MAGDALEN TO HER POET

By Olive Tilford Dargan

Take back thy song; or let me hear what thou

Heardst anciently from me,

The woman; now

This wassail drift on boughless shores;

Once lyre-veined leading thee

To singing doors

Out of the coiling dark;

Teaching thee hark

Earth's virgin candours, blossomed wonderings,

And sanctities inaudible till strings

Of lyric gentleness

Wooed Heaven to confess

Her world, and I was near,

The earliest listener,

Who of my bosom then made Arcady,

And drew thy forest feet to Castaly.

Take back thy pity. Is it not from man

Who made that world his own?

As barbican

Sends out its darts, and after flings

A dole of myrrh where groan

Is loudest, sings

Thy grace to me, me thus

Unbeauteous

By thee. Uneased thy covenanted bit

From Levite ark till now. Thy judges sit,

Gods ruminant, to keep

Earth pure for dulcet sleep

Of babe and mother. Ay,

Drones yet the lulling lie,

Whilst I, Disease uncinctured, darkly mate

With guard and sentry of thy hierarchate.

Thine ages, are they fair? Shall they yet draw

Child-homage from our eyes?

The woman awe

As her own babe? Far stretch the avid spans

Of fame-drunk emperies,

And all are man's;

But from what tower of praise

Does Justice gaze?

Art is thy boast? “See how we garland her,

The goddess of our hands?” Yea, yea, but where

Is Truth, save by whose breath

Art is a laurelled death?

“Our churches these, and this

Our Holy Writ; there wis

Our altars high, and sanctuarised sod!”

But what, care-taking soul, hast done with God?

The bairning time I knew, the whispering breast,

But in thy world no place

Was for my nest,

Fragrant for perilous brooding pause.

Thou went'st thy pace;

My gathered straws

And grasses cast to dust

To make thy lust

A wayside couch. Deep from the nation's root,

The bower-tree where homes are nesting fruit,

Thy blight creeps up unseen

On bitten way to the green,

Till no hope-banneret

Makes Spring in windy fret

Of flagellant boughs that whip my fingers bare,

Too chill at last to build, to bleed, to care.

Must surge so late with Nature's spawning ruse?

Her stintless passioning

Lest she should lose

The younglet of her dearest pang?

To thee, her tenderling,

She gave lust-fang

To run the jungle's harm;

Now strives thee to disarm,

And fend Life from that weapon lent thy wear

Till thou, forsaking dust, mightst capture her.

What need now of the blood

Whose wasteful plenitude

Swept thee through hostile slime

To shores of light and time,

Man-minim safe mid frost and poison dews

Where naught could live that had not life to lose?

Yet dost thou foster it as thy veinèd sun;

Thy Heaven and Holy Rood

Build toppling on

Its strifeful hell; root there thy art,

Thy dreams of tenderest bud;

Gaze on the heart

Of its fetidity,

This wreck of me,

And sing. O God, what death, in eyes so bound,

They see Life's beauty in her draining wound!

Lay thou the blind thing down

With saurian tusk and bone,

With dust of sworded maw

And peril's fossil claw,

Lest sexton Earth even Man inter, nor trover

Of after-law untomb for Love her Lover!

Her lover yet uncarnate; of thy race

To be; long-dreamèd mate

Of her embrace;

Whose godling fruit, too prized, too dear

For bandit breath, shall wait

The Garnerer.

Not then mute, anguished wives,

Dumb in law's gyves,

Shall shrink to mother a soul-famined brood,—

Unbudding sentiencies of flowerhood,

Shut miracles no wand

May touch, that from the hand

Of Toil, the reaver, fall

To dust, their grudgèd pall,

Leaving imperial web to those who wear

That woof of blood and tears as gossamer.

Not then! Where now the wailing way o'erteems,

And baffled starvelings bar

The way of dreams;

Pouring to Want, grey-veined Disease,

To Greed, and lurking War,—

Brute goblinries

With horde-lip sateless on

God-food dust-thrown,—

Lover and Love shall pass, each babe of theirs,

Darling of Life, born for the higher wars

Where knights of spirit sway,

Summoned to holiest fray

By heralds never bare

To clodded vision. There,

Shriven and sure, the sun-dipped lance shall leap

Till Dream uncorselet clay and put off sleep.

For me one rift! Through this sepultural blight

A breath runs living, new;

Unburdening light

As when the flame-borne prophet on

The Syrian ploughman threw

A people's dawn.

The world is Heaven worth,

The cradle earth

Casts orphanhood, a Bethlehem God-swung

From crimson grapple with his lyric young.

Here triumph I, so low,

Knowing that Lust shall go,

With whited, anarch train,—

Shall pass, this curbless, vain

Usurping deity that would compel

The Mary-longing Love to yet mould Jezebel.

Drag me with life that keeps Death shadow-near

Till I, unfrighted, wake

His charnel fear

In every face that wariful

Meets mine; this bud-mouth make

Unkissable

With kisses; and up-lap

My soul's youth sap

Till‘ t withers to a clutch about the gold

You think pays all; yet from this reedy mould,

This swamped, unfructant sedge,

Gentility's marsh edge,

I, on free wing, shall take

My swan-course o'er the brake,

Leaving the chanson of thy sin to thee

Who hast not seen, not touched the unstainable me.

Yet art thou dear, O singer! When we rest

Past all Life's hostel doors,

On her home crest;

And‘ neath our feet the dark vat night

From pain's crushed star-grapes pours

The climbing light;

There thou, beside me then,

With moteless ken,

Remembering these, thy pity and thy song,

Dropped at the cross where thou didst nail me long,

Shalt sereless‘ scape the aim

Of hot, lance-darting shame,

For over thee shall fall

The dawn-tressed coronal

Of Love I then shall be, wrapping thee in

The pity at whose touch dies every sin.