bitter-sweet, the white wisteria<br/>
Fastens its fingers in the strangling wall,<br/>
And the wide crannies quicken with bright weeds;<br/>
There dumbly like a worm all day the still white orchid feeds;<br/>
But never an echo of your daughters' laughter<br/>
Is there, nor any sign of you at all<br/>
Swells fungous from the rotten bough, grey mother of Pieria!<br/>
<br/>
Only her shadow once upon a stone<br/>
I saw,—and, lo, the shadow and the garden, too, were gone.<br/>
<br/>
I tell you you have done her body an ill,<br/>
You chatterers, you noisy crew!<br/>
She is not anywhere!<br/>
I sought her in deep Hell;<br/>
And through the world as well;<br/>
I thought of Heaven and I sought her there;<br/>
Above nor under ground<br/>
Is Silence to be found,<br/>
That was the very warp and woof of you,<br/>
Lovely before your songs began and after they were through!<br/>
Oh, say if on this hill<br/>
Somewhere your sister's body lies in death,<br/>
So I may follow there, and make a wreath<br/>
Of my locked hands, that on her quiet breast<br/>
Shall lie till age has withered them!<br/>
<br/>
(Ah, sweetly from the rest<br/>
I see<br/>
Turn and consider me<br/>
Compassionate Euterpe!)<br/>
"There is a gate beyond the gate of Death,<br/>
Beyond the gate of everlasting Life,<br/>
Beyond the gates of Heaven and Hell," she saith,<br/>
"Whereon but to believe is horror!<br/>
Whereon to meditate engendereth<br/>
Even in deathless spirits such as I<br/>
A tumult in the breath,<br/>
A chilling of the inexhaustible blood<br/>
Even in my veins that never will be dry,<br/>
And in the austere, divine monotony<br/>
That is my being, the madness of an unaccustomed mood.<br/>
<br/>
This is her province whom you lack and seek;<br/>
And seek her not elsewhere.<br/>
Hell is a thoroughfare<br/>
For pilgrims,—Herakles,<br/>
And he that loved Euridice too well,<br/>
Have walked therein; and many more than these;<br/>
And witnessed the desire and the despair<br/>
Of souls that passed reluctantly and sicken for the air;<br/>
You, too, have entered Hell,<br/>
And issued thence; but thence whereof I speak<br/>
None has returned;—for thither fury brings<br/>
Only the driven ghosts of them that flee before all things.<br/>
Oblivion is the name of this abode: and she is there."<br/>
<br/>
Oh, radiant Song! Oh, gracious Memory!<br/>
Be long upon this height<br/>
I shall not climb again!<br/>
I know the way you mean,—the little night,<br/>
And the long empty day,—never to see<br/>
Again the angry light,<br/>
Or hear the hungry noises cry my brain!<br/>
Ah, but she,<br/>
Your other sister and my other soul,<br/>
She shall again be mine;<br/>
And I shall drink her from a silver bowl,<br/>
A chilly thin green wine,<br/>
Not bitter to the taste,<br/>
Not sweet,<br/>
Not of your press, oh, restless, clamorous nine,—<br/>
To foam beneath the frantic hoofs of mirth—<br/>
But savoring faintly of the acid earth,<br/>
And trod by pensive feet<br/>
From perfect clusters ripened without haste<br/>
Out of the urgent heat<br/>
In some clear glimmering vaulted twilight under the odorous vine.<br/>
<br/>
Lift up your lyres! Sing on!<br/>
But as for me, I seek your sister whither she is gone.<br/></p>
<p>MEMORIAL TO D. C.<br/>
[VASSAR COLLEGE, 1918]<br/></p>
<p>Oh, loveliest throat of all sweet throats,<br/>
Where now no more the music is,<br/>
With hands that wrote you little notes<br/>
I write you little elegies!<br/></p>
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<h2> EPITAPH </h2>
<p>Heap not on this mound<br/>
Roses that she loved so well;<br/>
Why bewilder her with roses,<br/>
That she cannot see or smell?<br/>
She is happy where she lies<br/>
With the dust upon her eyes.<br/></p>
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<h2> PRAYER TO PERSEPHONE </h2>
<p>Be to her, Persephone,<br/>
All the things I might not be;<br/>
Take her head upon your knee.<br/>
She that was so proud and wild,<br/>
Flippant, arrogant and free,<br/>
She that had no need of me,<br/>
Is a little lonely child<br/>
Lost in Hell,—Persephone,<br/>
Take her head upon your knee;<br/>
Say to her, "My dear, my dear,<br/>
It is not so dreadful here."<br/></p>
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<h2> CHORUS </h2>
<p>Give away her gowns,<br/>
Give away her shoes;<br/>
She has no more use<br/>
For her fragrant gowns;<br/>
Take them all down,<br/>
Blue, green, blue,<br/>
Lilac, pink, blue,<br/>
From their padded hangers;<br/>
She will dance no more<br/>
In her narrow shoes;<br/>
Sweep her narrow shoes<br/>
From the closet floor.<br/></p>
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<h2> ELEGY </h2>
<p>Let them bury your big eyes<br/>
In the secret earth securely,<br/>
Your thin fingers, and your fair,<br/>
Soft, indefinite-colored hair,—<br/>
All of these in some way, surely,<br/>
From the secret earth shall rise;<br/>
Not for these I sit and stare,<br/>
Broken and bereft completely;<br/>
Your young flesh that sat so neatly<br/>
On your little bones will sweetly<br/>
Blossom in the air.<br/>
<br/>
But your voice,—never the rushing<br/>
Of a river underground,<br/>
Not the rising of the wind<br/>
In the trees before the rain,<br/>
Not the woodcock's watery call,<br/>
Not the note the white-throat utters,<br/>
Not the feet of children pushing<br/>
Yellow leaves along the gutters<br/>
In the blue and bitter fall,<br/>
Shall content my musing mind<br/>
For the beauty of that sound<br/>
That in no new way at all<br/>
Ever will be heard again.<br/>
<br/>
Sweetly through the sappy stalk<br/>
Of the vigorous weed,<br/>
Holding all it held before,<br/>
Cherished by the faithful sun,<br/>
On and on eternally<br/>
Shall your altered fluid run,<br/>
Bud and bloom and go to seed;<br/>
But your singing days are done;<br/>
But the music of your talk<br/>
Never shall the chemistry<br/>
Of the secret earth restore.<br/>
All your lovely words are spoken.<br/>
Once the ivory box is broken,<br/>
Beats the golden bird no more.<br/></p>
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<h2> DIRGE </h2>
<p>Boys and girls that held her dear,<br/>
Do your weeping now;<br/>
All you loved of her lies here.<br/>
<br/>
Brought to earth the arrogant brow,<br/>
And the withering tongue<br/>
Chastened; do your weeping now.<br/>
<br/>
Sing whatever songs are sung,<br/>
Wind whatever wreath,<br/>
For a playmate perished young,<br/>
<br/>
For a spirit spent in death.<br/>
Boys and girls that held her dear,<br/>
All you loved of her lies here.<br/></p>
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<h2> SONNETS </h2>
<p>I<br/>
<br/>
We talk of taxes, and I call you friend;<br/>
Well, such you are,—but well enough we know<br/>
How thick about us root, how rankly grow<br/>
Those subtle weeds no man has need to tend,<br/>
That flourish through neglect, and soon must send<br/>
Perfume too sweet upon us and overthrow<br/>
Our steady senses; how such matters go<br/>
We are aware, and how such matters end.<br/>
Yet shall be told no meagre passion here;<br/>
With lovers such as we forevermore<br/>
Isolde drinks the draught, and Guinevere<br/>
Receives the Table's ruin through her door,<br/>
Francesca, with the loud surf at her ear,<br/>
Lets fall the colored book upon the floor.<br/></p>
<p>II<br/>
<br/>
Into the golden vessel of great song<br/>
Let us pour all our passion; breast to breast<br/>
Let other lovers lie, in love and rest;<br/>
Not we,—articulate, so, but with the tongue<br/>
Of all the world: the churning blood, the long<br/>
Shuddering quiet, the desperate hot palms pressed<br/>
Sharply together upon the escaping guest,<br/>
The common soul, unguarded, and grown strong.<br/>
Longing alone is singer to the lute;<br/>
Let still on nettles in the open sigh<br/>
The minstrel, that in slumber is as mute<br/>
As any man, and love be far and high,<br/>
That else forsakes the topmost branch, a fruit<br/>
Found on the ground by every passer-by.<br/></p>
<p>III<br/>
<br/>
Not with libations, but with shouts and laughter<br/>
We drenched the altars of Love's sacred grove,<br/>
Shaking to earth green fruits, impatient after<br/>
The launching of the colored moths of Love.<br/>
Love's proper myrtle and his mother's zone<br/>
We bound about our irreligious brows,<br/>
And fettered him with garlands of our own,<br/>
And spread a banquet in his frugal house.<br/>
Not yet the god has spoken; but I fear<br/>
Though we should break our bodies in his flame,<br/>
And pour our blood upon his altar, here<br/>
Henceforward is a grove without a name,<br/>
A pasture to the shaggy goats of Pan,<br/>
Whence flee forever a woman and a man.<br/></p>
<p>IV<br/>
<br/>
Only until this cigarette is ended,<br/>
A little moment at the end of all,<br/>
While on the floor the quiet ashes fall,<br/>
And in the firelight to a lance extended,<br/>
Bizarrely with the jazzing music blended,<br/>
The broken shadow dances on the wall,<br/>
I will permit my memory to recall<br/>
The vision of you, by all my dreams attended.<br/>
And then adieu,—farewell!—the dream is done.<br/>
Yours is a face of which I can forget<br/>
The color and the features, every one,<br/>
The words not ever, and the smiles not yet;<br/>
But in your day this moment is the sun<br/>
Upon a hill, after the sun has set.<br/></p>
<p>V<br/>
<br/>
Once more into my arid days like dew,<br/>
Like wind from an oasis, or the sound<br/>
Of cold sweet water bubbling underground,<br/>
A treacherous messenger, the thought of you<br/>
Comes to destroy me; once more I renew<br/>
Firm faith in your abundance, whom I found<br/>
Long since to be but just one other mound<br/>
Of sand, whereon no green thing ever grew.<br/>
And once again, and wiser in no wise,<br/>
I chase your colored phantom on the air,<br/>
And sob and curse and fall and weep and rise<br/>
And stumble pitifully on to where,<br/>
Miserable and lost, with stinging eyes,<br/>
Once more I clasp,—and there is nothing there.<br/></p>
<p>VI<br/>
<br/>
No rose that in a garden ever grew,<br/>
In Homer's or in Omar's or in mine,<br/>
Though buried under centuries of fine<br/>
Dead dust of roses, shut from sun and dew<br/>
Forever, and forever lost from view,<br/>
But must again in fragrance rich as wine<br/>
The grey aisles of the air incarnadine<br/>
When the old summers surge into a new.<br/>
Thus when I swear, "I love with all my heart,"<br/>
'Tis with the heart of Lilith that I swear,<br/>
'Tis with the love of Lesbia and Lucrece;<br/>
And thus as well my love must lose some part<br/>
Of what it is, had Helen been less fair,<br/>
Or perished young, or stayed at home in Greece.<br/></p>
<p>VII<br/>
<br/>
When I too long have looked upon your face,<br/>
Wherein for me a brightness unobscured<br/>
Save by the mists of brightness has its place,<br/>
And terrible beauty not to be endured,<br/>
I turn away reluctant from your light,<br/>
And stand irresolute, a mind undone,<br/>
A silly, dazzled thing deprived of sight<br/>
From having looked too long upon the sun.<br/>
Then is my daily life a narrow room<br/>
In which a little while, uncertainly,<br/>
Surrounded by impenetrable gloom,<br/>
Among familiar things grown strange to me<br/>
Making my way, I pause, and feel, and hark,<br/>
Till I become accustomed to the dark.<br/></p>
<p>VIII<br/>
<br/>
And you as well must die, beloved dust,<br/>
And all your beauty stand you in no stead;<br/>
This flawless, vital hand, this perfect head,<br/>
This body of flame and steel, before the gust<br/>
Of Death, or under his autumnal frost,<br/>
Shall be as any leaf, be no less dead<br/>
Than the first leaf that fell,—this wonder fled.<br/>
Altered, estranged, disintegrated, lost.<br/>
Nor shall my love avail you in your hour.<br/>
In spite of all my love, you will arise<br/>
Upon that day and wander down the air<br/>
Obscurely as the unattended flower,<br/>
It mattering not how beautiful you were,<br/>
Or how beloved above all else that dies.<br/></p>
<p>IX<br/>
<br/>
Let you not say of me when I am old,<br/>
In pretty worship of my withered hands<br/>
Forgetting who I am, and how the sands<br/>
Of such a life as mine run red and gold<br/>
Even to the ultimate sifting dust, "Behold,<br/>
Here walketh passionless age!"—for there expands<br/>
A curious superstition in these lands,<br/>
And by its leave some weightless tales are told.<br/>
<br/>
In me no lenten wicks watch out the night;<br/>
I am the booth where Folly holds her fair;<br/>
Impious no less in ruin than in strength,<br/>
When I lie crumbled to the earth at length,<br/>
Let you not say, "Upon this reverend site<br/>
The righteous groaned and beat their breasts in prayer."<br/></p>
<p>X<br/>
<br/>
Oh, my beloved, have you thought of this:<br/>
How in the years to come unscrupulous Time,<br/>
More cruel than Death, will tear you from my kiss,<br/>
And make you old, and leave me in my prime?<br/>
How you and I, who scale together yet<br/>
A little while the sweet, immortal height<br/>
No pilgrim may remember or forget,<br/>
As sure as the world turns, some granite night<br/>
Shall lie awake and know the gracious flame<br/>
Gone out forever on the mutual stone;<br/>
And call to mind that on the day you came<br/>
I was a child, and you a hero grown?—<br/>
And the night pass, and the strange morning break<br/>
Upon our anguish for each other's sake!<br/></p>
<p>XI<br/>
<br/>
As to some lovely temple, tenantless<br/>
Long since, that once was sweet with shivering brass,<br/>
Knowing well its altars ruined and the grass<br/>
Grown up between the stones, yet from excess<br/>
Of grief hard driven, or great loneliness,<br/>
The worshiper returns, and those who pass<br/>
Marvel him crying on a name that was,—<br/>
So is it now with me in my distress.<br/>
Your body was a temple to Delight;<br/>
Cold are its ashes whence the breath is fled,<br/>
Yet here one time your spirit was wont to move;<br/>
Here might I hope to find you day or night,<br/>
And here I come to look for you, my love,<br/>
Even now, foolishly, knowing you are dead.<br/></p>
<p>XII<br/>
<br/>
Cherish you then the hope I shall forget<br/>
At length, my lord, Pieria?—put away<br/>
For your so passing sake, this mouth of clay<br/>
These mortal bones against my body set,<br/>
For all the puny fever and frail sweat<br/>
Of human love,—renounce for these, I say,<br/>
The Singing Mountain's memory, and betray<br/>
The silent lyre that hangs upon me yet?<br/>
Ah, but indeed, some day shall you awake,<br/>
Rather, from dreams of me, that at your side<br/>
So many nights, a lover and a bride,<br/>
But stern in my soul's chastity, have lain,<br/>
To walk the world forever for my sake,<br/>
And in each chamber find me gone again!<br/></p>
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<h2> WILD SWANS </h2>
<p>I looked in my heart while the wild swans went over.<br/>
And what did I see I had not seen before?<br/>
Only a question less or a question more;<br/>
Nothing to match the flight of wild birds flying.<br/>
Tiresome heart, forever living and dying,<br/>
House without air, I leave you and lock your door.<br/>
Wild swans, come over the town, come over<br/>
The town again, trailing your legs and crying!<br/></p>
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