Among School Children
I walk through the long schoolroom questioning; | A kind old nun in a white hood replies; | The children
learn to cipher and to sing, | To study reading-books and history, | To cut and sew, be neat in everything | In the best modern waythe childrens eyes | In momentary wonder stare upon | A sixty-year-old smiling
public man. | | | | | I dream of a Ledaean body, bent | Above a sinking fire, a tale that she | Told of a harsh
reproof, or trivial event | That changed some childish day to tragedy | Told, and it seemed that our two
natures blent | Into a sphere from youthful sympathy, | Or else, to alter Platos parable, | Into the yolk and
white of the one shell. | | | | | And thinking of that fit of grief or rage | I look upon one child or tother there | And wonder if she stood so at that age | For even daughters of the swan can share | Something of every
paddlers heritage | And had that colour upon cheek or hair, | And thereupon my heart is driven wild: | She stands before me as a living child. | | | | | Her present image floats into the mind | Did Quattrocento
finger fashion it | Hollow of cheek as though it drank the wind | And took a mess of shadows for its meat? | And I though never of Ledaean kind | Had pretty plumage onceenough of that, | Better to smile on all
that smile, and show | There is a comfortable kind of old scarecrow. | | | | | What youthful mother, a shape
upon her lap | Honey of generation had betrayed, | And that must sleep, shriek, struggle to escape | As
recollection or the drug decide, | Would think her son, did she but see that shape | With sixty or more winters
on its head, | A compensation for the pang of his birth, | Or the uncertainty of his setting forth? | | | | | Plato
thought nature but a spume that plays | Upon a ghostly paradigm of things; | Solider Aristotle played the
taws | Upon the bottom of a king of kings; | World-famous golden-thighed Pythagoras | Fingered upon a
fiddle-stick or strings | What a star sang and careless Muses heard: | Old clothes upon old sticks to scare
a bird. | | | | | Both nuns and mothers worship images, | But those the candles light are not as those | That
animate a mothers reveries, | But keep a marble or a bronze repose. | And yet they too break heartsO
Presences | That passion, piety or affection knows, | And that all heavenly glory symbolise | O self-born
mockers of mans enterprise; | | | | | Labour is blossoming or dancing where | The body is not bruised to
pleasure soul, | Nor beauty born out of its own despair, | Nor blear-eyed wisdom out of midnight oil. | O
chestnut tree, great rooted blossomer, | Are you the leaf, the blossom or the bole? | O body swayed to
music, O brightening glance, | How can we know the dancer from the dance? |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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