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Poem by Charlotte Mew * * * The forest road, The infinite straight road stretching away World without end: the breathless road between the walls Of the black listening trees: the hushed, grey road Beyond the window that you shut to-night Crying that you would look at it by day - There is a shadow there that sings and calls But not for you. Oh! hidden eyes that plead in sleep Against the lonely dark, if I could touch the fear And leave it kissed away on quiet lids - If I could hush these hands that are half-awake, Groping for me in sleep I could go free. I wish that God would take them out of mine And fold them like the wings of frightened birds Shot cruelly down, but fluttering into quietness so soon. Broken, forgotten things? there is no grief for them in the green Spring When the new birds fly back to the old trees. But it shall not be so with you. I will look back. I wish I knew that God would stand Smiling and looking down on you when morning comes, To hold you, when you wake, closer than I, So gently though: and not with famished lips or hungry arms: He does not hurt the frailest, dearest things As we do in the dark. See, dear, your hair - I must unloose this hair that sleeps and dreams About my face, and clings like the brown weed To drowned, delivered things, tossed by the tired sea Back to the beaches. Oh! your hair! If you had lain A long time dead on the rough, glistening ledge Of some black cliff, forgotten by the tide, The raving winds would tear, the dripping brine would rust away Fold after fold of all the loveliness That wraps you round, and makes you, lying here, The passionate fragrance that the roses are. But death would spare the glory of your head In the long sweetness of the hair that does not die: The spray would leap to it in every storm, The scent of the unsilenced sea would linger on In these dark waves, and round the silence that was you - Only the nesting gulls would hear - but there would still be whispers in your hair; Keep them for me; keep them for me. What is this singing on the road That makes all other music like the music in a dream - Dumb to the dancing and the marching feet; you know, in dreams, you see Old pipers playing that you cannot hear, And ghostly drums that only seem to beat. This seems to climb: Is it the music of a larger place? It makes our room too small: it is like a stair, A calling stair that climbs up to a smile you scarcely see, Dim, but so waited for; and you know what a smile is, how it calls, How if I smiled you always ran to me. Now you must sleep forgetfully, as children do. There is a Spirit sits by us in sleep Nearer than those who walk with us in the bright day. I think he has a tranquil, saving face: I think he came Straight from the hills: he may have suffered there in time gone by, And once, from those forsaken heights, looked down, Lonely himself, on all the lonely sorrows of the earth. It is his kingdom - Sleep. If I could leave you there - If, without waking you, I could get up and reach the door -! We used to go together. - Shut, scared eyes, Poor, desolate, desperate hands, it is not I Who thrust you off. No, take your hands away - I cannot strike your lonely hands. Yes, I have struck your heart, It did not come so near. Then lie you there Dear and wild heart behind this quivering snow With two red stains on it: and I will strike and tear Mine out, and scatter it to yours. Oh! throbbing dust, You that were life, our little wind-blown hearts! The road! the road! There is a shadow there: I see my soul, I hear my soul, singing among the trees! Charlotte Mew Charlotte Mew's other poems: 1368 Views |
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