Collected Poems (22 page)

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Authors: William Alexander Percy

BOOK: Collected Poems
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On Sunday morning after mass

               
When he is dressed so fine,

    
He stops before their open doors,

               
But at night he comes to mine.

    
O Mary, bless all sailor lads

               
Whose loves are two and three,

    
But mine keep safe from other girls

               
Or let him die in the sea!

And as the last line leaves her lips

She pauses, puckers up her mild girl’s brow,

Then laughs a low contented laugh,

And sings again, half crooningly.

But summer sunshine, jubilant with cock-crows,

Is rattling open all the shuttered town.

The cross-roads gild, and housewives with their mops

Splash on the family door-step; street by street

Hears emptily the melancholy calls,

Reiterant and shrill, of country women,

Shoving their push-carts full of salad leaves

And gasping fish and lentils, frosty green.

Soon shore and beach and jetty are swarming and laughing

With fishermen’s wives and mothers

And fathers and children and friends,

Come down to welcome the fleet:

Old men with cautious, simple eyes

And polished wrinkles carved in wood,

Old women coiffed in white

With wide clean aprons, baskets on their arms,

And little boys with windy looks and sober ways,

Breeched and jumpered in mandarin sail-cloth —

All shuffling in wooden shoes

That clatter and thump on the cobbles —

And the girl at the end of the jetty

Among them and of them,

Laughing the laughter that hides.

At last the black line of the wind appears,

Dragging behind unevenly the fleet.

And instantly the shore is ruffled

With ant-hill runnings up and down,

And pointing hands and voluble, unheeded chatter.

But she is silent,

Clutching her shawl in the freshening breeze,

And pale — or pale as peasant girls may be —

For the fishing boats are returning

And the sailors return from the sea.

Moth after moth, gold-winged on the golden morning,

Bursting and drinking the light green spray of the tide,

They fly with flashing and splendor out of the ocean,

Straining for waters of calm and the haven they know.

As each ship rounds the mole with sail careening

The girl leans out,

Searching the weathered faces of the crew.

And now her lover’s boat flings past,

Wrapped in a dazzle of spray, dripping with brine,

Tilting its saffron sail in the rainbow wash

As it shoulders the mole.

Ah, the girl is a pendent flower!

Her mouth, her eyes, her soul,

Above him, gazing, waiting!

But he, forgetful, wrangles with the ropes,

And never lifts his head, nor waves his hand,

Nor sends one smile

Up to her eager face.

And the last late boat comes home,

And the fishing’s done,

And hulls are emptied of their freight —

Mauve and silver-scaled sardines —

And sails are furled

And in the quiet sunlight from the masts

The nets are hung to dry —

The sea-soaked azure nets,

Bluer than filaments of unflawed turquoise.

But the girl alone on the bright deserted jetty

Still stands in the staring sunshine,

Her warm breast leaned against the spray-damp coping

It leaned more warmly on when he passed by.

But now her head is crouched behind her arms,

Her shawl clutched to her mouth,

And out across the hazing sea her wide eyes stare

Unseeingly and full of fear.

And the ancient wind from Tristan’s isle comes sighing,

From the isle where long ago

Iseult with white hands folded on her lap,

Night after night,

Before the smouldering faggot fire,

Sat watching for some little tenderness

From Tristan,

Tristan the knight, whose heart to Cornwall clave

Unpityingly,

As all men know.

PART III
ENZIO’S KINGDOM, AND OTHER POEMS
II
DELTA SKETCHES
IN THE DELTA

The river country’s wide and flat

    And blurred ash-blue with sun,

And there all work is dreams come true,

    All dreams are work begun.

The silted river made for us

    The black and mellow soil

And taught us as we conquered him

    Courage and faith and toil.

The river town that water oaks

    And myrtles hide and bless

Has broken every law except

    The law of kindliness.

And north and south and east the fields

    Of cotton close it round,

Where golden billows of the sun

    Break with no shade or sound.

Dear is the town, but in the fields

    A little house could be,

If built with care and auspices,

    A heart’s felicity.

O friend, who love not much indoors

    Or lamp-lit, peopled ways,

What of a field and house to pass

    Our residue of days?

We’d learn of fret and labor there

    A patience that we miss

And be content content to be

    Nor wish nor hope for bliss.

With the immense untrammelled sun

    For brother in the fields,

And every night the stars’ crusade

    Flashing to us their shields,

We’d meet, perhaps, some dusk as we

    Turned home to well-earned rest,

Unhurried Wisdom, tender-eyed,

    A pilgrim and our guest.

GREENVILLE TREES

THE LOMBARDY POPLARS:

Captive in this drab alien land,

We dreamed of all the great and wise

Who took the roads our shadows spanned

With song on lips and sword on thighs.

King Richard fared, one morn of May,

Our leafy lane to Palestine

With Blondel following. Well-a-day,

They sang of God and love and wine!

We leaned to pity once that girl

Who left the Loire one dripping spring,

So red of mouth, so brown of curl,

To be love’s slave and Scotland’s king.

Crusaders, knights, and troubadours

Rode through our golden-panelled shade:

We never thought these songless shores

Could rival that dead cavalcade.

But, petulant of simple joys,

Loving Death’s mother, blind Romance,

We watched the passionate Delta boys

Stride down the street that leads to France.

THE CHINA-BERRIES:

Thousands of years ago,

We were weaving in moonlit Manchu gardens

Webs and arabesques of purple

On the moon-gray pebbled paths

For slender empresses,

In silver, lavender, and rose,

To tread on with their fuchsia-tinted sandals.

And one, on such a night,

Paused in our falling veils of subtle fragrance

And lifted up her arms

To the weary, much-prayed- to moon,

And wept for love.

But we have never seen these pale new people

Lift their arms to the exquisite moon

Or linger in our perfume.

They seem unconscious

Of the marvel of our blossoms,

Our stamens purpler-black than clematis,

Our delicate wisteria-tinged corolla.

Yet slender-fingered undulant princesses

Have bit their coral lips

And slain in anger

Prostrate imperial attendants

Because no loom could match our secret dyes.

Here we must tolerate small girls

With strange, sun-colored hair

Who thread our blossoms

And loop them with coarse clover-chains

About their throats.

Or worse, near summer-time,

Small boys, with eyes that have no darkness,

Will clamber into our branches,

Wounding our tender bark of satin,

Snapping our wonderful patterned leaves,

And pull our berries,

Hard, green, with infinitesimal speckles;

Then filling our indignant shade with laughter,

Jolly, uncouth, immoderate,

Mash them into their popguns

And frighten the sparrows even

And the reverent ancient negroes

With their insolent bombardment.…

Only the winter robins love us,

And then our boughs are naked,

And our shrivelled berries

Hang down in milky yellow clusters,

Fingered by faded winds,

Against a gray interminable sky.

Yet then too we are beautiful!

THE LOCUSTS:

In vain we fill the winter’s palms

With rush of round, thin, golden alms.

The winter has no care for us

But breaks our brittle branches thus,

               Abjuring calms.

Yet one week of the year is ours:

We sun our creamy, scented flowers

And madden all the town. Oh, they

Are powerless, though prim, to stay

               Our fragrant powers.

The crowded church we bloom before

Leaves carelessly an open door:

Young sinners’ eyes desert their books

And meet with long-lashed pagan looks

               And read no more.

Ah, watch for them, when shadows wait,

Walking the levee, slow, sedate!

But blush to guess the darling sights

When perfumes are the only lights,

               And it grows late.

THE WATER OAKS:

Once in our branches

Swarms of green parrakeets in seething turmoil settled,

Chattering north from the sweltering rank pampas,

Clothing us doubly in delightful leaves,

And suddenly departing.

But long ago, one violet spring,

We watched their wavering throngs melt down the south

To come again no more.…

We have been darkened by clouds of pigeons

Weltering like a cyclone

Across the watery rose sunset.

But some great death

Slew them: they come no more.…

More beautiful than all the wings that fly in beauty,

The wild swans,

Noble and full of fellowship,

Came in old days

Down the broad curves and brimming tremble of the river,

Or overland, at night, against the stars.

Oppressed with solemn joy

And ever-urgent purpose undisclosed,

They hovered in the twilight of cool autumn

Or mounted on the sunrise, trumpeting

And glad of rest, though brief.

For all their beauty

Each year we saw their glistening ranks dissolve,

Dissolve and waste, till now

Once in a winter and with pain

We spy perhaps a lone white wanderer,

Mateless and without friend,

Circling uncertainly and with hoarse piteous cries,

Till mercifully, with no thought of mercy,

The gray-eyed hunter on the river bars,

Making of murder sport, deprives

Him of his loneliness, the deep sky of a swan.

So too the races passed that lived beneath our leaves —

The patient, thought-pressed builders of the mounds

That came from mystery,

Returning whence they came;

The stealthy copper tribes

Whose arrows slit the blue beyond our heights,

Who, making moonlight haggard with their fires,

Danced in bad triumph at their brothers’ death,

But in the end found never a cause to dance.

So too shall pass their pallid conquerors

Who now in slaying us have made the land

Naked and without loveliness of shade.

Though they have planted seed where once we towered

And hemmed the river’s strength

And wedged us in their curveless hot-floored towns,

They too shall pass,

And we shall watch them die.

In the beginning there were three

And in the end there shall be only three:

The trees, the river,

And the outspread lonely tree of heaven,

Whose boughs are blossomy apple-wreaths at dawn,

Autumnal red and purple in the sunset,

And laden, night long, with the fruitage of the stars,

A harvest for some still-delaying husbandman.

THE HOLY WOMEN

    I have seen Mary at the cross

               And Mary at the tomb

And Mary weeping as she spread her hair

               In a leper’s room.

    But it was not in Bethany

               Or groping up Calvary hill

I learned how women break their hearts to ease

               Another’s ill.

    Compassionate and wise in pain,

               Most faithful in defeat,

The holy Marys I have watched and loved

               Live on our street.

A BURNISHED CALM

If I could be as calm as willow branches

When the sunlight turns them copper-pink and gold

And they lift their slender wands in the winter sunshine

From out the red-brown coffee-weeds into the blueness;

If I could know the calm of willow branches

When the hollows of the woods hold azure smoke

And the southern winter blurs and tarnishes;

If I could feel their passive unstrained certainty

As they wait the still-uneager, leaf-laden springtime,

Not fearing it will never come or come

Less beautiful, not doubting the return in time

Of downy buds and wrinkled burgeoning

And all the filmy lustre of warm days;

If I could be like willows by the river-bank in winter,

I think that wars remembered and presaged,

The drugging sense of doom and old disaster,

Would not oppress and strangle me as now.

But I should have a faith unflawed by these,

Discerning through the mad inclement now

The right’s august recurrence in the race,

And like the leafless willows by the river

Wait in the winter sunshine trustfully

And with a burnished calm.

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