<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> THE HOUSE OF DUST </h1>
<h1> A Symphony </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Conrad Aiken </h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
To Jessie<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
NOTE<br/>
<br/>
. . . Parts of this poem have been printed in "The North American<br/>
Review, Others, Poetry, Youth, Coterie, The Yale Review". . . . I am<br/>
indebted to Lafcadio Hearn for the episode called "The Screen Maiden"<br/>
in Part II.<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h2> Contents </h2>
<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
<tr>
<td>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE HOUSE OF DUST</b> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART1"> PART I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART2"> PART II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART3"> PART III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART4"> PART IV. </SPAN></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<h1> THE HOUSE OF DUST </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART1" id="link2H_PART1"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PART I. </h2>
<p>I.<br/>
<br/>
The sun goes down in a cold pale flare of light.<br/>
The trees grow dark: the shadows lean to the east:<br/>
And lights wink out through the windows, one by one.<br/>
A clamor of frosty sirens mourns at the night.<br/>
Pale slate-grey clouds whirl up from the sunken sun.<br/>
<br/>
And the wandering one, the inquisitive dreamer of dreams,<br/>
The eternal asker of answers, stands in the street,<br/>
And lifts his palms for the first cold ghost of rain.<br/>
The purple lights leap down the hill before him.<br/>
The gorgeous night has begun again.<br/>
<br/>
'I will ask them all, I will ask them all their dreams,<br/>
I will hold my light above them and seek their faces.<br/>
I will hear them whisper, invisible in their veins . . .'<br/>
The eternal asker of answers becomes as the darkness,<br/>
Or as a wind blown over a myriad forest,<br/>
Or as the numberless voices of long-drawn rains.<br/>
<br/>
We hear him and take him among us, like a wind of music,<br/>
Like the ghost of a music we have somewhere heard;<br/>
We crowd through the streets in a dazzle of pallid lamplight,<br/>
We pour in a sinister wave, ascend a stair,<br/>
With laughter and cry, and word upon murmured word;<br/>
We flow, we descend, we turn . . . and the eternal dreamer<br/>
Moves among us like light, like evening air . . .<br/>
<br/>
Good-night! Good-night! Good-night! We go our ways,<br/>
The rain runs over the pavement before our feet,<br/>
The cold rain falls, the rain sings.<br/>
We walk, we run, we ride. We turn our faces<br/>
To what the eternal evening brings.<br/>
<br/>
Our hands are hot and raw with the stones we have laid,<br/>
We have built a tower of stone high into the sky,<br/>
We have built a city of towers.<br/>
<br/>
Our hands are light, they are singing with emptiness.<br/>
Our souls are light; they have shaken a burden of hours . . .<br/>
What did we build it for? Was it all a dream? . . .<br/>
Ghostly above us in lamplight the towers gleam . . .<br/>
And after a while they will fall to dust and rain;<br/>
Or else we will tear them down with impatient hands;<br/>
And hew rock out of the earth, and build them again.<br/></p>
<p>II.<br/>
<br/>
One, from his high bright window in a tower,<br/>
Leans out, as evening falls,<br/>
And sees the advancing curtain of the shower<br/>
Splashing its silver on roofs and walls:<br/>
Sees how, swift as a shadow, it crosses the city,<br/>
And murmurs beyond far walls to the sea,<br/>
Leaving a glimmer of water in the dark canyons,<br/>
And silver falling from eave and tree.<br/>
<br/>
One, from his high bright window, looking down,<br/>
Peers like a dreamer over the rain-bright town,<br/>
And thinks its towers are like a dream.<br/>
The western windows flame in the sun's last flare,<br/>
Pale roofs begin to gleam.<br/>
<br/>
Looking down from a window high in a wall<br/>
He sees us all;<br/>
Lifting our pallid faces towards the rain,<br/>
Searching the sky, and going our ways again,<br/>
Standing in doorways, waiting under the trees . . .<br/>
There, in the high bright window he dreams, and sees<br/>
What we are blind to,—we who mass and crowd<br/>
From wall to wall in the darkening of a cloud.<br/>
<br/>
The gulls drift slowly above the city of towers,<br/>
Over the roofs to the darkening sea they fly;<br/>
Night falls swiftly on an evening of rain.<br/>
The yellow lamps wink one by one again.<br/>
The towers reach higher and blacker against the sky.<br/></p>
<p>III.<br/>
<br/>
One, where the pale sea foamed at the yellow sand,<br/>
With wave upon slowly shattering wave,<br/>
Turned to the city of towers as evening fell;<br/>
And slowly walked by the darkening road toward it;<br/>
And saw how the towers darkened against the sky;<br/>
And across the distance heard the toll of a bell.<br/>
<br/>
Along the darkening road he hurried alone,<br/>
With his eyes cast down,<br/>
And thought how the streets were hoarse with a tide of people,<br/>
With clamor of voices, and numberless faces . . .<br/>
And it seemed to him, of a sudden, that he would drown<br/>
Here in the quiet of evening air,<br/>
These empty and voiceless places . . .<br/>
And he hurried towards the city, to enter there.<br/>
<br/>
Along the darkening road, between tall trees<br/>
That made a sinister whisper, loudly he walked.<br/>
Behind him, sea-gulls dipped over long grey seas.<br/>
Before him, numberless lovers smiled and talked.<br/>
And death was observed with sudden cries,<br/>
And birth with laughter and pain.<br/>
And the trees grew taller and blacker against the skies<br/>
And night came down again.<br/></p>
<p>IV.<br/>
<br/>
Up high black walls, up sombre terraces,<br/>
Clinging like luminous birds to the sides of cliffs,<br/>
The yellow lights went climbing towards the sky.<br/>
From high black walls, gleaming vaguely with rain,<br/>
Each yellow light looked down like a golden eye.<br/>
<br/>
They trembled from coign to coign, and tower to tower,<br/>
Along high terraces quicker than dream they flew.<br/>
And some of them steadily glowed, and some soon vanished,<br/>
And some strange shadows threw.<br/>
<br/>
And behind them all the ghosts of thoughts went moving,<br/>
Restlessly moving in each lamplit room,<br/>
From chair to mirror, from mirror to fire;<br/>
From some, the light was scarcely more than a gloom:<br/>
From some, a dazzling desire.<br/>
<br/>
And there was one, beneath black eaves, who thought,<br/>
Combing with lifted arms her golden hair,<br/>
Of the lover who hurried towards her through the night;<br/>
And there was one who dreamed of a sudden death<br/>
As she blew out her light.<br/>
<br/>
And there was one who turned from clamoring streets,<br/>
And walked in lamplit gardens among black trees,<br/>
And looked at the windy sky,<br/>
And thought with terror how stones and roots would freeze<br/>
And birds in the dead boughs cry . . .<br/>
<br/>
And she hurried back, as snow fell, mixed with rain,<br/>
To mingle among the crowds again,<br/>
To jostle beneath blue lamps along the street;<br/>
And lost herself in the warm bright coiling dream,<br/>
With a sound of murmuring voices and shuffling feet.<br/>
<br/>
And one, from his high bright window looking down<br/>
On luminous chasms that cleft the basalt town,<br/>
Hearing a sea-like murmur rise,<br/>
Desired to leave his dream, descend from the tower,<br/>
And drown in waves of shouts and laughter and cries.<br/></p>
<p>V.<br/>
<br/>
The snow floats down upon us, mingled with rain . . .<br/>
It eddies around pale lilac lamps, and falls<br/>
Down golden-windowed walls.<br/>
We were all born of flesh, in a flare of pain,<br/>
We do not remember the red roots whence we rose,<br/>
But we know that we rose and walked, that after a while<br/>
We shall lie down again.<br/>
<br/>
The snow floats down upon us, we turn, we turn,<br/>
Through gorges filled with light we sound and flow . . .<br/>
One is struck down and hurt, we crowd about him,<br/>
We bear him away, gaze after his listless body;<br/>
But whether he lives or dies we do not know.<br/>
<br/>
One of us sings in the street, and we listen to him;<br/>
The words ring over us like vague bells of sorrow.<br/>
He sings of a house he lived in long ago.<br/>
It is strange; this house of dust was the house I lived in;<br/>
The house you lived in, the house that all of us know.<br/>
And coiling slowly about him, and laughing at him,<br/>
And throwing him pennies, we bear away<br/>
A mournful echo of other times and places,<br/>
And follow a dream . . . a dream that will not stay.<br/>
<br/>
Down long broad flights of lamplit stairs we flow;<br/>
Noisy, in scattered waves, crowding and shouting;<br/>
In broken slow cascades.<br/>
The gardens extend before us . . . We spread out swiftly;<br/>
Trees are above us, and darkness. The canyon fades . . .<br/>
<br/>
And we recall, with a gleaming stab of sadness,<br/>
Vaguely and incoherently, some dream<br/>
Of a world we came from, a world of sun-blue hills . . .<br/>
A black wood whispers around us, green eyes gleam;<br/>
Someone cries in the forest, and someone kills.<br/>
<br/>
We flow to the east, to the white-lined shivering sea;<br/>
We reach to the west, where the whirling sun went down;<br/>
We close our eyes to music in bright cafees.<br/>
We diverge from clamorous streets to streets that are silent.<br/>
We loaf where the wind-spilled fountain plays.<br/>
<br/>
And, growing tired, we turn aside at last,<br/>
Remember our secret selves, seek out our towers,<br/>
Lay weary hands on the banisters, and climb;<br/>
Climbing, each, to his little four-square dream<br/>
Of love or lust or beauty or death or crime.<br/></p>
<p>VI.<br/>
<br/>
Over the darkened city, the city of towers,<br/>
The city of a thousand gates,<br/>
Over the gleaming terraced roofs, the huddled towers,<br/>
Over a somnolent whisper of loves and hates,<br/>
The slow wind flows, drearily streams and falls,<br/>
With a mournful sound down rain-dark walls.<br/>
On one side purples the lustrous dusk of the sea,<br/>
And dreams in white at the city's feet;<br/>
On one side sleep the plains, with heaped-up hills.<br/>
Oaks and beeches whisper in rings about it.<br/>
Above the trees are towers where dread bells beat.<br/>
<br/>
The fisherman draws his streaming net from the sea<br/>
And sails toward the far-off city, that seems<br/>
Like one vague tower.<br/>
The dark bow plunges to foam on blue-black waves,<br/>
And shrill rain seethes like a ghostly music about him<br/>
In a quiet shower.<br/>
<br/>
Rain with a shrill sings on the lapsing waves;<br/>
Rain thrills over the roofs again;<br/>
Like a shadow of shifting silver it crosses the city;<br/>
The lamps in the streets are streamed with rain;<br/>
And sparrows complain beneath deep eaves,<br/>
And among whirled leaves<br/>
The sea-gulls, blowing from tower to lower tower,<br/>
From wall to remoter wall,<br/>
Skim with the driven rain to the rising sea-sound<br/>
And close grey wings and fall . . .<br/>
<br/>
. . . Hearing great rain above me, I now remember<br/>
A girl who stood by the door and shut her eyes:<br/>
Her pale cheeks glistened with rain, she stood and shivered.<br/>
Into a forest of silver she vanished slowly . . .<br/>
Voices about me rise . . .<br/>
<br/>
Voices clear and silvery, voices of raindrops,—<br/>
'We struck with silver claws, we struck her down.<br/>
We are the ghosts of the singing furies . . . '<br/>
A chorus of elfin voices blowing about me<br/>
Weaves to a babel of sound. Each cries a secret.<br/>
I run among them, reach out vain hands, and drown.<br/>
<br/>
'I am the one who stood beside you and smiled,<br/>
Thinking your face so strangely young . . . '<br/>
'I am the one who loved you but did not dare.'<br/>
'I am the one you followed through crowded streets,<br/>
The one who escaped you, the one with red-gleamed hair.'<br/>
<br/>
'I am the one you saw to-day, who fell<br/>
Senseless before you, hearing a certain bell:<br/>
A bell that broke great memories in my brain.'<br/>
'I am the one who passed unnoticed before you,<br/>
Invisible, in a cloud of secret pain.'<br/>
<br/>
'I am the one who suddenly cried, beholding<br/>
The face of a certain man on the dazzling screen.<br/>
They wrote me that he was dead. It was long ago.<br/>
I walked in the streets for a long while, hearing nothing,<br/>
And returned to see it again. And it was so.'<br/></p>
<p>Weave, weave, weave, you streaks of rain!<br/>
I am dissolved and woven again . . .<br/>
Thousands of faces rise and vanish before me.<br/>
Thousands of voices weave in the rain.<br/>
<br/>
'I am the one who rode beside you, blinking<br/>
At a dazzle of golden lights.<br/>
Tempests of music swept me: I was thinking<br/>
Of the gorgeous promise of certain nights:<br/>
Of the woman who suddenly smiled at me this day,<br/>
Smiled in a certain delicious sidelong way,<br/>
And turned, as she reached the door,<br/>
To smile once more . . .<br/>
Her hands are whiter than snow on midnight water.<br/>
Her throat is golden and full of golden laughter,<br/>
Her eyes are strange as the stealth of the moon<br/>
On a night in June . . .<br/>
She runs among whistling leaves; I hurry after;<br/>
She dances in dreams over white-waved water;<br/>
Her body is white and fragrant and cool,<br/>
Magnolia petals that float on a white-starred pool . . .<br/>
I have dreamed of her, dreaming for many nights<br/>
Of a broken music and golden lights,<br/>
Of broken webs of silver, heavily falling<br/>
Between my hands and their white desire:<br/>
And dark-leaved boughs, edged with a golden radiance,<br/>
Dipping to screen a fire . . .<br/>
I dream that I walk with her beneath high trees,<br/>
But as I lean to kiss her face,<br/>
She is blown aloft on wind, I catch at leaves,<br/>
And run in a moonless place;<br/>
And I hear a crashing of terrible rocks flung down,<br/>
And shattering trees and cracking walls,<br/>
And a net of intense white flame roars over the town,<br/>
And someone cries; and darkness falls . . .<br/>
But now she has leaned and smiled at me,<br/>
My veins are afire with music,<br/>
Her eyes have kissed me, my body is turned to light;<br/>
I shall dream to her secret heart tonight . . . '<br/>
<br/>
He rises and moves away, he says no word,<br/>
He folds his evening paper and turns away;<br/>
I rush through the dark with rows of lamplit faces;<br/>
Fire bells peal, and some of us turn to listen,<br/>
And some sit motionless in their accustomed places.<br/>
<br/>
Cold rain lashes the car-roof, scurries in gusts,<br/>
Streams down the windows in waves and ripples of lustre;<br/>
The lamps in the streets are distorted and strange.<br/>
Someone takes his watch from his pocket and yawns.<br/>
One peers out in the night for the place to change.<br/>
<br/>
Rain . . . rain . . . rain . . . we are buried in rain,<br/>
It will rain forever, the swift wheels hiss through water,<br/>
Pale sheets of water gleam in the windy street.<br/>
The pealing of bells is lost in a drive of rain-drops.<br/>
Remote and hurried the great bells beat.<br/>
<br/>
'I am the one whom life so shrewdly betrayed,<br/>
Misfortune dogs me, it always hunted me down.<br/>
And to-day the woman I love lies dead.<br/>
I gave her roses, a ring with opals;<br/>
These hands have touched her head.<br/>
<br/>
'I bound her to me in all soft ways,<br/>
I bound her to me in a net of days,<br/>
Yet now she has gone in silence and said no word.<br/>
How can we face these dazzling things, I ask you?<br/>
There is no use: we cry: and are not heard.<br/>
<br/>
'They cover a body with roses . . . I shall not see it . . .<br/>
Must one return to the lifeless walls of a city<br/>
Whose soul is charred by fire? . . . '<br/>
His eyes are closed, his lips press tightly together.<br/>
Wheels hiss beneath us. He yields us our desire.<br/>
<br/>
'No, do not stare so—he is weak with grief,<br/>
He cannot face you, he turns his eyes aside;<br/>
He is confused with pain.<br/>
I suffered this. I know. It was long ago . . .<br/>
He closes his eyes and drowns in death again.'<br/>
<br/>
The wind hurls blows at the rain-starred glistening windows,<br/>
The wind shrills down from the half-seen walls.<br/>
We flow on the mournful wind in a dream of dying;<br/>
And at last a silence falls.<br/></p>
<p>VII.<br/>
<br/>
Midnight; bells toll, and along the cloud-high towers<br/>
The golden lights go out . . .<br/>
The yellow windows darken, the shades are drawn,<br/>
In thousands of rooms we sleep, we await the dawn,<br/>
We lie face down, we dream,<br/>
We cry aloud with terror, half rise, or seem<br/>
To stare at the ceiling or walls . . .<br/>
Midnight . . . the last of shattering bell-notes falls.<br/>
A rush of silence whirls over the cloud-high towers,<br/>
A vortex of soundless hours.<br/>
<br/>
'The bells have just struck twelve: I should be sleeping.<br/>
But I cannot delay any longer to write and tell you.<br/>
The woman is dead.<br/>
She died—you know the way. Just as we planned.<br/>
Smiling, with open sunlit eyes.<br/>
Smiling upon the outstretched fatal hand . . .'<br/>
<br/>
He folds his letter, steps softly down the stairs.<br/>
The doors are closed and silent. A gas-jet flares.<br/>
His shadow disturbs a shadow of balustrades.<br/>
The door swings shut behind. Night roars above him.<br/>
Into the night he fades.<br/>
<br/>
Wind; wind; wind; carving the walls;<br/>
Blowing the water that gleams in the street;<br/>
Blowing the rain, the sleet.<br/>
In the dark alley, an old tree cracks and falls,<br/>
Oak-boughs moan in the haunted air;<br/>
Lamps blow down with a crash and tinkle of glass . . .<br/>
Darkness whistles . . . Wild hours pass . . .<br/>
<br/>
And those whom sleep eludes lie wide-eyed, hearing<br/>
Above their heads a goblin night go by;<br/>
Children are waked, and cry,<br/>
The young girl hears the roar in her sleep, and dreams<br/>
That her lover is caught in a burning tower,<br/>
She clutches the pillow, she gasps for breath, she screams . . .<br/>
And then by degrees her breath grows quiet and slow,<br/>
She dreams of an evening, long ago:<br/>
Of colored lanterns balancing under trees,<br/>
Some of them softly catching afire;<br/>
And beneath the lanterns a motionless face she sees,<br/>
Golden with lamplight, smiling, serene . . .<br/>
The leaves are a pale and glittering green,<br/>
The sound of horns blows over the trampled grass,<br/>
Shadows of dancers pass . . .<br/>
The face smiles closer to hers, she tries to lean<br/>
Backward, away, the eyes burn close and strange,<br/>
The face is beginning to change,—<br/>
It is her lover, she no longer desires to resist,<br/>
She is held and kissed.<br/>
She closes her eyes, and melts in a seethe of flame . . .<br/>
With a smoking ghost of shame . . .<br/>
<br/>
Wind, wind, wind . . . Wind in an enormous brain<br/>
Blowing dark thoughts like fallen leaves . . .<br/>
The wind shrieks, the wind grieves;<br/>
It dashes the leaves on walls, it whirls then again;<br/>
And the enormous sleeper vaguely and stupidly dreams<br/>
And desires to stir, to resist a ghost of pain.<br/>
<br/>
One, whom the city imprisoned because of his cunning,<br/>
Who dreamed for years in a tower,<br/>
Seizes this hour<br/>
Of tumult and wind. He files through the rusted bar,<br/>
Leans his face to the rain, laughs up at the night,<br/>
Slides down the knotted sheet, swings over the wall,<br/>
To fall to the street with a cat-like fall,<br/>
Slinks round a quavering rim of windy light,<br/>
And at last is gone,<br/>
Leaving his empty cell for the pallor of dawn . . .<br/>
<br/>
The mother whose child was buried to-day<br/>
Turns her face to the window; her face is grey;<br/>
And all her body is cold with the coldness of rain.<br/>
He would have grown as easily as a tree,<br/>
He would have spread a pleasure of shade above her,<br/>
He would have been his father again . . .<br/>
His growth was ended by a freezing invisible shadow.<br/>
She lies, and does not move, and is stabbed by the rain.<br/>
<br/>
Wind, wind, wind; we toss and dream;<br/>
We dream we are clouds and stars, blown in a stream:<br/>
Windows rattle above our beds;<br/>
We reach vague-gesturing hands, we lift our heads,<br/>
Hear sounds far off,—and dream, with quivering breath,<br/>
Our curious separate ways through life and death.<br/></p>
<p>VIII.<br/>
<br/>
The white fog creeps from the cold sea over the city,<br/>
Over the pale grey tumbled towers,—<br/>
And settles among the roofs, the pale grey walls.<br/>
Along damp sinuous streets it crawls,<br/>
Curls like a dream among the motionless trees<br/>
And seems to freeze.<br/>
<br/>
The fog slips ghostlike into a thousand rooms,<br/>
Whirls over sleeping faces,<br/>
Spins in an atomy dance round misty street lamps;<br/>
And blows in cloudy waves over open spaces . . .<br/>
<br/>
And one from his high window, looking down,<br/>
Peers at the cloud-white town,<br/>
And thinks its island towers are like a dream . . .<br/>
It seems an enormous sleeper, within whose brain<br/>
Laborious shadows revolve and break and gleam.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART2" id="link2H_PART2"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PART II. </h2>
<p>I.<br/>
<br/>
The round red sun heaves darkly out of the sea.<br/>
The walls and towers are warmed and gleam.<br/>
Sounds go drowsily up from streets and wharves.<br/>
The city stirs like one that is half in dream.<br/>
<br/>
And the mist flows up by dazzling walls and windows,<br/>
Where one by one we wake and rise.<br/>
We gaze at the pale grey lustrous sea a moment,<br/>
We rub the darkness from our eyes,<br/>
<br/>
And face our thousand devious secret mornings . . .<br/>
And do not see how the pale mist, slowly ascending,<br/>
Shaped by the sun, shines like a white-robed dreamer<br/>
Compassionate over our towers bending.<br/>
<br/>
There, like one who gazes into a crystal,<br/>
He broods upon our city with sombre eyes;<br/>
He sees our secret fears vaguely unfolding,<br/>
Sees cloudy symbols shape to rise.<br/>
<br/>
Each gleaming point of light is like a seed<br/>
Dilating swiftly to coiling fires.<br/>
Each cloud becomes a rapidly dimming face,<br/>
Each hurrying face records its strange desires.<br/>
<br/>
We descend our separate stairs toward the day,<br/>
Merge in the somnolent mass that fills the street,<br/>
Lift our eyes to the soft blue space of sky,<br/>
And walk by the well-known walls with accustomed feet.<br/></p>
<p>II. THE FULFILLED DREAM<br/>
<br/>
More towers must yet be built—more towers destroyed—<br/>
Great rocks hoisted in air;<br/>
And he must seek his bread in high pale sunlight<br/>
With gulls about him, and clouds just over his eyes . . .<br/>
And so he did not mention his dream of falling<br/>
But drank his coffee in silence, and heard in his ears<br/>
That horrible whistle of wind, and felt his breath<br/>
Sucked out of him, and saw the tower flash by<br/>
And the small tree swell beneath him . . .<br/>
He patted his boy on the head, and kissed his wife,<br/>
Looked quickly around the room, to remember it,—<br/>
And so went out . . . For once, he forgot his pail.<br/>
<br/>
Something had changed—but it was not the street—<br/>
The street was just the same—it was himself.<br/>
Puddles flashed in the sun. In the pawn-shop door<br/>
The same old black cat winked green amber eyes;<br/>
The butcher stood by his window tying his apron;<br/>
The same men walked beside him, smoking pipes,<br/>
Reading the morning paper . . .<br/>
<br/>
He would not yield, he thought, and walk more slowly,<br/>
As if he knew for certain he walked to death:<br/>
But with his usual pace,—deliberate, firm,<br/>
Looking about him calmly, watching the world,<br/>
Taking his ease . . . Yet, when he thought again<br/>
Of the same dream, now dreamed three separate times,<br/>
Always the same, and heard that whistling wind,<br/>
And saw the windows flashing upward past him,—<br/>
He slowed his pace a little, and thought with horror<br/>
How monstrously that small tree thrust to meet him! . . .<br/>
He slowed his pace a little and remembered his wife.<br/>
<br/>
Was forty, then, too old for work like this?<br/>
Why should it be? He'd never been afraid—<br/>
His eye was sure, his hand was steady . . .<br/>
But dreams had meanings.<br/>
He walked more slowly, and looked along the roofs,<br/>
All built by men, and saw the pale blue sky;<br/>
And suddenly he was dizzy with looking at it,<br/>
It seemed to whirl and swim,<br/>
It seemed the color of terror, of speed, of death . . .<br/>
He lowered his eyes to the stones, he walked more slowly;<br/>
His thoughts were blown and scattered like leaves;<br/>
He thought of the pail . . . Why, then, was it forgotten?<br/>
Because he would not need it?<br/>
<br/>
Then, just as he was grouping his thoughts again<br/>
About that drug-store corner, under an arc-lamp,<br/>
Where first he met the girl whom he would marry,—<br/>
That blue-eyed innocent girl, in a soft blouse,—<br/>
He waved his hand for signal, and up he went<br/>
In the dusty chute that hugged the wall;<br/>
Above the tree; from girdered floor to floor;<br/>
Above the flattening roofs, until the sea<br/>
Lay wide and waved before him . . . And then he stepped<br/>
Giddily out, from that security,<br/>
To the red rib of iron against the sky,<br/>
And walked along it, feeling it sing and tremble;<br/>
And looking down one instant, saw the tree<br/>
Just as he dreamed it was; and looked away,<br/>
And up again, feeling his blood go wild.<br/>
<br/>
He gave the signal; the long girder swung<br/>
Closer to him, dropped clanging into place,<br/>
Almost pushing him off. Pneumatic hammers<br/>
Began their madhouse clatter, the white-hot rivets<br/>
Were tossed from below and deftly caught in pails;<br/>
He signalled again, and wiped his mouth, and thought<br/>
A place so high in the air should be more quiet.<br/>
The tree, far down below, teased at his eyes,<br/>
Teased at the corners of them, until he looked,<br/>
And felt his body go suddenly small and light;<br/>
Felt his brain float off like a dwindling vapor;<br/>
And heard a whistle of wind, and saw a tree<br/>
Come plunging up to him, and thought to himself,<br/>
'By God—I'm done for now, the dream was right . . .'<br/></p>
<p>III. INTERLUDE<br/>
<br/>
The warm sun dreams in the dust, the warm sun falls<br/>
On bright red roofs and walls;<br/>
The trees in the park exhale a ghost of rain;<br/>
We go from door to door in the streets again,<br/>
Talking, laughing, dreaming, turning our faces,<br/>
Recalling other times and places . . .<br/>
We crowd, not knowing why, around a gate,<br/>
We crowd together and wait,<br/>
A stretcher is carried out, voices are stilled,<br/>
The ambulance drives away.<br/>
We watch its roof flash by, hear someone say<br/>
'A man fell off the building and was killed—<br/>
Fell right into a barrel . . .' We turn again<br/>
Among the frightened eyes of white-faced men,<br/>
And go our separate ways, each bearing with him<br/>
A thing he tries, but vainly, to forget,—<br/>
A sickened crowd, a stretcher red and wet.<br/>
<br/>
A hurdy-gurdy sings in the crowded street,<br/>
The golden notes skip over the sunlit stones,<br/>
Wings are upon our feet.<br/>
The sun seems warmer, the winding street more bright,<br/>
Sparrows come whirring down in a cloud of light.<br/>
We bear our dreams among us, bear them all,<br/>
Like hurdy-gurdy music they rise and fall,<br/>
Climb to beauty and die.<br/>
The wandering lover dreams of his lover's mouth,<br/>
And smiles at the hostile sky.<br/>
The broker smokes his pipe, and sees a fortune.<br/>
The murderer hears a cry.<br/></p>
<p>IV. NIGHTMARE<br/>
<br/>
'Draw three cards, and I will tell your future . . .<br/>
Draw three cards, and lay them down,<br/>
Rest your palms upon them, stare at the crystal,<br/>
And think of time . . . My father was a clown,<br/>
My mother was a gypsy out of Egypt;<br/>
And she was gotten with child in a strange way;<br/>
And I was born in a cold eclipse of the moon,<br/>
With the future in my eyes as clear as day.'<br/>
<br/>
I sit before the gold-embroidered curtain<br/>
And think her face is like a wrinkled desert.<br/>
The crystal burns in lamplight beneath my eyes.<br/>
A dragon slowly coils on the scaly curtain.<br/>
Upon a scarlet cloth a white skull lies.<br/>
<br/>
'Your hand is on the hand that holds three lilies.<br/>
You will live long, love many times.<br/>
I see a dark girl here who once betrayed you.<br/>
I see a shadow of secret crimes.<br/>
<br/>
'There was a man who came intent to kill you,<br/>
And hid behind a door and waited for you;<br/>
There was a woman who smiled at you and lied.<br/>
There was a golden girl who loved you, begged you,<br/>
Crawled after you, and died.<br/>
<br/>
'There is a ghost of murder in your blood—<br/>
Coming or past, I know not which.<br/>
And here is danger—a woman with sea-green eyes,<br/>
And white-skinned as a witch . . .'<br/>
<br/>
The words hiss into me, like raindrops falling<br/>
On sleepy fire . . . She smiles a meaning smile.<br/>
Suspicion eats my brain; I ask a question;<br/>
Something is creeping at me, something vile;<br/>
<br/>
And suddenly on the wall behind her head<br/>
I see a monstrous shadow strike and spread,<br/>
The lamp puffs out, a great blow crashes down.<br/>
I plunge through the curtain, run through dark to the street,<br/>
And hear swift steps retreat . . .<br/>
<br/>
The shades are drawn, the door is locked behind me.<br/>
Behind the door I hear a hammer sounding.<br/>
I walk in a cloud of wonder; I am glad.<br/>
I mingle among the crowds; my heart is pounding;<br/>
You do not guess the adventure I have had! . . .<br/>
<br/>
Yet you, too, all have had your dark adventures,<br/>
Your sudden adventures, or strange, or sweet . . .<br/>
My peril goes out from me, is blown among you.<br/>
We loiter, dreaming together, along the street.<br/></p>
<p>V. RETROSPECT<br/>
<br/>
Round white clouds roll slowly above the housetops,<br/>
Over the clear red roofs they flow and pass.<br/>
A flock of pigeons rises with blue wings flashing,<br/>
Rises with whistle of wings, hovers an instant,<br/>
And settles slowly again on the tarnished grass.<br/>
<br/>
And one old man looks down from a dusty window<br/>
And sees the pigeons circling about the fountain<br/>
And desires once more to walk among those trees.<br/>
Lovers walk in the noontime by that fountain.<br/>
Pigeons dip their beaks to drink from the water.<br/>
And soon the pond must freeze.<br/>
<br/>
The light wind blows to his ears a sound of laughter,<br/>
Young men shuffle their feet, loaf in the sunlight;<br/>
A girl's laugh rings like a silver bell.<br/>
But clearer than all these sounds is a sound he hears<br/>
More in his secret heart than in his ears,—<br/>
A hammer's steady crescendo, like a knell.<br/>
He hears the snarl of pineboards under the plane,<br/>
The rhythmic saw, and then the hammer again,—<br/>
Playing with delicate strokes that sombre scale . . .<br/>
And the fountain dwindles, the sunlight seems to pale.<br/>
<br/>
Time is a dream, he thinks, a destroying dream;<br/>
It lays great cities in dust, it fills the seas;<br/>
It covers the face of beauty, and tumbles walls.<br/>
Where was the woman he loved? Where was his youth?<br/>
Where was the dream that burned his brain like fire?<br/>
Even a dream grows grey at last and falls.<br/>
<br/>
He opened his book once more, beside the window,<br/>
And read the printed words upon that page.<br/>
The sunlight touched his hand; his eyes moved slowly,<br/>
The quiet words enchanted time and age.<br/>
<br/>
'Death is never an ending, death is a change;<br/>
Death is beautiful, for death is strange;<br/>
Death is one dream out of another flowing;<br/>
Death is a chorded music, softly going<br/>
By sweet transition from key to richer key.<br/>
Death is a meeting place of sea and sea.'<br/></p>
<p>VI. ADELE AND DAVIS<br/>
<br/>
She turned her head on the pillow, and cried once more.<br/>
And drawing a shaken breath, and closing her eyes,<br/>
To shut out, if she could, this dingy room,<br/>
The wigs and costumes scattered around the floor,—<br/>
Yellows and greens in the dark,—she walked again<br/>
Those nightmare streets which she had walked so often . . .<br/>
Here, at a certain corner, under an arc-lamp,<br/>
Blown by a bitter wind, she stopped and looked<br/>
In through the brilliant windows of a drug-store,<br/>
And wondered if she dared to ask for poison:<br/>
But it was late, few customers were there,<br/>
The eyes of all the clerks would freeze upon her,<br/>
And she would wilt, and cry . . . Here, by the river,<br/>
She listened to the water slapping the wall,<br/>
And felt queer fascination in its blackness:<br/>
But it was cold, the little waves looked cruel,<br/>
The stars were keen, and a windy dash of spray<br/>
Struck her cheek, and withered her veins . . . And so<br/>
She dragged herself once more to home, and bed.<br/>
<br/>
Paul hadn't guessed it yet—though twice, already,<br/>
She'd fainted—once, the first time, on the stage.<br/>
So she must tell him soon—or else—get out . . .<br/>
How could she say it? That was the hideous thing.<br/>
She'd rather die than say it! . . . and all the trouble,<br/>
Months when she couldn't earn a cent, and then,<br/>
If he refused to marry her . . . well, what?<br/>
She saw him laughing, making a foolish joke,<br/>
His grey eyes turning quickly; and the words<br/>
Fled from her tongue . . . She saw him sitting silent,<br/>
Brooding over his morning coffee, maybe,<br/>
And tried again . . . she bit her lips, and trembled,<br/>
And looked away, and said . . . 'Say Paul, boy,—listen—<br/>
There's something I must tell you . . . ' There she stopped,<br/>
Wondering what he'd say . . . What would he say?<br/>
'Spring it, kid! Don't look so serious!'<br/>
'But what I've got to say—IS—serious!'<br/>
Then she could see how, suddenly, he would sober,<br/>
His eyes would darken, he'd look so terrifying—<br/>
He always did—and what could she do but cry?<br/>
Perhaps, then, he would guess—perhaps he wouldn't.<br/>
And if he didn't, but asked her 'What's the matter?'—<br/>
She knew she'd never tell—just say she was sick . . .<br/>
And after that, when would she dare again?<br/>
And what would he do—even suppose she told him?<br/>
<br/>
If it were Felix! If it were only Felix!—<br/>
She wouldn't mind so much. But as it was,<br/>
Bitterness choked her, she had half a mind<br/>
To pay out Felix for never having liked her,<br/>
By making people think that it was he . . .<br/>
She'd write a letter to someone, before she died,—<br/>
Just saying 'Felix did it—and wouldn't marry.'<br/>
And then she'd die . . . But that was hard on Paul . . .<br/>
Paul would never forgive her—he'd never forgive her!<br/>
Sometimes she almost thought Paul really loved her . . .<br/>
She saw him look reproachfully at her coffin.<br/>
<br/>
And then she closed her eyes and walked again<br/>
Those nightmare streets that she had walked so often:<br/>
Under an arc-lamp swinging in the wind<br/>
She stood, and stared in through a drug-store window,<br/>
Watching a clerk wrap up a little pill-box.<br/>
But it was late. No customers were there,—<br/>
Pitiless eyes would freeze her secret in her!<br/>
And then—what poison would she dare to ask for?<br/>
And if they asked her why, what would she say?<br/></p>
<p>VII. TWO LOVERS: OVERTONES<br/>
<br/>
Two lovers, here at the corner, by the steeple,<br/>
Two lovers blow together like music blowing:<br/>
And the crowd dissolves about them like a sea.<br/>
Recurring waves of sound break vaguely about them,<br/>
They drift from wall to wall, from tree to tree.<br/>
'Well, am I late?' Upward they look and laugh,<br/>
They look at the great clock's golden hands,<br/>
They laugh and talk, not knowing what they say:<br/>
Only, their words like music seem to play;<br/>
And seeming to walk, they tread strange sarabands.<br/>
<br/>
'I brought you this . . . ' the soft words float like stars<br/>
Down the smooth heaven of her memory.<br/>
She stands again by a garden wall,<br/>
The peach tree is in bloom, pink blossoms fall,<br/>
Water sings from an opened tap, the bees<br/>
Glisten and murmur among the trees.<br/>
Someone calls from the house. She does not answer.<br/>
Backward she leans her head,<br/>
And dreamily smiles at the peach-tree leaves, wherethrough<br/>
She sees an infinite May sky spread<br/>
A vault profoundly blue.<br/>
The voice from the house fades far away,<br/>
The glistening leaves more vaguely ripple and sway . .<br/>
The tap is closed, the water ceases to hiss . . .<br/>
Silence . . . blue sky . . . and then, 'I brought you this . . . '<br/>
She turns again, and smiles . . . He does not know<br/>
She smiles from long ago . . .<br/>
<br/>
She turns to him and smiles . . . Sunlight above him<br/>
Roars like a vast invisible sea,<br/>
Gold is beaten before him, shrill bells of silver;<br/>
He is released of weight, his body is free,<br/>
He lifts his arms to swim,<br/>
Dark years like sinister tides coil under him . . .<br/>
The lazy sea-waves crumble along the beach<br/>
With a whirring sound like wind in bells,<br/>
He lies outstretched on the yellow wind-worn sands<br/>
Reaching his lazy hands<br/>
Among the golden grains and sea-white shells . . .<br/>
<br/>
'One white rose . . . or is it pink, to-day?'<br/>
They pause and smile, not caring what they say,<br/>
If only they may talk.<br/>
The crowd flows past them like dividing waters.<br/>
Dreaming they stand, dreaming they walk.<br/>
<br/>
'Pink,—to-day!'—Face turns to dream-bright face,<br/>
Green leaves rise round them, sunshine settles upon them,<br/>
Water, in drops of silver, falls from the rose.<br/>
She smiles at a face that smiles through leaves from the mirror.<br/>
She breathes the fragrance; her dark eyes close . . .<br/>
<br/>
Time is dissolved, it blows like a little dust:<br/>
Time, like a flurry of rain,<br/>
Patters and passes, starring the window-pane.<br/>
Once, long ago, one night,<br/>
She saw the lightning, with long blue quiver of light,<br/>
Ripping the darkness . . . and as she turned in terror<br/>
A soft face leaned above her, leaned softly down,<br/>
Softly around her a breath of roses was blown,<br/>
She sank in waves of quiet, she seemed to float<br/>
In a sea of silence . . . and soft steps grew remote . .<br/>
<br/>
'Well, let us walk in the park . . . The sun is warm,<br/>
We'll sit on a bench and talk . . .' They turn and glide,<br/>
The crowd of faces wavers and breaks and flows.<br/>
'Look how the oak-tops turn to gold in the sunlight!<br/>
Look how the tower is changed and glows!'<br/>
<br/>
Two lovers move in the crowd like a link of music,<br/>
We press upon them, we hold them, and let them pass;<br/>
A chord of music strikes us and straight we tremble;<br/>
We tremble like wind-blown grass.<br/>
<br/>
What was this dream we had, a dream of music,<br/>
Music that rose from the opening earth like magic<br/>
And shook its beauty upon us and died away?<br/>
The long cold streets extend once more before us.<br/>
The red sun drops, the walls grow grey.<br/></p>
<p>VIII. THE BOX WITH SILVER HANDLES<br/>
<br/>
Well,—it was two days after my husband died—<br/>
Two days! And the earth still raw above him.<br/>
And I was sweeping the carpet in their hall.<br/>
In number four—the room with the red wall-paper—<br/>
Some chorus girls and men were singing that song<br/>
'They'll soon be lighting candles<br/>
Round a box with silver handles'—and hearing them sing it<br/>
I started to cry. Just then he came along<br/>
And stopped on the stairs and turned and looked at me,<br/>
And took the cigar from his mouth and sort of smiled<br/>
And said, 'Say, what's the matter?' and then came down<br/>
Where I was leaning against the wall,<br/>
And touched my shoulder, and put his arm around me . . .<br/>
And I was so sad, thinking about it,—<br/>
Thinking that it was raining, and a cold night,<br/>
With Jim so unaccustomed to being dead,—<br/>
That I was happy to have him sympathize,<br/>
To feel his arm, and leaned against him and cried.<br/>
And before I knew it, he got me into a room<br/>
Where a table was set, and no one there,<br/>
And sat me down on a sofa, and held me close,<br/>
And talked to me, telling me not to cry,<br/>
That it was all right, he'd look after me,—<br/>
But not to cry, my eyes were getting red,<br/>
Which didn't make me pretty. And he was so nice,<br/>
That when he turned my face between his hands,<br/>
And looked at me, with those blue eyes of his,<br/>
And smiled, and leaned, and kissed me—<br/>
Somehow I couldn't tell him not to do it,<br/>
Somehow I didn't mind, I let him kiss me,<br/>
And closed my eyes! . . . Well, that was how it started.<br/>
For when my heart was eased with crying, and grief<br/>
Had passed and left me quiet, somehow it seemed<br/>
As if it wasn't honest to change my mind,<br/>
To send him away, or say I hadn't meant it—<br/>
And, anyway, it seemed so hard to explain!<br/>
And so we sat and talked, not talking much,<br/>
But meaning as much in silence as in words,<br/>
There in that empty room with palms about us,<br/>
That private dining-room . . . And as we sat there<br/>
I felt my future changing, day by day,<br/>
With unknown streets opening left and right,<br/>
New streets with farther lights, new taller houses,<br/>
Doors swinging into hallways filled with light,<br/>
Half-opened luminous windows, with white curtains<br/>
Streaming out in the night, and sudden music,—<br/>
And thinking of this, and through it half remembering<br/>
A quick and horrible death, my husband's eyes,<br/>
The broken-plastered walls, my boy asleep,—<br/>
It seemed as if my brain would break in two.<br/>
My voice began to tremble . . . and when I stood,<br/>
And told him I must go, and said good-night—<br/>
I couldn't see the end. How would it end?<br/>
Would he return to-morrow? Or would he not?<br/>
And did I want him to—or would I rather<br/>
Look for another job?—He took my shoulders<br/>
Between his hands, and looked down into my eyes,<br/>
And smiled, and said good-night. If he had kissed me,<br/>
That would have—well, I don't know; but he didn't . .<br/>
And so I went downstairs, then, half elated,<br/>
Hoping to close the door before that party<br/>
In number four should sing that song again—<br/>
'They'll soon be lighting candles round a box with silver handles'—<br/>
And sure enough, I did. I faced the darkness.<br/>
And my eyes were filled with tears. And I was happy.<br/></p>
<p>IX. INTERLUDE<br/>
<br/>
The days, the nights, flow one by one above us,<br/>
The hours go silently over our lifted faces,<br/>
We are like dreamers who walk beneath a sea.<br/>
Beneath high walls we flow in the sun together.<br/>
We sleep, we wake, we laugh, we pursue, we flee.<br/>
<br/>
We sit at tables and sip our morning coffee,<br/>
We read the papers for tales of lust or crime.<br/>
The door swings shut behind the latest comer.<br/>
We set our watches, regard the time.<br/>
<br/>
What have we done? I close my eyes, remember<br/>
The great machine whose sinister brain before me<br/>
Smote and smote with a rhythmic beat.<br/>
My hands have torn down walls, the stone and plaster.<br/>
I dropped great beams to the dusty street.<br/>
<br/>
My eyes are worn with measuring cloths of purple,<br/>
And golden cloths, and wavering cloths, and pale.<br/>
I dream of a crowd of faces, white with menace.<br/>
Hands reach up to tear me. My brain will fail.<br/>
<br/>
Here, where the walls go down beneath our picks,<br/>
These walls whose windows gap against the sky,<br/>
Atom by atom of flesh and brain and marble<br/>
Will build a glittering tower before we die . . .<br/>
<br/>
The young boy whistles, hurrying down the street,<br/>
The young girl hums beneath her breath.<br/>
One goes out to beauty, and does not know it.<br/>
And one goes out to death.<br/></p>
<p>X. SUDDEN DEATH<br/>
<br/>
'Number four—the girl who died on the table—<br/>
The girl with golden hair—'<br/>
The purpling body lies on the polished marble.<br/>
We open the throat, and lay the thyroid bare . . .<br/>
<br/>
One, who held the ether-cone, remembers<br/>
Her dark blue frightened eyes.<br/>
He heard the sharp breath quiver, and saw her breast<br/>
More hurriedly fall and rise.<br/>
Her hands made futile gestures, she turned her head<br/>
Fighting for breath; her cheeks were flushed to scarlet,—<br/>
And, suddenly, she lay dead.<br/>
<br/>
And all the dreams that hurried along her veins<br/>
Came to the darkness of a sudden wall.<br/>
Confusion ran among them, they whirled and clamored,<br/>
They fell, they rose, they struck, they shouted,<br/>
Till at last a pallor of silence hushed them all.<br/>
<br/>
What was her name? Where had she walked that morning?<br/>
Through what dark forest came her feet?<br/>
Along what sunlit walls, what peopled street?<br/>
<br/>
Backward he dreamed along a chain of days,<br/>
He saw her go her strange and secret ways,<br/>
Waking and sleeping, noon and night.<br/>
She sat by a mirror, braiding her golden hair.<br/>
She read a story by candlelight.<br/>
<br/>
Her shadow ran before her along the street,<br/>
She walked with rhythmic feet,<br/>
Turned a corner, descended a stair.<br/>
She bought a paper, held it to scan the headlines,<br/>
Smiled for a moment at sea-gulls high in sunlight,<br/>
And drew deep breaths of air.<br/>
<br/>
Days passed, bright clouds of days. Nights passed. And music<br/>
Murmured within the walls of lighted windows.<br/>
She lifted her face to the light and danced.<br/>
The dancers wreathed and grouped in moving patterns,<br/>
Clustered, receded, streamed, advanced.<br/>
<br/>
Her dress was purple, her slippers were golden,<br/>
Her eyes were blue; and a purple orchid<br/>
Opened its golden heart on her breast . . .<br/>
She leaned to the surly languor of lazy music,<br/>
Leaned on her partner's arm to rest.<br/>
The violins were weaving a weft of silver,<br/>
The horns were weaving a lustrous brede of gold,<br/>
And time was caught in a glistening pattern,<br/>
Time, too elusive to hold . . .<br/>
<br/>
Shadows of leaves fell over her face,—and sunlight:<br/>
She turned her face away.<br/>
Nearer she moved to a crouching darkness<br/>
With every step and day.<br/>
<br/>
Death, who at first had thought of her only an instant,<br/>
At a great distance, across the night,<br/>
Smiled from a window upon her, and followed her slowly<br/>
From purple light to light.<br/>
<br/>
Once, in her dreams, he spoke out clearly, crying,<br/>
'I am the murderer, death.<br/>
I am the lover who keeps his appointment<br/>
At the doors of breath!'<br/>
<br/>
She rose and stared at her own reflection,<br/>
Half dreading there to find<br/>
The dark-eyed ghost, waiting beside her,<br/>
Or reaching from behind<br/>
To lay pale hands upon her shoulders . . .<br/>
Or was this in her mind? . . .<br/>
<br/>
She combed her hair. The sunlight glimmered<br/>
Along the tossing strands.<br/>
Was there a stillness in this hair,—<br/>
A quiet in these hands?<br/>
<br/>
Death was a dream. It could not change these eyes,<br/>
Blow out their light, or turn this mouth to dust.<br/>
She combed her hair and sang. She would live forever.<br/>
Leaves flew past her window along a gust . . .<br/>
And graves were dug in the earth, and coffins passed,<br/>
And music ebbed with the ebbing hours.<br/>
And dreams went along her veins, and scattering clouds<br/>
Threw streaming shadows on walls and towers.<br/></p>
<p>XI.<br/>
<br/>
Snow falls. The sky is grey, and sullenly glares<br/>
With purple lights in the canyoned street.<br/>
The fiery sign on the dark tower wreathes and flares . . .<br/>
The trodden grass in the park is covered with white,<br/>
The streets grow silent beneath our feet . . .<br/>
The city dreams, it forgets its past to-night.<br/>
<br/>
And one, from his high bright window looking down<br/>
Over the enchanted whiteness of the town,<br/>
Seeing through whirls of white the vague grey towers,<br/>
Desires like this to forget what will not pass,<br/>
The littered papers, the dust, the tarnished grass,<br/>
Grey death, stale ugliness, and sodden hours.<br/>
Deep in his heart old bells are beaten again,<br/>
Slurred bells of grief and pain,<br/>
Dull echoes of hideous times and poisonous places.<br/>
He desires to drown in a cold white peace of snow.<br/>
He desires to forget a million faces . . .<br/>
<br/>
In one room breathes a woman who dies of hunger.<br/>
The clock ticks slowly and stops. And no one winds it.<br/>
In one room fade grey violets in a vase.<br/>
Snow flakes faintly hiss and melt on the window.<br/>
In one room, minute by minute, the flutist plays<br/>
The lamplit page of music, the tireless scales.<br/>
His hands are trembling, his short breath fails.<br/>
<br/>
In one room, silently, lover looks upon lover,<br/>
And thinks the air is fire.<br/>
The drunkard swears and touches the harlot's heartstrings<br/>
With the sudden hand of desire.<br/>
<br/>
And one goes late in the streets, and thinks of murder;<br/>
And one lies staring, and thinks of death.<br/>
And one, who has suffered, clenches her hands despairing,<br/>
And holds her breath . . .<br/>
<br/>
Who are all these, who flow in the veins of the city,<br/>
Coil and revolve and dream,<br/>
Vanish or gleam?<br/>
Some mount up to the brain and flower in fire.<br/>
Some are destroyed; some die; some slowly stream.<br/>
<br/>
And the new are born who desire to destroy the old;<br/>
And fires are kindled and quenched; and dreams are broken,<br/>
And walls flung down . . .<br/>
And the slow night whirls in snow over towers of dreamers,<br/>
And whiteness hushes the town.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART3" id="link2H_PART3"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PART III </h2>
<p>I<br/>
<br/>
As evening falls,<br/>
And the yellow lights leap one by one<br/>
Along high walls;<br/>
And along black streets that glisten as if with rain,<br/>
The muted city seems<br/>
Like one in a restless sleep, who lies and dreams<br/>
Of vague desires, and memories, and half-forgotten pain . . .<br/>
Along dark veins, like lights the quick dreams run,<br/>
Flash, are extinguished, flash again,<br/>
To mingle and glow at last in the enormous brain<br/>
And die away . . .<br/>
As evening falls,<br/>
A dream dissolves these insubstantial walls,—<br/>
A myriad secretly gliding lights lie bare . . .<br/>
The lovers rise, the harlot combs her hair,<br/>
The dead man's face grows blue in the dizzy lamplight,<br/>
The watchman climbs the stair . . .<br/>
The bank defaulter leers at a chaos of figures,<br/>
And runs among them, and is beaten down;<br/>
The sick man coughs and hears the chisels ringing;<br/>
The tired clown<br/>
Sees the enormous crowd, a million faces,<br/>
Motionless in their places,<br/>
Ready to laugh, and seize, and crush and tear . . .<br/>
The dancer smooths her hair,<br/>
Laces her golden slippers, and runs through the door<br/>
To dance once more,<br/>
Hearing swift music like an enchantment rise,<br/>
Feeling the praise of a thousand eyes.<br/>
<br/>
As darkness falls<br/>
The walls grow luminous and warm, the walls<br/>
Tremble and glow with the lives within them moving,<br/>
Moving like music, secret and rich and warm.<br/>
How shall we live tonight? Where shall we turn?<br/>
To what new light or darkness yearn?<br/>
A thousand winding stairs lead down before us;<br/>
And one by one in myriads we descend<br/>
By lamplit flowered walls, long balustrades,<br/>
Through half-lit halls which reach no end.<br/></p>
<p>II. THE SCREEN MAIDEN<br/>
<br/>
You read—what is it, then that you are reading?<br/>
What music moves so silently in your mind?<br/>
Your bright hand turns the page.<br/>
I watch you from my window, unsuspected:<br/>
You move in an alien land, a silent age . . .<br/>
<br/>
. . . The poet—what was his name—? Tokkei—Tokkei—<br/>
The poet walked alone in a cold late rain,<br/>
And thought his grief was like the crying of sea-birds;<br/>
For his lover was dead, he never would love again.<br/>
<br/>
Rain in the dreams of the mind—rain forever—<br/>
Rain in the sky of the heart—rain in the willows—<br/>
But then he saw this face, this face like flame,<br/>
This quiet lady, this portrait by Hiroshigi;<br/>
And took it home with him; and with it came<br/>
<br/>
What unexpected changes, subtle as weather!<br/>
The dark room, cold as rain,<br/>
Grew faintly fragrant, stirred with a stir of April,<br/>
Warmed its corners with light again,<br/>
<br/>
And smoke of incense whirled about this portrait,<br/>
And the quiet lady there,<br/>
So young, so quietly smiling, with calm hands,<br/>
Seemed ready to loose her hair,<br/>
<br/>
And smile, and lean from the picture, or say one word,<br/>
The word already clear,<br/>
Which seemed to rise like light between her eyelids . .<br/>
He held his breath to hear,<br/>
<br/>
And smiled for shame, and drank a cup of wine,<br/>
And held a candle, and searched her face<br/>
Through all the little shadows, to see what secret<br/>
Might give so warm a grace . . .<br/>
<br/>
Was it the quiet mouth, restrained a little?<br/>
The eyes, half-turned aside?<br/>
The jade ring on her wrist, still almost swinging? . . .<br/>
The secret was denied,<br/>
<br/>
He chose his favorite pen and drew these verses,<br/>
And slept; and as he slept<br/>
A dream came into his heart, his lover entered,<br/>
And chided him, and wept.<br/>
<br/>
And in the morning, waking, he remembered,<br/>
And thought the dream was strange.<br/>
Why did his darkened lover rise from the garden?<br/>
He turned, and felt a change,<br/>
<br/>
As if a someone hidden smiled and watched him . . .<br/>
Yet there was only sunlight there.<br/>
Until he saw those young eyes, quietly smiling,<br/>
And held his breath to stare,<br/>
<br/>
And could have sworn her cheek had turned—a little . . .<br/>
Had slightly turned away . . .<br/>
Sunlight dozed on the floor . . . He sat and wondered,<br/>
Nor left his room that day.<br/>
<br/>
And that day, and for many days thereafter,<br/>
He sat alone, and thought<br/>
No lady had ever lived so beautiful<br/>
As Hiroshigi wrought . . .<br/>
<br/>
Or if she lived, no matter in what country,<br/>
By what far river or hill or lonely sea,<br/>
He would look in every face until he found her . . .<br/>
There was no other as fair as she.<br/>
<br/>
And before her quiet face he burned soft incense,<br/>
And brought her every day<br/>
Boughs of the peach, or almond, or snow-white cherry,<br/>
And somehow, she seemed to say,<br/>
<br/>
That silent lady, young, and quietly smiling,<br/>
That she was happy there;<br/>
And sometimes, seeing this, he started to tremble,<br/>
And desired to touch her hair,<br/>
<br/>
To lay his palm along her hand, touch faintly<br/>
With delicate finger-tips<br/>
The ghostly smile that seemed to hover and vanish<br/>
Upon her lips . . .<br/>
<br/>
Until he knew he loved this quiet lady;<br/>
And night by night a dread<br/>
Leered at his dreams, for he knew that Hiroshigi<br/>
Was many centuries dead,—<br/>
<br/>
And the lady, too, was dead, and all who knew her . .<br/>
Dead, and long turned to dust . . .<br/>
The thin moon waxed and waned, and left him paler,<br/>
The peach leaves flew in a gust,<br/>
<br/>
And he would surely have died; but there one day<br/>
A wise man, white with age,<br/>
Stared at the portrait, and said, 'This Hiroshigi<br/>
Knew more than archimage,—<br/>
<br/>
Cunningly drew the body, and called the spirit,<br/>
Till partly it entered there . . .<br/>
Sometimes, at death, it entered the portrait wholly . .<br/>
Do all I say with care,<br/>
<br/>
And she you love may come to you when you call her . . . '<br/>
So then this ghost, Tokkei,<br/>
Ran in the sun, bought wine of a hundred merchants,<br/>
And alone at the end of day<br/>
<br/>
Entered the darkening room, and faced the portrait,<br/>
And saw the quiet eyes<br/>
Gleaming and young in the dusk, and held the wine-cup,<br/>
And knelt, and did not rise,<br/>
<br/>
And said, aloud, 'Lo-san, will you drink this wine?'<br/>
Said it three times aloud.<br/>
And at the third the faint blue smoke of incense<br/>
Rose to the walls in a cloud,<br/>
<br/>
And the lips moved faintly, and the eyes, and the calm hands stirred;<br/>
And suddenly, with a sigh,<br/>
The quiet lady came slowly down from the portrait,<br/>
And stood, while worlds went by,<br/>
<br/>
And lifted her young white hands and took the wine cup;<br/>
And the poet trembled, and said,<br/>
'Lo-san, will you stay forever?'—'Yes, I will stay.'—<br/>
'But what when I am dead?'<br/>
<br/>
'When you are dead your spirit will find my spirit,<br/>
And then we shall die no more.'<br/>
Music came down upon them, and spring returning,<br/>
They remembered worlds before,<br/>
<br/>
And years went over the earth, and over the sea,<br/>
And lovers were born and spoke and died,<br/>
But forever in sunlight went these two immortal,<br/>
Tokkei and the quiet bride . . .<br/></p>
<p>III. HAUNTED CHAMBERS<br/>
<br/>
The lamplit page is turned, the dream forgotten;<br/>
The music changes tone, you wake, remember<br/>
Deep worlds you lived before,—deep worlds hereafter<br/>
Of leaf on falling leaf, music on music,<br/>
Rain and sorrow and wind and dust and laughter.<br/>
<br/>
Helen was late and Miriam came too soon.<br/>
Joseph was dead, his wife and children starving.<br/>
Elaine was married and soon to have a child.<br/>
You dreamed last night of fiddler-crabs with fiddles;<br/>
They played a buzzing melody, and you smiled.<br/>
<br/>
To-morrow—what? And what of yesterday?<br/>
Through soundless labyrinths of dream you pass,<br/>
Through many doors to the one door of all.<br/>
Soon as it's opened we shall hear a music:<br/>
Or see a skeleton fall . . .<br/>
<br/>
We walk with you. Where is it that you lead us?<br/>
We climb the muffled stairs beneath high lanterns.<br/>
We descend again. We grope through darkened cells.<br/>
You say: this darkness, here, will slowly kill me.<br/>
It creeps and weighs upon me . . . Is full of bells.<br/>
<br/>
This is the thing remembered I would forget—<br/>
No matter where I go, how soft I tread,<br/>
This windy gesture menaces me with death.<br/>
Fatigue! it says, and points its finger at me;<br/>
Touches my throat and stops my breath.<br/>
<br/>
My fans—my jewels—the portrait of my husband—<br/>
The torn certificate for my daughter's grave—<br/>
These are but mortal seconds in immortal time.<br/>
They brush me, fade away: like drops of water.<br/>
They signify no crime.<br/>
<br/>
Let us retrace our steps: I have deceived you:<br/>
Nothing is here I could not frankly tell you:<br/>
No hint of guilt, or faithlessness, or threat.<br/>
Dreams—they are madness. Staring eyes—illusion.<br/>
Let us return, hear music, and forget . . .<br/></p>
<p>IV. ILLICIT<br/>
<br/>
Of what she said to me that night—no matter.<br/>
The strange thing came next day.<br/>
My brain was full of music—something she played me—;<br/>
I couldn't remember it all, but phrases of it<br/>
Wreathed and wreathed among faint memories,<br/>
Seeking for something, trying to tell me something,<br/>
Urging to restlessness: verging on grief.<br/>
I tried to play the tune, from memory,—<br/>
But memory failed: the chords and discords climbed<br/>
And found no resolution—only hung there,<br/>
And left me morbid . . . Where, then, had I heard it? . . .<br/>
What secret dusty chamber was it hinting?<br/>
'Dust', it said, 'dust . . . and dust . . . and sunlight . .<br/>
A cold clear April evening . . . snow, bedraggled,<br/>
Rain-worn snow, dappling the hideous grass . . .<br/>
And someone walking alone; and someone saying<br/>
That all must end, for the time had come to go . . . '<br/>
These were the phrases . . . but behind, beneath them<br/>
A greater shadow moved: and in this shadow<br/>
I stood and guessed . . . Was it the blue-eyed lady?<br/>
The one who always danced in golden slippers—<br/>
And had I danced with her,—upon this music?<br/>
Or was it further back—the unplumbed twilight<br/>
Of childhood?—No—much recenter than that.<br/>
<br/>
You know, without my telling you, how sometimes<br/>
A word or name eludes you, and you seek it<br/>
Through running ghosts of shadow,—leaping at it,<br/>
Lying in wait for it to spring upon it,<br/>
Spreading faint snares for it of sense or sound:<br/>
Until, of a sudden, as if in a phantom forest,<br/>
You hear it, see it flash among the branches,<br/>
And scarcely knowing how, suddenly have it—<br/>
Well, it was so I followed down this music,<br/>
Glimpsing a face in darkness, hearing a cry,<br/>
Remembering days forgotten, moods exhausted,<br/>
Corners in sunlight, puddles reflecting stars—;<br/>
Until, of a sudden, and least of all suspected,<br/>
The thing resolved itself: and I remembered<br/>
An April afternoon, eight years ago—<br/>
Or was it nine?—no matter—call it nine—<br/>
A room in which the last of sunlight faded;<br/>
A vase of violets, fragrance in white curtains;<br/>
And, she who played the same thing later, playing.<br/>
<br/>
She played this tune. And in the middle of it<br/>
Abruptly broke it off, letting her hands<br/>
Fall in her lap. She sat there so a moment,<br/>
With shoulders drooped, then lifted up a rose,<br/>
One great white rose, wide opened like a lotos,<br/>
And pressed it to her cheek, and closed her eyes.<br/>
<br/>
'You know—we've got to end this—Miriam loves you . . .<br/>
If she should ever know, or even guess it,—<br/>
What would she do?—Listen!—I'm not absurd . . .<br/>
I'm sure of it. If you had eyes, for women—<br/>
To understand them—which you've never had—<br/>
You'd know it too . . . ' So went this colloquy,<br/>
Half humorous, with undertones of pathos,<br/>
Half grave, half flippant . . . while her fingers, softly,<br/>
Felt for this tune, played it and let it fall,<br/>
Now note by singing note, now chord by chord,<br/>
Repeating phrases with a kind of pleasure . . .<br/>
Was it symbolic of the woman's weakness<br/>
That she could neither break it—nor conclude?<br/>
It paused . . . and wandered . . . paused again; while she,<br/>
Perplexed and tired, half told me I must go,—<br/>
Half asked me if I thought I ought to go . . .<br/>
<br/>
Well, April passed with many other evenings,<br/>
Evenings like this, with later suns and warmer,<br/>
With violets always there, and fragrant curtains . . .<br/>
And she was right: and Miriam found it out . . .<br/>
And after that, when eight deep years had passed—<br/>
Or nine—we met once more,—by accident . . .<br/>
But was it just by accident, I wonder,<br/>
She played this tune?—Or what, then, was intended? . . .<br/></p>
<p>V. MELODY IN A RESTAURANT<br/>
<br/>
The cigarette-smoke loops and slides above us,<br/>
Dipping and swirling as the waiter passes;<br/>
You strike a match and stare upon the flame.<br/>
The tiny fire leaps in your eyes a moment,<br/>
And dwindles away as silently as it came.<br/>
<br/>
This melody, you say, has certain voices—<br/>
They rise like nereids from a river, singing,<br/>
Lift white faces, and dive to darkness again.<br/>
Wherever you go you bear this river with you:<br/>
A leaf falls,—and it flows, and you have pain.<br/>
<br/>
So says the tune to you—but what to me?<br/>
What to the waiter, as he pours your coffee,<br/>
The violinist who suavely draws his bow?<br/>
That man, who folds his paper, overhears it.<br/>
A thousand dreams revolve and fall and flow.<br/>
<br/>
Some one there is who sees a virgin stepping<br/>
Down marble stairs to a deep tomb of roses:<br/>
At the last moment she lifts remembering eyes.<br/>
Green leaves blow down. The place is checked with shadows.<br/>
A long-drawn murmur of rain goes down the skies.<br/>
And oaks are stripped and bare, and smoke with lightning:<br/>
And clouds are blown and torn upon high forests,<br/>
And the great sea shakes its walls.<br/>
And then falls silence . . . And through long silence falls<br/>
This melody once more:<br/>
'Down endless stairs she goes, as once before.'<br/>
<br/>
So says the tune to him—but what to me?<br/>
What are the worlds I see?<br/>
What shapes fantastic, terrible dreams? . . .<br/>
I go my secret way, down secret alleys;<br/>
My errand is not so simple as it seems.<br/></p>
<p>VI. PORTRAIT OF ONE DEAD<br/>
<br/>
This is the house. On one side there is darkness,<br/>
On one side there is light.<br/>
Into the darkness you may lift your lanterns—<br/>
O, any number—it will still be night.<br/>
And here are echoing stairs to lead you downward<br/>
To long sonorous halls.<br/>
And here is spring forever at these windows,<br/>
With roses on the walls.<br/>
<br/>
This is her room. On one side there is music—<br/>
On one side not a sound.<br/>
At one step she could move from love to silence,<br/>
Feel myriad darkness coiling round.<br/>
And here are balconies from which she heard you,<br/>
Your steady footsteps on the stair.<br/>
And here the glass in which she saw your shadow<br/>
As she unbound her hair.<br/>
<br/>
Here is the room—with ghostly walls dissolving—<br/>
The twilight room in which she called you 'lover';<br/>
And the floorless room in which she called you 'friend.'<br/>
So many times, in doubt, she ran between them!—<br/>
Through windy corridors of darkening end.<br/>
<br/>
Here she could stand with one dim light above her<br/>
And hear far music, like a sea in caverns,<br/>
Murmur away at hollowed walls of stone.<br/>
And here, in a roofless room where it was raining,<br/>
She bore the patient sorrow of rain alone.<br/>
<br/>
Your words were walls which suddenly froze around her.<br/>
Your words were windows,—large enough for moonlight,<br/>
Too small to let her through.<br/>
Your letters—fragrant cloisters faint with music.<br/>
The music that assuaged her there was you.<br/>
<br/>
How many times she heard your step ascending<br/>
Yet never saw your face!<br/>
She heard them turn again, ring slowly fainter,<br/>
Till silence swept the place.<br/>
Why had you gone? . . . The door, perhaps, mistaken . . .<br/>
You would go elsewhere. The deep walls were shaken.<br/>
<br/>
A certain rose-leaf—sent without intention—<br/>
Became, with time, a woven web of fire—<br/>
She wore it, and was warm.<br/>
A certain hurried glance, let fall at parting,<br/>
Became, with time, the flashings of a storm.<br/>
<br/>
Yet, there was nothing asked, no hint to tell you<br/>
Of secret idols carved in secret chambers<br/>
From all you did and said.<br/>
Nothing was done, until at last she knew you.<br/>
Nothing was known, till, somehow, she was dead.<br/>
<br/>
How did she die?—You say, she died of poison.<br/>
Simple and swift. And much to be regretted.<br/>
You did not see her pass<br/>
So many thousand times from light to darkness,<br/>
Pausing so many times before her glass;<br/>
<br/>
You did not see how many times she hurried<br/>
To lean from certain windows, vainly hoping,<br/>
Passionate still for beauty, remembered spring.<br/>
You did not know how long she clung to music,<br/>
You did not hear her sing.<br/>
<br/>
Did she, then, make the choice, and step out bravely<br/>
From sound to silence—close, herself, those windows?<br/>
Or was it true, instead,<br/>
That darkness moved,—for once,—and so possessed her? . . .<br/>
We'll never know, you say, for she is dead.<br/></p>
<p>VII. PORCELAIN<br/>
<br/>
You see that porcelain ranged there in the window—<br/>
Platters and soup-plates done with pale pink rosebuds,<br/>
And tiny violets, and wreaths of ivy?<br/>
See how the pattern clings to the gleaming edges!<br/>
They're works of art—minutely seen and felt,<br/>
Each petal done devoutly. Is it failure<br/>
To spend your blood like this?<br/>
<br/>
Study them . . . you will see there, in the porcelain,<br/>
If you stare hard enough, a sort of swimming<br/>
Of lights and shadows, ghosts within a crystal—<br/>
My brain unfolding! There you'll see me sitting<br/>
Day after day, close to a certain window,<br/>
Looking down, sometimes, to see the people . . .<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes my wife comes there to speak to me . . .<br/>
Sometimes the grey cat waves his tail around me . . .<br/>
Goldfish swim in a bowl, glisten in sunlight,<br/>
Dilate to a gorgeous size, blow delicate bubbles,<br/>
Drowse among dark green weeds. On rainy days,<br/>
You'll see a gas-light shedding light behind me—<br/>
An eye-shade round my forehead. There I sit,<br/>
Twirling the tiny brushes in my paint-cups,<br/>
Painting the pale pink rosebuds, minute violets,<br/>
Exquisite wreaths of dark green ivy leaves.<br/>
On this leaf, goes a dream I dreamed last night<br/>
Of two soft-patterned toads—I thought them stones,<br/>
Until they hopped! And then a great black spider,—<br/>
Tarantula, perhaps, a hideous thing,—<br/>
It crossed the room in one tremendous leap.<br/>
Here,—as I coil the stems between two leaves,—<br/>
It is as if, dwindling to atomy size,<br/>
I cried the secret between two universes . . .<br/>
A friend of mine took hasheesh once, and said<br/>
Just as he fell asleep he had a dream,—<br/>
Though with his eyes wide open,—<br/>
And felt, or saw, or knew himself a part<br/>
Of marvelous slowly-wreathing intricate patterns,<br/>
Plane upon plane, depth upon coiling depth,<br/>
Amazing leaves, folding one on another,<br/>
Voluted grasses, twists and curves and spirals—<br/>
All of it darkly moving . . . as for me,<br/>
I need no hasheesh for it—it's too easy!<br/>
Soon as I shut my eyes I set out walking<br/>
In a monstrous jungle of monstrous pale pink roseleaves,<br/>
Violets purple as death, dripping with water,<br/>
And ivy-leaves as big as clouds above me.<br/>
<br/>
Here, in a simple pattern of separate violets—<br/>
With scalloped edges gilded—here you have me<br/>
Thinking of something else. My wife, you know,—<br/>
There's something lacking—force, or will, or passion,<br/>
I don't know what it is—and so, sometimes,<br/>
When I am tired, or haven't slept three nights,<br/>
Or it is cloudy, with low threat of rain,<br/>
I get uneasy—just like poplar trees<br/>
Ruffling their leaves—and I begin to think<br/>
Of poor Pauline, so many years ago,<br/>
And that delicious night. Where is she now?<br/>
I meant to write—but she has moved, by this time,<br/>
And then, besides, she might find out I'm married.<br/>
Well, there is more—I'm getting old and timid—<br/>
The years have gnawed my will. I've lost my nerve!<br/>
I never strike out boldly as I used to—<br/>
But sit here, painting violets, and remember<br/>
That thrilling night. Photographers, she said,<br/>
Asked her to pose for them; her eyes and forehead,—<br/>
Dark brown eyes, and a smooth and pallid forehead,—<br/>
Were thought so beautiful.—And so they were.<br/>
Pauline . . . These violets are like words remembered . . .<br/>
Darling! she whispered . . . Darling! . . . Darling! . . . Darling!<br/>
Well, I suppose such days can come but once.<br/>
Lord, how happy we were! . . .<br/>
<br/>
Here, if you only knew it, is a story—<br/>
Here, in these leaves. I stopped my work to tell it,<br/>
And then, when I had finished, went on thinking:<br/>
A man I saw on a train . . . I was still a boy . . .<br/>
Who killed himself by diving against a wall.<br/>
Here is a recollection of my wife,<br/>
When she was still my sweetheart, years ago.<br/>
It's funny how things change,—just change, by growing,<br/>
Without an effort . . . And here are trivial things,—<br/>
A chill, an errand forgotten, a cut while shaving;<br/>
A friend of mine who tells me he is married . . .<br/>
Or is that last so trivial? Well, no matter!<br/>
<br/>
This is the sort of thing you'll see of me,<br/>
If you look hard enough. This, in its way,<br/>
Is a kind of fame. My life arranged before you<br/>
In scrolls of leaves, rosebuds, violets, ivy,<br/>
Clustered or wreathed on plate and cup and platter . . .<br/>
Sometimes, I say, I'm just like John the Baptist—<br/>
You have my head before you . . . on a platter.<br/></p>
<p>VIII. COFFINS: INTERLUDE<br/>
<br/>
Wind blows. Snow falls. The great clock in its tower<br/>
Ticks with reverberant coil and tolls the hour:<br/>
At the deep sudden stroke the pigeons fly . . .<br/>
The fine snow flutes the cracks between the flagstones.<br/>
We close our coats, and hurry, and search the sky.<br/>
<br/>
We are like music, each voice of it pursuing<br/>
A golden separate dream, remote, persistent,<br/>
Climbing to fire, receding to hoarse despair.<br/>
What do you whisper, brother? What do you tell me? . . .<br/>
We pass each other, are lost, and do not care.<br/>
<br/>
One mounts up to beauty, serenely singing,<br/>
Forgetful of the steps that cry behind him;<br/>
One drifts slowly down from a waking dream.<br/>
One, foreseeing, lingers forever unmoving . . .<br/>
Upward and downward, past him there, we stream.<br/>
<br/>
One has death in his eyes: and walks more slowly.<br/>
Death, among jonquils, told him a freezing secret.<br/>
A cloud blows over his eyes, he ponders earth.<br/>
He sees in the world a forest of sunlit jonquils:<br/>
A slow black poison huddles beneath that mirth.<br/>
<br/>
Death, from street to alley, from door to window,<br/>
Cries out his news,—of unplumbed worlds approaching,<br/>
Of a cloud of darkness soon to destroy the tower.<br/>
But why comes death,—he asks,—in a world so perfect?<br/>
Or why the minute's grey in the golden hour?<br/>
<br/>
Music, a sudden glissando, sinister, troubled,<br/>
A drift of wind-torn petals, before him passes<br/>
Down jangled streets, and dies.<br/>
The bodies of old and young, of maimed and lovely,<br/>
Are slowly borne to earth, with a dirge of cries.<br/>
<br/>
Down cobbled streets they come; down huddled stairways;<br/>
Through silent halls; through carven golden doorways;<br/>
From freezing rooms as bare as rock.<br/>
The curtains are closed across deserted windows.<br/>
Earth streams out of the shovel; the pebbles knock.<br/>
<br/>
Mary, whose hands rejoiced to move in sunlight;<br/>
Silent Elaine; grave Anne, who sang so clearly;<br/>
Fugitive Helen, who loved and walked alone;<br/>
Miriam too soon dead, darkly remembered;<br/>
Childless Ruth, who sorrowed, but could not atone;<br/>
<br/>
Jean, whose laughter flashed over depths of terror,<br/>
And Eloise, who desired to love but dared not;<br/>
Doris, who turned alone to the dark and cried,—<br/>
They are blown away like windflung chords of music,<br/>
They drift away; the sudden music has died.<br/>
<br/>
And one, with death in his eyes, comes walking slowly<br/>
And sees the shadow of death in many faces,<br/>
And thinks the world is strange.<br/>
He desires immortal music and spring forever,<br/>
And beauty that knows no change.<br/></p>
<p>IX. CABARET<br/>
<br/>
We sit together and talk, or smoke in silence.<br/>
You say (but use no words) 'this night is passing<br/>
As other nights when we are dead will pass . . .'<br/>
Perhaps I misconstrue you: you mean only,<br/>
'How deathly pale my face looks in that glass . . .'<br/>
<br/>
You say: 'We sit and talk, of things important . . .<br/>
How many others like ourselves, this instant,<br/>
Mark the pendulum swinging against the wall?<br/>
How many others, laughing, sip their coffee—<br/>
Or stare at mirrors, and do not talk at all? . . .<br/>
<br/>
'This is the moment' (so you would say, in silence)<br/>
When suddenly we have had too much of laughter:<br/>
And a freezing stillness falls, no word to say.<br/>
Our mouths feel foolish . . . For all the days hereafter<br/>
What have we saved—what news, what tune, what play?<br/>
<br/>
'We see each other as vain and futile tricksters,—<br/>
Posturing like bald apes before a mirror;<br/>
No pity dims our eyes . . .<br/>
How many others, like ourselves, this instant,<br/>
See how the great world wizens, and are wise? . . .'<br/>
<br/>
Well, you are right . . . No doubt, they fall, these seconds . . .<br/>
When suddenly all's distempered, vacuous, ugly,<br/>
And even those most like angels creep for schemes.<br/>
The one you love leans forward, smiles, deceives you,<br/>
Opens a door through which you see dark dreams.<br/>
<br/>
But this is momentary . . . or else, enduring,<br/>
Leads you with devious eyes through mists and poisons<br/>
To horrible chaos, or suicide, or crime . . .<br/>
And all these others who at your conjuration<br/>
Grow pale, feeling the skeleton touch of time,—<br/>
<br/>
Or, laughing sadly, talk of things important,<br/>
Or stare at mirrors, startled to see their faces,<br/>
Or drown in the waveless vacuum of their days,—<br/>
Suddenly, as from sleep, awake, forgetting<br/>
This nauseous dream; take up their accustomed ways,<br/>
<br/>
Exhume the ghost of a joke, renew loud laughter,<br/>
Forget the moles above their sweethearts' eyebrows,<br/>
Lean to the music, rise,<br/>
And dance once more in a rose-festooned illusion<br/>
With kindness in their eyes . . .<br/>
<br/>
They say (as we ourselves have said, remember)<br/>
'What wizardry this slow waltz works upon us!<br/>
And how it brings to mind forgotten things!'<br/>
They say 'How strange it is that one such evening<br/>
Can wake vague memories of so many springs!'<br/>
<br/>
And so they go . . . In a thousand crowded places,<br/>
They sit to smile and talk, or rise to ragtime,<br/>
And, for their pleasures, agree or disagree.<br/>
With secret symbols they play on secret passions.<br/>
With cunning eyes they see<br/>
<br/>
The innocent word that sets remembrance trembling,<br/>
The dubious word that sets the scared heart beating . . .<br/>
The pendulum on the wall<br/>
Shakes down seconds . . . They laugh at time, dissembling;<br/>
Or coil for a victim and do not talk at all.<br/></p>
<p>X. LETTER<br/>
<br/>
From time to time, lifting his eyes, he sees<br/>
The soft blue starlight through the one small window,<br/>
The moon above black trees, and clouds, and Venus,—<br/>
And turns to write . . . The clock, behind ticks softly.<br/>
<br/>
It is so long, indeed, since I have written,—<br/>
Two years, almost, your last is turning yellow,—<br/>
That these first words I write seem cold and strange.<br/>
Are you the man I knew, or have you altered?<br/>
Altered, of course—just as I too have altered—<br/>
And whether towards each other, or more apart,<br/>
We cannot say . . . I've just re-read your letter—<br/>
Not through forgetfulness, but more for pleasure—<br/>
<br/>
Pondering much on all you say in it<br/>
Of mystic consciousness—divine conversion—<br/>
The sense of oneness with the infinite,—<br/>
Faith in the world, its beauty, and its purpose . . .<br/>
Well, you believe one must have faith, in some sort,<br/>
If one's to talk through this dark world contented.<br/>
But is the world so dark? Or is it rather<br/>
Our own brute minds,—in which we hurry, trembling,<br/>
Through streets as yet unlighted? This, I think.<br/>
<br/>
You have been always, let me say, "romantic,"—<br/>
Eager for color, for beauty, soon discontented<br/>
With a world of dust and stones and flesh too ailing:<br/>
Even before the question grew to problem<br/>
And drove you bickering into metaphysics,<br/>
You met on lower planes the same great dragon,<br/>
Seeking release, some fleeting satisfaction,<br/>
In strange aesthetics . . . You tried, as I remember,<br/>
One after one, strange cults, and some, too, morbid,<br/>
The cruder first, more violent sensations,<br/>
Gorgeously carnal things, conceived and acted<br/>
With splendid animal thirst . . . Then, by degrees,—<br/>
Savoring all more delicate gradations<br/>
<br/>
In all that hue and tone may play on flesh,<br/>
Or thought on brain,—you passed, if I may say so,<br/>
From red and scarlet through morbid greens to mauve.<br/>
Let us regard ourselves, you used to say,<br/>
As instruments of music, whereon our lives<br/>
Will play as we desire: and let us yield<br/>
These subtle bodies and subtler brains and nerves<br/>
To all experience plays . . . And so you went<br/>
From subtle tune to subtler, each heard once,<br/>
Twice or thrice at the most, tiring of each;<br/>
And closing one by one your doors, drew in<br/>
Slowly, through darkening labyrinths of feeling,<br/>
Towards the central chamber . . . Which now you've reached.<br/>
<br/>
What, then's, the secret of this ultimate chamber—<br/>
Or innermost, rather? If I see it clearly<br/>
It is the last, and cunningest, resort<br/>
Of one who has found this world of dust and flesh,—<br/>
This world of lamentations, death, injustice,<br/>
Sickness, humiliation, slow defeat,<br/>
Bareness, and ugliness, and iteration,—<br/>
Too meaningless; or, if it has a meaning,<br/>
Too tiresomely insistent on one meaning:<br/>
<br/>
Futility . . . This world, I hear you saying,—<br/>
With lifted chin, and arm in outflung gesture,<br/>
Coldly imperious,—this transient world,<br/>
What has it then to give, if not containing<br/>
Deep hints of nobler worlds? We know its beauties,—<br/>
Momentary and trivial for the most part,<br/>
Perceived through flesh, passing like flesh away,—<br/>
And know how much outweighed they are by darkness.<br/>
We are like searchers in a house of darkness,<br/>
A house of dust; we creep with little lanterns,<br/>
Throwing our tremulous arcs of light at random,<br/>
Now here, now there, seeing a plane, an angle,<br/>
An edge, a curve, a wall, a broken stairway<br/>
Leading to who knows what; but never seeing<br/>
The whole at once . . . We grope our way a little,<br/>
And then grow tired. No matter what we touch,<br/>
Dust is the answer—dust: dust everywhere.<br/>
If this were all—what were the use, you ask?<br/>
But this is not: for why should we be seeking,<br/>
Why should we bring this need to seek for beauty,<br/>
To lift our minds, if there were only dust?<br/>
This is the central chamber you have come to:<br/>
Turning your back to the world, until you came<br/>
To this deep room, and looked through rose-stained windows,<br/>
And saw the hues of the world so sweetly changed.<br/>
<br/>
Well, in a measure, so only do we all.<br/>
I am not sure that you can be refuted.<br/>
At the very last we all put faith in something,—<br/>
You in this ghost that animates your world,<br/>
This ethical ghost,—and I, you'll say, in reason,—<br/>
Or sensuous beauty,—or in my secret self . . .<br/>
Though as for that you put your faith in these,<br/>
As much as I do—and then, forsaking reason,—<br/>
Ascending, you would say, to intuition,—<br/>
You predicate this ghost of yours, as well.<br/>
Of course, you might have argued,—and you should have,—<br/>
That no such deep appearance of design<br/>
Could shape our world without entailing purpose:<br/>
For can design exist without a purpose?<br/>
Without conceiving mind? . . . We are like children<br/>
Who find, upon the sands, beside a sea,<br/>
Strange patterns drawn,—circles, arcs, ellipses,<br/>
Moulded in sand . . . Who put them there, we wonder?<br/>
<br/>
Did someone draw them here before we came?<br/>
Or was it just the sea?—We pore upon them,<br/>
But find no answer—only suppositions.<br/>
And if these perfect shapes are evidence<br/>
Of immanent mind, it is but circumstantial:<br/>
We never come upon him at his work,<br/>
He never troubles us. He stands aloof—<br/>
Well, if he stands at all: is not concerned<br/>
With what we are or do. You, if you like,<br/>
May think he broods upon us, loves us, hates us,<br/>
Conceives some purpose of us. In so doing<br/>
You see, without much reason, will in law.<br/>
I am content to say, 'this world is ordered,<br/>
Happily so for us, by accident:<br/>
We go our ways untroubled save by laws<br/>
Of natural things.' Who makes the more assumption?<br/>
<br/>
If we were wise—which God knows we are not—<br/>
(Notice I call on God!) we'd plumb this riddle<br/>
Not in the world we see, but in ourselves.<br/>
These brains of ours—these delicate spinal clusters—<br/>
Have limits: why not learn them, learn their cravings?<br/>
Which of the two minds, yours or mine, is sound?<br/>
Yours, which scorned the world that gave it freedom,<br/>
Until you managed to see that world as omen,—<br/>
Or mine, which likes the world, takes all for granted,<br/>
Sorrow as much as joy, and death as life?—<br/>
You lean on dreams, and take more credit for it.<br/>
I stand alone . . . Well, I take credit, too.<br/>
You find your pleasure in being at one with all things—<br/>
Fusing in lambent dream, rising and falling<br/>
As all things rise and fall . . . I do that too—<br/>
With reservations. I find more varied pleasure<br/>
In understanding: and so find beauty even<br/>
In this strange dream of yours you call the truth.<br/>
<br/>
Well, I have bored you. And it's growing late.<br/>
For household news—what have you heard, I wonder?<br/>
You must have heard that Paul was dead, by this time—<br/>
Of spinal cancer. Nothing could be done—<br/>
We found it out too late. His death has changed me,<br/>
Deflected much of me that lived as he lived,<br/>
Saddened me, slowed me down. Such things will happen,<br/>
Life is composed of them; and it seems wisdom<br/>
To see them clearly, meditate upon them,<br/>
And understand what things flow out of them.<br/>
Otherwise, all goes on here much as always.<br/>
Why won't you come and see us, in the spring,<br/>
And bring old times with you?—If you could see me<br/>
Sitting here by the window, watching Venus<br/>
Go down behind my neighbor's poplar branches,—<br/>
Just where you used to sit,—I'm sure you'd come.<br/>
This year, they say, the springtime will be early.<br/></p>
<p>XI. CONVERSATION: UNDERTONES<br/>
<br/>
What shall we talk of? Li Po? Hokusai?<br/>
You narrow your long dark eyes to fascinate me;<br/>
You smile a little. . . . Outside, the night goes by.<br/>
I walk alone in a forest of ghostly trees . . .<br/>
Your pale hands rest palm downwards on your knees.<br/>
<br/>
'These lines—converging, they suggest such distance!<br/>
The soul is drawn away, beyond horizons.<br/>
Lured out to what? One dares not think.<br/>
Sometimes, I glimpse these infinite perspectives<br/>
In intimate talk (with such as you) and shrink . . .<br/>
<br/>
'One feels so petty!—One feels such—emptiness!—'<br/>
You mimic horror, let fall your lifted hand,<br/>
And smile at me; with brooding tenderness . . .<br/>
Alone on darkened waters I fall and rise;<br/>
Slow waves above me break, faint waves of cries.<br/>
<br/>
'And then these colors . . . but who would dare describe them?<br/>
This faint rose-coral pink . . this green—pistachio?—<br/>
So insubstantial! Like the dim ghostly things<br/>
Two lovers find in love's still-twilight chambers . . .<br/>
Old peacock-fans, and fragrant silks, and rings . . .<br/>
<br/>
'Rings, let us say, drawn from the hapless fingers<br/>
Of some great lady, many centuries nameless,—<br/>
Or is that too sepulchral?—dulled with dust;<br/>
And necklaces that crumble if you touch them;<br/>
And gold brocades that, breathed on, fall to rust.<br/>
<br/>
'No—I am wrong . . . it is not these I sought for—!<br/>
Why did they come to mind? You understand me—<br/>
You know these strange vagaries of the brain!—'<br/>
—I walk alone in a forest of ghostly trees;<br/>
Your pale hands rest palm downwards on your knees;<br/>
These strange vagaries of yours are all too plain.<br/>
<br/>
'But why perplex ourselves with tedious problems<br/>
Of art or . . . such things? . . . while we sit here, living,<br/>
With all that's in our secret hearts to say!—'<br/>
Hearts?—Your pale hand softly strokes the satin.<br/>
You play deep music—know well what you play.<br/>
You stroke the satin with thrilling of finger-tips,<br/>
You smile, with faintly perfumed lips,<br/>
You loose your thoughts like birds,<br/>
Brushing our dreams with soft and shadowy words . .<br/>
We know your words are foolish, yet sit here bound<br/>
In tremulous webs of sound.<br/>
<br/>
'How beautiful is intimate talk like this!—<br/>
It is as if we dissolved grey walls between us,<br/>
Stepped through the solid portals, become but shadows,<br/>
To hear a hidden music . . . Our own vast shadows<br/>
Lean to a giant size on the windy walls,<br/>
Or dwindle away; we hear our soft footfalls<br/>
Echo forever behind us, ghostly clear,<br/>
Music sings far off, flows suddenly near,<br/>
And dies away like rain . . .<br/>
We walk through subterranean caves again,—<br/>
Vaguely above us feeling<br/>
A shadowy weight of frescos on the ceiling,<br/>
Strange half-lit things,<br/>
Soundless grotesques with writhing claws and wings . . .<br/>
And here a beautiful face looks down upon us;<br/>
And someone hurries before, unseen, and sings . . .<br/>
Have we seen all, I wonder, in these chambers—<br/>
Or is there yet some gorgeous vault, arched low,<br/>
Where sleeps an amazing beauty we do not know? . . '<br/>
<br/>
The question falls: we walk in silence together,<br/>
Thinking of that deep vault and of its secret . . .<br/>
This lamp, these books, this fire<br/>
Are suddenly blown away in a whistling darkness.<br/>
Deep walls crash down in the whirlwind of desire.<br/></p>
<p>XII. WITCHES' SABBATH<br/>
<br/>
Now, when the moon slid under the cloud<br/>
And the cold clear dark of starlight fell,<br/>
He heard in his blood the well-known bell<br/>
Tolling slowly in heaves of sound,<br/>
Slowly beating, slowly beating,<br/>
Shaking its pulse on the stagnant air:<br/>
Sometimes it swung completely round,<br/>
Horribly gasping as if for breath;<br/>
Falling down with an anguished cry . . .<br/>
Now the red bat, he mused, will fly;<br/>
Something is marked, this night, for death . . .<br/>
And while he mused, along his blood<br/>
Flew ghostly voices, remote and thin,<br/>
They rose in the cavern of his brain,<br/>
Like ghosts they died away again;<br/>
And hands upon his heart were laid,<br/>
And music upon his flesh was played,<br/>
Until, as he was bidden to do,<br/>
He walked the wood he so well knew.<br/>
Through the cold dew he moved his feet,<br/>
And heard far off, as under the earth,<br/>
Discordant music in shuddering tones,<br/>
Screams of laughter, horrible mirth,<br/>
Clapping of hands, and thudding of drums,<br/>
And the long-drawn wail of one in pain.<br/>
To-night, he thought, I shall die again,<br/>
We shall die again in the red-eyed fire<br/>
To meet on the edge of the wood beyond<br/>
With the placid gaze of fed desire . . .<br/>
He walked; and behind the whisper of trees,<br/>
In and out, one walked with him:<br/>
She parted the branches and peered at him,<br/>
Through lowered lids her two eyes burned,<br/>
He heard her breath, he saw her hand,<br/>
Wherever he turned his way, she turned:<br/>
Kept pace with him, now fast, now slow;<br/>
Moving her white knees as he moved . . .<br/>
This is the one I have always loved;<br/>
This is the one whose bat-soul comes<br/>
To dance with me, flesh to flesh,<br/>
In the starlight dance of horns and drums . . .<br/>
<br/>
The walls and roofs, the scarlet towers,<br/>
Sank down behind a rushing sky.<br/>
He heard a sweet song just begun<br/>
Abruptly shatter in tones and die.<br/>
It whirled away. Cold silence fell.<br/>
And again came tollings of a bell.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>This air is alive with witches: the white witch rides<br/>
Swifter than smoke on the starlit wind.<br/>
In the clear darkness, while the moon hides,<br/>
They come like dreams, like something remembered . .<br/>
Let us hurry! beloved; take my hand,<br/>
Forget these things that trouble your eyes,<br/>
Forget, forget! Our flesh is changed,<br/>
Lighter than smoke we wreathe and rise . . .<br/>
<br/>
The cold air hisses between us . . . Beloved, beloved,<br/>
What was the word you said?<br/>
Something about clear music that sang through water . . .<br/>
I cannot remember. The storm-drops break on the leaves.<br/>
Something was lost in the darkness. Someone is dead.<br/>
Someone lies in the garden and grieves.<br/>
Look how the branches are tossed in this air,<br/>
Flinging their green to the earth!<br/>
Black clouds rush to devour the stars in the sky,<br/>
The moon stares down like a half-closed eye.<br/>
The leaves are scattered, the birds are blown,<br/>
Oaks crash down in the darkness,<br/>
We run from our windy shadows; we are running alone.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The moon was darkened: across it flew<br/>
The swift grey tenebrous shape he knew,<br/>
Like a thing of smoke it crossed the sky,<br/>
The witch! he said. And he heard a cry,<br/>
And another came, and another came,<br/>
And one, grown duskily red with blood,<br/>
Floated an instant across the moon,<br/>
Hung like a dull fantastic flame . . .<br/>
The earth has veins: they throb to-night,<br/>
The earth swells warm beneath my feet,<br/>
The tips of the trees grow red and bright,<br/>
The leaves are swollen, I feel them beat,<br/>
They press together, they push and sigh,<br/>
They listen to hear the great bat cry,<br/>
The great red bat with the woman's face . . .<br/>
Hurry! he said. And pace for pace<br/>
That other, who trod the dark with him,<br/>
Crushed the live leaves, reached out white hands<br/>
And closed her eyes, the better to see<br/>
The priests with claws, the lovers with hooves,<br/>
The fire-lit rock, the sarabands.<br/>
I am here! she said. The bough he broke—<br/>
Was it the snapping bough that spoke?<br/>
I am here! she said. The white thigh gleamed<br/>
Cold in starlight among dark leaves,<br/>
The head thrown backward as he had dreamed,<br/>
The shadowy red deep jasper mouth;<br/>
And the lifted hands, and the virgin breasts,<br/>
Passed beside him, and vanished away.<br/>
I am here! she cried. He answered 'Stay!'<br/>
And laughter arose, and near and far<br/>
Answering laughter rose and died . . .<br/>
Who is there? in the dark? he cried.<br/>
He stood in terror, and heard a sound<br/>
Of terrible hooves on the hollow ground;<br/>
They rushed, were still; a silence fell;<br/>
And he heard deep tollings of a bell.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Look beloved! Why do you hide your face?<br/>
Look, in the centre there, above the fire,<br/>
They are bearing the boy who blasphemed love!<br/>
They are playing a piercing music upon him<br/>
With a bow of living wire! . . .<br/>
The virgin harlot sings,<br/>
She leans above the beautiful anguished body,<br/>
And draws slow music from those strings.<br/>
They dance around him, they fling red roses upon him,<br/>
They trample him with their naked feet,<br/>
His cries are lost in laughter,<br/>
Their feet grow dark with his blood, they beat and<br/>
beat,<br/>
They dance upon him, until he cries no more . . .<br/>
Have we not heard that cry before?<br/>
Somewhere, somewhere,<br/>
Beside a sea, in the green evening,<br/>
Beneath green clouds, in a copper sky . . .<br/>
Was it you? was it I?<br/>
They have quenched the fires, they dance in the darkness,<br/>
The satyrs have run among them to seize and tear,<br/>
Look! he has caught one by the hair,<br/>
She screams and falls, he bears her away with him,<br/>
And the night grows full of whistling wings.<br/>
Far off, one voice, serene and sweet,<br/>
Rises and sings . . .<br/>
<br/>
'By the clear waters where once I died,<br/>
In the calm evening bright with stars. . . .'<br/>
Where have I heard these words? Was it you who sang them?<br/>
It was long ago.<br/>
Let us hurry, beloved! the hard hooves trample;<br/>
The treetops tremble and glow.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>In the clear dark, on silent wings,<br/>
The red bat hovers beneath her moon;<br/>
She drops through the fragrant night, and clings<br/>
Fast in the shadow, with hands like claws,<br/>
With soft eyes closed and mouth that feeds,<br/>
To the young white flesh that warmly bleeds.<br/>
The maidens circle in dance, and raise<br/>
From lifting throats, a soft-sung praise;<br/>
Their knees and breasts are white and bare,<br/>
They have hung pale roses in their hair,<br/>
Each of them as she dances by<br/>
Peers at the blood with a narrowed eye.<br/>
See how the red wing wraps him round,<br/>
See how the white youth struggles in vain!<br/>
The weak arms writhe in a soundless pain;<br/>
He writhes in the soft red veiny wings,<br/>
But still she whispers upon him and clings. . . .<br/>
This is the secret feast of love,<br/>
Look well, look well, before it dies,<br/>
See how the red one trembles above,<br/>
See how quiet the white one lies! . . . .<br/>
<br/>
Wind through the trees. . . . and a voice is heard<br/>
Singing far off. The dead leaves fall. . . .<br/>
'By the clear waters where once I died,<br/>
In the calm evening bright with stars,<br/>
One among numberless avatars,<br/>
I wedded a mortal, a mortal bride,<br/>
And lay on the stones and gave my flesh,<br/>
And entered the hunger of him I loved.<br/>
How shall I ever escape this mesh<br/>
Or be from my lover's body removed?'<br/>
Dead leaves stream through the hurrying air<br/>
And the maenads dance with flying hair.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The priests with hooves, the lovers with horns,<br/>
Rise in the starlight, one by one,<br/>
They draw their knives on the spurting throats,<br/>
They smear the column with blood of goats,<br/>
They dabble the blood on hair and lips<br/>
And wait like stones for the moon's eclipse.<br/>
They stand like stones and stare at the sky<br/>
Where the moon leers down like a half-closed eye. . .<br/>
In the green moonlight still they stand<br/>
While wind flows over the darkened sand<br/>
And brood on the soft forgotten things<br/>
That filled their shadowy yesterdays. . . .<br/>
Where are the breasts, the scarlet wings? . . . .<br/>
They gaze at each other with troubled gaze. . . .<br/>
And then, as the shadow closes the moon,<br/>
Shout, and strike with their hooves the ground,<br/>
And rush through the dark, and fill the night<br/>
With a slowly dying clamor of sound.<br/>
There, where the great walls crowd the stars,<br/>
There, by the black wind-riven walls,<br/>
In a grove of twisted leafless trees. . . .<br/>
Who are these pilgrims, who are these,<br/>
These three, the one of whom stands upright,<br/>
While one lies weeping and one of them crawls?<br/>
The face that he turned was a wounded face,<br/>
I heard the dripping of blood on stones. . . .<br/>
Hooves had trampled and torn this place,<br/>
And the leaves were strewn with blood and bones.<br/>
Sometimes, I think, beneath my feet,<br/>
The warm earth stretches herself and sighs. . . .<br/>
Listen! I heard the slow heart beat. . . .<br/>
I will lie on this grass as a lover lies<br/>
And reach to the north and reach to the south<br/>
And seek in the darkness for her mouth.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Beloved, beloved, where the slow waves of the wind<br/>
Shatter pale foam among great trees,<br/>
Under the hurrying stars, under the heaving arches,<br/>
Like one whirled down under shadowy seas,<br/>
I run to find you, I run and cry,<br/>
Where are you? Where are you? It is I. It is I.<br/>
It is your eyes I seek, it is your windy hair,<br/>
Your starlight body that breathes in the darkness there.<br/>
Under the darkness I feel you stirring. . . .<br/>
Is this you? Is this you?<br/>
Bats in this air go whirring. . . .<br/>
And this soft mouth that darkly meets my mouth,<br/>
Is this the soft mouth I knew?<br/>
Darkness, and wind in the tortured trees;<br/>
And the patter of dew.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Dance! Dance! Dance! Dance!<br/>
Dance till the brain is red with speed!<br/>
Dance till you fall! Lift your torches!<br/>
Kiss your lovers until they bleed!<br/>
Backward I draw your anguished hair<br/>
Until your eyes are stretched with pain;<br/>
Backward I press you until you cry,<br/>
Your lips grow white, I kiss you again,<br/>
I will take a torch and set you afire,<br/>
I will break your body and fling it away. . . .<br/>
Look, you are trembling. . . . Lie still, beloved!<br/>
Lock your hands in my hair, and say<br/>
Darling! darling! darling! darling!<br/>
All night long till the break of day.<br/>
<br/>
Is it your heart I hear beneath me. . . .<br/>
Or the far tolling of that tower?<br/>
The voices are still that cried around us. . . .<br/>
The woods grow still for the sacred hour.<br/>
Rise, white lover! the day draws near.<br/>
The grey trees lean to the east in fear.<br/>
'By the clear waters where once I died . . . .'<br/>
Beloved, whose voice was this that cried?<br/>
'By the clear waters that reach the sun<br/>
By the clear waves that starward run. . . .<br/>
I found love's body and lost his soul,<br/>
And crumbled in flame that should have annealed. . .<br/>
How shall I ever again be whole,<br/>
By what dark waters shall I be healed?'<br/>
<br/>
Silence. . . . the red leaves, one by one,<br/>
Fall. Far off, the maenads run.<br/>
<br/>
Silence. Beneath my naked feet<br/>
The veins of the red earth swell and beat.<br/>
The dead leaves sigh on the troubled air,<br/>
Far off the maenads bind their hair. . . .<br/>
Hurry, beloved! the day comes soon.<br/>
The fire is drawn from the heart of the moon.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The great bell cracks and falls at last.<br/>
The moon whirls out. The sky grows still.<br/>
Look, how the white cloud crosses the stars<br/>
And suddenly drops behind the hill!<br/>
Your eyes are placid, you smile at me,<br/>
We sit in the room by candle-light.<br/>
We peer in each other's veins and see<br/>
No sign of the things we saw this night.<br/>
Only, a song is in your ears,<br/>
A song you have heard, you think, in dream:<br/>
The song which only the demon hears,<br/>
In the dark forest where maenads scream . . .<br/>
<br/>
'By the clear waters where once I died . . .<br/>
In the calm evening bright with stars . . . '<br/>
What do the strange words mean? you say,—<br/>
And touch my hand, and turn away.<br/></p>
<p>XIII.<br/>
<br/>
The half-shut doors through which we heard that music<br/>
Are softly closed. Horns mutter down to silence.<br/>
The stars whirl out, the night grows deep.<br/>
Darkness settles upon us. A vague refrain<br/>
Drowsily teases at the drowsy brain.<br/>
In numberless rooms we stretch ourselves and sleep.<br/>
<br/>
Where have we been? What savage chaos of music<br/>
Whirls in our dreams?—We suddenly rise in darkness,<br/>
Open our eyes, cry out, and sleep once more.<br/>
We dream we are numberless sea-waves languidly foaming<br/>
A warm white moonlit shore;<br/>
<br/>
Or clouds blown windily over a sky at midnight,<br/>
Or chords of music scattered in hurrying darkness,<br/>
Or a singing sound of rain . . .<br/>
We open our eyes and stare at the coiling darkness,<br/>
And enter our dreams again.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART4" id="link2H_PART4"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PART IV. </h2>
<p>I. CLAIRVOYANT<br/>
<br/>
'This envelope you say has something in it<br/>
Which once belonged to your dead son—or something<br/>
He knew, was fond of? Something he remembers?—<br/>
The soul flies far, and we can only call it<br/>
By things like these . . . a photograph, a letter,<br/>
Ribbon, or charm, or watch . . . '<br/>
<br/>
. . . Wind flows softly, the long slow even wind,<br/>
Over the low roofs white with snow;<br/>
Wind blows, bearing cold clouds over the ocean,<br/>
One by one they melt and flow,—<br/>
<br/>
Streaming one by one over trees and towers,<br/>
Coiling and gleaming in shafts of sun;<br/>
Wind flows, bearing clouds; the hurrying shadows<br/>
Flow under them one by one . . .<br/>
<br/>
' . . . A spirit darkens before me . . . it is the spirit<br/>
Which in the flesh you called your son . . . A spirit<br/>
Young and strong and beautiful . . .<br/>
<br/>
He says that he is happy, is much honored;<br/>
Forgives and is forgiven . . . rain and wind<br/>
Do not perplex him . . . storm and dust forgotten . .<br/>
The glittering wheels in wheels of time are broken<br/>
And laid aside . . . '<br/>
<br/>
'Ask him why he did the thing he did!'<br/>
<br/>
'He is unhappy. This thing, he says, transcends you:<br/>
Dust cannot hold what shines beyond the dust . . .<br/>
What seems calamity is less than a sigh;<br/>
What seems disgrace is nothing.'<br/>
<br/>
'Ask him if the one he hurt is there,<br/>
And if she loves him still!'<br/>
<br/>
'He tells you she is there, and loves him still,—<br/>
Not as she did, but as all spirits love . . .<br/>
A cloud of spirits has gathered about him.<br/>
They praise him and call him, they do him honor;<br/>
He is more beautiful, he shines upon them.'<br/>
<br/>
. . . Wind flows softly, the long deep tremulous wind,<br/>
Over the low roofs white with snow . . .<br/>
Wind flows, bearing dreams; they gather and vanish,<br/>
One by one they sing and flow;<br/>
<br/>
Over the outstretched lands of days remembered,<br/>
Over remembered tower and wall,<br/>
One by one they gather and talk in the darkness,<br/>
Rise and glimmer and fall . . .<br/>
<br/>
'Ask him why he did the thing he did!<br/>
He knows I will understand!'<br/>
<br/>
'It is too late:<br/>
He will not hear me: I have lost my power.'<br/>
<br/>
'Three times I've asked him! He will never tell me.<br/>
God have mercy upon him. I will ask no more.'<br/></p>
<p>II. DEATH: AND A DERISIVE CHORUS<br/>
<br/>
The door is shut. She leaves the curtained office,<br/>
And down the grey-walled stairs comes trembling slowly<br/>
Towards the dazzling street.<br/>
Her withered hand clings tightly to the railing.<br/>
The long stairs rise and fall beneath her feet.<br/>
<br/>
Here in the brilliant sun we jostle, waiting<br/>
To tear her secret out . . . We laugh, we hurry,<br/>
We go our way, revolving, sinister, slow.<br/>
She blinks in the sun, and then steps faintly downward.<br/>
We whirl her away, we shout, we spin, we flow.<br/>
<br/>
Where have you been, old lady? We know your secret!—<br/>
Voices jangle about her, jeers, and laughter. . . .<br/>
She trembles, tries to hurry, averts her eyes.<br/>
Tell us the truth, old lady! where have you been?<br/>
She turns and turns, her brain grows dark with cries.<br/>
<br/>
Look at the old fool tremble! She's been paying,—<br/>
Paying good money, too,—to talk to spirits. . . .<br/>
She thinks she's heard a message from one dead!<br/>
What did he tell you? Is he well and happy?<br/>
Don't lie to us—we all know what he said.<br/>
<br/>
He said the one he murdered once still loves him;<br/>
He said the wheels in wheels of time are broken;<br/>
And dust and storm forgotten; and all forgiven. . . .<br/>
But what you asked he wouldn't tell you, though,—<br/>
Ha ha! there's one thing you will never know!<br/>
That's what you get for meddling so with heaven!<br/>
<br/>
Where have you been, old lady? Where are you going?<br/>
We know, we know! She's been to gab with spirits.<br/>
Look at the old fool! getting ready to cry!<br/>
What have you got in an envelope, old lady?<br/>
A lock of hair? An eyelash from his eye?<br/>
<br/>
How do you know the medium didn't fool you?<br/>
Perhaps he had no spirit—perhaps he killed it.<br/>
Here she comes! the old fool's lost her son.<br/>
What did he have—blue eyes and golden hair?<br/>
We know your secret! what's done is done.<br/>
<br/>
Look out, you'll fall—and fall, if you're not careful,<br/>
Right into an open grave. . . but what's the hurry?<br/>
You don't think you will find him when you're dead?<br/>
Cry! Cry! Look at her mouth all twisted,—<br/>
Look at her eyes all red!<br/>
<br/>
We know you—know your name and all about you,<br/>
All you remember and think, and all you scheme for.<br/>
We tear your secret out, we leave you, go<br/>
Laughingly down the street. . . . Die, if you want to!<br/>
Die, then, if you're in such a hurry to know!—<br/>
<br/>
. . . . She falls. We lift her head. The wasted body<br/>
Weighs nothing in our hands. Does no one know her?<br/>
Was no one with her when she fell? . . .<br/>
We eddy about her, move away in silence.<br/>
We hear slow tollings of a bell.<br/></p>
<p>III. PALIMPSEST: A DECEITFUL PORTRAIT<br/>
<br/>
Well, as you say, we live for small horizons:<br/>
We move in crowds, we flow and talk together,<br/>
Seeing so many eyes and hands and faces,<br/>
So many mouths, and all with secret meanings,—<br/>
Yet know so little of them; only seeing<br/>
The small bright circle of our consciousness,<br/>
Beyond which lies the dark. Some few we know—<br/>
Or think we know. . . Once, on a sun-bright morning,<br/>
I walked in a certain hallway, trying to find<br/>
A certain door: I found one, tried it, opened,<br/>
And there in a spacious chamber, brightly lighted,<br/>
A hundred men played music, loudly, swiftly,<br/>
While one tall woman sent her voice above them<br/>
In powerful sweetness. . . . Closing then the door<br/>
I heard it die behind me, fade to whisper,—<br/>
And walked in a quiet hallway as before.<br/>
Just such a glimpse, as through that opened door,<br/>
Is all we know of those we call our friends. . . .<br/>
We hear a sudden music, see a playing<br/>
Of ordered thoughts—and all again is silence.<br/>
The music, we suppose, (as in ourselves)<br/>
Goes on forever there, behind shut doors,—<br/>
As it continues after our departure,<br/>
So, we divine, it played before we came . . .<br/>
What do you know of me, or I of you? . . .<br/>
Little enough. . . . We set these doors ajar<br/>
Only for chosen movements of the music:<br/>
This passage, (so I think—yet this is guesswork)<br/>
Will please him,—it is in a strain he fancies,—<br/>
More brilliant, though, than his; and while he likes it<br/>
He will be piqued . . . He looks at me bewildered<br/>
And thinks (to judge from self—this too is guesswork)<br/>
<br/>
The music strangely subtle, deep in meaning,<br/>
Perplexed with implications; he suspects me<br/>
Of hidden riches, unexpected wisdom. . . .<br/>
Or else I let him hear a lyric passage,—<br/>
Simple and clear; and all the while he listens<br/>
I make pretence to think my doors are closed.<br/>
This too bewilders him. He eyes me sidelong<br/>
Wondering 'Is he such a fool as this?<br/>
Or only mocking?'—There I let it end. . . .<br/>
Sometimes, of course, and when we least suspect it—<br/>
When we pursue our thoughts with too much passion,<br/>
Talking with too great zeal—our doors fly open<br/>
Without intention; and the hungry watcher<br/>
Stares at the feast, carries away our secrets,<br/>
And laughs. . . . but this, for many counts, is seldom.<br/>
And for the most part we vouchsafe our friends,<br/>
Our lovers too, only such few clear notes<br/>
As we shall deem them likely to admire:<br/>
'Praise me for this' we say, or 'laugh at this,'<br/>
Or 'marvel at my candor'. . . . all the while<br/>
Withholding what's most precious to ourselves,—<br/>
Some sinister depth of lust or fear or hatred,<br/>
The sombre note that gives the chord its power;<br/>
Or a white loveliness—if such we know—<br/>
Too much like fire to speak of without shame.<br/>
<br/>
Well, this being so, and we who know it being<br/>
So curious about those well-locked houses,<br/>
The minds of those we know,—to enter softly,<br/>
And steal from floor to floor up shadowy stairways,<br/>
From room to quiet room, from wall to wall,<br/>
Breathing deliberately the very air,<br/>
Pressing our hands and nerves against warm darkness<br/>
To learn what ghosts are there,—<br/>
Suppose for once I set my doors wide open<br/>
And bid you in. . . . Suppose I try to tell you<br/>
The secrets of this house, and how I live here;<br/>
Suppose I tell you who I am, in fact. . . .<br/>
Deceiving you—as far as I may know it—<br/>
Only so much as I deceive myself.<br/>
<br/>
If you are clever you already see me<br/>
As one who moves forever in a cloud<br/>
Of warm bright vanity: a luminous cloud<br/>
Which falls on all things with a quivering magic,<br/>
Changing such outlines as a light may change,<br/>
Brightening what lies dark to me, concealing<br/>
Those things that will not change . . . I walk sustained<br/>
In a world of things that flatter me: a sky<br/>
Just as I would have had it; trees and grass<br/>
Just as I would have shaped and colored them;<br/>
Pigeons and clouds and sun and whirling shadows,<br/>
And stars that brightening climb through mist at nightfall,—<br/>
In some deep way I am aware these praise me:<br/>
Where they are beautiful, or hint of beauty,<br/>
They point, somehow, to me. . . . This water says,—<br/>
Shimmering at the sky, or undulating<br/>
In broken gleaming parodies of clouds,<br/>
Rippled in blue, or sending from cool depths<br/>
To meet the falling leaf the leaf's clear image,—<br/>
This water says, there is some secret in you<br/>
Akin to my clear beauty, silently responsive<br/>
To all that circles you. This bare tree says,—<br/>
Austere and stark and leafless, split with frost,<br/>
Resonant in the wind, with rigid branches<br/>
Flung out against the sky,—this tall tree says,<br/>
There is some cold austerity in you,<br/>
A frozen strength, with long roots gnarled on rocks,<br/>
Fertile and deep; you bide your time, are patient,<br/>
Serene in silence, bare to outward seeming,<br/>
Concealing what reserves of power and beauty!<br/>
What teeming Aprils!—chorus of leaves on leaves!<br/>
These houses say, such walls in walls as ours,<br/>
Such streets of walls, solid and smooth of surface,<br/>
Such hills and cities of walls, walls upon walls;<br/>
Motionless in the sun, or dark with rain;<br/>
Walls pierced with windows, where the light may enter;<br/>
Walls windowless where darkness is desired;<br/>
Towers and labyrinths and domes and chambers,—<br/>
Amazing deep recesses, dark on dark,—<br/>
All these are like the walls which shape your spirit:<br/>
You move, are warm, within them, laugh within them,<br/>
Proud of their depth and strength; or sally from them,<br/>
When you are bold, to blow great horns at the world. .<br/>
This deep cool room, with shadowed walls and ceiling,<br/>
Tranquil and cloistral, fragrant of my mind,<br/>
This cool room says,—just such a room have you,<br/>
It waits you always at the tops of stairways,<br/>
Withdrawn, remote, familiar to your uses,<br/>
Where you may cease pretence and be yourself. . . .<br/>
And this embroidery, hanging on this wall,<br/>
Hung there forever,—these so soundless glidings<br/>
Of dragons golden-scaled, sheer birds of azure,<br/>
Coilings of leaves in pale vermilion, griffins<br/>
Drawing their rainbow wings through involutions<br/>
Of mauve chrysanthemums and lotus flowers,—<br/>
This goblin wood where someone cries enchantment,—<br/>
This says, just such an involuted beauty<br/>
Of thought and coiling thought, dream linked with dream,<br/>
Image to image gliding, wreathing fires,<br/>
Soundlessly cries enchantment in your mind:<br/>
You need but sit and close your eyes a moment<br/>
To see these deep designs unfold themselves.<br/>
<br/>
And so, all things discern me, name me, praise me—<br/>
I walk in a world of silent voices, praising;<br/>
And in this world you see me like a wraith<br/>
Blown softly here and there, on silent winds.<br/>
'Praise me'—I say; and look, not in a glass,<br/>
But in your eyes, to see my image there—<br/>
Or in your mind; you smile, I am contented;<br/>
You look at me, with interest unfeigned,<br/>
And listen—I am pleased; or else, alone,<br/>
I watch thin bubbles veering brightly upward<br/>
From unknown depths,—my silver thoughts ascending;<br/>
Saying now this, now that, hinting of all things,—<br/>
Dreams, and desires, velleities, regrets,<br/>
Faint ghosts of memory, strange recognitions,—<br/>
But all with one deep meaning: this is I,<br/>
This is the glistening secret holy I,<br/>
This silver-winged wonder, insubstantial,<br/>
This singing ghost. . . . And hearing, I am warmed.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>You see me moving, then, as one who moves<br/>
Forever at the centre of his circle:<br/>
A circle filled with light. And into it<br/>
Come bulging shapes from darkness, loom gigantic,<br/>
Or huddle in dark again. . . . A clock ticks clearly,<br/>
A gas-jet steadily whirs, light streams across me;<br/>
Two church bells, with alternate beat, strike nine;<br/>
And through these things my pencil pushes softly<br/>
To weave grey webs of lines on this clear page.<br/>
Snow falls and melts; the eaves make liquid music;<br/>
Black wheel-tracks line the snow-touched street; I turn<br/>
And look one instant at the half-dark gardens,<br/>
Where skeleton elm-trees reach with frozen gesture<br/>
Above unsteady lamps,—with black boughs flung<br/>
Against a luminous snow-filled grey-gold sky.<br/>
'Beauty!' I cry. . . . My feet move on, and take me<br/>
Between dark walls, with orange squares for windows.<br/>
Beauty; beheld like someone half-forgotten,<br/>
Remembered, with slow pang, as one neglected . . .<br/>
Well, I am frustrate; life has beaten me,<br/>
The thing I strongly seized has turned to darkness,<br/>
And darkness rides my heart. . . . These skeleton elm-trees—<br/>
Leaning against that grey-gold snow filled sky—<br/>
Beauty! they say, and at the edge of darkness<br/>
Extend vain arms in a frozen gesture of protest . . .<br/>
A clock ticks softly; a gas-jet steadily whirs:<br/>
The pencil meets its shadow upon clear paper,<br/>
Voices are raised, a door is slammed. The lovers,<br/>
Murmuring in an adjacent room, grow silent,<br/>
The eaves make liquid music. . . . Hours have passed,<br/>
And nothing changes, and everything is changed.<br/>
Exultation is dead, Beauty is harlot,—<br/>
And walks the streets. The thing I strongly seized<br/>
Has turned to darkness, and darkness rides my heart.<br/>
<br/>
If you could solve this darkness you would have me.<br/>
This causeless melancholy that comes with rain,<br/>
Or on such days as this when large wet snowflakes<br/>
Drop heavily, with rain . . . whence rises this?<br/>
Well, so-and-so, this morning when I saw him,<br/>
Seemed much preoccupied, and would not smile;<br/>
And you, I saw too much; and you, too little;<br/>
And the word I chose for you, the golden word,<br/>
The word that should have struck so deep in purpose,<br/>
And set so many doors of wish wide open,<br/>
You let it fall, and would not stoop for it,<br/>
And smiled at me, and would not let me guess<br/>
Whether you saw it fall. . . These things, together,<br/>
With other things, still slighter, wove to music,<br/>
And this in time drew up dark memories;<br/>
And there I stand. This music breaks and bleeds me,<br/>
Turning all frustrate dreams to chords and discords,<br/>
Faces and griefs, and words, and sunlit evenings,<br/>
And chains self-forged that will not break nor lengthen,<br/>
And cries that none can answer, few will hear.<br/>
Have these things meaning? Or would you see more clearly<br/>
If I should say 'My second wife grows tedious,<br/>
Or, like gay tulip, keeps no perfumed secret'?<br/>
<br/>
Or 'one day dies eventless as another,<br/>
Leaving the seeker still unsatisfied,<br/>
And more convinced life yields no satisfaction'?<br/>
Or 'seek too hard, the sight at length grows callous,<br/>
And beauty shines in vain'?—<br/>
<br/>
These things you ask for,<br/>
These you shall have. . . So, talking with my first wife,<br/>
At the dark end of evening, when she leaned<br/>
And smiled at me, with blue eyes weaving webs<br/>
Of finest fire, revolving me in scarlet,—<br/>
Calling to mind remote and small successions<br/>
Of countless other evenings ending so,—<br/>
I smiled, and met her kiss, and wished her dead;<br/>
Dead of a sudden sickness, or by my hands<br/>
Savagely killed; I saw her in her coffin,<br/>
I saw her coffin borne downstairs with trouble,<br/>
I saw myself alone there, palely watching,<br/>
Wearing a masque of grief so deeply acted<br/>
That grief itself possessed me. Time would pass,<br/>
And I should meet this girl,—my second wife—<br/>
And drop the masque of grief for one of passion.<br/>
Forward we move to meet, half hesitating,<br/>
We drown in each others' eyes, we laugh, we talk,<br/>
Looking now here, now there, faintly pretending<br/>
We do not hear the powerful pulsing prelude<br/>
Roaring beneath our words . . . The time approaches.<br/>
We lean unbalanced. The mute last glance between us,<br/>
Profoundly searching, opening, asking, yielding,<br/>
Is steadily met: our two lives draw together . . .<br/>
. . . .'What are you thinking of?'. . . . My first wife's voice<br/>
Scattered these ghosts. 'Oh nothing—nothing much—<br/>
Just wondering where we'd be two years from now,<br/>
And what we might be doing . . . ' And then remorse<br/>
Turned sharply in my mind to sudden pity,<br/>
And pity to echoed love. And one more evening<br/>
Drew to the usual end of sleep and silence.<br/>
<br/>
And, as it is with this, so too with all things.<br/>
The pages of our lives are blurred palimpsest:<br/>
New lines are wreathed on old lines half-erased,<br/>
And those on older still; and so forever.<br/>
The old shines through the new, and colors it.<br/>
What's new? What's old? All things have double meanings,—<br/>
All things return. I write a line with passion<br/>
(Or touch a woman's hand, or plumb a doctrine)<br/>
Only to find the same thing, done before,—<br/>
Only to know the same thing comes to-morrow. . . .<br/>
This curious riddled dream I dreamed last night,—<br/>
Six years ago I dreamed it just as now;<br/>
The same man stooped to me; we rose from darkness,<br/>
And broke the accustomed order of our days,<br/>
And struck for the morning world, and warmth, and freedom. . . .<br/>
What does it mean? Why is this hint repeated?<br/>
What darkness does it spring from, seek to end?<br/>
<br/>
You see me, then, pass up and down these stairways,<br/>
Now through a beam of light, and now through shadow,—<br/>
Pursuing silent ends. No rest there is,—<br/>
No more for me than you. I move here always,<br/>
From quiet room to room, from wall to wall,<br/>
Searching and plotting, weaving a web of days.<br/>
This is my house, and now, perhaps, you know me. . .<br/>
Yet I confess, for all my best intentions,<br/>
Once more I have deceived you. . . . I withhold<br/>
The one thing precious, the one dark thing that guides me;<br/>
And I have spread two snares for you, of lies.<br/></p>
<p>IV. COUNTERPOINT: TWO ROOMS<br/>
<br/>
He, in the room above, grown old and tired,<br/>
She, in the room below—his floor her ceiling—<br/>
Pursue their separate dreams. He turns his light,<br/>
And throws himself on the bed, face down, in laughter. . . .<br/>
She, by the window, smiles at a starlight night,<br/>
<br/>
His watch—the same he has heard these cycles of ages—<br/>
Wearily chimes at seconds beneath his pillow.<br/>
The clock, upon her mantelpiece, strikes nine.<br/>
The night wears on. She hears dull steps above her.<br/>
The world whirs on. . . . New stars come up to shine.<br/>
<br/>
His youth—far off—he sees it brightly walking<br/>
In a golden cloud. . . . Wings flashing about it. . . . Darkness<br/>
Walls it around with dripping enormous walls.<br/>
Old age—far off—her death—what do they matter?<br/>
Down the smooth purple night a streaked star falls.<br/>
<br/>
She hears slow steps in the street—they chime like music;<br/>
They climb to her heart, they break and flower in beauty,<br/>
Along her veins they glisten and ring and burn. . . .<br/>
He hears his own slow steps tread down to silence.<br/>
Far off they pass. He knows they will never return.<br/>
<br/>
Far off—on a smooth dark road—he hears them faintly.<br/>
The road, like a sombre river, quietly flowing,<br/>
Moves among murmurous walls. A deeper breath<br/>
Swells them to sound: he hears his steps more clearly.<br/>
And death seems nearer to him: or he to death.<br/>
<br/>
What's death?—She smiles. The cool stone hurts her elbows.<br/>
The last of the rain-drops gather and fall from elm-boughs,<br/>
She sees them glisten and break. The arc-lamp sings,<br/>
The new leaves dip in the warm wet air and fragrance.<br/>
A sparrow whirs to the eaves, and shakes his wings.<br/>
<br/>
What's death—what's death? The spring returns like music,<br/>
The trees are like dark lovers who dream in starlight,<br/>
The soft grey clouds go over the stars like dreams.<br/>
The cool stone wounds her arms to pain, to pleasure.<br/>
Under the lamp a circle of wet street gleams. . . .<br/>
And death seems far away, a thing of roses,<br/>
A golden portal, where golden music closes,<br/>
Death seems far away:<br/>
And spring returns, the countless singing of lovers,<br/>
And spring returns to stay. . . .<br/>
<br/>
He, in the room above, grown old and tired,<br/>
Flings himself on the bed, face down, in laughter,<br/>
And clenches his hands, and remembers, and desires to die.<br/>
And she, by the window, smiles at a night of starlight.<br/>
. . . The soft grey clouds go slowly across the sky.<br/></p>
<p>V. THE BITTER LOVE-SONG<br/>
<br/>
No, I shall not say why it is that I love you—<br/>
Why do you ask me, save for vanity?<br/>
Surely you would not have me, like a mirror,<br/>
Say 'yes,—your hair curls darkly back from the temples,<br/>
Your mouth has a humorous, tremulous, half-shy sweetness,<br/>
Your eyes are April grey. . . . with jonquils in them?'<br/>
No, if I tell at all, I shall tell in silence . . .<br/>
I'll say—my childhood broke through chords of music<br/>
—Or were they chords of sun?—wherein fell shadows,<br/>
Or silences; I rose through seas of sunlight;<br/>
Or sometimes found a darkness stooped above me<br/>
With wings of death, and a face of cold clear beauty. .<br/>
I lay in the warm sweet grass on a blue May morning,<br/>
My chin in a dandelion, my hands in clover,<br/>
And drowsed there like a bee. . . . blue days behind me<br/>
Stretched like a chain of deep blue pools of magic,<br/>
Enchanted, silent, timeless. . . . days before me<br/>
Murmured of blue-sea mornings, noons of gold,<br/>
Green evenings streaked with lilac, bee-starred nights.<br/>
Confused soft clouds of music fled above me.<br/>
<br/>
Sharp shafts of music dazzled my eyes and pierced me.<br/>
I ran and turned and spun and danced in the sunlight,<br/>
Shrank, sometimes, from the freezing silence of beauty,<br/>
Or crept once more to the warm white cave of sleep.<br/>
<br/>
No, I shall not say 'this is why I praise you—<br/>
Because you say such wise things, or such foolish. . .'<br/>
You would not have me say what you know better?<br/>
Let me instead be silent, only saying—:<br/>
My childhood lives in me—or half-lives, rather—<br/>
And, if I close my eyes cool chords of music<br/>
Flow up to me . . . long chords of wind and sunlight. . . .<br/>
Shadows of intricate vines on sunlit walls,<br/>
Deep bells beating, with aeons of blue between them,<br/>
Grass blades leagues apart with worlds between them,<br/>
Walls rushing up to heaven with stars upon them. . .<br/>
I lay in my bed and through the tall night window<br/>
Saw the green lightning plunging among the clouds,<br/>
And heard the harsh rain storm at the panes and roof. . . .<br/>
How should I know—how should I now remember—<br/>
What half-dreamed great wings curved and sang above me?<br/>
What wings like swords? What eyes with the dread night in them?<br/>
<br/>
This I shall say.—I lay by the hot white sand-dunes. .<br/>
Small yellow flowers, sapless and squat and spiny,<br/>
Stared at the sky. And silently there above us<br/>
Day after day, beyond our dreams and knowledge,<br/>
Presences swept, and over us streamed their shadows,<br/>
Swift and blue, or dark. . . . What did they mean?<br/>
What sinister threat of power? What hint of beauty?<br/>
Prelude to what gigantic music, or subtle?<br/>
Only I know these things leaned over me,<br/>
Brooded upon me, paused, went flowing softly,<br/>
Glided and passed. I loved, I desired, I hated,<br/>
I struggled, I yielded and loved, was warmed to blossom . . .<br/>
You, when your eyes have evening sunlight in them,<br/>
Set these dunes before me, these salt bright flowers,<br/>
These presences. . . . I drowse, they stream above me,<br/>
I struggle, I yield and love, I am warmed to dream.<br/>
<br/>
You are the window (if I could tell I'd tell you)<br/>
Through which I see a clear far world of sunlight.<br/>
You are the silence (if you could hear you'd hear me)<br/>
In which I remember a thin still whisper of singing.<br/>
It is not you I laugh for, you I touch!<br/>
My hands, that touch you, suddenly touch white cobwebs,<br/>
Coldly silvered, heavily silvered with dewdrops;<br/>
And clover, heavy with rain; and cold green grass. . .<br/></p>
<p>VI. CINEMA<br/>
<br/>
As evening falls,<br/>
The walls grow luminous and warm, the walls<br/>
Tremble and glow with the lives within them moving,<br/>
Moving like music, secret and rich and warm.<br/>
How shall we live to-night, where shall we turn?<br/>
To what new light or darkness yearn?<br/>
A thousand winding stairs lead down before us;<br/>
And one by one in myriads we descend<br/>
By lamplit flowered walls, long balustrades,<br/>
Through half-lit halls which reach no end. . . .<br/>
<br/>
Take my arm, then, you or you or you,<br/>
And let us walk abroad on the solid air:<br/>
Look how the organist's head, in silhouette,<br/>
Leans to the lamplit music's orange square! . . .<br/>
The dim-globed lamps illumine rows of faces,<br/>
Rows of hands and arms and hungry eyes,<br/>
They have hurried down from a myriad secret places,<br/>
From windy chambers next to the skies. . . .<br/>
The music comes upon us. . . . it shakes the darkness,<br/>
It shakes the darkness in our minds. . . .<br/>
And brilliant figures suddenly fill the darkness,<br/>
Down the white shaft of light they run through darkness,<br/>
And in our hearts a dazzling dream unwinds . . .<br/>
<br/>
Take my hand, then, walk with me<br/>
By the slow soundless crashings of a sea<br/>
Down miles on miles of glistening mirrorlike sand,—<br/>
Take my hand<br/>
And walk with me once more by crumbling walls;<br/>
Up mouldering stairs where grey-stemmed ivy clings,<br/>
To hear forgotten bells, as evening falls,<br/>
Rippling above us invisibly their slowly widening rings. . . .<br/>
Did you once love me? Did you bear a name?<br/>
Did you once stand before me without shame? . . .<br/>
Take my hand: your face is one I know,<br/>
I loved you, long ago:<br/>
You are like music, long forgotten, suddenly come to mind;<br/>
You are like spring returned through snow.<br/>
Once, I know, I walked with you in starlight,<br/>
And many nights I slept and dreamed of you;<br/>
Come, let us climb once more these stairs of starlight,<br/>
This midnight stream of cloud-flung blue! . . .<br/>
Music murmurs beneath us like a sea,<br/>
And faints to a ghostly whisper . . . Come with me.<br/>
<br/>
Are you still doubtful of me—hesitant still,<br/>
Fearful, perhaps, that I may yet remember<br/>
What you would gladly, if you could, forget?<br/>
You were unfaithful once, you met your lover;<br/>
Still in your heart you bear that red-eyed ember;<br/>
And I was silent,—you remember my silence yet . . .<br/>
You knew, as well as I, I could not kill him,<br/>
Nor touch him with hot hands, nor yet with hate.<br/>
No, and it was not you I saw with anger.<br/>
Instead, I rose and beat at steel-walled fate,<br/>
Cried till I lay exhausted, sick, unfriended,<br/>
That life, so seeming sure, and love, so certain,<br/>
Should loose such tricks, be so abruptly ended,<br/>
Ring down so suddenly an unlooked-for curtain.<br/>
<br/>
How could I find it in my heart to hurt you,<br/>
You, whom this love could hurt much more than I?<br/>
No, you were pitiful, and I gave you pity;<br/>
And only hated you when I saw you cry.<br/>
We were two dupes; if I could give forgiveness,—<br/>
Had I the right,—I should forgive you now . . .<br/>
We were two dupes . . . Come, let us walk in starlight,<br/>
And feed our griefs: we do not break, but bow.<br/>
<br/>
Take my hand, then, come with me<br/>
By the white shadowy crashings of a sea . . .<br/>
Look how the long volutes of foam unfold<br/>
To spread their mottled shimmer along the sand! . . .<br/>
Take my hand,<br/>
Do not remember how these depths are cold,<br/>
Nor how, when you are dead,<br/>
Green leagues of sea will glimmer above your head.<br/>
You lean your face upon your hands and cry,<br/>
The blown sand whispers about your feet,<br/>
Terrible seems it now to die,—<br/>
Terrible now, with life so incomplete,<br/>
To turn away from the balconies and the music,<br/>
The sunlit afternoons,<br/>
To hear behind you there a far-off laughter<br/>
Lost in a stirring of sand among dry dunes . . .<br/>
Die not sadly, you whom life has beaten!<br/>
Lift your face up, laughing, die like a queen!<br/>
Take cold flowers of foam in your warm white fingers!<br/>
Death's but a change of sky from blue to green . . .<br/>
<br/>
As evening falls,<br/>
The walls grow luminous and warm, the walls<br/>
Tremble and glow . . . the music breathes upon us,<br/>
The rayed white shaft plays over our heads like magic,<br/>
And to and fro we move and lean and change . . .<br/>
You, in a world grown strange,<br/>
Laugh at a darkness, clench your hands despairing,<br/>
Smash your glass on a floor, no longer caring,<br/>
Sink suddenly down and cry . . .<br/>
You hear the applause that greets your latest rival,<br/>
You are forgotten: your rival—who knows?—is I . . .<br/>
I laugh in the warm bright light of answering laughter,<br/>
I am inspired and young . . . and though I see<br/>
You sitting alone there, dark, with shut eyes crying,<br/>
I bask in the light, and in your hate of me . . .<br/>
Failure . . . well, the time comes soon or later . . .<br/>
The night must come . . . and I'll be one who clings,<br/>
Desperately, to hold the applause, one instant,—<br/>
To keep some youngster waiting in the wings.<br/>
<br/>
The music changes tone . . . a room is darkened,<br/>
Someone is moving . . . the crack of white light widens,<br/>
And all is dark again; till suddenly falls<br/>
A wandering disk of light on floor and walls,<br/>
Winks out, returns again, climbs and descends,<br/>
Gleams on a clock, a glass, shrinks back to darkness;<br/>
And then at last, in the chaos of that place,<br/>
Dazzles like frozen fire on your clear face.<br/>
Well, I have found you. We have met at last.<br/>
Now you shall not escape me: in your eyes<br/>
I see the horrible huddlings of your past,—<br/>
All you remember blackens, utters cries,<br/>
Reaches far hands and faint. I hold the light<br/>
Close to your cheek, watch the pained pupils shrink,—<br/>
Watch the vile ghosts of all you vilely think . . .<br/>
Now all the hatreds of my life have met<br/>
To hold high carnival . . . we do not speak,<br/>
My fingers find the well-loved throat they seek,<br/>
And press, and fling you down . . . and then forget.<br/>
<br/>
Who plays for me? What sudden drums keep time<br/>
To the ecstatic rhythm of my crime?<br/>
What flute shrills out as moonlight strikes the floor? . .<br/>
What violin so faintly cries<br/>
Seeing how strangely in the moon he lies? . . .<br/>
The room grows dark once more,<br/>
The crack of white light narrows around the door,<br/>
And all is silent, except a slow complaining<br/>
Of flutes and violins, like music waning.<br/>
<br/>
Take my hand, then, walk with me<br/>
By the slow soundless crashings of a sea . . .<br/>
Look, how white these shells are, on this sand!<br/>
Take my hand,<br/>
And watch the waves run inward from the sky<br/>
Line upon foaming line to plunge and die.<br/>
The music that bound our lives is lost behind us,<br/>
Paltry it seems . . . here in this wind-swung place<br/>
Motionless under the sky's vast vault of azure<br/>
We stand in a terror of beauty, face to face.<br/>
The dry grass creaks in the wind, the blown sand whispers,<br/>
<br/>
The soft sand seethes on the dunes, the clear grains glisten,<br/>
Once they were rock . . . a chaos of golden boulders . . .<br/>
Now they are blown by the wind . . . we stand and listen<br/>
To the sliding of grain upon timeless grain<br/>
And feel our lives go past like a whisper of pain.<br/>
Have I not seen you, have we not met before<br/>
Here on this sun-and-sea-wrecked shore?<br/>
You shade your sea-gray eyes with a sunlit hand<br/>
And peer at me . . . far sea-gulls, in your eyes,<br/>
Flash in the sun, go down . . . I hear slow sand,<br/>
And shrink to nothing beneath blue brilliant skies . . .<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The music ends. The screen grows dark. We hurry<br/>
To go our devious secret ways, forgetting<br/>
Those many lives . . . We loved, we laughed, we killed,<br/>
We danced in fire, we drowned in a whirl of sea-waves.<br/>
The flutes are stilled, and a thousand dreams are stilled.<br/>
<br/>
Whose body have I found beside dark waters,<br/>
The cold white body, garlanded with sea-weed?<br/>
Staring with wide eyes at the sky?<br/>
I bent my head above it, and cried in silence.<br/>
Only the things I dreamed of heard my cry.<br/>
<br/>
Once I loved, and she I loved was darkened.<br/>
Again I loved, and love itself was darkened.<br/>
Vainly we follow the circle of shadowy days.<br/>
The screen at last grows dark, the flutes are silent.<br/>
The doors of night are closed. We go our ways.<br/></p>
<p>VII.<br/>
<br/>
The sun goes down in a cold pale flare of light.<br/>
The trees grow dark: the shadows lean to the east:<br/>
And lights wink out through the windows, one by one.<br/>
A clamor of frosty sirens mourns at the night.<br/>
Pale slate-grey clouds whirl up from the sunken sun.<br/>
<br/>
And the wandering one, the inquisitive dreamer of dreams,<br/>
The eternal asker of answers, stands in the street,<br/>
And lifts his palms for the first cold ghost of rain.<br/>
The purple lights leap down the hill before him.<br/>
The gorgeous night has begun again.<br/>
<br/>
'I will ask them all, I will ask them all their dreams,<br/>
I will hold my light above them and seek their faces,<br/>
I will hear them whisper, invisible in their veins. . . . '<br/>
The eternal asker of answers becomes as the darkness,<br/>
Or as a wind blown over a myriad forest,<br/>
Or as the numberless voices of long-drawn rains.<br/>
<br/>
We hear him and take him among us like a wind of music,<br/>
Like the ghost of a music we have somewhere heard;<br/>
We crowd through the streets in a dazzle of pallid lamplight,<br/>
We pour in a sinister mass, we ascend a stair,<br/>
With laughter and cry, with word upon murmured word,<br/>
We flow, we descend, we turn. . . . and the eternal dreamer<br/>
Moves on among us like light, like evening air . . .<br/>
<br/>
Good night! good night! good night! we go our ways,<br/>
The rain runs over the pavement before our feet,<br/>
The cold rain falls, the rain sings.<br/>
We walk, we run, we ride. We turn our faces<br/>
To what the eternal evening brings.<br/>
<br/>
Our hands are hot and raw with the stones we have laid,<br/>
We have built a tower of stone high into the sky.<br/>
We have built a city of towers.<br/>
Our hands are light, they are singing with emptiness.<br/>
Our souls are light. They have shaken a burden of hours. . . .<br/>
What did we build it for? Was it all a dream? . . .<br/>
Ghostly above us in lamplight the towers gleam . . .<br/>
And after a while they will fall to dust and rain;<br/>
Or else we will tear them down with impatient hands;<br/>
And hew rock out of the earth, and build them again.<br/>
<br/>
1916-1917<br/></p>
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