The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
407
ONE NIGHT
I
A night of rain. The wind is out.And I had wished it otherwise:
A calm, still night; no scudding skies;
Or, in the scud, above the rout,
The moon; by whose pale light my eyes
Might meet her eyes; the smile that tries
To come but will not; lips, that pout
With seeming anger, all surmise,
When I have said “I love your lies”—
Lips I shall kiss before she dies.
II
What force this wind has! As it runsAround each unprotecting tree
It seems some beast; and now I see
Its form, its eyes; a woman's once:—
Dark eyes! that blaze as lionly
As some bayed beast's, that will not flee
408
Or is it but the thought in me!
The thought of that which is to be,
The deed, that rises shadowy?
III
And now the trees and whipping rainConfuse them. ... I must drive it hence,
The memory of her eyes! the tense
Wild look within them of hard pain! ...
Yet she must die—with every sense
Strung to beholding knowledge, whence
My heart shall be made whole again.—
Here I will wait where night is dense.
Soon she will come, like Innocence,
Thinking her youth is her defense.
IV
And when she leaves,—and none perceives,—The old gray manor, where the eight
Old locusts, (twisted shadows), freight
With mossy murmurings its eaves,
One moment at the iron gate
She 'll tarry. Then, with breath abate,
409
And I will take both hands and sate
My mouth on hers and say, “You 're late”;
She'll laugh to hear I had to wait. ...
V
O passion of past vows, reviveImagination, and renew
The ardor of love's language you
For love's rose-altar kept alive!
Repeat the oaths that rang with dew
And starlight!—Tell her she is true
As beautiful.—I will contrive
To make her think I have no clue
To all her falseness. I will woo
As once I wooed before I knew.
VI
And we will walk against the wind;The shuffling leaves about our feet;
Our ruin, as the wood's, complete,
Because one woman so hath sinned
And never suffered. She shall meet
No murder in my eyes; no heat
410
To hers. To make her trust to beat,
I'll kiss her hand, her hair,—like wheat
Of affluent summer,—saying “Sweet.”
VII
And should I bungle in this thing,This purpose that must see her dead
To cure this fever in my head?—
What other thing is there to bring
Soul satisfaction? when is shed
No real blood, save what makes red
The baulked intention?—I will fling
The mask aside!—But hate hath led
Desire too far now to be fed
With failure. I have naught to dread.
VIII
When we have reached the precipiceThat thwarts the battling of the sea,
And wallows out great rocks, that knee
The giant foam with roar and hiss,
I will not cease to coax and be
The anxious lover. Trusting she
411
Until it turns a curse, and we
Sway for an instant totteringly,
And she has shrieked some prayer at me.
IX
O let me see wild terror thereUpon her face! the wilder frown
Of crime's apprisal, and renown
Of my life's injury, that bare
This horror with its bloody crown!—
No pity, God! For, if her gown,
Suspending looseness of her hair,
Delay the plunge ... the night is brown ...
My heel must crush her white face down,
And Hell and Heaven see her drown.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||