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<p>SILVERPOINTS</p>
<p>BY</p>
<p>JOHN GRAY</p>
<br/>
<p>LONDON M.DCCC.XC.III<br/>
ELKIN MATHEWS AND<br/>
JOHN LANE. AT THE<br/>
SIGN OF THE BODLEY<br/>
HEAD IN VIGO STREET</p>
<br/>
<p>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>. . . EN COMPOSANT DES ACROSTICHES INDOLENTS<br/>
P.V.</p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>LES DEMOISELLES DE SAUVE</p>
<p>TO S. A. S. ALICE, PRINCESSE DE MONACO</p>
<p><i>Beautiful ladies through the orchard pass;<br/>
Bend under crutched-up branches, forked and low;<br/>
Trailing their samet palls o'er dew-drenched grass.</i></p>
<p><i>Pale blossoms, looking on proud Jacqueline,<br/>
Blush to the colour of her finger tips,<br/>
And rosy knuckles, laced with yellow lace.</i></p>
<p><i>High-crested Berthe discerns, with slant, clinched
eyes,<br/>
Amid the leaves pink faces of the skies;<br/>
She locks her plaintive hands Sainte-Margot-wise.</i></p>
<p><i>Ysabeau follows last, with languorous pace;<br/>
Presses, voluptuous, to her bursting lips.<br/>
With backward stoop, a bunch of eglantine.</i></p>
<p><i>Courtly ladies through the orchard pass;<br/>
Bow low, as in lords' halls; and springtime grass<br/>
Tangles a snare to catch the tapering toe.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>HEART'S DEMESNE</p>
<p>TO PAUL VERLAINE</p>
<p><i>Listen, bright lady, thy deep Pansie eyes<br/>
Made never answer when my eyes did pray,<br/>
Than with those quaintest looks of blank surprise.</i></p>
<p><i>But my love longing has devised a way<br/>
To mock thy living image, from thy hair<br/>
To thy rose toes and keep thee by alway.</i></p>
<p><i>My garden's face is oh! so maidly fair,<br/>
With limbs all tapering and with hues all fresh;<br/>
Thine are the beauties all that flourish there.</i></p>
<p><i>Amaranth, fadeless, tells me of thy flesh.<br/>
Briar rose knows thy cheek, the Pink thy pout.<br/>
Bunched kisses dangle from the Woodbine mesh.</i></p>
<p><i>I love to loll, when Daisy stars peep out,<br/>
And hear the music of my garden dell,<br/>
Hollyhock's laughter and the Sunflowers shout.</i></p>
<p><i>And many whisper things I dare not tell.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>SONG OF THE SEEDLING</p>
<p>TO ARTHUR SEWELL BUTT</p>
<p><i>Tell, little seedling, murmuring germ,<br/>
Why are you joyful? What do you sing?<br/>
Have you no fear of that crawling thing,<br/>
Him that has so many legs? and the worm?</i></p>
<p><i>Rain drops patter above my head—<br/>
Drip, drip, drip.<br/>
To moisten the mould where my roots are fed—<br/>
Sip, sip, sip.<br/>
No thought have I of the legged thing.<br/>
Of the worm no fear,<br/>
When the goal is so near;<br/>
Every moment my life has run,<br/>
The livelong day I've not ceased to sing:<br/>
I must reach the sun, the sun.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>LADY EVELYN</p>
<p><i>I know no Name too sweet to tell of her,<br/>
For Love's sweet Sake and Domination.<br/>
She hath me all; her Spell hath Power to stir<br/>
My Heart to every Lust, and spur me on.<br/>
Love saith: 'tis even thus; her Will no Thrall,<br/>
But Touchstone of thy Worth in Love's Armure;<br/>
They only conquer in Love's Lists that fall,<br/>
And Wounds renewed for Wounds are captain Cure.<br/>
He doubly is inslaved that gilts his Chain,<br/>
Saith Reason, chaffering for his Empire gone,<br/>
Bestir, and root the Canker that hath ta'en<br/>
Thy Breast for Bed, and feeds thy Heart upon.</i></p>
<p><i>I this: Sweet Love, an sweet an sour thou be,<br/>
I know no Name too sweet to tell of thee.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>COMPLAINT</p>
<p>TO FELIX FÉNÉON</p>
<p><i>Men, women, call thee so or so;<br/>
I do not know.<br/>
Thou hast no name<br/>
For me, but in my heart aflame</i></p>
<p><i>Burns tireless, neath a silver vine.<br/>
And round entwine<br/>
Its purple girth<br/>
All things of fragrance and of worth.</i></p>
<p><i>Thou shout! thou burst of light! thou throb<br/>
Of pain! thou sob!<br/>
Thou like a bar<br/>
Of some sonata, heard from far</i></p>
<p><i>Through blue-hue'd veils! When in these wise,<br/>
To my soul's eyes,<br/>
Thy shape appears,<br/>
My aching hands are full of tears.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>A HALTING SONNET</p>
<p>TO MISS ELLEN TERRY ON HER BIRTHDAY</p>
<p><i>It is not meet for one like me to praise<br/>
A lady, princess, goddess, artist such;<br/>
For great ones crane their foreheads to her touch,<br/>
To change their splendours into crowns of bays.<br/>
But poets never rhyme as they are bid;<br/>
Nor never see their ft goal; but aspire,<br/>
With straining eyes, to some far silvern spire;<br/>
Flowers among, sing to the gods cloud-hid.<br/>
One of these, onetime, opened velvet eyes<br/>
Upon the world—the years recall the day;<br/>
Those lights still shine, conscious of power alway,<br/>
But flattering men with feigned looks of surprise.</i></p>
<p><i> The couplet is so great that, where thou art,<br/>
—Thou being a poem—it is past my art.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>WINGS IN THE DARK</p>
<p>TO ROBERT HARBOROUGH SHERARD</p>
<p><i>Forth into the warm darkness faring wide—<br/>
More silent momently the silent quay—<br/>
Towards where the ranks of boats rock to the tide,<br/>
Muffling their plaintive gurgling jealously.</i></p>
<p><i>With gentle nodding of her gracious snout,<br/>
One greets her master till he step aboard;<br/>
She flaps her wings, impatient to get out;<br/>
She runs to plunder, straining every cord,</i></p>
<p><i>Full-winged and stealthy like a bird of prey,<br/>
All tense the muscles of her seemly flanks;<br/>
She, the coy creature that the idle day<br/>
Sees idly riding in the idle ranks.</i></p>
<p><i>Backward and forth, over the chosen ground,<br/>
Like a young horse, she drags the heavy trawl,<br/>
Tireless; or speeds her rapturous course unbound,<br/>
And passing fishers through the darkness call</i></p>
<p><i>Deep greeting, in the jargon of the sea.<br/>
Haul upon haul, flounders and soles and dabs,<br/>
And phosphorescent animalcule,<br/>
Sand, seadrift, weeds, thousands of worthless crabs.</i></p>
<p><i>Low on the mud the darkling fishes grope.<br/>
Cautious to stir, staring with jewel eyes;<br/>
Dogs of the sea, the savage congers mope,<br/>
Winding their sulky march Meander-wise.</i></p>
<p><i>Suddenly all is light and life and flight,<br/>
Upon the sandy bottom, agate strewn.<br/>
The fishers mumble, waiting till the night<br/>
Urge on the clouds, and cover up the moon.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>THE BARBER<br/>
<br/>
I</p>
<p><i>I dreamed I was a barber; and there went<br/>
Beneath my hand, oh! manes extravagant.<br/>
Beneath my trembling fingers, many a mask<br/>
Of many a pleasant girl. It was my task<br/>
To gild their hair, carefully, strand by strand;<br/>
To paint their eyebrows with a timid hand;<br/>
To draw a bodkin, from a vase of kohl,<br/>
Through the closed lashes; pencils from a bowl<br/>
Of sepia to paint them underneath;<br/>
To blow upon their eyes with a soft breath.<br/>
They lay them back and watched the leaping bands.</i></p>
II<br/>
<p><i>The dream grew vague. I moulded with my hands<br/>
The mobile breasts, the valley; and the waist<br/>
I touched; and pigments reverently placed<br/>
Upon their thighs in sapient spots and stains,<br/>
Beryls and crysolites and diaphanes,<br/>
And gems whose hot harsh names are never said.<br/>
I was a masseur; and my fingers bled<br/>
With wonder as I touched their awful limbs.</i></p>
III<br/>
<p><i>Suddenly, in the marble trough, there seems<br/>
O, last of my pale, mistresses, Sweetness!<br/>
A twylipped scarlet pansie. My caress<br/>
Tinges thy steelgray eyes to violet.<br/>
Adown thy body skips the pit-a-pat<br/>
Of treatment once heard in a hospital<br/>
For plagues that fascinate, but half appal.</i></p>
IV<br/>
<p><i>So, at the sound, the blood of me stood cold.<br/>
Thy chaste hair ripened into sullen gold.<br/>
The throat, the shoulders, swelled and were uncouth.<br/>
The breasts rose up and offered each a mouth.<br/>
And on the belly pallid blushes crept,<br/>
That maddened me, until I laughed and wept.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>MISHKA</p>
<p>TO HENRI TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS</p>
<p><i>Mishka is poet among the beasts.<br/>
When roots are rotten, and rivers weep.<br/>
The bear is at play in the land of sleep.<br/>
Though his head be heavy between his fists.<br/>
The bear is poet among the beasts.</i></p>
<p>THE DREAM:</p>
<p><i>Wide and large are the monster's eyes,<br/>
Nought saying, save one word alone:<br/>
Mishka! Mishka, as turned to stone,<br/>
Hears no word else, nor in anywise<br/>
Can see aught save the monster's eyes.</i></p>
<p><i>Honey is under the monster's lips;<br/>
And Mishka follows into her lair,<br/>
dragged in the net of her yellow hair,<br/>
Knowing all things when honey drips<br/>
On his tongue like rain, the song of the hips</i></p>
<p><i>Of the honey-child, and of each twin mound.<br/>
Mishka! there screamed a far bird-note,<br/>
Deep in the sky, when round his throat<br/>
The triple coil of her hair she wound.<br/>
And stroked his limbs with a humming sound.</i></p>
<p><i>Mishka is white like a hunter's son<br/>
Tor he knows no more of the ancient south<br/>
When the honey-child's lips are on his mouth,<br/>
When all her kisses are joined in one,<br/>
And his body is bathed in grass and sun.</i></p>
<p><i>The shadows lie mauven beneath the trees,<br/>
And purple stains, where the finches pass,<br/>
Leap in the stalks of the deep, rank grass.<br/>
Flutter of-wing, and the buzz of bees,<br/>
Deepen the silence, and sweeten ease.</i></p>
<p><i>The honey-child is an olive tree,<br/>
The voice of birds and the voice of flowers,<br/>
Each of them all and all the hours,<br/>
The honey-child is a winged bee,<br/>
Her touch is a perfume, a melody.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>SUMMER PAST</p>
<p>TO OSCAR WILDE</p>
<p><i>There was the summer. There<br/>
Warm hours of leaf-lipped song,<br/>
And dripping amber sweat.<br/>
O sweet to see<br/>
The great trees condescend to cast a pearl<br/>
Down to the myrtles; and the proud leaves curl<br/>
In ecstasy.</i></p>
<p><i> Fruit of a quest, despair.<br/>
Smart of a sullen wrong.<br/>
Where may they hide them yet?<br/>
One hour, yet one,<br/>
To find the mossgod lurking in his nest,<br/>
To see the naiads' floating hair, caressed<br/>
By fragrant sun.</i></p>
<p><i> Beams. Softly lulled the eves<br/>
The song-tired birds to sleep,<br/>
That other things might tell<br/>
Their secrecies.<br/>
The beetle humming neath the fallen leaves.<br/>
Deep in what hollow do the stern gods keep<br/>
Their bitter silence? By what listening well<br/>
Where holy trees,</i></p>
<p><i>Song-set, unfurl eternally the sheen<br/>
Of restless green?</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>THE VINES</p>
<p>TO ANDRÉ CHEVRILLON</p>
<p><i>"Have you seen the listening snake?"<br/>
bramble clutches for his bride,<br/>
Lately she was by his side,<br/>
Woodbine, with her gummy hands.</i></p>
<p><i>In the ground the mottled snake<br/>
Listens for the dawn of day;<br/>
Listens, listening death away,<br/>
Till the day burst winter's bands.</i></p>
<p><i>Painted ivy is asleep,<br/>
Stretched upon the bank, all torn,<br/>
Sinewy though she be; love-lorn<br/>
Convolvuluses cease to creep.</i></p>
<p><i>Bramble clutches for his bride,<br/>
Woodbine, with her gummy hands,<br/>
All his horny claws expands;<br/>
She has withered in his grasp.</i></p>
<p><i>"Till the day dawn, till the tide<br/>
Of the winter's afternoon."<br/>
"Who tells dawning?"—"Listen, soon."<br/>
Half born tendrils, grasping, gasp.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p><i>Je pleure dans les coins; je n'ai plus goût à
rien;<br/>
Oh! j'ai tant pleuré, Dimanche, en mon paroissien!</i></p>
<p>JULES LAFORGUE</p>
<p><i>Did we not, Darling, you and I,<br/>
Walk on the earth like other men?<br/>
Did we not walk and wonder why<br/>
They spat upon us so. And then</i></p>
<p><i>We lay us down among fresh earthy<br/>
Sweet flowers breaking overhead,<br/>
Sore needed rest for our frail girth,<br/>
For our frail hearts; a well-sought bed.</i></p>
<p><i>So Spring came, and spread daffodils;<br/>
Summer, and fluffy bees sang on;<br/>
The fluffy bee knows us, and fills<br/>
His house with sweet to think upon.</i></p>
<p><i>Deep in the dear dust, Dear, we dream,<br/>
Our melancholy is a thing<br/>
At last our own; and none esteem<br/>
How our black lips are blackening.</i></p>
<p><i>And none note how our poor eyes fall,<br/>
Nor how our cheeks are sunk and sere . . .<br/>
Dear, when you waken, will you call? . . .<br/>
Alas! we are not very near.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p><i>Ainsi, elle viendrait à moi! les yeux bien fous!<br/>
Et elle me suivrait avec cet air partout!</i></p>
<p>TO E. M. G.</p>
<p><i>Lean back, and press the pillow deep,<br/>
Heart's dear demesne, dear Daintiness;<br/>
Close your tired eyes, but not to sleep . . .<br/>
How very pale your pallor is!</i></p>
<p><i>You smile, your cheek's voluptuous line<br/>
Melts in your dimpled saucy cave.<br/>
Your hairbraids seem a wilful vine,<br/>
Scorning to imitate a wave.</i></p>
<p><i>Your voice is tenebrous, as if<br/>
An angel mocked a blackbird's pipe.<br/>
You are my magic orchard feoff,<br/>
Where bud and fruit are always ripe.</i></p>
<p><i>O apple garden! all the days<br/>
Are fain to crown the darling year,<br/>
Ephemeral bells and garland bays,<br/>
Shy blade and lusty, bursting ear.</i></p>
<p><i>In every kiss I call you mine,<br/>
Tell me, my dear, how pure, how brave<br/>
Our child will be! what velvet eyne,<br/>
What bonny hair our child will have!</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>CROCUSES IN GRASS</p>
<p>TO CHARLES HAZELWOOD SHANNON</p>
<p><i>Purple and white the crocus flowers,<br/>
And yellow, spread upon<br/>
The sober lawn; the hours<br/>
Are not more idle in the sun.</i></p>
<p><i>Perhaps one droops a prettier head,<br/>
And one would say: Sweet Queen,<br/>
Your lips are white and red,<br/>
And round you lies the grass most green.</i></p>
<p><i>And she, perhaps, for whom is fain<br/>
The other, will not heed;<br/>
Or, that he may complain,<br/>
Babbles, for dalliaunce, with a weed.</i></p>
<p><i>And he dissimulates despair,<br/>
And anger, and suprise;<br/>
The while white daisies stare<br/>
—And stir not—with their yellow eyes.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>POEM</p>
<p>TO ARTHUR EDMONDS</p>
<p><i>Geranium, houseleek, laid in oblong beds<br/>
On the trim grass. The daisies' leprous stain<br/>
Is fresh. Each night the daisies burst again,<br/>
Though every day the gardener crops their heads.</i></p>
<p><i>A wistful child, in foul unwholesome shreds,<br/>
Recalls some legend of a daisy chain<br/>
That makes a pretty necklace. She would fain<br/>
Make one, and wear it, if she had some threads.</i></p>
<p><i>Sun, leprous flowers, foul child. The asphalt burns.<br/>
The garrulous sparrows perch on metal Burns.<br/>
Sing! Sing! they say, and flutter with their wings.<br/>
He does not sing, he only wonders why<br/>
He is sitting there. The sparrows sing. And I<br/>
Yield to the strait allure of simple things.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>ON A PICTURE</p>
<p>TO PIERRE LOUŸS</p>
<p><i>Not pale, as one in sleep or holier death,<br/>
Nor illcontent the lady seems, nor loth<br/>
To lie in shadow of shrill river growth,<br/>
So steadfast are the river's arms beneath.</i></p>
<p><i>Pale petals follow her in very faith,<br/>
Unmixed with pleasure or regret, and both<br/>
Her maidly hands look up, in noble sloth<br/>
To take the blossoms of her scattered wreath.</i></p>
<p><i>No weakest ripple lives to kiss her throat.<br/>
Nor dies in meshes of untangled hair;<br/>
No movement stirs the floor of river moss.</i></p>
<p><i>Until some furtive glimmer gleam across<br/>
Voluptuous mouth, where even teeth are bare,<br/>
And gild the broidery of her petticoat. . . .</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>PARSIFAL IMITATED FROM THE FRENCH<br/>
OF PAUL VERLAINE</p>
<p><i>Conquered the flower-maidens, and the wide embrace<br/>
Of their round proffered arms, that tempt the virgin boy;<br/>
Conquered the trickling of their babbling tongues; the coy<br/>
Back glances, and the mobile breasts of subtle grace;</i></p>
<p><i>Conquered the Woman Beautiful, the fatal charm<br/>
Of her hot breast, the music of her babbling tongue;<br/>
Conquered the gate of Hell, into the gate the young<br/>
Man passes, with the heavy trophy at his arm,</i></p>
<p><i>The holy Javelin that pierced the Heart of God.<br/>
He heals the dying king, he sits upon the throne,<br/>
King, and high priest of that great gift, the living
Blood.</i></p>
<p><i>In robe of gold the youth adores the glorious Sign<br/>
Of the green goblet, worships the mysterious Wine.<br/>
And oh! the chime of children's voices in the dome.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>A CRUCIFIX</p>
<p>TO ERNEST DOWSON</p>
<p><i>A gothic church. At one end of an aisle,<br/>
Against a wall where mystic sunbeams smile<br/>
Through painted windows, orange, blue, and gold,<br/>
The Christ's unutterable charm behold.<br/>
Upon the cross, adorned with gold and green,<br/>
Long fluted golden tongues of sombre sheen,<br/>
Like four flames joined in one, around the head<br/>
And by the outstretched arms, their glory spread.<br/>
The statue is of wood; of natural size<br/>
Tinted; one almost sees before one's eyes<br/>
The last convulsion of the lingering breath.<br/>
"Behold the man!" Robust and frail. Beneath<br/>
That breast indeed might throb the Sacred Heart.<br/>
And from the lips, so holily dispart,<br/>
The dying murmur breathes "Forgive! Forgive!"<br/>
O wide-stretched arms! "I perish, let them live."<br/>
Under the torture of the thorny crown,<br/>
The loving pallor of the brow looks down<br/>
On human blindness, on the toiler's woes;<br/>
The while, to overturn Despair's repose,<br/>
And urge to Hope and Love, as Faith demands,<br/>
Bleed, bleed the feet, the broken side, the hands.<br/>
A poet, painter, Christian,—it was a friend<br/>
Of mine—his attributes most fitly blend—<br/>
Who saw this marvel, made an exquisite<br/>
Copy; and, knowing how I worshipped it,<br/>
Forgot it, in my room, by accident.<br/>
I write these verses in acknowledgment.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>LE CHEVALIER MALHEUR</p>
<p><i>Grim visor'd cavalier!<br/>
Rides silently MISCHANCE.<br/>
Stabbed is my dying heart<br/>
of his unpitying lance.<br/>
My poor hearts blood leaps forth,<br/>
a single crimson jet.<br/>
The hot sun licks it up<br/>
where petals pale are wet.<br/>
Deep shadow seals my sight,<br/>
one shriek my lips has fed.<br/>
With a wrung, sullen shudder<br/>
my poor heart is dead.<br/>
The cavalier dismounts;<br/>
and, kneeling on the ground,<br/>
His finger iron-mailed<br/>
he thrusts into the wound.<br/>
Suddenly, at the freezing touch,<br/>
the iron smart,<br/>
At once within me bursts<br/>
a new, a noble heart.<br/>
Suddenly, as the steel<br/>
into the wound is pressed,<br/>
A heart all beautiful<br/>
and young throbs in my breast.<br/>
Trembling, incredulous<br/>
I sat; but ill at ease,<br/>
As one who, in a holy trance,<br/>
strange visions sees.<br/>
While the good cavalier,<br/>
remounted on his horse,<br/>
Left me a parting nod<br/>
as he retook his course,<br/>
And shouted to me<br/>
(still I hear his cries):<br/>
"Once only can the miracle<br/>
avail.—Be wise!"</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/></p>
<p>SPLEEN</p>
<p><i>The roses every one were red,<br/>
And all the ivy leaves were black.</i></p>
<p><i>Sweet, do not even stir your head,<br/>
Or all of my despairs come back.</i></p>
<p><i>The sky is too blue, too delicate:<br/>
Too soft the air, too green the sea.</i></p>
<p><i>I fear—-how long had I to wait!—<br/>
That you will tear yourself from me.</i></p>
<p><i>The shining box-leaves weary me,<br/>
The varnished holly's glistening,</i></p>
<p><i>The stretch of infinite country;<br/>
So, saving you, does everything.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>CLAIR DE LUNE</p>
<p><i>How like a well-kept garden is your soul,<br/>
With bergomask and solemn minuet!<br/>
Playing upon the lute! The dancers seem<br/>
But sad, beneath their strange habiliments.<br/>
While, in the minor key, their songs extol<br/>
The victor Love, and life's sweet blandishments,<br/>
Their looks belie the burden of their lays,<br/>
The songs that mingle with the still moon-beams.<br/>
So strange, so beautiful, the pallid rays;<br/>
Making the birds among the branches dream,<br/>
And sob with ecstasy the slender jets,</i></p>
<p><i>The fountains tall that leap upon the lawns<br/>
Amid the garden gods, the marble fauns.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>MON DIEU M'A DIT: . . .</p>
<p><i>God has spoken: Love me,<br/>
son, thou must; Oh see<br/>
My broken side; my heart,<br/>
its rays refulgent shine;<br/>
My feet, insulted, stabbed,<br/>
that Mary bathes with brine<br/>
Of bitter tears my sad arms,<br/>
helpless, son, for thee;</i></p>
<p><i>With thy sins heavy; and my hands;<br/>
thou seest the rod;<br/>
Thou seest the nails, the sponge,<br/>
the gall; and all my pain<br/>
Must teach thee love, amidst a world<br/>
where flesh doth reign,<br/>
My flesh alone, my blood,<br/>
my voice, the voice of God,</i></p>
<p><i>Say, have I not loved thee,<br/>
loved thee to death,<br/>
O brother in my Father,<br/>
in the Spirit son?<br/>
Say, as the word is written,<br/>
is my work not done?<br/>
Thy deepest woe have I not sobbed<br/>
with struggling breath?<br/>
Has not thy sweat of anguished nights<br/>
from all my pores in pain<br/>
Of blood dripped, piteous friend,<br/>
who seekest me in vain?</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>GREEN</p>
<p><i>Leaves and branches, flowers and fruits are here;<br/>
And here my heart, which throbs alone for thee.<br/>
Ah! do not wound my heart with those two dear<br/>
White hands, but take the poor gift tenderly.</i></p>
<p><i>I come, all covered with the dews of night<br/>
The morning breeze has pearled upon my face.<br/>
Let my fatigue, at thy feet, in thy sight,<br/>
Dream through the moments of its sweet solace.</i></p>
<p><i>With thy late kisses ringing, let my head<br/>
Roll in blest indolence on thy young breast;<br/>
To lull the tempest thy caresses bred,<br/>
And soothe my senses with a little rest.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>FLEURS. IMITATED FROM THE FRENCH<br/>
OF STEPHANE MALLARMÉ</p>
<p><i>The tawny iris—oh! the slim-necked swan;<br/>
And, sign of exiled souls, the bay divine;<br/>
Ruddy as seraph's heel its fleckless sheen,<br/>
Blushing the brightness of a trampled dawn.</i></p>
<p><i>The hyacinth; the myrtle's sweet alarm;<br/>
Like to a woman's flesh, the cruel rose,<br/>
Blossom'd Herodiade of the garden close,<br/>
Fed with ferocious dew of blooddrops warm.</i></p>
<p><i>Thou mad'st the lilies' pallor, nigh to swoon.<br/>
Which, rolling billows of deep sighs upon,<br/>
Through the blue incense of horizons wan,<br/>
Creeps dreamily towards the weeping moon.</i></p>
<p><i>Praise in the censers, praise upon the gong,<br/>
Madone! from the garden of our woes:<br/>
On eves celestial throb the echo long!<br/>
Ecstatic visions! radiance of haloes!</i></p>
<p><i>Mother creatrice! in thy strong, just womb,<br/>
Challices nodding the not distant strife;<br/>
Great honey'd blossoms, a balsamic tomb<br/>
For weary poets blanched with starless life.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>CHARLEVILLE. IMITATED FROM THE FRENCH<br/>
OF ARTHUR RIMBAUD</p>
<p>TO FRANK HARRIS</p>
<p><i>The square, with gravel paths and shabby lawns.<br/>
Correct, the trees and flowers repress their yawns.<br/>
The tradesman brings his favourite conceit,<br/>
To air it, while he stifles with the heat.</i></p>
<p><i>In the kiosk, the military band.<br/>
The shakos nod the time of the quadrilles.<br/>
The flaunting dandy strolls about the stand.<br/>
The notary, half unconscious of his seals.</i></p>
<p><i>On the green seats, small groups of grocermen,<br/>
Absorbed, their sticks scooping a little hole<br/>
Upon the path, talk market prices; then<br/>
Take up a cue: I think, upon the whole. . . .</i></p>
<p><i>The loutish roughs are larking on the grass.<br/>
The sentimental trooper, with a rose<br/>
Between his teeth, seeing a baby, grows<br/>
More tender, with an eye upon the nurse.</i></p>
<p><i>Unbuttoned, like a student, I follow<br/>
A couple of girls along the chesnut row.<br/>
They know I am following, for they turn and laugh,<br/>
Half impudent, half shy, inviting chaff.</i></p>
<p><i>I do not say a word. I only stare<br/>
At their round, fluffy necks. I follow where<br/>
The shoulders drop; I struggle to define<br/>
The subtle torso's hesitating line.</i></p>
<p><i>Only my rustling tread, deliberate, slow;<br/>
The rippled silence from the still leaves drips.<br/>
They think I am an idiot, they speak low;<br/>
— I feel faint kisses creeping on my lips.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>SENSATION</p>
<p><i>I walk the alleys trampled through the wheat,<br/>
Through whole blue summer eves, on velvet grass.<br/>
Dreaming, I feel the dampness at my feet;<br/>
The breezes bathe my naked head and pass.</i></p>
<p><i>I do not think a single thought, nor say<br/>
A word; but in my soul the mists upcurl<br/>
Of infinite love. I will go far away<br/>
With nature, happily, as with a girl.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>À UNE MADONE. IMITATED FROM THE FRENCH<br/>
OF CHARLES BAUDELAIRE</p>
<p><i>Madone! my lady, I will build for thee<br/>
A grotto altar of my misery.<br/>
Deep will I scoop, where darkest lies my heart,<br/>
Far from the world's cupidity apart,</i></p>
<p><i>A niche, with mercy stained, and streaked with gold,<br/>
Where none thy statue's wonder may behold.</i></p>
<p><i>Then, for thy head, I will fashion a tiar,<br/>
A filigree of verse, with many a star</i></p>
<p><i>Of crystal rhyme its heavy folds upon.<br/>
And jealousy, O mortal! my Madone,</i></p>
<p><i>Shall cut for thee a gown, of dreadful guise,<br/>
Which like a portcullis, shall veil thy thighs;</i></p>
<p><i>Rude, heavy curtain, faced with bitter fears,<br/>
Broidered, in place of pearls, with all my tears.</i></p>
<p><i>And, of my worship, shoes will I design;<br/>
Two satin shoes, to case thy feet divine,</i></p>
<p><i>Which, while their precious freight they softly hold,<br/>
Shall guard the imprint in a faithful mould.</i></p>
<p><i>If I should fail to forge a silver moon,<br/>
I with my art, for thee to tread upon,</i></p>
<p><i>Then will I place the writhing beast that hangs<br/>
Upon my heart, and tears it with his fangs,</i></p>
<p><i>Where thou may'st crush his head, and smile supreme,<br/>
O majesty! all potent to redeem.</i></p>
<p><i>And all my thoughts, like candles, shalt thou see<br/>
before thine altar spread, Star of the Sea!</i></p>
<p><i>Starring thine azure roof with points of fire.<br/>
With nought hut thee to cherish and admire,</i></p>
<p><i>So shall my soul in plaintive fumes arise<br/>
Of incense ever to thy pitying eyes.<br/>
</i></p>
<p><i>Last, that indeed a Mary thou may'st be,<br/>
And that my love be mixed with cruelty—</i></p>
<p><i>O foul voluptuousness! when I have made<br/>
Of every deadly sin a deadlier blade,</i></p>
<p><i>Torturer filled with pain will I draw near<br/>
The target of thy breast, and, sick with fear,</i></p>
<p><i>Deliberately plant them all where throbs<br/>
Thy bleeding heart, and stifling with its sobs.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>FEMMES DAMNÉES</p>
<p><i>Like moody beasts they lie along the sands;,<br/>
Look where the sky against the sea-rim clings:<br/>
Foot stretches out to foot, and groping hands<br/>
Have languors soft and bitter shudderings.</i></p>
<p><i>Some, smitten hearts with the long secrecies,<br/>
On velvet moss, deep in their bowers' ease,<br/>
Prattling the love of timid infancies,<br/>
Are tearing the green bark from the young trees.</i></p>
<p><i>Others, like sisters, slowly walk and grave;<br/>
By rocks that swarm with ghostly legions,<br/>
Where Anthony saw surging on the waves<br/>
The purple breasts of his temptations,</i></p>
<p><i>Some, by the light of crumbling, resinous gums,<br/>
In the still hollows of old pagan dens,<br/>
Call thee in aid to their deliriums<br/>
O Bacchus! cajoler of ancient pains.</i></p>
<p><i>And those whose breasts for scapulars are fain<br/>
Nurse under their long robes the cruel thong.<br/>
These, in dim woods, where huddling shadows throng.<br/>
Mix with the foam of pleasure tears of pain.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>LE VOYAGE À CYTHÈRE</p>
<p><i>Bird-like, my heart was glad to soar and vault;<br/>
Fluttering among the cordages; and on<br/>
The vessel flew, under an empty vault:<br/>
An angel drunken of a radiant sun.</i></p>
<p><i>Tell me, what is that gray, that sombre isle?<br/>
'Tis Cythera, famed on many a poet string;<br/>
A name that has not lacked the slavering smile;<br/>
But now, you see, it is not much to sing.</i></p>
<p><i>Isle of soft whispers, tremours of the heart!<br/>
The splendid phantom of thy rude goddess<br/>
Floats on thy seas like breath of spikenard,<br/>
Charging men's souls with love and lusciousness.</i></p>
<p><i>Sweet isle of myrtles, once of open blooms:<br/>
Now only of lean lands most lean: it seems<br/>
A flinty desert bitter with shrill screams:<br/>
But one strange object on its horror looms.</i></p>
<p><i>Not a fair temple, foiled with coppiced trees,<br/>
Where the young priestess, mistress of the flowers,<br/>
Goes opening her gown to the cool breeze,<br/>
To still the fire, the torment that devours.</i></p>
<p><i>But as along the shore we skirted, near<br/>
Enough to scare the birds with our white sails,<br/>
We saw a three-limbed gibbet rising sheer.<br/>
Detached against the sky in spare details.</i></p>
<p><i>Perched on their pasturage, ferocious fowl<br/>
Riddled with rage a more than putrid roast;<br/>
Each of them stabbing, like a tool, his foul<br/>
Beak in the oozing members of his host.</i></p>
<p><i>Below, a troop of jealous quadrupeds,<br/>
Looking aloft with eye and steadfast snout;<br/>
A larger beast above the others' heads,<br/>
A hangman with his porters round about.</i></p>
<p><i>The eyes, two caves; and from the rotten paunch,<br/>
Its freight, too heavy, streamed along the haunch,<br/>
Hang for these harpies' hideous delight,<br/>
Poor rag of flesh, torn of thy sex and sight!</i></p>
<p><i>Cythera's child, child of so sweet a sky!<br/>
Silent thou bearest insult—as we must—<br/>
In expiation of what faults deny<br/>
Thee even a shallow shelter in the dust.</i></p>
<p><i>Ludicrous sufferer! thy woes are mine.<br/>
There came, at seeing of thy dangling limbs,<br/>
Up to my lips, like vomiting, the streams<br/>
Of ancient miseries, of gall and brine.</i></p>
<p><i>Before thee, brother in my memory fresh!<br/>
I felt the mangling of the appetites<br/>
Of the black panthers, of the savage kites,<br/>
That were so fain to rend and pick my flesh.</i></p>
<p><i>The sea was sleeping. Blue and beautiful<br/>
The sky. Henceforth I saw but murk and blood,<br/>
Alas! and as it had been in a shroud,<br/>
My heart lay buried in that parable,</i></p>
<p><i>All thine isle showed me, Venus! was upthrust,<br/>
A symbol calvary where my image hung.<br/>
Give me, Lord God, to look upon that dung,<br/>
My body and my heart, without disgust.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/></div>
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