Skip to content
← Back to poem

PRISONERS

H. D. · 1924

It is strange that I should want

this sight of your face--

we have had so much:

at any moment now I may pass,

stand near the gate,

do not speak--

only reach if you can, your face

half-fronting the passage

toward the light.

 

Fate--God sends this as a mark,

a last token that we are not forgot,

lost in this turmoil,

about to be crushed out,

burned or stamped out

at best with sudden death.

 

The spearsman who brings this

will ask for the gold clasp

you wear under your coat.

I gave all I had left.

 

Press close to the portal,

my gate will soon clang

and your fellow wretches

will crowd to the entrance--

be first at the gate.

 

Ah beloved, do not speak.

I write this in great haste--

do not speak,

you may yet be released.

I am glad enough to depart

though I have never tasted life

as in these last weeks.

 

It is a strange life,

patterned in fire and letters

on the prison pavement.

If I glance up

it is written on the walls,

it is cut on the floor,

it is patterned across

the slope of the roof.

 

I am weak--weak--

last night if the guard

had left the gate unlocked

I could not have ventured to escape,

but one thought serves me now

with strength.

 

As I pass down the corridor

past desperate faces at each cell,

your eyes and my eyes may meet.

 

You will be dark, unkempt,

but I pray for one glimpse of your face--

why do I want this?

I who have seen you at the banquet

each flower of your hyacinth-circlet

white against your hair.

 

Why do I want this,

when even last night

you startled me from sleep?

You stood against the dark rock,

you grasped an elder staff.

 

So many nights

you have distracted me from terror.

Once you lifted a spear-flower.

I remember how you stooped

to gather it--

and it flamed, the leaf and shoot

and the threads, yellow, yellow--

sheer till they burnt

to red-purple in the cup.

 

As I pass your cell-door

do not speak.

I was first on the list--

They may forget you tried to shield me

as the horsemen passed.