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MID-DAY

H. D. · 1916

The light beats upon me.

I am startled--

a split leaf crackles on the paved floor--

I am anguished--defeated.

 

A slight wind shakes the seed-pods--

my thoughts are spent

as the black seeds.

My thoughts tear me,

I dread their fever.

I am scattered in its whirl.

I am scattered like

the hot shrivelled seeds.

 

The shrivelled seeds

are spilt on the path--

the grass bends with dust,

the grape slips

under its crackled leaf:

yet far beyond the spent seed-pods,

and the blackened stalks of mint,

the poplar is bright on the hill,

the poplar spreads out,

deep-rooted among trees.

 

O poplar, you are great

among the hill-stones,

while I perish on the path

among the crevices of the rocks.