Book Read Free

Great Poems by American Women

Page 20

by Great Poems by American Women- An Anthology (epub)


  Have you seen fruit under cover

  that wanted light—

  pears wadded in cloth,

  protected from the frost,

  melons, almost ripe,

  smothered in straw?

  Why not let the pears cling

  to the empty branch?

  All your coaxing will only make

  a bitter fruit—

  let them cling, ripen of themselves,

  test their own worth,

  nipped, shrivelled by the frost,

  to fall at last but fair

  with a russet coat.

  Or the melon—

  let it bleach yellow

  in the winter light,

  even tart to the taste—

  it is better to taste of frost—

  the exquisite frost—

  than of wadding and of dead grass.

  For this beauty,

  beauty without strength,

  chokes out life.

  I want wind to break,

  scatter these pink-stalks,

  snap off their spiced heads,

  fling them about with dead leaves—

  spread the paths with twigs,

  limbs broken off,

  trail great pine branches,

  hurled from some far wood

  right across the melon-patch,

  break pear and quince—

  leave half-trees, torn, twisted

  but showing the fight was valiant.

  O to blot out this garden

  to forget, to find a new beauty

  in some terrible

  wind-tortured place.

  Heat

  O wind, rend open the heat,

  cut apart the heat,

  rend it to tatters.

  Fruit cannot drop

  through this thick air-

  fruit cannot fall into heat

  that presses up and blunts

  the points of pears

  and rounds the grapes.

  Cut the heat—

  plough through it,

  turning it on either side

  of your path.

  Helen

  All Greece hates

  the still eyes in the white face,

  the lustre as of olives

  where she stands,

  and the white hands.

  All Greece reviles

  the wan face when she smiles,

  hating it deeper still

  when it grows wan and white,

  remembering past enchantments

  and past ills.

  Greece sees unmoved,

  God’s daughter, born of love,

  the beauty of cool feet

  and slenderest knees,

  could love indeed the maid,

  only if she were laid,

  white ash amid funereal cypresses.

  GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON (1886—1966)

  The first African-American woman poet to become famous since Frances E. W. Harper, Georgia Douglas Johnson was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and educated in public schools. Her emotional style is evident in her three books: The Heart of a Woman (1918), Bronze (1922), and An Autumn Love Cycle (1928).

  The Heart of a Woman

  The heart of a woman goes forth with the dawn,

  As a lone bird, soft winging, so restlessly on,

  Afar o’er life’s turrets and vales does it roam

  In the wake of those echoes the heart calls home.

  The heart of a woman falls back with the night,

  And enters some alien cage in its plight,

  And tries to forget it has dreamed of the stars,

  While it breaks, breaks, breaks on the sheltering bars.

  MARIANNE MOORE (1887—1972)

  Characterized by a highly personal and unique style, Marianne Moore’s verse has earned a distinctive place in twentieth-century American poetry. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Moore taught school after graduating from Bryn Mawr College in 1909. She worked as an assistant librarian in the New York Public Library during 1921-25. Without her knowledge, Poems (1921) was published, edited by Hilda Doolittle and Winifred Ellerman. Moore’s verse also appeared in various magazines and periodicals, as well as in Selected Poems (1935), The Pangolin and Other Poems (1936), What Are Years (1941), and Collected Poems (1951), which won her a Pulitzer Prize plus two additional awards.

  Poetry

  I, too, dislike it: there are things that are important beyond all this

  fiddle.

  Reading it, however, with a perfect contempt for it, one discovers in

  it after all, a place for the genuine.

  Hands that can grasp, eyes

  that can dilate, hair that can rise

  if it must, these things are important not because a

  high-sounding interpretation can be put upon them but because they

  are

  useful. When they become so derivative as to become unintelligible,

  the same things may be said for all of us, that we

  do not admire what

  we cannot understand: the bat

  holding on upside down or in quest of something to

  eat, elephants pushing, a wild horse taking a roll, a tireless wolf under

  a tree, the immovable critic twitching his skin like a horse that feels a

  flea, the base-

  ball fan, the statistician—

  nor is it valid

  to discriminate against ‘business documents and

  school-books’; all these phenomena are important. One must make a

  distinction

  however: when dragged into prominence by half poets, the result is

  not poetry,

  nor till the poets among us can be

  ‘literalists of

  the imagination’—above

  insolence and triviality and can present

  for inspection, ‘imaginary gardens with real toads in them’, shall we

  have

  it. In the meantime, if you demand on the one hand,

  the raw material of poetry in

  all its rawness and

  that which is on the other hand

  genuine, you are interested in poetry.

  Sojourn in the Whale

  Trying to open locked doors with a sword, threading

  The points of needles, planting shade trees

  Upside down; swallowed by the opaqueness of one whom the seas

  Love better than they love you, Ireland—

  You have lived and lived on every kind of shortage.

  You have been compelled by hags to spin

  Gold thread from straw and have heard men say: “There is a feminine

  Temperament in direct contrast to

  Ours which makes her do these things. Circumscribed by a

  Heritage of blindness and native

  Incompetence, she will become wise and will be forced to give

  In. Compelled by experience, she

  Will turn back; water seeks its own level”: and you

  Have smiled. ”Water in motion is far

  From level.” You have seen it when obstacles happened to bar

  The path—rise automatically.

  Roses Only

  You do not seem to realize that beauty is a liability rather than

  An asset—that in view of the fact that spirit creates form—we are jus-

  tified in supposing

  That you must have brains. For you, a symbol of the unit, stiff and

  sharp,

  Conscious of surpassing—by dint of native superiority and liking for

  everything

  Self dependent—anything an

  Ambitious civilization might produce: for you, unaided to attempt

  through sheer

  Reserve, to confute presumptions resulting from observation, is idle.

  You cannot make us

  Think you a delightful happen-so. But rose, if you are brilliant, it

  Is not because your petals are
the without-which-nothing of pre-

  eminence. You would look—minus

  Thorns—like a what-is-this, a mere

  Peculiarity. They are not proof against a worm, the elements, or mildew

  But what about the predatory hand? What is brilliance without co-

  ordination? Guarding the

  Infinitesmal pieces of your mind, compelling audience to

  The remark that is better to be forgotten than to be remembered too

  violently,

  Your thorns are the best part of you.

  To a Steam Roller

  The illustration

  Is nothing to you without the application.

  You lack half wit. You crush all the particles down

  Into close conformity and then walk back and forth on them.

  Sparkling chips of rock

  Are crushed down to the level of the parent block.

  Were not “impersonal judgment in aesthetic

  Matters, a metaphysical impossibility,” you

  Might fairly achieve

  It. As for butterflies, I can hardly conceive

  Of one’s attending upon you, but to question

  The congruence of the complement is vain, if it exists.

  EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY (1892—1950)

  Famous for her lyrical and passionate sonnets, Edna St. Vincent Millay was born in Rockland, Maine, and attended Vassar, graduating in 1917. At nineteen, Millay’s poem “Renascence” was published in The Lyric Year (1912). She lived in New York’s Greenwich Village, and was associated with the youthful, bohemian lifestyle prevalent there in the 1920s. Renascence and Other Poems (1917) was her first book of verse. In 1920, she published her second book of poems, A Few Figs from Thistles, and the following year, Second April appeared, along with two plays, Two Slatterns and a King and The Lamp and the Bell. She received the Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for her book, Ballad of the Harp-Weaver. That same year, Millay married a Dutch businessman and moved to Austerlitz, New York, where she died in 1950.

  First Fig

  My candle burns at both ends;

  It will not last the night;

  But ah, my foes and oh, my friends—

  It gives a lovely light.

  Renascence

  All I could see from where I stood

  Was three long mountains and a wood;

  I turned and looked another way,

  And saw three islands in a bay.

  So with my eyes I traced the line

  Of the horizon, thin and fine,

  Straight around till I was come

  Back to where I’d started from;

  And all I saw from where I stood

  Was three long mountains and a wood.

  Over these things I could not see;

  These were the things that bounded me;

  And I could touch them with my hand,

  Almost, I thought, from where I stand.

  And all at once things seemed so small

  My breath came short, and scarce at all.

  But, sure, the sky is big, I said;

  Miles and miles above my head;

  So here upon my back I’ll lie

  And look my fill into the sky.

  And so I looked, and, after all,

  The sky was not so very tall.

  The sky, I said, must somewhere stop,

  And—sure enough!—I see the top!

  The sky, I thought, is not so grand;

  I ‘most could touch it with my hand!

  And reaching up my hand to try,

  I screamed to feel it touch the sky.

  I screamed, and—lo!—Infinity

  Came down and settled over me;

  Forced back my scream into my chest,

  Bent back my arm upon my breast,

  And, pressing of the Undefined

  The definition on my mind,

  Held up before my eyes a glass

  Through which my shrinking sight did pass

  Until it seemed I must behold

  Immensity made manifold;

  Whispered to me a word whose sound

  Deafened the air for worlds around,

  And brought unmuffled to my ears

  The gossiping of friendly spheres,

  The creaking of the tented sky,

  The ticking of Eternity.

  I saw and heard, and knew at last

  The How and Why of all things, past,

  And present, and forevermore.

  The Universe, cleft to the core,

  Lay open to my probing sense

  That, sick’ning, I would fain pluck thence

  But could not,—nay! But needs must suck

  At the great wound, and could not pluck

  My lips away till I had drawn

  All venom out.—Ah, fearful pawn!

  For my omniscience paid I toll

  In infinite remorse of soul.

  All sin was of my sinning, all

  Atoning mine, and mine the gall

  Of all regret. Mine was the weight

  Of every brooded wrong, the hate

  That stood behind each envious thrust,

  Mine every greed, mine every lust.

  And all the while for every grief,

  Each suffering, I craved relief

  With individual desire,—

  Craved all in vain! And felt fierce fire

  About a thousand people crawl;

  Perished with each,—then mourned for all!

  A man was starving in Capri;

  He moved his eyes and looked at me;

  I felt his gaze, I heard his moan,

  And knew his hunger as my own.

  I saw at sea a great fog bank

  Between two ships that struck and sank;

  A thousand screams the heavens smote;

  And every scream tore through my throat.

  No hurt I did not feel, no death

  That was not mine; mine each last breath

  That, crying, met an answering cry

  From the compassion that was I.

  All suffering mine, and mine its rod;

  Mine, pity like the pity of God.

  Ah, awful weight! Infinity

  Pressed down upon the finite Me!

  My anguished spirit, like a bird,

  Beating against my lips I heard;

  Yet lay the weight so close about

  There was no room for it without.

  And so beneath the weight lay I

  And suffered death, but could not die.

  Long had I lain thus, craving death,

  When quietly the earth beneath

  Gave way, and inch by inch, so great

  At last had grown the crushing weight,

  Into the earth I sank till I

  Full six feet under ground did lie,

  And sank no more,—there is no weight

  Can follow here, however great.

  From off my breast I felt it roll,

  And as it went my tortured soul

  Burst forth and fled in such a gust

  That all about me swirled the dust.

  Deep in the earth I rested now;

  Cool is its hand upon the brow

  And soft its breast beneath the head

  Of one who is so gladly dead.

  And all at once, and over all

  The pitying rain began to fall;

  I lay and heard each pattering hoof

  Upon my lowly, thatched roof,

  And seemed to love the sound far more

  Than ever I had done before.

  For rain it hath a friendly sound

  To one who’s six feet underground;

  And scarce the friendly voice or face:

  A grave is such a quiet place.

  The rain, I said, is kind to come

  And speak to me in my new home.

  I would I were alive again

  To kiss the fingers of the rain,

  To drink into my eyes the shine

  Of every slanting silver line
,

  To catch the freshened, fragrant breeze

  From drenched and dripping apple-trees.

  For soon the shower will be done,

  And then the broad face of the sun

  Will laugh above the rain-soaked earth

  Until the world with answering mirth

  Shakes joyously, and each round drop

  Rolls, twinkling, from its grass-blade top.

  How can I bear it; buried here,

  While overhead the sky grows clear

  And blue again after the storm?

  O, multi-colored, multiform,

  Beloved beauty over me,

  That I shall never, never see

  Again! Spring-silver, autumn-gold,

  That I shall never more behold!

  Sleeping your myriad magics through,

  Close-sepulchred away from you!

  O God, I cried, give me new birth,

  And put me back upon the earth!

  Upset each cloud’s gigantic gourd

  And let the heavy rain, down-poured

  In one big torrent, set me free,

  Washing my grave away from me!

  I ceased; and through the breathless hush

  That answered me, the far-off rush

  Of herald wings came whispering

  Like music down the vibrant string

  Of my ascending prayer, and—crash!

  Before the wild wind’s whistling lash

  The startled storm-clouds reared on high

  And plunged in terror down the sky,

  And the big rain in one black wave

  Fell from the sky and struck my grave.

  I know not how such things can be;

  I only know there came to me

  A fragrance such as never clings

  To aught save happy living things;

  A sound as of some joyous elf

  Singing sweet songs to please himself,

 

‹ Prev