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PURSUIT

H. D. · 1916

What do I care

that the stream is trampled,

the sand on the stream-bank

still holds the print of your foot:

the heel is cut deep.

I see another mark

on the grass ridge of the bank--

it points toward the wood-path.

I have lost the third

in the packed earth.

 

But here

a wild-hyacinth stalk is snapped:

the purple buds--half ripe--

show deep purple

where your heel pressed.

 

A patch of flowering grass,

low, trailing--

you brushed this:

the green stems show yellow-green

where you lifted--turned the earth-side

to the light:

this and a dead leaf-spine,

split across,

show where you passed.

 

You were swift, swift!

here the forest ledge slopes--

rain has furrowed the roots.

Your hand caught at this;

the root snapped under your weight.

 

I can almost follow the note

where it touched this slender tree

and the next answered--

and the next.

 

And you climbed yet further!

you stopped by the dwarf-cornel--

whirled on your heels,

doubled on your track.

 

This is clear--

you fell on the downward slope,

you dragged a bruised thigh--you limped--

you clutched this larch.

 

Did your head, bent back,

search further--

clear through the green leaf-moss

of the larch branches?

 

Did you clutch,

stammer with short breath and gasp:

_wood-daemons grant life--

give life--I am almost lost._

 

For some wood-daemon

has lightened your steps.

I can find no trace of you

in the larch-cones and the underbrush.