The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
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QUATRAINS
I Poetry
Who hath beheld the goddess face to face,Blind with her beauty, all his days shall go
Climbing lone mountains towards her temple's place,
Weighed with Song's sweet, inexorable woe.
II The Unimaginative
Each form of beauty 's but the new disguiseOf thoughts more beautiful than forms can be;
Sceptics, who search with unanointed eyes,
Never the Earth's wild Fairy-dance shall see.
III Music
God-born before the Sons of God, she hurled,With awful symphonies of flood and fire,
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Flamed as the universe rolled from her lyre.
IV The Three Elements
They come as couriers of Heaven: their feetSonorous-sandaled with majestic awe;
In raiment of swift foam and wind and heat,
Blowing the trumpets of God's wrath and law.
V Rome
Above the Circus of the World she sat,Beautiful and base, a harlot crowned with pride:
Fierce Nations, upon whom she sneered and spat,
Shrieked at her feet and for her pastime died.
VI On Reading the Life of Haroun er Reshid
Down all the lanterned Bagdad of our youthHe steals, with golden justice for the poor:
Within his palace—you shall know the truth!—
A blood-smeared headsman hides behind each door.
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VII Mnemosyne
In classic beauty, cold, immaculate,A voiceful sculpture, stern and still she stands,
Upon her brow deep-chiselled love and hate,
That sorrow o'er dead roses in her hands.
VIII Beauty
High as a star, yet lowly as a flower,Unknown she takes her unassuming place
At Earth's proud masquerade—the appointed hour
Strikes, and, behold! the marvel of her face.
IX The Stars
These—the bright symbols of man's hope and fame,In which he reads his blessing or his curse—
Are syllables with which God speaks His name
In the vast utterance of the universe.
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X Echo
Dweller in hollow places, hills and rocks,Daughter of Silence and old Solitude,
Tip-toe she stands within her cave or wood,
Her only life the noises that she mocks.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||