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Poem by Hilda Doolittle


Orion Dead


     (Artemis speaks.)

The cornel-trees
uplift from the furrows,
the roots at their bases,
strike lower through the barley-sprays.

So arise and face me.
I am poisoned with the rage of song.

I once pierced the flesh
of the wild deer,
now I am afraid to touch
the blue and the gold-veined hyacinths?

I will tear the full flowers
and the little heads
of the grape-hyacinths,
I will strip the life from the bulb
until the ivory layers
lie like narcissus petals
on the black earth.

Arise,
lest I bend an ash-tree
into a taut bow,
and slay--and tear
all the roots from the earth.

The cornel-wood blazes
and strikes through the barley-sprays
but I have lost heart for this.

I break a staff,
I break the tough branch.
I know no light in the woods.
I have lost pace with the wind.



Hilda Doolittle


Hilda Doolittle's other poems:
  1. Lethe
  2. Sitalkas
  3. Telesila
  4. Holy Satyr
  5. Epigrams


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