Title:   Men, Women and Ghosts

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Author:   Amy Lowell

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PDF Version:   1.2



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Bookmarks





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Men, Women and Ghosts

Amy Lowell



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Table of Contents

Men, Women and Ghosts...................................................................................................................................1

Amy Lowell.............................................................................................................................................1

Figurines in Old Saxe.............................................................................................................................3

Patterns .....................................................................................................................................................3

Pickthorn Manor......................................................................................................................................6

The Cremona Violin..............................................................................................................................24

The CrossRoads ...................................................................................................................................46

A Roxbury Garden .................................................................................................................................49

1777.......................................................................................................................................................57

Bronze Tablets......................................................................................................................................61

The Fruit Shop.......................................................................................................................................61

Malmaison.............................................................................................................................................65

The Hammers .........................................................................................................................................70

Two Travellers in the Place Vendome ...................................................................................................83

War Pictures ..........................................................................................................................................84

The Allies ...............................................................................................................................................84

The Bombardment.................................................................................................................................85

Lead Soldiers.........................................................................................................................................87

The Painter on Silk................................................................................................................................91

A Ballad of Footmen ..............................................................................................................................91

The Overgrown Pasture........................................................................................................................93

Reaping..................................................................................................................................................93

Off the Turnpike....................................................................................................................................96

The Grocery.........................................................................................................................................101

Number 3 on the Docket ......................................................................................................................105

Clocks Tick a Century........................................................................................................................110

Nightmare:  A Tale for an Autumn Evening.......................................................................................110

The Paper Windmill .............................................................................................................................113

The Red Lacquer MusicStand...........................................................................................................116

Spring Day...........................................................................................................................................119

The DinnerParty................................................................................................................................122

Stravinsky's Three Pieces "Grotesques", for String Quartet ................................................................124

Towns in Colour..................................................................................................................................126

Red Slippers ........................................................................................................................................126

Thompson's Lunch Room  Grand Central Station.........................................................................127

An Opera House ..................................................................................................................................128

Afternoon Rain in State Street............................................................................................................129

An Aquarium......................................................................................................................................130


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 3


Men, Women and Ghosts

Amy Lowell

Figurines in Old Saxe 

Patterns 

Pickthorn Manor 

The Cremona Violin 

The CrossRoads 

A Roxbury Garden 

1777 

Bronze Tablets 

The Fruit Shop 

Malmaison 

The Hammers 

Two Travellers in the Place Vendome 

War Pictures 

The Allies 

The Bombardment 

Lead Soldiers 

The Painter on Silk 

A Ballad of Footmen 

The Overgrown Pasture 

Reaping 

Off the Turnpike 

The Grocery 

Number 3 on the Docket 

Clocks Tick a Century 

Nightmare: A Tale for an Autumn Evening 

The Paper Windmill 

The Red Lacquer MusicStand 

Spring Day 

The DinnerParty 

Stravinsky's Three Pieces "Grotesques", for String Quartet 

Towns in Colour 

Red Slippers 

Thompson's Lunch Room  Grand Central Station 

An Opera House 

Afternoon Rain in State Street 

An Aquarium  

"`. . . See small portions of the Eternal World that ever groweth':  . . . .

So sang a Fairy, mocking, as he sat on a streak'd tulip,

Thinking none saw him:  when he ceas'd I started from the trees,

And caught him in my hat, as boys knock down a butterfly."

                                   William Blake.  "Europe.  A Prophecy."

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`Thou hast a lap full of seed,

          And this is a fine country.'

                                   William Blake.

Preface

This is a book of stories.  For that reason I have excluded

all purely lyrical poems.  But the word "stories" has been stretched

to its fullest application.  It includes both narrative poems,

properly so called; tales divided into scenes; and a few pieces

of less obvious storytelling import in which one might say

that the dramatis personae are air, clouds, trees, houses, streets,

and such like things.

It has long been a favourite idea of mine that the rhythms of `vers libre'

have not been sufficiently plumbed, that there is in them a power of variation

which has never yet been brought to the light of experiment.

I think it was the piano pieces of Debussy, with their strange likeness

to short vers libre poems, which first showed me the close kinship

of music and poetry, and there flashed into my mind the idea of using

the movement of poetry in somewhat the same way that the musician uses

the movement of music.

It was quite evident that this could never be done in the strict pattern

of a metrical form, but the flowing, fluctuating rhythm of vers libre

seemed to open the door to such an experiment.  First, however,

I considered the same method as applied to the more pronounced

movements of natural objects.  If the reader will turn to the poem,

"A Roxbury Garden", he will find in the first two sections

an attempt to give the circular movement of a hoop bowling along the ground,

and the up and down, elliptical curve of a flying shuttlecock.

From these experiments, it is but a step to the flowing rhythm of music.

In "The Cremona Violin", I have tried to give this flowing, changing rhythm

to the parts in which the violin is being played.  The effect

is farther heightened, because the rest of the poem is written

in the seven line Chaucerian stanza; and, by deserting this ordered pattern

for the undulating line of vers libre, I hoped to produce

something of the suave, continuous tone of a violin.  Again,

in the violin parts themselves, the movement constantly changes,

as will be quite plain to any one reading these passages aloud.

In "The Cremona Violin", however, the rhythms are fairly obvious and regular.

I set myself a far harder task in trying to transcribe the various movements

of Stravinsky's "Three Pieces `Grotesques', for String Quartet".

Several musicians, who have seen the poem, think the movement

accurately given.

These experiments lead me to believe that there is here much food for thought

and matter for study, and I hope many poets will follow me

in opening up the still hardly explored possibilities of vers libre.

A good many of the poems in this book are written in "polyphonic prose".

A form about which I have written and spoken so much

that it seems hardly necessary to explain it here.  Let me hastily add,


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Page No 5


however, that the word "prose" in its name refers only

to the typographical arrangement, for in no sense is this a prose form.

Only read it aloud, Gentle Reader, I beg, and you will see what you will see.

For a purely dramatic form, I know none better in the whole range of poetry.

It enables the poet to give his characters the vivid, real effect

they have in a play, while at the same time writing in the `decor'.

One last innovation I have still to mention.  It will be found

in "Spring Day", and more fully enlarged upon in the series,

"Towns in Colour".  In these poems, I have endeavoured to give

the colour, and light, and shade, of certain places and hours,

stressing the purely pictorial effect, and with little or no reference

to any other aspect of the places described.  It is an enchanting thing

to wander through a city looking for its unrelated beauty,

the beauty by which it captivates the sensuous sense of seeing.

I have always loved aquariums, but for years I went to them and looked,

and looked, at those swirling, shooting, looping patterns of fish,

which always defied transcription to paper until I hit upon

the "unrelated" method.  The result is in "An Aquarium".

I think the first thing which turned me in this direction

was John Gould Fletcher's "London Excursion", in "Some Imagist Poets".

I here record my thanks.

For the substance of the poems  why, the poems are here.

No one writing today can fail to be affected by the great war

raging in Europe at this time.  We are too near it to do more

than touch upon it.  But, obliquely, it is suggested in many of these poems,

most notably those in the section, "Bronze Tablets".  The Napoleonic Era

is an epic subject, and waits a great epic poet.  I have only been able

to open a few windows upon it here and there.  But the scene from the windows

is authentic, and the watcher has used eyes, and ears, and heart, in watching.

                                             Amy Lowell

July 10, 1916.

The two sea songs quoted in "The Hammers" are taken from `Songs: Naval and Nautical, of the late Charles

Dibdin', London, John Murray, 1841. The "Hanging Johnny" refrain, in "The Cremona Violin", is borrowed

from the old, wellknown chanty of that name.

Figurines in Old Saxe

Patterns

I walk down the garden paths,

And all the daffodils

Are blowing, and the bright blue squills.

I walk down the patterned gardenpaths

In my stiff, brocaded gown.

With my powdered hair and jewelled fan,

I too am a rare


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Pattern. As I wander down

The garden paths.

My dress is richly figured,

And the train

Makes a pink and silver stain

On the gravel, and the thrift

Of the borders.

Just a plate of current fashion,

Tripping by in highheeled, ribboned shoes.

Not a softness anywhere about me,

Only whalebone and brocade.

And I sink on a seat in the shade

Of a lime tree. For my passion

Wars against the stiff brocade.

The daffodils and squills

Flutter in the breeze

As they please.

And I weep;

For the limetree is in blossom

And one small flower has dropped upon my bosom.

And the plashing of waterdrops

In the marble fountain

Comes down the gardenpaths.

The dripping never stops.

Underneath my stiffened gown

Is the softness of a woman bathing in a marble basin,

A basin in the midst of hedges grown

So thick, she cannot see her lover hiding,

But she guesses he is near,

And the sliding of the water

Seems the stroking of a dear

Hand upon her.

What is Summer in a fine brocaded gown!

I should like to see it lying in a heap upon the ground.

All the pink and silver crumpled up on the ground.

I would be the pink and silver as I ran along the paths,

And he would stumble after,

Bewildered by my laughter.

I should see the sun flashing from his swordhilt and the buckles

on his shoes.

I would choose

To lead him in a maze along the patterned paths,

A bright and laughing maze for my heavybooted lover,

Till he caught me in the shade,

And the buttons of his waistcoat bruised my body as he clasped me,

Aching, melting, unafraid.

With the shadows of the leaves and the sundrops,

And the plopping of the waterdrops,


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All about us in the open afternoon 

I am very like to swoon

With the weight of this brocade,

For the sun sifts through the shade.

Underneath the fallen blossom

In my bosom,

Is a letter I have hid.

It was brought to me this morning by a rider from the Duke.

"Madam, we regret to inform you that Lord Hartwell

Died in action Thursday se'nnight."

As I read it in the white, morning sunlight,

The letters squirmed like snakes.

"Any answer, Madam," said my footman.

"No," I told him.

"See that the messenger takes some refreshment.

No, no answer."

And I walked into the garden,

Up and down the patterned paths,

In my stiff, correct brocade.

The blue and yellow flowers stood up proudly in the sun,

Each one.

I stood upright too,

Held rigid to the pattern

By the stiffness of my gown.

Up and down I walked,

Up and down.

In a month he would have been my husband.

In a month, here, underneath this lime,

We would have broke the pattern;

He for me, and I for him,

He as Colonel, I as Lady,

On this shady seat.

He had a whim

That sunlight carried blessing.

And I answered, "It shall be as you have said."

Now he is dead.

In Summer and in Winter I shall walk

Up and down

The patterned gardenpaths

In my stiff, brocaded gown.

The squills and daffodils

Will give place to pillared roses, and to asters, and to snow.

I shall go

Up and down,

In my gown.

Gorgeously arrayed,

Boned and stayed.

And the softness of my body will be guarded from embrace


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By each button, hook, and lace.

For the man who should loose me is dead,

Fighting with the Duke in Flanders,

In a pattern called a war.

Christ! What are patterns for?

Pickthorn Manor

        I

How fresh the Dartle's little waves that day!

A steely silver, underlined with blue,

And flashing where the round clouds, blown away,

Let drop the yellow sunshine to gleam through

And tip the edges of the waves with shifts

And spots of whitest fire, hard like gems

        Cut from the midnight moon they were, and sharp

As wind through leafless stems.

The Lady Eunice walked between the drifts

Of blooming cherrytrees, and watched the rifts

        Of clouds drawn through the river's azure warp.

        II

Her little feet tapped softly down the path.

Her soul was listless; even the morning breeze

Fluttering the trees and strewing a light swath

Of fallen petals on the grass, could please

Her not at all. She brushed a hair aside

With a swift move, and a halfangry frown.

        She stopped to pull a daffodil or two,

And held them to her gown

To test the colours; put them at her side,

Then at her breast, then loosened them and tried

        Some new arrangement, but it would not do.

        III

A lady in a Manorhouse, alone,

Whose husband is in Flanders with the Duke

Of Marlborough and Prince Eugene, she's grown


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Page No 9


Too apathetic even to rebuke

Her idleness. What is she on this Earth?

No woman surely, since she neither can

        Be wed nor single, must not let her mind

Build thoughts upon a man

Except for hers. Indeed that were no dearth

Were her Lord here, for well she knew his worth,

        And when she thought of him her eyes were kind.

        IV

Too lately wed to have forgot the wooing.

Too unaccustomed as a bride to feel

Other than strange delight at her wife's doing.

Even at the thought a gentle blush would steal

Over her face, and then her lips would frame

Some little word of loving, and her eyes

        Would brim and spill their tears, when all they saw

Was the bright sun, slantwise

Through burgeoning trees, and all the morning's flame

Burning and quivering round her. With quick shame

        She shut her heart and bent before the law.

        V

He was a soldier, she was proud of that.

This was his house and she would keep it well.

His honour was in fighting, hers in what

He'd left her here in charge of. Then a spell

Of conscience sent her through the orchard spying

Upon the gardeners. Were their tools about?

        Were any branches broken? Had the weeds

Been duly taken out

Under the 'spaliered pears, and were these lying

Nailed snug against the sunny bricks and drying

        Their leaves and satisfying all their needs?

        VI

She picked a stone up with a little pout,

Stones looked so ill in wellkept flowerborders.

Where should she put it? All the paths about

Were strewn with fair, red gravel by her orders.

No stone could mar their sifted smoothness. So

She hurried to the river. At the edge

        She stood a moment charmed by the swift blue

Beyond the river sedge.

She watched it curdling, crinkling, and the snow


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Page No 10


Purfled upon its wavetops. Then, "Hullo,

        My Beauty, gently, or you'll wriggle through."

        VII

The Lady Eunice caught a willow spray

To save herself from tumbling in the shallows

Which rippled to her feet. Then straight away

She peered down stream among the budding sallows.

A youth in leather breeches and a shirt

Of finest broidered lawn lay out upon

        An overhanging bole and deftly swayed

A wellhooked fish which shone

In the pale lemon sunshine like a spurt

Of silver, bowed and damascened, and girt

        With crimson spots and moons which waned and played.

        VIII

The fish hung circled for a moment, ringed

And bright; then flung itself out, a thin blade

Of spotted lightning, and its tail was winged

With chipped and sparkled sunshine. And the shade

Broke up and splintered into shafts of light

Wheeling about the fish, who churned the air

        And made the fishline hum, and bent the rod

Almost to snapping. Care

The young man took against the twigs, with slight,

Deft movements he kept fish and line in tight

        Obedience to his will with every prod.

        IX

He lay there, and the fish hung just beyond.

He seemed uncertain what more he should do.

He drew back, pulled the rod to correspond,

Tossed it and caught it; every time he threw,

He caught it nearer to the point. At last

The fish was near enough to touch. He paused.

        Eunice knew well the craft  "What's got the thing!"

She cried. "What can have caused 

Where is his net? The moment will be past.

The fish will wriggle free." She stopped aghast.

        He turned and bowed. One arm was in a sling.

        X


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Page No 11


The broad, black ribbon she had thought his basket

Must hang from, held instead a useless arm.

"I do not wonder, Madam, that you ask it."

He smiled, for she had spoke aloud. "The charm

Of trout fishing is in my eyes enhanced

When you must play your fish on land as well."

        "How will you take him?" Eunice asked. "In truth

I really cannot tell.

'Twas stupid of me, but it simply chanced

I never thought of that until he glanced

        Into the branches. 'Tis a bit uncouth."

        XI

He watched the fish against the blowing sky,

Writhing and glittering, pulling at the line.

"The hook is fast, I might just let him die,"

He mused. "But that would jar against your fine

Sense of true sportsmanship, I know it would,"

Cried Eunice. "Let me do it." Swift and light

        She ran towards him. "It is so long now

Since I have felt a bite,

I lost all heart for everything." She stood,

Supple and strong, beside him, and her blood

        Tingled her lissom body to a glow.

        XII

She quickly seized the fish and with a stone

Ended its flurry, then removed the hook,

Untied the fly with wellpoised fingers. Done,

She asked him where he kept his fishingbook.

He pointed to a coat flung on the ground.

She searched the pockets, found a shagreen case,

        Replaced the fly, noticed a golden stamp

Filling the middle space.

Two letters half rubbed out were there, and round

About them gay rococo flowers wound

        And tossed a spray of roses to the clamp.

        XIII

The Lady Eunice puzzled over these.

"G. D." the young man gravely said. "My name

Is Gervase Deane. Your servant, if you please."

"Oh, Sir, indeed I know you, for your fame

For exploits in the field has reached my ears.

I did not know you wounded and returned."


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Page No 12


"But just come back, Madam. A silly prick

To gain me such unearned

Holiday making. And you, it appears,

Must be Sir Everard's lady. And my fears

        At being caught atrespassing were quick."

        XIV

He looked so rueful that she laughed out loud.

"You are forgiven, Mr. Deane. Even more,

I offer you the fishing, and am proud

That you should find it pleasant from this shore.

Nobody fishes now, my husband used

To angle daily, and I too with him.

        He loved the spotted trout, and pike, and dace.

He even had a whim

That flies my fingers tied swiftly confused

The greater fish. And he must be excused,

        Love weaves odd fancies in a lonely place."

        XV

She sighed because it seemed so long ago,

Those days with Everard; unthinking took

The path back to the orchard. Strolling so

She walked, and he beside her. In a nook

Where a stone seat withdrew beneath low boughs,

Fullblossomed, hummed with bees, they sat them down.

        She questioned him about the war, the share

Her husband had, and grown

Eager by his clear answers, straight allows

Her hidden hopes and fears to speak, and rouse

        Her numbed love, which had slumbered unaware.

        XVI

Under the orchard trees daffodils danced

And jostled, turning sideways to the wind.

A dropping cherry petal softly glanced

Over her hair, and slid away behind.

At the far end through twisted cherrytrees

The old house glowed, geraniumhued, with bricks

        Bloomed in the sun like roses, low and long,

Gabled, and with quaint tricks

Of chimneys carved and fretted. Out of these

Grey smoke was shaken, which the faint Spring breeze

        Tossed into nothing. Then a thrush's song


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Page No 13


XVII

Needled its way through sound of bees and river.

The notes fell, round and starred, between young leaves,

Trilled to a spiral lilt, stopped on a quiver.

The Lady Eunice listens and believes.

Gervase has many tales of her dear Lord,

His bravery, his knowledge, his charmed life.

        She quite forgets who's speaking in the gladness

Of being this man's wife.

Gervase is wounded, grave indeed, the word

Is kindly said, but to a softer chord

        She strings her voice to ask with wistful sadness,

        XVIII

"And is Sir Everard still unscathed? I fain

Would know the truth." "Quite well, dear Lady, quite."

She smiled in her content. "So many slain,

You must forgive me for a little fright."

And he forgave her, not alone for that,

But because she was fingering his heart,

        Pressing and squeezing it, and thinking so

Only to ease her smart

Of painful, apprehensive longing. At

Their feet the river swirled and chucked. They sat

        An hour there. The thrush flew to and fro.

        XIX

The Lady Eunice supped alone that day,

As always since Sir Everard had gone,

In the oakpanelled parlour, whose array

Of faded portraits in carved mouldings shone.

Warriors and ladies, armoured, ruffed, peruked.

Van Dykes with long, slim fingers; Holbeins, stout

        And heavyfeatured; and one Rubens dame,

A peony just burst out,

With flaunting, crimson flesh. Eunice rebuked

Her thoughts of gentler blood, when these had duked

        It with the best, and scorned to change their name.

        XX

A sturdy family, and old besides,

Much older than her own, the Earls of Crowe.

Since Saxon days, these men had sought their brides


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Page No 14


Among the highest born, but always so,

Taking them to themselves, their wealth, their lands,

But never their titles. Stern perhaps, but strong,

        The Framptons fed their blood from richest streams,

Scorning the common throng.

Gazing upon these men, she understands

The toughness of the web wrought from such strands

        And pride of Everard colours all her dreams.

        XXI

Eunice forgets to eat, watching their faces

Flickering in the windblown candle's shine.

Bluecoated lackeys tiptoe to their places,

And set out plates of fruit and jugs of wine.

The table glitters black like Winter ice.

The Dartle's rushing, and the gentle clash

        Of blossomed branches, drifts into her ears.

And through the casement sash

She sees each cherry stem a pointed slice

Of splintered moonlight, topped with all the spice

        And shimmer of the blossoms it uprears.

        XXII

"In such a night " she laid the book aside,

She could outnight the poet by thinking back.

In such a night she came here as a bride.

The date was graven in the almanack

Of her clasped memory. In this very room

Had Everard uncloaked her. On this seat

        Had drawn her to him, bade her note the trees,

How white they were and sweet

And later, coming to her, her dear groom,

Her Lord, had lain beside her in the gloom

        Of moon and shade, and whispered her to ease.

        XXIII

Her little taper made the room seem vast,

Caverned and empty. And her beating heart

Rapped through the silence all about her cast

Like some loud, dreadful deathwatch taking part

In this sad vigil. Slowly she undrest,

Put out the light and crept into her bed.

        The linen sheets were fragrant, but so cold.

And brimming tears she shed,

Sobbing and quivering in her barren nest,


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Her weeping lips into the pillow prest,

        Her eyes sealed fast within its smothering fold.

        XXIV

The morning brought her a more stoic mind,

And sunshine struck across the polished floor.

She wondered whether this day she should find

Gervase afishing, and so listen more,

Much more again, to all he had to tell.

And he was there, but waiting to begin

        Until she came. They fished awhile, then went

To the old seat within

The cherry's shade. He pleased her very well

By his discourse. But ever he must dwell

        Upon Sir Everard. Each incident

        XXV

Must be related and each term explained.

How troops were set in battle, how a siege

Was ordered and conducted. She complained

Because he bungled at the fall of Liege.

The curious names of parts of forts she knew,

And aired with conscious pride her ravelins,

        And counterscarps, and lunes. The day drew on,

And his dead fish's fins

In the hot sunshine turned a mauvegreen hue.

At last Gervase, guessing the hour, withdrew.

        But she sat long in still oblivion.

        XXVI

Then he would bring her books, and read to her

The poems of Dr. Donne, and the blue river

Would murmur through the reading, and a stir

Of birds and bees make the white petals shiver,

And one or two would flutter prone and lie

Spotting the smoothclipped grass. The days went by

        Threaded with talk and verses. Green leaves pushed

Through blossoms stubbornly.

Gervase, unconscious of dishonesty,

Fell into strong and watchful loving, free

        He thought, since always would his lips be hushed.

        XXVII


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Page No 16


But lips do not stay silent at command,

And Gervase strove in vain to order his.

Luckily Eunice did not understand

That he but read himself aloud, for this

Their friendship would have snapped. She treated him

And spoilt him like a brother. It was now

        "Gervase" and "Eunice" with them, and he dined

Whenever she'd allow,

In the oak parlour, underneath the dim

Old pictured Framptons, opposite her slim

        Figure, so bright against the chair behind.

        XXVIII

Eunice was happier than she had been

For many days, and yet the hours were long.

All Gervase told to her but made her lean

More heavily upon the past. Among

Her hopes she lived, even when she was giving

Her morning orders, even when she twined

        Nosegays to deck her parlours. With the thought

Of Everard, her mind

Solaced its solitude, and in her striving

To do as he would wish was all her living.

        She welcomed Gervase for the news he brought.

        XXIX

Blackhearts and whitehearts, bubbled with the sun,

Hid in their leaves and knocked against each other.

Eunice was standing, panting with her run

Up to the toolhouse just to get another

Basket. All those which she had brought were filled,

And still Gervase pelted her from above.

        The buckles of his shoes flashed higher and higher

Until his shoulders strove

Quite through the top. "Eunice, your spirit's filled

This tree. Whitehearts!" He shook, and cherries spilled

        And spat out from the leaves like falling fire.

        XXX

The wide, sunwinged June morning spread itself

Over the quiet garden. And they packed

Full twenty baskets with the fruit. "My shelf

Of cordials will be stored with what it lacked.

In future, none of us will drink strong ale,

But cherrybrandy." "Vastly good, I vow,"


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And Gervase gave the tree another shake.

The cherries seemed to flow

Out of the sky in cloudfuls, like blown hail.

Swift Lady Eunice ran, her farthingale,

        Unnoticed, tangling in a fallen rake.

        XXXI

She gave a little cry and fell quite prone

In the long grass, and lay there very still.

Gervase leapt from the tree at her soft moan,

And kneeling over her, with clumsy skill

Unloosed her bodice, fanned her with his hat,

And his unguarded lips pronounced his heart.

        "Eunice, my Dearest Girl, where are you hurt?"

His trembling fingers dart

Over her limbs seeking some wound. She strove

To answer, opened wide her eyes, above

        Her knelt Sir Everard, with face alert.

        XXXII

Her eyelids fell again at that sweet sight,

"My Love!" she murmured, "Dearest! Oh, my Dear!"

He took her in his arms and bore her right

And tenderly to the old seat, and "Here

I have you mine at last," she said, and swooned

Under his kisses. When she came once more

        To sight of him, she smiled in comfort knowing

Herself laid as before

Close covered on his breast. And all her glowing

Youth answered him, and ever nearer growing

        She twined him in her arms and soft festooned

        XXXIII

Herself about him like a flowering vine,

Drawing his lips to cling upon her own.

A ray of sunlight pierced the leaves to shine

Where her halfopened bodice let be shown

Her white throat fluttering to his soft caress,

Halfgasping with her gladness. And her pledge

        She whispers, melting with delight. A twig

Snaps in the hornbeam hedge.

A cackling laugh tears through the quietness.

Eunice starts up in terrible distress.

        "My God! What's that?" Her staring eyes are big.


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XXXIV

Revulsed emotion set her body shaking

As though she had an ague. Gervase swore,

Jumped to his feet in such a dreadful taking

His face was ghastly with the look it wore.

Crouching and slipping through the trees, a man

In worn, blue livery, a humpbacked thing,

        Made off. But turned every few steps to gaze

At Eunice, and to fling

Vile looks and gestures back. "The ruffian!

By Christ's Death! I will split him to a span

        Of hog's thongs." She grasped at his sleeve, "Gervase!

        XXXV

What are you doing here? Put down that sword,

That's only poor old Tony, crazed and lame.

We never notice him. With my dear Lord

I ought not to have minded that he came.

But, Gervase, it surprises me that you

Should so lack grace to stay here." With one hand

        She held her gaping bodice to conceal

Her breast. "I must demand

Your instant absence. Everard, but new

Returned, will hardly care for guests. Adieu."

        "Eunice, you're mad." His brain began to reel.

        XXXVI

He tried again to take her, tried to twist

Her arms about him. Truly, she had said

Nothing should ever part them. In a mist

She pushed him from her, clasped her aching head

In both her hands, and rocked and sobbed aloud.

"Oh! Where is Everard? What does this mean?

        So lately come to leave me thus alone!"

But Gervase had not seen

Sir Everard. Then, gently, to her bowed

And sickening spirit, he told of her proud

        Surrender to him. He could hear her moan.

        XXXVII

Then shame swept over her and held her numb,

Hiding her anguished face against the seat.

At last she rose, a woman stricken  dumb 


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And trailed away with slowlydragging feet.

Gervase looked after her, but feared to pass

The barrier set between them. All his rare

        Joy broke to fragments  worse than that, unreal.

And standing lonely there,

His swollen heart burst out, and on the grass

He flung himself and wept. He knew, alas!

        The loss so great his life could never heal.

        XXXVIII

For days thereafter Eunice lived retired,

Waited upon by one old servingmaid.

She would not leave her chamber, and desired

Only to hide herself. She was afraid

Of what her eyes might trick her into seeing,

Of what her longing urge her then to do.

        What was this dreadful illness solitude

Had tortured her into?

Her hours went by in a long constant fleeing

The thought of that one morning. And her being

        Bruised itself on a happening so rude.

        XXXIX

It grew ripe Summer, when one morning came

Her tirewoman with a letter, printed

Upon the seal were the Deane crest and name.

With utmost gentleness, the letter hinted

His understanding and his deep regret.

But would she not permit him once again

        To pay her his profound respects? No word

Of what had passed should pain

Her resolution. Only let them get

Back the old comradeship. Her eyes were wet

        With starting tears, now truly she deplored

        XL

His misery. Yes, she was wrong to keep

Away from him. He hardly was to blame.

'Twas she  she shuddered and began to weep.

'Twas her fault! Hers! Her everlasting shame

Was that she suffered him, whom not at all

She loved. Poor Boy! Yes, they must still be friends.

        She owed him that to keep the balance straight.

It was such poor amends

Which she could make for rousing hopes to gall


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Him with their unfulfilment. Tragical

        It was, and she must leave him desolate.

        XLI

Hard silence he had forced upon his lips

For long and long, and would have done so still

Had not she  here she pressed her finger tips

Against her heavy eyes. Then with forced will

She wrote that he might come, sealed with the arms

Of Crowe and Frampton twined. Her heart felt lighter

        When this was done. It seemed her constant care

Might some day cease to fright her.

Illness could be no crime, and dreadful harms

Did come from too much sunshine. Her alarms

        Would lessen when she saw him standing there,

        XLII

Simple and kind, a brother just returned

From journeying, and he would treat her so.

She knew his honest heart, and if there burned

A spark in it he would not let it show.

But when he really came, and stood beside

Her underneath the fruitless cherry boughs,

        He seemed a tired man, gaunt, leadeneyed.

He made her no more vows,

Nor did he mention one thing he had tried

To put into his letter. War supplied

        Him topics. And his mind seemed occupied.

        XLIII

Daily they met. And gravely walked and talked.

He read her no more verses, and he stayed

Only until their conversation, balked

Of every natural channel, fled dismayed.

Again the next day she would meet him, trying

To give her tone some healthy sprightliness,

        But his uneager dignity soon chilled

Her wellprepared address.

Thus Summer waned, and in the mornings, crying

Of wild geese startled Eunice, and their flying

        Whirred overhead for days and never stilled.

        XLIV


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One afternoon of grey clouds and white wind,

Eunice awaited Gervase by the river.

The Dartle splashed among the reeds and whined

Over the willowroots, and a long sliver

Of caked and slobbered foam crept up the bank.

All through the garden, drifts of skirling leaves

        Blew up, and settled down, and blew again.

The cherrytrees were weaves

Of empty, knotted branches, and a dank

Mist hid the house, mouldy it smelt and rank

        With sodden wood, and still unfalling rain.

        XLV

Eunice paced up and down. No joy she took

At meeting Gervase, but the custom grown

Still held her. He was late. She sudden shook,

And caught at her stopped heart. Her eyes had shown

Sir Everard emerging from the mist.

His uniform was travelstained and torn,

        His jackboots muddy, and his eager stride

Jangled his spurs. A thorn

Entangled, trailed behind him. To the tryst

He hastened. Eunice shuddered, ran  a twist

        Round a sharp turning and she fled to hide.

        XLVI

But he had seen her as she swiftly ran,

A flash of white against the river's grey.

"Eunice," he called. "My Darling. Eunice. Can

You hear me? It is Everard. All day

I have been riding like the very devil

To reach you sooner. Are you startled, Dear?"

        He broke into a run and followed her,

And caught her, faint with fear,

Cowering and trembling as though she some evil

Spirit were seeing. "What means this uncivil

        Greeting, Dear Heart?" He saw her senses blur.

        XLVII

Swaying and catching at the seat, she tried

To speak, but only gurgled in her throat.

At last, straining to hold herself, she cried

To him for pity, and her strange words smote

A coldness through him, for she begged Gervase

To leave her, 'twas too much a second time.


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Gervase must go, always Gervase, her mind

Repeated like a rhyme

This name he did not know. In sad amaze

He watched her, and that hunted, fearful gaze,

        So unremembering and so unkind.

        XLVIII

Softly he spoke to her, patiently dealt

With what he feared her madness. By and by

He pierced her understanding. Then he knelt

Upon the seat, and took her hands: "Now try

To think a minute I am come, my Dear,

Unharmed and back on furlough. Are you glad

        To have your lover home again? To me,

Pickthorn has never had

A greater pleasantness. Could you not bear

To come and sit awhile beside me here?

        A stone between us surely should not be."

        XLIX

She smiled a little wan and ravelled smile,

Then came to him and on his shoulder laid

Her head, and they two rested there awhile,

Each taking comfort. Not a word was said.

But when he put his hand upon her breast

And felt her beating heart, and with his lips

        Sought solace for her and himself. She started

As one sharp lashed with whips,

And pushed him from her, moaning, his dumb quest

Denied and shuddered from. And he, distrest,

        Loosened his wife, and long they sat there, parted.

        L

Eunice was very quiet all that day,

A little dazed, and yet she seemed content.

At candletime, he asked if she would play

Upon her harpsichord, at once she went

And tinkled airs from Lully's `Carnival'

And `Bacchus', newly brought away from France.

        Then jaunted through a lively rigadoon

To please him with a dance

By Purcell, for he said that surely all

Good Englishmen had pride in national

        Accomplishment. But tiring of it soon


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LI

He whispered her that if she had forgiven

His startling her that afternoon, the clock

Marked early bedtime. Surely it was Heaven

He entered when she opened to his knock.

The hours rustled in the trailing wind

Over the chimney. Close they lay and knew

        Only that they were wedded. At his touch

Anxiety she threw

Away like a shed garment, and inclined

Herself to cherish him, her happy mind

        Quivering, unthinking, loving overmuch.

        LII

Eunice lay long awake in the cool night

After her husband slept. She gazed with joy

Into the shadows, painting them with bright

Pictures of all her future life's employ.

Twin gems they were, set to a single jewel,

Each shining with the other. Soft she turned

        And felt his breath upon her hair, and prayed

Her happiness was earned.

Past Earls of Crowe should give their blood for fuel

To light this Frampton's hearthfire. By no cruel

        Affrightings would she ever be dismayed.

        LIII

When Everard, next day, asked her in joke

What name it was that she had called him by,

She told him of Gervase, and as she spoke

She hardly realized it was a lie.

Her vision she related, but she hid

The fondness into which she had been led.

        Sir Everard just laughed and pinched her ear,

And quite out of her head

The matter drifted. Then Sir Everard chid

Himself for laziness, and off he rid

        To see his men and count his farminggear.

        LIV

At supper he seemed overspread with gloom,

But gave no reason why, he only asked

More questions of Gervase, and round the room


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He walked with restless strides. At last he tasked

Her with a greater feeling for this man

Than she had given. Eunice quick denied

        The slightest interest other than a friend

Might claim. But he replied

He thought she underrated. Then a ban

He put on talk and music. He'd a plan

        To work at, draining swamps at Pickthorn End.

        LV

Next morning Eunice found her Lord still changed,

Hard and unkind, with bursts of anger. Pride

Kept him from speaking out. His probings ranged

All round his torment. Lady Eunice tried

To sooth him. So a week went by, and then

His anguish flooded over; with clenched hands

        Striving to stem his words, he told her plain

Tony had seen them, "brands

Burning in Hell," the man had said. Again

Eunice described her vision, and how when

        Awoke at last she had known dreadful pain.

        LVI

He could not credit it, and misery fed

Upon his spirit, day by day it grew.

To Gervase he forbade the house, and led

The Lady Eunice such a life she flew

At his approaching footsteps. Winter came

Snowing and blustering through the Manor trees.

        All the roofedges spiked with icicles

In fluted companies.

The Lady Eunice with her tambourframe

Kept herself sighing company. The flame

        Of the birch fire glittered on the walls.

        LVII

A letter was brought to her as she sat,

Unsealed, unsigned. It told her that his wound,

The writer's, had so well recovered that

To join his regiment he felt him bound.

But would she not wish him one short "Godspeed",

He asked no more. Her greeting would suffice.

        He had resolved he never should return.

Would she this sacrifice

Make for a dying man? How could she read


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The rest! But forcing her eyes to the deed,

        She read. Then dropped it in the fire to burn.

        LVIII

Gervase had set the river for their meeting

As farthest from the farms where Everard

Spent all his days. How should he know such cheating

Was quite expected, at least no dullard

Was Everard Frampton. Hours by hours he hid

Among the willows watching. Dusk had come,

        And from the Manor he had long been gone.

Eunice her burdensome

Task set about. Hooded and cloaked, she slid

Over the slippery paths, and soon amid

        The sallows saw a boat tied to a stone.

        LIX

Gervase arose, and kissed her hand, then pointed

Into the boat. She shook her head, but he

Begged her to realize why, and with disjointed

Words told her of what peril there might be

From listeners along the river bank.

A push would take them out of earshot. Ten

        Minutes was all he asked, then she should land,

He go away again,

Forever this time. Yet how could he thank

Her for so much compassion. Here she sank

        Upon a thwart, and bid him quick unstrand

        LX

His boat. He cast the rope, and shoved the keel

Free of the gravel; jumped, and dropped beside

Her; took the oars, and they began to steal

Under the overhanging trees. A wide

Gash of red lanternlight cleft like a blade

Into the gloom, and struck on Eunice sitting

        Rigid and stark upon the after thwart.

It blazed upon their flitting

In merciless light. A moment so it stayed,

Then was extinguished, and Sir Everard made

        One leap, and landed just a fraction short.

        LXI


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His weight upon the gunwale tipped the boat

To straining balance. Everard lurched and seized

His wife and held her smothered to his coat.

"Everard, loose me, we shall drown " and squeezed

Against him, she beat with her hands. He gasped

"Never, by God!" The slidden boat gave way

        And the black foamy water split  and met.

Bubbled up through the spray

A wailing rose and in the branches rasped,

And creaked, and stilled. Over the treetops, clasped

        In the blue evening, a clear moon was set.

        LXII

They lie entangled in the twisting roots,

Embraced forever. Their cold marriage bed

Closecanopied and curtained by the shoots

Of willows and pale birches. At the head,

White lilies, like still swans, placidly float

And sway above the pebbles. Here are waves

        Sunsmitten for a threaded counterpane

Goldwoven on their graves.

In perfect quietness they sleep, remote

In the green, rippled twilight. Death has smote

        Them to perpetual oneness who were twain.

The Cremona Violin

        Part First

Frau ConcertMeister Altgelt shut the door.

A storm was rising, heavy gusts of wind

Swirled through the trees, and scattered leaves before

Her on the clean, flagged path. The sky behind

The distant town was black, and sharp defined

Against it shone the lines of roofs and towers,

Superimposed and flat like cardboard flowers.

A pasted city on a purple ground,

Picked out with luminous paint, it seemed. The cloud

Split on an edge of lightning, and a sound

Of rivers full and rushing boomed through bowed,


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Tossed, hissing branches. Thunder rumbled loud

Beyond the town fast swallowing into gloom.

Frau Altgelt closed the windows of each room.

She bustled round to shake by constant moving

The strange, weird atmosphere. She stirred the fire,

She twitched the suppercloth as though improving

Its careful setting, then her own attire

Came in for notice, tiptoeing higher and higher

She peered into the wallglass, now adjusting

A straying lock, or else a ribbon thrusting

This way or that to suit her. At last sitting,

Or rather plumping down upon a chair,

She took her work, the stocking she was knitting,

And watched the rain upon the window glare

In white, bright drops. Through the black glass a flare

Of lightning squirmed about her needles. "Oh!"

She cried. "What can be keeping Theodore so!"

A roll of thunder set the casements clapping.

Frau Altgelt flung her work aside and ran,

Pulled open the house door, with kerchief flapping

She stood and gazed along the street. A man

Flung back the gardengate and nearly ran

Her down as she stood in the door. "Why, Dear,

What in the name of patience brings you here?

Quick, Lotta, shut the door, my violin

I fear is wetted. Now, Dear, bring a light.

This clasp is very much too worn and thin.

I'll take the other fiddle out tonight

If it still rains. Tut! Tut! my child, you're quite

Clumsy. Here, help me, hold the case while I 

Give me the candle. No, the inside's dry.

Thank God for that! Well, Lotta, how are you?

A bad storm, but the house still stands, I see.

Is my pipe filled, my Dear? I'll have a few

Puffs and a snooze before I eat my tea.

What do you say? That you were feared for me?

Nonsense, my child. Yes, kiss me, now don't talk.

I need a rest, the theatre's a long walk."

Her needles still, her hands upon her lap

Patiently laid, Charlotta Altgelt sat

And watched the rainrun window. In his nap

Her husband stirred and muttered. Seeing that,

Charlotta rose and softly, pitapat,

Climbed up the stairs, and in her little room

Found sighing comfort with a moon in bloom.


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But even rainy windows, silverlit

By a newburst, stormwhetted moon, may give

But poor content to loneliness, and it

Was hard for young Charlotta so to strive

And down her eagerness and learn to live

In placid quiet. While her husband slept,

Charlotta in her upper chamber wept.

Herr ConcertMeister Altgelt was a man

Gentle and unambitious, that alone

Had kept him back. He played as few men can,

Drawing out of his instrument a tone

So shimmeringsweet and palpitant, it shone

Like a bright thread of sound hung in the air,

Afloat and swinging upward, slim and fair.

Above all things, above Charlotta his wife,

Herr Altgelt loved his violin, a fine

Cremona pattern, Stradivari's life

Was flowering out of early discipline

When this was fashioned. Of softcutting pine

The belly was. The back of broadly curled

Maple, the head made thick and sharply whirled.

The slanting, youthful soundholes through

The belly of fine, vigorous pine

Mellowed each note and blew

It out again with a woody flavour

Tanged and fragrant as firtrees are

When breezes in their needles jar.

The varnish was an orangebrown

Lustered like glass that's long laid down

Under a crumbling villa stone.

Purfled stoutly, with mitres which point

Straight up the corners. Each curve and joint

Clear, and bold, and thin.

Such was Herr Theodore's violin.

Seven o'clock, the ConcertMeister gone

With his best violin, the rain being stopped,

Frau Lotta in the kitchen sat alone

Watching the embers which the fire dropped.

The china shone upon the dresser, topped

By polished copper vessels which her skill

Kept brightly burnished. It was very still.

An air from `Orfeo' hummed in her head.

Herr Altgelt had been practising before

The night's performance. Charlotta had plead


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With him to stay with her. Even at the door

She'd begged him not to go. "I do implore

You for this evening, Theodore," she had said.

"Leave them tonight, and stay with me instead."

"A silly poppet!" Theodore pinched her ear.

"You'd like to have our good Elector turn

Me out I think." "But, Theodore, something queer

Ails me. Oh, do but notice how they burn,

My cheeks! The thunder worried me. You're stern,

And cold, and only love your work, I know.

But Theodore, for this evening, do not go."

But he had gone, hurriedly at the end,

For she had kept him talking. Now she sat

Alone again, always alone, the trend

Of all her thinking brought her back to that

She wished to banish. What would life be? What?

For she was young, and loved, while he was moved

Only by music. Each day that was proved.

Each day he rose and practised. While he played,

She stopped her work and listened, and her heart

Swelled painfully beneath her bodice. Swayed

And longing, she would hide from him her smart.

"Well, Lottchen, will that do?" Then what a start

She gave, and she would run to him and cry,

And he would gently chide her, "Fie, Dear, fie.

I'm glad I played it well. But such a taking!

You'll hear the thing enough before I've done."

And she would draw away from him, still shaking.

Had he but guessed she was another one,

Another violin. Her strings were aching,

Stretched to the touch of his bow hand, again

He played and she almost broke at the strain.

Where was the use of thinking of it now,

Sitting alone and listening to the clock!

She'd best make haste and knit another row.

Three hours at least must pass before his knock

Would startle her. It always was a shock.

She listened  listened  for so long before,

That when it came her hearing almost tore.

She caught herself just starting in to listen.

What nerves she had: rattling like brittle sticks!

She wandered to the window, for the glisten

Of a bright moon was tempting. Snuffed the wicks

Of her two candles. Still she could not fix

To anything. The moon in a broad swath


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Beckoned her out and down the gardenpath.

Against the house, her hollyhocks stood high

And black, their shadows doubling them. The night

Was white and still with moonlight, and a sigh

Of blowing leaves was there, and the dim flight

Of insects, and the smell of aconite,

And stocks, and Marvel of Peru. She flitted

Along the path, where blocks of shadow pitted

The even flags. She let herself go dreaming

Of Theodore her husband, and the tune

From `Orfeo' swam through her mind, but seeming

Changed  shriller. Of a sudden, the clear moon

Showed her a passerby, inopportune

Indeed, but here he was, whistling and striding.

Lotta squeezed in between the currants, hiding.

"The best laid plans of mice and men," alas!

The stranger came indeed, but did not pass.

Instead, he leant upon the gardengate,

Folding his arms and whistling. Lotta's state,

Crouched in the prickly currants, on wet grass,

Was far from pleasant. Still the stranger stayed,

And Lotta in her currants watched, dismayed.

He seemed a proper fellow standing there

In the bright moonshine. His cocked hat was laced

With silver, and he wore his own brown hair

Tied, but unpowdered. His whole bearing graced

A fine cloth coat, and ruffled shirt, and chased

Swordhilt. Charlotta looked, but her position

Was hardly easy. When would his volition

Suggest his walking on? And then that tune!

A halfadozen bars from `Orfeo'

Gone over and over, and murdered. What Fortune

Had brought him there to stare about him so?

"Ach, Gott im Himmel! Why will he not go!"

Thought Lotta, but the young man whistled on,

And seemed in no great hurry to be gone.

Charlotta, crouched among the currant bushes,

Watched the moon slowly dip from twig to twig.

If Theodore should chance to come, and blushes

Streamed over her. He would not care a fig,

He'd only laugh. She pushed aside a sprig

Of sharpedged leaves and peered, then she uprose

Amid her bushes. "Sir," said she, "pray whose

Garden do you suppose you're watching? Why


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Do you stand there? I really must insist

Upon your leaving. 'Tis unmannerly

To stay so long." The young man gave a twist

And turned about, and in the amethyst

Moonlight he saw her like a nymph halfrisen

From the green bushes which had been her prison.

He swept his hat off in a hurried bow.

"Your pardon, Madam, I had no idea

I was not quite alone, and that is how

I came to stay. My trespass was not sheer

Impertinence. I thought no one was here,

And really gardens cry to be admired.

Tonight especially it seemed required.

And may I beg to introduce myself?

Heinrich Marohl of Munich. And your name?"

Charlotta told him. And the artful elf

Promptly exclaimed about her husband's fame.

So Lotta, halfunwilling, slowly came

To conversation with him. When she went

Into the house, she found the evening spent.

Theodore arrived quite wearied out and teased,

With all excitement in him burned away.

It had gone well, he said, the audience pleased,

And he had played his very best today,

But afterwards he had been forced to stay

And practise with the stupid ones. His head

Ached furiously, and he must get to bed.

        Part Second

Herr ConcertMeister Altgelt played,

And the four strings of his violin

Were spinning like bees on a day in Spring.

The notes rose into the wide sunmote

Which slanted through the window,

They lay like coloured beads arow,

They knocked together and parted,

And started to dance,

Skipping, tripping, each one slipping

Under and over the others so

That the polychrome fire streamed like a lance

Or a comet's tail,

Behind them.

Then a wail arose  crescendo 

And dropped from off the end of the bow,

And the dancing stopped.

A scent of lilies filled the room,


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Long and slow. Each large white bloom

Breathed a sound which was holy perfume from a blessed censer,

And the hum of an organ tone,

And they waved like fans in a hall of stone

Over a bier standing there in the centre, alone.

Each lily bent slowly as it was blown.

Like smoke they rose from the violin 

Then faded as a swifter bowing

Jumbled the notes like wavelets flowing

In a splashing, pashing, rippling motion

Between broad meadows to an ocean

Wide as a day and blue as a flower,

Where every hour

Gulls dipped, and scattered, and squawked, and squealed,

And over the marshes the Angelus pealed,

And the prows of the fishingboats were spattered

With spray.

And away a couple of frigates were starting

To race to Java with all sails set,

Topgallants, and royals, and stunsails, and jibs,

And wide moonsails; and the shining rails

Were polished so bright they sparked in the sun.

All the sails went up with a run:

        "They call me Hanging Johnny,

        Awayioh;

        They call me Hanging Johnny,

        So hang, boys, hang."

And the sun had set and the high moon whitened,

And the ship heeled over to the breeze.

He drew her into the shade of the sails,

And whispered tales

Of voyages in the China seas,

And his arm around her

Held and bound her.

She almost swooned,

With the breeze and the moon

And the slipping sea,

And he beside her,

Touching her, leaning 

The ship careening,

With the white moon steadily shining over

Her and her lover,

Theodore, still her lover!

Then a quiver fell on the crowded notes,

And slowly floated

A single note which spread and spread

Till it filled the room with a shimmer like gold,

And noises shivered throughout its length,

And tried its strength.

They pulled it, and tore it,


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And the stuff waned thinner, but still it bore it.

Then a wide rent

Split the arching tent,

And balls of fire spurted through,

Spitting yellow, and mauve, and blue.

One by one they were quenched as they fell,

Only the blue burned steadily.

Paler and paler it grew, and  faded  away.

        Herr Altgelt stopped.

"Well, Lottachen, my Dear, what do you say?

I think I'm in good trim. Now let's have dinner.

What's this, my Love, you're very sweet today.

I wonder how it happens I'm the winner

Of so much sweetness. But I think you're thinner;

You're like a bag of feathers on my knee.

Why, Lotta child, you're almost strangling me.

I'm glad you're going out this afternoon.

The days are getting short, and I'm so tied

At the Court Theatre my poor little bride

Has not much junketing I fear, but soon

I'll ask our manager to grant a boon.

Tonight, perhaps, I'll get a pass for you,

And when I go, why Lotta can come too.

Now dinner, Love. I want some onion soup

To whip me up till that rehearsal's over.

You know it's odd how some women can stoop!

Fraeulein Gebnitz has taken on a lover,

A Jew named Goldstein. No one can discover

If it's his money. But she lives alone

Practically. Gebnitz is a stone,

Pores over books all day, and has no ear

For his wife's singing. Artists must have men;

They need appreciation. But it's queer

What messes people make of their lives, when

They should know more. If Gebnitz finds out, then

His wife will pack. Yes, shut the door at once.

I did not feel it cold, I am a dunce."

Frau Altgelt tied her bonnet on and went

Into the streets. A bright, crisp Autumn wind

Flirted her skirts and hair. A turbulent,

Audacious wind it was, now close behind,

Pushing her bonnet forward till it twined

The strings across her face, then from in front

Slantingly swinging at her with a shunt,

Until she lay against it, struggling, pushing,


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Dismayed to find her clothing tightly bound

Around her, every fold and wrinkle crushing

Itself upon her, so that she was wound

In draperies as clinging as those found

Sucking about a sea nymph on the frieze

Of some old Grecian temple. In the breeze

The shops and houses had a quality

Of hard and dazzling colour; something sharp

And buoyant, like white, puffing sails at sea.

The city streets were twanging like a harp.

Charlotta caught the movement, skippingly

She blew along the pavement, hardly knowing

Toward what destination she was going.

She fetched up opposite a jeweller's shop,

Where filigreed tiaras shone like crowns,

And necklaces of emeralds seemed to drop

And then float up again with lightness. Browns

Of striped agates struck her like cold frowns

Amid the gaiety of topaz seals,

Carved though they were with heads, and arms, and wheels.

A row of pencils knobbed with quartz or sard

Delighted her. And rings of every size

Turned smartly round like hoops before her eyes,

Amethystflamed or rubygirdled, jarred

To spokes and flashing triangles, and starred

Like rockets bursting on a festal day.

Charlotta could not tear herself away.

With eyes glued tightly on a golden box,

Whose rare enamel piqued her with its hue,

Changeable, iridescent, shuttlecocks

Of shades and lustres always darting through

Its level, superimposing sheet of blue,

Charlotta did not hear footsteps approaching.

She started at the words: "Am I encroaching?"

"Oh, Heinrich, how you frightened me! I thought

We were to meet at three, is it quite that?"

"No, it is not," he answered, "but I've caught

The trick of missing you. One thing is flat,

I cannot go on this way. Life is what

Might best be conjured up by the word: `Hell'.

Dearest, when will you come?" Lotta, to quell

His effervescence, pointed to the gems

Within the window, asked him to admire

A bracelet or a buckle. But one stems

Uneasily the burning of a fire.


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Heinrich was chafing, pricked by his desire.

Little by little she wooed him to her mood

Until at last he promised to be good.

But here he started on another tack;

To buy a jewel, which one would Lotta choose.

She vainly urged against him all her lack

Of other trinkets. Should she dare to use

A ring or brooch her husband might accuse

Her of extravagance, and ask to see

A strict accounting, or still worse might be.

But Heinrich would not be persuaded. Why

Should he not give her what he liked? And in

He went, determined certainly to buy

A thing so beautiful that it would win

Her wavering fancy. Altgelt's violin

He would outscore by such a handsome jewel

That Lotta could no longer be so cruel!

Pity Charlotta, torn in diverse ways.

If she went in with him, the shopman might

Recognize her, give her her name; in days

To come he could denounce her. In her fright

She almost fled. But Heinrich would be quite

Capable of pursuing. By and by

She pushed the door and entered hurriedly.

It took some pains to keep him from bestowing

A pair of ruby earrings, carved like roses,

The setting twined to represent the growing

Tendrils and leaves, upon her. "Who supposes

I could obtain such things! It simply closes

All comfort for me." So he changed his mind

And bought as slight a gift as he could find.

A locket, frosted over with seed pearls,

Oblong and slim, for wearing at the neck,

Or hidden in the bosom; their joined curls

Should lie in it. And further to bedeck

His love, Heinrich had picked a whiff, a fleck,

The merest puff of a thin, linked chain

To hang it from. Lotta could not refrain

From weeping as they sauntered down the street.

She did not want the locket, yet she did.

To have him love her she found very sweet,

But it is hard to keep love always hid.

Then there was something in her heart which chid

Her, told her she loved Theodore in him,

That all these meetings were a foolish whim.


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She thought of Theodore and the life they led,

So near together, but so little mingled.

The great clouds bulged and bellied overhead,

And the fresh wind about her body tingled;

The crane of a large warehouse creaked and jingled;

Charlotta held her breath for very fear,

About her in the street she seemed to hear:

        "They call me Hanging Johnny,

        Awayioh;

        They call me Hanging Johnny,

        So hang, boys, hang."

And it was Theodore, under the racing skies,

Who held her and who whispered in her ear.

She knew her heart was telling her no lies,

Beating and hammering. He was so dear,

The touch of him would send her in a queer

Swoon that was half an ecstasy. And yearning

For Theodore, she wandered, slowly turning

Street after street as Heinrich wished it so.

He had some aim, she had forgotten what.

Their progress was confused and very slow,

But at the last they reached a lonely spot,

A garden far above the highest shot

Of soaring steeple. At their feet, the town

Spread open like a chequerboard laid down.

Lotta was dimly conscious of the rest,

Vaguely remembered how he clasped the chain

About her neck. She treated it in jest,

And saw his face cloud over with sharp pain.

Then suddenly she felt as though a strain

Were put upon her, collared like a slave,

Leashed in the meshes of this thing he gave.

She seized the flimsy rings with both her hands

To snap it, but they held with odd persistence.

Her eyes were blinded by two windblown strands

Of hair which had been loosened. Her resistance

Melted within her, from remotest distance,

Misty, unreal, his face grew warm and near,

And giving way she knew him very dear.

For long he held her, and they both gazed down

At the wide city, and its blue, bridged river.

From wooing he jested with her, snipped the blown

Strands of her hair, and tied them with a sliver

Cut from his own head. But she gave a shiver

When, opening the locket, they were placed


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Under the glass, commingled and enlaced.

"When will you have it so with us?" He sighed.

She shook her head. He pressed her further. "No,

No, Heinrich, Theodore loves me," and she tried

To free herself and rise. He held her so,

Clipped by his arms, she could not move nor go.

"But you love me," he whispered, with his face

Burning against her through her kerchief's lace.

Frau Altgelt knew she toyed with fire, knew

That what her husband lit this other man

Fanned to hot flame. She told herself that few

Women were so discreet as she, who ran

No danger since she knew what things to ban.

She opened her house door at five o'clock,

A short halfhour before her husband's knock.

        Part Third

The `ResidenzTheater' sparked and hummed

With lights and people. Gebnitz was to sing,

That rare soprano. All the fiddles strummed

With tuning up; the woodwinds made a ring

Of reedy bubbling noises, and the sting

Of sharp, red brass pierced every eardrum; patting

From muffled tympani made a dark slatting

Across the silver shimmering of flutes;

A bassoon grunted, and an oboe wailed;

The 'celli pizzicatoed like great lutes,

And mutterings of double basses trailed

Away to silence, while loud harpstrings hailed

Their thin, bright colours down in such a scatter

They lost themselves amid the general clatter.

Frau Altgelt in the gallery, alone,

Felt lifted up into another world.

Before her eyes a thousand candles shone

In the great chandeliers. A maze of curled

And powdered periwigs past her eyes swirled.

She smelt the smoke of candles guttering,

And caught the glint of jewelled fans fluttering

All round her in the boxes. Red and gold,

The house, like rubies set in filigree,

Filliped the candlelight about, and bold

Young sparks with eyeglasses, unblushingly

Ogled fair beauties in the balcony.

An officer went by, his steel spurs jangling.


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Behind Charlotta an old man was wrangling

About a playbill he had bought and lost.

Three drunken soldiers had to be ejected.

Frau Altgelt's eyes stared at the vacant post

Of ConcertMeister, she at once detected

The stir which brought him. But she felt neglected

When with no glance about him or her way,

He lifted up his violin to play.

The curtain went up? Perhaps. If so,

Charlotta never saw it go.

The famous Fraeulein Gebnitz' singing

Only came to her like the ringing

Of bells at a festa

Which swing in the air

And nobody realizes they are there.

They jingle and jangle,

And clang, and bang,

And never a soul could tell whether they rang,

For the plopping of guns and rockets

And the chinking of silver to spend, in one's pockets,

And the shuffling and clapping of feet,

And the loud flapping

Of flags, with the drums,

As the military comes.

It's a famous tune to walk to,

And I wonder where they're off to.

Stepstepstepping to the beating of the drums.

But the rhythm changes as though a mist

Were curling and twisting

Over the landscape.

For a moment a rhythmless, tuneless fog

Encompasses her. Then her senses jog

To the breath of a stately minuet.

Herr Altgelt's violin is set

In tune to the slow, sweeping bows, and retreats and advances,

To curtsies brushing the waxen floor as the Court dances.

Long and peaceful like warm Summer nights

When stars shine in the quiet river. And against the lights

Blundering insects knock,

And the `Rathaus' clock

Booms twice, through the shrill sounds

Of flutes and horns in the lamplit grounds.

Pressed against him in the mazy wavering

Of a country dance, with her short breath quavering

She leans upon the beating, throbbing

Music. Laughing, sobbing,

Feet gliding after sliding feet;

His  hers 

The ballroom blurs 


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She feels the air

Lifting her hair,

And the lapping of water on the stone stair.

He is there! He is there!

Twang harps, and squeal, you thin violins,

That the dancers may dance, and never discover

The old stone stair leading down to the river

With the chestnuttree branches hanging over

Her and her lover.

Theodore, still her lover!

The evening passed like this, in a half faint,

Delirium with waking intervals

Which were the entr'acts. Under the restraint

Of a large company, the constant calls

For oranges or syrops from the stalls

Outside, the talk, the passing to and fro,

Lotta sat ill at ease, incognito.

She heard the Gebnitz praised, the tenor lauded,

The music vaunted as most excellent.

The scenery and the costumes were applauded,

The latter it was whispered had been sent

From Italy. The Herr Direktor spent

A fortune on them, so the gossips said.

Charlotta felt a lightness in her head.

When the next act began, her eyes were swimming,

Her prodded ears were aching and confused.

The first notes from the orchestra sent skimming

Her outward consciousness. Her brain was fused

Into the music, Theodore's music! Used

To hear him play, she caught his single tone.

For all she noticed they two were alone.

        Part Fourth

Frau Altgelt waited in the chilly street,

Hustled by lackeys who ran up and down

Shouting their coachmen's names; forced to retreat

A pace or two by lurching chairmen; thrown

Rudely aside by linkboys; boldly shown

The ogling rapture in two bleary eyes

Thrust close to hers in most unpleasant wise.

Escaping these, she hit a liveried arm,

Was sworn at by this glittering gentleman

And ordered off. However, no great harm

Came to her. But she looked a trifle wan

When Theodore, her belated guardian,


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Emerged. She snuggled up against him, trembling,

Half out of fear, half out of the assembling

Of all the thoughts and needs his playing had given.

Had she enjoyed herself, he wished to know.

"Oh! Theodore, can't you feel that it was Heaven!"

"Heaven! My Lottachen, and was it so?

Gebnitz was in good voice, but all the flow

Of her last aria was spoiled by Klops,

A wretched flutist, she was mad as hops."

He was so simple, so matteroffact,

Charlotta Altgelt knew not what to say

To bring him to her dream. His lack of tact

Kept him explaining all the homeward way

How this thing had gone well, that badly. "Stay,

Theodore!" she cried at last. "You know to me

Nothing was real, it was an ecstasy."

And he was heartily glad she had enjoyed

Herself so much, and said so. "But it's good

To be got home again." He was employed

In looking at his violin, the wood

Was old, and evening air did it no good.

But when he drew up to the table for tea

Something about his wife's vivacity

Struck him as hectic, worried him in short.

He talked of this and that but watched her close.

Tea over, he endeavoured to extort

The cause of her excitement. She arose

And stood beside him, trying to compose

Herself, all whipt to quivering, curdled life,

And he, poor fool, misunderstood his wife.

Suddenly, broken through her anxious grasp,

Her musickindled love crashed on him there.

Amazed, he felt her fling against him, clasp

Her arms about him, weighing down his chair,

Sobbing out all her hours of despair.

"Theodore, a woman needs to hear things proved.

Unless you tell me, I feel I'm not loved."

Theodore went under in this tearing wave,

He yielded to it, and its headlong flow

Filled him with all the energy she gave.

He was a youth again, and this bright glow,

This living, vivid joy he had to show

Her what she was to him. Laughing and crying,

She asked assurances there's no denying.


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Over and over again her questions, till

He quite convinced her, every now and then

She kissed him, shivering as though doubting still.

But later when they were composed and when

She dared relax her probings, "Lottachen,"

He asked, "how is it your love has withstood

My inadvertence? I was made of wood."

She told him, and no doubt she meant it truly,

That he was sun, and grass, and wind, and sky

To her. And even if conscience were unruly

She salved it by neat sophistries, but why

Suppose her insincere, it was no lie

She said, for Heinrich was as much forgot

As though he'd never been within earshot.

But Theodore's hands in straying and caressing

Fumbled against the locket where it lay

Upon her neck. "What is this thing I'm pressing?"

He asked. "Let's bring it to the light of day."

He lifted up the locket. "It should stay

Outside, my Dear. Your mother has good taste.

To keep it hidden surely is a waste."

Pity again Charlotta, straight aroused

Out of her happiness. The locket brought

A chilly jet of truth upon her, soused

Under its icy spurting she was caught,

And choked, and frozen. Suddenly she sought

The clasp, but with such art was this contrived

Her fumbling fingers never once arrived

Upon it. Feeling, twisting, round and round,

She pulled the chain quite through the locket's ring

And still it held. Her neck, encompassed, bound,

Chafed at the sliding meshes. Such a thing

To hurl her out of joy! A gilded string

Binding her folly to her, and those curls

Which lay entwined beneath the clustered pearls!

Again she tried to break the cord. It stood.

"Unclasp it, Theodore," she begged. But he

Refused, and being in a happy mood,

Twitted her with her inefficiency,

Then looking at her very seriously:

"I think, Charlotta, it is well to have

Always about one what a mother gave.

As she has taken the great pains to send

This jewel to you from Dresden, it will be

Ingratitude if you do not intend


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To carry it about you constantly.

With her fine taste you cannot disagree,

The locket is most beautifully designed."

He opened it and there the curls were, twined.

Charlotta's heart dropped beats like knittingstitches.

She burned a moment, flaming; then she froze.

Her face was jerked by little, nervous twitches,

She heard her husband asking: "What are those?"

Put out her hand quickly to interpose,

But stopped, the gesture halfcomplete, astounded

At the calm way the question was propounded.

"A pretty fancy, Dear, I do declare.

Indeed I will not let you put it off.

A lovely thought: yours and your mother's hair!"

Charlotta hid a gasp under a cough.

"Never with my connivance shall you doff

This charming gift." He kissed her on the cheek,

And Lotta suffered him, quite crushed and meek.

When later in their room she lay awake,

Watching the moonlight slip along the floor,

She felt the chain and wept for Theodore's sake.

She had loved Heinrich also, and the core

Of truth, unlovely, startled her. Wherefore

She vowed from now to break this double life

And see herself only as Theodore's wife.

        Part Fifth

It was no easy matter to convince

Heinrich that it was finished. Hard to say

That though they could not meet (he saw her wince)

She still must keep the locket to allay

Suspicion in her husband. She would pay

Him from her savings bit by bit  the oath

He swore at that was startling to them both.

Her resolution taken, Frau Altgelt

Adhered to it, and suffered no regret.

She found her husband all that she had felt

His music to contain. Her days were set

In his as though she were an amulet

Cased in bright gold. She joyed in her confining;

Her eyes put out her lookingglass with shining.

Charlotta was so gay that old, dull tasks

Were furbished up to seem like rituals.

She baked and brewed as one who only asks


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The right to serve. Her daily manuals

Of prayer were duties, and her festivals

When Theodore praised some dish, or frankly said

She had a knack in making up a bed.

So Autumn went, and all the mountains round

The city glittered white with fallen snow,

For it was Winter. Over the hard ground

Herr Altgelt's footsteps came, each one a blow.

On the swept flags behind the currant row

Charlotta stood to greet him. But his lip

Only flicked hers. His ConcertMeistership

Was first again. This evening he had got

Important news. The opera ordered from

Young Mozart was arrived. That old despot,

The Bishop of Salzburg, had let him come

Himself to lead it, and the parts, still hot

From copying, had been tried over. Never

Had any music started such a fever.

The orchestra had cheered till they were hoarse,

The singers clapped and clapped. The town was made,

With such a great attraction through the course

Of Carnival time. In what utter shade

All other cities would be left! The trade

In music would all drift here naturally.

In his excitement he forgot his tea.

Lotta was forced to take his cup and put

It in his hand. But still he rattled on,

Sipping at intervals. The new catgut

Strings he was using gave out such a tone

The "Maestro" had remarked it, and had gone

Out of his way to praise him. Lotta smiled,

He was as happy as a little child.

From that day on, Herr Altgelt, more and more,

Absorbed himself in work. Lotta at first

Was patient and wellwishing. But it wore

Upon her when two weeks had brought no burst

Of loving from him. Then she feared the worst;

That his short interest in her was a light

Flared up an instant only in the night.

`Idomeneo' was the opera's name,

A name that poor Charlotta learnt to hate.

Herr Altgelt worked so hard he seldom came

Home for his tea, and it was very late,

Past midnight sometimes, when he knocked. His state

Was like a flabby orange whose crushed skin


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Is thin with pulling, and all dented in.

He practised every morning and her heart

Followed his bow. But often she would sit,

While he was playing, quite withdrawn apart,

Absently fingering and touching it,

The locket, which now seemed to her a bit

Of some gone youth. His music drew her tears,

And through the notes he played, her dreading ears

Heard Heinrich's voice, saying he had not changed;

Beer merchants had no ecstasies to take

Their minds off love. So far her thoughts had ranged

Away from her stern vow, she chanced to take

Her way, one morning, quite by a mistake,

Along the street where Heinrich had his shop.

What harm to pass it since she should not stop!

It matters nothing how one day she met

Him on a bridge, and blushed, and hurried by.

Nor how the following week he stood to let

Her pass, the pavement narrowing suddenly.

How once he took her basket, and once he

Pulled back a rearing horse who might have struck

Her with his hoofs. It seemed the oddest luck

How many times their business took them each

Right to the other. Then at last he spoke,

But she would only nod, he got no speech

From her. Next time he treated it in joke,

And that so lightly that her vow she broke

And answered. So they drifted into seeing

Each other as before. There was no fleeing.

Christmas was over and the Carnival

Was very near, and tripping from each tongue

Was talk of the new opera. Each bookstall

Flaunted it out in bills, what airs were sung,

What singers hired. Pictures of the young

"Maestro" were for sale. The town was mad.

Only Charlotta felt depressed and sad.

Each day now brought a struggle 'twixt her will

And Heinrich's. 'Twixt her love for Theodore

And him. Sometimes she wished to kill

Herself to solve her problem. For a score

Of reasons Heinrich tempted her. He bore

Her moods with patience, and so surely urged

Himself upon her, she was slowly merged

Into his way of thinking, and to fly


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With him seemed easy. But next morning would

The Stradivarius undo her mood.

Then she would realize that she must cleave

Always to Theodore. And she would try

To convince Heinrich she should never leave,

And afterwards she would go home and grieve.

All thought in Munich centered on the part

Of January when there would be given

`Idomeneo' by Wolfgang Mozart.

The twentyninth was fixed. And all seats, even

Those almost at the ceiling, which were driven

Behind the highest gallery, were sold.

The inches of the theatre went for gold.

Herr Altgelt was a shadow worn so thin

With work, he hardly printed black behind

The candle. He and his old violin

Made up one person. He was not unkind,

But dazed outside his playing, and the rind,

The pine and maple of his fiddle, guarded

A part of him which he had quite discarded.

It woke in the silence of frostbright nights,

In little lights,

Like willo'thewisps flickering, fluttering,

Here  there 

Spurting, sputtering,

Fading and lighting,

Together, asunder 

Till Lotta sat up in bed with wonder,

And the faint grey patch of the window shone

Upon her sitting there, alone.

For Theodore slept.

The twentyeighth was last rehearsal day,

'Twas called for noon, so early morning meant

Herr Altgelt's only time in which to play

His part alone. Drawn like a monk who's spent

Himself in prayer and fasting, Theodore went

Into the kitchen, with a weary word

Of cheer to Lotta, careless if she heard.

Lotta heard more than his spoken word.

She heard the vibrating of strings and wood.

She was washing the dishes, her hands all suds,

When the sound began,

Long as the span

Of a white road snaking about a hill.

The orchards are filled

With cherry blossoms at butterfly poise.


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Page No 46


Hawthorn buds are cracking,

And in the distance a shepherd is clacking

His shears, snipsnipping the wool from his sheep.

The notes are asleep,

Lying adrift on the air

In level lines

Like sunlight hanging in pines and pines,

Strung and threaded,

All imbedded

In the bluegreen of the hazy pines.

Lines  long, straight lines!

And stems,

Long, straight stems

Pushing up

To the cup of blue, blue sky.

Stems growing misty

With the many of them,

Redgreen mist

Of the trees,

And these

Woodflavoured notes.

The back is maple and the belly is pine.

The rich notes twine

As though weaving in and out of leaves,

Broad leaves

Flapping slowly like elephants' ears,

Waving and falling.

Another sound peers

Through little pine fingers,

And lingers, peeping.

Ping! Ping! pizzicato, something is cheeping.

There is a twittering up in the branches,

A chirp and a lilt,

And crimson atilt on a swaying twig.

Wings! Wings!

And a little ruffledout throat which sings.

The forest bends, tumultuous

With song.

The woodpecker knocks,

And the songsparrow trills,

Every fir, and cedar, and yew

Has a nest or a bird,

It is quite absurd

To hear them cutting across each other:

Peewits, and thrushes, and larks, all at once,

And a loud cuckoo is trying to smother

A woodpigeon perched on a birch,

"Roo  coo  oo  oo "

"Cuckoo! Cuckoo! That's one for you!"

A blackbird whistles, how sharp, how shrill!

And the great trees toss


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Page No 47


And leaves blow down,

You can almost hear them splash on the ground.

The whistle again:

It is double and loud!

The leaves are splashing,

And water is dashing

Over those creepers, for they are shrouds;

And men are running up them to furl the sails,

For there is a capful of wind today,

And we are already well under way.

The deck is aslant in the bubbling breeze.

"Theodore, please.

Oh, Dear, how you tease!"

And the boatswain's whistle sounds again,

And the men pull on the sheets:

        "My name is Hanging Johnny,

        Awayioh;

        They call me Hanging Johnny,

        So hang, boys, hang."

The trees of the forest are masts, tall masts;

They are swinging over

Her and her lover.

Almost swooning

Under the ballooning canvas,

She lies

Looking up in his eyes

As he bends farther over.

Theodore, still her lover!

The suds were dried upon Charlotta's hands,

She leant against the table for support,

Wholly forgotten. Theodore's eyes were brands

Burning upon his music. He stopped short.

Charlotta almost heard the sound of bands

Snapping. She put one hand up to her heart,

Her fingers touched the locket with a start.

Herr Altgelt put his violin away

Listlessly. "Lotta, I must have some rest.

The strain will be a hideous one today.

Don't speak to me at all. It will be best

If I am quiet till I go." And lest

She disobey, he left her. On the stairs

She heard his mounting steps. What use were prayers!

He could not hear, he was not there, for she

Was married to a mummy, a machine.

Her hand closed on the locket bitterly.

Before her, on a chair, lay the shagreen

Case of his violin. She saw the clean

Sun flash the open clasp. The locket's edge


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Page No 48


Cut at her fingers like a pushing wedge.

A heavy cart went by, a distant bell

Chimed ten, the fire flickered in the grate.

She was alone. Her throat began to swell

With sobs. What kept her here, why should she wait?

The violin she had begun to hate

Lay in its case before her. Here she flung

The cover open. With the fiddle swung

Over her head, the hanging clock's loud ticking

Caught on her ear. 'Twas slow, and as she paused

The little door in it came open, flicking

A wooden cuckoo out: "Cuckoo!" It caused

The forest dream to come again. "Cuckoo!"

Smashed on the grate, the violin broke in two.

"Cuckoo! Cuckoo!" the clock kept striking on;

But no one listened. Frau Altgelt had gone.

The CrossRoads

A bullet through his heart at dawn. On the table a letter signed

with a woman's name. A wind that goes howling round the house,

and weeping as in shame. Cold November dawn peeping through the windows,

cold dawn creeping over the floor, creeping up his cold legs,

creeping over his cold body, creeping across his cold face.

A glaze of thin yellow sunlight on the staring eyes. Wind howling

through bent branches. A wind which never dies down. Howling, wailing.

The gazing eyes glitter in the sunlight. The lids are frozen open

and the eyes glitter.

The thudding of a pick on hard earth. A spade grinding and crunching.

Overhead, branches writhing, winding, interlacing, unwinding, scattering;

tortured twinings, tossings, creakings. Wind flinging branches apart,

drawing them together, whispering and whining among them. A waning,

lobsided moon cutting through black clouds. A stream of pebbles and earth

and the empty spade gleams clear in the moonlight, then is rammed again

into the black earth. Tramping of feet. Men and horses.

Squeaking of wheels.

"Whoa! Ready, Jim?"


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Page No 49


"All ready."

Something falls, settles, is still. Suicides have no coffin.

"Give us the stake, Jim. Now."

Pound! Pound!

"He'll never walk. Nailed to the ground."

An ash stick pierces his heart, if it buds the roots will hold him.

He is a part of the earth now, clay to clay. Overhead the branches sway,

and writhe, and twist in the wind. He'll never walk with a bullet

in his heart, and an ash stick nailing him to the cold, black ground.

Six months he lay still. Six months. And the water welled up in his body,

and soft blue spots chequered it. He lay still, for the ash stick

held him in place. Six months! Then her face came out of a mist of green.

Pink and white and frail like Dresden china, liliesofthevalley

at her breast, pucecoloured silk sheening about her. Under the young

green leaves, the horse at a footpace, the high yellow wheels of the chaise

scarcely turning, her face, rippling like grain ablowing,

under her pucecoloured bonnet; and burning beside her, flaming within

his correct blue coat and brass buttons, is someone. What has dimmed the sun?

The horse steps on a rolling stone; a wind in the branches makes a moan.

The little leaves tremble and shake, turn and quake, over and over,

tearing their stems. There is a shower of young leaves,

and a suddensprung gale wails in the trees.

The yellowwheeled chaise is rocking  rocking, and all the branches

are knocking  knocking. The sun in the sky is a flat, red plate,

the branches creak and grate. She screams and cowers, for the green foliage

is a lowering wave surging to smother her. But she sees nothing.

The stake holds firm. The body writhes, the body squirms.

The blue spots widen, the flesh tears, but the stake wears well

in the deep, black ground. It holds the body in the still, black ground.

Two years! The body has been in the ground two years. It is worn away;

it is clay to clay. Where the heart moulders, a greenish dust, the stake

is thrust. Late August it is, and night; a night flauntingly jewelled

with stars, a night of shooting stars and loud insect noises.

Down the road to Tilbury, silence  and the slow flapping of large leaves.

Down the road to Sutton, silence  and the darkness of heavyfoliaged trees.

Down the road to Wayfleet, silence  and the whirring scrape of insects

in the branches. Down the road to Edgarstown, silence  and stars like

steppingstones in a pathway overhead. It is very quiet at the crossroads,

and the signboard points the way down the four roads, endlessly points

the way where nobody wishes to go.


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Page No 50


A horse is galloping, galloping up from Sutton. Shaking the wide,

still leaves as he goes under them. Striking sparks with his iron shoes;

silencing the katydids. Dr. Morgan riding to a childbirth over Tilbury way;

riding to deliver a woman of her firstborn son. One o'clock from

Wayfleet bell tower, what a shower of shooting stars! And a breeze

all of a sudden, jarring the big leaves and making them jerk up and down.

Dr. Morgan's hat is blown from his head, the horse swerves, and curves away

from the signpost. An oath  spurs  a blurring of grey mist.

A quick left twist, and the gelding is snorting and racing

down the Tilbury road with the wind dropping away behind him.

The stake has wrenched, the stake has started, the body, flesh from flesh,

has parted. But the bones hold tight, socket and ball, and clamping them down

in the hard, black ground is the stake, wedged through ribs and spine.

The bones may twist, and heave, and twine, but the stake holds them still

in line. The breeze goes down, and the round stars shine, for the stake

holds the fleshless bones in line.

Twenty years now! Twenty long years! The body has powdered itself away;

it is clay to clay. It is brown earth mingled with brown earth. Only flaky

bones remain, lain together so long they fit, although not one bone is knit

to another. The stake is there too, rotted through, but upright still,

and still piercing down between ribs and spine in a straight line.

Yellow stillness is on the crossroads, yellow stillness is on the trees.

The leaves hang drooping, wan. The four roads point four yellow ways,

saffron and gamboge ribbons to the gaze. A little swirl of dust

blows up Tilbury road, the wind which fans it has not strength to do more;

it ceases, and the dust settles down. A little whirl of wind

comes up Tilbury road. It brings a sound of wheels and feet.

The wind reels a moment and faints to nothing under the signpost.

Wind again, wheels and feet louder. Wind again  again  again.

A drop of rain, flat into the dust. Drop!  Drop! Thick heavy raindrops,

and a shrieking wind bending the great trees and wrenching off their leaves.

Under the black sky, bowed and dripping with rain, up Tilbury road,

comes the procession. A funeral procession, bound for the graveyard

at Wayfleet. Feet and wheels  feet and wheels. And among them

one who is carried.

The bones in the deep, still earth shiver and pull. There is a quiver

through the rotted stake. Then stake and bones fall together

in a little puffing of dust.

Like meshes of linked steel the rain shuts down behind the procession,

now well along the Wayfleet road.

He wavers like smoke in the buffeting wind. His fingers blow out like smoke,

his head ripples in the gale. Under the signpost, in the pouring rain,


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Page No 51


he stands, and watches another quavering figure drifting down

the Wayfleet road. Then swiftly he streams after it. It flickers

among the trees. He licks out and winds about them. Over, under,

blown, contorted. Spindrift after spindrift; smoke following smoke.

There is a wailing through the trees, a wailing of fear,

and after it laughter  laughter  laughter, skirling up to the black sky.

Lightning jags over the funeral procession. A heavy clap of thunder.

Then darkness and rain, and the sound of feet and wheels.

A Roxbury Garden

        I

Hoops

Blue and pink sashes,

Crisscross shoes,

Minna and Stella run out into the garden

To play at hoop.

Up and down the gardenpaths they race,

In the yellow sunshine,

Each with a big round hoop

White as a stripped willowwand.

Round and round turn the hoops,

Their diamond whiteness cleaving the yellow sunshine.

The gravel crunches and squeaks beneath them,

And a large pebble springs them into the air

To go whirling for a foot or two

Before they touch the earth again

In a series of little jumps.

Spring, Hoops!

Spit out a shower of blue and white brightness.

The little crisscross shoes twinkle behind you,

The pink and blue sashes flutter like flags,

The hoopsticks are ready to beat you.

Turn, turn, Hoops! In the yellow sunshine.

Turn your stripped willow whiteness

Along the smooth paths.

Stella sings:


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Page No 52


"Round and round, rolls my hoop,

Scarcely touching the ground,

With a swoop,

And a bound,

Round and round.

With a bumpety, crunching, scattering sound,

Down the garden it flies;

In our eyes

The sun lies.

See it spin

Out and in;

Through the paths it goes whirling,

About the beds curling.

Sway now to the loop,

Faster, faster, my hoop.

Round you come,

Up you come,

Quick and straight as before.

Run, run, my hoop, run,

Away from the sun."

And the great hoop bounds along the path,

Leaping into the windbright air.

Minna sings:

"Turn, hoop,

Burn hoop,

Twist and twine

Hoop of mine.

Flash along,

Leap along,

Right at the sun.

Run, hoop, run.

Faster and faster,

Whirl, twirl.

Wheel like fire,

And spin like glass;

Fire's no whiter

Glass is no brighter.

Dance,

Prance,

Over and over,

About and about,

With the top of you under,

And the bottom at top,

But never a stop.

Turn about, hoop, to the tap of my stick,

I follow behind you

To touch and remind you.

Burn and glitter, so white and quick,

Round and round, to the tap of a stick."


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Page No 53


The hoop flies along between the flowerbeds,

Swaying the flowers with the wind of its passing.

Beside the foxgloveborder roll the hoops,

And the little pink and white bells shake and jingle

Up and down their tall spires;

They roll under the snowball bush,

And the ground behind them is strewn with white petals;

They swirl round a corner,

And jar a bee out of a Canterbury bell;

They cast their shadows for an instant

Over a bed of pansies,

Catch against the spurs of a columbine,

Jostle the quietness from a cluster of monk'shood.

Pat! Pat! behind them come the little crisscross shoes,

And the blue and pink sashes stream out in flappings of colour.

Stella sings:

"Hoop, hoop,

Roll along,

Faster bowl along,

Hoop.

Slow, to the turning,

Now go!  Go!

Quick!

Here's the stick.

Ratataptap it,

Pat it, flap it.

Fly like a bird or a yellowbacked bee,

See how soon you can reach that tree.

Here is a path that is perfectly straight.

Roll along, hoop, or we shall be late."

Minna sings:

"Trip about, slip about, whip about

Hoop.

Wheel like a top at its quickest spin,

Then, dear hoop, we shall surely win.

First to the greenhouse and then to the wall

Circle and circle,

And let the wind push you,

Poke you,

Brush you,

And not let you fall.

Whirring you round like a wreath of mist.

Hoopety hoop,

Twist,

Twist."

Tap! Tap! go the hoopsticks,


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Page No 54


And the hoops bowl along under a grape arbour.

For an instant their willow whiteness is green,

Pale whitegreen.

Then they are out in the sunshine,

Leaving the halfformed grape clusters

Atremble under their big leaves.

"I will beat you, Minna," cries Stella,

Hitting her hoop smartly with her stick.

"Stella, Stella, we are winning," calls Minna,

As her hoop curves round a bed of clovepinks.

A hummingbird whizzes past Stella's ear,

And two or three yellowandblack butterflies

Flutter, startled, out of a pillar rose.

Round and round race the little girls

After their great white hoops.

Suddenly Minna stops.

Her hoop wavers an instant,

But she catches it up on her stick.

"Listen, Stella!"

Both the little girls are listening;

And the scents of the garden rise up quietly about them.

"It's the chaise! It's Father!

Perhaps he's brought us a book from Boston."

Twinkle, twinkle, the little crisscross shoes

Up the garden path.

Blue  pink  an instant, against the syringa hedge.

But the hoops, white as stripped willowwands,

Lie in the grass,

And the grasshoppers jump back and forth

Over them.

        II

Battledore and Shuttlecock

The shuttlecock soars upward

In a parabola of whiteness,

Turns,

And sinks to a perfect arc.

Plat! the battledore strikes it,

And it rises again,

Without haste,

Winged and curving,

Tracing its white flight

Against the clipped hemlocktrees.

Plat!

Up again,

Orange and sparkling with sun,


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Page No 55


Rounding under the blue sky,

Dropping,

Fading to greygreen

In the shadow of the coned hemlocks.

"Ninetyone." "Ninetytwo." "Ninetythree."

The arms of the little girls

Come up  and up 

Precisely,

Like mechanical toys.

The battledores beat at nothing,

And toss the dazzle of snow

Off their parchment drums.

"Ninetyfour." Plat!

"Ninetyfive." Plat!

Back and forth

Goes the shuttlecock,

Iciclewhite,

Leaping at the sharpedged clouds,

Overturning,

Falling,

Down,

And down,

Tinctured with pink

From the upthrusting shine

Of Oriental poppies.

The little girls sway to the counting rhythm;

Left foot,

Right foot.

Plat! Plat!

Yellow heat twines round the handles of the battledores,

The parchment cracks with dryness;

But the shuttlecock

Swings slowly into the iceblue sky,

Heaving up on the warm air

Like a foambubble on a wave,

With feathers slanted and sustaining.

Higher,

Until the earth turns beneath it;

Poised and swinging,

With all the garden flowing beneath it,

Scarlet, and blue, and purple, and white 

Blurred colour reflections in rippled water 

Changing  streaming 

For the moment that Stella takes to lift her arm.

Then the shuttlecock relinquishes,

Bows,

Descends;

And the sharp blue spears of the air

Thrust it to earth.


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Page No 56


Again it mounts,

Stepping up on the rising scents of flowers,

Buoyed up and under by the shining heat.

Above the foxgloves,

Above the guelderroses,

Above the greenhouse glitter,

Till the shafts of cooler air

Meet it,

Deflect it,

Reject it,

Then down,

Down,

Past the greenhouse,

Past the guelderrose bush,

Past the foxgloves.

"Ninetynine," Stella's battledore springs to the impact.

Plunk! Like the snap of a taut string.

"Oh! Minna!"

The shuttlecock drops zigzagedly,

Out of orbit,

Hits the path,

And rolls over quite still.

Dead white feathers,

With a weight at the end.

        III

Garden Games

The tall clock is striking twelve;

And the little girls stop in the hall to watch it,

And the big ships rocking in a halfcircle

Above the dial.

Twelve o'clock!

Down the side steps

Go the little girls,

Under their big round straw hats.

Minna's has a pink ribbon,

Stella's a blue,

That is the way they know which is which.

Twelve o'clock!

An hour yet before dinner.

Mother is busy in the stillroom,

And Hannah is making gingerbread.

Slowly, with lagging steps,

They follow the gardenpath,

Crushing a leaf of box for its acrid smell,

Discussing what they shall do,


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Page No 57


And doing nothing.

"Stella, see that grasshopper

Climbing up the bank!

What a jump!

Almost as long as my arm."

Run, children, run.

For the grasshopper is leaping away,

In halfcircle curves,

Shuttlecock curves,

Over the grasses.

Hand in hand, the little girls call to him:

"Grandfather, grandfather gray,

Give me molasses, or I'll throw you away."

The grasshopper leaps into the sunlight,

Goldengreen,

And is gone.

"Let's catch a bee."

Round whirl the little girls,

And up the garden.

Two heads are thrust among the Canterbury bells,

Listening,

And fingers clasp and unclasp behind backs

In a strain of silence.

White bells,

Blue bells,

Hollow and reflexed.

Deep tunnels of blue and white dimness,

Cool winetunnels for bees.

There is a floundering and buzzing over Minna's head.

"Bend it down, Stella. Quick! Quick!"

The wide mouth of a blossom

Is pressed together in Minna's fingers.

The stem flies up, jiggling its flowerbells,

And Minna holds the dark blue cup in her hand,

With the bee

Imprisoned in it.

Whirr! Buzz! Bump!

Bump! Whiz! Bang!

BANG!!

The blue flower tears across like paper,

And a goldblack bee darts away in the sunshine.

"If we could fly, we could catch him."

The sunshine is hot on Stella's upturned face,

As she stares after the bee.

"We'll follow him in a dove chariot.


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Page No 58


Come on, Stella."

Run, children,

Along the red gravel paths,

For a bee is hard to catch,

Even with a chariot of doves.

Tall, still, and cowled,

Stand the monk'shoods;

Taller than the heads of the little girls.

A blossom for Minna.

A blossom for Stella.

Off comes the cowl,

And there is a purplepainted chariot;

Off comes the forward petal,

And there are two little green doves,

With green traces tying them to the chariot.

"Now we will get in, and fly right up to the clouds.

Fly, Doves, up in the sky,

With Minna and me,

After the bee."

Up one path,

Down another,

Run the little girls,

Holding their dove chariots in front of them;

But the bee is hidden in the trumpet of a honeysuckle,

With his wings folded along his back.

The dove chariots are thrown away,

And the little girls wander slowly through the garden,

Sucking the salvia tips,

And squeezing the snapdragons

To make them gape.

"I'm so hot,

Let's pick a pansy

And see the little man in his bath,

And play we're he."

A royal bathtub,

Hung with purple stuffs and yellow.

The great purpleyellow wings

Rise up behind the little red and green man;

The purpleyellow wings fan him,

He dabbles his feet in cool green.

Off with the green sheath,

And there are two spindly legs.

"Heigho!" sighs Minna.

"Heigho!" sighs Stella.

There is not a flutter of wind,

And the sun is directly overhead.

Along the edge of the garden


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Page No 59


Walk the little girls.

Their hats, round and yellow like cheeses,

Are dangling by the ribbons.

The grass is a tumult of buttercups and daisies;

Buttercups and daisies streaming away

Up the hill.

The garden is purple, and pink, and orange, and scarlet;

The garden is hot with colours.

But the meadow is only yellow, and white, and green,

Cool, and long, and quiet.

The little girls pick buttercups

And hold them under each other's chins.

"You're as gold as Grandfather's snuffbox.

You're going to be very rich, Minna."

"Ohoo! Then I'll ask my husband to give me a pair of garnet earrings

Just like Aunt Nancy's.

I wonder if he will.

I know. We'll tell fortunes.

That's what we'll do."

Plump down in the meadow grass,

Stella and Minna,

With their round yellow hats,

Like cheeses,

Beside them.

Drop,

Drop,

Daisy petals.

"One I love,

Two I love,

Three I love I say . . ."

The ground is peppered with daisy petals,

And the little girls nibble the golden centres,

And play it is cake.

A bell rings.

Dinnertime;

And after dinner there are lessons.

1777

        I

The TrumpetVine Arbour


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The throats of the little red trumpetflowers are wide open,

And the clangour of brass beats against the hot sunlight.

They bray and blare at the burning sky.

Red! Red! Coarse notes of red,

Trumpeted at the blue sky.

In long streaks of sound, molten metal,

The vine declares itself.

Clang!  from its red and yellow trumpets.

Clang!  from its long, nasal trumpets,

Splitting the sunlight into ribbons, tattered and shot with noise.

I sit in the cool arbour, in a greenandgold twilight.

It is very still, for I cannot hear the trumpets,

I only know that they are red and open,

And that the sun above the arbour shakes with heat.

My quill is newly mended,

And makes finedrawn lines with its point.

Down the long, white paper it makes little lines,

Just lines  up  down  crisscross.

My heart is strained out at the pinpoint of my quill;

It is thin and writhing like the marks of the pen.

My hand marches to a squeaky tune,

It marches down the paper to a squealing of fifes.

My pen and the trumpetflowers,

And Washington's armies away over the smoketree to the Southwest.

"Yankee Doodle," my Darling! It is you against the British,

Marching in your ragged shoes to batter down King George.

What have you got in your hat? Not a feather, I wager.

Just a haystraw, for it is the harvest you are fighting for.

Hay in your hat, and the whites of their eyes for a target!

Like Bunker Hill, two years ago, when I watched all day from the housetop

Through Father's spyglass.

The red city, and the blue, bright water,

And puffs of smoke which you made.

Twenty miles away,

Round by Cambridge, or over the Neck,

But the smoke was white  white!

Today the trumpetflowers are red  red 

And I cannot see you fighting,

But old Mr. Dimond has fled to Canada,

And Myra sings "Yankee Doodle" at her milking.

The red throats of the trumpets bray and clang in the sunshine,

And the smoketree puffs dun blossoms into the blue air.

        II

The City of Falling Leaves

Leaves fall,


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Brown leaves,

Yellow leaves streaked with brown.

They fall,

Flutter,

Fall again.

The brown leaves,

And the streaked yellow leaves,

Loosen on their branches

And drift slowly downwards.

One,

One, two, three,

One, two, five.

All Venice is a falling of Autumn leaves 

Brown,

And yellow streaked with brown.

"That sonnet, Abate,

Beautiful,

I am quite exhausted by it.

Your phrases turn about my heart

And stifle me to swooning.

Open the window, I beg.

Lord! What a strumming of fiddles and mandolins!

'Tis really a shame to stop indoors.

Call my maid, or I will make you lace me yourself.

Fie, how hot it is, not a breath of air!

See how straight the leaves are falling.

Marianna, I will have the yellow satin caught up with silver fringe,

It peeps out delightfully from under a mantle.

Am I well painted today, `caro Abate mio'?

You will be proud of me at the `Ridotto', hey?

Proud of being `Cavalier Servente' to such a lady?"

"Can you doubt it, `Bellissima Contessa'?

A pinch more rouge on the right cheek,

And Venus herself shines less . . ."

"You bore me, Abate,

I vow I must change you!

A letter, Achmet?

Run and look out of the window, Abate.

I will read my letter in peace."

The little black slave with the yellow satin turban

Gazes at his mistress with strained eyes.

His yellow turban and black skin

Are gorgeous  barbaric.

The yellow satin dress with its silver flashings

Lies on a chair

Beside a black mantle and a black mask.

Yellow and black,

Gorgeous  barbaric.

The lady reads her letter,

And the leaves drift slowly


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Past the long windows.

"How silly you look, my dear Abate,

With that great brown leaf in your wig.

Pluck it off, I beg you,

Or I shall die of laughing."

A yellow wall

Aflare in the sunlight,

Chequered with shadows,

Shadows of vine leaves,

Shadows of masks.

Masks coming, printing themselves for an instant,

Then passing on,

More masks always replacing them.

Masks with tricorns and rapiers sticking out behind

Pursuing masks with plumes and high heels,

The sunlight shining under their insteps.

One,

One, two,

One, two, three,

There is a thronging of shadows on the hot wall,

Filigreed at the top with moving leaves.

Yellow sunlight and black shadows,

Yellow and black,

Gorgeous  barbaric.

Two masks stand together,

And the shadow of a leaf falls through them,

Marking the wall where they are not.

From hattip to shouldertip,

From elbow to swordhilt,

The leaf falls.

The shadows mingle,

Blur together,

Slide along the wall and disappear.

Gold of mosaics and candles,

And night blackness lurking in the ceiling beams.

Saint Mark's glitters with flames and reflections.

A cloak brushes aside,

And the yellow of satin

Licks out over the coloured inlays of the pavement.

Under the gold crucifixes

There is a meeting of hands

Reaching from black mantles.

Sighing embraces, bold investigations,

Hide in confessionals,

Sheltered by the shuffling of feet.

Gorgeous  barbaric

In its mail of jewels and gold,

Saint Mark's looks down at the swarm of black masks;

And outside in the palace gardens brown leaves fall,

Flutter,


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Fall.

Brown,

And yellow streaked with brown.

Blueblack, the sky over Venice,

With a pricking of yellow stars.

There is no moon,

And the waves push darkly against the prow

Of the gondola,

Coming from Malamocco

And streaming toward Venice.

It is black under the gondola hood,

But the yellow of a satin dress

Glares out like the eye of a watching tiger.

Yellow compassed about with darkness,

Yellow and black,

Gorgeous  barbaric.

The boatman sings,

It is Tasso that he sings;

The lovers seek each other beneath their mantles,

And the gondola drifts over the lagoon, aslant to the coming dawn.

But at Malamocco in front,

In Venice behind,

Fall the leaves,

Brown,

And yellow streaked with brown.

They fall,

Flutter,

Fall.

Bronze Tablets

The Fruit Shop


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Crossribboned shoes; a muslin gown,

Highwaisted, girdled with bright blue;

A straw poke bonnet which hid the frown

She pluckered her little brows into

As she picked her dainty passage through

The dusty street. "Ah, Mademoiselle,

A dirty pathway, we need rain,

My poor fruits suffer, and the shell

Of this nut's too big for its kernel, lain

Here in the sun it has shrunk again.

The baker down at the corner says

We need a battle to shake the clouds;

But I am a man of peace, my ways

Don't look to the killing of men in crowds.

Poor fellows with guns and bayonets for shrouds!

Pray, Mademoiselle, come out of the sun.

Let me dust off that wicker chair. It's cool

In here, for the green leaves I have run

In a curtain over the door, make a pool

Of shade. You see the pears on that stool 

The shadow keeps them plump and fair."

Over the fruiterer's door, the leaves

Held back the sun, a greenish flare

Quivered and sparked the shop, the sheaves

Of sunbeams, glanced from the sign on the eaves,

Shot from the golden letters, broke

And splintered to little scattered lights.

Jeanne Tourmont entered the shop, her poke

Bonnet tilted itself to rights,

And her face looked out like the moon on nights

Of flickering clouds. "Monsieur Popain, I

Want gooseberries, an apple or two,

Or excellent plums, but not if they're high;

Haven't you some which a strong wind blew?

I've only a couple of francs for you."

Monsieur Popain shrugged and rubbed his hands.

What could he do, the times were sad.

A couple of francs and such demands!

And asking for fruits a little bad.

Windblown indeed! He never had

Anything else than the very best.

He pointed to baskets of blunted pears

With the thin skin tight like a bursting vest,

All yellow, and red, and brown, in smears.

Monsieur Popain's voice denoted tears.

He took up a pear with tender care,

And pressed it with his hardened thumb.

"Smell it, Mademoiselle, the perfume there

Is like lavender, and sweet thoughts come

Only from having a dish at home.

And those grapes! They melt in the mouth like wine,


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Just a click of the tongue, and they burst to honey.

They're only this morning off the vine,

And I paid for them down in silver money.

The Corporal's widow is witness, her pony

Brought them in at sunrise today.

Those oranges  Gold! They're almost red.

They seem little chips just broken away

From the sun itself. Or perhaps instead

You'd like a pomegranate, they're rarely gay,

When you split them the seeds are like crimson spray.

Yes, they're high, they're high, and those Turkey figs,

They all come from the South, and Nelson's ships

Make it a little hard for our rigs.

They must be forever giving the slips

To the cursed English, and when men clips

Through powder to bring them, why dainties mounts

A bit in price. Those almonds now,

I'll strip off that husk, when one discounts

A life or two in a nigger row

With the man who grew them, it does seem how

They would come dear; and then the fight

At sea perhaps, our boats have heels

And mostly they sail along at night,

But once in a way they're caught; one feels

Ivory's not better nor finer  why peels

From an almond kernel are worth two sous.

It's hard to sell them now," he sighed.

"Purses are tight, but I shall not lose.

There's plenty of cheaper things to choose."

He picked some currants out of a wide

Earthen bowl. "They make the tongue

Almost fly out to suck them, bride

Currants they are, they were planted long

Ago for some new Marquise, among

Other great beauties, before the Chateau

Was left to rot. Now the Gardener's wife,

He that marched off to his death at Marengo,

Sells them to me; she keeps her life

From snuffing out, with her pruning knife.

She's a poor old thing, but she learnt the trade

When her man was young, and the young Marquis

Couldn't have enough garden. The flowers he made

All new! And the fruits! But 'twas said that he

Was no friend to the people, and so they laid

Some charge against him, a cavalcade

Of citizens took him away; they meant

Well, but I think there was some mistake.

He just pottered round in his garden, bent

On growing things; we were so awake

In those days for the New Republic's sake.

He's gone, and the garden is all that's left


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Not in ruin, but the currants and apricots,

And peaches, furred and sweet, with a cleft

Full of morning dew, in those greenglazed pots,

Why, Mademoiselle, there is never an eft

Or worm among them, and as for theft,

How the old woman keeps them I cannot say,

But they're finer than any grown this way."

Jeanne Tourmont drew back the filigree ring

Of her striped silk purse, tipped it upside down

And shook it, two coins fell with a ding

Of striking silver, beneath her gown

One rolled, the other lay, a thing

Sparked white and sharply glistening,

In a drop of sunlight between two shades.

She jerked the purse, took its empty ends

And crumpled them toward the centre braids.

The whole collapsed to a mass of blends

Of colours and stripes. "Monsieur Popain, friends

We have always been. In the days before

The Great Revolution my aunt was kind

When you needed help. You need no more;

'Tis we now who must beg at your door,

And will you refuse?" The little man

Bustled, denied, his heart was good,

But times were hard. He went to a pan

And poured upon the counter a flood

Of pungent raspberries, tanged like wood.

He took a melon with rough green rind

And rubbed it well with his apron tip.

Then he hunted over the shop to find

Some walnuts cracking at the lip,

And added to these a barberry slip

Whose acrid, oval berries hung

Like fringe and trembled. He reached a round

Basket, with handles, from where it swung

Against the wall, laid it on the ground

And filled it, then he searched and found

The francs Jeanne Tourmont had let fall.

"You'll return the basket, Mademoiselle?"

She smiled, "The next time that I call,

Monsieur. You know that very well."

'Twas lightly said, but meant to tell.

Monsieur Popain bowed, somewhat abashed.

She took her basket and stepped out.

The sunlight was so bright it flashed

Her eyes to blindness, and the rout

Of the little street was all about.

Through glare and noise she stumbled, dazed.

The heavy basket was a care.

She heard a shout and almost grazed

The panels of a chaise and pair.


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The postboy yelled, and an amazed

Face from the carriage window gazed.

She jumped back just in time, her heart

Beating with fear. Through whirling light

The chaise departed, but her smart

Was keen and bitter. In the white

Dust of the street she saw a bright

Streak of colours, wet and gay,

Red like blood. Crushed but fair,

Her fruit stained the cobbles of the way.

Monsieur Popain joined her there.

"Tiens, Mademoiselle,

        c'est le General Bonaparte, partant pour la Guerre!"

Malmaison

        I

How the slates of the roof sparkle in the sun, over there, over there,

beyond the high wall! How quietly the Seine runs in loops and windings,

over there, over there, sliding through the green countryside! Like ships

of the line, stately with canvas, the tall clouds pass along the sky,

over the glittering roof, over the trees, over the looped and curving river.

A breeze quivers through the lindentrees. Roses bloom at Malmaison.

Roses! Roses! But the road is dusty. Already the Citoyenne Beauharnais

wearies of her walk. Her skin is chalked and powdered with dust,

she smells dust, and behind the wall are roses! Roses with

smooth open petals, poised above rippling leaves . . . Roses . . .

They have told her so. The Citoyenne Beauharnais shrugs her shoulders

and makes a little face. She must mend her pace if she would be back

in time for dinner. Roses indeed! The guillotine more likely.

The tiered clouds float over Malmaison, and the slate roof sparkles

in the sun.

        II

Gallop! Gallop! The General brooks no delay. Make way, good people,

and scatter out of his path, you, and your hens, and your dogs,

and your children. The General is returned from Egypt, and is come

in a `caleche' and four to visit his new property. Throw open the gates,


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you, Porter of Malmaison. Pull off your cap, my man, this is your master,

the husband of Madame. Faster! Faster! A jerk and a jingle

and they are arrived, he and she. Madame has red eyes. Fie! It is for joy

at her husband's return. Learn your place, Porter. A gentleman here

for two months? Fie! Fie, then! Since when have you taken to gossiping.

Madame may have a brother, I suppose. That  all green, and red,

and glitter, with flesh as dark as ebony  that is a slave; a bloodthirsty,

stabbing, slashing heathen, come from the hot countries to cure your tongue

of idle whispering.

A fine afternoon it is, with tall bright clouds sailing over the trees.

"Bonaparte, mon ami, the trees are golden like my star, the star I pinned

to your destiny when I married you. The gypsy, you remember her prophecy!

My dear friend, not here, the servants are watching; send them away,

and that flashing splendour, Roustan. Superb  Imperial, but . . .

My dear, your arm is trembling; I faint to feel it touching me! No, no,

Bonaparte, not that  spare me that  did we not bury that last night!

You hurt me, my friend, you are so hot and strong. Not long, Dear,

no, thank God, not long."

The looped river runs saffron, for the sun is setting. It is getting dark.

Dark. Darker. In the moonlight, the slate roof shines palely milkily white.

The roses have faded at Malmaison, nipped by the frost. What need for roses?

Smooth, open petals  her arms. Fragrant, outcurved petals  her breasts.

He rises like a sun above her, stooping to touch the petals, press them wider.

Eagles. Bees. What are they to open roses! A little shivering breeze

runs through the lindentrees, and the tiered clouds blow across the sky

like ships of the line, stately with canvas.

        III

The gates stand wide at Malmaison, stand wide all day. The gravel

of the avenue glints under the continual rolling of wheels.

An officer gallops up with his sabre clicking; a mameluke gallops down

with his charger kicking. `Valets de pied' run about in ones, and twos,

and groups, like swirled blown leaves. Tramp! Tramp! The guard is changing,

and the grenadiers off duty lounge out of sight, ranging along the roads

toward Paris.

The slate roof sparkles in the sun, but it sparkles milkily, vaguely,

the great glasshouses put out its shining. Glass, stone, and onyx

now for the sun's mirror. Much has come to pass at Malmaison.

New rocks and fountains, blocks of carven marble, fluted pillars uprearing

antique temples, vases and urns in unexpected places, bridges of stone,

bridges of wood, arbours and statues, and a flood of flowers everywhere,

new flowers, rare flowers, parterre after parterre of flowers. Indeed,


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the roses bloom at Malmaison. It is youth, youth untrammeled and advancing,

trundling a country ahead of it as though it were a hoop. Laughter,

and spur janglings in tessellated vestibules. Tripping of clocked

and embroidered stockings in little lowheeled shoes over smooth grassplots.

India muslins spangled with silver patterns slide through trees 

mingle  separate  white day fireflies flashing moonbrilliance

in the shade of foliage.

"The kangaroos! I vow, Captain, I must see the kangaroos."

"As you please, dear Lady, but I recommend the shady linden alley

and feeding the cockatoos."

"They say that Madame Bonaparte's breed of sheep is the best in all France."

"And, oh, have you seen the enchanting little cedar she planted

when the First Consul sent home the news of the victory of Marengo?"

Picking, choosing, the chattering company flits to and fro. Over the trees

the great clouds go, tiered, stately, like ships of the line

bright with canvas.

Prisoners'base, and its swooping, veering, racing, giggling, bumping.

The First Consul runs plump into M. de Beauharnais and falls.

But he picks himself up smartly, and starts after M. Isabey. Too late,

M. Le Premier Consul, Mademoiselle Hortense is out after you. Quickly,

my dear Sir! Stir your short legs, she is swift and eager, and as graceful

as her mother. She is there, that other, playing too, but lightly, warily,

bearing herself with care, rather floating out upon the air than running,

never far from goal. She is there, borne up above her guests

as something indefinably fair, a rose above periwinkles. A blown rose,

smooth as satin, reflexed, one loosened petal hanging back and down.

A rose that undulates languorously as the breeze takes it,

resting upon its leaves in a faintness of perfume.

There are rumours about the First Consul. Malmaison is full of women,

and Paris is only two leagues distant. Madame Bonaparte stands

on the wooden bridge at sunset, and watches a black swan

pushing the pink and silver water in front of him as he swims,

crinkling its smoothness into pleats of changing colour with his breast.

Madame Bonaparte presses against the parapet of the bridge,

and the crushed roses at her belt melt, petal by petal, into the pink water.

        IV

A vile day, Porter. But keep your wits about you. The Empress

will soon be here. Queer, without the Emperor! It is indeed,

but best not consider that. Scratch your head and prick up your ears.

Divorce is not for you to debate about. She is late? Ah, well,


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the roads are muddy. The rain spears are as sharp as whetted knives.

They dart down and down, edged and shining. Cloptrop! Cloptrop!

A carriage grows out of the mist. Hist, Porter. You can keep on your hat.

It is only Her Majesty's dogs and her parrot. Cloptrop!

The Ladies in Waiting, Porter. Cloptrop! It is Her Majesty. At least,

I suppose it is, but the blinds are drawn.

"In all the years I have served Her Majesty she never before passed the gate

without giving me a smile!"

You're a droll fellow, to expect the Empress to put out her head

in the pouring rain and salute you. She has affairs of her own

to think about.

Clang the gate, no need for further waiting, nobody else will be coming

to Malmaison tonight.

White under her veil, drained and shaking, the woman crosses the antechamber.

Empress! Empress! Foolish splendour, perished to dust. Ashes of roses,

ashes of youth. Empress forsooth!

Over the glass domes of the hothouses drenches the rain. Behind her

a clock ticks  ticks again. The sound knocks upon her thought

with the echoing shudder of hollow vases. She places her hands on her ears,

but the minutes pass, knocking. Tears in Malmaison. And years to come

each knocking by, minute after minute. Years, many years, and tears,

and cold pouring rain.

"I feel as though I had died, and the only sensation I have

is that I am no more."

Rain! Heavy, thudding rain!

        V

The roses bloom at Malmaison. And not only roses. Tulips, myrtles,

geraniums, camelias, rhododendrons, dahlias, double hyacinths.

All the year through, under glass, under the sky, flowers bud, expand, die,

and give way to others, always others. From distant countries they have

been brought, and taught to live in the cool temperateness of France.

There is the `Bonapartea' from Peru; the `Napoleone Imperiale';

the `Josephinia Imperatrix', a pearlwhite flower, purpleshadowed,

the calix pricked out with crimson points. Malmaison wears its flowers

as a lady wears her gems, flauntingly, assertively. Malmaison decks herself

to hide the hollow within.

The glasshouses grow and grow, and every year fling up hotter reflections

to the sailing sun.


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The cost runs into millions, but a woman must have something

to console herself for a broken heart. One can play backgammon and patience,

and then patience and backgammon, and stake gold napoleons on each game won.

Sport truly! It is an unruly spirit which could ask better. With her jewels,

her laces, her shawls; her two hundred and twenty dresses, her fichus,

her veils; her pictures, her busts, her birds. It is absurd that she

cannot be happy. The Emperor smarts under the thought of her ingratitude.

What could he do more? And yet she spends, spends as never before.

It is ridiculous. Can she not enjoy life at a smaller figure?

Was ever monarch plagued with so extravagant an exwife. She owes

her chocolatemerchant, her candlemerchant, her sweetmeat purveyor;

her grocer, her butcher, her poulterer; her architect, and the shopkeeper

who sells her rouge; her perfumer, her dressmaker, her merchant of shoes.

She owes for fans, plants, engravings, and chairs. She owes

masons and carpenters, vintners, lingeres. The lady's affairs

are in sad confusion.

And why? Why?

Can a river flow when the spring is dry?

Night. The Empress sits alone, and the clock ticks, one after one.

The clock nicks off the edges of her life. She is chipped like

an old bit of china; she is frayed like a garment of last year's wearing.

She is soft, crinkled, like a fading rose. And each minute flows by

brushing against her, shearing off another and another petal.

The Empress crushes her breasts with her hands and weeps. And the tall clouds

sail over Malmaison like a procession of stately ships bound for the moon.

Scarlet, clearblue, purple epauletted with gold. It is a parade of soldiers

sweeping up the avenue. Eight horses, eight Imperial harnesses,

four caparisoned postilions, a carriage with the Emperor's arms on the panels.

Ho, Porter, pop out your eyes, and no wonder. Where else under the Heavens

could you see such splendour!

They sit on a stone seat. The little man in the green coat of a Colonel

of Chasseurs, and the lady, beautiful as a satin seedpod, and as pale.

The house has memories. The satin seedpod holds his germs of Empire.

We will stay here, under the blue sky and the turreted white clouds.

She draws him; he feels her faded loveliness urge him to replenish it.

Her soft transparent texture woos his nervous fingering. He speaks to her

of debts, of resignation; of her children, and his; he promises that she

shall see the King of Rome; he says some harsh things and some pleasant.

But she is there, close to him, rose toned to amber, white shot with violet,

pungent to his nostrils as embalmed roseleaves in a twilit room.

Suddenly the Emperor calls his carriage and rolls away

across the looping Seine.


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Page No 72


VI

Crystalblue brightness over the glasshouses. Crystalblue streaks

and ripples over the lake. A macaw on a gilded perch screams;

they have forgotten to take out his dinner. The windows shake. Boom! Boom!

It is the rumbling of Prussian cannon beyond Pecq. Roses bloom at Malmaison.

Roses! Roses! Swimming above their leaves, rotting beneath them.

Fallen flowers strew the unraked walks. Fallen flowers for a fallen Emperor!

The General in charge of him draws back and watches. Snatches of music 

snarling, sneering music of bagpipes. They say a Scotch regiment

is besieging SaintDenis. The Emperor wipes his face, or is it his eyes.

His tired eyes which see nowhere the grace they long for. Josephine!

Somebody asks him a question, he does not answer, somebody else does that.

There are voices, but one voice he does not hear, and yet he hears it

all the time. Josephine! The Emperor puts up his hand to screen his face.

The white light of a bright cloud spears sharply through the lindentrees.

`Vive l'Empereur!' There are troops passing beyond the wall,

troops which sing and call. Boom! A pink rose is jarred off its stem

and falls at the Emperor's feet.

"Very well. I go." Where! Does it matter? There is no sword to clatter.

Nothing but soft brushing gravel and a gate which shuts with a click.

"Quick, fellow, don't spare your horses."

A whip cracks, wheels turn, why burn one's eyes following a fleck of dust.

        VII

Over the slate roof tall clouds, like ships of the line, pass along the sky.

The glasshouses glitter splotchily, for many of their lights are broken.

Roses bloom, fiery cinders quenching under damp weeds. Wreckage and misery,

and a trailing of petty deeds smearing over old recollections.

The musty rooms are empty and their shutters are closed, only in the gallery

there is a stuffed black swan, covered with dust. When you touch it,

the feathers come off and float softly to the ground. Through a chink

in the shutters, one can see the stately clouds crossing the sky

toward the Roman arches of the Marly Aqueduct.

The Hammers


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Page No 73


I

Frindsbury, Kent, 1786

Bang!

Bang!

Tap!

Tapatap! Rap!

All through the lead and silver Winter days,

All through the copper of Autumn hazes.

Tap to the red rising sun,

Tap to the purple setting sun.

Four years pass before the job is done.

Two thousand oak trees grown and felled,

Two thousand oaks from the hedgerows of the Weald,

Sussex had yielded two thousand oaks

With huge boles

Round which the tape rolls

Thirty mortal feet, say the village folks.

Two hundred loads of elm and Scottish fir;

Planking from Dantzig.

My! What timber goes into a ship!

Tap! Tap!

Two years they have seasoned her ribs on the ways,

Tapping, tapping.

You can hear, though there's nothing where you gaze.

Through the fog down the reaches of the river,

The tapping goes on like heartbeats in a fever.

The churchbells chime

Hours and hours,

Dropping days in showers.

Bang! Rap! Tap!

Go the hammers all the time.

They have planked up her timbers

And the nails are driven to the head;

They have decked her over,

And again, and again.

The shoringup beams shudder at the strain.

Black and blue breeches,

Pigtails bound and shining:

Like ants crawling about,

The hull swarms with carpenters, running in and out.

Joiners, calkers,

And they are all terrible talkers.

Jem Wilson has been to sea and he tells some wonderful tales

Of whales, and spice islands,

And pirates off the Barbary coast.

He boasts magnificently, with his mouth full of nails.

Stephen Pibold has a tenor voice,

He shifts his quid of tobacco and sings:


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"The second in command was bleareyed Ned:

        While the surgeon his limb was alopping,

        A ninepounder came and smack went his head,

        Pull away, pull away, pull away! I say;

        Rare news for my Meg of Wapping!"

Every Sunday

People come in crowds

(After churchtime, of course)

In curricles, and gigs, and wagons,

And some have brought cold chicken and flagons

Of wine,

And beer in stoppered jugs.

"Dear! Dear! But I tell 'ee 'twill be a fine ship.

There's none finer in any of the slips at Chatham."

The third Summer's roses have started in to blow,

When the fine stern carving is begun.

Flutings, and twinings, and long slow swirls,

Bits of deal shaved away to thin spiral curls.

Tap! Tap! A cornucopia is nailed into place.

Rapatap! They are putting up a railing filigreed like Irish lace.

The Three Town's people never saw such grace.

And the paint on it! The richest gold leaf!

Why, the glitter when the sun is shining passes belief.

And that row of glass windows tipped toward the sky

Are rubies and carbuncles when the day is dry.

Oh, my! Oh, my!

They have coppered up the bottom,

And the copper nails

Stand about and sparkle in big wooden pails.

Bang! Clash! Bang!

        "And he swigg'd, and Nick swigg'd,

        And Ben swigg'd, and Dick swigg'd,

        And I swigg'd, and all of us swigg'd it,

        And swore there was nothing like grog."

It seems they sing,

Even though coppering is not an easy thing.

What a splendid specimen of humanity is a true British workman,

Say the people of the Three Towns,

As they walk about the dockyard

To the sound of the evening churchbells.

And so artistic, too, each one tells his neighbour.

What immense taste and labour!

Miss Jessie Prime, in a pink silk bonnet,

Titters with delight as her eyes fall upon it,

When she steps lightly down from Lawyer Green's whisky;

Such amazing beauty makes one feel frisky,

She explains.

Mr. Nichols says he is delighted

(He is the firm);

His work is all requited


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If Miss Jessie can approve.

Miss Jessie answers that the ship is "a love".

The sides are yellow as marigold,

The portlids are red when the ports are up:

Bloodred squares like an even chequer

Of yellow asters and portulaca.

There is a wide "black strake" at the waterline

And above is a blue like the sky when the weather is fine.

The inner bulwarks are painted red.

"Why?" asks Miss Jessie. "'Tis a horrid note."

Mr. Nichols clears his throat,

And tells her the launching day is set.

He says, "Be careful, the paint is wet."

But Miss Jessie has touched it, her sprigged muslin gown

Has a bloodred streak from the shoulder down.

"It looks like blood," says Miss Jessie with a frown.

Tap! Tap! Rap!

An October day, with waves running in bluewhite lines and a capful of wind.

Three broad flags ripple out behind

Where the masts will be:

Royal Standard at the main,

Admiralty flag at the fore,

Union Jack at the mizzen.

The hammers tap harder, faster,

They must finish by noon.

The last nail is driven.

But the wind has increased to half a gale,

And the ship shakes and quivers upon the ways.

The Commissioner of Chatham Dockyard is coming

In his tenoared barge from the King's Stairs;

The Marine's band will play "God Save Great George Our King";

And there is to be a dinner afterwards at the Crown, with speeches.

The wind screeches, and flaps the flags till they pound like hammers.

The wind hums over the ship,

And slips round the dogshores,

Jostling them almost to falling.

There is no time now to wait for Commissioners and marine bands.

Mr. Nichols has a bottle of port in his hands.

He leans over, holding his hat, and shouts to the men below:

"Let her go!"

Bang! Bang! Pound!

The dogshores fall to the ground,

And the ship slides down the greased planking.

A splintering of glass,

And port wine running all over the white and copper stem timbers.

"Success to his Majesty's ship, the Bellerophon!"

And the red wine washes away in the waters of the Medway.

        II


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Page No 76


Paris, March, 1814

Fine yellow sunlight down the rue du Mont Thabor.

Ten o'clock striking from all the clocktowers of Paris.

Over the door of a shop, in gilt letters:

"Martin  Parfumeur", and something more.

A large gilded wooden something.

Listen! What a ringing of hammers!

Tap!

Tap!

Squeak!

Tap! Squeak! Tapatap!

"Blaise."

"Oui, M'sieu."

"Don't touch the letters. My name stays."

"Bien, M'sieu."

"Just take down the eagle, and the shield with the bees."

"As M'sieu pleases."

Tap! Squeak! Tap!

The man on the ladder hammers steadily for a minute or two,

Then stops.

"He! Patron!

They are fastened well, Nom d'un Chien!

What if I break them?"

"Break away,

You and Paul must have them down today."

"Bien."

And the hammers start again,

Drumbeating at the something of gilded wood.

Sunshine in a golden flood

Lighting up the yellow fronts of houses,

Glittering each window to a flash.

Squeak! Squeak! Tap!

The hammers beat and rap.

A Prussian hussar on a grey horse goes by at a dash.

From other shops, the noise of striking blows:

Pounds, thumps, and whacks;

Wooden sounds: splinters  cracks.

Paris is full of the galloping of horses and the knocking of hammers.

"Hullo! Friend Martin, is business slack

That you are in the street this morning? Don't turn your back

And scuttle into your shop like a rabbit to its hole.

I've just been taking a stroll.

The stinking Cossacks are bivouacked all up and down the Champs Elysees.

I can't get the smell of them out of my nostrils.

Dirty fellows, who don't believe in frills

Like washing. Ah, mon vieux, you'd have to go

Out of business if you lived in Russia. So!

We've given up being perfumers to the Emperor, have we?

Blaise,


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Be careful of the hen,

Maybe I can find a use for her one of these days.

That eagle's rather well cut, Martin.

But I'm sick of smelling Cossack,

Take me inside and let me put my head into a stack

Of orrisroot and musk."

Within the shop, the light is dimmed to a pearlandgreen dusk

Out of which dreamily sparkle counters and shelves of glass,

Containing phials, and bowls, and jars, and dishes; a mass

Of aqueous transparence made solid by threads of gold.

Gold and glass,

And scents which whiff across the green twilight and pass.

The perfumer sits down and shakes his head:

"Always the same, Monsieur Antoine,

You artists are wonderful folk indeed."

But Antoine Vernet does not heed.

He is reading the names on the bottles and bowls,

Done in fine gilt letters with wonderful scrolls.

"What have we here? `Eau Imperial Odontalgique.'

I must say, mon cher, your names are chic.

But it won't do, positively it will not do.

Elba doesn't count. Ah, here is another:

`Baume du Commandeur'. That's better. He needs something to smother

Regrets. A little lubricant, too,

Might be useful. I have it,

`Sage Oil', perhaps he'll be good now; with it we'll submit

This fine German rouge. I fear he is pale."

"Monsieur Antoine, don't rail

At misfortune. He treated me well and fairly."

"And you prefer him to Bourbons, admit it squarely."

"Heaven forbid!" Bang! Whack!

Squeak! Squeak! Crack!

CRASH!

"Oh, Lord, Martin! That shield is hash.

The whole street is covered with golden bees.

They look like so many yellow peas,

Lying there in the mud. I'd like to paint it.

`Plum pudding of Empire'. That's rather quaint, it

Might take with the Kings. Shall I try?" "Oh, Sir,

You distress me, you do." "Poor old Martin's purr!

But he hasn't a scratch in him, I know.

Now let us get back to the powders and patches.

Foolish man,

The Kings are here now. We must hit on a plan

To change all these titles as fast as we can.

`Bouquet Imperatrice'. Tut! Tut! Give me some ink 

`Bouquet de la Reine', what do you think?

Not the same receipt?

Now, Martin, put away your conceit.

Who will ever know?

`Extract of Nobility'  excellent, since most of them are killed."


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Page No 78


"But, Monsieur Antoine "

"You are selfwilled,

Martin. You need a salve

For your conscience, do you?

Very well, we'll halve

The compliments, also the pastes and dentifrices;

Send some to the Kings, and some to the Empresses.

`Oil of Bitter Almonds'  the Empress Josephine can have that.

`Oil of Parma Violets' fits the other one pat."

Rap! Rap! Bang!

"What a hideous clatter!

Blaise seems determined to batter

That poor old turkey into bits,

And pound to jelly my excellent wits.

Come, come, Martin, you mustn't shirk.

`The night cometh soon'  etc. Don't jerk

Me up like that. `Essence de la Valliere' 

That has a charmingly Bourbon air.

And, oh! Magnificent! Listen to this! 

`Vinaigre des Quatre Voleurs'. Nothing amiss

With that  England, Austria, Russia and Prussia!

Martin, you're a wonder,

Upheavals of continents can't keep you under."

"Monsieur Antoine, I am grieved indeed

At such levity. What France has gone through "

"Very true, Martin, very true,

But never forget that a man must feed."

Pound! Pound! Thump!

Pound!

"Look here, in another minute Blaise will drop that bird on the ground."

Martin shrugs his shoulders. "Ah, well, what then? "

Antoine, with a laugh: "I'll give you two sous for that antiquated hen."

The Imperial Eagle sells for two sous,

And the lilies go up.

        A man must choose!

        III

Paris, April, 1814

Cold, impassive, the marble arch of the Place du Carrousel.

Haughty, contemptuous, the marble arch of the Place du Carrousel.

Like a woman raped by force, rising above her fate,

Borne up by the cold rigidity of hate,

Stands the marble arch of the Place du Carrousel.

Tap! Clinkatink!

Tap! Rap! Chink!

What falls to the ground like a streak of flame?

Hush! It is only a bit of bronze flashing in the sun.

What are all those soldiers? Those are not the uniforms of France.


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Alas! No! The uniforms of France, Great Imperial France, are done.

They will rot away in chests and hang to dusty tatters in barn lofts.

These are other armies. And their name?

Hush, be still for shame;

Be still and imperturbable like the marble arch.

Another bright spark falls through the blue air.

Over the Place du Carrousel a wailing of despair.

Crowd your horses back upon the people, Uhlans and Hungarian Lancers,

They see too much.

Unfortunately, Gentlemen of the Invading Armies, what they do not see,

they hear.

Tap! Clinkatink!

Tap!

Another sharp spear

Of brightness,

And a ringing of quick metal lightness

On hard stones.

Workmen are chipping off the names of Napoleon's victories

From the triumphal arch of the Place du Carrousel.

Do they need so much force to quell the crowd?

An old Grenadier of the line groans aloud,

And each hammer tap points the sob of a woman.

Russia, Prussia, Austria, and the fadedwhitelily Bourbon king

Think it well

To guard against tumult,

A mob is an undependable thing.

Ding! Ding!

Vienna is scattered all over the Place du Carrousel

In glittering, bent, and twisted letters.

Your betters have clattered over Vienna before,

Officer of his Imperial Majesty our FatherinLaw!

Tink! Tink!

A workman's chisel can strew you to the winds,

Munich.

Do they think

To pleasure Paris, used to the fall of cities,

By giving her a fall of letters!

It is a month too late.

One month, and our lilywhite Bourbon king

Has done a colossal thing;

He has curdled love,

And soured the desires of a people.

Still the letters fall,

The workmen creep up and down their ladders like lizards on a wall.

Tap! Tap! Tink!

Clink! Clink!

"Oh, merciful God, they will not touch Austerlitz!

Strike me blind, my God, my eyes can never look on that.

I would give the other leg to save it, it took one.


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Page No 80


Curse them! Curse them! Aim at his hat.

Give me the stone. Why didn't you give it to me?

I would not have missed. Curse him!

Curse all of them! They have got the `A'!"

Ding! Ding!

"I saw the Terror, but I never saw so horrible a thing as this.

`Vive l'Empereur! Vive l'Empereur!'"

"Don't strike him, Fritz.

The mob will rise if you do.

Just run him out to the `quai',

That will get him out of the way.

They are almost through."

Clink! Tink! Ding!

Clear as the sudden ring

Of a bell

"Z" strikes the pavement.

Farewell, Austerlitz, Tilsit, Presbourg;

Farewell, greatness departed.

Farewell, Imperial honours, knocked broadcast by the beating hammers

of ignorant workmen.

Straight, in the Spring moonlight,

Rises the deflowered arch.

In the silence, shining bright,

She stands naked and unsubdued.

Her marble coldness will endure the march

Of decades.

Rend her bronzes, hammers;

Cast down her inscriptions.

She is unconquerable, austere,

Cold as the moon that swims above her

When the nights are clear.

        IV

Croissy, IledeFrance, June, 1815

"Whoa! Victorine.

Devil take the mare! I've never seen so vicious a beast.

She kicked Jules the last time she was here,

He's been lame ever since, poor chap."

Rap! Tap!

Tapatapatap! Tap! Tap!

"I'd rather be lame than dead at Waterloo, M'sieu Charles."

"Sacre Bleu! Don't mention Waterloo, and the damned grinning British.

We didn't run in the old days.

There wasn't any running at Jena.

Those were decent days,

And decent men, who stood up and fought.

We never got beaten, because we wouldn't be.

See!"


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Page No 81


"You would have taught them, wouldn't you, Sergeant Boignet?

But today it's everyone for himself,

And the Emperor isn't what he was."

"How the Devil do you know that?

If he was beaten, the cause

Is the green geese in his army, led by traitors.

Oh, I say no names, Monsieur Charles,

You needn't hammer so loud.

If there are any spies lurking behind the bellows,

I beg they come out. Dirty fellows!"

The old Sergeant seizes a redhot poker

And advances, brandishing it, into the shadows.

The rows of horses flick

Placid tails.

Victorine gives a savage kick

As the nails

Go in. Tap! Tap!

Jules draws a horseshoe from the fire

And beats it from red to peacockblue and black,

Purpling darker at each whack.

Ding! Dang! Dong!

Dingadingdong!

It is a long time since any one spoke.

Then the blacksmith brushes his hand over his eyes,

"Well," he sighs,

"He's broke."

The Sergeant charges out from behind the bellows.

"It's the green geese, I tell you,

Their hearts are all whites and yellows,

There's no red in them. Red!

That's what we want. Fouche should be fed

To the guillotine, and all Paris dance the carmagnole.

That would breed jolly fine lickbloods

To lead his armies to victory."

"Ancient history, Sergeant.

He's done."

"Say that again, Monsieur Charles, and I'll stun

You where you stand for a dungeating Royalist."

The Sergeant gives the poker a savage twist;

He is as purple as the cooling horseshoes.

The air from the bellows creaks through the flues.

Tap! Tap! The blacksmith shoes Victorine,

And through the doorway a fine sheen

Of leaves flutters, with the sun between.

By a spurt of fire from the forge

You can see the Sergeant, with swollen gorge,

Puffing, and gurgling, and choking;

The bellows keep on croaking.

They wheeze,

And sneeze,

Creak! Bang! Squeeze!


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Page No 82


And the hammer strokes fall like buzzing bees

Or pattering rain,

Or faster than these,

Like the hum of a waterfall struck by a breeze.

Clank! from the bellowschain pulled up and down.

Clank!

And sunshine twinkles on Victorine's flank,

Starting it to blue,

Dropping it to black.

Clack! Clack!

Tapatap! Tap!

Lord! What galloping! Some mishap

Is making that man ride so furiously.

"Francois, you!

Victorine won't be through

For another quarter of an hour." "As you hope to die,

Work faster, man, the order has come."

"What order? Speak out. Are you dumb?"

"A chaise, without arms on the panels, at the gate

In the far sidewall, and just to wait.

We must be there in half an hour with swift cattle.

You're a stupid fool if you don't hear that rattle.

Those are German guns. Can't you guess the rest?

Nantes, Rochefort, possibly Brest."

Tap! Tap! as though the hammers were mad.

Dang! Ding! Creak! The farrier's lad

Jerks the bellows till he cracks their bones,

And the stifled air hiccoughs and groans.

The Sergeant is lying on the floor

Stone dead, and his hat with the tricolore

Cockade has rolled off into the cinders. Victorine snorts and lays back

her ears.

What glistens on the anvil? Sweat or tears?

        V

St. Helena, May, 1821

Tap! Tap! Tap!

Through the white tropic night.

Tap! Tap!

Beat the hammers,

Unwearied, indefatigable.

They are hanging dull black cloth about the dead.

Lustreless black cloth

Which chokes the radiance of the moonlight

And puts out the little moving shadows of leaves.

Tap! Tap!

The knocking makes the candles quaver,

And the long black hangings waver


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Tap! Tap! Tap!

Tap! Tap!

In the ears which do not heed.

Tap! Tap!

Above the eyelids which do not flicker.

Tap! Tap!

Over the hands which do not stir.

Chiselled like a cameo of white agate against the hangings,

Struck to brilliance by the falling moonlight,

A face!

Sharp as a frozen flame,

Beautiful as an altar lamp of silver,

And still. Perfectly still.

In the next room, the men chatter

As they eat their midnight lunches.

A knife hits against a platter.

But the figure on the bed

Between the stifling black hangings

Is cold and motionless,

Played over by the moonlight from the windows

And the indistinct shadows of leaves.

Tap! Tap!

Upholsterer Darling has a fine shop in Jamestown.

Tap! Tap!

Andrew Darling has ridden hard from Longwood to see to the work in his shop

in Jamestown.

He has a corps of men in it, toiling and swearing,

Knocking, and measuring, and planing, and squaring,

Working from a chart with figures,

Comparing with their rules,

Setting this and that part together with their tools.

Tap! Tap! Tap!

Haste indeed!

So great is the need

That carpenters have been taken from the new church,

Joiners have been called from shaping pews and lecterns

To work of greater urgency.

Coffins!

Coffins is what they are making this bright Summer morning.

Coffins  and all to measurement.

There is a tin coffin,

A deal coffin,

A lead coffin,

And Captain Bennett's best mahogany diningtable

Has been sawed up for the grand outer coffin.

Tap! Tap! Tap!

Sunshine outside in the square,

But inside, only hollow coffins and the tapping upon them.

The men whistle,

And the coffins grow under their hammers


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Page No 84


In the darkness of the shop.

Tap! Tap! Tap!

Tramp of men.

Steady tramp of men.

Sliteyed Chinese with long pigtails

Bearing oblong things upon their shoulders

March slowly along the road to Longwood.

Their feet fall softly in the dust of the road;

Sometimes they call gutturally to each other and stop to shift shoulders.

Four coffins for the little dead man,

Four fine coffins,

And one of them Captain Bennett's diningtable!

And sixteen splendid Chinamen, all strong and able

And of assured neutrality.

Ah! George of England, Lord Bathhurst Co.

Your princely munificence makes one's heart glow.

Huzza! Huzza! For the Lion of England!

Tap! Tap! Tap!

Marble likeness of an Emperor,

Dead man, who burst your heart against a world too narrow,

The hammers drum you to your last throne

Which always you shall hold alone.

Tap! Tap!

The glory of your past is faded as a sunset fire,

Your day lingers only like the tones of a windlyre

In a twilit room.

Here is the emptiness of your dream

Scattered about you.

Coins of yesterday,

Double napoleons stamped with Consul or Emperor,

Strange as those of Herculaneum 

And you just dead!

Not one spool of thread

Will these buy in any marketplace.

Lay them over him,

They are the baubles of a crown of mist

Worn in a vision and melted away at waking.

Tap! Tap!

His heart strained at kingdoms

And now it is content with a silver dish.

Strange World! Strange Wayfarer!

Strange Destiny!

Lower it gently beside him and let it lie.

Tap! Tap! Tap!


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Page No 85


Two Travellers in the Place Vendome

Reign of Louis Philippe

A great tall column spearing at the sky

With a little man on top. Goodness! Tell me why?

He looks a silly thing enough to stand up there so high.

What a strange fellow, like a soldier in a play,

Tightfitting coat with the tails cut away,

Highcrowned hat which the brims overlay.

Twohorned hat makes an outline like a bow.

Must have a sword, I can see the light glow

Between a dark line and his leg. Vertigo

I get gazing up at him, a pygmy flashed with sun.

A weathercock or scarecrow or both things in one?

As bright as a jewelled crown hung above a throne.

Say, what is the use of him if he doesn't turn?

Just put up to glitter there, like a torch to burn,

A sort of sacrificial show in a lofty urn?

But why a little soldier in an obsolete dress?

I'd rather see a Goddess with a spear, I confess.

Something allegorical and fine. Why, yes 

I cannot take my eyes from him. I don't know why at all.

I've looked so long the whole thing swims. I feel he ought to fall.

Foreshortened there among the clouds he's pitifully small.

What do you say? There used to be an Emperor standing there,

With flowing robes and laurel crown. Really? Yet I declare

Those spiral battles round the shaft don't seem just his affair.

A togaed, laurelled man's I mean. Now this chap seems to feel

As though he owned those soldiers. Whew! How he makes one reel,

Swinging round above his circling armies in a wheel.

Sweeping round the sky in an orbit like the sun's,

Flashing sparks like cannonballs from his own long guns.

Perhaps my sight is tired, but that figure simply stuns.

How low the houses seem, and all the people are mere flies.

That fellow pokes his hat up till it scratches on the skies.

Impudent! Audacious! But, by Jove, he blinds the eyes!


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Page No 86


War Pictures

The Allies

August 14th, 1914

Into the brazen, burnished sky, the cry hurls itself. The zigzagging cry

of hoarse throats, it floats against the hard winds, and binds the head

of the serpent to its tail, the long snailslow serpent of marching men.

Men weighed down with rifles and knapsacks, and parching with war.

The cry jars and splits against the brazen, burnished sky.

This is the war of wars, and the cause? Has this writhing worm of men

a cause?

Crackling against the polished sky is an eagle with a sword. The eagle is red

and its head is flame.

In the shoulder of the worm is a teacher.

His tongue laps the warsucked air in drought, but he yells defiance

at the redeyed eagle, and in his ears are the bells of new philosophies,

and their tinkling drowns the sputter of the burning sword. He shrieks,

"God damn you! When you are broken, the word will strike out new shoots."

His boots are tight, the sun is hot, and he may be shot, but he is in

the shoulder of the worm.

A dust speck in the worm's belly is a poet.

He laughs at the flaring eagle and makes a long nose with his fingers.


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Page No 87


He will fight for smooth, white sheets of paper, and uncurdled ink.

The sputtering sword cannot make him blink, and his thoughts are

wet and rippling. They cool his heart.

He will tear the eagle out of the sky and give the earth tranquillity,

and loveliness printed on white paper.

The eye of the serpent is an owner of mills.

He looks at the glaring sword which has snapped his machinery

and struck away his men.

But it will all come again, when the sword is broken to a million dying stars,

and there are no more wars.

Bankers, butchers, shopkeepers, painters, farmers  men, sway and sweat.

They will fight for the earth, for the increase of the slow, sure roots

of peace, for the release of hidden forces. They jibe at the eagle

and his scorching sword.

One! Two!  One! Two!  clump the heavy boots. The cry hurtles

against the sky.

Each man pulls his belt a little tighter, and shifts his gun

to make it lighter. Each man thinks of a woman, and slaps out a curse

at the eagle. The sword jumps in the hot sky, and the worm crawls on

to the battle, stubbornly.

This is the war of wars, from eye to tail the serpent has one cause:

        PEACE!

The Bombardment

Slowly, without force, the rain drops into the city. It stops a moment

on the carved head of Saint John, then slides on again, slipping and trickling

over his stone cloak. It splashes from the lead conduit of a gargoyle,

and falls from it in turmoil on the stones in the Cathedral square.

Where are the people, and why does the fretted steeple sweep about in the sky?

Boom! The sound swings against the rain. Boom, again! After it, only water

rushing in the gutters, and the turmoil from the spout of the gargoyle.

Silence. Ripples and mutters. Boom!


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The room is damp, but warm. Little flashes swarm about from the firelight.

The lustres of the chandelier are bright, and clusters of rubies

leap in the bohemian glasses on the `etagere'. Her hands are restless,

but the white masses of her hair are quite still. Boom! Will it never cease

to torture, this iteration! Boom! The vibration shatters a glass

on the `etagere'. It lies there, formless and glowing,

with all its crimson gleams shot out of pattern, spilled, flowing red,

bloodred. A thin bellnote pricks through the silence. A door creaks.

The old lady speaks: "Victor, clear away that broken glass." "Alas!

Madame, the bohemian glass!" "Yes, Victor, one hundred years ago

my father brought it " Boom! The room shakes, the servitor quakes.

Another goblet shivers and breaks. Boom!

It rustles at the windowpane, the smooth, streaming rain, and he is shut

within its clash and murmur. Inside is his candle, his table, his ink,

his pen, and his dreams. He is thinking, and the walls are pierced with

beams of sunshine, slipping through young green. A fountain tosses itself

up at the blue sky, and through the spattered water in the basin he can see

copper carp, lazily floating among cold leaves. A windharp in a cedartree

grieves and whispers, and words blow into his brain, bubbled, iridescent,

shooting up like flowers of fire, higher and higher. Boom!

The flameflowers snap on their slender stems. The fountain rears up

in long broken spears of dishevelled water and flattens into the earth. Boom!

And there is only the room, the table, the candle, and the sliding rain.

Again, Boom!  Boom!  Boom! He stuffs his fingers into his ears.

He sees corpses, and cries out in fright. Boom! It is night,

and they are shelling the city! Boom! Boom!

A child wakes and is afraid, and weeps in the darkness. What has made

the bed shake? "Mother, where are you? I am awake." "Hush, my Darling,

I am here." "But, Mother, something so queer happened, the room shook."

Boom! "Oh! What is it? What is the matter?" Boom! "Where is Father?

I am so afraid." Boom! The child sobs and shrieks. The house

trembles and creaks. Boom!

Retorts, globes, tubes, and phials lie shattered. All his trials

oozing across the floor. The life that was his choosing, lonely, urgent,

goaded by a hope, all gone. A weary man in a ruined laboratory,

that is his story. Boom! Gloom and ignorance, and the jig of drunken brutes.

Diseases like snakes crawling over the earth, leaving trails of slime.

Wails from people burying their dead. Through the window, he can see

the rocking steeple. A ball of fire falls on the lead of the roof,

and the sky tears apart on a spike of flame. Up the spire,

behind the lacings of stone, zigzagging in and out of the carved tracings,

squirms the fire. It spouts like yellow wheat from the gargoyles, coils round

the head of Saint John, and aureoles him in light. It leaps into the night


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Page No 89


and hisses against the rain. The Cathedral is a burning stain on the white,

wet night.

Boom! The Cathedral is a torch, and the houses next to it begin to scorch.

Boom! The bohemian glass on the `etagere' is no longer there.

Boom! A stalk of flame sways against the red damask curtains.

The old lady cannot walk. She watches the creeping stalk and counts.

Boom!  Boom!  Boom!

The poet rushes into the street, and the rain wraps him in a sheet of silver.

But it is threaded with gold and powdered with scarlet beads. The city burns.

Quivering, spearing, thrusting, lapping, streaming, run the flames.

Over roofs, and walls, and shops, and stalls. Smearing its gold on the sky,

the fire dances, lances itself through the doors, and lisps and chuckles

along the floors.

The child wakes again and screams at the yellow petalled flower

flickering at the window. The little red lips of flame creep along

the ceiling beams.

The old man sits among his broken experiments and looks at

the burning Cathedral. Now the streets are swarming with people.

They seek shelter and crowd into the cellars. They shout and call,

and over all, slowly and without force, the rain drops into the city.

Boom! And the steeple crashes down among the people. Boom! Boom, again!

The water rushes along the gutters. The fire roars and mutters. Boom!

Lead Soldiers

The nursery fire burns brightly, crackling in cheerful little explosions

and trails of sparks up the back of the chimney. Miniature rockets

peppering the black bricks with golden stars, as though a gala

flamed a night of victorious wars.

The nodding mandarin on the bookcase moves his head forward and back, slowly,

and looks into the air with his bluegreen eyes. He stares into the air

and nods  forward and back. The red rose in his hand is a crimson splash

on his yellow coat. Forward and back, and his bluegreen eyes stare

into the air, and he nods  nods.


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Page No 90


Tommy's soldiers march to battle,

        Trumpets flare and snaredrums rattle.

        Bayonets flash, and sabres glance 

        How the horses snort and prance!

        Cannon drawn up in a line

        Glitter in the dizzy shine

        Of the morning sunlight. Flags

        Ripple colours in great jags.

        Red blows out, then blue, then green,

        Then all three  a weaving sheen

        Of prismed patriotism. March

        Tommy's soldiers, stiff and starch,

        Boldly stepping to the rattle

        Of the drums, they go to battle.

Tommy lies on his stomach on the floor and directs his columns.

He puts his infantry in front, and before them ambles a mounted band.

Their instruments make a strand of gold before the scarlettunicked soldiers,

and they take very long steps on their little green platforms,

and from the ranks bursts the song of Tommy's soldiers marching to battle.

The song jolts a little as the green platforms stick on the thick carpet.

Tommy wheels his guns round the edge of a box of blocks, and places

a squad of cavalry on the commanding eminence of a footstool.

The fire snaps pleasantly, and the old Chinaman nods  nods. The fire makes

the red rose in his hand glow and twist. Hist! That is a bold song

Tommy's soldiers sing as they march along to battle.

Crack! Rattle! The sparks fly up the chimney.

        Tommy's army's off to war 

        Not a soldier knows what for.

        But he knows about his rifle,

        How to shoot it, and a trifle

        Of the proper thing to do

        When it's he who is shot through.

        Like a cleverly trained flea,

        He can follow instantly

        Orders, and some quick commands

        Really make severe demands

        On a mind that's none too rapid,

        Leaden brains tend to the vapid.

        But how beautifully dressed

        Is this army! How impressed

        Tommy is when at his heel

        All his baggage wagons wheel


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Page No 91


About the patterned carpet, and

        Moving up his heavy guns

        He sees them glow with diamond suns

        Flashing all along each barrel.

        And the gold and blue apparel

        Of his gunners is a joy.

        Tommy is a lucky boy.

        Boom! Boom! Tara!

The old mandarin nods under his purple umbrella. The rose in his hand

shoots its petals up in thin quills of crimson. Then they collapse

and shrivel like red embers. The fire sizzles.

Tommy is galloping his cavalry, two by two, over the floor. They must pass

the open terror of the door and gain the enemy encamped under the washstand.

The mounted band is very grand, playing allegro and leading the infantry on

at the double quick. The tassel of the hearthrug has flung down

the bassdrum, and he and his dapplegrey horse lie overtripped,

slipped out of line, with the little lead drumsticks glistening

to the fire's shine.

The fire burns and crackles, and tickles the tripped bassdrum

with its sparkles.

The marching army hitches its little green platforms valiantly, and steadily

approaches the door. The overturned bassdrummer, lying on the hearthrug,

melting in the heat, softens and sheds tears. The song jeers

at his impotence, and flaunts the glory of the martial and still upstanding,

vaunting the deeds it will do. For are not Tommy's soldiers

all bright and new?

        Tommy's leaden soldiers we,

        Glittering with efficiency.

        Not a button's out of place,

        Tons and tons of golden lace

        Wind about our officers.

        Every manly bosom stirs

        At the thought of killing  killing!

        Tommy's dearest wish fulfilling.

        We are gaudy, savage, strong,

        And our loins so ripe we long

        First to kill, then procreate,

        Doubling so the laws of Fate.

        On their women we have sworn

        To graft our sons. And overborne

        They'll rear us younger soldiers, so

        Shall our race endure and grow,

        Waxing greater in the wombs


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Page No 92


Borrowed of them, while damp tombs

        Rot their men. O Glorious War!

        Goad us with your points, Great Star!

The china mandarin on the bookcase nods slowly, forward and back 

forward and back  and the red rose writhes and wriggles,

thrusting its flaming petals under and over one another like tortured snakes.

The fire strokes them with its dartles, and purrs at them,

and the old man nods.

Tommy does not hear the song. He only sees the beautiful, new,

gailycoloured lead soldiers. They belong to him, and he is very proud

and happy. He shouts his orders aloud, and gallops his cavalry past the door

to the washstand. He creeps over the floor on his hands and knees

to one battalion and another, but he sees only the bright colours

of his soldiers and the beautiful precision of their gestures.

He is a lucky boy to have such fine lead soldiers to enjoy.

Tommy catches his toe in the leg of the washstand, and jars the pitcher.

He snatches at it with his hands, but it is too late. The pitcher falls,

and as it goes, he sees the white water flow over its lip. It slips

between his fingers and crashes to the floor. But it is not water which oozes

to the door. The stain is glutinous and dark, a spark from the firelight

heads it to red. In and out, between the fine, new soldiers,

licking over the carpet, squirms the stream of blood, lapping at

the little green platforms, and flapping itself against the painted uniforms.

The nodding mandarin moves his head slowly, forward and back.

The rose is broken, and where it fell is black blood. The old mandarin leers

under his purple umbrella, and nods  forward and back, staring into the air

with bluegreen eyes. Every time his head comes forward a rosebud pushes

between his lips, rushes into full bloom, and drips to the ground

with a splashing sound. The pool of black blood grows and grows,

with each dropped rose, and spreads out to join the stream from

the washstand. The beautiful army of lead soldiers steps boldly forward,

but the little green platforms are covered in the rising stream of blood.

The nursery fire burns brightly and flings fanbursts of stars up the chimney,

as though a gala flamed a night of victorious wars.


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Page No 93


The Painter on Silk

There was a man

Who made his living

By painting roses

Upon silk.

He sat in an upper chamber

And painted,

And the noises of the street

Meant nothing to him.

When he heard bugles, and fifes, and drums,

He thought of red, and yellow, and white roses

Bursting in the sunshine,

And smiled as he worked.

He thought only of roses,

And silk.

When he could get no more silk

He stopped painting

And only thought

Of roses.

The day the conquerors

Entered the city,

The old man

Lay dying.

He heard the bugles and drums,

And wished he could paint the roses

Bursting into sound.

A Ballad of Footmen

Now what in the name of the sun and the stars

Is the meaning of this most unholy of wars?

Do men find life so full of humour and joy


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Page No 94


That for want of excitement they smash up the toy?

Fifteen millions of soldiers with popguns and horses

All bent upon killing, because their "of courses"

Are not quite the same. All these men by the ears,

And nine nations of women choking with tears.

It is folly to think that the will of a king

Can force men to make ducks and drakes of a thing

They value, and life is, at least one supposes,

Of some little interest, even if roses

Have not grown up between one foot and the other.

What a marvel bureaucracy is, which can smother

Such quite elementary feelings, and tag

A man with a number, and set him to wag

His legs and his arms at the word of command

Or the blow of a whistle! He's certainly damned,

Fit only for mincemeat, if a little gold lace

And an upturned moustache can set him to face

Bullets, and bayonets, and death, and diseases,

Because some one he calls his Emperor, pleases.

If each man were to lay down his weapon, and say,

With a click of his heels, "I wish you Goodday,"

Now what, may I ask, could the Emperor do?

A king and his minions are really so few.

Angry? Oh, of course, a most furious Emperor!

But the men are so many they need not mind his temper, or

The dire results which could not be inflicted.

With no one to execute sentence, convicted

Is just the weak wind from an old, broken bellows.

What lackeys men are, who might be such fine fellows!

To be killing each other, unmercifully,

At an order, as though one said, "Bring up the tea."

Or is it that tasting the blood on their jaws

They lap at it, drunk with its ferment, and laws

So patiently builded, are nothing to drinking


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Page No 95


More blood, any blood. They don't notice its stinking.

I don't suppose tigers do, fighting cocks, sparrows,

And, as to men  what are men, when their marrows

Are running with blood they have gulped; it is plain

Such excellent sport does not recollect pain.

Toll the bells in the steeples left standing. Halfmast

The flags which meant order, for order is past.

Take the dust of the streets and sprinkle your head,

The civilization we've worked for is dead.

Squeeze into this archway, the head of the line

Has just swung round the corner to `Die Wacht am Rhein'.

The Overgrown Pasture

Reaping

You want to know what's the matter with me, do yer?

My! ain't men blinder'n moles?

It ain't nothin' new, be sure o' that.

Why, ef you'd had eyes you'd ha' seed

Me changin' under your very nose,

Each day a little diff'rent.

But you never see nothin', you don't.

Don't touch me, Jake,

Don't you dars't to touch me,

I ain't in no humour.

That's what's come over me;

Jest a change clear through.

You lay still, an' I'll tell yer,


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Page No 96


I've had it on my mind to tell yer

Fer some time.

It's a strain livin' a lie from mornin' till night,

An' I'm goin' to put an end to it right now.

An' don't make any mistake about one thing,

When I married yer I loved yer.

Why, your voice 'ud make

Me go hot and cold all over,

An' your kisses most stopped my heart from beatin'.

Lord! I was a silly fool.

But that's the way 'twas.

Well, I married yer

An' thought Heav'n was comin'

To set on the doorstep.

Heav'n didn't do no settin',

Though the first year warn't so bad.

The baby's fever threw you off some, I guess,

An' then I took her death real hard,

An' a mopey wife kind o' disgusts a man.

I ain't blamin' yer exactly.

But that's how 'twas.

Do lay quiet,

I know I'm slow, but it's harder to say 'n I thought.

There come a time when I got to be

More wife agin than mother.

The mother part was sort of a waste

When we didn't have no other child.

But you'd got used ter lots o' things,

An' you was all took up with the farm.

Many's the time I've laid awake

Watchin' the moon go clear through the elmtree,

Out o' sight.

I'd foller yer around like a dog,

An' set in the chair you'd be'n settin' in,

Jest to feel its arms around me,

So long's I didn't have yours.

It preyed on me, I guess,

Longin' and longin'

While you was busy all day, and snorin' all night.

Yes, I know you're wide awake now,

But now ain't then,

An' I guess you'll think diff'rent

When I'm done.

Do you mind the day you went to Hadrock?

I didn't want to stay home for reasons,

But you said someone 'd have to be here

'Cause Elmer was comin' to see t' th' telephone.

An' you never see why I was so set on goin' with yer,

Our married life hadn't be'n any great shakes,

Still marriage is marriage, an' I was raised Godfearin'.

But, Lord, you didn't notice nothin',


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Page No 97


An' Elmer hangin' around all Winter!

'Twas a lovely mornin'.

The appletrees was jest elegant

With their blossoms all flared out,

An' there warn't a cloud in the sky.

You went, you wouldn't pay no 'tention to what I said,

An' I heard the Ford chuggin' for most a mile,

The air was so still.

Then Elmer come.

It's no use your frettin', Jake,

I'll tell you all about it.

I know what I'm doin',

An' what's worse, I know what I done.

Elmer fixed th' telephone in about two minits,

An' he didn't seem in no hurry to go,

An' I don't know as I wanted him to go either,

I was awful mad at your not takin' me with yer,

An' I was tired o' wishin' and wishin'

An' gittin' no comfort.

I guess it ain't necessary to tell yer all the things.

He stayed to dinner,

An' he helped me do the dishes,

An' he said a home was a fine thing,

An' I said dishes warn't a home

Nor yet the room they're in.

He said a lot o' things,

An' I fended him off at first,

But he got talkin' all around me,

Clost up to the things I'd be'n thinkin',

What's the use o' me goin' on, Jake,

You know.

He got all he wanted,

An' I give it to him,

An' what's more, I'm glad!

I ain't dead, anyway,

An' somebody thinks I'm somethin'.

Keep away, Jake,

You can kill me tomorrer if you want to,

But I'm goin' to have my say.

Funny thing! Guess I ain't made to hold a man.

Elmer ain't be'n here for mor'n two months.

I don't want to pretend nothin',

Mebbe if he'd be'n lately

I shouldn't have told yer.

I'll go away in the mornin', o' course.

What you want the light fer?

I don't look no diff'rent.

Ain't the moon bright enough

To look at a woman that's deceived yer by?

Don't, Jake, don't, you can't love me now!

It ain't a question of forgiveness.


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Page No 98


Why! I'd be thinkin' o' Elmer ev'ry minute;

It ain't decent.

Oh, my God! It ain't decent any more either way!

Off the Turnpike

Good ev'nin', Mis' Priest.

I jest stepped in to tell you Goodbye.

Yes, it's all over.

All my things is packed

An' every last one o' them boxes

Is on Bradley's team

Bein' hauled over to th' depot.

No, I ain't goin' back agin.

I'm stoppin' over to French's fer tonight,

And goin' down first train in th' mornin'.

Yes, it do seem kinder queer

Not to be goin' to see Cherry's Orchard no more,

But Land Sakes! When a change's comin',

Why, I al'ays say it can't come too quick.

Now, that's real kind o' you,

Your doughnuts is always so tasty.

Yes, I'm goin' to Chicago,

To my niece,

She's married to a fine man, hardware business,

An' doin' real well, she tells me.

Lizzie's be'n at me to go out ther for the longest while.

She ain't got no kith nor kin to Chicago, you know

She's rented me a real nice little flat,

Same house as hers,

An' I'm goin' to try that city livin' folks say's so pleasant.

Oh, yes, he was real generous,

Paid me a sight o' money fer the Orchard;

I told him 'twouldn't yield nothin' but stones,

But he ain't farmin' it.

Lor', no, Mis' Priest,

He's jest took it to set and look at the view.

Mebbe he wouldn't be so stuck on the view

Ef he'd seed it every mornin' and night for forty year

Same's as I have.

I dessay it's pretty enough,

But it's so pressed into me

I c'n see't with my eyes shut.


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Page No 99


No. I ain't cold, Mis' Priest,

Don't shut th' door.

I'll be all right in a minit.

But I ain't a mite sorry to leave that view.

Well, mebbe 'tis queer to feel so,

An' mebbe 'taint.

My! But that tea's revivin'.

Old things ain't always pleasant things, Mis' Priest.

No, no, I don't cal'late on comin' back,

That's why I'd ruther be to Chicago,

Boston's too near.

It ain't cold, Mis' Priest,

It's jest my thoughts.

I ain't sick, only 

Mis' Priest, ef you've nothin' ter take yer time,

An' have a mind to listen,

Ther's somethin' I'd like ter speak about

I ain't never mentioned it,

But I'd like to tell yer 'fore I go.

Would you mind lowerin' them shades,

Fall twilight's awful grey,

An' that fire's real cosy with the shades drawed.

Well, I guess folks about here think I've be'n dret'ful onsociable.

You needn't say 'taint so, 'cause I know diff'rent.

An' what's more, it's true.

Well, the reason is I've be'n scared out o' my life.

Scared ev'ry minit o' th' time, fer eight year.

Eight mortal year 'tis, come next June.

'Twas on the eighteenth o' June,

Six months after I'd buried my husband,

That somethin' happened ter me.

Mebbe you'll mind that afore that

I was a cheery body.

Hiram was too,

Al'ays liked to ask a neighbor in,

An' ev'n when he died,

Barrin' low sperrits, I warn't averse to seein' nobody.

But that eighteenth o' June changed ev'rythin'.

I was doin' most o' th' farmwork myself,

With jest a hired boy, Clarence King, 'twas,

Comin' in fer an hour or two.

Well, that eighteenth o' June

I was goin' round,

Lockin' up and seein' to things 'fore I went to bed.

I was jest steppin' out t' th' barn,

Goin' round outside 'stead o' through the shed,

'Cause there was such a sight o' moonlight

Somehow or another I thought 'twould be pretty outdoors.

I got settled for pretty things that night, I guess.

I ain't stuck on 'em no more.

Well, them laylock bushes side o' th' house


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Page No 100


Was real lovely.

Glitt'rin' and shakin' in the moonlight,

An' the smell o' them rose right up

An' most took my breath away.

The colour o' the spikes was all faded out,

They never keep their colour when the moon's on 'em,

But the smell fair 'toxicated me.

I was al'ays partial to a sweet scent,

An' I went close up t' th' bushes

So's to put my face right into a flower.

Mis' Priest, jest's I got breathin' in that laylock bloom

I saw, layin' right at my feet,

A man's hand!

It was as white's the side o' th' house,

And sparklin' like that lum'nous paint they put on gateposts.

I screamed right out,

I couldn't help it,

An' I could hear my scream

Goin' over an' over

In that echo be'ind th' barn.

Hearin' it agin an' agin like that

Scared me so, I dar'sn't scream any more.

I jest stood ther,

And looked at that hand.

I thought the echo'd begin to hammer like my heart,

But it didn't.

There was only th' wind,

Sighin' through the laylock leaves,

An' slappin' 'em up agin the house.

Well, I guess I looked at that hand

Most ten minits,

An' it never moved,

Jest lay there white as white.

After a while I got to thinkin' that o' course

'Twas some drunken tramp over from Redfield.

That calmed me some,

An' I commenced to think I'd better git him out

From under them laylocks.

I planned to drag him in t' th' barn

An' lock him in ther till Clarence come in th' mornin'.

I got so mad thinkin' o' that allfired brazen tramp

Asleep in my laylocks,

I jest stooped down and grabbed th' hand and give it an awful pull.

Then I bumped right down settin' on the ground.

Mis' Priest, ther warn't no body come with the hand.

No, it ain't cold, it's jest that I can't abear thinkin' of it,

Ev'n now.

I'll take a sip o' tea.

Thank you, Mis' Priest, that's better.

I'd ruther finish now I've begun.

Thank you, jest the same.


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Page No 101


I dropped the hand's ef it'd be'n red hot

'Stead o' ice cold.

Fer a minit or two I jest laid on that grass

Pantin'.

Then I up and run to them laylocks

An' pulled 'em every which way.

True es I'm settin' here, Mis' Priest,

Ther warn't nothin' ther.

I peeked an' pryed all about 'em,

But ther warn't no man ther

Neither livin' nor dead.

But the hand was ther all right,

Upside down, the way I'd dropped it,

And glist'nin' fit to dazzle yer.

I don't know how I done it,

An' I don't know why I done it,

But I wanted to git that dret'ful hand out o' sight

I got in t' th' barn, somehow,

An' felt roun' till I got a spade.

I couldn't stop fer a lantern,

Besides, the moonlight was bright enough in all conscience.

Then I scooped that awful thing up in th' spade.

I had a sight o' trouble doin' it.

It slid off, and tipped over, and I couldn't bear

Ev'n to touch it with my foot to prop it,

But I done it somehow.

Then I carried it off be'ind the barn,

Clost to an old appletree

Where you couldn't see from the house,

An' I buried it,

Good an' deep.

I don't rec'lect nothin' more o' that night.

Clarence woke me up in th' mornin',

Hollerin' fer me to come down and set th' milk.

When he'd gone,

I stole roun' to the appletree

And seed the earth all new turned

Where I left it in my hurry.

I did a heap o' gardenin'

That mornin'.

I couldn't cut no big sods

Fear Clarence would notice and ask me what I wanted 'em fer,

So I got teeny bits o' turf here and ther,

And no one couldn't tell ther'd be'n any diggin'

When I got through.

They was awful days after that, Mis' Priest,

I used ter go every mornin' and poke about them bushes,

An' up and down the fence,

Ter find the body that hand come off of.

But I couldn't never find nothin'.


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Page No 102


I'd lay awake nights

Hearin' them laylocks blowin' and whiskin'.

At last I had Clarence cut 'em down

An' make a big bonfire of 'em.

I told him the smell made me sick,

An' that warn't no lie,

I can't abear the smell on 'em now;

An' no wonder, es you say.

I fretted somethin' awful 'bout that hand

I wondered, could it be Hiram's,

But folks don't rob graveyards hereabouts.

Besides, Hiram's hands warn't that awful, starin' white.

I give up seein' people,

I was afeared I'd say somethin'.

You know what folks thought o' me

Better'n I do, I dessay,

But mebbe now you'll see I couldn't do nothin' diff'rent.

But I stuck it out,

I warn't goin' to be downed

By no loose hand, no matter how it come ther

But that ain't the worst, Mis' Priest,

Not by a long ways.

Two year ago, Mr. Densmore made me an offer for Cherry's Orchard.

Well, I'd got used to th' thought o' bein' sort o' blighted,

An' I warn't scared no more.

Lived down my fear, I guess.

I'd kinder got used to th' thought o' that awful night,

And I didn't mope much about it.

Only I never went out o' doors by moonlight;

That stuck.

Well, when Mr. Densmore's offer come,

I started thinkin' 'bout the place

An' all the things that had gone on ther.

Thinks I, I guess I'll go and see where I put the hand.

I was foolhardy with the long time that had gone by.

I know'd the place real well,

Fer I'd put it right in between two o' the apple roots.

I don't know what possessed me, Mis' Priest,

But I kinder wanted to know

That the hand had been flesh and bone, anyway.

It had sorter bothered me, thinkin' I might ha' imagined it.

I took a mornin' when the sun was real pleasant and warm;

I guessed I wouldn't jump for a few old bones.

But I did jump, somethin' wicked.

Ther warn't no bones!

Ther warn't nothin'!

Not ev'n the gold ring I'd minded bein' on the little finger.

I don't know ef ther ever was anythin'.

I've worried myself sick over it.

I be'n diggin' and diggin' day in and day out

Till Clarence ketched me at it.


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Page No 103


Oh, I know'd real well what you all thought,

An' I ain't sayin' you're not right,

But I ain't goin' to end in no county 'sylum

If I c'n help it.

The shiv'rin' fits come on me sudden like.

I know 'em, don't you trouble.

I've fretted considerable about the 'sylum,

I guess I be'n frettin' all the time I ain't be'n diggin'.

But anyhow I can't dig to Chicago, can I?

Thank you, Mis' Priest,

I'm better now. I only dropped in in passin'.

I'll jest be steppin' along down to French's.

No, I won't be seein' nobody in the mornin',

It's a pretty early start.

Don't you stand ther, Mis' Priest,

The wind'll blow yer lamp out,

An' I c'n see easy, I got aholt o' the gate now.

I ain't a mite tired, thank you.

Goodnight.

The Grocery

"Hullo, Alice!"

"Hullo, Leon!"

"Say, Alice, gi' me a couple

O' them two for five cigars,

Will yer?"

"Where's your nickel?"

"My! Ain't you close!

Can't trust a feller, can yer."

"Trust you! Why

What you owe this store

Would set you up in business.

I can't think why Father 'lows it."

"Yer Father's a sight more neighbourly

Than you be. That's a fact.

Besides, he knows I got a vote."

"A vote! Oh, yes, you got a vote!

A lot o' good the Senate'll be to Father

When all his bank account

Has run away in credits.

There's your cigars,

If you can relish smokin'


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Page No 104


With all you owe us standin'."

"I dunno as that makes 'em taste any diff'rent.

You ain't fair to me, Alice, 'deed you ain't.

I work when anythin's doin'.

I'll get a carpenterin' job next Summer sure.

Cleve was tellin' me today he'd take me on come Spring."

"Come Spring, and this December!

I've no patience with you, Leon,

Shillyshallyin' the way you do.

Here, lift over them crates o' oranges

I wanter fix 'em in the winder."

"It riles yer, don't it, me not havin' work.

You pepper up about it somethin' good.

You pick an' pick, and that don't help a mite.

Say, Alice, do come in out o' that winder.

Th' oranges c'n wait,

An' I don't like talkin' to yer back."

"Don't you! Well, you'd better make the best o' what you can git.

Maybe you won't have my back to talk to soon.

They look good in pyramids with the 'lectric light on 'em,

Don't they?

Now hand me them bananas

An' I'll string 'em right acrost."

"What do yer mean

'Bout me not havin' you to talk to?

Are yer springin' somethin' on me?"

"I don't know 'bout springin'

When I'm tellin' you right out.

I'm goin' away, that's all."

"Where? Why?

What yer mean  goin' away?"

"I've took a place

Down to Boston, in a candy store

For the holidays."

"Good Land, Alice,

What in the Heavens fer!"

"To earn some money,

And to git away from here, I guess."

"Ain't yer Father got enough?

Don't he give yer proper pocketmoney?"

"He'd have a plenty, if you folks paid him."

"He's rich I tell yer.

I never figured he'd be close with you."

"Oh, he ain't. Not close.

That ain't why.

But I must git away from here.

I must! I must!"

"You got a lot o' reason in yer

Tonight.

How long d' you cal'late

You'll be gone?"


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Page No 105


"Maybe for always."

"What ails yer, Alice?

Talkin' wild like that.

Ain't you an' me goin' to be married

Some day."

"Some day! Some day!

I guess the sun'll never rise on some day."

"So that's the trouble.

Same old story.

'Cause I ain't got the cash to settle right now.

You know I love yer,

An' I'll marry yer as soon

As I c'n raise the money."

"You've said that any time these five year,

But you don't do nothin'."

"Wot could I do?

Ther ain't no work here Winters.

Not fer a carpenter, ther ain't."

"I guess you warn't born a carpenter.

Ther's icecuttin' a plenty."

"I got a dret'ful tender throat;

Dr. Smiles he told me

I mustn't resk icecuttin'."

"Why haven't you gone to Boston,

And hunted up a job?"

"Have yer forgot the time I went expressin'

In the American office, down ther?"

"And come back two weeks later!

No, I ain't."

"You didn't want I should git hurted,

Did yer?

I'm a sight too light fer all that liftin' work.

My back was commencin' to strain, as 'twas.

Ef I was like yer brother now,

I'd ha' be'n down to the city long ago.

But I'm too clumsy fer a dancer.

I ain't got Arthur's luck."

"Do you call it luck to be a disgrace to your folks,

And git locked up in jail!"

"Oh, come now, Alice,

`Disgrace' is a mite strong.

Why, the jail was a joke.

Art's all right."

"All right!

All right to dance, and smirk, and lie

For a livin',

And then in the end

Lead a silly girl to give you

What warn't hers to give

By pretendin' you'd marry her 

And she a pupil."


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"He'd ha' married her right enough,

Her folks was millionaires."

"Yes, he'd ha' married her!

Thank God, they saved her that."

"Art's a fine feller.

I wish I had his luck.

Swellin' round in Hart, Schaffner Marx fancy suits,

And eatin' in rest'rants.

But somebody's got to stick to the old place,

Else Foxfield'd have to shut up shop,

Hey, Alice?"

"You admire him!

You admire Arthur!

You'd be like him only you can't dance.

Oh, Shame! Shame!

And I've been like that silly girl.

Fooled with your promises,

And I give you all I had.

I knew it, oh, I knew it,

But I wanted to git away 'fore I proved it.

You've shamed me through and through.

Why couldn't you hold your tongue,

And spared me seein' you

As you really are."

"What the Devil's the row?

I only said Art was lucky.

What you spitfirin' at me fer?

Ferget it, Alice.

We've had good times, ain't we?

I'll see Cleve 'bout that job agin tomorrer,

And we'll be married 'fore hayin' time."

"It's like you to remind me o' hayin' time.

I've good cause to love it, ain't I?

Many's the night I've hid my face in the dark

To shut out thinkin'!"

"Why, that ain't nothin'.

You ain't be'n half so kind to me

As lots o' fellers' girls.

Gi' me a kiss, Dear,

And let's make up."

"Make up!

You poor fool.

Do you suppose I care a ten cent piece

For you now.

You've killed yourself for me.

Done it out o' your own mouth.

You've took away my home,

I hate the sight o' the place.

You're all over it,

Every stick an' stone means you,

An' I hate 'em all."


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"Alice, I say,

Don't go on like that.

I can't marry yer

Boardin' in one room,

But I'll see Cleve tomorrer,

I'll make him "

"Oh, you fool!

You terrible fool!"

"Alice, don't go yit,

Wait a minit,

I'll see Cleve "

"You terrible fool!"

"Alice, don't go.

Alice " (Door slams)

Number 3 on the Docket

The lawyer, are you?

Well! I ain't got nothin' to say.

Nothin'!

I told the perlice I hadn't nothin'.

They know'd real well 'twas me.

Ther warn't no supposin',

Ketchin' me in the woods as they did,

An' me in my house dress.

Folks don't walk miles an' miles

In the drifted snow,

With no hat nor wrap on 'em

Ef everythin's all right, I guess.

All right? Ha! Ha! Ha!

Nothin' warn't right with me.

Never was.

Oh, Lord! Why did I do it?

Why ain't it yesterday, and Ed here agin?

Many's the time I've set up with him nights

When he had cramps, or rheumatizm, or somethin'.

I used ter nurse him same's ef he was a baby.

I wouldn't hurt him, I love him!

Don't you dare to say I killed him. 'Twarn't me!

Somethin' got aholt o' me. I couldn't help it.

Oh, what shall I do! What shall I do!

Yes, Sir.

No, Sir.


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I beg your pardon, I  I 

Oh, I'm a wicked woman!

An' I'm desolate, desolate!

Why warn't I struck dead or paralyzed

Afore my hands done it.

Oh, my God, what shall I do!

No, Sir, ther ain't no extenuatin' circumstances,

An' I don't want none.

I want a bolt o' lightnin'

To strike me dead right now!

Oh, I'll tell yer.

But it won't make no diff'rence.

Nothin' will.

Yes, I killed him.

Why do yer make me say it?

It's cruel! Cruel!

I killed him because o' th' silence.

The long, long silence,

That watched all around me,

And he wouldn't break it.

I tried to make him,

Time an' agin,

But he was terrible taciturn, Ed was.

He never spoke 'cept when he had to,

An' then he'd only say "yes" and "no".

You can't even guess what that silence was.

I'd hear it whisperin' in my ears,

An' I got frightened, 'twas so thick,

An' al'ays comin' back.

Ef Ed would ha' talked sometimes

It would ha' driven it away;

But he never would.

He didn't hear it same as I did.

You see, Sir,

Our farm was off'n the main road,

And set away back under the mountain;

And the village was seven mile off,

Measurin' after you'd got out o' our lane.

We didn't have no hired man,

'Cept in hayin' time;

An' Dane's place,

That was the nearest,

Was clear way 'tother side the mountain.

They used Marley postoffice

An' ours was Benton.

Ther was a carttrack took yer to Dane's in Summer,

An' it warn't above two mile that way,

But it warn't never broke out Winters.

I used to dread the Winters.

Seem's ef I couldn't abear to see the goldenrod bloomin';

Winter'd come so quick after that.


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You don't know what snow's like when yer with it

Day in an' day out.

Ed would be out all day loggin',

An' I set at home and look at the snow

Layin' over everythin';

It 'ud dazzle me blind,

Till it warn't white any more, but black as ink.

Then the quiet 'ud commence rushin' past my ears

Till I most went mad listenin' to it.

Many's the time I've dropped a pan on the floor

Jest to hear it clatter.

I was most frantic when dinnertime come

An' Ed was back from the woods.

I'd ha' give my soul to hear him speak.

But he'd never say a word till I asked him

Did he like the raised biscuits or whatever,

An' then sometimes he'd jest nod his answer.

Then he'd go out agin,

An' I'd watch him from the kitchin winder.

It seemed the woods come marchin' out to meet him

An' the trees 'ud press round him an' hustle him.

I got so I was scared o' th' trees.

I thought they come nearer,

Every day a little nearer,

Closin' up round the house.

I never went in t' th' woods Winters,

Though in Summer I liked 'em well enough.

It warn't so bad when my little boy was with us.

He used to go sleddin' and skatin',

An' every day his father fetched him to school in the pung

An' brought him back agin.

We scraped an' scraped fer Neddy,

We wanted him to have a education.

We sent him to High School,

An' then he went up to Boston to Technology.

He was a minin' engineer,

An' doin' real well,

A credit to his bringin' up.

But his very first position ther was an explosion in the mine.

And I'm glad! I'm glad!

He ain't here to see me now.

Neddy! Neddy!

I'm your mother still, Neddy.

Don't turn from me like that.

I can't abear it. I can't! I can't!

What did you say?

Oh, yes, Sir.

I'm here.

I'm very sorry,

I don't know what I'm sayin'.

No, Sir,


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Page No 110


Not till after Neddy died.

'Twas the next Winter the silence come,

I don't remember noticin' it afore.

That was five year ago,

An' it's been gittin' worse an' worse.

I asked Ed to put in a telephone.

I thought ef I felt the whisperin' comin' on

I could ring up some o' th' folks.

But Ed wouldn't hear of it.

He said we'd paid so much for Neddy

We couldn't hardly git along as 'twas.

An' he never understood me wantin' to talk.

Well, this year was worse'n all the others;

We had a terrible spell o' stormy weather,

An' the snow lay so thick

You couldn't see the fences even.

Out o' doors was as flat as the palm o' my hand,

Ther warn't a hump or a holler

Fer as you could see.

It was so quiet

The snappin' o' the branches back in the woodlot

Sounded like pistol shots.

Ed was out all day

Same as usual.

An' it seemed he talked less'n ever.

He didn't even say `Goodmornin'', once or twice,

An' jest nodded or shook his head when I asked him things.

On Monday he said he'd got to go over to Benton

Fer some oats.

I'd oughter ha' gone with him,

But 'twas washin' day

An' I was afeared the fine weather'd break,

An' I couldn't do my dryin'.

All my life I'd done my work punctual,

An' I couldn't fix my conscience

To go junketin' on a washin'day.

I can't tell you what that day was to me.

It dragged an' dragged,

Fer ther warn't no Ed ter break it in the middle

Fer dinner.

Every time I stopped stirrin' the water

I heerd the whisperin' all about me.

I stopped oftener'n I should

To see ef 'twas still ther,

An' it al'ays was.

An' gittin' louder

It seemed ter me.

Once I threw up the winder to feel the wind.

That seemed most alive somehow.

But the woods looked so kind of menacin'

I closed it quick


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Page No 111


An' started to mangle's hard's I could,

The squeakin' was comfortin'.

Well, Ed come home 'bout four.

I seen him down the road,

An' I run out through the shed inter th' barn

To meet him quicker.

I hollered out, `Hullo!'

But he didn't say nothin',

He jest drove right in

An' climbed out o' th' sleigh

An' commenced unharnessin'.

I asked him a heap o' questions;

Who he'd seed

An' what he'd done.

Once in a while he'd nod or shake,

But most o' th' time he didn't do nothin'.

'Twas gittin' dark then,

An' I was in a state,

With the loneliness

An' Ed payin' no attention

Like somethin' warn't livin'.

All of a sudden it come,

I don't know what,

But I jest couldn't stand no more.

It didn't seem 's though that was Ed,

An' it didn't seem as though I was me.

I had to break a way out somehow,

Somethin' was closin' in

An' I was stiflin'.

Ed's loggin' axe was ther,

An' I took it.

Oh, my God!

I can't see nothin' else afore me all the time.

I run out inter th' woods,

Seemed as ef they was pullin' me;

An' all the time I was wadin' through the snow

I seed Ed in front of me

Where I'd laid him.

An' I see him now.

There! There!

What you holdin' me fer?

I want ter go to Ed,

He's bleedin'.

Stop holdin' me.

I got to go.

I'm comin', Ed.

I'll be ther in a minit.

Oh, I'm so tired!

        (Faints)


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Clocks Tick a Century

Nightmare: A Tale for an Autumn Evening

        After a Print by George Cruikshank

It was a gusty night,

With the wind booming, and swooping,

Looping round corners,

Sliding over the cobblestones,

Whipping and veering,

And careering over the roofs

Like a thousand clattering horses.

Mr. Spruggins had been dining in the city,

Mr. Spruggins was none too steady in his gait,

And the wind played ball with Mr. Spruggins

And laughed as it whistled past him.

It rolled him along the street,

With his little feet pitapatting on the flags of the sidewalk,

And his muffler and his coattails blown straight out behind him.

It bumped him against area railings,

And chuckled in his ear when he said "Ouch!"

Sometimes it lifted him clear off his little patting feet

And bore him in triumph over three grey flagstones and a quarter.

The moon dodged in and out of clouds, winking.

It was all very unpleasant for Mr. Spruggins,

And when the wind flung him hard against his own front door

It was a relief,

Although the breath was quite knocked out of him.

The gaslamp in front of the house flared up,

And the keyhole was as big as a barn door;

The gaslamp flickered away to a sputtering blue star,

And the keyhole went out with it.

Such a stabbing, and jabbing,

And sticking, and picking,


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And poking, and pushing, and prying

With that key;

And there is no denying that Mr. Spruggins rapped out an oath or two,

Rubadubdubbing them out to a real snaredrum roll.

But the door opened at last,

And Mr. Spruggins blew through it into his own hall

And slammed the door to so hard

That the knocker banged five times before it stopped.

Mr. Spruggins struck a light and lit a candle,

And all the time the moon winked at him through the window.

"Why couldn't you find the keyhole, Spruggins?"

Taunted the wind.

"I can find the keyhole."

And the wind, thin as a wire,

Darted in and seized the candle flame

And knocked it over to one side

And pummelled it down  down  down !

But Mr. Spruggins held the candle so close that it singed his chin,

And ran and stumbled up the stairs in a surprisingly agile manner,

For the wind through the keyhole kept saying, "Spruggins! Spruggins!"

behind him.

The fire in his bedroom burned brightly.

The room with its crimson bed and window curtains

Was as red and glowing as a carbuncle.

It was still and warm.

There was no wind here, for the windows were fastened;

And no moon,

For the curtains were drawn.

The candle flame stood up like a pointed pear

In a wide brass dish.

Mr. Spruggins sighed with content;

He was safe at home.

The fire glowed  red and yellow roses

In the black basket of the grate 

And the bed with its crimson hangings

Seemed a great peony,

Wide open and placid.

Mr. Spruggins slipped off his topcoat and his muffler.

He slipped off his bottlegreen coat

And his flowered waistcoat.

He put on a flannel dressinggown,

And tied a peaked nightcap under his chin.

He wound his large gold watch

And placed it under his pillow.

Then he tiptoed over to the window and pulled back the curtain.

There was the moon dodging in and out of the clouds;

But behind him was his quiet candle.

There was the wind whisking along the street.

The window rattled, but it was fastened.

Did the wind say, "Spruggins"?

All Mr. Spruggins heard was "Sssss "


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Dying away down the street.

He dropped the curtain and got into bed.

Martha had been in the last thing with the warmingpan;

The bed was warm,

And Mr. Spruggins sank into feathers,

With the familiar ticking of his watch just under his head.

Mr. Spruggins dozed.

He had forgotten to put out the candle,

But it did not make much difference as the fire was so bright . . .

Too bright!

The red and yellow roses pricked his eyelids,

They scorched him back to consciousness.

He tried to shift his position;

He could not move.

Something weighed him down,

He could not breathe.

He was gasping,

Pinned down and suffocating.

He opened his eyes.

The curtains of the window were flung back,

The fire and the candle were out,

And the room was filled with green moonlight.

And pressed against the windowpane

Was a wide, round face,

Winking  winking 

Solemnly dropping one eyelid after the other.

Tick  tock  went the watch under his pillow,

Wink  wink  went the face at the window.

It was not the fire roses which had pricked him,

It was the winking eyes.

Mr. Spruggins tried to bounce up;

He could not, because 

His heart flapped up into his mouth

And fell back dead.

On his chest was a fat pink pig,

On the pig a blackamoor

With a ten pound weight for a cap.

His mustachios kept curling up and down like angry snakes,

And his eyes rolled round and round,

With the pupils coming into sight, and disappearing,

And appearing again on the other side.

The holsters at his saddlebow were two port bottles,

And a curved tableknife hung at his belt for a scimitar,

While a fork and a keg of spirits were strapped to the saddle behind.

He dug his spurs into the pig,

Which trampled and snorted,

And stamped its cloven feet deeper into Mr. Spruggins.

Then the green light on the floor began to undulate.

It heaved and hollowed,

It rose like a tide,

Seagreen,


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Full of claws and scales

And wriggles.

The air above his bed began to move;

It weighed over him

In a mass of draggled feathers.

Not one lifted to stir the air.

They drooped and dripped

With a smell of port wine and brandy,

Closing down, slowly,

Trickling drops on the bedquilt.

Suddenly the window fell in with a great scatter of glass,

And the moon burst into the room,

Sizzling  "Sssss  Spruggins! Spruggins!"

It rolled toward him,

A green ball of flame,

With two eyes in the center,

A red eye and a yellow eye,

Dropping their lids slowly,

One after the other.

Mr. Spruggins tried to scream,

But the blackamoor

Leapt off his pig

With a cry,

Drew his scimitar,

And plunged it into Mr. Spruggins's mouth.

Mr. Spruggins got up in the cold dawn

And remade the fire.

Then he crept back to bed

By the light which seeped in under the window curtains,

And lay there, shivering,

While the bells of St. George the Martyr chimed the quarter after seven.

The Paper Windmill

The little boy pressed his face against the windowpane and looked out

at the bright sunshiny morning. The cobblestones of the square

glistened like mica. In the trees, a breeze danced and pranced,

and shook drops of sunlight like falling golden coins into the brown water

of the canal. Down stream slowly drifted a long string of galliots

piled with crimson cheeses. The little boy thought they looked as if

they were roc's eggs, blocks of big ruby eggs. He said, "Oh!" with delight,

and pressed against the window with all his might.


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The golden cock on the top of the `Stadhuis' gleamed. His beak was open

like a pair of scissors and a narrow piece of blue sky was wedged in it.

"Cockadoodledo," cried the little boy. "Can't you hear me

through the window, Gold Cocky? Cockadoodledo! You should crow

when you see the eggs of your cousin, the great roc." But the golden cock

stood stock still, with his fine tail blowing in the wind.

He could not understand the little boy, for he said "Cocorico"

when he said anything. But he was hung in the air to swing, not to sing.

His eyes glittered to the bright West wind, and the crimson cheeses

drifted away down the canal.

It was very dull there in the big room. Outside in the square, the wind

was playing tag with some fallen leaves. A man passed, with a dogcart

beside him full of smart, new milkcans. They rattled out a gay tune:

"Tidditytumtiti. Have some milk for your tea. Cream for your coffee

to drink tonight, thick, and smooth, and sweet, and white,"

and the man's sabots beat an accompaniment: "Plop! trop! milk for your tea.

Plop! trop! drink it tonight." It was very pleasant out there,

but it was lonely here in the big room. The little boy gulped at a tear.

It was queer how dull all his toys were. They were so still.

Nothing was still in the square. If he took his eyes away a moment

it had changed. The milkman had disappeared round the corner,

there was only an old woman with a basket of green stuff on her head,

picking her way over the shiny stones. But the wind pulled the leaves

in the basket this way and that, and displayed them to beautiful advantage.

The sun patted them condescendingly on their flat surfaces, and they seemed

sprinkled with silver. The little boy sighed as he looked at his disordered

toys on the floor. They were motionless, and their colours were dull.

The dark wainscoting absorbed the sun. There was none left for toys.

The square was quite empty now. Only the wind ran round and round it,

spinning. Away over in the corner where a street opened into the square,

the wind had stopped. Stopped running, that is, for it never

stopped spinning. It whirred, and whirled, and gyrated, and turned.

It burned like a great coloured sun. It hummed, and buzzed, and sparked,

and darted. There were flashes of blue, and long smearing lines of saffron,

and quick jabs of green. And over it all was a sheen like a myriad

cut diamonds. Round and round it went, the huge windwheel,

and the little boy's head reeled with watching it. The whole square

was filled with its rays, blazing and leaping round after one another,

faster and faster. The little boy could not speak, he could only gaze,

staring in amaze.

The windwheel was coming down the square. Nearer and nearer it came,


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a great disk of spinning flame. It was opposite the window now,

and the little boy could see it plainly, but it was something more

than the wind which he saw. A man was carrying a huge fanshaped frame

on his shoulder, and stuck in it were many little painted paper windmills,

each one scurrying round in the breeze. They were bright and beautiful,

and the sight was one to please anybody, and how much more a little boy

who had only stupid, motionless toys to enjoy.

The little boy clapped his hands, and his eyes danced and whizzed,

for the circling windmills made him dizzy. Closer and closer

came the windmill man, and held up his big fan to the little boy

in the window of the Ambassador's house. Only a pane of glass

between the boy and the windmills. They slid round before his eyes

in rapidly revolving splendour. There were wheels and wheels of colours 

big, little, thick, thin  all one clear, perfect spin. The windmill vendor

dipped and raised them again, and the little boy's face was glued

to the windowpane. Oh! What a glorious, wonderful plaything!

Rings and rings of windy colour always moving! How had any one ever preferred

those other toys which never stirred. "Nursie, come quickly. Look!

I want a windmill. See! It is never still. You will buy me one, won't you?

I want that silver one, with the big ring of blue."

So a servant was sent to buy that one: silver, ringed with blue,

and smartly it twirled about in the servant's hands as he stood a moment

to pay the vendor. Then he entered the house, and in another minute

he was standing in the nursery door, with some crumpled paper on the end

of a stick which he held out to the little boy. "But I wanted a windmill

which went round," cried the little boy. "That is the one you asked for,

Master Charles," Nursie was a bit impatient, she had mending to do.

"See, it is silver, and here is the blue." "But it is only a blue streak,"

sobbed the little boy. "I wanted a blue ring, and this silver

doesn't sparkle." "Well, Master Charles, that is what you wanted,

now run away and play with it, for I am very busy."

The little boy hid his tears against the friendly windowpane. On the floor

lay the motionless, crumpled bit of paper on the end of its stick.

But far away across the square was the windmill vendor, with his big wheel

of whirring splendour. It spun round in a blaze like a whirling rainbow,

and the sun gleamed upon it, and the wind whipped it, until it seemed

a maze of spattering diamonds. "Cocorico!" crowed the golden cock

on the top of the `Stadhuis'. "That is something worth crowing for."

But the little boy did not hear him, he was sobbing over the crumpled

bit of paper on the floor.


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 118


The Red Lacquer MusicStand

A musicstand of crimson lacquer, long since brought

In some fast clippership from China, quaintly wrought

With bossed and carven flowers and fruits in blackening gold,

The slender shaft all twined about and thickly scrolled

With vine leaves and young twisted tendrils, whirling, curling,

Flinging their new shoots over the four wings, and swirling

Out on the three wide feet in golden lumps and streams;

Petals and apples in high relief, and where the seams

Are worn with handling, through the polished crimson sheen,

Long streaks of black, the under lacquer, shine out clean.

Four desks, adjustable, to suit the heights of players

Sitting to viols or standing up to sing, four layers

Of music to serve every instrument, are there,

And on the apex a large flattopped golden pear.

It burns in red and yellow, dusty, smouldering lights,

When the sun flares the old barnchamber with its flights

And skips upon the crystal knobs of dim sideboards,

Legless and mouldy, and hops, glint to glint, on hoards

Of scythes, and spades, and dinnerhorns, so the old tools

Are little candles throwing brightness round in pools.

With Oriental splendour, red and gold, the dust

Covering its flames like smoke and thinning as a gust

Of brighter sunshine makes the colours leap and range,

The strange old musicstand seems to strike out and change;

To stroke and tear the darkness with sharp golden claws;

To dart a forked, vermilion tongue from open jaws;

To puff out bitter smoke which chokes the sun; and fade

Back to a still, faint outline obliterate in shade.

Creeping up the ladder into the loft, the Boy

Stands watching, very still, prickly and hot with joy.

He sees the dusty sunmote slit by streaks of red,

He sees it split and stream, and all about his head

Spikes and spears of gold are licking, pricking, flicking,

Scratching against the walls and furniture, and nicking

The darkness into sparks, chipping away the gloom.

The Boy's nose smarts with the pungence in the room.

The wind pushes an elm branch from before the door

And the sun widens out all along the floor,

Filling the barnchamber with white, straightforward light,

So not one blurred outline can tease the mind to fright.

"O All ye Works of the Lord, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever.

O let the Earth Bless the Lord; Yea, let it Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever.


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Page No 119


O ye Mountains and Hills, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever.

O All ye Green Things upon the Earth, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him,

        and Magnify Him for ever."

The Boy will praise his God on an altar builded fair,

Will heap it with the Works of the Lord. In the morning air,

Spices shall burn on it, and by their pale smoke curled,

Like shoots of all the Green Things, the God of this bright World

Shall see the Boy's desire to pay his debt of praise.

The Boy turns round about, seeking with careful gaze

An altar meet and worthy, but each table and chair

Has some defect, each piece is needing some repair

To perfect it; the chairs have broken legs and backs,

The tables are uneven, and every highboy lacks

A handle or a drawer, the desks are bruised and worn,

And even a wide sofa has its cane seat torn.

Only in the gloom far in the corner there

The lacquer musicstand is elegant and rare,

Clear and slim of line, with its four wings outspread,

The sound of old quartets, a tenuous, faint thread,

Hanging and floating over it, it stands supreme 

Black, and gold, and crimson, in one twisted scheme!

A candle on the bookcase feels a draught and wavers,

Stippling the whitewashed walls with dancing shades and quavers.

A bedpost, grown colossal, jigs about the ceiling,

And shadows, strangely altered, stain the walls, revealing

Eagles, and rabbits, and weird faces pulled awry,

And hands which fetch and carry things incessantly.

Under the Eastern window, where the morning sun

Must touch it, stands the musicstand, and on each one

Of its broad platforms is a pyramid of stones,

And metals, and dried flowers, and pine and hemlock cones,

An oriole's nest with the four eggs neatly blown,

The rattle of a rattlesnake, and three large brown

Butternuts uncracked, six butterflies impaled

With a green luna moth, a snakeskin freshly scaled,

Some sunflower seeds, wampum, and a bloodytooth shell,

A blue jay feather, all together piled pellmell

The stand will hold no more. The Boy with humming head

Looks once again, blows out the light, and creeps to bed.

The Boy keeps solemn vigil, while outside the wind

Blows gustily and clear, and slaps against the blind.

He hardly tries to sleep, so sharp his ecstasy

It burns his soul to emptiness, and sets it free

For adoration only, for worship. Dedicate,

His unsheathed soul is naked in its novitiate.

The hours strike below from the clock on the stair.

The Boy is a white flame suspiring in prayer.


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Page No 120


Morning will bring the sun, the Golden Eye of Him

Whose splendour must be veiled by starry cherubim,

Whose Feet shimmer like crystal in the streets of Heaven.

Like an open rose the sun will stand up even,

Fronting the windowsill, and when the casement glows

Rosered with the newblown morning, then the fire which flows

From the sun will fall upon the altar and ignite

The spices, and his sacrifice will burn in perfumed light.

Over the musicstand the ghosts of sounds will swim,

`Viols d'amore' and `hautbois' accorded to a hymn.

The Boy will see the faintest breath of angels' wings

Fanning the smoke, and voices will flower through the strings.

He dares no farther vision, and with scalding eyes

Waits upon the daylight and his great emprise.

The cold, grey light of dawn was whitening the wall

When the Boy, finedrawn by sleeplessness, started his ritual.

He washed, all shivering and pointed like a flame.

He threw the shutters open, and in the windowframe

The morning glimmered like a tarnished Venice glass.

He took his Chinese pastilles and put them in a mass

Upon the mantelpiece till he could seek a plate

Worthy to hold them burning. Alas! He had been late

In thinking of this need, and now he could not find

Platter or saucer rare enough to ease his mind.

The house was not astir, and he dared not go down

Into the barnchamber, lest some door should be blown

And slam before the draught he made as he went out.

The light was growing yellower, and still he looked about.

A flash of almost crimson from the gilded pear

Upon the musicstand, startled him waiting there.

The sun would rise and he would meet it unprepared,

Labelled a fool in having missed what he had dared.

He ran across the room, took his pastilles and laid

Them on the flattopped pear, most carefully displayed

To light with ease, then stood a little to one side,

Focussed a burningglass and painstakingly tried

To hold it angled so the bunched and prismed rays

Should leap upon each other and spring into a blaze.

Sharp as a wheeling edge of disked, carnation flame,

Gemhard and cutting upward, slowly the round sun came.

The arrowed fire caught the burningglass and glanced,

Split to a multitude of pointed spears, and lanced,

A deeper, hotter flame, it took the incense pile

Which welcomed it and broke into a little smile

Of yellow flamelets, creeping, crackling, thrusting up,

A golden, redslashed lily in a lacquer cup.

"O ye Fire and Heat, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever.

O ye Winter and Summer, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him


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Page No 121


for ever.

O ye Nights and Days, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever.

O ye Lightnings and Clouds, Bless ye the Lord; Praise Him, and Magnify Him

        for ever."

A moment so it hung, widecurved, brightpetalled, seeming

A chalice foamed with sunrise. The Boy woke from his dreaming.

A spike of flame had caught the card of butterflies,

The oriole's nest took fire, soon all four galleries

Where he had spread his treasures were become one tongue

Of gleaming, brutal fire. The Boy instantly swung

His pitcher off the washstand and turned it upside down.

The flames drooped back and sizzled, and all his senses grown

Acute by fear, the Boy grabbed the quilt from his bed

And flung it over all, and then with aching head

He watched the early sunshine glint on the remains

Of his holy offering. The lacquer stand had stains

Ugly and charred all over, and where the golden pear

Had been, a deep, black hole gaped miserably. His dear

Treasures were puffs of ashes; only the stones were there,

Winking in the brightness.

        The clock upon the stair

Struck five, and in the kitchen someone shook a grate.

The Boy began to dress, for it was getting late.

Spring Day

        Bath

The day is freshwashed and fair, and there is a smell of tulips and narcissus

in the air.

The sunshine pours in at the bathroom window and bores through the water

in the bathtub in lathes and planes of greenishwhite. It cleaves the water

into flaws like a jewel, and cracks it to bright light.

Little spots of sunshine lie on the surface of the water and dance, dance,

and their reflections wobble deliciously over the ceiling; a stir of my finger

sets them whirring, reeling. I move a foot, and the planes of light

in the water jar. I lie back and laugh, and let the greenwhite water,

the sunflawed beryl water, flow over me. The day is almost

too bright to bear, the green water covers me from the too bright day.


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Page No 122


I will lie here awhile and play with the water and the sun spots.

The sky is blue and high. A crow flaps by the window, and there is

a whiff of tulips and narcissus in the air.

        Breakfast Table

In the freshwashed sunlight, the breakfast table is decked and white.

It offers itself in flat surrender, tendering tastes, and smells,

and colours, and metals, and grains, and the white cloth falls over its side,

draped and wide. Wheels of white glitter in the silver coffeepot,

hot and spinning like catherinewheels, they whirl, and twirl  and my eyes

begin to smart, the little white, dazzling wheels prick them like darts.

Placid and peaceful, the rolls of bread spread themselves in the sun to bask.

A stack of butterpats, pyramidal, shout orange through the white, scream,

flutter, call: "Yellow! Yellow! Yellow!" Coffee steam rises in a stream,

clouds the silver teaservice with mist, and twists up into the sunlight,

revolved, involuted, suspiring higher and higher, fluting in a thin spiral

up the high blue sky. A crow flies by and croaks at the coffee steam.

The day is new and fair with good smells in the air.

        Walk

Over the street the white clouds meet, and sheer away without touching.

On the sidewalks, boys are playing marbles. Glass marbles,

with amber and blue hearts, roll together and part with a sweet

clashing noise. The boys strike them with black and red striped agates.

The glass marbles spit crimson when they are hit, and slip into the gutters

under rushing brown water. I smell tulips and narcissus in the air,

but there are no flowers anywhere, only white dust whipping up the street,

and a girl with a gay Spring hat and blowing skirts. The dust and the wind

flirt at her ankles and her neat, highheeled patent leather shoes. Tap, tap,

the little heels pat the pavement, and the wind rustles among the flowers

on her hat.

A watercart crawls slowly on the other side of the way. It is green and gay

with new paint, and rumbles contentedly, sprinkling clear water over

the white dust. Clear zigzagging water, which smells of tulips and narcissus.

The thickening branches make a pink `grisaille' against the blue sky.

Whoop! The clouds go dashing at each other and sheer away just in time.

Whoop! And a man's hat careers down the street in front of the white dust,

leaps into the branches of a tree, veers away and trundles ahead of the wind,

jarring the sunlight into spokes of rosecolour and green.

A motorcar cuts a swathe through the bright air, sharpbeaked, irresistible,

shouting to the wind to make way. A glare of dust and sunshine


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 123


tosses together behind it, and settles down. The sky is quiet and high,

and the morning is fair with freshwashed air.

        Midday and Afternoon

Swirl of crowded streets. Shock and recoil of traffic. The stockstill

brick facade of an old church, against which the waves of people

lurch and withdraw. Flare of sunshine down sidestreets. Eddies of light

in the windows of chemists' shops, with their blue, gold, purple jars,

darting colours far into the crowd. Loud bangs and tremors,

murmurings out of high windows, whirring of machine belts,

blurring of horses and motors. A quick spin and shudder of brakes

on an electric car, and the jar of a churchbell knocking against

the metal blue of the sky. I am a piece of the town, a bit of blown dust,

thrust along with the crowd. Proud to feel the pavement under me,

reeling with feet. Feet tripping, skipping, lagging, dragging,

plodding doggedly, or springing up and advancing on firm elastic insteps.

A boy is selling papers, I smell them clean and new from the press.

They are fresh like the air, and pungent as tulips and narcissus.

The blue sky pales to lemon, and great tongues of gold blind the shopwindows,

putting out their contents in a flood of flame.

        Night and Sleep

The day takes her ease in slippered yellow. Electric signs gleam out

along the shop fronts, following each other. They grow, and grow,

and blow into patterns of fireflowers as the sky fades. Trades scream

in spots of light at the unruffled night. Twinkle, jab, snap, that means

a new play; and over the way: plop, drop, quiver, is the sidelong

sliver of a watchmaker's sign with its length on another street.

A gigantic mug of beer effervesces to the atmosphere over a tall building,

but the sky is high and has her own stars, why should she heed ours?

I leave the city with speed. Wheels whirl to take me back to my trees

and my quietness. The breeze which blows with me is freshwashed and clean,

it has come but recently from the high sky. There are no flowers

in bloom yet, but the earth of my garden smells of tulips and narcissus.

My room is tranquil and friendly. Out of the window I can see

the distant city, a band of twinkling gems, little flowerheads with no stems.

I cannot see the beerglass, nor the letters of the restaurants and shops

I passed, now the signs blur and all together make the city,

glowing on a night of fine weather, like a garden stirring and blowing

for the Spring.

The night is freshwashed and fair and there is a whiff of flowers in the air.

Wrap me close, sheets of lavender. Pour your blue and purple dreams


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 124


into my ears. The breeze whispers at the shutters and mutters

queer tales of old days, and cobbled streets, and youths leaping their horses

down marble stairways. Pale blue lavender, you are the colour of the sky

when it is freshwashed and fair . . . I smell the stars . . . they are like

tulips and narcissus . . . I smell them in the air.

The DinnerParty

        Fish

"So . . ." they said,

With their wineglasses delicately poised,

Mocking at the thing they cannot understand.

"So . . ." they said again,

Amused and insolent.

The silver on the table glittered,

And the red wine in the glasses

Seemed the blood I had wasted

In a foolish cause.

        Game

The gentleman with the greyandblack whiskers

Sneered languidly over his quail.

Then my heart flew up and laboured,

And I burst from my own holding

And hurled myself forward.

With straight blows I beat upon him,

Furiously, with redhot anger, I thrust against him.

But my weapon slithered over his polished surface,

And I recoiled upon myself,

Panting.

        DrawingRoom

In a dress all softness and halftones,

Indolent and halfreclined,

She lay upon a couch,

With the firelight reflected in her jewels.

But her eyes had no reflection,

They swam in a grey smoke,


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Page No 125


The smoke of smouldering ashes,

The smoke of her cindered heart.

        Coffee

They sat in a circle with their coffeecups.

One dropped in a lump of sugar,

One stirred with a spoon.

I saw them as a circle of ghosts

Sipping blackness out of beautiful china,

And mildly protesting against my coarseness

In being alive.

        Talk

They took dead men's souls

And pinned them on their breasts for ornament;

Their cufflinks and tiaras

Were gems dug from a grave;

They were ghouls battening on exhumed thoughts;

And I took a green liqueur from a servant

So that he might come near me

And give me the comfort of a living thing.

        Eleven O'Clock

The front door was hard and heavy,

It shut behind me on the house of ghosts.

I flattened my feet on the pavement

To feel it solid under me;

I ran my hand along the railings

And shook them,

And pressed their pointed bars

Into my palms.

The hurt of it reassured me,

And I did it again and again

Until they were bruised.

When I woke in the night

I laughed to find them aching,

For only living flesh can suffer.


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 126


Stravinsky's Three Pieces "Grotesques", for String Quartet

        First Movement

Thinvoiced, nasal pipes

Drawing sound out and out

Until it is a screeching thread,

Sharp and cutting, sharp and cutting,

It hurts.

Wheeee!

Bump! Bump! Tongtibump!

There are drums here,

Banging,

And wooden shoes beating the round, grey stones

Of the marketplace.

Wheeee!

Sabots slapping the worn, old stones,

And a shaking and cracking of dancing bones;

Clumsy and hard they are,

And uneven,

Losing half a beat

Because the stones are slippery.

Bumpetytong! Wheeee! Tong!

The thin Spring leaves

Shake to the banging of shoes.

Shoes beat, slap,

Shuffle, rap,

And the nasal pipes squeal with their pigs' voices,

Little pigs' voices

Weaving among the dancers,

A fine white thread

Linking up the dancers.

Bang! Bump! Tong!

Petticoats,

Stockings,

Sabots,

Delirium flapping its thighbones;

Red, blue, yellow,

Drunkenness steaming in colours;

Red, yellow, blue,

Colours and flesh weaving together,

In and out, with the dance,

Coarse stuffs and hot flesh weaving together.

Pigs' cries white and tenuous,

White and painful,

White and 

Bump!


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 127


Tong!

        Second Movement

Pale violin music whiffs across the moon,

A pale smoke of violin music blows over the moon,

Cherry petals fall and flutter,

And the white Pierrot,

Wreathed in the smoke of the violins,

Splashed with cherry petals falling, falling,

Claws a grave for himself in the fresh earth

With his fingernails.

        Third Movement

An organ growls in the heavy roofgroins of a church,

It wheezes and coughs.

The nave is blue with incense,

Writhing, twisting,

Snaking over the heads of the chanting priests.

`Requiem aeternam dona ei, Domine';

The priests whine their bastard Latin

And the censers swing and click.

The priests walk endlessly

Round and round,

Droning their Latin

Off the key.

The organ crashes out in a flaring chord,

And the priests hitch their chant up half a tone.

`Dies illa, dies irae,

Calamitatis et miseriae,

Dies magna et amara valde.'

A wind rattles the leaded windows.

The little pearshaped candle flames leap and flutter,

`Dies illa, dies irae;'

The swaying smoke drifts over the altar,

`Calamitatis et miseriae;'

The shuffling priests sprinkle holy water,

`Dies magna et amara valde;'

And there is a stark stillness in the midst of them

Stretched upon a bier.

His ears are stone to the organ,

His eyes are flint to the candles,

His body is ice to the water.

Chant, priests,

Whine, shuffle, genuflect,

He will always be as rigid as he is now

Until he crumbles away in a dust heap.

`Lacrymosa dies illa,


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 128


Qua resurget ex favilla

Judicandus homo reus.'

Above the grey pillars the roof is in darkness.

Towns in Colour

        I

Red Slippers

Red slippers in a shopwindow, and outside in the street, flaws of grey,

windy sleet!

Behind the polished glass, the slippers hang in long threads of red,

festooning from the ceiling like stalactites of blood, flooding the eyes

of passersby with dripping colour, jamming their crimson reflections

against the windows of cabs and tramcars, screaming their claret and salmon

into the teeth of the sleet, plopping their little round maroon lights

upon the tops of umbrellas.

The row of white, sparkling shop fronts is gashed and bleeding,

it bleeds red slippers. They spout under the electric light,

fluid and fluctuating, a hot rain  and freeze again to red slippers,

myriadly multiplied in the mirror side of the window.

They balance upon arched insteps like springing bridges of crimson lacquer;

they swing up over curved heels like whirling tanagers sucked

in a windpocket; they flatten out, heelless, like July ponds,

flared and burnished by red rockets.

Snap, snap, they are crackersparks of scarlet in the white, monotonous

block of shops.

They plunge the clangour of billions of vermilion trumpets

into the crowd outside, and echo in faint rose over the pavement.


Men, Women and Ghosts

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Page No 129


People hurry by, for these are only shoes, and in a window, farther down,

is a big lotus bud of cardboard whose petals open every few minutes

and reveal a wax doll, with staring bead eyes and flaxen hair,

lolling awkwardly in its flower chair.

One has often seen shoes, but whoever saw a cardboard lotus bud before?

The flaws of grey, windy sleet beat on the shopwindow where there are only

red slippers.

        II

Thompson's Lunch Room  Grand Central Station

        Study in Whites

Waxwhite 

Floor, ceiling, walls.

Ivory shadows

Over the pavement

Polished to cream surfaces

By constant sweeping.

The big room is coloured like the petals

Of a great magnolia,

And has a patina

Of flower bloom

Which makes it shine dimly

Under the electric lamps.

Chairs are ranged in rows

Like sepia seeds

Waiting fulfilment.

The chalkwhite spot of a cook's cap

Moves unglossily against the vaguely bright wall 

Dull chalkwhite striking the retina like a blow

Through the wavering uncertainty of steam.

Vitreouswhite of glasses with green reflections,

Icegreen carboys, shifting  greener, bluer  with the jar of moving water.

Jagged greenwhite bowls of pressed glass

Rearing snowpeaks of chipped sugar

Above the lighthouseshaped castors

Of grey pepper and greywhite salt.

Greywhite placards: "Oyster Stew, Cornbeef Hash, Frankfurters":

Marble slabs veined with words in meandering lines.


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Page No 130


Dropping on the white counter like horn notes

Through a web of violins,

The flat yellow lights of oranges,

The cubered splashes of apples,

In high plated `epergnes'.

The electric clock jerks every halfminute:

"Coming!  Past!"

"Three beefsteaks and a chickenpie,"

Bawled through a slide while the clock jerks heavily.

A man carries a china mug of coffee to a distant chair.

Two rice puddings and a salmon salad

Are pushed over the counter;

The unfulfilled chairs open to receive them.

A spoon falls upon the floor with the impact of metal striking stone,

And the sound throws across the room

Sharp, invisible zigzags

Of silver.

        III

An Opera House

Within the gold square of the proscenium arch,

A curtain of orange velvet hangs in stiff folds,

Its tassels jarring slightly when someone crosses the stage behind.

Gold carving edges the balconies,

Rims the boxes,

Runs up and down fluted pillars.

Little knifestabs of gold

Shine out whenever a box door is opened.

Gold clusters

Flash in soft explosions

On the blue darkness,

Suck back to a point,

And disappear.

Hoops of gold

Circle necks, wrists, fingers,

Pierce ears,

Poise on heads

And fly up above them in coloured sparkles.

Gold!

Gold!

The opera house is a treasurebox of gold.

Gold in a broad smear across the orchestra pit:

Gold of horns, trumpets, tubas;


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Page No 131


Gold  spungold, twitteringgold, snappinggold

Of harps.

The conductor raises his baton,

The brass blares out

Crass, crude,

Parvenu, fat, powerful,

Golden.

Rich as the fat, clapping hands in the boxes.

Cymbals, gigantic, coinshaped,

Crash.

The orange curtain parts

And the primadonna steps forward.

One note,

A drop: transparent, iridescent,

A gold bubble,

It floats . . . floats . . .

And bursts against the lips of a bank president

In the grand tier.

        IV

Afternoon Rain in State Street

Crosshatchings of rain against grey walls,

Slant lines of black rain

In front of the up and down, wet stone sides of buildings.

Below,

Greasy, shiny, black, horizontal,

The street.

And over it, umbrellas,

Black polished dots

Struck to white

An instant,

Stream in two flat lines

Slipping past each other with the smoothness of oil.

Like a foursided wedge

The Custom House Tower

Pokes at the low, flat sky,

Pushing it farther and farther up,

Lifting it away from the housetops,

Lifting it in one piece as though it were a sheet of tin,

With the lever of its apex.

The crosshatchings of rain cut the Tower obliquely,

Scratching lines of black wire across it,

Mutilating its perpendicular grey surface


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Page No 132


With the sharp precision of tools.

The city is rigid with straight lines and angles,

A chequered table of blacks and greys.

Oblong blocks of flatness

Crawl by with lowgeared engines,

And pass to short upright squares

Shrinking with distance.

A steamer in the basin blows its whistle,

And the sound shoots across the rain hatchings,

A narrow, level bar of steel.

Hard cubes of lemon

Superimpose themselves upon the fronts of buildings

As the windows light up.

But the lemon cubes are edged with angles

Upon which they cannot impinge.

Up, straight, down, straight  square.

Crumpled greywhite papers

Blow along the sidewalks,

Contorted, horrible,

Without curves.

A horse steps in a puddle,

And white, glaring water spurts up

In stiff, outflaring lines,

Like the rattling stems of reeds.

The city is heraldic with angles,

A sombre escutcheon of argent and sable

And countercoloured bends of rain

Hung over a foursquare civilization.

When a street lamp comes out,

I gaze at it for fully thirty seconds

To rest my brain with the suffusing, round brilliance of its globe.

        V

An Aquarium

Streaks of green and yellow iridescence,

Silver shiftings,

Rings veering out of rings,

Silver  gold 

Greygreen opaqueness sliding down,

With sharp white bubbles

Shooting and dancing,

Flinging quickly outward.

Nosing the bubbles,


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Page No 133


Swallowing them,

Fish.

Blue shadows against silversaffron water,

The light rippling over them

In steelbright tremors.

Outspread translucent fins

Flute, fold, and relapse;

The threaded light prints through them on the pebbles

In scarcely tarnished twinklings.

Curving of spotted spines,

Slow upshifts,

Lazy convolutions:

Then a sudden swift straightening

And darting below:

Oblique grey shadows

Athwart a pale casement.

Roped and curled,

Green maneating eels

Slumber in undulate rhythms,

With crests laid horizontal on their backs.

Barred fish,

Striped fish,

Uneven disks of fish,

Slip, slide, whirl, turn,

And never touch.

Metallic blue fish,

With fins wide and yellow and swaying

Like Oriental fans,

Hold the sun in their bellies

And glow with light:

Blue brilliance cut by black bars.

An oblong pane of strawcoloured shimmer,

Across it, in a tangent,

A smear of rose, black, silver.

Short twists and upstartings,

Roseblack, in a setting of bubbles:

Sunshine playing between red and black flowers

On a blue and gold lawn.

Shadows and polished surfaces,

Facets of mauve and purple,

A constant modulation of values.

Shaftshaped,

With green bead eyes;

Thicknosed,

Heliotropecoloured;

Swift spots of chrysolite and coral;

In the midst of green, pearl, amethyst irradiations.

Outside,

A willowtree flickers

With little white jerks,


Men, Women and Ghosts

An Aquarium 131



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Page No 134


And long blue waves

Rise steadily beyond the outer islands.


Men, Women and Ghosts

An Aquarium 132



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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Men, Women and Ghosts, page = 4

   3. Amy Lowell, page = 4

   4.  Figurines in Old Saxe, page = 6

   5. Patterns, page = 6

   6. Pickthorn Manor, page = 9

   7. The Cremona Violin, page = 27

   8. The Cross-Roads, page = 49

   9. A Roxbury Garden, page = 52

   10. 1777, page = 60

   11.  Bronze Tablets, page = 64

   12. The Fruit Shop, page = 64

   13. Malmaison, page = 68

   14. The Hammers, page = 73

   15. Two Travellers in the Place Vendome, page = 86

   16.  War Pictures, page = 87

   17. The Allies, page = 87

   18. The Bombardment, page = 88

   19. Lead Soldiers, page = 90

   20. The Painter on Silk, page = 94

   21. A Ballad of Footmen, page = 94

   22.  The Overgrown Pasture, page = 96

   23. Reaping, page = 96

   24. Off the Turnpike, page = 99

   25. The Grocery, page = 104

   26. Number 3 on the Docket, page = 108

   27.  Clocks Tick a Century, page = 113

   28. Nightmare:  A Tale for an Autumn Evening, page = 113

   29. The Paper Windmill, page = 116

   30. The Red Lacquer Music-Stand, page = 119

   31. Spring Day, page = 122

   32. The Dinner-Party, page = 125

   33. Stravinsky's Three Pieces "Grotesques", for String Quartet, page = 127

   34. Towns in Colour, page = 129

   35.  Red Slippers, page = 129

   36.  Thompson's Lunch Room -- Grand Central Station, page = 130

   37.  An Opera House, page = 131

   38.  Afternoon Rain in State Street, page = 132

   39.  An Aquarium, page = 133