A honeyed parting on the hived store;
   Whose throat a sweetened reed had blown to be;
   Whose breast was harped of silver and of two
   Grave small singing birds uncaged; the chant
   Of limbs to one another tuned and wed
   That, as she walked, the air with music filled;
   Now she, for whose caress once duke and king
   And scarlet cardinal broke cords of fate,
   From couch to couch her restless slumber seeks
   And strokes indifferent lead with moaning hands.
   The citied dead snore past, the hissing seas
   Roar overhead again, and bows of coral
   Whip gleaming fish in darts of unmouthed colors:
   Trees of coral strip their colored leaves
   Of fish, and each leaf has two bats of light
   Where eyes would be, while other golden bats
   Slipping among them, gleam their curving sides.
   Thundering rocks crash down; spears of starlight
   Shatter and break among them. Water-stallions
   Neighing, crest the foaming rush of tides.
   Drowning waves, airward rushing, crash
   Columned upward, rake the stars and hear
   A humming chord within the heavens bowled,
   Then plunging back, they lose between the rocks
   A dying rumor of the chanting stars.
   The cave is ribbed with music; threads of sound
   Gleam on the whirring wings of bats of gold,
   Loop from the grassroots to the roots of trees
   Thrust into sunlight, where the song of birds
   Spins silver threads to gleam from bough to bough.
   Grass in meadows cools his fancy’s feet:
   Dew is on the grass, and birds in hedges
   Weave the sunlight with sharp streaks of flight.
   Bees break apple bloom, and peach and clover
   Sing in the southern air where aimless clouds
   Go up the sky-hill, cropping it like sheep,
   And startled pigeons, like a wind beginning,
   Fill the air with sucking silver sound.
   He would leave the cave, before the bats
   Of light grow weary, to their eaves return,
   While music fills the dark as wind fills sails
   And Silence like a priest on thin gray feet
   Tells his beads of minutes on beside.
   The cave is ribbed with dark, the music flies,
   The bats of light are eaved and dark again.
   Before him as, the priest of Silence by
   And all the whispering nuns of breathing blent
   With Silence’s self, he walks, the door beside
   Stands the moonwashed sentinel to break
   Its lichened sleep. Here halts the retinue.
   The priest between his fingers lets his beads
   Purr down. The nuns the timeless interval
   Fill with all the still despair of breath.
   He gateward turns. The sentinel his mace
   Lifts in calm indifference. At the stroke
   The sleeping gate wakes yawning back upon
   Where gaunt Orion, swinging by his knees,
   Crashes the arcing moon among the stars.
   IV
   and let
   within the antiseptic atmosphere
   of russel square grown brisk and purified
   the ymca (the american express for this sole purpose too)
   let lean march teasing the breasts of spring
   horned like reluctant snails within
   pink intervals
   a brother there
   so many do somanydo
   from out the weary courtesy of time
   fate a lady shopper takes her change
   brightly in coppers somanydo
   with soaped efficiency english food agrees
   even with thos cook
   here is a
   tunnel a long one like a black period
   with kissing punctuate on our left we see
   forty poplars like the breasts of girls
   taut with running
   on our left we see
   that blanched plateau wombing cunningly
   hushing his brilliant counterattack saying
   shhhhhh to general blah in the year mille
   neufcentvingtsomethingorother
   may five years defunct
   in a patient wave of sleep till natures
   stomach settles hearing their sucking boots
   their brittle sweat harshly evaporating carrying
   dung there was no time to drop
   the general himself
   is now on tour somewhere in the states
   telling about the war
   and here
   battalioned crosses in a pale parade
   the german burned his dead (which goes to show
   god visited him with proper wrath)
   o spring
   above unsapped convolvulae of hills april
   a bee sipping perplexed with pleasure o spring
   o wanton o cruel
   o bitter and new as fire
   baring to the curved and hungry hand
   of march your white unsubtle thighs
   grass his feet no longer trouble grows
   lush in lanes he
   sleeps quietly decay
   makes death a cuckold yes lady
   8 rue diena we take care of that yes
   in amiens youll find 3 good hotels
   V
   THERE is no shortening-breasted nymph to shake
   The tickets that stem up the lidless blaze
   Of sunlight stiffening the shadowed ways,
   Nor does the haunted silence even wake
   Nor ever stir.
   No footfall trembles in the smoky brush
   Where bright leaves flicker down the dappled shade:
   A tapestry that cloaks this empty glade
   And shudders up to still the pulsing thrush
   And frighten her
   With the contact of its unboned hands
   Until she falls and melts into the night
   Where inky shadows splash upon the light
   Crowding the folded darkness as it stands
   About each grave
   Whose headstone glimmers dimly in the gloom
   Threaded by the doves’ unquiet calls,
   Like memories that swim between the walls
   And dim the peopled stillness of a room
   Into a nave
   Where no light breaks the thin cool panes of glass
   To falling butterflies upon the floor;
   While the shadows crowd within the door
   And whisper in the dead leaves as they pass
   Along the ground.
   Here the sunset paints its wheeling gold
   Where there is no breast to still in strife
   Of joy or sadness, nor does any life
   Flame these hills and vales grown sharp and cold
   And bare of sound.
   VI
   MAN comes, man goes, and leaves behind
   The bleaching bones that bore his lust;
   The palfrey of his loves and hates
   Is stabled at the last in dust.
   He cozened it and it did bear
   Him to wishing’s utmost rim;
   But now, when wishing’s gained, he finds
   It was the steed that cozened him.
   VII
   TRUMPETS of sun to silence fall
   On house and barn and stack and wall.
   Within the cottage, slowly wheeling,
   The lamplight’s gold turns on the ceiling.
   Beneath the stark and windless vane
   Cattle stamp and munch their grain;
   Below the starry apple bough
   Leans the warped and clotted plow.
   The moon rolls up, while far away
   And thin with sorrow, the sheepdog’s bay
   Fills the valley with lonely sound.
   Slow leaves of dar 
					     					 			kness steal around.
   The watch the watchman, Death, will keep
   And man in amnesty may sleep.
   The world is still, for she is old
   And many’s the bead of a life she’s told.
   Her gossip there, the watching moon
   Views hill and stream and wave and dune
   And many’s the fair one she’s seen wither:
   They pass and pass, she cares not whither;—
   Lovers’ vows by her made bright,
   The outcast cursing at her light;
   Mazed within her lambence lies
   All the strife of flesh that dies.
   Then through the darkened room with whispers speaking
   There comes to man the sleep that all are seeking.
   The lurking thief, in sharp regret
   Watches the far world, waking yet,
   But which in sleep will soon be still;
   While he upon his misty hill
   Hears a dark bird briefly cry
   From its thicket on the sky,
   And curses the moon because her light
   Marks every outcast under night.
   Still swings the murderer, bent of knees
   In a slightly strained repose,
   Nor feels the faint hand of the breeze:
   He now with Solomon all things knows:
   That, lastly, breath is to a man
   But to want and fret a span.
   VIII
   HE FURROWS the brown earth, doubly sweet
   To a hushed great passage of wind
   Dragging its shadow. Beneath his feet
   The furrow breaks, and at its end
   He turns. With peace about his head
   Traverses he again the earth: his own,
   Still with enormous promises of bread
   And the clean smell of its strength upon him blown.
   Against the shimmering azure of the wood
   A blackbird whistles, cool and mellow;
   And there, where for a space he stood
   To fill his lungs, a spurting yellow
   Rabbit bursts, its flashing scut
   Muscled in erratic lines
   Of fright from furrow hill to rut.
   He shouts: the darkly liquid pines
   Mirror his falling voice, as leaf
   Raises clear brown depths to meet its falling self;
   Then again the blackbird, thief
   Of silence in a burnished pelf.
   Inscribes the answer to all life
   Upon the white page of the sky:
   The furious emptiness of strife
   For him to read who passes by.
   Beneath the marbled sky go sheep
   Slow as clouds on hills of green;
   Somewhere waking waters sleep
   Beyond a faintleaved willow screen.
   Wind and sun and air: he can
   Furrow the brown earth, doubly sweet
   With his own sweat, since here a man
   May bread him with his hands and feet.
   IX
   THE sun lies long upon the hills,
   The plowman slowly homeward wends;
   Cattle low, uneased of milk,
   The lush grass to their passing bends.
   Mockingbirds in the ancient oak
   In golden madness swing and shake;
   Sheep like surf against a cliff
   Of green hills, slowly flow and break.
   Then sun sank down, and with him went
   A pageantry whose swords are sheathed
   At last, as warriors long ago
   Let fall their storied arms and breathed
   This air and found this peace as he
   Who across this sunset moves to rest,
   Finds but simple scents and sounds;
   And this is all, and this is best.
   X
   BeYOND the hill the sun swam downward
   And he was lapped in azure seas;
   The dream that hurt him, the blood that whipped him
   Dustward, slowed and gave him ease.
   Behind him day lay stark with labor
   Of him who strives with earth for bread;
   Before him sleep, tomorrow his circling
   Sinister shadow about his head.
   But now, with night, this was forgotten:
   Phantoms of breath round man swim fast;
   Forgotten his father, Death; Derision
   His mother, forgotten by her at last.
   Nymph and faun in this dusk might riot
   Beyond all oceaned Time’s cold greenish bar
   To shrilling pipes, to cymbals’ hissing
   Beneath a single icy star
   Where he, to his own compulsion
   —A terrific figure on an urn—
   Is caught between his two horizons,
   Forgetting that he cant return.
   XI
   WHEN evening shadows grew around
   And a thin moon filled the lane,
   Their slowing breath made scarce a sound
   Where Richard lay with Jane.
   The world was empty of all save they
   And Spring itself was snared,
   And well’s the fare of any day
   When none has lesser fared:
   Young breasts hollowed out with fire,
   A singing fire that spun
   The gusty tree of his desire
   Till tree and gale were one;
   And a small white belly yielded up
   That they might try to make
   Of youth and dark and spring a cup
   That cannot fail nor slake.
   XII
   YOUNG Richard, striding toward town,
   Felt life within him grown
   Taut as a silver wire on which
   Desire’s sharp winds were blown
   To a monstrous sound that lapped him close
   With a rain of earth and fire,
   Flaying him exquisitely
   With whips of living wire.
   Under the arch where Mary dwelt
   And nights were brief and sharp,
   Her ancient music fell with his
   As cythern falls with harp
   And Richard’s fire within her fire
   Swirled up into the air,
   And polarised was all breath when
   A girl let down her hair.
   XIII
   WHEN I was young and proud and gay
   And flowers in fields were thicking,
   There was Tad and Ralph and Ray
   All waiting for my picking.
   And who, with such a page to spell
   And the hand of Spring to spread it,
   Could like the tale told just as well
   By another who had read it?
   Ah, not I! and if I had
   —When I was young and pretty—
   Not learned to spell, then there was Tad
   And Ralph and Ray to pity.
   There was Tad and Ray and Ralph,
   And field and lane were sunny;
   And ah! I spelled my page myself
   Long ere I married Johnny.
   XIV
   HIS mother said: I’ll make him
   A lad has never been
   (And rocked him closely, stroking
   His soft hair’s yellow sheen)
   His bright youth will be metal
   No alchemist has seen.
   His mother said: I’ll give him
   A brave and high desire,
   ’Till all the dross of living
   Burns clean within his fire.
   He’ll be strong and merry
   And he’ll be clean and brave,
   And all the world will rue it
   When he is dark in grave.
   But dark will treat him kinder
   Than man would anywhere
   (With barren winds to rock him
   —Though now he doesn’t care—
   And hushed and haughty starlight
   To stroke his golden hair)
   Mankind called him felon
   And hanged hi 
					     					 			m stark and high
   Where four winds could watch him
   Troubled on the sky.
   Once he was quick and golden,
   Once he was clean and brave.
   Earth, you dreamed and shaped him:
   Will you deny him grave?
   Being dead he will forgive you
   And all that you have done,
   But he’ll curse you if you leave him
   Grinning at the sun.
   XV
   BONNY earth and bonny sky
   And bonny was the sweep
   Of sun and rain in apple trees
   While I was yet asleep.
   And bonny earth and bonny sky
   And bonny’ll be the rain
   And sun among the apple trees
   When I’ve long slept again.
   XVI
   BEHOLD me, in my feathered cap and doublet,
   strutting across this stage that men call living:
   the mirror of all youth and hope and striving.
   Even you, in me, become a grimace.”
   “Ay, in that belief you too are but a mortal,
   thinking that peace and quietude and silence
   are but the shadows of your little gestures
   upon the wall of breathing that surrounds you.”
   “Ho, old spectre, solemnly ribbed with wisdom!
   D’ye think that I must feel your dark compulsions
   and flee with kings and queens in whistling darkness?
   I am star, and sun, and moon, and laughter.”
   “What star is there that falls, with none to watch it?
   What sun is there more permanent than darkness?
   What moon is there that cracks not? ay, what laughter,
   what purse is there that empties not with spending?”
   “Ho.… One grows weary, posturing and grinning,
   aping a dream to a house of peopled shadows!
   Ah, ’twas you who stripped me bare and set me
   gibbering at mine own face in a mirror.”