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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE SLEEPING BEAUTY, by EDITH SITWELL Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: When we come to that dark house Last Line: "and songs no heart can understand." | |||
I WHEN we come to that dark house, Never sound of wave shall rouse The bird that sings within the blood Of those who sleep in that deep wood, For in that house the shadows now Seem cast by some dark unknown bough. The gardener plays his old bagpipe To make the melons' gold seeds ripe; The music swoons with a sad sound -- "Keep, my lad, to the good safe ground! For once, long since, there was a felon With guineas gold as the seeds of a melon, And he would sail for a far strand To seek a waking, clearer land, -- A land whose name is only heard In the strange singing of a bird. The sea was sharper than green grass, The sailors would not let him pass, For the sea was wroth and rose at him Like the turreted walls of Jerusalem, Or like the towers and gables seen Within a deep-boughed garden green. And the sailors bound and threw him down Among those wrathful towers to drown. And oh, far best," the gardener said, "Like fruits to lie in your kind bed, -- To sleep as snug as in the grave In your kind bed, and shun the wave, Nor ever sigh for a strange land And songs no heart can understand." I hunted with the country gentlemen Who, seeing Psyche fly, thought her a hen And aimed at her; the mocking winged one Laughed at their wingless state, their crooked gun. Then on the water -- green and jewelled leaves Hiding ripe fruitage -- every sportsman grieves, Sitting and grumbling in their flat boat edged With the soft feathers of the foam, scarce fledged. But I will seek again the palace in the wood, Where never bird shall rouse our sleepy blood Within the bear-dark forests, far beyond This hopeless hunting, or Time's sleepy bond. * * * * * The gardener was old as tongues of nightingales, That in the wide leaves tell a thousand Grecian tales And sleep in golden nets of summer light, "Sweet fig," he called me, and would stay the flight Of plums that seemed Jove's golden-feathered rain. Then, birds like Fortunatus moved again Among the boughs with silent feathered feet, -- Spraying down dew like jewels amid the sweet Green darkness; figs, each like a purse of gold, Grow among leaves like rippled water green, and cold. "Beneath those laden boughs," the gardener sighs, "Dreaming in endlessness, forgotten beauty lies. Long since, a wandering and airy nymph She seemed, when the bright ladies of the court Came like the sylvan equipage Dian Leads in her hunting through the deepest woods And the Dodonian leaves of summer; only now We see them smile, an echo through dim leaves." Thus spoke the ancient man, wrinkled like old moonlight Beneath dark boughs. Time dreamed away to night, And while I heard the leaves like silver cymbals ring He told me this old tale of Beauty's mournful christening: -- Oh the pomp that passed those doors; Trains still sweep the empty floors, Pelongs, bulchauls, pallampores, Soundless now as any breeze, Of amber and of orangeries That sweep from isles in Indian seas; While in the floating and mysterious leaves A silver sound like some forgotten music grieves. The fairies all received an invitation, Ordered their sedan-chairs with great elation, Their richest trains, their plumes, and their bright trumps, Like silver fruits that from dark branches grow in clumps. The fays descend from each dark palanquin With fanfares and with lute sounds, walk within The shade; there, smiling dim as satyr-broods Horned as moons, that haunt our deepest woods, Are country gentlemen, so countrified That in their rustic grace they try to hide Their fingers sprouting into leaves; we see Them sweet as cherries growing from a tree -- All fire and snow; they grow and never move, Each in the grace of his Pan-haunted grove. "Her mouth," the first fay said, "as fair shall be As any gentle ripe red strawberry That grows among the thickest silver leaves; Her locks shall be as blonde as these -- the eve's Great winds of beauty, fleeces from those flocks That Dian tends in her deep woods, those locks Shall seem." The second fairy said, "Blessings like dew fall on her lovely head! For lovely as the cherubim's soft breath, Or Leda's love, whose cold melodious death Is heavenly music to the sad world lost, Her skin shall be, as fair as silver frost." But now within the dark shade of a deep-dreaming tree A darker shade and panoply we see, Drowning the soft sound of the plashing lute, A great fanfare is heard, like unripe silver fruit. "Who is this now who comes?" Dark words reply and swoon Through all the high cold arbours of the moon: "The slighted Laidronette, the unbidden fay, Princess of the Pagodas. . . . Shades, make way!" The sedan-chair that hides her shade is mellow As the trees' great fruit-jewels glittering yellow, And round it the old turbanned ladies flock Like apes that try to pluck an apricock. The little fawning airs are trembling wan; And silver as fair Leda's love, the swan, The moonlight seems; the apricocks have turned to amber, Cold as from the bright nymph Thetis' chamber, And far away, the fountains sigh forlorn As waving rustling sheaves of silver corn. The wicked fay descended, mopping, mowing In her wide-hooped petticoat, her water-flowing Brightly-perfumed silks. . . . "Ah, ha, I see You have remembered all the fays but me!" (She whipped her panthers, golden as the shade Of afternoon in some deep forest glade.) "I am very cross because I am old, And my tales are told, And my flames jewel-cold. I will make your bright birds scream, I will darken your jewelled dream, I will spoil your thickest cream. I will turn the cream sour, I will darken the bower, I will look through the darkest shadows and lour, -- And sleep as dark as the shade of a tree Shall cover you. . . . Don't answer me! For if the Princess prick her finger Upon a spindle, then she shall be lost As a child wandering in a glade of thorn, With sleep like roses blowing soft, forlorn, Upon each bough. This, madam, is the cost Of your dark rudeness. But I will not linger." And with a dark dream's pomp and panoply She swept out with her train; the soft sounds die, Of plumaged revelry bright as her train Of courtiers; and all was night again. Then through the deepest shades went Laidronette, Princess of the Pagodas; in a pet She left the domes, like rich and turbanned fruits In the great gardens, and she left the lutes; Back to her palace in her great sedan She floats; worlds turn to snow before her fan -- She sweeps through the dark woods to her vast palace Where now, at last, she can unleash her malice. There in her room, an amber orange burned On the Hesperides' dark trees and spurned By that gold-peruked conqueror the Sun -- An Alexander whence plumed rivers run, Fearing his fierceness, Ethiopian shapes The heat had kissed, with lips like burning grapes, Unwigged her for the night, while her apes beg That she will leave uncurtained that Roc's egg, Her head, a mount of diamonds bald and big In the ostrich feathers that compose her wig. Her dwarfs as round as oranges of amber Among the tall trees of the shadow clamber, And in Night's deep domain she monstrous lies With every little wicked dream that flies And crawls; with old Bacchantes black with wine, Whose very hair has changed into a vine, And ancient satyrs whose wry wig of roses Nothing but little rotting shames discloses; They lie where shadows, cold as the night breeze, Seem cast by rocks, and never by kind trees. II NEXT dawn, the ancient chamberlain Came like someone who has lain For years beneath the deepest water. . . . He called the housekeeper's young daughter, Where she sat in her bedgown, Smoothing the dusky dawn's owl-down, Until she leaned out through the wet Leaves in her pale sarcenet. "Forget the dawn is still owl-dark, Forget the wet leaves . . . you must hark: Owing to the fairy's malice, No spindles must be in the palace." In their dark leaf-hid bower the maidens chatter like a bird Awakening: "Phoebe, Audrey, have you heard? Oh, the dark panic here this very night, The slighted fairy's anger and our good queen's fright, And all our spindles banished! it would seem That we have naught to do all day but dream!" When the dew seems like trembling silver leaves, Cross Poll Troy looks out through the palace eaves. . . . "Knot up your butter-yellow satin hair, You lazy queans. . . . Come quick! come down the stair! Anne, Anne, Come draw the milk! The cream must be as thick as silk And yellow as the ripest sheen Of apricock or nectarine. Beneath the great leaves of that tree Wicked Goat-foot I can see! He'll steal the milk and steal the cream While you lie in a lazy dream. Fie, the lazy birds, the shames! Phoebe, you must light the flames; They will spring like greenest leaves Growing round your bower's dim eaves. Oh the foliage shrill and green In the fire! you lazy quean, Dream not of your heart's desire, -- Phoebe, come and light the fire!" III THEN through the broad green leaves the gardener came With a basket filled with honeyed fruits of dawn Plucked from the thickest leaves. They heard him sing As he walked where that pillared avenue Of tall clear-fruited ripe trees grew (For so the Palace seemed); and sweet His song fled, soft as wind and fleet: "Now the dawn lights seem Ripe yellow fruits in a dream Among the great green leaves Of dawn and rustling sheaves. The vast sun's rays like sheaves of wheat Are gold and dry, All bound together, growing yet -- An early offering. I Heard the old King's lullabies That his nurse the South Wind sighs, As she heaps the honeycombs Where he lies; the fruit-ripe domes All around him, clear and sweet. . . . And now the old King's cockscomb crown Is nodding, falls a-down, a-down. . . . Till the golden sheaves of the sun shall be mown He will lie in the palace above the wheat. The dew all tastes of ripening leaves; Dawn's tendril fingers heap The yellow honeyed fruits whose clear Sound flows into his sleep. Those yellow fruits and honeycomb. . . . 'Lulla-lullaby,' Shrilled the dew on the broad leaves -- 'Time itself must die -- ( -- must die'). Now in the palace the maidens knead And bake the little loaves of the bread, Gold as the sun; they sighing said, When will the sun begin to seed And waken the old Dead -- (cold Dead)?'" IV DO, do, Princess, do, The fairy Chatte Blanche rocks you slow. Like baskets of white fruit or pearls Are the fairy's tumbling curls, -- Or lattices of roses white Wherethrough the snows like doves take flight. Do, do, Princess, do, How furred and white is the fallen snow. Do, do, Princess, do, Like singing blackbirds are the eyes Of the fairy old and wise. A honeyed tune, the crystal drops Of rain that falls, and never stops, From flowers as white as seraphims' Breath no winter ever dims. . . . Do, do, Princess, do, Like birds that peck fruit sweet and shrill With painted bill, Flies down the snow. The angels came with footsteps light, They brushed her hair to make it bright, They taught her to be sweet and wise With kisses faint as butterflies. They said, "When you go up to heaven The nursery clock shall ne'er strike seven. Your boudoir shall be of white satin, You shall not say your prayers in Latin -- But you shall dance a minuet On heaven's floors; frizzed mignonette Shall seem your curls, of heaven's flowers Most fair; and you shall sit in bowers Of honeysuckle sweet as those pink fires Whereby the angels dry their locks upon the lights' gold wires." And when the Queen called for her child, they brought Only her image, formed to please the Court. . . . An old man with a gardener's hat and red Poll-parrot nose brought her a tiny bed Whereon lies folded a small poppet rose That in her dark leaves like a little babe lies close. For after Laidronette's wild rage was spent, The chamberlain to the child's nursery went And sped her far away, like the East Wind, To worlds of snow, far from the fairy's mind. And there the Princess stayed till she was weaned From milk of doves; then o'er the snow, bright-preened By its sharp bill, the wind, the chamberlain Whisked the Princess back to the Court again. V BUT the Dowager Queen shook her old head: "The rose, the peach, and the quince-flower red And the strawberry flower in the snows are dead. If none of the rose-tribe can survive The snow, then how can our poppet live?" And in her gown of quilted satin, As red as quince-flowers, she reads Latin Missals to the peaches that grow Gilded with suns, then fade like snow; They lie in the nets of dew at leisure. And this is now her only pleasure -- This and her parrot long ago Dead, -- but none dared tell her so, And therefore the bird was stuffed and restored To lifeless immortality; bored It seemed, but yet it remained her own; And she never knew the bird's soul had flown. And so indeed seemed Destiny, -- A bird fine-feathered, fair to see In spite of its condor-wings, fierce beak, And hooded eyes. . . . Grown old and weak, Imprisoned now in a gilded cage In her powder-closet, far from the rage Of winter, it can only sing Roulades, and preen its bright clipped wing Upon her perfumed dressing table In a cage with a foolish bell-hung gable, Beneath the portrait of dead Queen Anne (Whose life was the sweet air blown from a fan), 'Midst brightly perfumed water-flowing Eighteenth-century silks where growing Strawberry flowers of the frail frost Upon the diamond-panes are lost. VI AT Easter when red lacquer buds sound far slow Quarter-tones for the old dead Mikado, Through avenues of lime trees, where the wind Sounds like a chapeau chinois, shrill, unkind, -- The Dowager Queen, a curling Korin wave That flows for ever past a coral cave, With Dido, Queen of Carthage, slowly drives (Her griffin dog that has a thousand lives) Upon the flat-pearled and fantastic shore Where curled and turbanned waves sigh "Nevermore," And she is sunk beneath a clear still lake Of sleep, -- so frail with age she cannot wake. . . . A strange horizon and a soundless sea Must separate wise age from you and me -- They watch life's movements ripening like fruit And sigh, knowing the gnarled and twisted root. O people building castles on the sand, And taking one another by the hand, What do you find within each other's eyes? -- What wisdom unknown of the lonely wise? -- The promise of what spring, the certainty Of what eternal life to come, -- what lie? Only the sound of Time's small muffled drum, The sound of footsteps that will never come, And little marches all beribboned gay That lead down the lime avenues away To the dark grave . . . we for a little weep, Then pray a little, sinking into sleep. How far is this wise age from the bright youth Of Princess Cydalise, a warm wind from the south? VII IN the great nursery where the poppet maids Seem small round fruits that grow in leafy glades, The Princess grew in beauty till she seemed That gentle maid of whom Endymion dreamed. And in those evenings when the lovely moon Shone through the smiling woods of deepest June, Then through the curtains she would play "Bo-Peep" With fleecy lamb-tailed clouds, when she should sleep. Sometimes the moon would sing her ancient songs Of lovely ladies and forgotten wrongs; And once she whispered that within the wood An ancient satyr, wiser than the brood From which he sprang, within a cloudy cave Teaches philosophies both old and grave. The Princess said, "With my light step I will be gone, To peep within that far cave -- but alone!" Yet in the darkness, her gazelle-light footsteps ran Far from the cave of that wise satyr-man. VIII IN the great gardens, after bright spring rain, We find sweet innocence come once again, White periwinkles, little pensionnaires With muslin gowns and shy and candid airs, That under saint-blue skies, with gold stars sown, Hide their sweet innocence by spring winds blown, From zephyr libertines that like Richelieu And d'Orsay their gold-spangled kisses blew; And lilies of the valley whose buds blonde and tight Seem curls of little school-children that light The priests' procession, when on some saint's day Along the country paths they make their way; Forget-me-nots, whose eyes of childish blue, Gold-starred like heaven, speak of love still true; And all the flowers that we call "dear heart," Who say their prayers like children, then depart Into the dark. Amid the dew's bright beams The summer airs, like Weber waltzes, fall Round the first rose who flushed with her youth seems Like young Princesses dressed for their first ball: Who knows what beauty ripens from dark mould After the sad wind and the winter's cold? -- But a small wind sighed, colder than the rose Blooming in desolation, "No one knows." IX THE Princess was young as the innocent flowers That bloom and love through the bright spring hours; Sometimes she crept through locked doors to annoy The palace housekeeper, cross Mrs. Troy, Who kept all the whimpering sad ghosts locked In a cupboard, was grieved and faintly shocked If the Princess Jehanne, long since dead, Whose hair was of costly long gold thread, Would slip her flat body, like a gleaming Quivering fish in a clear pool dreaming, Through the deep mesh of a conversation, Making some ghostly imputation; -- Or if she frightened the maids till they wince By stealing a withered gold-crowned quince Wherewith they make preserves; in the gloom She seems, as she glimmers round the room, Like a lovely milk-white unicorn In a forestial thicket of thorn. Life was so still, so clear, that to wake Under a kingfisher's limpid lake In the lovely afternoon of a dream Would not remote or stranger seem. Everything seemed so clear for a while -- The turn of a head or a deep-seen smile, Then a smile seen through wide leaves or deep water, That beauty seemed to the King's daughter; For a flying shadow passed, then gone Was the gleam, and the Princess was alone. How sweet seemed the flowers of spring again -- As pink as Susan and Polly and Jane, Like country maids so sweet and shy Who bloom and love and wonder not why: Now when summer comes it seems the door To the graves that lie under the trivial floor, And the gardens hard to touch and shining, Where no mirage dew lies whining. And the sweet flowers seem for a fading while Dear as our first love's youthful smile, -- Till they bruise and wound the heart and sense With their lost and terrible innocence. X WHEN each clear raindrop holds for flight A wingless world all plumage-bright, Like crystal-clear wysteria, After the storm's hysteria, The Princess visited the farm Where all the beasts lie, furred as palm That on the budding Easter boughs Among the winds of beauty grows. The farm-pond, fruitish-soft and ripe, Was smooth as a daguerreotype; The farm-maid, Rosa, under flimsy Muslin skies, an angel's whimsy, Walked. . . . Her daisy-frilled frock Was stiff and harder than a rock, Frills touch her feet, like plants foam down; Her wooden trellised hair is brown. The grass is furry as a bear With heat; the donkey's panniers flare With fruits whose clear complexions, waxen, Hide in leaves all hairy-flaxen. And from the sky, white angels lean To stroke poor Dobbin's palm-furred skin, And pluck from the round leaves the pink Schoolgirlish summer fruits that wink -- Giggle insipidly. On winding Roads whose dust seems gilded binding Made for "Paul et Virginie" -- (So flimsy-tough those roads are), see The panniered donkey pass. The ass's Thoughts as through the dust he passes Where leaves seem parasols of gauze Shading the striped wooden floors, Seem like this: "When long ago I worked for Balaam, never so Appeared an angel! times are stranger Now," and turning to his manger He longs, for loads have made him weary, For gentian stars, all rough and hairy, And trees that bear white satin streamers Of lovely flowers to please poor dreamers. The Princess passed goats, gold as wheat, With a kind white milky bleat, Under the wide leaves mild as milk; The billowing pigs with ears of silk; Maternal cows with a white horn As hard and dry as rustling corn -- All the poor shadows cast by our sad earthly dress Of faults and virtues, wavering childishness! XI WHEN we were young, how beautiful life seemed! -- The boundless bright horizons that we dreamed, And the immortal music of the Day and Night, Leaving the echo of their wonder and their might Deep in our hearts and minds. How could the dust Of superstitions taught in schoolrooms, lust In love's shape, dim our beauty? What dark lie, Or cruelty's voice, could drown this God-made harmony? For we knew naught of prison-worlds man built Around us that we may not know man's guilt, -- The endless vistas of the goatish faces Echoing each other, and the basis Of clay, the plumeless wings of Destiny, The vistas leading only to the grave where we must lie. * * * * * Then all the beauty of the world lay deep Mirrored within the beauty water-clear Of flowering boughs; Helen and Deirdre dreamed And fading, wakened in that loveliness Of watery branches. In that dead wild spring Through the bird's shaken voice we heard God sing. But age has dimmed our innocent paradise With a faint shadow, shaken dust within our eyes, -- And we are one now with the lonely wise, Knowing the spring is only the clear mirage Of an eternal beauty that is not. Those were the days when the fleet summer seemed The warmth and infinite loveliness of God, Who cared for us, within a childish heaven. We could believe then! Oh the lips and eyes That spoke of some far undimmed paradise! Those were the days. . . . XII NOW that the summer only seems the sad Mechanical dull action of the light And shadow playing over a dead world -- Dead as my heart -- it seems too long ago For the remembrance of the beauty and the world we used to know; When the warm lights of afternoon were mellow As honeyed yellow pears, the Princess played At Troy Town in the palace garden, tossed And through the smiling leaves of summer lost A round compact gold ball, the smaller image Of this hard world, grown dry of any love -- Or walked upon the shore, watched the fantastic Arabesque, the horsemanship of waves. "Mademoiselle Fantoche, where do they go?" A faint cold wind replied, "I do not know." THE PRINCESS "Upon the infinite shore by the sea The lovely ladies are walking like birds, Their gowns have the beauty, the feathery Grace of a bird's soft raiment; remote Is their grace and their distinction, -- they float And peck at their deep and honeyed words As though they were honeyed fruits; and this Is ever their life, between sleep and bliss Though they are winged for enchanted flight, They yet remain ever upon the shore Of Eternity, seeking for nothing more, Until the cold airs dull their beauty And the snows of winter load those dazzling Wings, and no bird-throat can sing!" THE GOVERNANTE "Look not on the infinite wave, Dream not of the siren cave, Nor hear the cold wind in the tree Sigh of worlds we cannot see. (She sings) The hot muscatelle Siesta time fell, And the Spanish belle Looked out through her shutters. Under the eglantine Thorny and lean A shadow was playing a mandoline, mutters Only this: 'Wave Your fan . . . siren cave Never was cold as the wind from the grave.' The governante Came walking andante, -- Sailed like a brigantine, black of brow. And the falconette Who danced a ballette Sang on the pretty, the brunette bough: 'The ambassade Of shadows invade Death's most ultimate, peaceful shade. . . . Lovely lady, where are you now?' * * * * * Come, Madame, you must eat your creamy curd, Soft as the plumage of a bird, -- Break through the jewelled branches' bird-soft gloom And find Malinn within the cool still-room." XIII WHERE reynard-haired Malinn Walks by rock and cave, The Sun, a Chinese mandarin, Came dripping from the wave. "Your hair seems like the sunrise O'er Persia and Cathay -- A rose-red music strange and dim As th' embalmed smile of seraphim," He said to her by the white wave In the water-pallid day (A forest of white coral boughs Seemed the delicate sea-spray): "In envy of your brighter hair, -- Since, Madam, we must quarrel, -- I've changed the cold flower-lovely spray To branches of white coral; And when, white muslin madam, you Coquette with the bright wind, I shall be but thin rose-dust; He will be cold, unkind." The flowers that bud like rain and dream On thin boughs water-clear, Fade away like a lovely music Nobody will hear, And Eolus and Boreas Brood among those boughs, Like hermits haunting the dark caves None but the wise man knows. But Malinn's reynard-coloured hair, Amid the world grown sere Still seemed the Javanese sunrise Whose wandering music will surprise Into cold bird-chattering cries The Emperor of China Lying on his bier. XIV THE birds, strange flashing glints of another life, Peck at the fruits of summer, that too soon Will fade into a little gilded dust. Then underneath the dancing, glancing bough Came Malinn, with her round cheeks dyed as pink As the insipid empty-tasting fruits Of summer giggling through the rounded leaves. Outside the stillroom was a cherry tree, And through the dancing shadows she could see Cross ancient Poll Troy come to do her duty. . . . She had a cold frost-bitten beauty Like blue moonlight smooth and cold As amber; with her trembling old Hands she tied the boughs aloft Through the air all creamy soft; Then on the sill of the woodland dairy, Moving as quick and light as a fairy, She put a bowl of the thickest cream (As thick as chestnut flowers in a dream). The gossiping naiad of the water, In her sprigged gown like the housekeeper's daughter, Giggles outside the stillroom; she Plucks at the thick-bustled cherry tree. And Poll is cross; she chases cherried Country maids like thickest-berried Cherry trees in their ruched gown Till they run from the palace, down, Like the sprigged muslin waterfalls Of this clear country, to where calls Pan, with his satyrs on the rocks Feeding their wave-weary flocks. The naiad's giggling irritates Cross Poll Troy till at last she rates Her through the thick-leaved cherry tree: "My eyes are dim, -- I yet can see You, lazy quean! Go work!" "I can't." "I say you shall!" "I say I shan't!" "But when the airs are creamy soft And candle-flames are quince flowers, oft Though my heart flutters like a bird, All dream-dark, though as soft as curd The moonlight seems still, from my bed I rise and work, you sleepy head! Though I am dim and very old, I wake the flames all jewel-cold, The flames that seem, when they soar high, Like waterfalls of jewels; you sigh, While I, Miss, churn and make the curd," Piped Poll Troy like a small cross bird, Then shuts the stillroom window, goes, for she Still hears the naiad giggling through the tree. But Malinn stays where the deep fire's red flowers Should be as sweet and red as hawthorn bowers. (She sings) "The purring fire has a bear's dull fur, Its warmth is sticky, dark as a burr. . . . Come drowse, for now there is no eye To watch, no voice to ask me why! All night I hear my animal blood Cry to my youth, 'Come to the wood' . . . But Darkness lumbers like a bear, Grumbling, cumbers floor and stair. . . . And on the eightieth step, I know That on the moon's green lichen stain I'll slip . . . and his dark breath will blow My light out. . . . All will be still again!" She cried out to the naiad: "I have torn My flimsy dress upon a thicket's thorn; The petal of a briar-rose lies forlorn Upon it." Through the glinting leaves about the dairy Appeared the cream - smug face of the wicked fairy. . . . "You've torn your dress, my poppet. . . . I'll come in. . . . I've brought my spindle with me and I'll spin A dress for you. . . . Such grey-blue sleeves Of muslin, like the wind of eve's; It shall have frills that flare like leaves, The ribbons shall be preened, Quilled prettily and sheened. As when the courtier-wind plays with a flock Of birds for battledore and shuttlecock -- Whose feathers stream like ribbons. I will hide A jewel within each one: you'll seem a bride For Ariel or some rich water-god. . . . Come, spin!" Malinn looked through the leaves. . . . "Ma'am, please come in!" Far off, the Martha-coloured scabious Grew among dust as dry as old Eusebius, And underneath the cotton-nightcap trees Wanders a little cold pig-snouted breeze. Then in a gown all frilled with foliage like hell's fires, And quilled like nests of cockatrices, with the light's gold wires Sewing it stiff, old Laidronette the fairy Crept through the window of the woodland dairy. Butter and cream Turn hard as a jewel, The shrill flames scream, The leaves mutter "cruel." Through the dark jewelled leaves See the Princess peep As lovely as eve's Soft wind of sleep. She picks up the spindle. "Oh, the curious bliss! . . . . . . It pricks my finger now. How strange this is, -- For I am like that lovely fawn-queen dead Long since, -- pierced through the pool-clear heart," she said. Her room now seems like some pale cave Haunted by a goatish wave. Through the curtains -- waves of water -- Comes the housekeeper's young daughter, Where like coral-branches seem The candles' light, the candles' gleam. "Does Echo mourn her lost love there?" Echo is a courtly air Sighing the name of Cydalise Beside clear pools of sleep; she sees Her like a nymph in some deep grot (Where the wave whispers not) Like a rose-bush in that cave Haunted by a goatish wave. XV DO, do, Princess, do, Like a tree that drips with gold you flow With beauty ripening very slow. Soon beneath that peaceful shade The whole world dreaming will be laid. Do, do, Princess, do, The years like soft winds come and go. Do, do, Princess, do, How river-thick flow your fleeced locks Like the nymphs' music o'er the rocks. . . . From satyr-haunted caverns drip These lovely airs on brow and lip. Do, do, Princess, do, Like a tree that drips with gold you flow. XVI BUT far from snow-soft sleep, the country Fair Spangled like planets the bucolic air Under hot Capricorn, with gold goat-legs, Rough satyr hands, that in the sunburnt hay Pulled the long wind-blown hair of Susans, Megs, And under great trees dark as water lay. It seemed a low-hung country of the blind, -- A sensual touch upon the heart and mind, Like crazy creaking chalets hanging low From the dark hairiness of bestial skies The clouds seem, like a potting-shed where grow The flower-like planets for the gay flower-show: Gold-freckled calceolarias, Marigolds, cinerarias, African marigolds, coarse-frilled And cherries, apricots, all chilled With dew, for thus the bright stars seemed To cottage windows where none dreamed. But country gentlemen who from their birth, Like kind red strawberries, root deep in earth And sleep as in the grave, dream far beyond The sensual aspects of the hairy sky That something hides, they have forgotten why! And so they wander, aiming with their gun At mocking feathered creatures that have learnt That movement is but groping into life, -- Under rough trees like shepherds' goatish tents. And only Midsummer's wide country Fair Seems to them heaven and hell, and earth and air. The people ride in roundabouts; their hair Is like the gardens of the Pleiades, Or the first impulse from which music sprung, And the dark sound in the smooth growth of trees; They sparkle like the sea; their love is young For ever, they are golden as the boy Who gave an apple smoother than the breeze To lady Venus, lovely as the seas; Their lips are like the gold fires burning Troy. Like harsh and crackling rags of laughter seems The music, bright flung as an angel's hair -- Yet awful as the ultimate despair Of angels and of devils. . . . Something dreams Within the sound that shrieks both high and low Like some ventriloquist's bright-painted show On green grass, shrill as anger, dulled as hate: It shrieks to the dulled soul, "Too late, too late!" Sometimes it jangles thin as the sharp wires Whereon the poor half-human puppets move; Sometimes it flares in foliage like hell's fires, Or whispers insincerities for love. A little hurdy-gurdy waltz sounds hollow And bright-husked as the hearts of passing people, Whose talk is only of the growth of plums And pears: "Life goes, Death never comes," They sigh, while the bright music like a wave Sings of far lands and many a siren cave. And there are terrible and quick drum-taps That seem the anguished beat of our own heart Making an endless battle without hope Against materialism and the world. And sometimes terrible lumbering Darkness comes Breaking the trivial matchboard floors that hide From us the Dead we dare not look upon: O childish eyes, O cold and murdered face -- Dead innocence and youth that were our own! But age has brought a little subtle change Like the withdrawal caused by the slow dropping Of cold sad water on some vast stone image: A slow withdrawal, a sad, gradual change O'er tragic masks through which strange gods have cried -- Till seen through death-cold rents in saturnine leaves They seem, almost, to echo in their form The saturnine cold laughter of the water. And this, too, is the fate of country masks Of Comedy, as fresh as smiling fruits Of summer seen, vermilion, through deep leaves. Now from the countrysides where people know That Destiny is wingless and bemired, With feathers dirty as a hen's, too tired To fly -- where old pig-snouted Darkness grovels For life's mired rags among the broken hovels -- The country bumpkins come, with faces round And pink as summer fruits, with hair as gold, Sharp-pointed, as the summer sun (that old Bucolic mime, whose laughing pantomime Is rearing pink fruits from the sharp white rime). They come from little rooms, each a poor booth (Seen through the summer leaves, all smiling smooth). There, for all beauty, is the badly painted Ancestral portrait of their grey-beard God; In that poor clownish booth it is so cold That small airs prick like grass, a wooden sword. They pass along the country roads as thick With walls and gardens as a childish heaven, Where all the flowers seem a pink fleshly heart And mirage-dews sigh, "We will never part." And there are young Princesses at each inn, And poor young people poverty makes wise, With eyes like maps of the wide summer heaven; And on the country roads there is a shrine, As blue and sparkling as the sea-god's wine, For country gods and goddesses of gardens, Where every fruit and flower to old songs hardens: Pomona, tinsel-pink as that bright pear, The moon -- she seems a poor bucolic clown With dry and gilded foliage for her hair, -- Where branches cast a shallow melancholy, An owl-soft shadow falling over folly. The pink schoolgirlish fruits hang in bright sheaves Between the rounded and the negroid leaves. . . . And we remember nursery afternoons When the small music-box of the sweet snow Gave half-forgotten tunes, and our nurse told Us tales that fell with the same tinkling notes. . . . "Once on a time," she said, "and long ago." Her voice was sweet as the bright-sparkling rime, The fruits are cold as that sweet music's time -- Yet all those fruits like the bright snow will fade. The country bumpkins travel to the Fair, For Night and Day, and Hell and Heaven, seem Only a clown's booth seen in some bad dream, Wherefrom we watch the movements of our life Growing and ripening like summer fruits And dwindling into dust, a mirage lie: Hell is no vastness, it has naught to keep But little rotting souls and a small sleep. It has the same bright-coloured clarity we knew In nursery afternoons so long ago, Bright as our childish dreams; but we are old, This is a different world; the snow lies cold Upon our heart, though midsummer is here. . . . XVII BUT in the Court, the little people know That Sleep is bright as fruit, and soft as snow. The sunlight seems like warm brocade In the courtyard, through the great arcade; And golden as a Sultan's turban The ripened medlars hang; the urban Maids of the ladies at the palace Talked like birds, with a gentle malice, And on the wall, light-motes take shapes Of vines, with showers of emerald grapes. "Queen Venus is a toothless crone, Blackened with age; all night alone She lies, and no bird ever cries For the wild starlight of her eyes." "Once Helen was Prince Paris' doxy; She meets her lovers now by proxy And wrinkled as the gold sea-sand Are the breasts that once seemed heaven's land." "Look at that little shadow . . . oh, the joy, As black as any jewelled negro boy. O little shade -- see, I will call him Zambo. Look where he silent sits, and plays dumbcrambo, There at the door, with ghosts . . . and his mentero, Half in brocaded sunlight, points to Zero! Black fingers stretched to pluck the fruits of gold Through the great leaves. . . . I feel a sudden cold Sweet air from the arcade. . . . Again it goes. The scented darkness seems as rich as snows, Like cornucopias with ostrich plumes And great gold fruits, the clouds seem from these glooms." Down in the great arcade of the courtyard The fairies' coachmen, tawny as a pard, Are talking of those feathered July eves When all these dames desert their country leaves (Though still as lovely as those moonlight maids Juno and Dian, haunting their deep glades) -- And in their coach, with maids and footmen, drive Up to the great town houses where they live; No longer they seem fairies, but we see Them named as the old Duchess of Bohea, And Madam Cards, the Marchioness of Gout; Though they are old, they still enjoy a rout, And through the dark leaves of the shadow-grove, As wickedly as ever, eyes still rove That dealt death from behind a fluttered fan In Pompeii, Athens, before Time began. In courtyards stained with the black night like wine, Strange figures with hair lifted like a vine Listen. . . . Who is it hearkens at their doors, In the vast rooms and endless corridors? It is goat-footed, mincing Death, who presses His muzzle at the keyhole, hears their dresses Rustling like rose-leaves. . . . They hit him with their fan, Through scented moonlight move to their sedan. When the hot gilded day will reach A restful close, A Japanese dwarf forest on the beach, With dark trees of the shadow, the street grows. How sand-like quivers the gold light Under the large black leaves of shadow; mirage-bright It lies, that dusty gold, Untouched of any air, Like Dead-Sea fruit carved in cornelian, bold; The faces of a man and Pleasure's mournful daughter Show lovely in the light, a moment flare, Then shadows fall again -- dark agates through clear water. Then these Chinoiseries, old ghosts of red and white Smooth lacquer in their palanquins take flight, For tea, and the last esoteric rage Whose plumes may soften age, that harpy's cage. Their smile is like Death's trap . . . a little gilded dust Of valueless beauty from the sun, soon must Brush, for a fading while, each feathered cheek That paradisal airs will never sleek, -- And round them, as they move, the unfading sea, Eternity With its cool feathered airs of beauty, sighs of no horizons they can see. What would these ghosts do, if the truths they know, That were served up like snow-cold jewelled fruits, And the enfeathered airs of lutes, Could be their guests in cold reality? They would be shivering, Wide-eyed as a negro king Seeing the evanescent mirage snow, -- They would be silenced by the cold That is of the spirit, endlessly, Unfabled, and untold. the swan's breath winter these have known is finer Fading than the early snows of China, The poems of Queen Marguerite of Navarre, (Narcissus-petalled, perfumed like a star) Or the Pleiades' citron-scented poems, fading like the snows, Perfuming their long fingers till their eyelids close. The winters these have known have been too kind, With skies that seemed the bitter gilded rind Of unattainable fruits; small women go As white as ermines, and small winds are slow As tunes upon a lute; the point-lace on the trees, And the pearl-berries of the snow upon dark bushes freeze, And the snow falls, as sharp and bright, unripe and sour, As the budding grapes' bright perfume, or the sweet grape-flower. The daughters of the Silence now are dead, And these Chinoiserie ghosts, These mummies in dim hosts, Tread the long mournful avenues instead; Alarm the soul by their cold interest -- For what can be the purpose of their quest? When spring begins, in China and Thibet Through bell'd lime-avenues a springe is set To catch the softly-smiling wind, The cherubim to catch and blind As cruel men blind a singing-bird; They trap them with the sound of lutes And the softest smiles of fruits, That these old ghosts may prove the feathered creatures real to hold, And make them sing upon a perch of gold In cages with a foolish bell-hung gable, Amid the powders on their dressing-table; Till, trapped by our mortality, they die, and their small bones, Sounding as sweetly as the west wind's tones, Are sold because they sound like a small music-box; Their slayers sell for silver the bright plumes in flocks, To make the pillows for a sleepy head That never dreams of heaven, but the lonely Dead. And still they dwindle the bright world down to the gilded glooms Of dust, these mummies, hieing, harrying fast The Soul, their quarry, through the deserted tombs -- Or lying, lotus-eaters in a dreamful ease, Perfuming their cold lips with silence and the past Beneath the Asian darkness of smooth trees. . . . Thus spoke the men; then sleep came colder than the rose Blooming in desolation. . . . No one knows The end there is to dust -- it is the soul that shall survive them at the last. XVIII BENEATH a wan and sylvan tree Whose water-flowing beauty our tired eyes Can feel from very far, two travellers lie; And one is swarthy as the summer wind, -- A man who travelled from a far countree; The other Soldan in his pomp and panoply Seems like le Roi Soleil in all his pride, When his gold periwig is floating wide. They talked together, those dark kings beneath the bough, And their songs mingled with soft winds that flow. THE SOLDAN (sings) "When green as a river was the barley, Green as a river the rye, I waded deep and began to parley With a youth whom I heard sigh. 'I seek,' said he, 'a lovely lady, A nymph as bright as a queen, Like a tree that drips with pearls her shady Locks of hair were seen; And all the rivers became her flocks Though their wool you cannot shear, Because of the love of her flowing locks. The kingly sun like a swain Came strong, unheeding of her scorn, Wading in deeps where she has lain, Sleeping upon her river lawn And chasing her starry satyr train. She fled, and changed into a tree, -- That lovely fair-haired lady. . . . And now I seek through the sere summer Where no trees are shady!' They say that Daphne never was more fair With all the shaken pearls of her long hair -- The lovely tree that was Apollo's love, To whom he brought his richest spoils -- than she! And oh, that other Soldan, the hot sun Burns not with love as I, with my dark pomp, My helmet thick-plumed as a water-god's, Whose cornucopia filled with dripping jewels Is not so rich as treasuries I bear -- Dark spices, nard and spikenard, ambergris . . . No maid will change into a tree before my kiss!" THE MAN FROM A FAR COUNTREE "But I will be content with some far-lesser maid, Who feeds her flocks beneath a fair-haired tree And listens to the wind's song; she shall be My soldanesse, and rule my far countree. (He sings) Rose and Alice, Oh, the pretty lassies, With their mouths like a calice And their hair a golden palace -- Through my heart like a lovely wind they blow. Though I am black and not comely, Though I am black as the darkest trees, I have swarms of gold that will fly like honey-bees, By the rivers of the sun I will feed my words Until they skip like those fleeced lambs The waterfalls, and the rivers (horned rams), Then for all my darkness I shall be The peacefulness of a lovely tree -- A tree wherein the golden birds Are singing in the darkest branches, oh!" Thus sang those plumed kings, and the winds that flow Whispered of lands no waking heart may know. XIX NOW from the silk pavilions of the seas The nymphs sing, gold and cold as orange-trees. "Through gilded trellises Of the heat, Dolores, Inez, Manuccia, Isabel, Lucia, Mock Time that flies. 'Lovely bird, will you stay and sing, Flirting your sheened wing, -- Peck with your beak, and cling To our balconies?' They flirt their fans, flaunting -- 'O silence enchanting As music!' then slanting Their eyes, Like gilded or emerald grapes, They take mantillas, capes, Hiding their simian shapes. Sighs Each lady, 'Our spadille Is done.' . . . 'Dance the quadrille From Hell's towers to Seville; Surprise Their siesta,' Dolores Said. Through gilded trellises Of the heat, spangles Pelt down through the tangles Of bell-flowers; each dangles Her castanets, shutters Fall while the heat mutters, With sounds like a mandoline Or tinkled tambourine. . . . Ladies, Time dies!" And petals of the foam, like perfumed orange-blossom, Pelt the nymphs singing in their bowers -- cold as their bosom. XX IN the hot noon -- like glowing muscadine The light seems, and the shade like golden wine -- Beneath the deep shade of the trees' arcade, All foppish in his dressing-gown's brocade And turban, comes the great Magnifico, And hearkens not where the becafico Time taps at the lovely sylvan trees. Now underneath the shadows fallen from these The queen sits with her court, and through the glade The light from their silks casts another silver shade. Home goes the great Magnifico, his dressing-gown Is changed for water-rustling silks that drown The shades, and walking proudly as the breeze Now he advances through the sylph-slim trees. "Madam, the Soldan and the King of Ethiop's land Approach as suitors for your daughter's hand." The day grew water-pale and cool as eves. . . . A lady sang through water-rippling leaves: "The mauve summer rain Is falling again -- It soaks through the eaves And the ladies' sleeves -- It soaks through the leaves That like silver fish fall In the fountains, recall Afternoons when I Was a child small and shy In the palace. . . . Fish lie On the grass with lives darkling. Our laughter falls sparkling As the mauve raindrops bright When they fall through the light With the briefest delight. The pavilions float On the lake like a boat. . . . Mauve rains from trees fall Like wysteria flowers . . . all My life is like this And drifts into nothingness! The strange ladies sigh 'The autumn is nigh' . . . The King bows and mutters. . . . His eyelids seem shutters Of a palace pavilion Deserted a million Echoing years ago. Oh, but the rain falls slow." * * * * * But no one heard the great Magnifico Or this pale song, for underneath the low Deep bough the queen slept, while the flowers that fall Seemed Ariadne's starry coronal. XXI IN the great room above the orangery The old queen's dwarfs are drinking their bohea While the thin flames seem gold and whispering leaves Of trees in the Hesperides, whose faint sound grieves. So small, they could be hid in a pomander, Miss Ellen and Sir Pompey Alexander Seem . . . the tea is gold as evening, The perfumes in the orangery sing, And, flashing like exotic-plumaged birds, The lovely shadows whisper unknown words. Upon the wall, the portrait of Queen Anne Frowned at them, and waved a languid fan, -- Queen Anne, whose white wig glittering in the net Of gold light seems a florid bergerette, Sheep-floury underneath the powder . . . Her lips' small strawberry said "Louder" To the shadows' fluttering bird . . . But the lovely one scarce heard. . . . The zephyrs' lips like ruffled roses sleek Caressingly, each faintly upturned cheek; And now the shutters like blue water Fall . . . where is the King's daughter? The candle-flames seem orange-flowers Whose pale light falls in perfumed showers; But Queen Anne, sleeping on the wall, Long dead, would answer not at all. XXII THE little golden lights like Chinese ladies peep Through the old queen's curtains, then like sleep Their gentle footsteps fade again and fail, And once again the world is ghostly pale. In the queen's powder-closet, Mrs. Troy Teases the flames to wake them and annoy . . . So pale are those thin ghostly flames that yet They seem like the old notes of a spinet That sometimes sounds a courante or gavotte By Mozart or Scarlatti -- sometimes not -- While the pale silken ribbons of the rain, Knotted, are fluttering down the window-pane. But suddenly the flames turn green and red As unripe fruit; their shrilling fills her head With noises like a painted puppet-show; And in that music, shrieking high and low, Dead is the pointed flames' small minuet -- And from the shrilling fire leaps Laidronette. The ghostly apparition that appeared Wagged from her chin a cockatrice's beard; She crouches like a flame, the adder-sting Of her sharp tongue is ready; hear her sing: "The candle flames bob Like strawberries low, Bobcherry, bobcherry, See them go In the hands of the queen's maids Under the trees Of the shadow, flickering in the breeze. Crept a starved and a humble air From the hovels, grunting with low pig-snout, -- Starved thin, creeping Everywhere, weeping It blew the queen's strawberry candle-flames out. The maids in long chequered gowns Hunting for these Find but the shadows' Flickering trees." The humble ghosts like poppet maids Walk tiptoe in the shadow glades. Their mouths seem small red strawberries; Their naive, naiad-titterings freeze The airs in the long corridors Where they must hark at hopeless doors. And Mrs. Troy rose up like a thin shriek Or pointed flame. . . . "Oh, my poor head is weak! Oh dear, Oh dear, Whatever shall I do? In the flames' shrill rout Laidronette slipped through. I forget the Latin For my prayer! My quilted satin Is beyond repair! I must tell the queen -- But I dare not be seen! Oh dear, oh dear, I tremble with fear, Like a nectarine bough When the sun shines through. How harmless has been my poor life -- Yet when a young girl, I had strife! Out, alas! how I remember That dawn, when to light the ember, I must steal and I must creep In the kitchen half asleep. Noises from the sharp green wood Burnt and bit my satyr blood, And my cockscomb hair raised ire In parrot-whistlers in the fire! Now the ember as it dozes Seems lattices of bunched roses, Fuchsias and fat strawberries, Dahlias, cherries, and one sees Through those lattices' gold wire The parrot-whistlers in the fire, Pecking cherries every one. 'Polly, put the kettle on,' Scream they; 'scratch poor pretty Polly' (Kettles hissing at their folly!). From the wood they spring and scream, Scald the milk, upset the cream, . . . Oh the feathers jewel-bright! Alas! my life was never light." The shrill flames nodded, beckoned, then lay dead; Her wig awry, cross Poll Troy nods her head. The long dark corridors seem shadow-groves Wherein a little courtier air still roves. . . . Pale rose-leaves, wet and scented, seems the rain, Whose bright drops cease, as soft as sleep again. Her gown seems like a pale and tuneful rose, * * * * * Hours passed; the soft melodious moonlight grows. . . . A murmurous sound of far-off Circean seas And old enchantments and the growth of trees. * * * * * Across the silver grass the powdered ghosts Are wandering in dim and scattered hosts Among the woods and fields, and they forget Everything but that their love's hand yet Is touching theirs; the ribbons of the moon are blue And pink; those ghosts pick bunches from the dew Of ghostly flowers, all poignant with spring rain, Smelling of youth that will not come again. XXIII THE public Scribe, noctambulo, Where moonlight, cold as blades of grass Echoes upon deserted walls Turned his dusty folio. . . . Dry grass that cackles thin in Hell The spires of fire . . . his nightcap fell. . . . Doctor Gradus Mounts Parnassus On that dusty ass the Law; His hair is grey As asses' ears, The cold wind's bray He never hears. . . . O'er donkey's hide grass the attorney Still continues on his journey With the dusty Law's proceedings, Through the old forrestial readings For the Town of Troy Prince Paris lost when yet a boy. Il Dottore in the long grass Culls the simples, -- cold henbane, Nettles that make fevers pass, Wood-spurge that will cure a blain. He walks where weeds have covered all. . . . The moon's vast echoes die Across the plain where weeds grown tall Pearled treasuries of Asia seem, Sunk in an endless dream. And the mandarins in Asia, In the silken palace of the moon, Are all who are left to drink this physic That will restore them from a swoon. XXIV NIGHT passed, and in that world of leaves The Dawn came, rustling like corn-sheaves; And a small wind came like little Boy-blue Over the cornfield and rustling through The large leaves. . . . Oh, how very deep The old queen is sighing in her sleep: "Alas, blue wind, Bluebeard unkind, Why have you blown so far from me Through the jewelled blue leaves that sound like the sea, The lady Margotte, The goosegirl Gargotte Agog with curiosity? They played Troy Town on the palace wall . . . Like small grape hyacinths were their curls And thin as the spring wind were those girls -- But now they never come if I call." The kingly cock with his red-gold beard, And his red-gold crown had crowed unheard While his queens ruffled down Their feathered gown Beside the waterfall's crystal town; The cock, the dawn-fruits, the gold corn, Sing this aubade, cold, forlorn: "Jane, Jane, Forget the pain In your heart. Go work again. Light is given that you may Work till owl-soft dusk of day. The morning light whines on the floor, . . . No one e'er will cross the door, No one ever cares to know How ragged flowers like you do grow. Like beaux and belles about the Court King James the Second held, athwart The field the sheep run, -- foolish graces, Periwigs, long Stuart faces, While ragged-robin, cockscomb flowers Cluck beneath the crystal showers. A far-off huntsman sounds his horn That sounds like rain, harsh and forlorn; Pink as his coat, poor robin seems. . . . Jane, no longer lie in dreams. The crude pink stalactites of rain Are sounding from the boughs again, Each sighs the name of Harriet, Mary, Susan, Anne, grown cold and wary -- Never yours. Once, bright and gay, They used to whisper 'Come away,' But now they have forgotten why. Come, no longer sleeping lie. Jane, Jane, Forget the pain In your heart. Go work again!" No answer came. No footsteps now will climb Down from Jane's attic. She forgets the time, Her wages, plainness, and how none could love A maid with cockscomb hair, in Sleep's dark grove. XXV AND now the brutish forests close around The beauty sleeping in enchanted ground. All night, the harsh bucolic winds that grunt Through those green curtains, help me in my hunt. Oh the swinish hairy beasts Of the rough wind (Wild boars tearing through the forests)! Nothing they will find But stars like empty wooden nuts, In leaves green and shrill. Home they go to their rough stye The clouds . . . and home go I. Above the wooden shutters Of my room at morn, Like bunches of the country flowers Seem the fresh dawn hours. And the young dawn creeps Tiptoe through my room, . . . Never speaks of one who sleeps In the forest's gloom. XXVI THE gardener played his old bagpipe To make the melons and the peaches ripe. . . . The threads are mixed in a tartan sound . . . "Keep, my lad, to the good safe ground. For Jonah long since was a felon, With guineas gold as a grape or melon. He always said his prayers in Latin To peaches like red quilted satin; And he had four and twenty daughters, As lovely as the thick-fleeced waters Or the Hesperides' thick-leaved trees -- And they were lovely as the evening breeze. One Sabbath roamed that godless man Beneath the great trees sylvan wan, And met an ancient satyr crone, Cold as the droning wind the drone Hears when the thickest gold will thrive, Summer-long, in the combs of the honey-hive. She said, 'You must sail, as I understand, To better yourself in a Better Land.' The sea was sharper than green grass, The sailors would not let him pass, And the sea was wroth and rose at him Like the turreted walls of Jerusalem, Or like the towers and gables seen In the midst of a deep-boughed garden green. If my old bagpipe I blew It would not blow those great towers down. The sailors took and bound him, threw Him in among those towers to drown. And oh, far best," the gardener said, "Like fruits to lie in your kind bed, To sleep as snug as in the grave In your kind bed, and shun the wave, Nor ever sigh for a strange land And songs no heart can understand." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BUCOLIC COMEDY: EARLY SPRING by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: FLEECING TIME by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: FOX TROT by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: KING COPHETUA AND THE BEGGAR MAID by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: SERENADE by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: SPINNING SONG by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: SPRING by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: THE BEAR by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: THE DOLL by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: THE FOX; FOR ANN PEARN by EDITH SITWELL BUCOLIC COMEDY: WHY by EDITH SITWELL ELEGY: THE GHOST WHOSE LIPS WERE WARM; FOR GEOFFREY GORER by EDITH SITWELL |
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