Skip to content
← Back to poem

SHE CONTRASTS WITH HERSELF HIPPOLYTA

H. D. · 1924

Can flame beget white steel--

ah no, it could not take

within my reins its shelter;

steel must seek steel,

or hate make out of joy

a whet-stone for a sword;

sword against flint,

Theseus sought Hippolyta;

she yielded not nor broke,

sword upon stone,

from the clash leapt a spark,

Hippolytus, born of hate.

 

What did she think

when all her strength

was twisted for his bearing;

did it break,

even within her sheltered heart, a song,

some whispered note,

distant and faint as this:

 

_Love that I bear

within my breast

how is my armour melted

how my heart:

as an oak-tree

that keeps beneath the snow,

the young bark fresh

till the spring cast

from off its shoulders

the white snow

so does my armour melt._

 

_Love that I bear

within my heart, O speak;

tell how beneath the serpent-spotted shell,

the cygnets wait,

how the soft owl

opens and flicks with pride,

eye-lids of great bird-eyes,

when underneath its breast

the owlets shrink and turn._

 

You have the power,

(then did she say) Artemis,

benignity to grant

forgiveness that I gave

no quarter to an enemy who cast

his armour on the forest-moss,

and took, unmatched in an uneven contest,

Hippolyta who relented not,

returned and sought no kiss.

 

Then did she pray: Artemis,

grant that no flower

be grafted alien on a broken stalk,

no dark flame-laurel on the stricken crest

of a wild mountain-poplar;

grant in my thought,

I never yield but wait,

entreating cold white river,

mountain-pool and salt:

let all my veins be ice,

until they break

(strength of white beach,

rock of mountain land,

forever to you, Artemis, dedicate)

from out my reins,

those small, cold hands.