#Americans #Imagist #Women #FreeVerse
Each of us like you has died once, has passed through drift of wood—l… cracked and bent and tortured and unbent
YOU are as gold as the half—ripe grain that merges to gold again, as white as the white rain that beats through
Bear me to Dictaeus, and to the steep slopes; to the river Erymanthus. I choose spray of dittany, cyperum, frail of flower,
Rose, harsh rose, marred and with stint of petals, meagre flower, thin, sparse of leaf, more precious
All Greece hates the still eyes in the white face, the lustre as of olives where she stands, and the white hands.
So you have swept me back, I who could have walked with the l… above the earth, I who could have slept among the l… at last;
I first tasted under Apollo’s lip… love and love sweetness, I, Evadne; my hair is made of crisp violets or hyacinth which the wind combs b…
I have had enough. I gasp for breath. Every way ends, every road, every foot-path leads at last to the hill-crest—
Amber husk fluted with gold, fruit on the sand marked with a rich grain, treasure
I should have thought in a dream you would have brought some lovely, perilous thing, orchids piled in a great sheath, as who would say (in a dream),
Are you alive? I touch you. You quiver like a sea—fish. I cover you with my net. What are you —banded one?
O wind, rend open the heat, cut apart the heat, rend it to tatters. Fruit cannot drop through this thick air—
You are clear O rose, cut in rock, hard as the descent of hail. I could scrape the colour from the petals
Can we believe—by an effort comfort our hearts: it is not waste all this, not placed here in disgust, street after street,
The mysteries remain, I keep the same cycle of seed—time and of sun and rain; Demeter in the grass,