|
Harun Omar and Master Hafiz | |
|
keep your dead beautiful ladies. | |
|
Mine is a little lovelier | |
|
than any of your ladies were. | |
| 5 |
In her perfectest array |
|
my lady, moving in the day, | |
|
is a little stranger thing | |
|
than crisp Sheba with her king | |
|
in the morning wandering. | |
| 10 |
Through the young and awkward hours |
|
my lady perfectly moving, | |
|
through the new world scarce astir | |
|
my fragile lady wandering | |
|
in whose perishable poise | |
| 15 |
is the mystery of Spring |
|
(with her beauty more than snow | |
|
dexterous and fugitive | |
|
my very frail lady drifting | |
|
distinctly, moving like a myth | |
| 20 |
in the uncertain morning, with |
|
April feet like sudden flowers | |
|
and all her body filled with May) | |
|
—moving in the unskilful day | |
|
my lady utterly alive, | |
| 25 |
to me is a more curious thing |
|
(a thing more nimble and complete) | |
|
than ever to Judea's king | |
|
were the shapely sharp cunning | |
|
and withal delirious feet | |
| 30 |
of the Princess Salom |
|
carefully dancing in the noise | |
|
of Herod's silence, long ago. | |
|
If she a little turn her head | |
|
i know that i am wholly dead: | |
| 35 |
nor ever did on such a throat |
|
the lips of Tristram slowly dote, | |
|
La beale Isoud whose leman was. | |
|
And if my lady look at me | |
|
(with her eyes which like two elves | |
| 40 |
incredibly amuse themselves) |
|
with a look of faerie, | |
|
perhaps a little suddenly | |
|
(as sometimes the improbable | |
|
beauty of my lady will) | |
| 45 |
—at her glance my spirit shies |
|
rearing (as in the miracle | |
|
of a lady who had eyes | |
|
which the king's horses might not kill.) | |
|
But should my lady smile, it were | |
| 50 |
a flower of so pure surprise |
|
(it were so very new a flower, | |
|
a flower so frail, a flower so glad) | |
|
as trembling used to yield with dew | |
|
when the world was young and new | |
| 55 |
(a flower such as the world had |
|
in springtime when the world was mad | |
|
and Launcelot spoke to Guenever, | |
|
a flower which most heavy hung | |
|
with silence when the world was young | |
| 60 |
and Diarmid looked in Grania's eyes.) |
|
But should my lady's beauty play | |
|
at not speaking (sometimes as | |
|
it will) the silence of her face | |
|
doth immediately make | |
| 65 |
in my heart so great a noise, |
|
as in the sharp and thirsty blood | |
|
of Paris would not all the Troys | |
|
of Helen's beauty: never did | |
|
Lord Jason (in impossible things | |
| 70 |
victorious impossibly) |
|
so wholly burn, to undertake | |
|
Medea's rescuing eyes; nor he | |
|
when swooned the white egyptian day | |
|
who with Egypt's body lay. | |
| 75 |
Lovely as those ladies were |
|
mine is a little lovelier. | |
|
And if she speak in her frail way, | |
|
it is wholly to bewitch | |
|
my smallest thought with a most swift | |
| 80 |
radiance wherein slowly drift |
|
murmurous things divinely bright; | |
|
it is foolingly to smite | |
|
my spirit with the lithe free twitch | |
|
of scintillant space, with the cool writhe | |
| 85 |
of gloom truly which syncopate |
|
some sunbeam's skilful fingerings; | |
|
it is utterly to lull | |
|
with foliate inscrutable | |
|
sweetness my soul obedient; | |
| 90 |
it is to stroke my being with |
|
numbing forests, frolicsome, | |
|
fleetly mystical, aroam | |
|
with keen creatures of idiom | |
|
(beings alert and innocent | |
| 95 |
very deftly upon which |
|
indolent miracles impinge) | |
|
—it is distinctly to confute | |
|
my reason with the deep caress | |
|
of every most shy thing and mute, | |
| 100 |
it is to quell me with the twinge |
|
of all living intense things. | |
|
Never my soul so fortunate | |
|
is (past the luck of all dead men | |
|
and loving) as invisibly when | |
| 105 |
upon her palpable solitude |
|
a furtive occult fragrance steals, | |
|
a gesture of immaculate | |
|
perfume—whereby (with fear aglow) | |
|
my soul is wont wholly to know | |
| 110 |
the poignant instantaneous fern |
|
whose scrupulous enchanted fronds | |
|
toward all things intrinsic yearn, | |
|
the immanent subliminal | |
|
fern of her delicious voice | |
| 115 |
(of her voice which always dwells |
|
beside the vivid magical | |
|
impetuous and utter ponds | |
|
of dream; and very secret food | |
|
its leaves inimitable find | |
| 120 |
beyond the white authentic springs, |
|
beyond the sweet instinctive wells, | |
|
which make to flourish the minute | |
|
spontaneous meadow of her mind) | |
|
—the vocal fern, alway which feels | |
| 125 |
the keen ecstatic actual tread |
|
(and thereto perfectly responds) | |
|
of all things exquisite and dead, | |
|
all living things and beautiful. | |
|
(Caliph and king their ladies had | |
| 130 |
to love them and to make them glad, |
|
when the world was young and mad, | |
|
in the city of Bagdad— | |
|
mine is a little lovelier | |
|
than any of their ladies were.) | |
| 135 |
Her body is most beauteous, |
|
being for all things amorous | |
|
fashioned very curiously | |
|
of roses and of ivory. | |
|
The immaculate crisp head | |
| 140 |
is such as only certain dead |
|
and careful painters love to use | |
|
for their youngest angels (whose | |
|
praising bodies in a row | |
|
between slow glories fleetly go.) | |
| 145 |
Upon a keen and lovely throat |
|
the strangeness of her face doth float, | |
|
which in eyes and lips consists | |
|
—alway upon the mouth there trysts | |
|
curvingly a fragile smile | |
| 150 |
which like a flower lieth (while |
|
within the eyes is dimly heard | |
|
a wistful and precarious bird.) | |
|
Springing from fragrant shoulders small, | |
|
ardent, and perfectly withal | |
| 155 |
smooth to stroke and sweet to see |
|
as a supple and young tree, | |
|
her slim lascivious arms alight | |
|
in skilful wrists which hint at flight | |
|
—my lady's very singular | |
| 160 |
and slenderest hands moreover are |
|
(which as lilies smile and quail) | |
|
of all things perfect the most frail. | |
|
(Whoso rideth in the tale | |
|
of Chaucer knoweth many a pair | |
| 165 |
of companions blithe and fair; |
|
who to walk with Master Gower | |
|
in Confessio doth prefer | |
|
shall not lack for beauty there, | |
|
nor he that will amaying go | |
| 170 |
with my lord Boccaccio— |
|
whoso knocketh at the door | |
|
of Marie and of Maleore | |
|
findeth of ladies goodly store | |
|
whose beauty did in nothing err. | |
| 175 |
If to me there shall appear |
|
than a rose more sweetly known, | |
|
more silently than a flower, | |
|
my lady naked in her hair— | |
|
i for those ladies nothing care | |
| 180 |
nor any lady dead and gone.) |
|
Each tapering breast is firm and smooth | |
|
that in a lovely fashion doth | |
|
from my lady's body grow; | |
|
as morning may a lily know, | |
| 185 |
her petaled flesh doth entertain |
|
the adroit blood's mysterious skein | |
|
(but like some passionate earlier | |
|
flower, the snow will oft utter, | |
|
whereof the year has perfect bliss— | |
| 190 |
for each breast a blossom is, |
|
which being a little while caressed | |
|
its fragrance makes the lover blest.) | |
|
Her waist is a most tiny hinge | |
|
of flesh, a winsome thing and strange; | |
| 195 |
apt in my hand warmly to lie |
|
it is a throbbing neck whereby | |
|
to grasp the belly's ample vase | |
|
(that urgent urn which doth amass | |
|
for whoso drinks, a dizzier wine | |
| 200 |
than should the grapes of heaven combine |
|
with earth's madness)—'tis a gate | |
|
unto a palace intricate | |
|
(whereof the luscious pillars rise | |
|
which are her large and shapely thighs) | |
| 205 |
in whose dome the trembling bliss |
|
of a kingdom wholly is. | |
|
Beneath her thighs such legs are seen | |
|
as were the pride of the world's queen: | |
|
each is a verb, miraculous | |
| 210 |
inflected oral devious, |
|
beneath the body's breathing noun | |
|
(moreover the delicious frown | |
|
of the grave great sensual knees | |
|
well might any monarch please.) | |
| 215 |
Each ankle is divinely shy; |
|
as if for fear you would espy | |
|
the little distinct foot (if whose | |
|
very minuteness doth abuse | |
|
reason, why then the artificer | |
| 220 |
did most exquisitely err.) |
|
When the world was like a song | |
|
heard behind a golden door, | |
|
poet and sage and caliph had | |
|
to love them and to make them glad | |
| 225 |
ladies with lithe eyes and long |
|
(when the world was like a flower | |
|
Omar Hafiz and Harun | |
|
loved their ladies in the moon) | |
|
—fashioned very curiously | |
| 230 |
of roses and ivory |
|
if naked she appear to me | |
|
my flesh is an enchanted tree; | |
|
with her lips' most frail parting | |
|
my body hears the cry of Spring, | |
| 235 |
and with their frailest syllable |
|
its leaves go crisp with miracle. | |
|
Love!—maker of my lady, | |
|
in that alway beyond this | |
|
poem or any poem she | |
| 240 |
of whose body words are afraid |
|
perfectly beautiful is, | |
|
forgive these words which I have made. | |
|
And never boast your dead beauties, | |
|
you greatest lovers in the world! | |
| 245 |
never boast your beauties dead |
|
who with Grania strangely fled, | |
|
who with Egypt went to bed, | |
|
whom white-thighed Semiramis | |
|
put up her mouth to wholly kiss— | |
| 250 |
never boast your dead beauties, |
|
mine being unto me sweeter | |
|
(of whose why delicious glance | |
|
things which never more shall be, | |
|
perfect things of færie, | |
| 255 |
are intense inhabitants; |
|
in whose warm superlative | |
|
body do distinctly live | |
|
all sweet cities passed away— | |
|
in her flesh at break of day | |
| 260 |
are the smells of Nineveh, |
|
in her eyes when day is gone | |
|
are the cries of Babylon.) | |
|
Diarmid Paris and Solomon, | |
|
Omar Harun and Master Hafiz, | |
| 265 |
to me your ladies are all one— |
|
keep your dead beautiful ladies. | |
|
Eater of all things lovely—Time! | |
|
upon whose watering lips the world | |
|
poises a moment (futile, proud, | |
| 270 |
a costly morsel of sweet tears) |
|
gesticulates, and disappears— | |
|
of all dainties which do crowd | |
|
gaily upon oblivion | |
|
sweeter than any there is one; | |
| 275 |
to touch it is the fear of rhyme— |
|
in life's very fragile hour | |
|
(when the world was like a tale | |
|
made of laughter and of dew, | |
|
was a flight, a flower, a flame, | |
| 280 |
was a tendril fleetly curled |
|
upon frailness) used to stroll | |
|
(very slowly) one or two | |
|
ladies like flowers made, | |
|
softly used to wholly move | |
| 285 |
slender ladies made of dream |
|
(in the lazy world and new | |
|
sweetly used to laugh and love | |
|
ladies with crisp eyes and frail, | |
|
in the city of Bagdad.) | |
| 290 |
Keep your dead beautiful ladies |
|
Harun Omar and Master Hafiz. |
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Transcribed and formatted for Internet reading, with addition of line numbers, from the 1923 (Thomas Seltzer, Inc.) hardcover edition of Tulips and Chimneys by E.E. Cummings.