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Full text of "Sour grapes; a book of poems"

SOUR GRAPES 



SOUR GRAPES 

A Book of Poems 




BOSTON 

THE FOUR SEAS COMPANY 
1921 



Copyright, 1921, by 
THE FOUR SEAS COMPANY 



The Four Seas Press 
Boston, Mass., U. S. A. 



fs 



To 
ALFRED KREYMBORG 



807391 



Certain of the poems in this book have appeared in the 
magazines : Poetry, a Magazine of Verse, The Egoist, 
The Little Review, The Dial, Others, and Contact. 



CONTENTS 

Page 

THE LATE SINGER . . . . . 1 1 

MARCH .' 12 

BERKET AND THE STARS . .. ./ . 17 

A CELEBRATION . 18 

APRIL . . . ... . 21 

A GOODNIGHT . . . . . . 22 

OVERTURE TO A DANCE OF LOCOMOTIVES . 24 

ROMANCE MODERNE .... . 26 

THE DESOLATE FIELD . ... 30 

WILLOW POEM . . . . . . 31 

APPROACH OF WINTER . ,. . . 32 

JANUARY . 33 

BLIZZARD . . . . . 34 

To WAKEN AN OLD LADY . . . . 35 

WINTER TREES ...... 36 

COMPLAINT . . . ... 37 

THE COLD NIGHT 38 

SPRING STORM . . . . . . 39 

THE DELICACIES . . . . . 40 

THURSDAY . . . . . . . 43 

THE DARK DAY . ... . ' . . . 44 

TIME, THE HANGMAN . . . . 45 

To A FRIEND . . . . . 46 

THE GENTLE MAN . . . . . . 47 



CONTENTS 

THE SOUGHING WIND . 

SPRING ...... 

PLAY 

LINES 

THE POOR .... 

COMPLETE DESTRUCTION 

MEMORY OF APRIL 

EPITAPH ...... 

DAISY 

PRIMROSE ...... 

QUEEN-ANN'S-LACE .... 

GREAT MULLEN ..... 

WAITING ...... 

THE HUNTER 

ARRIVAL ...... 

To A FRIEND CONCERNING SEVERAL LADIES 
YOUTH AND BEAUTY .... 

THE THINKER ..... 

THE DISPUTANTS .... 

THE TULIP BED ..... 

THE BIRDS 

THE NIGHTINGALES .... 

SPOUTS ...... 

BLUEFLAGS ...... 

THE WIDOW'S LAMENT IN SPRINGTIME . 

LIGHT HEARTED WILLIAM 

PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR 

THE LONELY STREET .... 

THE GREAT FIGURE 



SOUR GRAPES 



THE LATE SINGER 

Here it is spring again 

and I still a young man ! 

1 am late at my singing. 

The sparrow with the black rain on his breast 

has been at his cadenzas for two weeks past : 

What is it that is dragging at my heart ? 

The grass by the back door 

is stiff with sap. 

The old maples are opening 

their branches of brown and yellow moth-flowers. 

A moon hangs in the blue 

in the early afternoons over the marshes. 

I am late at my singing. 



EH] 



MARCH 

I 

Winter is long in this climate 
and spring a matter of a few days 
only, a flower or two picked 
from mud or from among wet leaves 
or at best against treacherous 
bitterness of wind, and sky shining 
teasingly, then closing in black 
and sudden, with fierce jaws. 



II 

March, 

you remind me of 
the pyramids, our pyramids 
stript of the polished stone 
that used to guard them! 

March, 

you are like Fra Angelico 
at Fiesole, painting on plaster! 

March, 

you are like a band of 
young poets that have not learned 
the blessedness of warmth 
(or have forgotten it). 

At any rate 
I am moved to write poetry 
for the warmth there is in it 
and for the loneliness 
a poem that shall have you 
in it March. 

[12] 



Ill 

See! 

Ashur-ban-i-pal, 
the archer king, on horse-back, 
in blue and yellow enamel! 
with drawn bow facing lions 
standing on their hind legs, 
fangs bared ! his shafts 
bristling in their necks ! 

Sacred bulls dragons 
in embossed brickwork 
marching in four tiers 
along the sacred way to 
Nebuchadnezzar's throne hall ! 
They shine in the sun, 
they that have been marching 
marching under the dust of 
ten thousand dirt years. 

Now 

they are coming into bloom again! 

See them ! 

marching still, bared by 

the storms from my calendar 

winds that blow back the sand ! 

winds that enfilade dirt ! 

winds that by strange craft 

have whipt up a black army 

that by pick and shovel 

bare a procession to 

the god, Marduk! 

Natives cursing and digging 
for pay unearth dragons with 
[13] 



upright tails and sacred bulls 
alternately 

in four tiers 

lining the way to an old altar ! 
Natives digging at old walls 
digging me warmth digging me 

sweet loneliness 
high enamelled walls. 



IV 

My second spring 
passed in a monastery 
with plaster walls in Fiesole 
on the hill above Florence. 

My second spring painted 
a virgin in a blue aureole 
sitting on a three-legged stool, 
arms crossed 
she is intently serious, 

and still 

watching an angel 
with coloured wings 
half kneeling before her 
and smiling the angel's eyes 
holding the eyes of Mary 
as a snake's holds a bird's. 
On the ground there are flowers, 
trees are in leaf. 



V 

But ! now for the battle ! 

Now for murder now for the real thing! 

My third springtime is approaching! 



Winds ! 

lean, serious as a virgin, 

seeking, seeking the flowers of March. 

Seeking 

flowers nowhere to be found, 

they twine among the bare branches 

in insatiable eagerness 

they whirl up the snow 

seeking under it 

they the winds snakelike 

roar among yellow reeds 

seeking flowers flowers. 

I spring among them 

seeking one flower 

in which to warm myself ! 

I deride with all the ridicule 

of misery 

my own starved misery. 

Counter-cutting winds 

strike against me 
refreshing their fury! 

Come, good, cold fellows! 

Have we no flowers? 
Defy then with even more 
desperation than ever being 

lean and frozen! 

But though you are lean and frozen 
think of the blue bulls of Babylon. 
[15] 



Fling yourselves upon 

their empty roses 
cut savagely! 

But 

think of the painted monastery 
at Fiesole. 



[16] 



BERKET AND THE STARS 

A day on the boulevards chosen out of ten years of 
student poverty! One best day out of ten good ones. 
Berket in high spirits "Ha, oranges ! Let's have one !" 
And he made to snatch an orange from the vender's 
cart. 

Now so clever was the deception, so nicely timed 
to the full sweep of certain wave summits, 
that the rumor of the thing has come down through 
three generations which is relatively forever! 



[17] 



A CELEBRATION 

A middle-northern March, now as always 

gusts from the south broken against cold winds 

but from under, as if a slow hand lifted a tide, 

it moves not into April into a second March, 

the old skin of wind-clear scales dropping 

upon the mould: this is the shadow projects the tree 

upward causing the sun to shine in his sphere. 

So we will put on our pink felt hat new last year! 
newer this by virtue of brown eyes turning back 
the seasons and let us walk to the orchid-house, 
see the flowers will take the prize to-morrow 
at the Palace. 

Stop here, these are our oleanders. 
When they are in bloom 

You would waste words 
It is clearer to me than if the pink 
were on the branch. It would be a searching in 
a coloured cloud to reveal that which now, huskless, 
shows the very reason for their being. 

And these the orange-trees, in blossom no need 
to tell with this weight of perfume in the air. 
If it were not so dark in this shed one could better 
see the white. 

It is that very perfume 

has drawn the darkness down among the leaves. 
Do I speak clearly enough? 

It is this darkness reveals that which darkness alone 
loosens and sets spinning on waxen wings 
not the touch of a finger-tip, not the motion 
of a sigh. A too heavy sweetness proves 
its own caretaker. 

[18] 



And here are the orchids ! 

Never having seen 

such gaiety I will read these flowers for you : 
This is an odd January, died in Villon's time. 
Snow, this is and this the stain of a violet 
grew in that place the spring that foresaw its own 
doom. 

And this, a certain July from Iceland: 

a young woman of that place 

breathed it toward the south. It took root there. 

The colour ran true but the plant is small. 



This falling spray of snowflakes is 

a handful of dead Februarys 

prayed into flower by Rafael Arevalo Martinez 

of Guatemala. 

Here's that old friend who 

went by my side so many years : this full, fragile 
head of veined lavender. Oh that April 
that we first went with our stiff lusts 
leaving the city behind, out to the green hill 
May, they said she was. A hand for all of us : 
this branch of blue butterflies tied to this stem. 



June is a yellow cup I'll not name; August 
the over-heavy one. And here are 
russet and shiny, all but March. And March? 
Ah, March- 
Flowers are a tiresome pastime. 
One has a wish to shake them from their pots 
root and stem, for the sun to gnaw. 
[19] 



A CELEBRATION 

A middle-northern March, now as always 

gusts from the south broken against cold winds 

but from under, as if a slow hand lifted a tide, 

it moves not into April into a second March, 

the old skin of wind-clear scales dropping 

upon the mould: this is the shadow projects the tree 

upward causing the sun to shine in his sphere. 

So we will put on our pink felt hat new last year ! 
newer this by virtue of brown eyes turning back 
the seasons and let us walk to the orchid-house, 
see the flowers will take the prize to-morrow 
at the Palace. 

Stop here, these are our oleanders. 
When they are in bloom 

You would waste words 
It is clearer to me than if the pink 
were on the branch. It would be a searching in 
a coloured cloud to reveal that which now, huskless, 
shows the very reason for their being. 

And these the orange-trees, in blossom no need 
to tell with this weight of perfume in the air. 
If it were not so dark in this shed one could better 
see the white. 

It is that very perfume 

has drawn the darkness down among the leaves. 
Do I speak clearly enough? 

It is this darkness reveals that which darkness alone 
loosens and sets spinning on waxen wings 
not the touch of a finger-tip, not the motion 
of a sigh. A too heavy sweetness proves 
its own caretaker. 

[18] 



And here are the orchids ! 

Never having seen 

such gaiety I will read these flowers for you : 
This is an odd January, died in Villon's time. 
Snow, this is and this the stain of a violet 
grew in that place the spring that foresaw its own 
doom. 

And this, a certain July from Iceland: 

a young woman of that place 

breathed it toward the south. It took root there. 

The colour ran true but the plant is small. 



This falling spray of snowflakes is 

a handful of dead Februarys 

prayed into flower by Rafael Arevalo Martinez 

of Guatemala. 

Here's that old friend who 

went by my side so many years : this full, fragile 
head of veined lavender. Oh that April 
that we first went with our stiff lusts 
leaving the city behind, out to the green hill 
May, they said she was. A hand for all of us : 
this branch of blue butterflies tied to this stem. 



June is a yellow cup I'll not name; August 
the over-heavy one. And here are 
russet and shiny, all but March. And March? 
Ah, March 

Flowers are a tiresome pastime. 
One has a wish to shake them from their pots 
root and stem, for the sun to gnaw. 
[19] 



Walk out again into the cold and saunter home 
to the fire. This day has blossomed long enough. 
I have wiped out the red night and lit a blaze 
instead which will at least warm our hands 
and stir up the talk. 

I think we have kept fair time. 
Time is a green orchid. 



[20] 



APRIL 

If you had come away with me 

into another state 

we had been quiet together. 

But there the sun coming up 

out of the nothing beyond the lake was 

too low in the sky, 

there was too great a pushing 

against him, 

too much of sumac buds, pink 

in the head 

with the clear gum upon them, 

too many opening hearts of 

lilac leaves, 

too many, too many swollen 

limp poplar tassels on the 

bare branches ! 

It was too strong in the air. 

I had no rest agaist that 

springtime ! 

The pounding of the hoofs on the 

raw sods 

stayed with me half through the night. 

I awoke smiling but tired. 



21] 



A GOODNIGHT 

Go to sleep though of course you will not 
to tideless waves thundering slantwise against 
strong embankments, rattle and swish of spray 
dashed thirty feet high, caught by the lake wind, 
scattered and strewn broadcast in over the steady 
car rails ! Sleep, sleep ! Gulls' cries in a wind-gust 
broken by the wind ; calculating wings set above 
the field of waves breaking. 
Go to sleep to the lunge between foam-crests, 
refuse churned in the recoil. Food! Food! 
Offal ! Offal ! that holds them in the air, wave-white 
for the one purpose, feather upon feather, the wild 
chill in their eyes, the hoarseness in their voices 
sleep, sleep . . . 

Gentlefooted crowds are treading out your lullaby. 
Their arms nudge, they brush shoulders, 
hitch this way then that, mass and surge at the cross- 
ings 

lullaby, lullaby ! The wild- fowl police whistles, 
the enraged roar of the trafic, machine shrieks: 
it is all to put you to sleep, 
to soften your limbs in relaxed postures, 
and that your head slip sidewise, and your hair loosen 
and fall over your eyes and over your mouth, 
brushing your lips wistfully that you may dream, 
sleep and dream 



A black fungus springs out about lonely church doors 
sleep, sleep. The Night, coming down upon 
the wet boulevard, would start you awake with his 
message, to have in at your window. Pay no 
heed to him. He storms at your sill with 
cooings, with gesticulations, curses! 
[22] 



You will not let him in. He would keep you from 

sleeping. 

He would have you sit under your desk lamp 
brooding, pondering; he would have you 
slide out the drawer, take up the ornamented dagger 
and handle it. It is late, it is nineteen-nineteen 
go to sleep, his cries are a lullaby; 
his jabbering is a sleep- well-my-baby ; he is 
a crackbrained messenger. 

The maid waking you in the morning 

when you are up and dressing, 

the rustle of your clothes as you raise them 

it is the same tune. 

At table the cold, greenish, split grapefruit, its juice 

on the tongue, the clink of the spoon in 

your coffee, the toast odors say it over and over. 

The open street-door lets in the breath of 

the morning wind from over the lake. 

The bus coming to a halt grinds from its sullen 

brakes 

lullaby, lullaby. The crackle of a newspaper, 
the movement of the troubled coat beside you 
sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep . . . 
It is the sting of snow, the burning liquor of 
the moonlight, the rush of rain in the gutters packed 
with dead leaves : go to sleep, go to sleep. 
And the night passes and never passes 



[23] 



OVERTURE TO A DANCE OF LOCOMOTIVES 



Men with picked voices chant the names 
of cities in a huge gallery: promises 
that pull through descending stairways 
to a deep rumbling. 

The rubbing feet 

of those coming to be carried quicken a 
grey pavement into soft light that rocks 
to and fro, under the domed ceiling, 
across and across from pale 
earthcoloured walls of bare limestone. 

Covertly the hands of a great clock 
go round and round ! Were they to 
move quickly and at once the whole 
secret would be out and the shuffling 
of all ants be done forever. 

A leaning pyramid of sunlight, narrowing 
out at a high window, moves by the clock 
disaccordant hands straining out from 
a center: inevitable postures infinitely 
repeated 



II 

Two twofour twoeight ! 

Porters in red hats run on narrow platforms. 

This way ma'm ! 

important not to take 
the wrong train! 

Lights from the concrete 
ceiling hang crooked but 

[24] 



Poised horizontal 

on glittering parallels the dingy cylinders 
packed with a warm glow inviting entry 
pull against the hour. But brakes can 
hold a fixed posture till 

The whistle ! 

Not twoeight. Not two four. Two ! 

Gliding windows. Colored cooks sweating 
in a small kitchen. Taillights > 

In time : twof our ! 
In time : twoeight ! 

rivers are tunneled: trestles 
cross oozy swampland: wheels repeating 
the same gesture remain relatively 
stationary: rails forever parallel 
return on themselves infinitely. 

The dance is 



[25] 



ROMANCE MODERNE 

Tracks of rain and light linger in 

the spongy greens of a nature whose 

nickering mountain bulging nearer, 

ebbing back into the sun 

hollowing itself away to hold a lake, 

or brown stream rising and falling 

at the roadside, turning about, 

churning itself white, drawing 

green in over it, plunging glassy funnels 

fall 

And the other world 
the windshield a blunt barrier: 
Talk to me. Sh ! they would hear us. 
the backs of their heads facing us 
The stream continues its motion of 
a hound running over rough ground. 



Trees vanish reappear vanish:' 
detached dance of gnomes as a talk 
dodging remarks, glows and fades. 
The unseen power of words 
And now that a few of the moves 
are clear the first desire is 
to fling oneself out at the side into 
the other dance, to other music. 
Peer Gynt. Rip Van Winkle. Diana. 



If I were young I would try a new alignment- 
alight nimbly from the car, Good-bye ! 
Childhood companions linked two and two 
criss-cross : four, three, two, one. 
Back into self, tentacles withdrawn. 
Feel about in warm self-flesh. 
Since childhood, since childhood! 
[26] 



Childhood is a toad in the garden, a 

happy toad. All toads are happy 

and belong in gardens. A toad to Diana ! 

Lean forward. Punch the steersman 

behind the ear. Twirl the wheel ! 

Over the edge ! Screams ! Crash ! 

The end. I sit above my head 

a little removed or 

a thin wash of rain on the roadway 

I am never afraid when he is driving, 

interposes new direction, 

rides us sideswise, unforseen 

into the ditch! All threads cut! 

Death! Black. The end. The very end 

I would sit separate weighing a 

small red handful: the dirt of these parts, 

sliding mists sheeting the alders 

against the touch of fingers creeping 

to mine. All stuff of the blind emotions. 

But stirred, the eye seizes 

for the first time The eye awake ! 

anything, a dirt bank with green stars 

of scrawny weed flattened upon it under 

a weight of air For the first time ! 

or a yawning depth: Big! 

Swim around in it, through it 

all directions and find 

vitreous seawater stuff 

God how I love you ! or, as I say, 

a plung into the ditch. The end. I sit 

examining my red handful. Balancing 

this in and out agh. 

Love you? It's 
a fire in the blood, willy-nilly! 
[27] 



It's the sun coming tip in the morning. 
Ha, but it's the grey moon too, already up 
in the morning. You are slow. 
Men are not friends where it concerns 
a woman? Fighters. Playfellows. 
White round thighs! Youth! Sighs! 
It's the fillip of novelty. It's 

Mountains. Elephants humping along 

against the sky indifferent to 

light withdrawing its tattered shreds, 

worn out with embraces. It's 

the fillip of novelty. It's a fire in the blood. 

Oh get a flannel shirt, white flannel 

or pongee. You'd look so well ! 

I married you because I liked your nose. 

I wanted you ! I wanted you 

in spite of all they'd say 

Rain and light, mountain and rain, 

rain and river. Will you love me always? 

- A car overturned and two crushed bodies 

under it. Always ! Always ! 

And the white moon already up. 

White. Clean. All the colors. 

A good head, backed by the eye awake ! 

backed by the emotions blind 

River and mountain, light and rain or 

rain, rock, light, trees divided: 

rain-light counter rocks-trees or 

trees counter rain-light-rocks or 

Myriads of counter processions 
crossing and recrossing, regaining 
the advantage, buying here, selling there 
You are sold cheap everywhere in town ! 
[28] 



lingering, touching fingers, withdrawing 
gathering forces into blares, hummocks, 
peaks and rivers river meeting rock 
I wish that you were lying there dead 
and I sitting here beside you. 
It's the grey moon over and over. 
It's the clay of these parts. 



[29] 



THE DESOLATE FIELD 

Vast and grey, the sky 

is a simulacrum 

to all but him whose days 

are vast and grey, and 

In the tall, dried grasses 

a goat stirs 

with nozzle searching the ground. 

my head is in the air 

but who am I . . ? 

And amazed my heart leaps 

at the thought of love 

vast and grey 

yearning silently over me. 



[30] 



WILLOW POEM 

It is a willow when summer is over, 
a willow by the river 
from which no leaf has fallen nor 
bitten by the sun 
turned orange or crimson. 
The leaves cling and grow paler, 
swing and grow paler 
over the swirling waters of the river 
as if loath to let go, 
they are so cool, so drunk with 
the swirl of the wind and of the river- 
oblivious to winter, 
the last to let go and fall 
into the water and on the ground. 



APPROACH OF WINTER 

The half stripped trees 

struck by a wind together, 

bending all, 

the leaves flutter drily 

and refuse to let go 

or driven like hail 

stream bitterly out to one side 

and fall 

where the salvias, hard carmine,- 

like no leaf that ever was 

edge the bare garden. 



[32] 



JANUARY 

Again I reply to the triple winds 
running chromatic fifths of derision 
outside my window : 

Play louder. 

You will not succeed. I am 
bound more to my sentences 
the more you batter at me 
to follow you. 

And the wind, 
as before,, fingers perfectly 
its derisive music. 



[33] 



BLIZZARD 

Snow: 

years of anger following 

hours that float idly down 

the blizzard 

drifts its weight 

deeper and deeper for three days 

or sixty years, eh? Then 

the sun ! a clutter of 

yellow and blue flakes 

Hairy looking trees stand out 

in long alleys 

over a wild solitude. 

The man turns and there 

his sblitary track stretched out 

upon the world. 



[34] 



TO WAKEN AN OLD LADY 

Old age is 

a flight of small 

cheeping birds 

skimming 

bare trees 

above a snow glaze. 

Gaining and failing 

they are buffetted 

by a dark wind 

But what? 

On harsh weedstalks 

the flock has rested, 

the snow 

is covered with broken 

seedhusks 

and the wind tempered 

by a shrill 

piping of plenty. 



[35] 



WINTER TREES 

All the complicated details 

of the attiring and 

the disattiring are completed! 

A liquid moon 

moves gently among 

the long branches. 

Thus having prepared their buds 

against a sure winter 

the wise trees 

stand sleeping in the cold. 



[36] 



COMPLAINT 

They call me and I go 

It is a frozen road 

past midnight, a dust 

of snow caught 

in the rigid wheeltracks. 

The door opens. 

I smile, enter and 

shake off the cold. 

Here is a great woman 

on her side in the bed. 

She is sick, 

perhaps vomiting, 

perhaps laboring 

to give birth to 

a tenth child. Joy! Joy! 

Night is a room 

darkened for lovers, 

through the jalousies the sun 

has sent one gold needle ! 

I pick the hair from her eyes 

and watch her misery 

with compassion. 



[37] 



THE COLD NIGHT 

It is cold. The white moon 

is up among her scattered stars 

like the bare thighs of 

the Police Seargent's wife among 

her five children . . . 

No answer. Pale shadows lie upon 

the frosted grass. One answer: 

It is midnight, it is still 

and it is cold . . . ! 

White thighs of the sky ! a 

new answer out of the depths of 

my male belly: In April . . . 

In April I shall see again In April ! 

the round and perfect thighs 

of the Police Sergent's wife 

perfect still after many babies. 

Oya! 



[38] 



SPRING STORM 

The sky has given over 

its bitterness. 

Out of the dark change 

all day long 

rain falls and falls 

as if it would never end. 

Still the snow keeps 

its hold on the ground. 

But water, water 

from a thousand runnels! 

It collects swiftly, 

dappled with black 

cuts a way for itself 

through green ice in the gutters. 

Drop after drop it falls 

from the withered grass-stems 

of the overhanging embankment. 



[39] 



THE DELICACIES 



The hostess, in pink satin and blond hair dressed 
high shone beautifully in her white slippers against 
the great silent bald head of her little-eyed husband ! 

Raising a glass of yellow Rhine wine in the narrow 
space just beyond the light-varnished woodwork and 
the decorative column between dining-room and hall, 
she smiled the smile of water tumbling from one ledge 
to another. 

We began with a herring salad: delicately flavoured 
saltiness in scallops of lettuce-leaves. 



The little owl-eyed and thick-set lady with masses 
of grey hair has smooth pink cheeks without a wrinkle. 
She cannot be the daughter of the little red-faced 
fellow dancing about inviting lion-headed Wolff the 
druggist to play the piano ! But she is. Wolff is a 
terrific smoker: if the telephone goes off at night so 
his curled-haired wife whispers he rises from bed but 
cannot answer till he has lighted a cigarette. 



Sherry wine in little conical glasses, dull brownish 
yellow, and tomatoes stuffed with finely cut chicken 
and mayonnaise! 



The tall Irishman in a Prince Albert and the usual 
striped trousers is going to sing for us. (The piano 
is in a little alcove with dark curtains.) The hostess's 
sister ten years younger than she in black net and 
velvet, has hair like some filmy haystack, cloudy about 
the eyes. She will play for her husband. 
[40] 



My wife is young, yes she is young and pretty when 
she cares to be when she is interested in a discussion : 
it is the little dancing mayor's wife telling her of the 
Day nursery in East Rutherford, 'cross the track, 
divided from us by the railroad and disputes as to 
precedence. It is in this town the saloon flourishes, 
the saloon of my friend on the right whose wife has 
twice offended with chance words. Her English is 
atrocious ! It is in this town that the saloon is situated, 
close to the railroad track, close as may be, this side 
being dry, dry, dry: two people listening on opposite 
sides of a wall! The Day Nursery had sixty-five 
babies the week before last, so my wife's eyes shine 
and her cheeks are pink and I cannot see a blemish. 



Ice-cream in the shape of flowers and domestic 
objects: a pipe for me since I do not smoke, a doll 
for you. 

The figure of some great bulk of a woman dis- 
appearing into the kitchen with a quick look over the 
shoulder. My friend on the left who has spent the 
whole day in a car the like of which some old fellow 
would give to an actress : flower-holders, mirrors, 
curtains, plush seats my friend on the left who is 
chairman of the Streets committee of the town council 
and who has spent the whole day studying auto- 
mobile fire-engines in neighbouring towns in view of 
purchase, my friend, at the Elks last week at the 
breaking-up hymn, signalled for them to let Bill a 
familiar friend of the saloon-keeper sing out all alone 
to the organ and he did sing ! 

Salz-rolls, exquisite! and Rhine wine ad libitum. 
A masterly caviare sandwich. 



The children flitting about above stairs. The 
councilman has just bought a National eight some 
car! 

For heaven's sake I mustn't forget the halves of 
green peppers stuffed with cream cheese and whole 
walnuts ! 



[42] 



THURSDAY 

I have had my dream like others 

and it has come to nothing, so that 

I remain now carelessly 

with feet planted on the ground 

and look up at the sky 

feeling my clothes about me, 

the weight of my body in my shoes, 

the rim of my hat, air passing in and out 

at my nose and decide to dream no more. 



[43] 



THE DARK DAY 

A three-day-long rain from the east 

an interminable talking, talking 

of no consequence patter, patter, patter. 

Hand in hand little winds 

blow the thin streams aslant. 

Warm. Distance cut off. Seclusion. 

A few passers-by, drawn in upon themselves, 

hurry from one place to another. 

Winds of the white poppy! there is no escape !- 

An interminable talking, talking, 

talking ... it has happened before. 

Backward, backward, backward. 



[44] 



TIME THE HANGMAN 

Poor old Abner, old white-haired nigger! 

[ remember when you were so strong 

fou hung yourself by a rope round the neck 

n Doc Hollister's barn to prove you could beat 

:he faker in the circus and it didn't kill you. 

Now your face is in your hands, and your elbows 

ire on your knees, and you are silent and broken. 



[45] 



TO A FRIEND 

Well, Lizzie Anderson ! seventeen men and 
the baby hard to find a father for ! 

What will the good Father in Heaven say 

to the local judge if he do not solve this problem? 

A little two pointed smile and pouff ! 

the law is changed into a mouthful of phrases. 



[46] 



'THE GENTLE MAN 

I feel the caress of my own fingers 
on my own neck as I place my collar 
and think pityingly 
of the kind women I have known. 



[47] 



THE SOUGHING WIND 

Some leaves hang late, some fall 

before the first frost so goes 

the tale of winter branches and old bones. 



[48] 



SPRING 

O my grey hairs ! 

You are truly white as plum blossoms. 



t49] 



PLAY 

Subtle, clever brain, wiser than I am, 
by what devious means do you contrive 
to remain idle ? Teach me, O master. 



[50] 



LINES 

Leaves are greygreen, 

the glass broken, bright green. 



THE POOR 

By constantly tormenting them 

with reminders of the lice in 

their children's hair, the 

School Physician first 

brought their hatred down on him, 

But by this familiarity 

they grew used to him, and so, 

at last, 

took him for their friend and adviser. 



[52] 



COMPLETE DESTRUCTION 

It was an icy day. 
We buried the cat, 
then took her box 
and set fire to it 
in the back yard. 
Those fleas that escaped 
earth and fire 
died by the cold. 



[53] 



MEMORY OF APRIL 

You say love is this, love is that : 
Poplar tassels, willow tendrils 
the wind and the rain comb, 
tinkle and drip, tinkle and drip 
branches drifting apart. Hagh ! 
Love has not even visited this country. 



[54] 



EPITAPH 

An old willow with hollow branches 
slowly swayed his few high bright tendrils 
and sang: 

Love is a young green willow 
shimmering at the bare wood's edge. 



[55] 



DAISY 

The dayseye hugging the earth 

in August, ha ! Spring is 

gone down in purple, 

weeds stand high in the corn, 

the rainbeaten furrow 

is clotted with sorrel 

and crabgrass, the 

branch is black under 

the heavy mass of the leaves 

The sun is upon a 

slender green stem 

ribbed lengthwise. 

He lies on his back 

it is a woman also 

he regards his former 

majesty and 

round the yellow center, 

split and creviced and done into 

minute flowerheads, he sends out 

his twenty rays a little 

and the wind is among them 

to grow cool there ! 

One turns the thing over 

in his hand and looks 

at it from the rear: brownedged, 

green and pointed scales 

armor his yellow. 

But turn and turn, 

the crisp petals remain 

brief, translucent, greenfastened, 

barely touching at the edges : 

blades of limpid seashell. 



[56] 



PRIMROSE 

Yellow, yellow, yellow, yellow ! 

It is not a color. 

It is summer! 

It is the wind on a willow, 

the lap of waves, the shadow 

under a bush, a bird, a bluebird, 

three herons, a dead hawk 

rotting on a pole 

Clear yellow ! 

It is a piece of blue paper 

in the grass or a threecluster of 

green walnuts swaying, children 

playing croquet or one boy 

fishing, a man 

swinging his pink fists 

as he walks 

It is ladysthumb, forgetmenots 

in the ditch, moss under 

the flange of the carrail, the 

wavy lines in split rock, a 

great oaktree 

It is a disinclination to be 

five red petals or a rose, it is 

a cluster of birdsbreast flowers 

on a red stem six feet high, 

four open yellow petals 

above sepals curled 

backward into reverse spikes 

Tufts of purple grass spot the 

green meadow and clouds the sky. 



[57] 



QUEEN-ANN'S-LACE 

Her body is not so white as 

anemony petals nor so smooth nor 

so remote a thing. It is a field 

of the wild carrot taking 

the field by force ; the grass 

does not raise above it. 

Here is no question of whiteness, 

white as can be, with a purple mole 

at the center of each flower. 

Each flower is a hand's span 

of her whiteness. Wherever 

his hand has lain there is 

a tiny purple blemish. Each part 

is a blossom under his touch 

to which the fibres of her being 

stem one by one, each to its end, 

until the whole field is a 

white desire, empty, a single stem, 

a cluster, flower by flower, 

a pious wish to whiteness gone over 

or nothing. 



[58] 



GREAT MULLEN 

One leaves his leaves at home 

being a mullen and sends up a lighthouse 

to peer from: I will have my way, 

yellow A mast with a lantern, ten 

fifty, a hundred, smaller and smaller 

as they grow more Liar, liar, liar! 

You come from her! I can smell djer-kiss 

on your clothes. Ha, ha! you come to me, 

you I am a point of dew on a grass-stem. 

Why are you sending heat down on me 

from your lantern? You are cowdung, a 

dead stick with the bark off. She is 

squirting on us both. She has had her 

hand on you ! Well? She has defiled 

ME. Your leaves are dull, thick 

and hairy. Every hair on my body will 

hold you off from me. You are a 

dungcake, birdlime on a fencerail. 

I love you, straight, yellow 

finger of God pointing to her ! 

Liar, broken weed, duncake, you have 

I am a cricket waving his antenae 

and you are high, grey and straight. Ha! 



[59] 



WAITING 

When I am alone I am happy. 

The air is cool. The sky is 

flecked and splashed and wound 

with color. The crimson phalloi 

of the sassafrass leaves 

hang crowded before me 

in shoals on the heavy branches. 

When I reach my doorstep 

I am greeted by 

the happy shrieks of my children 

and my heart sinks. 

I am crushed. 

Are not my children as dear to me 

as falling leaves or 

must one become stupid 

to grow older? 

It seems much as if Sorrow 

had tripped up my heels. 

Let us see, let us see ! 

What did I plan to say to her 

when it should happen to me 

as it has happened now ? 



[60] 



THE HUNTER 

In the flashes and black shadows 

of July 

the days, locked in each other's arms, 

seem still 

so that squirrels and colored birds 

go about at ease over 

the branches and through the air. 

Where will a shoulder split or 
a forehead open and victory be? 

Nowhere. 

Both sides grow older. 

And you may be sure 

not one leaf will lift itself 

from the ground 

and become fast to a twig again. 



[61; 



ARRIVAL 

And yet one arrives somehow, 

finds himself loosening the hooks of 

her dress 

in a strange bedroom 

feels the autumn 

dropping its silk and linen leaves 

about her ankles. 

The tawdry veined body emerges 

twisted upon itself 

like a winter wind . 



[62] 



TO A FRIEND 
CONCERNING SEVERAL LADIES 

You know there is not much 

that I desire, a few crysanthemums 

half lying on the grass, yellow 

and brown and white, the 

talk of a few people, the trees, 

an expanse of dried leaves perhaps 

with ditches among them. 

But there comes 

between me and these things 

a letter 

or even a look well placed, 

you understand, 

so that I am confused, twisted 

four ways and left flat, 

unable to lift the food to 

my own mouth: 

Here is what they say: Come! 

and come ! and come ! And if 

I do not go I remain stale to 

myself and if I go 

I have watched 

the city from a distance at night 
and wondered why I wrote no poem. 
Come ! yes, 

the city is ablaze for you 
and you stand and look at it. 

And they are right. There is 
no good in the world except out of 
a woman and certain women alone 
for certain things. But what if 
I arrive like a turtle 
with my house on my back or 
a fish ogling from under water? 
[6 3 ] 



It will not do. I must be 
steaming with love, colored 
like a flamingo. For what? 
To have legs and a silly head 
and to smell, pah ! like a flamingo 
that soils its own feathers behind. 
Must I go home filled 
with a bad poem? 
And they say: 

Who can answer these things 
till he has tried? Your eyes 
are half closed, you are a child, 
oh, a sweet one, ready to play 
but I will make a man of you and 
with love on his shoulder ! 

And in the marshes 

the crickets run 

on the sunny dike's top and 

make burrows there, the water 

reflects the reeds and the reeds 

move on their stalks and rattle drily. 



[64] 



YOUTH AND BEAUTY 

I bought a dishmop 

having no daughter 

for they had twisted 

fine ribbons of shining copper 

about white twine 

and made a towsled head 

of it, fastened it 

upon a turned ash stick 

slender at the neck 

straight, tall 

when tied upright 

on the brass wallbracket 

to be a light for me 

and naked, 

as a girl should seem 

to her father. 



[65] 



THE THINKER 

My wife's new pink slippers 

have gay pom-poms. 

There is not a spot or a stain 

on their satin toes or their sides. 

All night they lie together 

under her bed's edge. 

Shivering I catch sight of them 

and smile, in the morning. 

Later I watch them 

descending the stair, 

hurrying through the doors 

and round the table, 

moving stiffly 

with a shake of their gay pom-poms ! 

And I talk to them 

in my secret mind 

out of pure happiness. 



[66] 



THE DISPUTANTS 

Upon the table in their bowl 

in violent disarray 

of yellow sprays, green spikes 

of leaves, red pointed petals 

and curled heads of blue 

and white among the litter 

of the forks and crumbs and plates 

the flowers remain composed. 

Cooly their colloquy continues 

above the coffee and loud talk 

grown frail as vaudeville. 



[67] 



THE TULIP BED 

The May sun whom 

all things imitate 

that glues small leaves to 

the wooden trees 

shone from the sky 

through bluegauze clouds 

upon the ground. 

Under the leafy trees 

where the suburban streets 

lay crossed, 

with houses on each corner, 

tangled shadows had begun 

to join 

the roadway and the lawns. 

With excellent precision 

the tulip bed 

inside the iron fence 

upreared its gaudy 

yellow, white and red, 

rimmed round with grass, 

reposedly. 



[68] 



THE BIRDS 

The world begins again ! 

Not wholly insufflated 

the blackbirds in the rain 

upon the dead topbranches 

of the living tree, 

stuck fast to the low clouds, 

notate the dawn. 

Their shrill cries sound 

announcing appetite 

and drop among the bending roses 

and the dripping grass. 



[69] 



THE NIGHTINGALES 

My shoes as I lean 
unlacing them 
stand out upon 
flat worsted flowers 
under my feet. 
Nimbly the shadows 
of my fingers play 
unlacing 
over shoes and flowers. 



SPOUTS 

In this world of 

as fine a pair of breasts 

as ever I saw 

the fountain in 

Madison Square 

spouts up of water 

a white tree 

that dies and lives 

as the rocking water 

in the basin 

turns from the stonerim 

back upon the jet 

and rising there 

reflectively drops down again. 



[71] 



BLUEFLAGS 

I stopped the car 

to let the children down 

where the streets end 

in the sun 

at the marsh edge 

and the reeds begin 

and there are small houses 

facing the reeds 

and the blue mist 

in the distance 

with grapevine trellises 

with grape clusters 

small as strawberries 

on the vines 

and ditches 

running springwater 

that continue the gutters 

with willows over them. 

The reeds begin 

like water at a shore 

their pointed petals waving 

dark green and light. 

But blueflags are blossoming 

in the reeds 

which the children pluck 

chattering in the reeds 

high over their heads 

which they part 

with bare arms to appear 

with fists of flowers 

till in the air 

there conies the smell 

of calamus 

from wet, gummy stalks. 

[72] 



THE WIDOW'S LAMENT IN SPRINGTIME 

Sorrow is my own yard 

where the new grass 

flames as it has flamed 

often before but not 

with the cold fire 

that closes round me this year. 

Thirtyfive years 

I lived with my husband. 

The plumtree is white today 

with masses of flowers. 

Masses of flowers 

load the cherry branches 

and color some bushes 

yellow and some red 

but the grief in my heart 

is stronger than they 

for though they were my joy 

formerly, today I notice them 

and turn away forgetting. 

Today my son told me 

that in the meadows, 

at the edge of the heavy woods 

in the distance, he saw 

trees of white flowers. 

I feel that I would like 

to go there 

and fall into those flowers 

and sink into the marsh near them. 



[73] 



LIGHT HEARTED WILLIAM 

Light hearted William twirled 
his November moustaches 
and, half dressed, looked 
from the bedroom window 
upon the spring weather. 

Heigh-ya ! sighed he gaily 

leaning out to see 

up and down the street 

where a heavy sunlight 

lay beyond some blue shadows. 

Into the room he drew 

his head again and laughed 

to himself quietly 

twirling his green moustaches. 



[74] 



PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR 

The birches are mad with green points 

the wood's edge is burning with their green, 

burning, seething No, no, no. 

The birches are opening their leaves one 

by one. Their delicate leaves unfold cold 

and separate, one by one. Slender tassels 

hang swaying from the delicate branch tips 

Oh, I cannot say it. There is no word. 

Black is split at once into flowers. In 

every bog and ditch, flares of 

small fire, white flowers! Agh, 

the birches are mad, mad with their green. 

The world is gone, torn into shreds 

with this blessing. What have I left undone 

that I should have undertaken 

O my brother, you redfaced, living man 

ignorant, stupid whose feet are upon 

this same dirt that I touch and eat. 

We are alone in this terror, alone, 

face to face on this road, you and I, 

wrapped by this flame! 

Let the polished plows stay idle, 

their gloss already on the black soil. 

But that face of yours ! 

Answer me. I will clutch you. I 

will hug you, grip you. I will poke my face 

into your face and force you to see me. 

Take me in your arms, tell me the commonest 

thing that is in your mind to say, 

say anything. I will understand you ! 

It is the madness of the birch leaves opening 

cold, one by one. 

[75] 



My rooms will receive me. But my rooms 

are no longer sweet spaces where comfort 

is ready to wait on me with its crumbs. 

A darkness has brushed them. The mass 

of yellow tulips in the bowl is shrunken. 

Every familiar object is changed and dwarfed. 

I am shaken, broken against a might 

that splits comfort, blows apart 

my careful partitions, crushes my house 

and leaves me with shrinking heart 

and startled, empty eyes peering out 

into a cold world. 

In the spring I would drink ! In the spring 

I would be drunk and lie forgetting all things. 

Your face ! Give me your face, Yang Kue Fei ! 

your hands, your lips to drink ! 

Give me your wrists to drink 

I drag you, I am drowned in you, you 

overwhelm me ! Drink ! 

Save me ! The shad bush is in the edge 

of the clearing. The yards in a fury 

of lilac blossoms are driving me mad with terror. 

Drink and lie forgetting the world. 

And coldly the birch leaves are opening one by one. 
Coldly I observe them and wait for the end. 
And it ends. 



[76] 



THE LONELY STREET 

School is over. It is too hot 

to walk at ease. At ease 

in light frocks they walk the streets 

to while the time away. 

They have grown tall. They hold 

pink flames in their right hands. 

In white from head to foot, 

with sidelong, idle look 

in yellow, floating stuff, 

black sash and stockings 

touching their avid mouths 

with pink sugar on a stick 

like a carnation each holds in her hand 

they mount the lonely street. 



[77] 



THE GREAT FIGURE 

Among the rain 

and lights 

I saw the figure 5 

in gold 

on a red 

fi ret ruck 

moving 

with weight and urgency 

tense 

unheeded 

to gong clangs 

siren howls 

and wheels rumbling 

through the dark city. 



[78] 



This book is DUE on the last 
date stamped below. 



UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY 

Los Angeles 
This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. 




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