A Man Young and Old
| | | | Though nurtured like the sailing moon | In beautys murderous brood, | She walked awhile and
blushed awhile | And on my pathway stood | Until I thought her body bore | A heart of flesh and blood. | | | | | But
since I laid a hand thereon | And found a heart of stone | I have attempted many things | And not a thing
is done, | For every hand is lunatic | That travels on the moon. | | | | | She smiled and that transfigured me | And
left me but a lout, | Maundering here, and maundering there, | Emptier of thought | Than the heavenly circuit
of its stars | When the moon sails out. | | | | | | | | | Like the moon her kindness is, | If kindness I
may call | What has no comprehension int, | But is the same for all | As though my sorrow were a scene | Upon a painted wall. | | | | | So like a bit of stone I lie | Under a broken tree. | I could recover if I shrieked | My
hearts agony | To passing bird, but I am dumb | From human dignity. | | | | | | | | | A mermaid found
a swimming lad, | Picked him for her own, | Pressed her body to his body, | Laughed; and plunging down | Forgot in cruel happiness | That even lovers drown. | | | | | | | | | I have pointed out the
yelling pack, | The hare leap to the wood, | And when I pass a compliment | Rejoice as lover should | At the
drooping of an eye, | At the mantling of the blood. | | | | | Then suddenly my heart is wrung | By her distracted
air | And I remember wildness lost | And after, swept from there, | Am set down standing in the wood | At
the death of the hare. | | | | | | | | | A crazy man that found a cup, | When all but dead of thirst, | Hardly dared to wet his mouth | Imagining, moon-accursed, | That another mouthful | And his beating heart
would burst. | October last I found it too | But found it dry as bone, | And for that reason am I crazed | And
my sleep is gone. | | | | | | | | | We should be hidden from their eyes, | Being but holy shows | And
bodies broken like a thorn | Whereon the bleak north blows, | To think of buried Hector | And that none
living knows. | | | | | The women take so little stock | In what I do or say | Theyd sooner leave their cosseting | To hear a jackass bray; | My arms are like the twisted thorn | And yet there beauty lay; | | | | | The first of all the
tribe lay there | And did such pleasure take | She who had brought great Hector down | And put all Troy
to wreck | That she cried into this ear, | Strike me if I shriek. | | | | | VII | | | | | The Friends of his Youth | | | | | Laughter
not time destroyed my voice | And put that crack in it, | And when the moons pot-bellied | I get a laughing
fit, | For that old Madge comes down the lane, | A stone upon her breast, | And a cloak wrapped about the
stone, | And she can get no rest | With singing hush and hush-a-bye; | She that has been wild | And barren
as a breaking wave | Thinks that the stones a child. | | | | | And Peter that had great affairs | And was a pushing
man | Shrieks, I am King of the Peacocks, | And perches on a stone; | And then I laugh till tears run down | And the heart thumps at my side, | Remembering that her shriek was love | And that he shrieks from pride. | | | | | | | | | We sat under an old thorn-tree | And talked away the night, | Told all that had
been said or done | Since first we saw the light, | And when we talked of growing up | Knew that wed halved
a soul | And fell the one in tothers arms | That we might make it whole; | Then Peter had a murdering look, | For it seemed that he and she | Had spoken of their childish days | Under that very tree. | O what a bursting
out there was, | And what a blossoming, | When we had all the summer-time | And she had all the spring! | | | | | | | | | I have old womens secrets now | That had those of the young; | Madge tells
me what I dared not think | When my blood was strong, | And what had drowned a lover once | Sounds like
an old song. | | | | | Though Margery is stricken dumb | If thrown in Madges way, | We three make up a solitude; | For none alive to-day | Can know the stories that we know | Or say the things we say: | | | | | How such a man
pleased women most | Of all that are gone, | How such a pair loved many years | And such a pair but one, | Stories of the bed of straw | Or the bed of down. | | | | | | | | | O bid me mount and sail up there | Amid the cloudy wrack, | For Peg and Meg and Paris love | That had so straight a back, | Are gone away,
and some that stay | Have changed their silk for sack. | | | | | Were I but there and none to hear | Id have a peacock
cry, | For that is natural to a man | That lives in memory, | Being all alone Id nurse a stone | And sing it lullaby. | | | | | XI | | | | | From Oedipus at Colonus | | | | | Endure what life God gives and ask no longer span; | Cease to remember
the delights of youth, travel-wearied aged man; | Delight becomes death-longing if all longing else be
vain. | | | | | Even from that delight memory treasures so, | Death, despair, division of families, all entanglements
of mankind grow, | As that old wandering beggar and these God-hated children know. | | | | | In the long echoing
street the laughing dancers throng, | The bride is carried to the bridegrooms chamber through torchlight
and tumultuous song; | I celebrate the silent kiss that ends short life or long. | | | | | Never to have lived is best,
ancient writers say; | Never to have drawn the breath of life, never to have looked into the eye of day; | The
second bests a gay goodnight and quickly turn away. |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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