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THE HELMSMAN

H. D. · 1916

O be swift--

we have always known you wanted us.

 

We fled inland with our flocks,

we pastured them in hollows,

cut off from the wind

and the salt track of the marsh.

 

We worshipped inland--

we stepped past wood-flowers,

we forgot your tang,

we brushed wood-grass.

 

We wandered from pine-hills

through oak and scrub-oak tangles,

we broke hyssop and bramble,

we caught flower and new bramble-fruit

in our hair: we laughed

as each branch whipped back,

we tore our feet in half buried rocks

and knotted roots and acorn-cups.

 

We forgot--we worshipped,

we parted green from green,

we sought further thickets,

we dipped our ankles

through leaf-mould and earth,

and wood and wood-bank enchanted us--

 

and the feel of the clefts in the bark,

and the slope between tree and tree--

and a slender path strung field to field

and wood to wood

and hill to hill

and the forest after it.

 

We forgot--for a moment

tree-resin, tree-bark,

sweat of a torn branch

were sweet to the taste.

 

We were enchanted with the fields,

the tufts of coarse grass

in the shorter grass--

we loved all this.

 

But now, our boat climbs--hesitates--drops--

climbs--hesitates--crawls back--

climbs--hesitates--

O be swift--

we have always known you wanted us.