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WAR PICTURES

Amy Lowell

The Allies

 

August 14th, 1914

 

 

 

Into the brazen, burnished sky, the cry hurls itself. The zigzagging

cry of hoarse throats, it floats against the hard winds, and binds the

head of the serpent to its tail, the long snail-slow serpent of marching

men. Men weighed down with rifles and knapsacks, and parching with war.

The cry jars and splits against the brazen, burnished sky.

 

This is the war of wars, and the cause? Has this writhing worm of men a

cause?

 

Crackling against the polished sky is an eagle with a sword. The eagle

is red and its head is flame.

 

 

In the shoulder of the worm is a teacher.

 

His tongue laps the war-sucked air in drought, but he yells defiance at

the red-eyed eagle, and in his ears are the bells of new philosophies,

and their tinkling drowns the sputter of the burning sword. He shrieks,

"God damn you! When you are broken, the word will strike out new

shoots."

 

His boots are tight, the sun is hot, and he may be shot, but he is in

the shoulder of the worm.

 

 

A dust speck in the worm's belly is a poet.

 

He laughs at the flaring eagle and makes a long nose with his fingers.

He will fight for smooth, white sheets of paper, and uncurdled ink. The

sputtering sword cannot make him blink, and his thoughts are wet and

rippling. They cool his heart.

 

He will tear the eagle out of the sky and give the earth tranquillity,

and loveliness printed on white paper.

 

 

The eye of the serpent is an owner of mills.

 

He looks at the glaring sword which has snapped his machinery and struck

away his men.

 

But it will all come again, when the sword is broken to a million dying

stars, and there are no more wars.

 

 

Bankers, butchers, shop-keepers, painters, farmers--men, sway and

sweat. They will fight for the earth, for the increase of the slow, sure

roots of peace, for the release of hidden forces. They jibe at the

eagle and his scorching sword.

 

One! Two!--One! Two!--clump the heavy boots. The cry hurtles

against the sky.

 

Each man pulls his belt a little tighter, and shifts his gun to make it

lighter. Each man thinks of a woman, and slaps out a curse at the

eagle. The sword jumps in the hot sky, and the worm crawls on to the

battle, stubbornly.

 

This is the war of wars, from eye to tail the serpent has one cause: