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Poem by David Herbert Lawrence Cypresses TUSCAN cypresses, What is it? Folded in like a dark thought For which the language is lost, Tuscan cypresses, Is there a great secret? Are our words no good? The undeliverable secret, Dead with a dead race and a dead speech, and yet Darkly monumental in you, Etruscan cypresses. Ah, how I admire your fidelity, Dark cypresses, Is it the secret of the long-nosed Etruscans? The long-nosed, sensitive-footed, subtly-smiling Etruscans, Who made so little noise outside the cypress groves? Among the sinuous, flame-tall cypresses That swayed their length of darkness all around Etruscan-dusky, wavering men of old Etruria: Naked except for fanciful long shoes, Going with insidious, half-smiling quietness And some of Africa's imperturbable sang-froid About a forgotten business. What business, then? Nay, tongues are dead, and words are hollow as hollow seed-pods, Having shed their sound and finished all their echoing Etruscan syllables, That had the telling. Yet more I see you darkly concentrate, Tuscan cypresses, On one old thought: On one old slim imperishable thought, while you remain Etruscan cypresses; Dusky, slim marrow-thought of slender, flickering men of Etruria, Whom Rome called vicious. Vicious, dark cypresses: Vicious, you supple, brooding, softly-swaying pillars of dark flame. Monumental to a dead, dead race Embalmed in you! Were they then vicious, the slender, tender-footed, Long-nosed men of Etruria? Or was their way only evasive and different, dark, like cypress- trees in a wind? They are dead, with all their vices, And all that is left Is the shadowy monomania of some cypresses And tombs. The smile, the subtle Etruscan smile still lurking Within the tombs, Etruscan cypresses. He laughs longest who laughs last; Nay, Leonardo only bungled the pure Etruscan smile. What would I not give To bring back the rare and orchid-like Evil-yclept Etruscan? For as to the evil We have only Roman word for it, Which I, being a little weary of Roman virtue, Don't hang much weight on. For oh, I know, in the dust where we have buried The silenced races and all their abominations, We have buried so much of the delicate magic of life. There in the deeps That churn the frankincense and ooze the myrrh, Cypress shadowy, Such an aroma of lost human life! They say the fit survive, But I invoke the spirits of the lost. Those that have not survived, the darkly lost. To bring their meaning back into life again. Which they have taken away And wrapt inviolable in soft cypress-trees, Etruscan cypresses. Evil, what is evil? There is only one evil, to deny life As Rome denied Etruria And mechanical America Montezuma still. David Herbert Lawrence David Herbert Lawrence's other poems: ![]() 1349 Views |
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