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DEMETER

H. D. · 1921

I

 

Men, fires, feasts,

steps of temple, fore-stone, lintel,

step of white altar, fire and after-fire,

slaughter before,

fragment of burnt meat,

deep mystery, grapple of mind to reach

the tense thought,

power and wealth, purpose and prayer alike,

(men, fires, feasts, temple steps)--useless.

 

Useless to me who plant

wide feet on a mighty plinth,

useless to me who sit,

wide of shoulder, great of thigh,

heavy in gold, to press

gold back against solid back

of the marble seat:

useless the dragons wrought on the arms,

useless the poppy-buds and the gold inset

of the spray of wheat.

 

Ah they have wrought me heavy

and great of limb--

she is slender of waist,

slight of breast, made of many fashions;

they have set _her_ small feet

on many a plinth;

she they have known,

she they have spoken with,

she they have smiled upon,

she they have caught

and flattered with praise and gifts.

 

But useless the flattery

of the mighty power

they have granted me:

for I will not stay in her breast

the great of limb,

though perfect the shell they have

fashioned me, these men!

 

Do I sit in the market place--

do I smile, does a noble brow

bend like the brow of Zeus--

am I a spouse, his or any,

am I a woman, or goddess or queen,

to be met by a god with a smile--and left?

 

 

II

 

Do you ask for a scroll,

parchment, oracle, prophecy, precedent;

do you ask for tablets marked with thought

or words cut deep on the marble surface,

do you seek measured utterance or the mystic trance?

 

Sleep on the stones of Delphi--

dare the ledges of Pallas

but keep me foremost,

keep me before you, after you, with you,

never forget when you start

for the Delphic precipice,

never forget when you seek Pallas

and meet in thought

yourself drawn out from yourself

like the holy serpent,

never forget

in thought or mysterious trance--

I am greatest and least.

 

Soft are the hands of Love,

soft, soft are his feet;

you who have twined myrtle,

have you brought crocuses,

white as the inner

stript bark of the osier,

have you set

black crocus against the black

locks of another?

 

 

III

 

Of whom do I speak?

 

Many the children of gods

but first I take

Bromios, fostering prince,

lift from the ivy brake, a king.

 

Enough of the lightning,

enough of the tales that speak

of the death of the mother:

strange tales of a shelter

brought to the unborn,

enough of tale, myth, mystery, precedent--

a child lay on the earth asleep.

 

Soft are the hands of Love,

but what soft hands

clutched at the thorny ground,

scratched like a small white ferret

or foraging whippet or hound,

sought nourishment and found

only the crackling of ivy,

dead ivy leaf and the white

berry, food for a bird,

no food for this who sought,

bending small head in a fever,

whining with little breath.

 

Ah, small black head,

ah, the purple ivy bush,

ah, berries that shook and spilt

on the form beneath,

who begot you and left?

 

Though I begot no man child

all my days,

the child of my heart and spirit,

is the child the gods desert

alike and the mother in death--

the unclaimed Dionysios.

 

 

IV

 

_What of her--

mistress of Death?_

 

Form of a golden wreath

were my hands that girt her head,

fingers that strove to meet,

and met where the whisps escaped

from the fillet, of tenderest gold,

small circlet and slim

were my fingers then.

 

Now they are wrought of iron

to wrest from earth

secrets; strong to protect,

strong to keep back the winter

when winter tracks too soon

blanch the forest:

strong to break dead things,

the young tree, drained of sap,

the old tree, ready to drop,

to lift from the rotting bed

of leaves, the old

crumbling pine tree stock,

to heap bole and knot of fir

and pine and resinous oak,

till fire shatter the dark

and hope of spring

rise in the hearts of men.

 

_What of her--

mistress of Death--

what of his kiss?_

 

Ah, strong were his arms to wrest

slight limbs from the beautiful earth,

young hands that plucked the first

buds of the chill narcissus,

soft fingers that broke

and fastened the thorny stalk

with the flower of wild acanthus.

 

Ah, strong were the arms that took

(ah evil, the heart and graceless,)

but the kiss was less passionate!