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XXIX
_The Pattern of the Earth_
The pattern of the earth, so wonderful, Is, more than myrtle, very dear to me.
Across the avenue of limes I see A little mist by ghosts made magical, Tossing across the hills, more beautiful Than the deep eyes of amber women, free Of shame and of disdain, on some far sea Swept by trade-winds the sun makes lyrical.
There is no air the mind may not recall, Blown from the violet-beds of Greece; and all The moons who drop their shattered petals here Live from the days which hid Semiramis.
Breezes upon my lips are subtly dear, Because they bear the burden of her kiss.
x.x.x
_Disguised_
The beggar thoughts pa.s.s down the lanes of day, And on the thorns that are the hours I find Their tatters and their rags. Infirm and blind, They faded in the void, and all the way Mouthed senseless jeers at me. I dared not pray For wisdom from these fools who throng the mind And leave no gifts but bitterness behind.
Chin upon hand, I watched, nor bade them stay.
Then wearily and indolently glanced Where the thorns fluttered with their flags, and, lo, Fragments of cloth of silver gleamed and danced In the late sun, and linen white as snow Among the beggar thoughts, with lowered eyes, Princes and kings had wandered in disguise.
SONGS
I
_On the White Road_
There's a white, white road lies under the swinging moon, Stretched from the black of the deep to the black of the deep, And midway the graveyard lies, with its leaves a-croon, The only sound of the world, like a dream in sleep.
There's a white, white grave lies under the graveyard trees, Hung on the road as a single pearl on a thread, And silence waits, beast crouched, on the rim of the breeze, That moans where the only man in the world lies dead.
II
_The Wanderer_
Have I finished my life, am I done?
Is my heart-blood thin and cold, That I gnaw the bones of the town?
Am I empty and old?
My flags are the chimneys' grime, Tossed on a languid breeze.
Have I dreamed of the roaring rhyme, A storm through the trees?
The snow in the streets is black, Profaned with the city's sin; I know of a star-lit track Where G.o.d's hand has been.
Have I finished with snow and sun, With the wind on the open plain, That I starve in the barren town-- Is my life in vain?
III
_False_
The black sky stretches to the pallid sea, As a false love and a dismantled heart.
Empty of faith and eager to depart.
He takes her yet once more, submissively, Against his lips, then, laughing, drifts away Swiftly within the dawning of the day.
Blindly she tosses up her foam-white hands, Crying for mercy, and the wind--her hair-- Lashes the wide-sailed ships and leaves them bare.
Blindly she hurls her rage against the sands.
There, in the cold sky where her love had lain Scornful, aloof, the sun reviews her pain.
IV
_A Song of the Oregon Trail_
How long the trail! How far the goal!
Last year the moons might come and go Like dancing shadows on the snow.
My heart was light, my heart was strong; I cared not though the way be long; But now--the end is you--my soul!--
I fear the dark, I fear the dread White frost that hovers round my heart, The cold, high sun, and, wide apart, The frozen, pitiless stars above.
So far, so far from my true love, And, oh! I fear, I fear the dead!
I fear their fingers, grasping and pale.
I did not fear the dead last year-- But now, the kisses of my dear!
The breast of her, so kind and warm, Ah, heart! I must not come to harm-- How far the goal! How long the trail!
V